We Resist: Day 616

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: Kavanaugh Open Thread and Trump's Presser Was Appalling, Even by His Standards.

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

If you're looking for some live coverage of the Kavanaugh hearing, without having to watch the livestream, the Guardian's live coverage has been very good so far.

[Content Note: Description of assault] Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: Women React to Christine Blasey Ford's Testimony. "After and during Ford’s opening statement, women flooded social media with messages of support and solidarity... Hundreds of women also protested in the Hart Senate building, gathered together to listen to the testimony... Female politicians including Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) both attended the hearing, offering their support for Ford."


And all of this very public hatred and abuse of women is not without consequence. Here are two stories I read just this morning, about how people tasked with protecting girls in schools are actually harming them:

[CN: Misogyny] Dan Cancian at Newsweek: Tennessee School Athletic Director Says 'Girls Pretty Much Ruin Everything,' and Gets Suspended. "Jared Hensley made the remarks during a video announcement on Wednesday morning, as he informed students at the Soddy-Daisy High School near Chattanooga that a ban on wearing athletic shorts would be implemented. ...'If you want to blame someone, blame the girls, because they pretty much ruin everything,' he said. 'They ruin the dress code, well — ask Adam. Look at Eve. That's really all you got to get to. You can go back to the beginning of time. So, it'll be like that for the rest of your life; get used to it, keep your mouth shut, suck it up and follow the rules.' The video sparked a fiery backlash against Hensley and the school acted swiftly by condemning his statement, before placing him on administrative leave."

[CN: Misogyny; sexual assault] Peter Jamison and Perry Stein at the Washington Post: D.C. Principal Was Taped Mocking Student's Sex Assault Claim, Lawsuit Says. "In June of last year, a freshman at Roosevelt High School in Northwest Washington reported to Principal Aqueelha James that she had been sexually assaulted by another student in a school bathroom. James at first expressed concern over the accusation, according to an audio recording of the conversation... But after the distraught girl abruptly left the conference room where she was meeting with James, followed by her mother, the principal took a different tone with other school officials who were present. She said that she was 'sick of her and her mom' and that she planned to try to 'embarrass her ass.' She ridiculed the clothes the girl was wearing. 'This is a bunch of bullshit,' James said. ...James did not respond to calls seeking comment or to a reporter's inquiry at her home Wednesday."

Fucking hell. I am so angry, and so very sad.

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Michael Lewis at the Guardian: 'This Guy Doesn't Know Anything': The Inside Story of Trump's Shambolic Transition Team.
On the morning after the election the hundreds of people who had prepared to brief the incoming Trump administration sat waiting. A day became a week and a week became a month...and no one showed up. The parking spots that had been set aside for Trump's people remained empty, and the briefing books were never opened. You could walk into almost any department of the US government and hear people asking the same question: where were these people who were meant to be running the place?

The department of agriculture was an excellent case study. The place had an annual budget of $164bn and was charged with so many missions critical to the society that the people who worked there played a drinking game called Does the Department of Agriculture Do It? Someone would name a function of government, say, making sure that geese don't gather at U.S. airports, and fly into jet engines. Someone else would have to guess whether the agriculture department did it. (In this case, it did.) Guess wrong and you had to drink.

Among other things, the department essentially maintained rural America, and also ensured that the American poor and the elderly did not starve. Much of its work was complicated and technical — and yet for the months between the election and the inauguration, Trump people never turned up to learn about it. Only on inauguration day did they flood into the building, but the people who showed up had no idea why they were there or what they were meant to do. Trump sent, among others, a long-haul truck driver, a telephone company clerk, a gas company meter reader, a country club cabana attendant, a Republican National Committee intern, and the owner of a scented candle company. One of the CVs listed the new appointee's only skill as "a pleasant demeanor."

All these people had two things in common. They were Trump loyalists. And they knew nothing whatsoever about the job they suddenly found themselves in. A new American experiment was underway.
Fucking hell.

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Kevin Poulsen at the Daily Beast: Fancy Bear, the Russian Election Hackers, Have a Nasty New Weapon. "Russia's GRU has secretly developed and deployed new malware that's virtually impossible to eradicate, capable of surviving a complete wipe of a target computer's hard drive, and allows the Kremlin's hackers to return again and again. The malware, uncovered by the European security company ESET, works by rewriting the code flashed into a computer's UEFI chip, a small slab of silicon on the motherboard that controls the boot and reboot process. Its apparent purpose is to maintain access to a high-value target in the event the operating system gets reinstalled or the hard drive replaced — changes that would normally kick out an intruder. ...'There's been no deterrence to Russian hacking,' said former FBI counterterrorism agent Clint Watts, a research fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. 'And as long as there's no deterrence, they're not going to stop, and they're going to get more and more sophisticated.'"

