Bernie Sanders, What Are You Even Doing Now?


Closed primaries are a safeguard against ratfucking.

Requiring primary voters to be registered with a party to participate in the primary does not guarantee that no one will register just to try to sway a primary in a troubling direction, but it is a major deterrent which prevents that from happening en masse.

Anyone advocating for open primaries and caucuses while a foreign adversary is meddling in our elections, and the sitting president and his governing party are doing nothing to stop it, does not give a single fuck about the state of our democracy. He only cares about what benefits him personally.

Not exactly news about Bernie Sanders. Just more proof.

[Previously: In the News; Oh, Team Bernie; Kentucky and Oregon Primary Wrap-Up; and Great Point.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat and Olivia the White Farm Cat each sitting in an orange arm chair
"Thanks for the new chairs, Two-Legs!"

Iain and I have been working on a room that has just been sitting there unused since we moved in almost three years ago, and it's a really beautiful living space that we've wanted to use, but for various reasons are only getting to it now. Anyway! Pictured are two chairs we purchased for sitting at a folding table for morning coffee or board games or whathaveyou, and naturally the cats are helpfully covering them in cat hair before we've even had a chance to use them, lol.

Thank Maude for Dyson vacuums!

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 540

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 Blasts Theresa May on His Wrecking Ball Tour Through Europe and Rosenstein Announces New Indictments.

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

Caitlin MacNeal at TPM: Trump Bashes CNN, NBC at Press Conference with Theresa May. "When NBC's Kristen Welker asked Trump about his comments bashing his NATO allies, including May, Trump accused Welker of misrepresenting what he said. 'That's such dishonesty reporting because — of course that happens to be NBC which is possibly worse than CNN, possibly,' he declared before answering the question. Later, CNN's Jim Acosta attempted to ask trump a question, and Trump refused to take a question from the network and instead called on Fox News' John Roberts. 'No, no. John Roberts. Go ahead. CNN's fake news,' Trump said. 'I don't take questions from CNN — CNN is fake news. I don't take questions from CNN. John Roberts of Fox. Let's go to a real network. John, let's go.'"

Donald Trump has been waging a war on the press since virtually the moment he announced his candidacy in July 2015, and yet still the press behave like absolute cowards when he does stuff like this.

The way Trump talked to Welker and Acosta was shameful. The rest of the reporters should have got up and walked out en masse in protest of an authoritarian waging war on one of their colleagues. Instead, they were silent — and he went on to bully another reporter into removing his hat.

So afraid to lose their access that they'll let us all lose a free press instead.

* * *

Carol E. Lee, Courtney Kube, and Geoff Bennett at NBC News: Pentagon Goes into 'Damage Control' Mode to Reassure NATO Allies. "Hours after [Donald] Trump departed NATO headquarters Thursday, U.S. military leaders embarked on a full-scale 'damage control' operation with calls to their counterparts across Europe to reassure them that America will abide by its defense commitments in the region. ...The overall message from senior military officials in a series of phone calls to members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has been that U.S. military bases in their countries will remain open and American troop levels in the region will not be reduced." JFC.


[Content Note: War on agency; chipping away at Roe] Jessica Glenza at the Guardian: How Anti-Abortion Activists Use Cutting Edge Science to Justify Ever Stricter Laws. "Dr Edward Bell treats the tiniest babies at University of Iowa children's hospital, pre-term infants who weigh one pound or less, and whose chances of survival are minute. One of his pet projects is tracking the smallest in the world, which sometimes attracts attention from abortion opponents. ...Joni Ernst, the fiercely anti-abortion Republican U.S. senator from Iowa, sent her staffers to interview Bell. Of interest was an article published in the , which reignited debate about whether infants as young as 22 weeks old may survive if aggressively treated. 'Of course their interest was in how it might apply to this political issue,' said Bell, referring to abortion rights. 'Although they didn't actually come out and say that,' he said, he believes their interest was clear: 'What does this mean for restricting women's access to abortion?'"

Carol D. Leonnig, Josh Dawsey, and Ashley Parker at the Washington Post: Jared Kushner Lacks Security Clearance Level to Review Some of the Nation's Most Sensitive Intelligence in White House Role. "For the first year of the Trump administration, Kushner had nearly blanket access to highly classified intelligence, even as he held an interim security clearance and awaited the completion of his background investigation. But when White House security officials granted him a permanent clearance in late May, he was granted only 'top secret' status — a level that does not allow him to see some of the country's most closely guarded intelligence, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss security issues."


Exactly so. Further to that: Kushner shouldn't have any clearance at all. He repeatedly lied on his financial disclosure forms, obliging multiple revisions, which is a federal crime. He shouldn't even have a job in federal government, no less a security clearance.

Speaking of people who collude with Russia...


Here's one of many terrific passages from the above article: "In May 2018, the Stein campaign also paid $9,325 in attorney fees to Miller & Chevalier. In August 2017, Politico described it as 'a boutique firm in Washington' that had taken on the case of Paul Manafort, the former Trump campaign chairman. Manafort, accused of by special counsel Robert Mueller of money laundering, is currently in jail." Yeah. Stein is using he same attorneys as Manafort. Cool.

