Two Ominous Signs of the Trump Regime's Expanding Authoritarianism

[Content Note: Nativism.]

In March of last year, I flagged that the Trump administration was signalling they would soon come after documented immigrants. As you may recall, it was something Steve Bannon said that raised the hairs on the back of my neck: "Don't we have a problem with legal immigration? Twenty percent of this country is immigrants. Is that not the beating heart of this problem?"

In the intervening year, Trump has empowered and institutionalized a nativist, white supremacist, anti-immigrant agenda that I have long been warning will underwrite a targeting of U.S. citizens.

In January, the administration did the previously unthinkable: Revoked a naturalized citizen's citizenship, reverting him to a lawful permanent resident and potentially making him subject to deportation. In May, a border patrol agent detained two women who are citizens and demanded to see ID because they were speaking Spanish in public. Recently, the president suggested that that people who protest state violence (police killings) should be removed from the country. And earlier this month, the Trump administration announced it was establishing a new federal office to strip citizenship from "Americans who are suspected of cheating to get their citizenship."

I have said before and will keep saying: This administration's (mis)treatment of undocumented immigrants is their canary in the coalmine. Their vile nativist campaign is intolerable on its face and must be strenuously resisted for its own reasons, but we must simultaneously understand that whatever they are doing to undocumented immigrants will be used to target others in the same way eventually. We must resist their nativist strategies not only because they are cruel and indecent and unjust, but also because if we fail to resist them, they will proliferate.

Indeed, they already are proliferating — and, as I have been urgently warning, the next target is documented immigrants.

Ronald Brownstein at CNN reports that the GOP increasingly opposes legal immigration (recall the above Bannon quote as you read this next part; emphasis mine):

The firestorm over the separation of children from their undocumented parents at the border has almost completely overshadowed another milestone in the long-running national immigration debate: Opposition to legal, as well as illegal, migration is hardening into a bedrock principle of the Republican Party.

With last week's vote in the House of Representatives on hardline immigration legislation from GOP Rep. Bob Goodlatte of Virginia, about three-fourths of Republicans in both the House and Senate have voted this year to cut legal immigration by about 40%. That would represent, by far, the largest reduction in legal immigration since Congress voted in 1924 to virtually shut off immigration for the next four decades.

And while each of the bills this year to slash legal immigration ultimately fell short of passage, their preponderant support among Republicans marked a telling shift in the GOP's center of gravity: The last time Congress seriously considered cuts in legal immigration during the 1990s, about three-fourths of Senate Republicans, and about one-third of House Republicans, opposed it.

"It tells me that the party is more interested in reducing the number of foreigners in the United States than in reducing illegal immigration," says David Bier, an immigration policy analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute.

...[T]he GOP's geographic center over the next few elections will tilt even more toward the places least affected by immigration. That would further strengthen the party's nativist elements at a time when Trump is already championing them. And that means, even as America inexorably grows more diverse, the party is likely to hurtle further away from the support for legal immigration championed by Republican presidents from Ronald Reagan through George W. Bush.

"I don't see any way to get back to it now that Republicans know where their base is on their issue," says Bier. "I would be surprised if you didn't see a more restrictive legal immigration plank than you already have in the GOP platform in 2020."
That is one ominous sign that Trump's authoritarianism, centered firmly around the violent othering of immigrants, is expanding. Here is the second, reported by Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast:
An immigration attorney said an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer broke her foot and locked her in a room early Tuesday morning in Kansas City, Missouri.

Andrea Martinez told The Daily Beast she was dropping off a 3-year-old immigrant at an ICE facility to be reunited with his mother before they are to be deported to Honduras. Martinez said she was accompanying the boy, his pregnant mother, and his father into an ICE field office but Martinez was denied access. That's when Martinez said she was "knocked to the ground and bloodied" by an ICE officer.

...Martinez said the ICE officer detained her and locked her in an office before calling the Federal Protective Service and "continually looked at my phone to make sure I wasn't recording him."

Martinez told The Daily Beast she suffered a fracture to her right foot.
Surely I'm not the only person who understands that government agents physically harming and detaining people who are trying to help the scapegoated population is both very familiar and very dangerous.

Responding to this nightmare with "civility" is not only insufficient; it's to be an accomplice to expanding malice.

I am part of an immigrant family, and I certainly hope you will make noise now. Do not wait.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound standing in the living room, his head a blur as he shakes his head
This picture definitely turned out exactly as I'd hoped.

The thing I love about this photo — despite that it wasn't what I'd intended to capture, lol — is how Dudley's front paw is also a blur as he does his doggy head shake. He always has to lift his paw when he does it, as if the power of the head shake cannot be contained in his head, but part of it has to shimmy down his leg and escape out of his toes.