Allegra Kirkland at TPM: The Future of 1.4 Million Floridians with Felony Convictions Is on the Ballot in November. "Different states take wildly varied approaches to this question. In, say, Delaware people with most types of felony convictions have their voting rights automatically restored after completing prison, probation, and parole. In Pennsylvania, those on parole or probation can vote. Vermont, Maine, and jurisdictions like Cook County, Illinois, allow people to cast ballots from jail. Florida is one of four states with a constitution that permanently disenfranchises residents with past felony convictions. But how that policy is enforced is up to interpretation. ...When Gov. Charlie Crist, then a Republican, took office in 2007, he convinced the board to streamline the clemency process, allowing non-violent felons to get their rights back without hearings. Over 150,000 clemencies were granted in just four years. In 2011, [Gov. Rick Scott] and his new Cabinet unanimously voted, after 30 minutes of public debate, to change those rules. ...Roughly 3,000 people have had their rights restored in the past eight years, and the state has a backlog of over 10,000 cases."

[CN: War on agency] Jon Herskovitz at Reuters: U.S. Court Upholds Louisiana Restriction on Abortion Clinics. "A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday upheld a Louisiana provision that requires doctors who perform abortions in the state to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital. In a 2-1 ruling from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, the judges said the Louisiana provision was different than one in Texas that was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2016 because it would not put an undue burden on women. 'There is no evidence that any of the clinics will close as a result of the Act,' the appeals court said in its ruling." Rage seethe boil.

[CN: Nativism] Amanda Holpuch at the Guardian: U.S. Immigrants Stop Using Public Benefits over Fears of New Trump Rule. "U.S. immigrants have begun to remove themselves from public housing waiting lists, childcare subsidy programs, and the food stamp program — out of fears that a rule proposed on Saturday night could jeopardize their immigration status. The Department of Homeland Security's "public charge rule" would make it more difficult for people to qualify for green cards and other visas if they use or have used public benefits. Immigrants began purging themselves from public assistance programs when a draft version of the rule leaked earlier this year."

Bryan Menegus at Gizmodo: Amazon's Aggressive Anti-Union Tactics Revealed in Leaked 45-Minute Video.
Amazon, the country's second-largest employer, has so far remained immune to any attempts by U.S. workers to form a union. With rumblings of employee organization at Whole Foods — which Amazon bought for $13.7 billion last year — a 45-minute union-busting training video produced by the company was sent to Team Leaders of the grocery chain last week, according to sources with knowledge of the store's activities. Recordings of that video, obtained by Gizmodo, provide valuable insight into the company's thinking and tactics.

Each of the video's six sections, which the narrator states are "specifically designed to give you the tools that you need for success when it comes to labor organizing," take place in an animated simulacrum of a Fulfillment Center. The video's narrators are clad in the reflective vests typical of the real-world setting. "We are not anti-union, but we are not neutral either," the video states, drawing a distinction that would likely be largely academic to potential organizers.

...Throughout, the video claims Amazon prefers a "direct management" structure where employees can bring grievances to their bosses individually, rather than union representation. However, a number of warehouse workers have expressed to Gizmodo in past reporting that they believed voicing their concerns led to retaliatory scrutiny or firing.

"[Amazon] preaches that they have this open-door policy and then when you try to go through that open door, instead of being allowed in, you are now set up," a former Fulfillment Center worker in Indiana told Gizmodo. "You're somebody that talks and you're somebody they're gonna absolutely make the job as difficult as humanly possible for." Another Floridian Fulfillment Center worker told Gizmodo he sent complaints of low pay to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos's public-facing email address (jeff@amazon.com) and claims management was "harassing me since I sent that email." He said he was terminated shortly afterward.
Staff at the Daily Beast: Global Warming: World 'Nowhere Near on Track' to Meeting Temperature Rise Target. "Governments around the world are 'nowhere near on track' to restricting the rise in global temperatures to below 1.5 degrees Celsius higher the pre-industrial period, says the author of a United Nations report. ...'It's extraordinarily challenging to get to the 1.5 C target and we are nowhere near on track to doing that,' said Drew Shindell, a Duke University climate scientist. 'While it's technically possible, it's extremely improbable, absent a real sea change in the way we evaluate risk. We are nowhere near that.'"

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

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The Makeup Thread

Here is your semi-regular makeup thread, to discuss all things makeup and makeup adjacent.

Do you have a makeup product you'd recommend? Are you looking for the perfect foundation which has remained frustratingly elusive? Need or want to offer makeup tips? Searching for hypoallergenic products? Want to grouse about how you hate makeup? Want to gush about how you love it?

Whatever you like — have at it!

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Because there are so many terrible and overwhelming things happening today, I thought we needed a makeup thread. Please know it's not because I am not taking seriously what's going on in the Senate and elsewhere today. To the absolute contrary, I figured a lot of folks might need something low-stakes to talk about in this space today. So here we go.

image of me from the shoulders up, wearing a tank-top with my hair pulled back, and sporting light makeup

Just a very quick look with the old standbys, plus a couple of new items: Neutrogena's Hydro Boost Hydrating Lip Shine in Soft Mulberry and Morphe's Fall into Frost Eyeshadow Palette, from which I used four colors to do a sort of ombre sunset eye.

I really like the Morphe palette a lot. At only $24, it's very reasonably priced for the number and quality of colors you get.