Still on the subject of Russian collaborators...


* * *

Ari Ezra Waldman at Towleroad: SCOTUS Nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Other Radical Views. "Judge Brett Kavanaugh is not only a threat to a woman’s right to choose and to LGBTQ equality. He is a danger to the government's ability to regulate pretty much anything. ...Judge Kavanaugh has also staked out a radically conservative approach to gun rights. ...As a judge on the DC Circuit, Kavanaugh has written or dissented in many cases involving the environment. In almost all of them, he has sought to rein in the power of the Obama-era EPA. Kavanaugh also has a broad view of executive power. ...In labor and employment law cases, Kavanaugh favors big business. ...Kavanaugh is at the extreme right of the legal community, and he is about to cement an extreme right majority on the Supreme Court." I highly recommend heading over the read this entire piece. I know this sentiment has become trite in the Trump Era, but it may be even worse than you'd imagined.


* * *

[CN: Nativism; abuse] Eugene Robinson at the Washington Post: The Trump Administration Kidnapped Children; Someone Should Go to Jail.
The Trump administration's kidnapping — that's the proper word — of the children of would-be migrants should be seen as an ongoing criminal conspiracy. Somebody ought to go to jail.

Under a federal court order, all 103 children under the age of 5 who were taken from their families at the border were supposed to be returned by Tuesday. The government missed that deadline, and I wish U.S. District Judge Dana M. Sabraw, who issued the order, had held somebody in contempt. One candidate would be Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who on Tuesday had the gall to describe the administration's treatment of immigrant children as "one of the great acts of American generosity and charity."

...Given that the intention from the beginning was clearly to frighten and intimidate would-be migrants from Central America, why should anyone believe that the administration is acting or speaking in good faith now? Why should we accept at face value that exactly 103 children under 5 were seized? How can we be sure there is only one case in which officials can't find or identify the parents? Given that it has taken weeks to return just 57 children, what is the likelihood the government kept adequate records?

This is an administration, after all, that conducts immigration court proceedings, or travesties, in which children too young to know their ABCs are expected to represent themselves without the benefit of legal counsel. Imagine your 3-year-old child or grandchild in that situation. Now tell me how adopting child abuse as a policy is supposed to Make America Great Again.

...I don't think they know how many kids they ripped away from their families, and I believe it is inevitable some children will never again see their parents. The fact that my government would commit such a crime weighs on my conscience as an American. [Donald] Trump and his accomplices, from all appearances, couldn't be prouder.
Tell me how adopting child abuse as a policy is supposed to Make America Great Again. Indeed.

[CN: Nativism; abuse] Bob Ortega at CNN: Migrants Describe Hunger and Solitary Confinement at For-Profit Detention Center. "The Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, Washington, which US Immigration and Customs Enforcement said held 1,495 detainees as of June 30, sits within a toxic sludge field and EPA Superfund site where residential construction has been barred. It has been the target of more than a dozen hunger strikes in recent years, each involving from a dozen to hundreds of detainees, over complaints of inadequate food and medical care, among other issues. Its operator, Florida-based The GEO Group, is fighting two lawsuits in Washington over alleged labor-law violations for a dollar-a-day migrant detainee work program it calls voluntary. And the center has in recent years faced one of the highest number of complaints about alleged physical and sexual assaults against detainees of any facility of its kind in the nation, according to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement data obtained through public records requests by the advocacy group Freedom for Immigrants."

[CN: Nativism; abuse; self-harm] Elham Khatami at ThinkProgress: Mexican National Commits Suicide While in ICE Custody in Georgia. "Forty-year-old Efrain De La Rosa, a Mexican national who was held in an ICE detention facility in Georgia, committed suicide and was pronounced dead late Tuesday evening, making him the eighth person in ICE custody to die in the 2018 fiscal year. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency confirmed De La Rosa's death in a press release Thursday afternoon. His death is the third at the Stewart Detention Facility in Lumpkin, Georgia in only 15 months, according to nonprofit advocacy organization Project South." My condolences to his family and friends. I am so sorry.

[CN: Nativism; anti-Blackness] Shamira Ibrahim at NYMag: Patricia Okoumou and the Threat to Black Immigrants. "The effects have been particularly acute for Black immigrants, who are one of the fastest growing demographics in the United States. Since 28 percent of Sub-Saharan African immigrants have entered the nation as refugees or asylees between 2000 and 2013 — statuses that can only be applied for upon entry to the U.S. — the family-separation policy poses significant risk to Black immigrant populations. ...Adding to the problems faced by black refugees and asylees is the pending expiration of the eligibility to live and work in the United States via Temporary Protected Status for many countries. ...Black immigrants face the dual threat of bias in the criminal-justice system and cruelty in the immigration and deportation system. ...As a result, more than 20 percent of all noncitizens who face deportation on criminal grounds are black, and black people are ultimately deported at a higher rate."