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

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We Resist: Day 523

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: Trump Doesn't "Want Judges" and Another Note About Civility and Two Terrible SCOTUS Rulings and F#@k Civility.

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

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse. Covers entire section.]

James LaPorta and Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Detention Camps on Military Bases 'Smacks of Totalitarianism,' Troops Say.
Active-duty and retired U.S. military officers and enlisted personnel are expressing a sense of moral emergency over the Defense Department setting up detention camps for undocumented immigrants on military bases.

"It smacks of totalitarianism," said Steve Kleinman, a retired Air Force colonel and military intelligence officer. Raf Noboa, an Iraq War veteran and former Army sergeant, said he was astounded by the "enormous moral offense" the camps represent and which the military will be ordered to support.

"America's military once liberated people from concentration camps," Noboa told The Daily Beast. "It beggars the mind and our morality that it might be used to secure them."

..."The Department of Defense is participating in a scheme that appropriates the concept of military honor to perpetrate a human rights abuse. DOD's specific task might not be illegal, at least not unambiguously illegal. But DOD would be participating in hostage taking," [Paul Yingling, retired Army colonel and Iraq War veteran] said. At the Pentagon, Yingling added, senior officials "have to decide, right now, if they're going to participate in a clearly unethical and possibly illegal hostage scheme."
Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Leaked Audio Reveals Detention Center Staff Threatening Immigrant Kids over Speaking to the Media. "The audio and companion video, captured by a former employee at the facility and sent to MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, is the first footage not vetted or released by the federal government and comes as thousands of immigrant children separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border wait to hear what will happen to them next. ...The staffer appears to be threatening the children against speaking out, warning them that doing so could imperil their immigration case, forcing them to remain in detention for a long time, or suggesting that it could get them deported quickly."


Tina Vasquez at Rewire.News: The U.S. Has a Long History of Helping to 'Disappear' Central Americans. "Because of civil war and gang violence in the region, both of which are partly fueled by U.S. foreign policy, generations of Central Americans have been disappeared, presumably murdered in their countries of origin. Those who migrate to escape this violence are only met with more and sometimes never heard from again. A Border Patrol policy dating back to the 1990s purposely pushes migrants further into more dangerous, isolated areas of the desert, and has killed and disappeared countless people. Now, the Trump administration is specifically targeting Central American migrants by removing protections for children; ending the ability to claim asylum due to domestic and gang violence; and using its zero-tolerance policy to deport asylum seekers possibly to their deaths and disappear children into the immigration system."

* * *

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Chris Strohm and Shannon Pettypiece at Bloomberg: Mueller Poised to Zero in on Trump-Russia Collusion Allegations. "Special Counsel Robert Mueller is preparing to accelerate his probe into possible collusion between Donald Trump's presidential campaign and Russians who sought to interfere in the 2016 election, according to a person familiar with the investigation. Mueller and his team of prosecutors and investigators have an eye toward producing conclusions — and possible indictments — related to collusion by fall, said the person, who asked not to be identified. He'll be able to turn his full attention to the issue as he resolves other questions, including deciding soon whether to find that Trump sought to obstruct justice. Mueller's office declined to comment on his plans." *drums fingers*

Meanwhile...


My gut reaction to that video is that it helps Trump to have Emin muddying the waters with what will surely be dismissed as a false narrative of what happened created by "some dipshit who wants to make himself look more important than he actually is," as people who don't know or understand his role in the campaign will regard almost certainly regard him.

* * *

Sarah Ferris at Politico: U.S. Cruises Toward Record-Breaking Debt on Trump's Watch. "The nation's fiscal outlook looks ever bleaker, thanks in part to deficit spending during [Donald] Trump's first term, Congress' nonpartisan budget scorekeeper projected Tuesday. Within 16 years, the federal deficit is expected to be the largest in history, outpacing even the fiscal shortfalls that followed World War II, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates."


[CN: Christian Supremacy] Sarah Posner at the Nation: South Carolina Sought an Exemption to Allow a Foster-Care Agency to Discriminate Against Non-Christians. "South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster, a long-standing ally of [Donald] Trump, has personally intervened with the Department of Health and Human Services to secure a religious exemption from federal nondiscrimination laws for a Christian foster-care-placement agency in his state. Without the exemption, the placement agency, Miracle Hill Ministries, of Greenville, is at risk of losing its license because it refuses to place foster children with non-Christian families. Like other such agencies that participate in state foster-care programs that receive federal funds, Miracle Hill would normally be barred from discriminating on the basis of religion."

* * *

[CN: Sexual assault. Covers entire section.]


Staff at CBS News: Experts Say U.S. Among 10 Most Dangerous Nations for Women. "The United States has been ranked for the first time among the ten nations deemed to be the most dangerous for women by experts in the field. A survey by the Thomson Reuters Foundation of about 550 experts in women's issues around the globe labelled the U.S. the 10th most dangerous nation in terms of the risk of sexual violence, harassment and being coerced into sex."