Anyway! What's up with you?

(As always, I'm not affiliated in any way with any of the companies whose products I mention, nor am I getting anything in exchange for my recommendations. I just like the products!)

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Please note, as always, that advice should be not be offered to an individual person unless they solicit it. Further: This thread is open to everyone — women, men, genderqueer folks. People who are makeup experts, and people who are makeup newbies. Also, because there is a lot of racist language used in discussions of makeup, and in makeup names, please be aware to avoid turns of phrase that are alienating to women of color, like "nude" or "flesh tone" when referring to a peachy or beige color. I realize some recommended products may have names that use these words, so please be considerate about content noting for white supremacist (and/or Orientalist) product naming.

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Trump's Presser Was Appalling, Even by His Standards

Yesterday afternoon, Donald Trump gave a rare press conference that lasted 81 minutes, during which he gave an execrable performance full of lies and attacks and rape apologia.

If you missed it, and I sincerely hope you did, the Toronto Star's Daniel Dale live-tweeted it in a thread that begins here, and the Washington Post's Ashley Parker has a decent recap, filed under the deservedly blunt headline, "'Give it to me': Trump lets loose with 81 minutes of bluster, falsehoods, and insults."

While it was nearing its end, I noted on Twitter: "Today's presser is what it looks like when your president is an unhinged authoritarian goblin with zero checks and balances."

That, for me, is the most important takeaway, more than any one thing he said — because he said a lot of terrible things, and he will face zero consequence for any of them.

He will face no consequence for lying. He will face no consequence for insulting and attacking people. He will face no consequence for his rank rape apologia. He will face no consequence for saying horrible things that frighten all reasonable and decent people.

Even if, and it is a huge if, he faces consequences one day that result in his removal from office, he is doing so much incredible damage in the meantime. The goalposts have been moved so far that they're not even on the field anymore. If we haven't already reached a point of no return to a functional if flawed democracy, we're getting damn close.

And that road has been paved with appalling displays just like yesterday's press conference, whether Trump was standing at a podium holding forth in front of an adoring crowd of deplorables or responding to reporters' questions with whatever mendacity and tangents his trash-bin of a brain decided to disgorge from his anusular maw.

The particulars of the lies he tells and the precise flavor of vile bigotry he spews hardly matter anymore. It's all bad. What matters is that he is wholly unconstrained, and the escalation of his freewheeling fuckery shows that he knows it.

He's behaving like a despot who believes he's untouchable. Because, for the moment, he is. And he's making maximum use of that power while he's got it.

Which should profoundly concern and anger anyone who remembers what it used to be like to live in a democratic republic, and hopes that they may again one day.

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Kavanaugh Open Thread

image of Brett Kavanaugh sitting to testify; I have highlighted his shifty eyes and the 'Hon.' before his name on the nameplate sitting in front of him

Today, the Senate Judiciary Committee will hear testimony from Professor Christine Blasey Ford regarding her allegations that Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her, and Kavanaugh will also give his testimony. No other witnesses will be allowed to tell their stories during the proceedings, because the Republicans are rape apologist shitwheels.

I am not going to be watching or live-tweeting the hearing, because I am just totally tapped out. So here is an open thread for discussion.

If you need a livestream, the hearing will stream on C-SPAN here and on PBS here.

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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 SisterShimmy: "What's your favorite food that you associate with a particular holiday or special occasion?"

Chicken liver parfait topped with a red wine gelée, which I associate with Iain's birthday.

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by water.

Recommended Reading:

Rachel Becker at the Verge: Kayaker Blessed by a Seal, Slapped in the Face with an Octopus

Andy Towle at Towleroad: [Content Note: Sexual assault] Trump Rages at Michael Avenatti Following New Allegations Against Brett Kavanaugh: 'A Total Low-Life!'

Camille Rivera at Colorlines: [CN: Sexual harassment and assault] I'm a Survivor Who Isn't Brave Like Anita and Christine — and That's Okay

Diana Moskovitz at Jezebel: [CN: Sexual assault; details of Cosby's assaults] How Many Women Have to Bleed?

Kia Morgan-Smith at the Grio: [CN: Sexual assault] Critics Question Hollywood Walk of Fame Decision to Keep Bill Cosby Star

IWHC Staff at the International Women's Health Coalition: Abortion: Normal and Vital

Monica Roberts at TransGriot: The Trans Community Could Use Some Investment in Our Advocacy Infrastructure and Our People

Sue Kerr at Pgh Lesbian Correspondents: 72 Bisexual Folx from Western PA Share Their Stories Through the #AMPLIFY Project

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

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An Observation

You know, I bet it would have been easier to convince Hillary Clinton to be slightly more progressive than it is trying to convince Donald Trump not to be an obscene shitwheel nightmare monster at all times.

Just a thought.

Which is maybe one that "Democrats and Republicans are all the same" dead-enders can keep in mind, in 2020.

If we still have free and fair elections.

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Discussion Thread: Self-Care

What are you doing to do to take care of yourself today, or in the near future, as soon as you can?