[CN: Anti-Blackness; white supremacy; class warfare]


[CN: Anti-Blackness; police misconduct] Sophie Weiner at Splinter: Florida Police Department Allegedly Told Officers to Frame Black People. "Biscayne Park, a suburb north of Miami, is at the center of a scandal over police corruption that has led to the indictment in federal court of former police chief Raimundo Atesiano and two officers, according to an exhaustive report from the Miami Herald. They are charged with falsely accusing a teenager of four burglaries in order to improve the town's crime stats. An investigation into the police department from 2014 included many more disturbing details of the department's practices. The Herald writes: 'Records obtained by the Miami Herald suggest that during the tenure of former chief Raimundo Atesiano, the command staff pressured some officers into targeting random black people to clear cases. 'If they have burglaries that are open cases that are not solved yet, if you see anybody black walking through our streets and they have somewhat of a record, arrest them so we can pin them for all the burglaries,' one cop, Anthony De La Torre, said in an internal probe ordered in 2014.'"

[CN: Racism; gaslighting] Staff at the Grio: Angela Rye Bursts into Tears While Talking About Racism on CNN. "'At this point I'm emotional. We're constantly gas lit. I'm told everyday that I'm on air that I'm racist because I call out racism. That is maddening to me. ...We're supposed to be talking about a 12-year-old boy who was just trying to deliver newspapers and the police are called on him in Ohio where Tamir Rice was killed and the same age. I want to be acknowledged and seen that this is not okay for our children. This is not okay for the future direction of this country,' Rye said."

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

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Rosenstein Announces New Indictments

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein just began a press conference in which he is announcing indictments against 12 Russian intelligence officers related to cyber-operations, including hacking and dissemination of information gathered via cyberattacks, against the DNC and state election infrastructure, with the intent to influence the 2016 election.

I will update with additional information shortly.

UPDATE: Some thoughts.

1. Here is the actual indictment.

2. Rosenstein made clear that there was no allegation in the indictment that Americans conspired with the Russian intelligence officers, nor that any vote totals were affected as a result of the cyberattacks.

Note the careful language there: Many folks' takeaway will be that no Americans did conspire, and that no vote totals were affected, but that is not what Rosenstein said. He said only that the indictment alleges neither of those things.

I'm angry that Rosenstein went to such great lengths to imply that there was no vote tampering, while not actually saying that (because he can't). That's certainly the impression with which most people will be left, though, despite the fact that, in some states, like Georgia, the election data has been destroyed, so we'll never know if the vote totals were altered by hacking.

3. Rosenstein was also very determined to avoid saying to which candidate's benefit the Russian agents interfered.

4. AND YET:


That person is almost certainly Roger Stone, who has yet to be indicted.

5. The timing of this presser, seemingly designed to maximize the general public's ignorance or indifference to its contents, combined with Rosenstein's mendacious spin and commentary explicitly reassuring to Trump and his allies, is deeply troubling to me.


All of this convinces me even further that the objective of Bob Mueller's investigation is no longer (if it ever was) to deliver meaningful accountability to a treasonous president and his accomplices, but instead to create the illusion that our institutions still work, long enough to give Republicans time to consolidate power behind this presidency, ensuring that the findings will never matter, anyway.

I hope I am wrong and fear that I'm not.

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Happy National French Fry Day!

image of french fries
[Image care of Pixabay.]

Today is National French Fry Day! And because I love french fries and am desperate to write about anything besides Donald Trump and the fall of the American Democracy, here is a thread about french fries! Huzzah!

I love french fries in just about any form, except for haystack and shoestring french fries, which aren't even french fries, as far as I'm concerned. Get out of here with those too-thin potato sticks!

Skins on, skins off, thin cut, thick cut, steak fries, British chips — I like 'em all. And I have definite preferences about the condiment with which I like to eat different types of fries.

If you set thin cut, skin off fries in front of me, I'll take just ketchup, preferably cold.

If you set thick cut, skin off fries in front of me, I'll take a mix of ketchup and sriracha mayo — or a mix of ketchup and mustard. Something in the mix to add a bit of a kick.

If you set crinkle fries in Old Bay in front of me, I'll take melty cheese.

If you set skin off steak fries in front of me, I'll take tzatziki sauce — thanks to the suggestion of a waitress at a local Mediterranean place, who turned me on to that combo and I have never looked back.

If you set British chips in front of me me, I'll take curry sauce, please!

Speaking of chips with curry sauce, one time Deeks and I went to what was supposed to be a British pub in Baltimore, but was really just a sports pub that was lazily British-themed. I asked if they had chips with curry sauce, and the server said she'd see what she could do. A few minutes later, she returned to the table with a plate of grocery-store tortilla chips accompanied by a small cup of cold water into which had been dumped a bunch of curry powder. That was like four years ago, and we still haven't stopped laughing.

Anyway!

All of the above particular combinations are my favorites, but I eat any kind of fries any kind of way, basically.

I just won't eat them dipped in mayo. If that's your jam, you do you! But plain mayo isn't getting anywhere near my fries, thankyouverymuch.

Geez. Now I want some french fries.

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Trump Blasts Theresa May on His Wrecking Ball Tour Through Europe

Ahead of his official visits in Britain, Donald Trump gave an interview to the Sun in which he blasted Prime Minister Theresa May, saying she blew it by not taking his advice to mount a soft Brexit strategy, and threatening her that maintaining close ties to the Eurpean Union would ruin Britain's chances of a trade deal with the United States.

