Susan Sarandon Says Some More Despicable Sh1t

Susan Sarandon was a complete asshole during the 2016 election — one of Bernie Sanders' most obnoxious surrogates, who splained at Dolores Huerta, asserted that Hillary Clinton was "more dangerous" than Donald Trump, said that a Trump presidency was "more likely" to usher in positive change than a Clinton presidency, and then voted for Jill Stein.

She has continued to disgorge stupid trash along the same vein post-election, in some contemptible bid to justify the stupid trash she said two years ago. For instance: "I did think she was very, very dangerous. ...We would be at war [if she was president]."

And here we go again:

Transcript:

Male Interviewer, offscreen, at the Toronto International Film Festival: —give our current president a grade, what grade would you give him at this point?

Sarandon: Oh my god, I would tell him just start all over again. I mean, I don't think we can grade him. I think what he's done that is the most significant is that, by no — unintentionally, he has energized, um, you know, by making it so clear, the way governme— I mean, in all fairness to Trump, this stuff was all laid in place over the last 12 years. I mean, this didn't just suddenly happen.

Democrats were losing thousands and thousands of seats, then all these things were put in place, and refu— People were being deported, and there was many, many wars, and all of that was happening, but he is so bumbling, and he is so — he's like a character out of a cartoon or something — that you can't not be aware of what's going on now.

And — and Bernie Sanders proved that you could run without taking dark money, without taking PAC money, and so you're seeing an enormous amount of people that are using that and are running and winning. And so many women in primaries, and now we've got, you know, more, uh, elections coming up, and those people — you never saw that population running. So many women, I think like forty percent more women, are running for office and becoming elected.

We're on the verge of having the governors of Florida, Georgia, and Maryland be people of color, and one woman of co— Now that, you know, this is a revolution. It may not seem like one. So things have gotten— What is it? The Leonard Cohen quote? You know, the cracks are where the light comes through? So maybe things had to get so bad before real change actually could happen.

So, uh, we just have to stay awake, and also the kids are on fire. I never heard millennials or kids in high school saying, "I can't wait to vote." That's huge. And they're really doing a good job of, uh, of signing up kids. And that's what's gonna make the change. I say: Take me down, you know? [laughs] Take over. Get rid of all these old people and get that young blood in there. And they're gonna make the difference. I'm very hopeful because of them.
Where do I even begin with this horseshit?

First, the answer to the question should have been "F. He gets a failing grade, because he is a vile human being whose chief governing principle is malice." This isn't hard — or it shouldn't be. And isn't, for any decent person who doesn't have an agenda in which they want to retroactively justify their ludicrous comments about Hillary Clinton being more dangerous than Donald Trump by giving Trump credit for inadvertently inspiring a revolution.

Second, to talk about what's happening right now as a "revolution," and further to imply that it will yield good things for marginalized people (that they definitely want even if they are too stupid to know it), is just breathtaking privilege, for reasons I have previously explained.

Third, Sarandon literally just has no idea what the fuck she is talking about: "I mean, in all fairness to Trump, this stuff was all laid in place over the last 12 years. I mean, this didn't just suddenly happen." To say that the groundwork has been laid for Trump over the last 12 years is ahistorical nonsense. Try decades. Of course, a historically accurate picture of what got us here — and how long it took — undercuts Sarandon's execrable implication that the Democrats were complicit, as well as her evident belief that we can turn around decades of traitorous scheming by winning a few House seats.

Fourth, crediting Bernie Sanders (and Donald Trump) for the burst of female candidates running for elected office, and failing to even utter the name Hillary Clinton, despite her history-making run as the first ever major-party female nominee in the nation's history, is just some full-tilt misogynist filth. I'm sure there are women running for office who were inspired by Sanders. I'm sure there are women running for office who were moved by the prospect of holding Trump accountable. And I'm damn well sure that there are women running for office who would credit Hillary Clinton with inspiring them, with motivating them, with blazing a trail for them, with giving them the courage to take their first steps into the fray.

Fifth, I will never not ragescream when I hear people say crap like this: "So maybe things had to get so bad before real change actually could happen." Things were pretty goddamn bad for a lot of people already, Susan! FOR FUCK'S SAKE. I don't even understand how a person says something like this. I guess we just needed a president who put babies in cages before we could get off our asses and pay minimal attention and start spouting a bunch of half-baked dross about a political system we haven't even put in any real effort to understand. SHRUG EMOJI.

Sixth, she's never heard teenagers say they can't wait to vote? Oh. Well, there are a lot of nerds in the world who said that, like me. The fact that she thinks because she's never heard it, it's never happened, is a pretty good indication of why her thinking about a lot of stuff is total rubbish.

Seventh, SHUT THE FUCK UP.

Sarandon isn't just saying ill-informed stuff with which I disagree (although that, too). She's saying stuff that is dangerous, because it's dishonest in a way that serves a privileged agenda which is just as selectively dismissive of expertise and knowledge, just as disdainful of recognizing the individual needs of distinct populations, and just as hostile toward the essential tenets of a pluralistic democracy as the conservative movement consolidating its power behind Donald Trump.

That's why Sarandon can't bring herself to truly criticize him. She sees something familiar in him, and something in him she admires.

Which brings us to why it's necessary to push back against this stuff: Sarandon and her compatriots aren't staging a revolution; they're staging a change in management.

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Hurricane Florence, Part 3

[Previously: Part 1; Part 2.]