If you are someone who has a hard time engaging in self-care, or figuring out easy, fast, and/or inexpensive ways to treat yourself, and you would like to solicit suggestions, please feel welcome. And, as always, no one should offer advice unless it is solicited.

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More swimming, more Great British Baking Show, and more actual baking, which has become a huge respite for me.

I am neither an experienced nor a knowledgeable baker, so I have to pay attention to what I'm doing — I can't wing it, the way I can with cooking. It commands my whole mind, and thus provides relief from the anxieties that seize it, at least for a little while.

And, with any luck, there's something tasty at the end. Not altogether a terrible deal.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat and Sophie the Torbie Cat standing on their back legs looking out the front window
Large and Little keeping an eye on things.

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 615

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: Kavanaugh Was a Republican Inevitability and Rosenstein Has His Job for Now — Until Trump Needs to Deploy a Major Distraction and Trump Continues to Brazenly Set the Stage to Declare Elections Illegitimate.

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

[Content Note: Descriptions of sexual assault; rape apologia. Covers entire section.]

Joanna Walters at the Guardian: Brett Kavanaugh: Third Woman Accuses Supreme Court Nominee of Sexual Misconduct.
A third woman has come forward to accuse Donald Trump's Supreme Court pick, Brett Kavanaugh, of sexual misconduct, according to a statement published on Wednesday by her lawyer Michael Avenatti.

Avenatti tweeted a declaration made in the name of Julie Swetnick, a resident of Washington D.C., which said she had met Kavanaugh and his school friend Mark Judge in the early 1980s and attended the same parties.

The declaration said she had "observed Brett Kavanaugh drink excessively at these parties and engage in abusive and physically aggressive behaviour towards girls, including pressing girls against him without their consent, 'grinding' against girls, and attempting to remove or shift girls clothing to expose private body parts."

Swetnick said she was at parties where Kavanaugh and his friend Judge were involved in situations that resulted in women being gang raped.

She wrote: "I witnessed efforts by Mark Judge, Brett Kavanaugh, and others to cause girls to become inebriated and disoriented so they could then be 'gang raped' in a side room or bedroom by a 'train' of numerous boys…"

..."In approximately 1982, I became the victim of one of these 'gang' or 'train' rapes where Mark Judge and Brett Kavanaugh were present. Shortly after the incident, I shared what had transpired with at least two other people. During this incident, I was incapacitated without my consent and unable to fight off boys raping me. I believe I was drugged using Quaaludes or something similar placed in what I was drinking."
Kate Riga at TPM: As Accusations Mount, Three More Yalies Retract Support from Kavanaugh. "Yale Law School graduates Kent Sinclair, Douglas Rutzen, and Mark Osler, all of whom previously signed a letter attesting to Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's virtue, are now pushing for an investigation into the accusations against him, according to a Tuesday Washington Post report. ...Two of his peers during his undergrad time at Yale, Louisa Garry and Dino Ewing, withdrew their names Monday from a statement of support that ran in the New Yorker article detailing Deborah Ramirez's accusation of sexual misconduct." Which, of course, means that their support was based on nothing but Boys' Club bullshit in the first place.

Elham Khatami at ThinkProgress: Republicans Have Already Ensured That Thursday's Kavanaugh Hearing Will Be a Sham. "Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans announced Tuesday evening that the panel should be prepared to vote on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh for Supreme Court on Friday, just one day after he and his accuser Dr. Christine Blasey Ford will testify before the committee regarding allegations that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in high school. ...The intention of the hearings, for Republicans, is not to determine the facts of the case, but to assuage the few senators who could be swing votes on the nomination: potentially Sens. Jeff Flake, Susan Collins, and Lisa Murkowski. Just two Republican senators voting against him would be enough to derail Kavanaugh's nomination."

Mary Ann Georgantopoulos at BuzzFeed: Four People Told the Senate That Christine Blasey Ford Told Them She Was Sexually Assaulted in High School. At that link, way at the bottom of the piece, are images of Kavanaugh's calendar from that period, which a number of his defenders are using to "prove" he couldn't have assaulted Ford, because the party wasn't noted on his calendar. Let me just say this about that despicable defense...

The guy who raped me in high school was a student athlete and part of a group of boys, many of whom were also student athletes, who passed around a secret notebook called "The Log," in which they documented many of their various "conquests," including everything from video game high scores to girls (because we were things to be defeated, just like a record high score on Centipede). There was stuff about parties and drinking and drug use, etc. It was basically a shared journal of their high school years.

One of the pieces of evidence that I took to authorities (to be duly ignored), after a friend of mine who was a jock got his hands on "The Log" for me, was a poem entitled "Raping [Then Last Name]." (Which I've briefly mentioned previously.) It was written by another kid who was telling the story that the guy who raped me told him, like he was fucking Homer or something.

Anyway. The point is that my rape was recorded in "The Log." But the other girl I know he raped, because she told me, was not mentioned. That doesn't mean shit. It sure doesn't mean she wasn't raped. No more than something that Brett Kavanaugh left off his calendar in 1982.

