Mueller Indicts Russian-Ukrainian Operative and Manafort Crony Konstantin Kilimnik


A few quick notes:

1. Paul Manafort and Konstantin Kilimnik worked so closely together that Manafort referred to Kilimnik as "my Russian brain." Manafort worked with Kilimnik for nearly two decades — and kept working with him long after Kilimnik was suspected of working for the GRU.

2. Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti pointed out on Twitter: "This is Mueller's first indictment with both a Russian and an American name on it — former Trump Campaign Chair Manafort and suspected Russian intel operative Konstantin Kilimnik."

That's notable because, even though Mueller has issued indictments of Russians and indictments of Americans, issuing an indictment that includes both is a stronger indication of the potential collusion he's been tasked with investigating.

3. In a lot of the coverage of this new indictment, you're going to see framing of Manafort's and Kilimnik's work together like this, at Bloomberg (as but one of many examples): "Konstantin Kilimnik, who worked with former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort on a U.S. lobbying effort on Ukraine's behalf, was indicted on federal charges Friday by U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller."

To quote Eastsidekate in comments earlier this week: "I hate how the media keeps framing Manafort's work as promoting the interests of Ukraine, which sounds completely isolated from Russian espionage. He worked for pro-Kremlin stooges who were kicked out of office by the Ukrainian people. Manafort cares fuck all about 'the interests of Ukraine.'"

That is absolutely correct and extremely important to understand. Manafort was working in Ukraine on behalf of Russian allies there. And so was Kilimnik.

4. Unless I've missed it, Kilimnik hasn't been arrested today, which means that he's probably not in the United States right now, and it's unlikely he'll show himself in any country that would pick him up and extradite him to the U.S. (especially as Trump ensures our list of allies grows thinner and thinner). That makes the indictment largely symbolic, except insofar as it further makes the collusion case against Manafort — and, by extension, Trump.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat lying on a chaise in the sunshine, upside down
Sophie enjoys the sunshine. (Olivia photobombs.) ♥

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 505

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: The Collusion Is Right Out in the Open and DREAMer Manuel Antonio Cano Pacheco Killed After Deportation.

Here are some more things in the news today...

Damian Paletta, David J. Lynch, and Heather Long at the Washington Post: France's Macron Threatens Rare Rebuke of U.S. at G-7, Trump Fires Back.
French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday threatened to join with other world leaders to issue a rare rebuke of the United States at a global summit here this weekend, drawing immediate and sharp replies from [Donald] Trump.

Macron said Trump could be excluded from joining with other leaders in a joint declaration of unity at the end of a global summit here, a very unusual move that was meant to isolate Trump's recent burst of trade threats aimed at numerous U.S. allies.

"The American President may not mind being isolated, but neither do we mind signing a 6 country agreement if need be," Macron wrote on Twitter. "Because these 6 countries represent values, they represent an economic market which has the weight of history behind it and which is now a true international force."

Trump appeared unmoved, accusing Macron and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of hurting the United States with unfair trade practices.

"Please tell Prime Minister Trudeau and President Macron that they are charging the U.S. massive tariffs and create nonmonetary barriers. The EU trade surplus with the U.S. is $151 Billion, and Canada keeps our farmers and others out. Look forward to seeing them tomorrow," Trump wrote.

He followed it up with another tweet targeting Trudeau. "Prime Minister Trudeau is being so indignant, bringing up the relationship that the U.S. and Canada had over the many years and all sorts of other things ... but he doesn't bring up the fact that they charge us up to 300% on dairy — hurting our Farmers, killing our Agriculture!" he wrote.

Later, Trump tweeted that he would raise undisclosed tariffs against Canada and European Union countries if they don't lower theirs. "Take down your tariffs & barriers or we will more than match you!" he wrote.

The exchanges cast an immediate shadow over the summit before it even began.
To put it mildly. And as if that weren't enough, Trump is also planning to make an early exit from the G7 summit: "By pulling out early, Trump will skip sessions focused on climate change, the oceans, and clean energy. He will also miss the traditional group-photo opportunity among fellow heads of state. The president may also miss the opportunity to host a summit-ending news conference, something world leaders traditionally do."

It's honestly time for everyone, inside the U.S. and outside, to acknowledge that Trump simply isn't a world leader. He's a destructive puppet with immense power which he uses to subvert what little and precarious global stability there is. And he's a deeply fear-driven man who masks his cowardice with fatalism, which makes him unfathomably dangerous.