"If they do a deal like that, we would be dealing with the European Union instead of dealing with the U.K., so it will probably kill the deal," Trump told the Sun. "We are cracking down right now on the European Union because they have not treated the United States fairly on trading."

His criticism of May was shockingly insulting, garnering headlines like this one at the Guardian: "With Criticism of May's Brexit, Trump Detonates a Diplomatic Grenade."

He then incredibly asserted that the relationship between the U.S. and the U.K. is "very, very strong."

"We arrived here last night and we had a dinner where I think we probably never developed a better relationship," Trump told reporters in brief remarks. "The relationship is very, very strong. We really have a very good relationship."

Minutes ago, during a joint presser with May, Trump went on about what an incredible woman she is, and how he's gotten to know her well over the last two days, because they ate breakfast, lunch, and dinner together.

The entire presser has been an utter disgrace. Like his visit to Britain so far, like his performance at the NATO summit, and, presumably, as his behavior with Putin will be in a few days.

He is an enormous embarrassment, and would that humiliating the country were the worst of it. But he is also incredibly dangerous. Intentionally so.

It's difficult to watch, but it would be irresponsible to look away.

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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 aforalpha: "What is the neatest thing you've learned in the past month?"

How to make bauernbrot, also known as German Farmers Bread. I haven't actually made it yet, lol, but I learned how! And I am very excited to try to make it, even though I am fairly certain that my first attempt will be a disaster. Practice will, hopefully, make perfect!

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An Observation

Watching, as much as I've been able, FBI Agent Peter Strzok testify before the House Judiciary and Oversight Committees today has been something.

It's such a weird state of affairs that, on the one hand, I'm like, enough with the precious defense of institutions who fucked up so badly that Trump is now president, but, on the other hand, I'm like TELL THEM STRZOK! He is straddling a line — and my feelings are straddling it right along with him.

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Emmy Nominations Thread

If you watch TV and care about awards shows, then today is your lucky day, because the Emmy Nominations have been announced wheeeeeeeeeee!

The Guardian has a complete list, and please feel welcome to discuss ALL OF THE SHOWS AND ALL OF THE PEOPLE in comments — which shows you like, which shows you don't like, whom you're happy to see nominated, who should have been nominated but wasn't, your feelings about the diversity of the nominees, and everything else!

I haven't really had time to delve deeply into the nominations yet, but here are a few quick impressions:

OMGGGGGGG SANDRA OH GIVE HER EVERYTHING, PLEASE AND THANK YOU. Oh is nominated for Killing Eve, and she is the first Asian woman ever nominated for lead actress in a dramatic series, so CONGRATULATIONS SANDRA OH YOU DESERVE IT I LOVE YOU.

I am so happy that Sterling Brown was nominated for This Is Us and also for his guest spot on Brooklyn Nine-Nine.

I am so sad that literally not a single regular cast member from Brooklyn Nine-Nine was nominated. Boo!

I am happy that Ted Danson was nominated for The Good Place, but I am also sad and not just a little miffed that he was the only regular cast member nominated (Maya Rudolph was also nominated for her guest spot — yay!), especially since he is the only white dude. Where are the nominations for Kristen Bell, Jameela Jamil, D'Arcy Carden, William Jackson Harper, and Manny Jacinto?! THEY ARE ALL TERRIFIC, TOO! AHHHHHH!

Yay, Tracee Ellis Ross was nominated! But against Lily Tomlin! And Rachel Brosnahan! And Issa Rae! LOOK AT THAT CATEGORY! Good grief.

There are just a lot of people I like as human beings (as far as anyone can tell from a distance) on this year's list of nominees! John Legend! Viola Davis! Laura Dern! Jesse Plemons! Regina King! Peter Dinklage! Edie Falco! Aidy Bryant! Kate McKinnon! Leslie Jones! Merritt Wever! SARAH PAULSONNNNNNNNNNNN!!!!

I don't envy the judges. Just give everyone a prize.

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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 have a wonderful (and oft-mentioned) friend named Miller, whom I have known now for more than two decades, and I can text her emojis that symbolize lines from an Eddie Izzard routine that's nearly as old as our friendship, and she knows exactly what they mean and can emoji-text me back different lines, until the space in my heart carved out just for her is filled with the particular warmth only she can provide.

And goddamn am I grateful for that these days. As have I always been.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat standing on my lap, looking sassy
"What?"

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 539

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 Is a Reprehensible Bully at the NATO Summit and Trump's War on Immigrants: The Latest.

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

Today, FBI Agent Peter Strzok is testifying at a joint hearing before the House Judiciary and Oversight Committees, and it has been exactly as dreadful as you'd expect. ThinkProgress' Aaron Rupar has been live-tweeting the proceedings, with pertinent video clips, and I encourage you to check out and follow his thread, which begins here:


Some of his responses to Republicans' questions have been absolutely amazing. His outrage at this entire spectacle is righteous, necessary, and perfect.