(All of this is so triggering. I hate this. I hate remembering this stuff, and I hate thinking about it constantly, and I hate having to read about Kavanaugh's high school rape rampage, and I hate every single disgusting member of the Republican Party who has obliged us to navigate this garbage. And I take up space in solidarity with my fellow survivors who are having a tough time at the moment, too.)

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Natasha Bertrand at the Atlantic: A Supreme Court Case Could Liberate Trump to Pardon His Associates.
A key Republican senator has quietly weighed in on an upcoming Supreme Court case that could have important consequences for Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.

The Utah lawmaker Orrin Hatch, who sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee, filed a 44-page amicus brief earlier this month in Gamble v. United States, a case that will consider whether the dual-sovereignty doctrine should be put to rest. The 150-year-old exception to the Fifth Amendment's double-jeopardy clause allows state and federal courts to prosecute the same person for the same criminal offense.

According to the brief he filed on September 11, Hatch believes the doctrine should be overturned. "The extensive federalization of criminal law has rendered ineffective the federalist underpinnings of the dual sovereignty doctrine," his brief reads. "And its persistence impairs full realization of the Double Jeopardy Clause's liberty protections."

Within the context of the Mueller probe, legal observers have seen the dual-sovereignty doctrine as a check on [Donald] Trump's power: It could discourage him from trying to shut down the Mueller investigation or pardon anyone caught up in the probe, because the pardon wouldn't be applied to state charges.

Under settled law, if Trump were to pardon his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, for example — he was convicted last month in federal court on eight counts of tax and bank fraud — both New York and Virginia state prosecutors could still charge him for any crimes that violated their respective laws. (Both states have a double-jeopardy law that bars secondary state prosecutions for committing "the same act," but there are important exceptions, as the Fordham University School of Law professor Jed Shugerman has noted.) If the dual-sovereignty doctrine were tossed, as Hatch wants, then Trump's pardon could theoretically protect Manafort from state action.
Another reason Republicans want to get Kavanaugh confirmed as swiftly as possible.

Betsy Woodruff and Erin Banco at the Daily Beast: Revealed: What Erik Prince and Moscow's Money Man Discussed in That Infamous Seychelles Meeting. "Joint U.S.-Russian raids to kill top terrorists. Teamwork between an American government agency and a sanctioned Russian fund. Moscow pouring money into the Midwest. These are just a few of the ideas the head of a Russian sovereign wealth fund touched on during his meeting with former Blackwater head Erik Prince in the Seychelles, just weeks before [Donald] Trump's inauguration, according to a memo exclusively reviewed by The Daily Beast. The meeting between Prince, an influential Trump ally, and Kirill Dmitriev, the CEO of the sanctioned fund, took place on Jan. 11, 2017, at the Four Seasons Hotel in a bar overlooking the Indian Ocean."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] As I've noted before, Trump pretty clearly sees Venezuela as a resource he wants to exploit and control, and Mike Pence has been tasked with the Venezuela beat — so this item by Jason Lemon at Newsweek has my antennae tingling: "Pence issued a strong warning to Venezuela on Tuesday after it stationed troops along the border of Colombia in a move seen as highly provocative by Bogotá and Washington. Citing news reports of the military buildup, Pence called the decision from Caracas 'an obvious effort at intimidation' as he spoke at the U.N. General Assembly in New York. 'Let me be clear: The United States of America will always stand with our allies for their security,' Pence said, in a stern statement directed at the government of embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. 'The Maduro regime would do well not to test the resolve of the President of the United States or the American people in this regard,' he added."

[CN: Nativism] Adolfo Flores at BuzzFeed: The Secretary of Homeland Security Said There Was "No Policy of Separating Families." A Memo Proves There Was. "A memo signed by Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen contradicts statements she made at the height of the family separation crisis last spring that the administration did not have a policy of separating children from parents. Nielsen signed off on the option to prosecute all adults who crossed the border illegally, including those with kids, knowing it would lead to family separations. ...'DHS could also permissibly direct the separation of parents or legal guardians and minors held in immigration detention so that the parent or legal guardian can be prosecuted,' the memo said."

[CN: War on agency] James Arkin at Politico: GOP Ground Game Focuses on Abortion to Turn Out Base. "The issue is getting a fraction of the attention of [Donald] Trump, health care, and immigration. But Republican and anti-abortion groups have made it a major part of their ground game: Organizers for Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion group, ran a series of events in red states in August and early September and have had more than 500 canvassers knock on doors at more than 1.6 million homes in Ohio, Florida, Missouri, Indiana, West Virginia, and North Dakota. ...Even as national Democrats organize like never before around threats to abortion rights and Trump's judicial picks, Republicans looking at the narrow, more conservative Senate map see a different picture that they believe tilts toward them on this key issue. 'It is very clear that there is a sizable pro-life base that can deliver victories on the margins,' said Marjorie Dannenfelser, the president of Susan B. Anthony List."