Susan B. Glasser at the New Yorker: Under Trump, "America First" Really Is Turning Out to Be America Alone.
Ever since Trump took office, America's allies have desperately sought to avoid this moment. Over the last year and a half, though, many of them have come to realize, with growing dread, that it was inevitable. The rift between the world's great democracies that Trump's election portended is coming to pass, and it is about far more than Iran policy, obscure trade provisions, or whether Germany spends two per cent of its G.D.P. on nato. Many senior European officials speak of it, as one Ambassador to Washington did to me recently, as nothing less than a "crisis of the West."

...Nowhere in Europe has that subconscious been more rocked than in Germany, where its close relationship with the United States has defined the country's remarkable resurrection after the Second World War. "It took Germany the longest of all partners to come to terms with someone like Trump becoming President," the senior German official told me. "We were very emotional, because our relationship with America is so emotional—it's more of a son-father relationship—and we didn't recognize our father anymore and realized he might beat us."

Only in recent weeks, he said, after Trump reorganized his foreign-policy team, replacing his Secretary of State and national-security adviser with the more like-minded Mike Pompeo and John Bolton and launching his trade war, did they finally get that "this is real. And still many people haven't come to grips with the idea that Trump is not considering us an ally and as a son but maybe even as adversary."

...A year ago, after Trump returned from his first Presidential trip overseas with deeply unsettled allies in Europe, his national-security adviser, H. R. McMaster, and his chief economic adviser, Gary Cohn, teamed up to write a reassuring op-ed in the Wall Street Journal. "America First is not America alone," they promised. Neither of the two men still works for Trump.
Sob.

* * *

Amy Goldstein at the Washington Post: Trump Administration Won't Defend ACA in Case Brought by GOP States.
The Trump administration said Thursday night that it will not defend the Affordable Care Act against the latest legal challenge to its constitutionality — a dramatic break from the executive branch's tradition of arguing to uphold existing statutes and a land mine for health insurance changes the ACA brought about.

In a brief filed in a Texas federal court and an accompanying letter to the House and Senate leaders of both parties, the Justice Department agrees in large part with the 20 Republican-led states that brought the suit. They contend that the ACA provision requiring most Americans to carry health insurance soon will no longer be constitutional and that, as a result, consumer insurance protections under the law will not be valid, either.

The three-page letter from Attorney General Jeff Sessions begins by saying that Justice adopted its position "with the approval of the President of the United States."
Jessica Mason Pieklo at Rewire.News: Congress Couldn't Kill Obamacare, But Trump Is Still Trying. "In its brief, the Justice Department argues two main points. First, it claims that the individual mandate, which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld in 2012, is unconstitutional. Second, the administration argues that because the individual mandate is unconstitutional, other key provisions of the law should be struck down on the ground that they can't be severed, or removed, from the unconstitutional mandate. The provisions the Justice Department wants the court to invalidate are central to the ACA, or Obamacare, and would gut protections for those with pre-existing conditions."

screen cap of tweet authored by me, featuring an old tweet of mine reading 'Fuck every single person who said or implied there was no difference between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.' to which I've added new commentary reading 'G7, Affordable Care Act, and literally just every goddamned thing edition.'

* * *


Justin Glawe at the Daily Beast: John Bolton's New Top Aide Is a Russia Truther. "National Security Adviser John Bolton's top aide hire said last year that U.S. intelligence reports on Russia's election meddling were 'rigged.' That's just one of the conspiracies Fred Fleitz espoused before he was hired last week as Bolton's chief of staff. Fleitz has also said it's 'impossible' to know if Russia was responsible for election-related hacks, and speculated that the Obama administration manipulated intelligence about Russia and that it schemed to 'trap' Trump officials by sanctioning Moscow. Fleitz even said that [Donald] Trump should 'pardon everyone' under investigation in the Russia matter.


Kira Lerner at ThinkProgress: North Carolina Tries to Revive Its Discriminatory Voter ID Law as Constitutional Amendment. "Two years after federal courts struck down North Carolina's discriminatory voter ID law, Republican lawmakers are trying to revive their strict requirements by passing an amendment to the state's constitution [despite the fact that the Supreme Court said last year that the law] targeted 'African-Americans with almost surgical precision.' ...Brandi Collins-Dexter, the senior campaign director for Color of Change, noted that House Speaker Tim Moore, the lead sponsor of the new bill, and the other Republicans pushing it left the details 'intentionally vague' — the bill does not specify which forms of photo ID would be accepted under the new law. 'To us, that's even more alarming,' she told ThinkProgress."

And finally, more horrendous news from the United States' deadly war on immigrants...