* * *

Faith Karimi and Sonia Moghe at CNN: Stormy Daniels Arrested at Ohio Strip Club; Her Attorney Calls It a Setup. "Adult film actress Stormy Daniels was arrested early Thursday at an Ohio strip club for allegedly touching three undercover detectives during her performance in violation of state law. Daniels, who gained notoriety after suing [Donald] Trump following an alleged affair, faces three misdemeanor counts of illegally touching a patron, court records show. She posted a $6,054 bail and was released Thursday morning, and is due to be arraigned Friday morning, records show. Daniels will plead not guilty to the three misdemeanor charges, her attorney, Michael Avenatti, tweeted."

He also tweeted: "They are devoting law enforcement resources to sting operations for this? There has to be higher priorities."

Good point! Maybe if they have nothing better to do in Columbus, they could investigate the allegations that the president is a serial sexual abuser.

Columbus police said in a statement that Daniels' arrest is part of a "long-term investigation into allegations of human trafficking, prostitution, & other vice related violations." Sure. Lock her up! Lock her up!

I'm sure if Daniels actually did violate some local obscenity law, no one would have cared if undercover police hadn't just happened to be there.

But they were. And now the entire nation has been warned that if you are a public dissident, you risk a politicized arrest for minor lawbreaking that would usually garner a warning, if anything at all.

* * *

Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: The U.S. Senate Is Facing a Legitimacy Crisis. "The United States Senate is an immoral, anti-democratic institution where a person from Wyoming counts as over 68 Californians. It is also a demographic time bomb that is likely to plunge the United States into a legitimacy crisis. According to Baruch College's David Birdsell, by 2040 'about 70% of Americans are expected to live in the 15 largest states.' That means that 30 percent of the population will elect 70 percent of the senators. It also means that, if small states continue to trend towards Republicans, the GOP may soon have a permanent Senate majority that is large enough to remove the President of the United States from office at will."

Amy Brittain at the Washington Post: Supreme Court Nominee Brett Kavanaugh Piled up Credit Card Debt by Purchasing Nationals Tickets, White House Says. "Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh incurred tens of thousands of dollars of credit card debt buying baseball tickets over the past decade and at times reported liabilities that could have exceeded the value of his cash accounts and investment assets, according to a review of Kavanaugh's financial disclosures and information provided by the White House. White House spokesman Raj Shah told The Washington Post that Kavanaugh built up the debt by buying Washington Nationals season tickets and tickets for playoff games for himself and a 'handful' of friends. Shah said some of the debts were also for home improvements. ...Shah did not provide the names of the friends or additional details about the tickets. Kavanaugh, who is known to be a Nationals fan, declined to comment." There is much more at the link and these numbers do not add up.

Brad Reed at Raw Story: Bombshell Report Reveals How Shady Russian Cash Flowed Through Trump's Toronto Hotel.
A major investigation conducted by the Financial Times reveals how shady Russian cash flowed through the financial of [Donald] Trump's Toronto hotel — and, ultimately, back to the president himself.

In particular, the report zeroes in on actions taken by Alex Shnaider, the Russian-Canadian billionaire who served as Trump's business partner in the construction of Trump International Hotel and Tower Toronto.

According to the Financial Times' reporting, Shnaider in 2010 made a secret $100 million payment to a group of so-called "introducers" who were representing the Kremlin. The goal of the payment to these "introducers" was to pave the way for Shnaider's group to sell off its stake in the Zaporizhstal steel mill in eastern Ukraine.

Shnaider eventually succeeded in selling off the steel mill with the help of Russian state bank Vnesheconombank (VEB) — and the Financial Times' reporting raises questions about whether the deal would have gotten financing from VEB without the massive payment to the "introducers."

More importantly, writes the Financial Times, "legal filings in a recent commercial dispute between Shnaider and his business partner raised the possibility that some of the money could have ended up with Russian government officials."

If the payments made by Shnaider did wind up in the hands of Russian officials, then the deal would likely be considered an illegal bribe under Canadian law.

After the sale of the steel mill, Shnaider used $40 million of the proceeds to further finance Trump's Toronto hotel. Of that, a further $4 million went to the Trump Organization in the form of licensing fees.
JFC. Time for a reminder that Jared Kushner met with the head of Vnesheconombank and then later endeavored to conceal the meeting.

Rick Noack at the Washington Post: As Trump Rattles NATO, 42 Percent of Germans Now Want U.S. Troops out of the Country. "There was always some public opposition to the U.S. presence, but the open hostility that marked the 1960s and 1970s (and even a bit of the 1980s) eventually turned into the widespread indifference of recent years. Now, in a rather stunning poll, 42 percent of Germans say they want U.S. troops out of the country, compared with 37 percent who want the approximately 35,000 U.S. military personnel to stay." Now Trump can use German public opinion to justify his own desire to withdraw troops from Germany, to Vladimir Putin's benefit. Terrific.

Man, John Kelly is a real asshole:


Mark Z. Barabak at the LA Times: Stymied Elsewhere, Trump Turns to Pardons to Advance Personal and Policy Goals. "As a candidate for president, Donald Trump vowed to accomplish a great many things with the ease and simplicity of snapping his fingers. Once in office, however, he discovered that achieving those goals — dismantling Obamacare, slashing the federal debt, building a wall along the border with Mexico, among other promises — was far more frustrating and complicated than he supposed. There is one area, however, where Trump can exercise nearly limitless sway: the power to pardon. He has made early and eager use of that unfettered authority, advancing his political agenda in the process. ...It is also another of the countless ways Trump has shattered conventional norms."