Mandatory evacuations have been ordered for more than a million people in the Carolinas and parts of Virginia as Hurricane Florence heads toward the U.S. east coast. If you are in the areas for which evacuations have been ordered, and are a non-incarcerated person who is allowed to evacuate, please heed the evacuation orders for your own safety.

* * *


Hurricane Florence has been downgraded to a Category 2 hurricane, but meteorologists are urging not to underestimate the storm. That merely indicates a reduction in sustained windspeed, but the real threat of Florence has always been storm surges and flooding, predictions for which remain the same.


Nicole Chavez and Holly Yan at CNN: Hurricane Florence Is Slashing the Carolinas in the Opening Act of a 3-Day, Coastal Disaster.
• Fierce winds and rain have started: "Rain bands with tropical-storm-force winds (are) moving onshore on the outer banks of North Carolina," the National Hurricane Center said. Tropical-storm-force winds are between 39 and 73 mph.

• Florence is getting closer: As of 8 ET Thursday morning, the center of Florence was about 170 miles east-southeast of Wilmington, North Carolina, and about 220 miles east of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

• The path of the storm: Florence's center will approach the North and South Carolina coasts late Thursday and Friday, but it's unclear exactly when and where and it will make landfall. As the storm moves inland, Georgia, Virginia, and Maryland will also be in peril.

• Storm surge is a huge threat: Strong winds will send rising water inland from the coastline of the Carolinas. The storm surge could rise up to 13 feet — that's water inundating homes up to the first-floor ceiling, the National Hurricane Center said.

• Flight cancellations: At least 800 flights along the U.S. East Coast have been canceled Thursday through Saturday ahead of the storm.
I continue to hope fervently for the safety of everyone in the storm's path.

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Open Thread

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker catvoncat: "What is your go-to swear word (or other exclamation, if you don't swear)?"

Fuck. In every possible iteration.

Although, as y'all have surely noticed, I like swearing generally and tend to be pretty diverse and creative about it!

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by purple ink.

Recommended Reading:

Brian Kahn at Earther: Hurricane Florence Could Unleash Pig Shit, Coal Ash, Industrial Waste

Jessica Schieder and Zane Mokhiber at the Economic Policy Institute: By the Numbers: Income and Poverty, 2017

Martin Cizmar at Raw Story: [Content Note: Police brutality] Attorney Reveals Potential Link Between a Dallas Cop and the Innocent Man She Gunned Down in His Own Apartment

Sangeeta Singh-Kurtz at Quartz: [CN: Some images may be NSFW] Chromat's New Swimsuit Line Is Pretty Neat

Linda Bloodworth Thomason at the Hollywood Reporter: [CN: Sexual harassment and assault; misogyny] Designing Women Creator Pens Fiery, Satisfying Screed about Les Moonves

Vivian Kane at the Mary Sue: [CN: Sexual assault; class shaming; misogyny] Geoffrey Owens Says Bill Cosby's Crimes Led to His Trader Joe's Job, But People Are Still Blaming Women

James Whitbrook at io9: The First Scene of The Good Place Season 3 Highlights Humanity's Greatest Achievement

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

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And Another One

[Content Note: Sexual harassment and/or assault.]


"Inappropriate conduct." Gotta love these fucking euphemisms for men who made workplaces absolute hell for women by being consent-hostile pervo shitwheels.

Once again, I ask if there remains a single apologist who still wants to argue with me about whether misogyny played a role in campaign coverage of the last election, or nah?

It really takes a special sort of willful, evil dipshittery to try to make the case that U.S. newsrooms being run by a tremendous number of misogynistic and abusive men had no effect on the coverage of the first female candidate for president nominated by a major party.

Of course it did.

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Shaker Gourmet

Whatcha been cooking up in your kitchen lately, Shakers?

Share your favorite recipes, solicit good recipes, share recipes you've recently tried, want to try, are trying to perfect, whatever! Whether they're your own creation, or something you found elsewhere, share away.

Also welcome: Recipes you've seen recently that you'd love to try, but haven't yet!

* * *

I recently made some baked donuts which were super easy and turned out very well!

image of glazed donuts sitting on a rack on my kitchen counter

The recipe I used is Elena's at As Easy as Apple Pie. The only modification I made was to replace some of the milk in the glaze with lemon juice, because I like a citrusy glaze.

The next time I made them, Deeks was visiting, so I added a bit of red food coloring, so we could eat pink donuts together. OBVIOUSLY.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat curled up on the back of the chaise, looking at me
Wee Sophs.

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 601

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 Regime Redirects FEMA Funding to ICE and Trump Regime Will Triple Size of Child Detention Camp and Hurricane Florence, Part 2.

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

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Trump Attacks 'Incompetent' San Juan Mayor, Again Praises Himself for Hurricane Relief in Puerto Rico, Where 2,975 Died. "Donald Trump praised himself again for the 'unappreciated great job' he did on hurricane relief in Puerto Rico, where 2,975 people died, and also attacked the mayor of San Juan, Carmen Yulin Cruz, who has said that many of the deaths were the result of Trump's 'inability to get the job done.' Tweeted Trump: 'We got A Pluses for our recent hurricane work in Texas and Florida (and did an unappreciated great job in Puerto Rico, even though an inaccessible island with very poor electricity and a totally incompetent Mayor of San Juan). We are ready for the big one that is coming!'"