[Content Note: Nativism; self-harm; death] Staff at the Daily Beast: ICE Deportee Killed Himself En Route to Native Country. "A 34-year-old Eritrean killed himself while being deported back to his home country, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced Friday. Zeresenay Ermias Testfatsion was being held in Egypt's Cairo International Airport when authorities found him 'deceased in a shower area.' His body was then transported to a local hospital and en route to Eritrea's capital Asmara. Testfatsion was apprehended by immigration authorities last year at the Hidalgo Texas Port of Entry when he attempted to illegally cross the southern border, and was ordered to be deported by a federal immigration judge in October."

What are we doing? Shame on this nation. Shame on us.

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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Keep Shakesville Truckin'

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teaspoon icon This is, for those who have requested it, your bi-monthly reminder to donate to Shakesville and an important fundraiser to keep Shakesville going.

To keep doing this job, and to keep Shakesville a safe ad-free space, I need to be making enough through donations to support myself. Although Iain and I combine resources, like many couples, I don't want to find myself in a place where I couldn't support myself on my own if I needed and/or wanted to.

So this full-time gig has to pay me a livable wage for my time, and enough to pay contributing writers for their work, or I need to find another way to make a living. I'm not looking to get rich off this work. I simply want to make enough money that I am able to support myself modestly, in exchange for my full-time labor.

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I cannot afford to do this full-time for free, but, even if I could, fundraising is also one of the most feminist acts I do here. I ask to be paid for my work because progressive feminist advocacy has value; because women's work has value.

So! If you value my work here and/or on Twitter — if you appreciate being able to tune in for coverage of politics and culture, for curated news about the Trump administration and/or the resistance, for media analysis, for a safe and image-free space to discuss difficult subjects, for the Fat Fashion or Make-Up or Shaker Gourmet threads, or for whatever else you appreciate at Shakesville, whether it's the moderation, community in the Open Threads, video transcripts, or anything else — please remember that Shakesville is run exclusively on donations. I would certainly be grateful for your support, if you are able to chip in.

Thank you to each of you who donates or has donated, whether monthly or as a one-off. I am deeply appreciative. This community couldn't exist without that support, truly. Thank you.

My thanks as well to everyone who contributes to the space in other ways, whether as a contributor, a moderator, a guest writer, a transcriber, and/or as someone who takes the time to send me a note of support and encouragement, some cool art, or anything else you think might give me a smile or fill my lungs with air. (You're usually right!) This community couldn't exist without you, either.

Finally and essentially: Please note that I don't want anyone to feel obliged to contribute financially, especially if money is tight. There is a big enough readership that no one needs to donate if it would be a hardship, and no one should ever feel bad about that.

I mean that. We're all in this thing together.

One of the things I hate most about fundraising is knowing that it might make some people feel bad, if they want to donate but aren't able. I would never presume to tell you how to feel, but please know that I don't want you to feel bad.

What I want is for you to know that, some days, your kind words are the only thing that keeps me going. I need money to survive. It is your encouragement that keeps me doing this work. You support me in many ways, and I am immensely thankful for them all. ♥

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DREAMer Manuel Antonio Cano Pacheco Killed After Deportation

[Content Note: Nativism; violence; death.]

Manuel Antonio Cano Pacheco arrived in the United States at age 3, in the company of his parents, who were undocumented immigrants. Because he was brought here as a child, he qualified for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. But now he is dead, after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deported him from the only home he's ever really known.

Rekha Basu at the Des Moines Register: Sent Back to Mexico's Violence, Des Moines Student Dies within Weeks.

Manuel Antonio Cano Pacheco should have graduated high school in Des Moines last month. The oldest of four siblings should have walked across a stage in a cap and gown to become a proud symbol to his sister and brothers of the rewards of hard work and education.

Instead, Manuel died a brutal death alone in a foreign land...

[His DACA] status didn't protect Manuel when he came to immigration authorities' attention after being stopped for speeding last fall. An ICE spokesperson said in a statement that a federal immigration judge terminated his DACA status because of two misdemeanor convictions.

...Yes, Manuel was responsible for his own actions when he broke the law during a traumatic time [after his father was sent to prison] by driving under the influence. "I think most of this is because of his dad," [his friend Juan Verduzco] said. "That's when his college stuff, his dreams went down the drain."

No one should put others at risk by driving under the influence, though some very prominent Iowans have done so without having it derail their futures. Manuel had paid his dues for it.
And how many Iowans have been stopped for speeding without being delivered a death sentence?