I don't believe there's an entirely accurate way to rank this sort of thing, especially around issues of sexual violence which relies so heavily on reporting in a context with strong disincentives against reporting and strong stigma about public disclosure, but, with that caveat, this is quite a list: 1. India 2. Afghanistan 3. Syria 4. Somalia 5. Saudi Arabia 6. Pakistan 7. Democratic Republic of Congo 8. Yemen 9. Nigeria 10. United States.

And finally, your regular reminder that Terry Crews is a national treasure.


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

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F#@k Civility

For a very long time, I have been writing about the false equivalencies drawn, by pundits and by politicians, between progressive and conservative positions in the United States, in order to create an illusion of parity, rooted in a mendacious narrative about good faith disagreement, that does not exist.

I have written, again and again, over and over, about the inherent lack of equivalance between the left and the right, in both the nature of our policy positions and the tone of our public communications. It is not my opinion but a statement of fact that progressive policy positions broaden choice while conservative policy positions limit them. It is not my opinion but a statement of fact that progressive rhetoric does not seek to normalize eliminationist language. These are vast and irreconcilable differences between the "both sides" that we are meant to understand are similarly problematic.

The imagined similarities — designed to function so as to suggest that "both sides" are equally troublesome to the other — can only exist in a public square riddled with profoundly dishonest discourse that has obliterated truth beneath an insistence that opinion is all that matters, and all are equally valid.

The slow but determined erosion of the idea that there are facts and there are fictions, and they are not equivalent, is how we arrived at the point in which we now find ourselves — a point at which Democratic leaders and editorial boards of national newspapers are lecturing the resistance about their lack of civility toward an administration who is keeping babies in cages as a matter of national policy so aggressively unjustifiable that only wholesale lies can be invoked in its defense.

The trail leading backwards to the origins of the bothsideserism currently plaguing us, underwriting both silencing of legitimate criticism and the amplification of calls for "civility" directed as dissidents, is visible. Scattered all along its way are the scrawled traces of Cassandras who urgently deconstructed the harmful dynamic as it emerged.

Here, for example, is me writing on the subject thirteen years ago:

The media are further compromised in the current political climate because they're faced with an administration which repeatedly exhibits such wanton contempt for the truth, that genuine objectivity would often require calling the president, a member of his cabinet, and/or a close advisor a liar...

Giving ample time, as Ezra [Klein] suggests, to "everything going wrong in the country, they're certainly not buying the spin on Iraq, they're certainly not glossing over gas prices," isn't really the point. Ample time only matters if the time given produces something closely resembling reality, something genuinely objective, and the media has (repeatedly) mistaken objectivity for giving equal time to opposing sides, sans critique, irrespective of how fallacious one side may be. This tendency manifests itself most evidently in coverage of wedge issues like gay marriage and intelligent design, which weren't mentioned in Ezra's piece.

To wit, a recent AP story contained the following paragraph:
The theory of intelligent design says life on earth is too complex to have developed through evolution, implying that a higher power must have had a hand in creation. Nearly all scientists dismiss it as a scientific theory, and critics say it's nothing more than religion masquerading as science.
Two big problems here:

1. Identifying intelligent design as a "theory," while also referring to the theory of evolution in the same story, is, if I'm generous, bad application of language as theory is used in its scientific sense ("a set of related observations or events based upon proven hypotheses and verified multiple times by detached groups of researchers") in regard to evolution and in its layman's sense (a proposed but unverified explanation) in regard to intelligent design. If I'm not generous, it's a cynical attempt to imbue both sides of the debate with equal viability. While both sides have a right to their arguments, the suggestion that both are correct in their assertions their beliefs belong in a science class is sheer claptrap.

2. An intellectually honest statement about scientists' critique of intelligent design would be: All credible scientists dismiss it as scientific theory. Not "nearly all scientists." Any scientist who recognizes intelligent design as a scientific theory, considering it hasn't meant the minimum requirements for being categorized thusly, is utterly lacking in integrity. The suggestion that there are respected scientists within the scientific community who recognize intelligent design as a scientific theory is misleading at best and outright bullshit at worst.
That is a long excerpt, but an important one. None of this happened in a vacuum. It happened to the lingering echoes of critics who foresaw the deleterious effects such conjured parity would have on our institutions, our democracy, and eventually our very sustainability as a nation.

It happened as Cassandras who were shamed for our incivility pointed out that "policy differences" — one platform of which was increasingly defended using religion as a shield for otherwise indefensible bigotries — were, to an ever greater extent, becoming proxy battles for an overarching war over empathy: Its valued and governing presence on one side, or its contemptible status and resultant absence on the other.