[Content Note: Racism; police misconduct] Michael Harriot at the Root: Cop Pulls Gun on Children After 911 Caller Falsely Reports Armed Black Kids Roaming Around in Park. "When asked to describe what happened, Lindell explains: 'An older white kid, who's probably 17, and coming at them with a garbage can lid, threatening them and calling them the n-word when we passed by earlier. And cops come and they're arresting the kids, apparently.' After the police officers eventually loaded the boys into the back of the cruiser, Lindell and other onlookers asked why the two were being arrested. One cop explained that the boys were not under arrest (they were just handcuffed and locked in the back of a police car, which is totally different from being arrested.)" Fucking hell!

[CN: Homophobia] Zack Ford at ThinkProgress: House Republicans Advance 'License to Discriminate' Amendment for Adoption Agencies. "House Republicans advanced an amendment that would guarantee that adoption agencies could discriminate against same-sex couples without any consequences. It was tacked onto a funding bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education. The House Appropriates Committee passed the amendment 29-23, with all Democrats voting against it and all Republicans, except Rep. Scott Taylor (R-VA), voting for it. Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-AL) introduced the amendment and claimed that it was necessary to protect child welfare providers from 'discrimination' on the basis of their religious convictions." Rage seethe boil.

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

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Trump's War on Immigrants: The Latest

[Content Note: Nativism; abuse.]

Donald Trump's war on immigrants — migrants, refugees, undocumented, documented, and naturalized citizens — continues to expand in scope with each passing day and is doing untold harm to countless immigrant families. Here is some of the latest news.

1. Brittny Mejia at the LA Times: Trump Administration Reunites Just Over Half of Migrant Children Under 5 with Parents; Says Others Are 'Ineligible'.

Federal officials said early Thursday they had reunited 57 of 103 young migrant children separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border largely as part of the Trump administration's "zero-tolerance" policy on suspected illegal crossings, but have not returned an additional 46 for reasons including deportation and criminal histories of some of the adults.

The government began its first major wave of reuniting migrant children with their parents on Tuesday, the deadline set by U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw for those children younger than 5. Sabraw ordered the reunifications after a class-action lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Of 103 children younger than 5 who were covered by the court case, 57 had been reunited as of 7 a.m., officials said. Forty-six were "acknowledged by the court to be ineligible for reunification or determined by HHS, DHS, and DOJ to be ineligible under court-approved criteria."

...Twenty-two of the 46 remaining children were declared ineligible for reunification due to safety concerns posed by the adults in their cases, including serious criminal histories and adults determined not to be a parent, according to HHS. An additional 24 children were declared not eligible due to various circumstances of the adults, including 12 who have been deported, nine who are in custody of the U.S. Marshals Service, two in the custody of state jails, and one whose location has been unknown for over a year.
So, just to be clear: The Trump Regime has missed the deadline set by a judge to reunite families and is making the excuse that many of the children are ineligible for reunification for reasons that are their parents' fault.

This is not right. None of this is right.

And of course there are plenty of people who are willing to buy this execrable excuse, because they are so primed from demonization of undocumented immigrants as criminals and so primed from demonization of anyone who has ever been imprisoned as monsters, that they can't imagine it could ever be right to return a child to a parent who has a "criminal history." But with some notable and clear exceptions, e.g. violence and abuse, children belong with their parents, even parents with a "criminal history."

The Trump Regime is counting on the fact that most people will focus exclusively on that garbage excuse for missing the court-ordered deadline to reunite families, and regard them as heroes for separating children from parents who are criminals, and not notice that the Trump Regime is responsible in more than half of the outstanding cases, because they have detained or deported or lost track of the parents.

And trust that it's way more than half, if we were able to scrutinize the Trump Regime's designation of "serious criminal history" and their reasons for rendering guardians "not parents," to assert ineligibility.

2. Claire Parker and Neena Satija at the Texas Tribune: Trump Officials Want to Give Migrant Families Two Options: Stay Detained Together or Agree to Separation. "'The authority to detain and to parole are critical to the government,' Scott Stewart, the head of the immigration litigation office at the U.S. Department of Justice, told [federal Judge Dana M. Sabraw] yesterday. He explained that as the government faces Sabraw's deadline of reuniting more than 2,000 children with their parents by July 26, officials may give remaining parents in immigration detention two choices: Agree to be detained with their children — and give up their children's rights under the 1997 Flores agreement to be released after 20 days — or release their child to the custody of the federal government. In other words: 'The family could stay detained' together for longer than 20 days, Stewart said, or 'the family would be separated, but with the parent's consent.' Just because immigrant families must be reunited doesn't mean that parents can 'bootstrap a right to release' from immigration detention, he continued."

There is no "consent" in this situation. That is coercion, and no one can give meaningful consent when they are being coerced. This is horrifying. And it is exactly what I feared would happen: The concern about separating families is now being exploited by the Trump Regime to propose family detentions, and, worse still, the family detentions are being positioned as a choice that parents have to make in order to not risk being permanently separated from their children.