That's not hyperbole. Manuel was deported to the northwestern Mexican state of Zacatecas, where his family is from, which has "become a deadly place, especially for youth," because of gang violence. Manuel's throat was slit when he went "out to get food with an acquaintance of his cousin's, who apparently was known to the killers."

Said his friend Verduzco: "He was in the wrong place at the wrong time." A place he was in because ICE put him there.

And had he not been killed mere weeks after his deportation, he would have risked abduction and possible death at the hands of gangs who are preying on U.S. deportees along the border, who "hold the deportees until their relatives in the U.S. pay thousands of dollars for their release."
Do federal authorities take any of those dangers into consideration when deporting people who were raised here? [Shawn Neudauer, ICE public affairs officer] said deportees to Mexico are turned over to Mexican authorities. "Once turned over they are the responsibility of their own government," he said.
That is sociopathic indifference to the lives of human beings. And it now official U.S. policy.

Manuel left behind a one-year-old child, his girlfriend, his parents, three siblings, extended family, and friends who loved him and depended on him.

My condolences to them. I am so sorry.
"I kind of don't believe it still," Verduzco said of the loss of his friend, who was more like a brother. "It still hasn't hit me... I don't understand."

Nor should any of us understand or accept it.
MAKE SOME NOISE.

Open Wide...

The Collusion Is Right Out in the Open

I have written many, many times that the collusion between Donald Trump and the Kremlin is right out in the open. It's utterly brazen.

While we wait interminably for Special Counsel Bob Mueller or Congressional investigative committees to find "proof" of collusion, the collusion continues observably, in front of our eyes.

And here again is a perfect example of what I mean:


The reason Russia was expelled from the G7 (then the G8) was because of their aggressive (and illegal) annexation of Crimea.

Now, in the midst of Russian interference in elections around the world, in a clear bid for global destabilization to create a power vacuum that Putin can exploit, Trump wants to overlook Putin having taken Crimea by force and invite him back to the table of world leadership.

Because "we have a world to run," he says.

The collusion is right out in the open. There it is. Take a look.

Open Wide...

Open Thread

image of a pink couch

Hosted by a pink sofa. Have a seat and chat.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Sue Kerr: "You can bring back one restaurant/eatery from your real life that has since closed. What do you bring back and why?"

Shakey's Pizza!

There are still some Shakey's locations open, but nowhere near me anymore. The one I grew up with in Northwest Indiana closed a very long time ago.

I have many fond memories of eating at Shakey's. So many friends' birthday parties and family special occasions. The food wasn't that great — aside from those magical mojo potatoes! — but I miss the days of the Shakey's buffet, video game room, and dancing animatrons.

Open Wide...

1,600 Undocumented Immigrants Being Transferred to Federal Prisons

[Content Note: Nativism; carcerality.]


According to Reuters, the "detainees awaiting civil immigration court hearings" will be sent to one of five federal prisons "temporarily."

A thousand of them will reportedly be going to a single prison in Victorville, California, prompting a prison employees' union to say that "the influx of ICE detainees raises questions about prison staffing and safety."

It certainly raises questions about the safety of the "detainees," too.

Please take note of the use of "detainees" to describe the people in ICE custody, among whom are asylum seekers. Previous to Donald Trump's nativist war on migrants and refugees, "detainees" was a word we encountered most frequently in stories about terrorists.

That's not a coincidence.

This administration is waging a gross campaign of human rights violating indecency against migrants and refugees, and anyone who doesn't want to be a Good German had better start making noise about it. Those "what would you have done" thought experiments aren't hypotheticals anymore. It's happening.

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E.U. Announces Tariffs on $3B Worth of U.S. Products

Donald Trump, he of the BEST DEALS, has art-of-the-dealed us right into a global trade war. Ben Popken at NBC News reports:

Donald Trump's tit-for-tat trade war keeps heating up. The European Union announced Wednesday it will in July start imposing a sweeping round of tariffs on $3 billion worth of U.S. products in retaliation for the White House's decision to hit European steel and aluminum products with duties.

"This is a measured and proportionate response to the unilateral and illegal decision taken by the United States to impose tariffs on European steel and aluminum exports," EU Commissioner for Trade Cecilia Malmström said in a statement.

The commission cited WTO rules that it said allow for proportional counter-tariffs, and endorsed a list of goods it had previously submitted to the organization.

"We regret that the United States left us with no other option than to safeguard EU interests," said Malmström.