Which brings me to the question that nags at me (and maybe you, too) a lot these days: How can "both sides" coexist as one nation, when the thing that divides us is not really policy difference at all, but fundamental differences in the way we express our own humanity and value others'?

On one side — and it's not in perfect alignment with progressive and conservative distinctions, but it's closer than not — are people who prioritize empathy and don't regard human variation and difference as something to fear or despise.

These folks support universal healthcare access, jobs with liveable wages, legal and accessible abortion, racial justice, gender justice, full LGBTQ equality, disability rights, voting rights, equal pay for all, restrictions on guns, regulations on capitalism, fair housing, public education, desegregation, criminal justice reforms, asylum, a fully funded social safety net, and other policies that broadly recognize the humanity of their fellow countrypersons.

It's the policy of empathy, struck through a rational self-interest driven by the understanding that we are all in the same leaky, creaky, unreliable boat — and the knowledge that a fortune is worth nothing at the bottom of the ocean, less than a single penny carried safely to shore.

On the other side are people who hold empathy in disdain, who sneer at the "weakness" of caring about strangers and regard the social contract as a zero sum game.

These folks support whatever personally benefits them, or, failing that, what will provide maximum harm to the people they've erroneously decided are responsible for their not having the life they want. Restrict healthcare to those who can afford it, good jobs are for white men, criminalize abortion, white is right, women are trash except their moms and wives, no gay marriage, trans people aren't real, more guns, fewer regulations, privatize schools, militarize the police, shut down the borders, no entitlements, fuck you.

It's the policy of selfishness, of privilege, of insularity, insecurity, ignorance, bigotry, hatred.

And we cannot change their minds. Not with all the civility, understanding, patient explanations, facts, appeals to reason, photos of infants in cages in all the world.

I could not change their minds any more than they could change mine.

The difference, however, despite the pundits' and politicians' insistence on concealing this rather significant reality, is that I want to enact laws that let us both live our lives as closely as possible to the way we'd like and they want me fucking dead.

At least some of them. Many of them. Large numbers. I've got 14 years of missives from their ranks to prove it.

Now we have reached the point where they control virtually everything — all three branches of the federal government, most state governments, an increasing share of the lower courts, and an abundance of media.

And it still isn't enough for them. Now we must bow. Be civil.

I will not. Our refusal to be civil is the one thing we've got left.

I don't know how we can coexist as a nation when we can't agree on the most fundamental issue of basic empathy. I'm not sure that we can. But what I do know is that I won't abet some sickening false harmony with authoritarian sadists by offering them my capitulation under the auspices of "civility."

Fuck civility. And fuck anyone who asks me for it.

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Two Terrible SCOTUS Rulings

[Content Note: Islamophobia; nativism; war on agency; misogyny.]

Goddammit. The Supreme Court issued two absolutely abysmal ruling this morning.

In NIFLA v. Becerra, the majority blocked a California law which required anti-choice nonprofits to inform pregnant patients about the availability of free or low-cost abortions elsewhere and disclose their inability to provide healthcare services and medical assistance. In other words, the law required anti-choice outfits masquerading as clinics to disclose that they aren't actually clinics at all.

But SCOTUS struck down the law, because free speech. The complete decision [PDF].

In a just world, this ruling would make it harder for anti-choice legislators and their "force doctors to lie to patients" laws. But this isn't a just world, so that isn't going to happen.

Instead, anti-abortion outfits will be allowed to lie to patients because free speech, and doctors will be forced to lie to patients because fetuses are valued more highly than the people carrying them.

In Trump v. Hawaii, the majority sided with the Trump administration in its arguments in defense of the Muslim ban, holding than the ban "is within president's authority under immigration laws and challengers are unlikely to prevail on establishment clause claim because the ban is justified by legitimate national-security concerns."

The complete decision [PDF].

Fucking hell. This administration is just a relentless nightmare. Sob.

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Another Note About Civility

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Trump Doesn't "Want Judges"

Last night, Donald Trump held another Make America Clap for Me Again rally in South Carolina, where he spent a good part of his time at the podium ranting about late-night talk show hosts and various other garbage. It will be his litany of grievances with the entertainment industry that gets the headlines (including the article from which I am quoting), but he said something rather more important than calling Jimmy Kimmel a talentless hack or whatever:

Yet all of Trump's musings about the pop-culture landscape paled in comparison to his continued airing of grievances regarding the U.S. judicial system. In claiming, dubiously, that an official came to him "three days ago" requesting an additional 5,000 judges "on the border," Trump asked, without a hint of irony, "What other country has judges?"

"I don't want judges," the president added, as the crowd roared. "I want ICE and border patrol agents."
The authors correctly note that Trump's meandering spleen-venting "paled in comparison" to the President of the United States bellowing that he doesn't "want judges," and yet these were the final two paragraphs in the piece, rather than the lede.