This is grotesque. Utterly grotesque. And I cannot fathom how the vast majority of this nation remains ignorant and/or indifferent to it.

3. Sam Levin at the Guardian: California Malls Are Sharing License Plate Data with ICE-Linked Surveillance Firm. "The Electronic Frontier Foundation found that Irvine Company, a real estate developer that operates dozens of malls throughout California, has been conducting vehicle license plate reader surveillance for Vigilant Solutions, a firm that maintains databases and works with law enforcement. The automated license plate recognition technology allows cameras to capture images of plates and link them to GPS locations. ...Earlier this year, U.S. officials confirmed that ICE had developed a contract with Vigilant that would give immigration authorities access to the company's vast database during investigations, sparking privacy concerns and protests."

4. Ananya Bhattacharya at Quartz: America's Broken Immigration System Is Tearing Indian Families Apart. "An estimated 40,000 children of H-1B workers on the dependent H4 visa face the same uncertainty as Ponnada. Overall, those in jeopardy, including kids of skilled immigrants across different visa categories, could be between 250,000 and 350,000, Aman Kapoor, co-founder of advocacy group Immigration Voice, estimates. ...It doesn't help that the Donald Trump administration's overall stance on immigration is far from encouraging. Securing the H-1B, which allows immigrants to live and work in the U.S. for up to six years, is getting harder with burdensome paperwork and heightened scrutiny to prevent visa fraud and abuse. Spouses of people belong to this visa class, known as H4 visa-holders, may be robbed off the right to work. 'That the administration is seeking to rescind the H4 EAD rule suggests there is very little spirit of accommodation for the interests of immigrant professional families right now,' said Leon Rodriguez, a partner at Seyfarth Shaw, a law firm based in Washington DC."

5. Martin Patriquin at the Guardian: How Did Quebec's Nationalist Movement Become So White? "The sovereignty movement now seems less focused on achieving a country than on how immigration is purportedly reshaping the province for the worse." The news here is not the white supremacy, which has long been a part of this movement; the news is that it has become the central part of this movement.

Something to keep an eye on. It's very troubling to see organized white nationalism scapegoating immigrants of color on either side of the border. Right now, there is no broad, substantive cross-border alliance among nativist white supremacists under the banner of "nationalism," but that could change.

6. Tal Kopan at CNN: Trump Administration to Turn Away Far More Asylum Seekers at the Border Under New Guidance. "The Trump administration is implementing a new asylum policy at the border that will result in potentially thousands of asylum seekers being turned away before they can plead their case in court. The guidance, reviewed by CNN, also applies to refugee applicants — immigrants seeking similar protections in the U.S. who are still abroad. Under new guidance given Wednesday to the officers who interview asylum seekers at the U.S.'s borders and evaluate refugee applications, claims based on fear of gang and domestic violence will be immediately rejected. In addition, the guidance tells officers they should consider whether an immigrant crossed the border illegally and weigh that against their claim, potentially rejecting even legitimate fears of persecution if the immigrant crossed illegally."

Emphasis mine. As Jeff Sessions threatened.

Further, it's important to note, again, that border agents have reportedly been blocking asylum-seekers from entering at established points of legal entry for requesting refuge. So they are being forced to enter the country illegally.

In other words, the Trump Regime is essentially making it impossible to arrive at the U.S. border seeking refuge at all.

7. Finally, this item may not seem on its face directly related to Trump's war on immigrants, but this is how he is going to ensure that he's allowed to pursue his nativist agenda without checks, balance, or consequence.

Ephrat Livni at Quartz: Trump Just Made It Easier for Agency Heads to Pick Judges Who Agree with His Politics.
Donald Trump is busy changing the way the government works. On July 10, the commander-in-chief issued an executive order that eliminates the testing process for administrative law judges (ALJ) at federal agencies. Basically, the change will allow the administration to exert more influence over the process of hiring judges — and the subsequent decisions they'll issue.

The order explains that, previously, ALJ appointees underwent a competitive examination and competitive service selection procedures. "The role of ALJs, however, has increased over time and ALJ decisions have, with increasing frequency, become the final word of the agencies they serve," Trump says. Given "this expanding responsibility for important agency adjudications," the president has changed the process.

Now agency heads, who were appointed by Trump, will pick ALJs. That means department heads can install judges who agree with the president's policies and his limited regulation stance, and they will in turn make rulings on matters at the Social Security Administration, National Labor Relations Board, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Securities and Exchange Commission, among others.
Previous to Trump's executive order, ALJs were "the only merit-based judicial corps in the United States," and they had to pass rigorous testing to get their positions: "The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (APA) requires that federal ALJs be appointed based on scores achieved in a comprehensive testing procedure, including a four-hour written examination and an oral examination before a panel that includes an Office of Personnel Management representative, an American Bar Association representative, and a sitting federal ALJ."

But with the stroke of a pen, Trump turned all 2,000 ALJs into partisan tools that he can weaponize in defense of his vile bigotry.

Make noise. Make your calls. Make a plan. Please support immigrant families, in whatever way you can.