The list includes a 25 percent tariff on imported U.S. steel and aluminum, and proposes duties on a hodgepodge of over 100 items, including bourbon, motorcycles, peanut butter, cranberries, orange juice, porcelain tableware, fishing vessels, plasma cleaner machines for removing contaminants from electron microscopy specimens, and digital flight-data recorders.
Millions of U.S. workers work industries associated with the production and sale of those products.

Open Wide...

Discussion Thread: Good Things

One of the ways we resist the demoralization and despair in which exploiters of fear like Trump thrive is to keep talking about the good things in our lives.

Because, even though it feels very much (and rightly so) like we are losing so many things we value, there are still daily moments of joy or achievement or love or empowering ferocity or other kinds of fulfillment.

Maybe you've experienced something big worth celebrating; maybe you've just had a precious moment of contentment; maybe getting out of bed this morning was a success worthy of mention.

News items worth celebrating are also welcome.

So, whatever you have to share that's good, here's a place to do it.

* * *

I just made myself a cheeseburger, on an English muffin, just like my grandfather used to make, and it was tasty and satisfying and reminded me of someone I loved and miss very much. And all of that was good.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound standing beside my desk, staring at me plaintively
"Hey, wanna stop everything you're doing and come pet me
and give me treats and run around in the yard with me?"

image of Dudley's face in close-up, because he's sticking his face in my face
"How about now?"

Shakers, the answer was a giant belly laugh followed by a resounding yes.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 504

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: This Is What the Threat of Gun Violence in Schools Looks Like and Trump Doesn't Mention Puerto Rican Hurricane Victims at FEMA Hurricane Preparedness Event.

Here are some more things in the news today...

Eliana Johnson at Politico: Trump and Bolton Spurn Top-Level North Korea Planning. "National Security Adviser John Bolton has yet to convene a Cabinet-level meeting to discuss [Donald] Trump's upcoming summit with North Korea next week, a striking break from past practice that suggests the Trump White House is largely improvising its approach to the unprecedented nuclear talks. For decades, top presidential advisers have used a methodical process to hash out national security issues before offering the president a menu of options for key decisions. But since Trump agreed on a whim to meet with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un on March 8, the White House's summit planning has been unstructured, according to a half-dozen administration officials. Trump himself has driven the preparation almost exclusively on his own, consulting little with his national security team outside of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo."

On the one hand, yes, there has been little formal, traditional, strategic planning. On the other, Rudy Giuliani didn't publicly say on a foreign trip that, following Trump's (rescinded) cancellation, Kim "got back on his hands and knees and begged for it, which is exactly the position you want to put him in" without Donald Trump knowing about it.

Meanwhile, a U.S. official Trump leaks that he might invite Kim to Mar-a-Lago if they get along, or maybe they'll play a round of golf together. Flattering cop; threatening cop.

There's a strategy at work. It just isn't one that centers effective diplomacy or peace.

And in other foreign policy goings-on...


Lily Kuo at the Guardian: 'Sonic Attack' Fears as More U.S. Diplomats Fall Ill in China. "U.S. State Department officials said on Wednesday it had sent 'a number of individuals' from its consulate in Guangzhou back to the U.S. for 'further evaluation and a comprehensive assessment of their symptoms.' Last month, a consulate worker in Guangzhou was found to have suffered a mild traumatic brain injury after reporting 'abnormal sensations of sound and pressure' from late 2017 through to April 2018. The department sent a team to Guangzhou in late May to examine other US staff and their families, and investigate possible links between their symptoms and those of U.S. diplomats in Cuba last year, an incident that prompted Washington to pull its staff from the country and expel Cuban diplomats from the U.S." Stranger and stranger!

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism; white supremacy; violence. Covers entire section.]

Erik Larson at Bloomberg: Judge Calls Trump's Border Separations of Children 'Brutal'.
The Trump administration failed to kill a legal challenge to its practice of separating undocumented parents and children who seek to enter the U.S. to flee persecution at home, with a judge handing an early victory to civil rights activists who say the policy is unconstitutional and cruel.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego on Wednesday denied a motion to dismiss the suit, in which the American Civil Liberties Union argues that splitting up families at the border violates their due process rights.

..."These allegations sufficiently describe government conduct that arbitrarily tears at the sacred bond between parent and child," the judge wrote. The conduct, if true, "is brutal, offensive, and fails to comport with traditional notions of fair play and decency."

...Sabraw said the ACLU's claims are particularly troubling because the plaintiffs in the case had allegedly come to the U.S. seeking asylum out of fear for their well-being in their home countries. The suit applies to migrants who formally present themselves at ports of entry as political refugees as well as those who seek asylum after they are apprehended during illegal border crossings.