Again, I want to note that there was not actually an immigration crisis in the U.S. that warranted Trump's obsessive focus on the southern border. It's manufactured fear and straight-up lies, used to justify a nativist agenda which itself will serve only as precursor to a much broader and more comprehensive white supremacist authoritarian agenda.

That could not be clearer in Trump's comments. He wants to deny due process to immigrants, and he's expecting his base (and the rest of his cowardly, despicable party) to support that rank authoritarian move because he's nurtured their seething hatred of immigrants, who have been scapegoated as misdirection so the Republican Party can avoid accountability for their own reprehensible policies that have decimated jobs paying livable wages and offering benefits.

Trump won't stop there. If he is allowed to deny due process to immigrants along the southern border, citizens he doesn't like will be next.

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Open Thread


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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Kathy_A: "Who was your favorite boss? ('Myself' works here!)"

Myself, for sure.

And I've had good bosses before (e.g. Helene), but I've been my own boss for a very long time now, and it's a pretty unbeatable working relationship, lol.

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Monday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by stripey tanktops.

Recommended Reading:

Sue Kerr at Pgh Lesbian Correspondents: [Content Note: Racism; police brutality; death] Concrete Ways to Support Pittsburgh Protestors Who are Seeking #Justice4Antwon After the Police Killing of #AntwonRose

Kenrya Rankin at Colorlines: [CN: Racism; police brutality; death; trauma] STUDY: Police Killings of Unarmed Black People Traumatize Black Communities

Jorge Rivas at Splinter: [CN: Nativism; racism; internment; child abuse; trauma] A Former Japanese Internment Camp Prisoner on the Dire Effects of Putting Kids in Detention

Melanie Ehrenkranz at Gizmodo: [CN: Domestic violence; stalking] Domestic Abusers Are Increasingly Weaponizing Smart Home Tech

Jackson McHenry at Vulture: [CN: Sexual assault; victim-blaming] Toni Collette and Merritt Wever Will Team Up on Netflix's Unbelievable

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Massive Keith Haring Mural, Hidden for 30 Years, Has Been Rescued and Revealed

Yasmin Tayag at Inverse: Here's the Story Behind the Mesmerizing Blue Sand Dune NASA Snapped on Mars

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

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This Rhetoric Enables Trump


If this is the best the Senate Democratic leader has to offer in this moment, he needs to step the fuck out of the way so that someone who actually wants to lead can.

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OMG SHOEZ

Listen, the news is tough, and we all need moments of escape from the horror to recuperate and prepare for the next onslaught, and I can talk about shoes all the livelong day, so welcome to the OMG SHOEZ thread.

Got a favorite pair of shoes you want to share? Bought a new pair about which you're super excited? Have a recommendation to make, or want to caution us away from a purchase you regret? Want to solicit suggestions for a specific event, a foot issue, an elusive something for which you've been hunting? Having trouble finding something particular on a budget? Have at it in comments!

* * *

image of my lower legs, clad in jeans, and my feet clad in shiny black flats
Kenneth Cole's New York Westley Loafer

I love the black ones just as much as the pink ones. And I'm really excited to have some new flats that I adore, because my beloved purple Docs are — sob! —getting old and starting to get cruddy-looking after all the miles I've put on them, so I can't really wear them anywhere nice anymore.

And it took me a shockingly long time to find flats that were just as comfy and just as cool to be their replacement.

Not that I'm getting rid of the Docs, of course. I will wear those things until they fall apart around my toes, lol. Just not to dinner any longer.

So, that's what up with me! What's up with you?

(As always: I am not affiliated with Kenneth Cole in any way, nor have I received anything in exchange for recommending their shoes. I just really like 'em! I'm also not affiliated in any way with nor receiving compensation from Shoes.com.)

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt resting her chin on the sofa next to where Sophie the Torbie Cat is curled up
"Wanna play with me, Sophs?"

The answer is always no, lol. No amount of patient pleading nor elaborate play-bowing nor enticement with toys can convince Sophie that playing with Zelda is a good idea. But Zelda keeps trying, gently, because she is a good girl. And at least she has me to play with in the meantime.

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

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We Resist: Day 522

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 Unbearable Pouting of Jimmy Fallon and I Write Letters.

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

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse. Covers entire section.]

Maria Sacchetti, Kevin Sieff, and Marc Fisher at the Washington Post: Separated Immigrant Children Are All over the U.S. Now, Far from Parents Who Don't Know Where They Are. "The children have been through hell. They are babies who were carried across rivers and toddlers who rode for hours in trucks and buses and older kids who were told that a better place was just beyond the horizon. And now they live and wait in unfamiliar places: big American suburban houses where no one speaks their language; a locked shelter on a dusty road where they spend little time outside; a converted Walmart where each morning they are required to stand and recite the Pledge of Allegiance, in English, to the country that holds them apart from their parents. ...U.S. authorities are compiling mug shots of the children in detention. Immigration lawyers who have seen the pictures say some of them show children in tears."