Thus does Trump continue his reprehensible habit of very visibly attacking, in particular, women of color who criticize him.

[Content Note: Extreme weather; displacement; death. Covers whole section.]

Kyla Mandel at ThinkProgress: Government Shutdown Looms as Trump Claims We Are 'Totally Prepared' for Hurricane Florence. "Only one day after the official death toll was published last month, Trump said that the government had done a 'fantastic job' with recovery in Puerto Rico. ...And yet many news reports and studies have shown the government was anything but prepared to deal with Hurricane Maria last year. ...And all of these risks rise to the forefront as a government shutdown looms — a shutdown the president has said he'll follow through on if Congress doesn't provide more money for his proposed border wall."

This is a really great point. Trump is saying we're totally prepared out one side of his mouth while threatening out the other to shut down the government. Ain't no federal aid getting to hurricane survivors if the federal government is shut down.

Ashley Parker at the Washington Post: 'Tremendously Big': Trump Reaches for Superlatives in the Face of Calamity.
Flanked in the Oval Office by charts showing the path of Hurricane Florence, [Donald] Trump on Tuesday issued a warning about the potentially catastrophic storm that at times felt strangely exuberant.

"Tremendously big and tremendously wet — tremendous amounts of water," Trump said, expressing something close to admiration at the expected precipitation.

Then the president turned to bragging about the federal response to past storms during his tenure, including Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico — though the estimate of nearly 3,000 excess deaths attributed to that storm ranks it among the deadliest in U.S. history.

"I think that Puerto Rico was an incredible, unsung success," he asserted.

Trump has long struggled with public displays of empathy and with rising to the role of consoler in chief. In a range of situations — from deadly shootings and natural disasters to Tuesday's anniversary of the 9/11 attacks — Trump has responded in ways that, at best, seem ill-suited to the somberness of the events.
This is something about which I've been writing for over two years, yet another character flaw that was glaringly apparent about Donald Trump even when he was a candidate, long before Election Day.

And it's important because it is part and parcel of what I wrote about yesterday: "There are many things that make Donald Trump unfit to be president. Chief among them is this: He does not care about other people. A man who does not care about other people, or what happens to them, isn't fit to lead them."

He can't express sincere concern because he doesn't feel it.

And I am very, very concerned about that as another hurricane barrels toward the U.S. coast. His apathy is deadly. We know that. We need look no further than Puerto Rico.

(Aside: "Tremendously Big and Tremendously Wet" — With everything else this grifter has stolen, you'd think he could have left me the title of my sex memoir.) (Sorry.) (Not sorry.)

* * *


Relatedly, Hillary Clinton published a terrific and terrifying thread on Twitter this morning, outlining the threat posed by Brett Kavanaugh if he is confirmed to the Supreme Court:
I want to be sure we're all clear about something that Brett Kavanaugh said in his confirmation hearings last week. He referred to birth-control pills as "abortion-inducing drugs." That set off a lot of alarm bells for me, and it should for you, too.

Kavanaugh didn't use that term because he misunderstands the basic science of birth control — the fact that birth control prevents fertilization of eggs in the first place. He used that term because it's a dog whistle to the extreme right.

When Kavanaugh called birth control "abortion-inducing drugs," he made it clear that safe and legal abortion isn't the only fundamental reproductive right at grave risk if he is confirmed. Access to birth control is, too.

Imagine an America in which women are barred from getting IUDs or birth control pills, and doctors are criminalized for prescribing them. It's an America in which women would be punished for insisting on being full and equal partners in society.

Sen. Kamala Harris asked Brett Kavanaugh last week: "Can you think of any laws that give the government the power to make decisions about the male body?" He said he was not. Because there are none.

Let's be clear: Women have just as much right as men to make the most personal health decisions without government interference. We are equal citizens and we will insist on nothing less in this country.

Please call your senators and relay the message: (202) 224-3121

MAKE YOUR CALLS.

* * *

[CN: Anti-semitism; fascism] Anne Applebaum at the Atlantic: A Warning from Europe: The Worst Is Yet to Come. "In a famous journal he kept from 1935 to 1944, the Romanian writer Mihail Sebastian chronicled an even more extreme shift in his own country. Like me, Sebastian was Jewish; like me, most of his friends were on the political right. In his journal, he described how, one by one, they were drawn to fascist ideology, like a flock of moths to an inescapable flame. He recounted the arrogance and confidence they acquired as they moved away from identifying themselves as Europeans — admirers of Proust, travelers to Paris — and instead began to call themselves blood-and-soil Romanians. ...This is not 1937. Nevertheless, a parallel transformation is taking place in my own time, in the Europe that I inhabit and in Poland, a country whose citizenship I have acquired. And it is taking place without the excuse of an economic crisis of the kind Europe suffered in the 1930s. ...Given the right conditions, any society can turn against democracy. Indeed, if history is anything to go by, all societies eventually will."

Applebaum is the best conservative writing on this subject today. Maybe tied with Jennifer Rubin. Out of a very small field that includes David Frum, who gets a disproportionate share of the plaudits. (It's certainly no coincidence that all three of them are Jewish.) Applebaum and I hardly agree on anything, and I've disagreements with her even in reading this piece, but we agree at least that our democracy is in grave danger, for reasons well beyond the tired narratives of "economic insecurity."