"The government actors responsible for the 'care and custody' of migrant children have, in fact, become their persecutors," the judge said.
This isn't a definitive win (yet), as Judge Sabraw "rejected the ACLU's argument that the separation practice violates the Asylum Act and the Administrative Procedure Act." However, she also gave the ACLU "permission to amend its complaint to address deficiencies in those claims."

Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Ronal Francisco Romero Died in Agony in ICE Custody; Now His Family Is Preparing to Sue. "Border Patrol agents arrested [Honduran native Martina Blasina Romero's] son on May 9, 2018, when he tried to enter the United States illegally. They held him at a Customs and Border Protection detention facility for about six days before turning him over to ICE custody. At about 2:30 a.m. on May 16, the authorities sent him to a local hospital. Less than 24 hours later, he was pronounced dead. Katie Shepherd of the American Immigration Council said health care in CBP facilities — where Romero first got sick — is severely lacking. 'The access to medical care in the CBP holding facilities is virtually nonexistent,' she said. At least 27 people have died in ICE custody since 2015, according to the American Immigration Lawyers Association."

Liz Robbins at the New York Times: He Delivered Pizza to an Army Base in Brooklyn; Now He Faces Deportation. "Pablo Villavicencio Calderon, 35, an undocumented immigrant, was making a delivery from a brick-oven pizza restaurant in Queens to the Army base next to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge on Friday before lunchtime. According to his wife, Sandra Chica, he presented a New York City identification card, as he had done in the past. ...But on that day, Ms. Chica said, it was not enough for the military police officer on duty, who said Mr. Villavicencio needed a driver's license, which he did not have. A background check revealed an open order of deportation from 2010. Military personnel detained him and called Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, who took him into custody, an official for the immigration agency said."

Lauren Gambino at the Guardian: Immigration Showdown: Dreamers' Future on the Table as Republicans Clash. "A bloc of moderate House Republicans are challenging far-right conservatives — and their leadership — in the latest effort to secure protections for Dreamers, the nearly 700,000 undocumented immigrants protected from deportation under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) program that Donald Trump terminated. Their rebellion has set the stage for a dramatic showdown over a politically perilous issue that has riven the Republican party — and, some worry, could cost them their majority control in this year's midterms. House Republican leaders have scheduled a private, two-hour conference to discuss the issue on Thursday morning."

Their only concern is their electoral fortunes. That families are being forcibly separated and people are being targeted and attacked and dying in ICE custody doesn't fucking matter. These vile wrecks.

* * *

This seems normal (it does not seem normal):


Alexandra Ma at Business Insider: 'Delete All Your Emails and Then Acid-Wash' Your Hard Drives: Sean Hannity Suggests Mueller Probe Witnesses Should Destroy Their Evidence. "Sean Hannity has called on the witnesses in the special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation to delete their evidence and destroy all their hardware in an attempt to derail the case. The Fox News host on Wednesday night said witnesses should 'acid-wash the emails on the hard drives and your phones' then smash them into 'itsy-bitsy pieces' with a hammer. The advice — which would be illegal to follow — appeared to be sarcastic and was delivered as part of an attack on Hillary Clinton." Hahaha of course it was.


[CN: Sex work stigma; misogyny; video may autoplay at link] Kaelyn Forde at ABC News: Giuliani Takes Swipe at Stormy Daniels, Adult Film Stars: 'I Don't Respect a Porn Star the Way I Respect a Career Woman'. "Rudy Giuliani took aim at Stormy Daniels today, saying that her career as an adult-film star and director undermines her 'credibility' in her lawsuit against the president over their alleged affair. 'So Stormy, you want to bring a case, let me cross-examine you. Because the business you were in entitles you to no degree of giving your credibility any weight,' Giuliani told an audience in Tel Aviv, adding later, 'I'm sorry I don't respect a porn star the way I respect a career woman or a woman of substance or a woman who...isn't going to sell her body for sexual exploitation.'" Someone tell this execrable slut-shaming dipshit that "sex work" and "career" are not mutually exclusive.


Relatedly: Melania has now made two public appearances — at a Gold Star Families event and at the FEMA Hurricane Preparedness event — but has not spoken at either of them. She has walked in and sat down and then remained there in total silence. Odd. To say the least.

[CN: Class warfare]


Fucking hell. This is really bad news. Really bad.