Farai Mutsaka at the AP: Zimbabwe's Leader Says He Offers Trump Land for Golf Course. "Zimbabwe's leader says he is willing to offer land to [Donald] Trump to build a golf course in a national park teeming with wildlife. President Emmerson Mnangagwa was speaking to a New York investors' forum ahead of his first address to a United Nations annual gathering of world leaders this week. Mnangagwa said he made the offer to Trump staffers earlier this year at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland, pitching land in the tourist town of Victoria Falls." JFC.

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Mike Fomil, Gabe Gutierrez, and Elizabeth Chuck at NBC News: After Florence, South Carolinians Brace for Record Flooding. "They survived Hurricane Florence's powerful wind and driving rain, but now residents in coastal South Carolina are wondering how they will make it through the historic floods that are forecast as a result of the swollen rivers that the storm left behind. ...Earlier in the week, county officials urged nearly 8,000 Georgetown residents to evacuate ahead of a 'record event' of up to 10 feet of flooding, the Associated Press said."

Amanda Morris at NPR: Florence Floodwaters Total Thousands of Cars, Stranding Locals. "Coupled with the cost of the damage to her house and loss of almost all her personal belongings, [Ashley Simpson] said she will need to move to a smaller home with cheaper rent in order to buy a new car. Everything she owns was trashed, but still, Simpson considers herself one of the lucky ones. 'I know a lot of people that don't have the means that I do to replace their cars,' she said. Without the money, some residents will be left waiting for a ride, surrounded by cars that won't take them anywhere."

Nicole Lafond at TPM: FEMA Chief Brock Long Spent $151,000 Of Taxpayers' Money on Unofficial Travel. "Brock Long, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, spent more than $150,000 of government funds for personal travel on trips to and from his home in North Carolina on the weekends and during a family vacation to Hawaii, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. ...During his frequent trips from Washington, D.C. to North Carolina and back, Long also had an aide accompany him and used taxpayer funds to put the staffer up in a hotel while he spent time with family."

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

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Trump Continues to Brazenly Set the Stage to Declare Elections Illegitimate

In July, Donald Trump tweeted that Russia will be interfering in the midterms to the benefit of Democrats. Now he's at the United Nations saying that China is interfering in the midterms:


Again, his assertion is that China is interfering to Democrats' benefit: "Regrettably, we found that China has been attempting to interfere in our upcoming 2018 election. Coming up in November. Against my administration. They do not want me, or us, to win, because I am the first president ever to challenge China on trade. And we are winning on trade. We are winning on every level. We do not want them to meddle or interfere in our upcoming election."

On what is this contention based? He offers no evidence. We are meant to take his conjecture as fact, simply because he states it that way.

It may even now seem implausible that Trump would or could reject out of hand the results of the midterm elections.

But electoral challenges end up before the Supreme Court, which, you may have heard, he's currently in the process of stacking with flunkies who will reflexively rule in his favor.

So this is no joke. This is a(nother) constitutional crisis in the making, care of our authoritarian president.

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Rosenstein Has His Job for Now — Until Trump Needs to Deploy a Major Distraction

After the Kavanaugh-centered political press was briefly taken by the threat that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein was about to lose his job, Matt Zapotosky, Devlin Barrett, and Josh Dawsey at the Washington Post report that Rosenstein's job remains safe — for now.

While it remained possible that Rosenstein could still resign or be fired imminently, people inside and outside the department said it seemed increasingly more likely that Rosenstein would stay in the job until after November's elections and then depart, probably along with the attorney general. Two White House officials said Tuesday that Trump is unlikely to fire Rosenstein until after the midterms.
Unless, of course, Trump needs to distract the political press from another unfavorable news story, which is exactly what happened this week, per Gabriel Sherman at Vanity Fair.
Over the weekend, as Brett Kavanaugh's prospects appeared increasingly imperiled, Trump faced two tactical options, both of them fraught. One was to cut Kavanaugh loose. But he was also looking for ways to dramatically shift the news cycle away from his embattled Supreme Court nominee. According to a source briefed on Trump's thinking, Trump decided that firing Rosenstein would knock Kavanaugh out of the news, potentially saving his nomination and Republicans' chances for keeping the Senate. "The strategy was to try and do something really big," the source said. The leak about Rosenstein's resignation could have been the result, and it certainly had the desired effect of driving Kavanaugh out of the news for a few hours.
"A source briefed on Trump's thinking," who is totally not the president himself, definitely not calling reporters to brag about his cool strategy, for sure not publicly doing a victory lap that he scared the shit out of all reasonable people as a grand manipulation, uh-huh.

Even the threat of firing Rosenstein was a grave abuse of power by a savvy media manipulator, who also happens to be the sitting president.

He has zero respect for the rule of law, democracy, or We the People.

That should have been evident to everyone from the start, but surely it is now, to even his most contemptible apologists in the press.

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Kavanaugh Was a Republican Inevitability

[Content Note: Sexual assault; rape culture; misogyny.]

I have previously noted that the 2016 election was a referendum on how this nation values women. Donald Trump's presidency has subsequently become a series of horrendous reminders that the people running the joint don't value women at all, except as targets or apologists for their vast abuse.