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Here Is Something Nice

Yesterday at Wimbledon, Rafael Nadal and Juan Martin del Potro battled for nearly five hours in a truly epic quarterfinal match. (Which I wish I'd had the pleasure of watching!) At the end of five sets (!), Nadal emerged the victor.

And then he walked over to del Potro, who had collapsed on the ground, so they could give each other a big old hug.


Video Description: Nadal is seen lifting his arms exhaustedly in victory, as the announcer notes that del Potro is "down, and beaten on the ground." Cut to del Potro lying face down on the court. Nadal spies del Potro and clambors over the net and strides toward him. "And Nadal over the net, to see the man who scarcely deserves to lose this great encounter between two giants of the game," says the announcer, as del Potro brings himself to his feet. Nadal pats del Potro on the shoulder, and then they embrace warmly, lying their heads on each other's shoulders. As they pull apart, they keep one arm around each other as they begin to walk across the court, and del Potro cups Nadal's head with his hand. "What a match," says the announcer. "What a match on center court."

They walk over to the judge to shake hands, as the crowd cheers, and the announcer says, "No wild celebrations yet from Nadal; he has too much respect for del Potro and the challenge he has offered. But now, he will salute and celebrate." Nadal drops his racket and stands mid-court, raising his fists triumphantly and dropping his head backwards. The crowd cheers. He breaks his pose and claps his hands together, then leaves the court after his brief celebration, following del Potro.

That's what good sportspersonship looks like. Congratulations to both of them.

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Trump Is a Reprehensible Bully at the NATO Summit

It was always going to be the case that Donald Trump behaved like a colossal, reprehensible bully at NATO, and so he has. He has been a belligerent, braggadocious, blameful wreck, who has endeaved in every conceivable way to undermine the United States' long-held alliances to Vladimir Putin's favor.

Yesterday, I wrote: "Trump's strategy appears to be: Continue to tell lies about the structure of NATO to underwrite demands that NATO members will not possibly meet, because they are absurd, then use their refusal to justify the United States' withdrawal from NATO. I hope I'm wrong about that, and fear that I'm not."

Welp:


Trump claimed that other member nations of NATO committed to "step up like they have never stepped up before," essentially asserting that they capitulated to his demands and declaring victory, despite the fact that French President Emmanuel Macron has made clear that they have not.

screencap of CNN's front page, showing a picture of Trump with a headline reading: 'Trump: I could leave NATO, but not necessary'
Currently the featured article on CNN's front page.

Trump has further announced that it may not be "necessary" for him to leave NATO, since his demands have been met, which of course is laying the groundwork for the reverse, which is that he will be forced to leave if his demands aren't met after all, which he already knows they aren't.

So here we are. And, again, it's important to understand why Trump is doing this:


Trump knows exactly what he is doing. Exactly so.

As I also wrote yesterday, though on the subject of North Korea: "Funny, isn't it, how we keep hearing what incompetent bozos the Trump Regime is, and yet they have managed to consolidate power almost entirely and turn the world's most prominent democracy into an authoritarian state in less than two years. It's almost like it serves the Trump Regime for everyone to keep believing their fools who are incapable of strategy."

It's long past time for all of us, including and especially the political press, to understand that Trump is not a wrecking ball by mistake or by accident. He is wrecking destruction by design.

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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 BlueJean: "What's one TV moment that has helped guide your life? Doesn't have to be news and/or a documentary; it could be a sitcom, a drama, a concert, etc."

Coincidentally, I was just telling Iain about a moment like this, after we saw the Mr. Rogers documentary.

Mr. Rogers told his viewers: "When I was a boy, and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, 'Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.'"

And I remember the first time I heard that — or at least the first time I was old enough to really think about what it meant. I had two thoughts: That I would always remember to look for helpers if I were in trouble, and that I wanted to grow up to be a helper, so that anyone in trouble could always turn to me for help.

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by determination.

Recommended Reading:

Paola Rosa-Aquino at Earther: Plastic Straw Bans Leave out People with Disabilities

Monica Roberts at TransGriot: Hell Naw, We're Not Gonna Be Nice To Y'all!

Andy Towle at Towleroad: [Content Note: Sexual assault] Jim Jordan Says Claims by 8 Former Wrestlers That He Ignored Sexual Abuse Are 'Ridiculous'

Chaim Gartenberg at the Verge: Timehop's Data Breach Included More Personal User Information Than Originally Announced

Meghan Bartels at Space.com: Laser-Aided 'Hawk' Camera Snaps Spectacular New View of Star Cluster

David Freedlander at the Daily Beast: You've Never Seen a Performance Like Available Light

Fannie Wolfe at Fannie's Room: [CN: Misogyny] Vital Programming in the Trump Era

Rosalind Jones at Ms: [CN: Discussion of body image] Sexist and Racist Ads Are Now Banned in Stockholm

Maiysha Kai at the Glow Up: [CN: Images may be NSFW] In Full Bloom: The Beauty Behind That Banging Bardi Baby Announcement (Some great low-cost makeup recommendations here, for all the makeup fans among us!)

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

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The Republican Party, Folks


The Republican President:


The Republican Congress:


Deplorable is too kind. For their base, and for them.

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