Renae Merle at the Washington Post: Mick Mulvaney Fires All 25 Members of Consumer Watchdog's Advisory Board. "Mick Mulvaney, acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, fired the agency's 25-member advisory board Wednesday, days after some of its members criticized his leadership of the watchdog agency. ...On Monday, 11 CAB members held a news conference and criticized Mulvaney for, among other things, canceling legally required meetings with the group. On Wednesday, group members were notified that they were being replaced — and that they could not reapply for spots on the new board." This fucking administration. JFC.

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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#365feministselfie: Week 23

I am again participating in the #365feministselfie project, now in its fifth year, and promised a thread for others to share selfies and/or talk about the project, visibility generally, self-apprecation, and related topics. So here is a thread for Week 23!

A few of my selfies over the last two weeks:

image of me from the shoulders up, in the car, with my hair pulled back, wearing my contacts and a black and white striped blouse
On my way out for a Friday date night with Iain.

image of me from mid-chest up, sitting on my couch with wet hair
Just home from a mile swim and feeling good!

image of me in a full-length mirror wearing a navy blue top, white jeans, and gold shoes, while carrying a red purse
A nautical look for dinner with friends, taken in my dusty mirror.

image of part of my face in close-up, as I'm lying on the couch with Sophie right next to my head
Sophie would literally lie ON my face if I let her.

image of me from mid-chest up, sitting on my bedroom, wearing my contacts and a grey top
Ready for some Buddhist meditation!
(I guess I looked pretty happy beforehand, too!)

Please feel welcome and encouraged to share your own selfies in comments, or share your thoughts on the project, or solicit encouragement or advice, or do whatever else feels best for you to participate, if you are inclined to do so!

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Trump Doesn't Mention Puerto Rican Hurricane Victims at FEMA Hurricane Preparedness Event

I have not yet reached a moment where I feel like I can't hate Donald Trump any more than I already hate him, because literally every single day there is something that makes me hate him even more.

Josh Dawsey at the Washington Post: In Private FEMA Remarks, Trump's Focus Strays from Hurricanes.

The meeting was supposed to be about hurricane preparedness, as disaster officials gathered at Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters days after the start of the 2018 season.

But [Donald] Trump had a lot else on his mind, turning the closed-door discussion into soliloquies on his prowess in negotiating airplane deals, his popularity, the effectiveness of his political endorsements, the Republican Party's fortunes, the vagaries of Defense Department purchasing guidelines, his dislike of magnetized launch equipment on aircraft carriers, his unending love of coal, and his breezy optimism about his planned Singapore summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

"It's an interesting journey. It's called the land of the unknown — who knows? We'll maybe make a deal. Maybe not. As I say to everybody, are you going to make a deal?" Trump said, according to audio of the FEMA meeting obtained by The Washington Post. "Maybe and maybe not. Who knows?"

The president's 40-minute briefing session behind closed-doors came after he spoke to cameras for about 15 minutes. He briefly referred to Puerto Rico — where health authorities now estimate there were about 1,400 additional deaths following Hurricane Maria, compared to the same period the previous year. The Trump administration was roundly criticized for its performance, and hundreds of thousands in the U.S. territory remain without electricity.

Trump did not mention Puerto Rico's victims but thanked Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R) for helping and noted that the power company was "in bankruptcy prior to the hurricane." He said the recovery was a "tough job." He also mentioned Puerto Rico in passing once with the cameras rolling.
"1,400 additional deaths" is the estimate of Puerto Rican health officials. A recent Harvard study estimated a number closer to 4,600.

In any case, many people died as the result of Hurricane Maria and its after-effects in Puerto Rico. And Trump couldn't even be bothered to fucking mention them over the course of an hour — neither in his on-camera remarks nor the subsequent briefing session.

I am filthy angry about his sociopathic indifference to Puerto Rico, where many people are still struggling.

And I am filthy angry that there is seemingly no malice he can commit so obscene that the members of his vile party in the Congressional majority can be moved to hold him accountable.

And I grieve when I contemplate the damage he has left to do.

I take up space in solidarity with the people of Puerto Rico. Here are a few things you can do to support them.

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This Is What the Threat of Gun Violence in Schools Looks Like

[Content Note: Gun violence; terrorism; child abuse.]

Here are two things I saw this morning, each of them absolutely heartbreaking:


If you're unable to view the image embedded in the tweet, it's a photo of a sign hanging on a chalkboard in an elementary school classroom with carefully printed text reading: "Lockdown, Lockdown / Lock the door / Shut the lights off / Say no more / Go behind the desk and hide / Wait until it's safe inside / Lockdown, Lockdown / It's all done / Now it's time to have some fun."

A song for tiny children to sing to the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" or the "Alphabet Song," because part of being a kindergarten teacher now is to teach your charges horrifying nightmare ditties that might save their wee lives.