Eli Rosenberg at the Washington Post: Activists Raised $1 million to Defeat Susan Collins If She Votes for Kavanaugh; She Says It's Bribery. "[A] group of liberal activists in Maine created an unusual crowdfunding campaign that...raised money in the form of pledges that they said they would give to whoever decided to challenge Collins in 2020 if she voted for Kavanaugh's confirmation. If she votes no, the money will never be withdrawn from donors. ...'It seems kind of icky but it doesn't rise to the level of bribery because there's no agreement,' Jordan Libowitz, a spokesman for the Citizens for Ethics and Responsibilities. 'It's just the way money and politics tend to work these days.'"

Which is exactly how the Republicans wanted it, and now they're complaining that their own lax rules on campaign financing and fundraising are being used against them. I mean, trust that it wasn't progressives who angled for the ability to use enormous sums of money to influence candidates!

Fredreka Schouten at USA Today: Three-Quarters of the Secret Money in Recent Elections Came from 15 Groups. "Just 15 groups account for three-quarters of the anonymous cash flowing into federal elections since the Supreme Court paved the way for corporate and union money in candidate races eight years ago... Outside money in elections has exploded since the high court's blockbuster Citizens United ruling in 2010, allowing corporations and unions to spend in candidate elections. Groups that don't disclose their donors spent more than $800 million between January 1, 2010 and December 2016, with $600 million coming from 15 organizations, Issue One's analysis found." Welp!

Speaking of fundraising...


* * *

[CN: Nativism; abuse] Andrew Gumbel at the Guardian: 'They Were Laughing at Us': Immigrants Tell of Cruelty, Illness, and Filth in U.S. Detention. "'The conditions were horrible, everything was filthy, and there was no air circulating,' Kimberly Martinez told the Guardian of the five days the family spent cooped up in one facility they — like tens of thousands before them – referred to as 'la hielera': The icebox. Her husband added: 'It's as though they wanted to drain every positive feeling out of us.' They knew, from following the news, that their ordeal of escaping gang violence back home and trekking across desert terrain at the height of summer would not end when they reached the United States. What they did not expect, though, were days of hunger, separation, and verbal abuse that they said they endured at the hands of federal immigration officials."

Anthony Cormier and Jason Leopold at BuzzFeed: A Series of Suspicious Money Transfers Followed the Trump Tower Meeting. "The June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower has become one of the most famous gatherings in American political history — a flashpoint for allegations of collusion, the subject of shifting explanations by the president and his son, countless hair-on-fire tweets, and boundless speculation by the press. But secret documents reviewed by BuzzFeed News reveal a previously undisclosed aspect of the meeting: A complex web of financial transactions among some of the planners and participants who moved money from Russia and Switzerland to the British Virgin Islands, Bangkok, and a small office park in New Jersey. The documents show Aras Agalarov, a billionaire real estate developer close to both Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump, at the center of this vast network and how he used accounts overseas to filter money to himself, his son, and at least two people who attended the Trump Tower meeting."

[CN: War; violence; death] Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Pompeo, Mattis Bless Saudi and UAE's Brutal War in Yemen. "Batting down congressional disquiet on U.S. aid to a war that has become one of the world's worst humanitarian crises, two top Trump Cabinet members vouched for humanitarian progress on the part of their allies, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Defense James Mattis attested Wednesday morning that both U.S.-supported nations 'are undertaking demonstrable actions to reduce the risk of harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure.' Their endorsement, called 'farcical' by Human Rights Watch's Sarah Leah Whitson, attempts to dodge a bipartisan congressional effort to block U.S. tanker aircraft from refueling Saudi and Emirati warplanes for the Yemen conflict."

[CN: Gun violence] Lois Beckett at the Guardian: 'A Human Rights Crisis': Amnesty Urges U.S. to Get Tough on Gun Violence. "American gun violence is 'a human rights crisis' and the U.S. government's refusal to pass gun control laws represents a violation of its citizens' right to life, according to a new report by Amnesty International. 'The USA is failing to protect individuals and communities most at risk of gun violence, in violation of international human rights law,' Amnesty argues. 'The right to live free from violence, discrimination, and fear has been superseded by a sense of entitlement to own a practically unlimited array of deadly weapons.'"

[CN: Disablism] Erin Heger at Rewire.News: People Are Losing Medicaid Coverage Because They Don't Understand the GOP's Work Requirements. "Thousands of Medicaid recipients in Arkansas have lost health coverage for the rest of the year after failing to meet the state's new Republican-backed work requirement. Some don't have health care today because they never knew about the stringent rules. Jessica Greene, a health policy professor at the City University of New York's Baruch College, interviewed 18 Medicaid recipients in northeast Arkansas in mid-August and reported a lack of awareness about the policy. Twelve of the 18 people Greene interviewed did not know about the new work requirement. Many of the Medicaid recipients didn't know how to report their satisfying of the work requirement online."

[CN: Anti-semitism; Holocaust denialism] Sam Levin at the Guardian: California Transit Agency Allows Ad from Holocaust Denial Group. "A San Francisco public transit agency has approved adverts from a group that promotes Holocaust denial and antisemitic views, claiming the organization has a 'free speech' right to buy train station billboards. Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) officials defended their decision to allow ads for the Institute for Historical Review (IHR), which the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has classified as a hate group that aims to 'defend Nazism' and spread Holocaust denial propaganda. ...They come at a time when antisemitic incidents have accelerated at alarming rates in the U.S. and across the world, and as far-right groups and neo-Nazis have increasingly pushed racist and fascist views under the guise of advocating for free speech."