And a pointed reminder that this is all manufactured outrage to justify a nativist, white supremacist agenda:


Much of Trump's rhetoric around MS-13 is also rooted in lies. Hannah Dreier at ProPublica: I've Been Reporting on MS-13 for a Year: Here Are the 5 Things Trump Gets Most Wrong. "This all matters because the gang really is terrorizing a portion of the population: young Latino immigrants in a few specific communities." It matters hugely that Trump gets this wrong, deliberately so, because he uses his mischaracterization of MS-13 to stoke fear among his white base and justify his reactionary policies.

The truth is, MS-13 is mostly a danger to young Latinx immigrants — and less so than Trump himself is.

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[CN: Racism; misogyny; threats]


Courtney Kube and Carol E. Lee at NBC News: Mattis Is out of the Loop and Trump Doesn't Listen to Him, Say Officials. "The president is relying less and less on the advice of one of the longest-serving members of his cabinet, the officials said. 'They don't really see eye to eye,' said a former senior White House official who has closely observed the relationship. ...'He's never been one of the go-tos in the gang that's very close to the president,' a senior White House official said. 'But the president has a lot of respect for him.' In recent months, however, the president has cooled on Mattis, in part because he's come to believe his defense secretary looks down on him and slow-walks his policy directives, according to current and former administration officials."

1. So much for that much-lauded "moderating influence" Mattis was going to provide. 2. How many of those "current and former administration officials" were named Tronald Dump and Beve Stannon?

Robert Barnes at the Washington Post: Supreme Court Sends Case on North Carolina Gerrymandering Back to Lower Court. "The Supreme Court on Monday sent back to a lower court a decision that Republicans in North Carolina had gerrymandered the state's congressional districts to give their party an unfair advantage. The lower court will need to decide whether the plaintiffs had the proper legal standing to bring the case. The Supreme Court recently considered the question of partisan gerrymandering in cases from Wisconsin and Maryland. The court has never found a map so infected by politics that it violated the constitutional rights of voters."

Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: Gorsuch Says He'll Repeal and Replace the Fourth Amendment with Something Terrific. "As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump offered a vague promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act with 'something terrific.' On Friday, Neil Gorsuch, who occupies the seat on the Supreme Court that Senate Republicans held open until Trump could fill it, brought a similar amount of thoughtfulness and coherence to the question of when police should be allowed to conduct a search without a warrant. Gorsuch's dissenting opinion in Carpenter v. United States is an odd piece of writing. It reads less like a judicial opinion and more like the sort of essay that an overworked law professor might toss off after they suddenly realize that they have a symposium paper due at the end of the week." (Just go read the whole piece, because YIKES.)

Nicole Lafond at TPM: Restaurant That Trump Called 'Filthy' Actually Has a Glowing Health Record. "Despite [Donald] Trump's dubious claim that a restaurant's exterior appearance will unfailingly mirror its interior cleanliness, the restaurant in Lexington, Virginia that gave White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders the boot over the weekend actually has a glowing health record, according to county health department documents. ...Red Hen's last inspection was completed on Feb. 6, 2018, when it received a clean bill of health with no violations or required follow up visits. ...While much larger than the Red Hen, by contrast, the kitchen of Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort was hit with 13 health violations in April 2017 and was slapped with 15 violations in the club's two kitchens in a follow-up visit in November 2017."

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[CN: White supremacy]

Sebastian Murdock at the Huffington Post: White Woman Threatened to Call Cops on 8-Year-Old Girl Selling Water. "An apparent competition over who can threaten to call the police on people of color for no good reason is really ramping up. In a video posted to Instagram on Saturday, a white woman in San Francisco was captured apparently calling the police on a nonwhite girl who's 8 years old. The child's supposed crime? Selling water 'illegally.' But the woman...said that 'this has no racial component to it' and claims she only 'pretended' to call the police. ...'I have no problem with enterprising young women. I want to support that little girl. It was all the mother and just about being quiet,' she said."


Adrienne Mahsa Varkiani at Think Progress: White Woman Who Threatened to Call Cops on 8-Year-Old Black Girl Says She's 'Discriminated Against'. "She added that she has been getting threats online and now 'feels discriminated against.' 'It was stupid,' she said. 'I completely regret that I handled that so poorly. It was completely stress-related, and I should have never confronted her. That was a mistake, a complete mistake. Please don't make me sound horrible.' ...Ettel is the latest in a long list of white women calling the police on people of color for ordinary things, like holding a barbecue in a public park, napping in their dormitory's common room, and wearing black clothes during a university campus tour."