And because part of being a child now is learning those ditties in case a man with a gun comes into your classroom to murder you.


Sarah asks her daughter about what the song was, then returns to the lockdown, which lasted for 45 minutes. She asks if they were given updates during the ordeal. Her daughter tells her they weren't; it was very quiet while they were all "crammed together," until they heard helicopters overhead, at which point they feared the school might be bombed.

She tells her mother, "We've done drills but we knew this was for real. We were all sure we were going to die, Mom. I'm so glad we didn't die."


This is the life that a significant portion of the population and virtually the entire governing party, including the sitting president and vice-president, have decided is acceptable for children in this nation.

I cannot begin to fathom the heart and mind of a person who finds any of that okay.

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Open Thread

image of a yellow couch

Hosted by a yellow sofa. Have a seat and chat.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker lattendicht: "What's your favourite travel tip?"

When you're traveling abroad, make sure you take pictures of your ID and passport and any other important documents with which you travel, including medication prescriptions, and keep them in your phone — and make sure your phone is password and/or otherwise protected. Then don't carry your docs and phone in the same place, even if that just means two different pockets.

If you lose your documents, you'll have a much easier time if you've got copies of them on your phone. And they're sensitive enough that you might not want to download them from the cloud (or wherever) on any old computer in an emergency.

Just remember to remove them when you get home. Even if your phone has security, better not to carry them around if you no longer need them.

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by summer showers.

Recommended Reading:

Dom Cosentino at Deadspin: Malcolm Jenkins Says a Lot without Saying a Thing

Monique Morrissey at the Economic Policy Institute: Social Security Trustees Report Shows Why We Should Expand the Program — Not Look for Excuses to Cut It

Patti Greco at Bustle: Oceans 8 Star Sarah Paulson Is Ready

Kayleigh Donaldson at Pajiba: Earnest: Why We Still Owe Anne Hathaway an Apology

Shane Thomas at Media Diversified: [CN: Racism; classism] Raheem Sterling: English Football's Cultural Panic

Sarah Alexander at Ms.: [CN: Discussion of fat hatred] Welcome to Dietland

Mark Kaufman at Mashable: That Beluga Whale Certainly Doesn't Have Legs; Here's What It Does Have

Leave your links and recommendations in comments. Self-promotion welcome and encouraged!

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Trump Still Won't Even Acknowledge Automation

Donald Trump continues to brag on the regular about how he has magically made the economy great again.

In the White House's "500 Days of American Greatness" fact sheet, issued earlier this week to mark his presidential milestone, among the many demonstrable lies is this whopper: "The American economy is stronger today and American workers are better off thanks to [Donald] Trump's pro-growth agenda." And this one: "Since taking office, [Donald] Trump has advanced free, fair, and reciprocal trade deals that protect American workers, ending decades of destructive trade policies."

The word "automation" appears nowhere in the document.

Trump still makes deeply dishonest promises to the working class, even as more and more jobs paying livable wages are lost not to the familiar hobgoblins of bad trade deals or regulation or unionization or outsourcing, but to automation.

There are stories about automation every day. Following is just one I happened to read today.

Venessa Wong at BuzzFeed: McDonald's Kiosks Are the New Cashiers.

McDonald's will roll out self-order kiosks to 1,000 stores every quarter for the next two years, according to CEO Steve Easterbrook.

The kiosks were already in roughly 3,500 US McDonald's restaurants as of March, or about one-fourth of its domestic stores. They will be in about half of US restaurants by the end of 2018 and in all stores by 2020.

...As part of its modernization efforts, the fast-food chain is offering customers alternative ways of ordering, including through kiosks, the mobile app, and delivery through Uber Eats.
Its "modernization" efforts — which is quite the euphemism for what is in actuality its "profit protection" efforts.

You see: "In the first quarter of the year, McDonald's payroll and employee benefits were 30.2% of sales, up from 27.8% during the same period in 2017." So something has to give. And it's going to be the employees.

McDonald's assures us that their cashiers will still have jobs:
While [McDonald's spokesperson Terri Hickey] did not say roughly how many cashiers are being replaced by kiosks, she said the restaurants are shifting those workers to other roles: "[With] the addition of self-order kiosks, restaurants are transitioning some roles to more customer engaging positions like Guest Experience Leaders and table service."
Cool.

What solutions does Donald Trump have for this? Absolutely none. Because this — maximized corporate profits at the expense of workers who are disproportionately women/people of color — is precisely the objective of his economic agenda.

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