[CN: Racism] Sameer Rao at Colorlines: MENA Actors Still Overwhelmingly Cast as 'Terrorists & Tyrants'. "Years of discussion about representation and narrative shift in Hollywood have yet to change the overwhelming representation of Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) people as oppressors and extremists who pervert Islam to justify violent subjugation. The MENA Arts Advocacy Coalition, an industry advocacy group pushing for stronger and more nuanced MENA representation, highlights this premise in a new collaborative study released [September 10]. ...MENA Americans constitute an estimated 3.2 percent of the U.S. population, but barely 1 percent of all on-screen roles. ...Seventy-eight percent of MENA characters are portrayed as terrorists or tyrants."

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

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Hurricane Florence, Part 2

[Previously: Part 1.]

Mandatory evacuations have been ordered for more than a million people in the Carolinas and parts of Virginia as Hurricane Florence heads toward the U.S. east coast. If you are in the areas for which evacuations have been ordered, and are a non-incarcerated person who is allowed to evacuate, please heed the evacuation orders for your own safety.

* * *

Abbie Bennett, Noah Feit, and Mark Price at the Charlotte Observer: Hurricane Florence, 'Storm of a Lifetime,' Shifts Toward South Carolina as 'Extreme' Threat.

The path of Hurricane Florence is still set squarely on the Carolinas, but early Wednesday morning, the storm's path shifted south and west, encompassing more of South Carolina and western North Carolina.

The "probable" forecast path for Florence, a Category 4 hurricane, as of 5 a.m. Wednesday showed the storm shifting further toward the southern North Carolina coast and the northern half of the South Carolina coast, with the forecast cone stretching into Georgia, western North Carolina and Tennessee, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Meanwhile, the projections for rain are growing, adding to growing concerns about flooding across the two states: Coastal North Carolina now expects 20 to 30 inches, with isolated areas of 40 inches projected in South Carolina.

"We cannot stress this enough: Florence poses a very serious threat to people who live far away from the coast," said a National Weather Service tweet late Tuesday. "Heavy and long-lasting rainfall could lead to catastrophic flooding in inland parts of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia.”

"This will likely be the storm of a lifetime for portions of the Carolina coast," the National Weather Service in Wilmington, North Carolina said Tuesday evening.
* * *

The Editors of the Washington Post deserve credit, in my estimation, for being willing to publish this now, knowing the risk of accusations that they're "politicizing" the storm simply by pointing out that this isn't merely an act of nature: Another Hurricane Is About to Batter Our Coast. Trump Is Complicit. "Trump issued several warnings on his Twitter feed Monday, counseling those in Florence's projected path to prepare and listen to local officials. That was good advice. Yet when it comes to extreme weather, Mr. Trump is complicit. He plays down humans' role in increasing the risks, and he continues to dismantle efforts to address those risks. It is hard to attribute any single weather event to climate change. But there is no reasonable doubt that humans are priming the Earth's systems to produce disasters."

And they end with the reminder that it's not just Trump, and that he is not an outlier of his despicable party: "The president has cemented the GOP's legacy as one of reaction and reality denial. Sadly, few in his party appear to care."

* * *

I fervently hope that the dire predictions about Hurricane Florence are undercut by an abrupt change in the storm's trajectory, and desperately fear that they won't be. And I hope for the safety of everyone in the storm's path.

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Trump Regime Will Triple Size of Child Detention Camp

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse.]

In addition to redirecting FEMA funds to ICE for use in their heinous nativist war on immigrants, the Trump Regime has also announced that it will triple the size of the child detention camp in Texas — the one near El Paso, where the average high temperature in September is 85°.

Nick Miroff at the Washington Post reports:

A tent camp for migrant children in the desert outside El Paso will expand to accommodate a growing number of Central American children crossing the border, the Department of Health and Human Services said Tuesday.

HHS, the federal agency tasked with caring for migrant children and teenagers in U.S. custody, said it would more than triple the size of its camp at the Tornillo-Guadalupe Land Port of Entry from 1,200 beds to as many as 3,800.

...Kenneth Wolfe, a spokesman for HHS's Administration for Children and Families, said the need for emergency capacity was the result of the latest surge at the border, not the administration's decision to separate families during the crackdown this spring.

"'Family separations' resulting from the zero tolerance policy ended on June 20, 2018 and are not driving this need," Wolfe said in a statement.
So, take note: The HHS spokesperson, in victim-blaming undocumented children for the Trump Regime detaining them in a tent camp, has also (inadvertently) admitted that their "zero tolerance" policy did not work. It was justified as a deterrence measure, but if there's a fresh "surge at the border" requiring the creation of more capacity to hold undocumented children, then the deterrence didn't work. Something to remember for the next time they roll out that codswallop, which they certainly will in future.

Further, the HHS went to great pains to explain that they're definitely taking good care of those children in their detention camp, assuring the public that they "sleep in large, climate-controlled canvas tents, and the site offers a full range of services including recreational and educational activities."

It's unclear what makes the tents "climate-controlled." Climate-controlled tents can mean anything from a tent with portable HVAC and solar panels to a tent with a small, battery-powered fan. Without knowing any details, we cannot remotely be certain that the tents are adequately equipped to protect the children housed in them.