The Kavanaugh nomination is another painful interlude, with a specific message about how female survivors are valued. Or not, as the case clearly is.

Brett Kavanaugh has now been publicly accused by multiple women of sexual assault, but the Republicans refuse to abandon him, because they're drawing a line in the sand. They won't be held accountable by a bunch of abused women and their allies.

We say #BelieveSurvivors, and they say: "Fuck no."

Besides, belief is altogether irrelevant to them, anyhow. Whatever they may say publicly to discredit Kavanaugh's accusers, they might well "believe" them — in private, as they strategize defenses, or deep in their heart of dark hearts. The more important issue, for them, is that even if Kavanaugh did the things of which he's accused, it doesn't matter.

That's what it means to use a Supreme Court nomination as another referendum on how we value women.

And, just like Donald Trump was not an anomaly but an inevitability of Republican politics, so, too, is Brett Kavanaugh.

As I have observed many, many times in this space over the last 14 years, the Republican Party does not have a solid history of taking sexual assault seriously, to put it mildly.

There was that time House Republicans tried to redefine rape so that it was only "real" rape if it involved force. Then there was the time that Senate Republicans blocked votes on military sexual assault legislation. There was that other time New York state Republicans blocked a proposal to eliminate the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse. And let's not forget that time when Georgia state Republicans didn't want to consider a proposal on rape kits and accused the Democratic sponsor of "politicizing" the issue to get votes.

There was that time former GOP Senator and two-time presidential candidate Rick Santorum said that pregnant rape victims should make the best out of a bad situation. And that time former GOP Senate candidate Todd Akin argued that pregnancy from rape is really rare, because "If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down." And that time Akin also accused women of lying about rape. And that time GOP Senate candidate Richard Mourdock said that getting pregnant from rape is god's plan. And all the times Republicans have told women how to avoid getting ourselves raped, as if it's our responsibility to stop rapists rather than predators' responsibility to not rape people.

There's Joe Walsh. And John Koster. And Phil Gingrey. And Thomas Corbin. And Jonathan Stickland. And Roy Moore. And Blake Farenthold. Just the tip of the iceberg of Republican politicians who have said stupid shit about sexual assault and/or been accused of sexual assault themselves.

And then there's the current Republican president, whose opening salvo in his campaign was to call undocumented Mexican immigrants rapists; who compared trade deficits to rape — twice; who is himself a confessed serial sex abuser; and whose Secretary of Education has rewritten campus assault guidlines to favor predators.

This is hardly a comprehensive list. The litany of examples of Republicans blocking legislation that would address sexual assault or support survivors, and of Republicans saying inappropriate things about rape and/or its victims, is interminable. And intolerable.

They want to win this battle, because it's the culmination of a protracted war, which they have been waging against survivors for a very long time.

Anyone who is surprised at their bloody-minded defense of an accused predator hasn't been paying attention.

But we should all be deeply appalled. And keep making lots of noise in unyielding protest.

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Open Thread

image of a red couch

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

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Open Thread

image of a purple sofa

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

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Programming Note

As I mentioned, I've got a friend coming to visit for a few days. Actually, he arrived last night — yay! So I'm going to be taking tomorrow and Friday off, as well as Monday and Tuesday of next week, and then I'll see you back here next Wednesday.

I'll be putting up fresh Open Threads every couple of days, so you'll still have a place to hang out and chat about stuff, if you need it!

image of a cartoon version of me poking around big block lettering that reads SEE YOU SOON

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What I'm Watching

This is a thread to share all the good things you're watching at the moment, or have recently watched. Serialized shows on broadcast or streaming; films; digital shorts; stand-up; documentaries; performances — whatever! Tell us what you're watching and enjoying these days.

In addition to watching the Great British Baking Show, I just finished Season 1 of the new Amazon series Forever, because I would literally watch Maya Rudolph read a takeout menu.

I can't say anything about the show without ruining it, so I won't. I will only say that it's interesting, and I'm not sure that I liked it, but I would definitely watch more of it!

screenshot of a scene from Forever in which Maya Rudolph and Fred Armisen are sitting in funny positions in a mid-century modern living room

Anyway! What are you watching these days?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat, Olivia the White Farm Cat, and Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on the living room floor near the window together
The girls were having a cuddle fest near the window the other day.

Meanwhile, Dudley was all:

image of Dudley the Greyhound, lounging on the couch with his ears perked up
"Hi!"

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 608

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: Life Preservers in a Toxic Sea and A Tale of Two Senators.

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

[Content Note: Sexual assault] Lauren Gambino at the Guardian: Trump: 'Very Hard to Imagine' Anything Happened Between Kavanaugh and Accuser. "Donald Trump has said it would be 'very hard' to imagine anything happened between his supreme court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, and Christine Blasey Ford, the woman who has accused him of sexual assault decades ago. ...[He also] continued to vigorously defend his nominee, calling him an 'outstanding man' with an 'unblemished record' and lamenting the hardship this has placed on Kavanaugh's wife and two young daughters." Goddammit I hate him so much.