Fellow white women: Please stop calling police on people of color, except in cases of extreme emergencies. You are risking their getting arrested, harassed, harmed, and/or killed. Stop.

* * *

Gabriel Debenedetti at NYMag: Where Is Barack Obama? Good question. "Obama is monitoring the destruction, but he spends the bulk of his time on two projects, building his foundation and writing a memoir." Oh.

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

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I Write Letters

[Content Note: Bigotry.]

Dear Kirstjen Nielsen, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and Pals:

If you don't want to be heckled while dining or refused service at restaurants or treated like a pariah in the dating world or in various other ways regarded like a toxic turd, then perhaps you should consider not very publicly dedicating your life to enabling a white supremacist, nativist, patriarchal, disablist, classist, vile authoritarian regime.

Really. That's all you have to do. Don't be a fucking Nazi.

It's not like you are being denied on the basis of your immutable identities. No matter how much you caterwaul about "leftist intolerance" and try to conflate political beliefs with intrinsic characteristics, the refusal to be served because you've chosen a life of hatred, malice, and deceit is not akin to marginalized people being denied far more important things than a restaurant reservation, like healthcare and housing and jobs and bodily autonomy and marriage and civil rights.

Literally all you have to do is not be execrable scum on an internationally visible platform.

Then you can enjoy all the burgers, or whatever.

Until then, I guess you can eat cake.

No Love,
Liss

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The Unbearable Pouting of Jimmy Fallon

In September of 2016, two months before the presidential election, Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon welcomed Donald Trump as a guest. During the interview, Fallon famously ruffled Trump's hair.

It's tough to remember, especially with every day of Trump's presidency feeling like an entire eternity of horror, where we were in the campaign when that happened.

But it happened just two weeks after Trump's chief opponent, Hillary Clinton, had given a powerful address about the dangerous white nationalism being promulgated by Trump, during which she urgently warned: "He would form a deportation force to round up millions of immigrants and kick them out of the country. He'd abolish the bedrock constitutional principle that says if you're born in the United States, you're an American citizen. He says that children born in America to undocumented parents are, quote, 'anchor babies' and should be deported. Millions of them. And he'd ban Muslims around the world — 1.5 billion men, women, and children — from entering our country just because of their religion."

That's where we were in the campaign two years ago. The point at which Trump's rival felt obliged to dedicate an entire speech along the campaign trail to detail that her opponent is a white supremacist.

And then Fallon ruffled Trump's hair.

At the time, I wrote: "OMG YOU GUYS DONZO LET JIMMY RUFFLE HIS HAIR! HOW ADORBZ! I guess he's not a supremely dangerous white nationalist AFTER ALL! He's really just a big lovable and super relatable dude!"

Because that's where we were in the campaign. It was not merely "tone deaf" in retrospect; it was aggressively "tone deaf" at the time.

A year ago, the New York Times published one of its classic White Men Redemption Stories about Fallon, whose ratings plummeted after the hair-toussling incident. It followed the usual formula: The writer made sure readers understood Fallon is "boyish" and "self-deprecating" and other things that are meant to convey that he is harmless. That the undilutedly privileged straight white cis man hosting a flagship late-night network talkshow doesn't have any real power, geez.

And Fallon made sure to convey that our criticisms had hurt his feelings: "If I let anyone down, it hurt my feelings that they didn't like it. I got it. ...I don't want to be bullied into not being me, and not doing what I think is funny. Just because some people bash me on Twitter, it's not going to change my humor or my show. ...I'm a people pleaser. If there's one bad thing on Twitter about me, it will make me upset. So, after this happened, I was devastated. I didn't mean anything by it. I was just trying to have fun."

Poor Jimmy.

It was, perhaps, not received as well as he'd hoped or anticipated. Surprisingly (to Fallon, apparently), tousling the hair of a white supremacist authoritarian does not age well — especially when that white supremacist authoritarian has spent the interceding time enacting a white supremacist authoritarian agenda.

So now Fallon is back, and complaining even harder that he's gotten a bad break just for doing something attention-seeking for ratings which was then widely noticed, as designed, and garnering in response deserved censure.

Scott Feinberg at the Hollywood Reporter quotes Fallon from their interview on THR's "Awards Chatter" podcast [Content Note: Reference to self-harm]:

"I did not do it to 'normalize' him or to say I believe in his political beliefs or any of that stuff," says Jimmy Fallon at the point, during our recording of an episode of The Hollywood Reporter's 'Awards Chatter' podcast, when our conversation inevitably arrives at the Sept. 15, 2016, episode of The Tonight Show.