As I've previously noted: Children are "more susceptible to heat illness than adults for many reasons, including a greater surface area to body mass ratio, lower rate of sweating, and slower rate of acclimatization. The prevention of heat illness is based on recognizing and modifying risk factors," like, presumably, not housing children in concentration camps in the El Paso heat.

Because even if the tents are fine, the fact is that we're still talking about the United States government detaining children fleeing violence and/or extreme poverty and/or oppression in fucking tents in a camp in the desert.

And it's about to be three times the size it is now.

There is nothing okay about that.

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Trump Regime Redirects FEMA Funding to ICE

[Content Note: Nativism.]

Malice is the governing principle of the Trump Regime, and here is yet more evidence of that ugly truth: $33.1 million was diverted to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from various agencies this year, and nearly $10 million of that was redirected from the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA), during this year's hurricane season, even as people are still struggling to recover from last year's hurricane season, especially in Puerto Rico, in part because FEMA support has been withdrawn or denied.

John Bowden at MSNBC reports:

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) on Tuesday night released documents appearing to show the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) diverted nearly $10 million from the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

...Those diverted funds, totaling $33.1 million, "will provide funding in support of higher priority detention and removal requirements than those for which originally appropriated," according to the documents.

Merkley says he believes the transfer from FEMA to ICE was made this summer. He told Maddow that "it means that just as hurricane season is starting...the administration is working hard to find funds for child detention camps."

"So $10 million dollars comes out of FEMA when we're facing hurricane season, knowing what happened last year, and look what's happened since?" Merkley said, referring to a recent hurricane in the Pacific that largely missed Hawaii, and another, Florence, currently threatening North Carolina and the East Coast.

"I find it extraordinary," he added. "It says that money came from response and recovery, right on it."
Again, I want to remind everyone that the Trump Regime's obscene immigration agenda is based on outright lies. There is no urgent crisis threatening the United States because of undocumented immigration — not an employment crisis, not a crime and violence crisis, not a health crisis.

That's important to remember, because not only is this administration diverting response and recovery funding during hurricane season to fund its vile nativism, but it's doing so for literally no other reason but malice.

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Open Thread

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Kathy_A: "Do you have something you have handmade yourself in your possession? If you have different items, which one is the oldest?"

If I own something I handmade myself, I honestly can't think of it, lol.

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Your Best Photograph

If you're a photographer, even if a very amateur one (like myself), and you've got a photo or photos you'd like to share, here's your thread for that!

It doesn't really have to be your best photograph — just one you like!

Please be sure if your photo contains people other than yourself, that you have the explicit consent of the people in the photos before posting them.

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Here's a picture I took recently from the car as we crossed over the Schuylkill River at dusk:

image of the river, lined by thick trees, below a blue sky with pink-lit clouds, seen beyond a set of guardrails

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What a Vile Specimen He Is


If you are unable to view the image embedded in the tweet, it's a photo of Donald Trump in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, visiting the 9/11 Flight 93 National Memorial earlier today. While he and Melania are given a tour by a guide at the memorial, Trump looks at the press with an open mouth, giving a thumbs-up.

Donald Trump has a "long history of lying about 9/11 and exploiting it for personal gain" — including his own self-aggrandizement, having implied that he "helped" first responders clear rubble and locate survivors. (He did not.)

The terrorist act of September 11, 2001 means nothing to Trump, except for its usefulness in trying to justify his rank Islamophobia or demonstrate his thoroughly false patriotism.

It happened in his hometown, and he is now the president of the nation upon whom the attack was waged, and there is perhaps no one in the nation who cares less about the tragedy of the day than he does.

He is glib and irreverent about recognizing the history of a grim day, utterly cruel in his indifference to the gravity of what happened that morning — and everything that happened, and is still happening, in reaction to it.

There are many things that make Donald Trump unfit to be president. Chief among them is this: He does not care about other people.

A man who does not care about other people, or what happens to them, isn't fit to lead them.

He never has been. He never will be.

[Related Reading: I Hate Donald Trump.]

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World of Shakescraft

image of colorful yarn
[Via Shirsty Cat Designs. You can buy their beautiful yarn here.]

As you know, I am not a crafty person. I am terrible at crafts! And I'm only slightly better with DIY home projects, with the occasional modest success.

But lots of Shakers are very talented crafters and DIY-ers, and I am happy to read about all of your terrific projects! So here is a thread to talk about your current crafting and/or DIY project(s), completed projects, or future projects; to share ideas; to brag about your successes or lament your setbacks; and to solicit advice from fellow creators!

(As always, make sure you don't offer advice unless it's solicited.)

Have at it in comments!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat crouching on the couch, swishing her tail, looking like she's about ready to get into some trouble
Guess who's looking for trouble again?

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 600

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.

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Earlier today by me: 9/11/18 and Hurricane Florence and All the Jumping into All the Christmas Trees and Quote of the Day.

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

[Content Note: Terrorism; death; illness] Erin Durkin at the Guardian: September 11: Nearly 10,000 People Affected by 'Cesspool of Cancer'. "Tens of thousands of people who lived or worked in the neighborhood at the time found themselves breathing in air thick with toxic fumes and particles from the pulverized, burning skyscrapers. Many have since become sick, many have died and new cases are still occurring all the time that are linked back to the poisons that were in the air around the wreckage. ...'We went back to work exactly one week after 9/11, while the towers were still burning and everything else crumbled around us. We were told that the air was fine, and we needed to get back to work... It was ridiculous. It was horrible. The smell downtown was as pungent as you could imagine. There were buildings still on fire. Those buildings burned for months.' ...The head of the EPA at the time has admitted she was wrong to assure the public that the air around Ground Zero was safe."