[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Chris Strohm at Bloomberg: FBI, DOJ Plan Redactions Despite Trump's Document Order. "Donald Trump has demanded the 'immediate declassification' of sensitive materials about the Russia investigation, but the agencies responsible are expected to propose redactions that would keep some information secret, according to three people familiar with the matter. The Justice Department, FBI, and Office of the Director of National Intelligence are going through a methodical review and can’t offer a timeline for finishing, said the people, who weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the sensitive matter."

[Previously: Trump Declassifies Documents in Brazen Authoritarian Move.]

Kate Riga at TPM: Trump on Sessions: 'I Don't Have an Attorney General. It's Very Sad.' "Donald Trump beat up on Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday, saying that he doesn't 'have an attorney general' and that he's 'very sad' about it. ...'I'm so sad over Jeff Sessions because he came to me,' Trump told the Hill. 'He was the first senator that endorsed me. And he wanted to be attorney general, and I didn't see it.' ...'And my worst enemies, I mean, people that, you know, are on the other side of me, in a lot of ways, including politically, have said that was a very unfair thing he did,' he told the Hill, looping back to Sessions' recusal. 'We'll see how it goes with Jeff. I'm very disappointed in Jeff. Very disappointed.'"

John Wagner and Matt Zapotosky at the Washington Post: 'I Should Have Fired Him Before I Got Here': Trump Says He Regrets Not Firing Comey Sooner. "Trump said Tuesday that he regrets not firing James B. Comey as FBI director sooner, asserting that he should have done so while still a candidate for president — an option that was not actually available to him. 'If I did one mistake with Comey, I should have fired him before I got here,' Trump said in an interview with Hill.TV. 'I should have fired him right after the convention, say I don't want that guy. Or at least fired him the first day on the job. ...I would have been better off firing him or putting out a statement that I don't want him there when I get there.'"

WHAT THE FUCK IS HE EVEN TALKING ABOUT?! ARGH.

* * *

Kira Lerner: Georgia Voters Warn Midterm Election Security Is in Danger. "Georgia is one of just five states that will not use paper ballets in the upcoming midterms, after a judge denied a motion late Monday that would have required the state to move away from its electronic touch screen machines. In her ruling, U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg pointed to the limited time remaining to switch the state's election systems ahead of November's vote, although she said that security concerns are legitimate and warned that 'further delay is not tolerable' in 'confronting and tackling the challenges before the state's election balloting system.'"

* * *

Justin Sink at Bloomberg: Poland Offers 'Fort Trump' as Name If U.S. Builds Military Base.
[Donald] Trump said the U.S. is looking "very seriously" at establishing a permanent military base in Poland — and Polish President Andrzej Duda, eager to secure a deal, suggested it be named "Fort Trump."

Trump raised the possibility of a new U.S. base in Poland in a meeting with Duda in the Oval Office on Tuesday. He said at a news conference with the Polish leader that Duda had offered to pay more than $2 billion toward construction.

"Poland is willing to make a very major contribution to the United States to come in and have a presence in Poland," Trump said in the Oval Office. "If they're willing to do that, it's something we will certainly talk about."

Duda, whose country is wary of Russian aggression in neighboring Ukraine, suggested during the news conference that a base could be named after Trump.

...The construction of a base would risk provoking Russian President Vladimir Putin even as Trump has gone to lengths to improve relations with the Kremlin.
I don't even know where to begin with this garbage, but let's start here: Why does the media continue to talk about Trump as though he's a typical president?! That last quoted sentence is absurd. Obviously the objective of the base wouldn't really be to prevent Russian aggression. For crying out loud.

[Content Note: Deadly explosions] Last Friday, I wrote about a strange and troubling series of explosions in three Massachusetts communities, which left one person dead, dozens injured, and many people displaced from their homes after officials called for widespread evacuations. At the time, I said that I feared it was the first significant cyberattack on our utility grid.

This AP piece (wire at Washington Post) has not disabused me of my concerns: Lawsuit Filed Against Gas Company After Massachusetts Blasts. "A letter sent by the state's U.S. senators to executives at Columbia Gas and its parent company, NiSource, on Monday said the pressure in natural gas pipelines was 12 times higher than it should have been. 'The federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has reported that the pressure in the Columbia Gas system should have been around 0.5 pounds per square inch (PSI), but readings in the area reached at least 6 PSI — twelve times higher than the system was intended to hold,' the letter said. The pressure spike registered in a Columbia Gas control room in Ohio, the senators said in the letter, which requests a reply by Wednesday." Welp.

Tom Embury-Dennis at the Independent: Container Ship Crosses Arctic Route for First Time in History Due to Melting Sea Ice. "A commercial container ship has for the first time successfully navigated the Northern Sea Route of the Arctic Ocean, a route made possible by melting sea ice caused by global warming. Maersk Line, the world's biggest container shipping company, told The Independent its ship, Venta Maersk, was expected to reach its final destination of St. Petersburg next week. ...With help from Russia's most powerful nuclear icebreaker, it followed the Northern Sea Route up through the Bering Strait between Russia and Alaska, before travelling along Russia's north coast and into the Norwegian Sea."

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

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