...It was, it turned out, the biggest mistake of Fallon's career. He almost immediately began taking incoming fire on social media from people who felt that Trump was an existential threat to America whom Fallon had 'normalized' for people who were still on the fence about him. "It just got bigger and out of control," Fallon recalls, speaking in his office at 30 Rock. Then came the shots from Fallon's colleagues. "I saw other comedians from other shows making fun of me on Twitter and I go, 'Okay, now I'm just gonna get off,'" he says. "They know the show. I'm just doing five hours a week. I get in at 10 in the morning, I work 'til seven at night and I'm just trying to make a funny show. [Addressing them:] 'You know the grind and you know me. Of all the people in the world, I'm one of the good people — I mean, really. You don't even know what you're talking about if you say that I'm evil or whatever.' But people just jump on the train, and some people don't even want to hear anything else. They're like, 'No, you did that!' You go, 'Well, just calm down and just look at the whole thing and actually see my body of work.'"

..."It was definitely a down time," Fallon somberly says of the period after Trump's last appearance on his show. "And it's tough for morale. There's 300 people that work here, and so when people are talking that bad about you and ganging up on you, in a really gang-mentality..." Choking up, he continues, "You go, 'Alright, we get it. I heard you. You made me feel bad. So now what? Are you happy? I'm depressed. Do you want to push me more? What do you want me to do? You want me to kill myself? What would make you happy? Get over it.'" Fallon adds, "I'm sorry. I don't want to make anyone angry — I never do and I never will. It's all in the fun of the show. I made a mistake. I'm sorry if I made anyone mad. And, looking back, I would do it differently."
"Of all the people in the world, I'm one of the good people." That is just a real thing that Jimmy Fallon said, while also insisting that people should not criticize him because he works really hard and normalizing a white supremacist authoritarian was all in good fun and now he's depressed because everyone is so mean to him.

He's one of the good people, even though he obdurately refuses to accept or even acknowledge that people did not criticize him to make him feel bad, but because he carelessly did a very dangerous and despicable thing for ratings, without any regard for how awful it was, and he continues to insist it was all just a bit of fun and couldn't possibly have been dangerous or despicable because he didn't intend for it to be anything but silly, and his critics are monsters who keep bringing it up because we want him dead, not because it will remain an issue as long as he continues to treat it with such deflective flippancy.

He wasn't responsible in the first place, and he isn't responsible now. Pout.

And what Fallon further won't realize, stuck in his bubble of self-righteousness, is that this fuck-up for which he refuses to be meaningfully accountable is emblematic of a larger lack of media accountability — from CNN lingering endlessly on Trump's empty podium to CBS chair Les Moonves gleefully declaring that Trump's candidacy "may not be good for America, but it's damn good for CBS," from coverage of Hillary Clinton's email for nearly 600 consecutive days to media decisions to withhold from public view editing room footage of Trump behaving badly, and on and on and on — and the media's collective shirking of responsibility for What They Did is encapsulated, in some way, in Fallon's refusal to demonstrate shame for an image that none of us can forget.

screen shot of Jimmy Fallon ruffling Donald Trump's hair, while they both smile

And naturally Trump took to Twitter to respond to Fallon's latest round of whining, tweeting: ".@jimmyfallon is now whimpering to all that he did the famous 'hair show' with me (where he seriously messed up my hair), & that he would have now done it differently because it is said to have 'humanized' me-he is taking heat. He called & said 'monster ratings.' Be a man Jimmy!"

One of the good people called to tell the white supremacist whose hair he tousled "monster ratings."

Or maybe not. Because the white supremacist is also a goddamned liar. Which was also well-known at the time.

Fallon responded by tweeting: "In honor of the President's tweet I'll be making a donation to RAICES in his name."

Which is a good thing to do. (Even more so when it's not just out of vengeance or guilt.)

Another good thing to do would be for Jimmy Fallon to stop casting his critics as unprincipled gremlins who just want to hurt him and instead regard us as people who are legitimately angry at his abetting the rise of a white supremacist authoritarian and then failing utterly and repeatedly to hold himself accountable for that catastrophically bad decision. He needs to own his role in this mess.

And if he is unable to bring himself to do that, then he needs to shut the fuck up about it forever. Because his public pouting is obscene. There are children in cages, Jimmy. They can't attend your pity party, and no decent person wants to.

[Related Reading: It's Like I Don't Even Care About Unifying in Opposition to Donald Trump.]

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Film Corner: Won't You Be My Neighbor?


Shakers, I confess to you that I started crying about 30 seconds into the film and didn't stop until the very end. For a whole lot of different reasons.

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Open Thread

image of a purple sofa

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

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of the exterior of a pub which has been photoshopped to be named 'The Beloved Community Pub'
[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

Belly up to the bar,
and be in this space together.

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Programming Note

I have friends coming to visit for a long weekend, so I'll be posting the pub shortly and taking off tomorrow and Friday.

I realize there are rumors that Trump may fire Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on Friday, so if that happens, or anything else of equivalent seismic horror, I will open a thread for discussion.

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