That was Christine Todd Whitman, who continues to maintain that she did the best she could at the time and was "simply passing on what government scientists were telling her, warning those working at Ground Zero itself to wear respirators but dismissing concerns over the surrounding area, which was engulfed in dust and ash," instead telling residents of Lower Manhattan one week after the towers collapsed that their air "is safe to breathe and their water is safe to drink."

In fact, Christine Todd Whitman was not doing "what government scientists were telling her," but what Bush administration officials were telling her: "The [then-New York Senator Hillary Clinton] who emerges from the WNYC tapes is passionate, raw, and unrestrained. Above all, she is livid. She had just learned that the Bush administration instructed officials of the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to reassure New Yorkers after 9/11 that the air over Ground Zero was safe. In fact, they had a pretty good idea that it was a toxic pall of asbestos, cement, glass dust, heavy metals, fuels, and PCBs."

And Christine Todd Whitman was not alone: Then-New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani oversaw a clean-up that prioritized speed over safety, and ignored test results demanding precautions that were not taken. "Records show that the city was aware of the danger in the ground zero dust from the start. In a federal court deposition, Kelly R. McKinney, associate commissioner at the city's health department in 2001, said the agency issued an advisory on the night of Sept. 11 stating that asbestos in the air made the site hazardous and that everyone should wear masks. ...Violations of federal safety rules abounded, and no one strictly enforced them. ...Agency officials said that enforcing rules and issuing fines would have delayed the cleanup, and contractors could have passed along the cost of the fines to the city."

Now people are paying with their lives instead.

The politicians who failed the people of New York City have never been held accountable. And now one of them is the personal attorney to the President of the United States, who arrived at a memorial service today pumping his fists in the air.


The Republican Party abandoned ethical leadership a long time ago — and has marched in a straight line to the presidency of Donald Trump. Remember that next time you hear someone argue that he's not a typical Republican. The fuck he isn't.

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Josh Lederman, Courtney Kube, Abigail Williams and Ken Dilanian at NBC News: U.S. Officials Suspect Russia in Mystery 'Attacks' on Diplomats in Cuba, China. "Intelligence agencies investigating mysterious 'attacks' that led to brain injuries in U.S. personnel in Cuba and China consider Russia to be the main suspect, three U.S. officials and two others briefed on the investigation tell NBC News. The suspicion that Russia is likely behind the alleged attacks is backed up by evidence from communications intercepts, known in the spy world as signals intelligence, amassed during a lengthy and ongoing investigation involving the FBI, the CIA and other U.S. agencies. The officials declined to elaborate on the nature of the intelligence. The evidence is not yet conclusive enough, however, for the U.S. to formally assign blame to Moscow for incidents that started in late 2016 and have continued in 2018, causing a major rupture in U.S.-Cuba relations."

Meanwhile...


And as Russia attacks U.S. diplomats and stages elaborate war exercises alongside China... [CN: Human rights violations; violence] D. Parvaz at ThinkProgress: Trump Silent as China Cracks Down on Christians, Muslims in Brutal Campaign. "Stepping up its attacks on organized religions, the Chinese government has been cracking down on churches in Beijing and elsewhere in the country, burning bibles, dismantling crosses, and forcing Christians to sign documents renouncing their faith, requiring loyalty to the country's atheist Communist Party. ...The country's Muslim Uighur minority — of Turkic origin and largely living in the Xinjiang region — has long been targeted by arrests and detentions, but the government has recently engaged in the extraordinary measure of detaining them in 'political education' camps. There, Uighurs — up to 1 million of them — are forced to renounce Islam and pledge loyalty to the Community Party."

And the Trump Regime remains silent, while unironically using "religious freedom" to justify repression within its country's own borders.

Also, this:


Everything is fine. (Everything is not fine.)

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Ariel Dorfman at the Guardian: I Thought Democracy in Chile Was Safe; Now I See America Falling into the Same Trap.
There are, of course, significant differences between the situations in Chile almost half a century ago and in the U.S. today. And yet the similarities are sobering. Having once lost democracy in Chile, I can recognise the signs of malignancy that fester in the U.S., a country of which I am now a citizen.

I reluctantly note in my adopted homeland the same sort of polarisation that contaminated Chile before the coup; the same weakening of the bonds of a shared, inclusive national community; the same sense of victimhood among large swaths of the populace, troubled that their command over the traditional contours of their identity is slipping away; the same faulting of intruders, upstarts, and aliens for that loss; the same tensions and rage exacerbated by shameful disparities in wealth and power. And, alas, the same seduction by authoritarian, simplistic solutions that promise to restore order to a complex, difficult, menacing reality.

...The main lesson that the Chilean cataclysm bequeaths us is to never forget that the rights we take for granted are fragile and revocable, protected only by the unceasing, vigilant, vigorous struggle of millions upon millions of ordinary citizens. Salvation can't be outsourced to some sort of heroic figure who will ride to the rescue. The only real saviours are the people themselves.

Unless we understand this, we risk awakening one day in a land that is unrecognisable, with consequences that will be paid for by generations to come. My message to my fellow Americans, and to many others abroad, is alarmingly simple: Do not cry tomorrow for what you did not have the courage and the wisdom to defend today.
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[CN: Nativism; child abuse] Read the following item in the context of Jeff Sessions' telling immigration judges to have no sympathy for the people who appear before them in court, and recalling that children too young to read are being obliged to appear in immigration courts without their parents...

Jodi S. Cohen, Melissa Sanchez, and Duaa Eldeib at ProPublica: Here's What Happened to the 99 Immigrant Children Separated from Their Parents and Sent to Chicago. "A federal class-action lawsuit filed by a coalition of lawyers last week asks that the government pay for mental health treatment for children separated from their parents, saying the 'traumatic event' has caused 'severe and often permanent emotional and psychological harm.' Psychiatrists and pediatricians had urged the government to end the policy, arguing it would lead to anxiety, depression, and developmental delays. 'The damage inflicted was not something that went away because of the reunification,' said Jesse Bless, one of the attorneys who filed the lawsuit, who has represented children housed at Heartland's shelters. 'We are starting to see signs that there could be long-term effects.'"

[CN: Nativism; white supremacy] Kelly Weill at the Daily Beast: GOP Lawmaker Is a Leader in Hate Group That Calls Immigration 'Assault on Our Culture'. "A Republican politician in Oregon pushing to repeal an immigrant-friendly law is the vice president of an anti-immigrant hate group, the group told The Daily Beast on Monday, despite his previous denial. Oregon House Rep. Mike Nearman is vice president of Oregonians for Immigration Reform, an anti-immigrant coalition with ties to eugenicist John Tanton, who has pushed white nationalist politics through a series of anti-immigrant organizations."

[CN: War on agency] Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: A Federal Appeals Court Just Gave Both Middle Fingers to Roe v. Wade. "A panel of three Republican judges openly defied the Supreme Court on Monday, permitting a law that is nearly identical to the abortion restriction the justices struck down in Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt to take effect. Just like Hellerstedt, Comprehensive Health v. Hawley concerns two restrictions on abortion. The first requires abortion clinics to comply with expensive architectural requirements, the second requires that 'all doctors who perform abortions at ASCs must be 'privileged to perform surgical procedures in at least one licensed hospital in the community.'' Again, the Supreme Court struck down a nearly identical Texas law in Hellerstedt."

They're just waiting for Brett Kavanaugh to give them the fifth vote they need. Sob.

[CN: Environmental harm] Coral Davenport at the New York Times: Trump Administration Wants to Make It Easier to Release Methane into the Air. "The Trump administration, taking its third major step this year to roll back federal efforts to fight climate change, is preparing to make it significantly easier for energy companies to release methane into the atmosphere. Methane, which is among the most powerful greenhouse gases, routinely leaks from oil and gas wells, and energy companies have long said that the rules requiring them to test for emissions were costly and burdensome. The Environmental Protection Agency, perhaps as soon as this week, plans to make public a proposal to weaken an Obama-era requirement that companies monitor and repair methane leaks, according to documents reviewed by The New York Times. In a related move, the Interior Department is also expected in coming days to release its final version of a draft rule, proposed in February, that essentially repeals a restriction on the intentional venting and 'flaring,' or burning, of methane from drilling operations."

[CN: Gun violence] Lois Beckett at the Guardian: More People Shot in Incidents Involving Semiautomatic Rifles, Study Finds. "More people were shot, and more killed, when the perpetrator of an 'active shooting' in the U.S. had a semiautomatic rifle, according to a new study of 248 incidents published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The study, which examined only a small subset of America's shootings, found that incidents in which at least one of the perpetrator's guns was a semiautomatic rifle left an average of 4.25 people killed and 5.48 wounded. Shootings where the perpetrator did not have a semiautomatic rifle, but instead used handguns, shotguns or other types of rifles, left an average of 2.5 people killed and three people wounded."

[CN: Police brutality] Last Friday, I shared an item about a Dallas police officer who fatally shot a man after she mistakenly tried to enter his apartment, thinking it was her own. An update, care of Alfonso Serrano at Colorlines: Dallas Police Officer Faces Manslaughter Charge in Shooting Death of Botham Jean. "The Dallas police officer who fatally shot an Black immigrant from St. Lucia last week was arrested [September 9] on manslaughter charges, a move that civil rights groups called a 'first step' toward justice and police accountability. Amid increasing calls for her arrest from advocates against police violence, Amber Guyger, 30, was booked into the Kaufman County Jail on Sunday. The Dallas Police Department officer was later released after posting a $300,000 bond."

Guyger also shot another man, Uvaldo Perez, in May of 2017, while on duty — which means she's already shot two men of color in 4 years on the force. This is someone who should not be a police officer. Period.

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

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Nativism.]

"When we depart from the law and create nebulous legal standards out of a sense of sympathy for the personal circumstances of a respondent in our immigration courts, we do violence to the rule of law and constitutional fabric that bind this great nation." — Attorney General Jeff Sessions, in a speech to 44 newly-hired immigration judges in training.

I don't know which is worse: The Attorney General of the United States telling judges to behave like sociopaths when dealing with people who are, in many cases, fleeing oppression and/or deadly violence, or Donald Trump's chief lackey saying without a trace of irony that showing basic human kindness is tantamount to doing "violence to the rule of law."

Like I always say: Malice is the governing principle of the Trump Regime. And here is the AG warning new immigration judges that to refuse to center malice in their decisions is essentially sedition.

Welp.

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