Trump Wants to End Birthright Citizenship

[Content Note: Nativism.]

Section One of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

It is this part of the Constitution that establishes birthright citizenship — that is, a person born in the United States is automatically a citizen.

There are good reasons for this clause, chief among them that it serves as a preventative against racialized citizenship.

Naturally, that's what many conservatives hate about it, which is why they disgorge vile nativist narratives using obscene phrases like "anchor babies" and "chain migration."

Donald Trump has always used nativism, starting with his birther campaign against President Barack Obama, to cultivate his deplorable following. Leading into the midterms, he's activating them with a steady stream of nativist trash, the latest of which is telling the water-carrying outlet Axios that he intends to rescind birthright citizenship with an executive order.

Said Trump: "We're the only country in the world where a person comes in and has a baby, and the baby is essentially a citizen of the United States...with all of those benefits. It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. And it has to end."

He went on to say: "It's in the process. It'll happen...with an executive order."

The president is not empowered to override a Constitutional amendment with an executive order. Because it seems like such a reach, many people are reacting by dismissing the news out of hand as patently ludicrous.

However: Trump's attack on the 14th Amendment is not coming out of left field. It's coming following nearly two years of: 1. Stacking the judiciary so that any challenges made to such wild executive overreach will have a strong chance of being decided by courts disposed to uphold and enable the administration's authoritarianism; and 2. Escalating attacks on immigrants, including naturalized citizens.


On Twitter, I have possted a long thread detailing the Trump Regime's attacks on documented immigrants. This latest grotesquery did not come out of nowhere.

And while it's absolutely true, as many folks have observed, that Trump's threat to birthright citizenship has been made to shore up the Republican base before the midterms, it would be foolish to believe that's the only reason he made this threat.

Trump doesn't believe in much, but he does believe in white supremacy, nativism, and fealty to him. Trust that this is not merely a talking point to get out the vote for him. It's a real objective.

We misunderstand that reality at our own peril.

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Open Thread


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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Diverkat: "What's your favourite go-to 'quick' or 'lazy' meal when you're short on time or energy?"

Besides "ordering in," lol, my favorite easy go-to is "throw whatever I've got in the crockpot for a stew." If I don't think far enough ahead, then it's "throw whatever I've got in the wok for a stirfry." Unless it's summertime, and then it's "throw whatever I've got in a bowl for a salad."

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Monday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by homemade bread.

Recommended Reading:

Paul Rogers at the Mercury News: Rare Dumbo Octopus Filmed in Deep Sea off Monterey Bay

Staff at the Transgender Law Center: [Content Note: Transphobia; harassment; suicidal ideation] The Laverne Cox Speech You Need This Week

Jourdain Searles at Bitch Media: No Shame Monster: Big Mouth Sweetens the Bitter Pill of Puberty

Zoë Weiner at Teen Vogue: Zoë Kravitz Poses Nude on the Cover of Rolling Stone, Re-creating Lisa Bonet's Cover

Julia Alexander at the Verge: The Bizarre Justin Bieber Burrito Incident Reminds Us Not to Believe Everything Online

Gabriella Paiella at the Cut: Sorry, But This Robot Painting Sucks

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

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"Sam's Club Now" Will Open with No Cashiers and Mobile Scan App

Automation is everywhere: Manufacturing jobs are being lost to automation via robots. Retail jobs are being lost to automation via online shopping. Service jobs are being lost to automation via self-serve kiosks, even in restaurants, where touch-screen order interfaces are popping up where waitstaff used to be.

Operators have been replaced with automated directories. Bank tellers have been replaced with ATMs and online banking. Cashier jobs are being lost to self-checkouts. Opportunities to make one's living as an instructor — a piano teacher, say — have precipitously dwindled with the advent of online (and often free) instruction videos.

If you've visited a construction site lately, you may have seen field clearances and leveling being done by a grounded drone within marked boundaries — a sort of large-scale Roomba for the great outdoors.

Delivery drones are coming. And self-piloting vehicles will destroy entire sectors: Trucking, municipal driving jobs (garbage collection, street sweeping, leaf collection, snow plowing, public transportation), and driving services (taxis, Uber, Lyft).

If politicians talk about automation at all, it's usually couched within a framework which suggests that widespread automation looms in our future.

But the future is now.

Sarah Perez at TechCrunch: Walmart's Test Store for New Technology, Sam's Club Now, Opens Next Week in Dallas.

Walmart's warehouse club, Sam's Club, is preparing to open the doors at a new Dallas area store that will serve as a testbed for the latest in retail technology. Specifically, the retailer will test out new concepts like mobile checkout, an Amazon Go-like camera system for inventory management, electronic shelf labels, wayfinding technology for in-store navigation, augmented reality, and artificial intelligence-infused shopping, among other things.

...Like other Sam's Club stores, consumers will need a membership to shop at Sam's Club Now. But how they shop will be remarkably different.

Instead of cashiers, the store is staffed with "Member Hosts," who will act more like concierges, the company says.

And instead of scanning items at a point-of-sale cashier stand, customers will use a specialized Sam's Club Now mobile app.

The app leverages Sam's Club existing "Scan & Go" technology, which is used today across its retail locations to help speed up checkout. With the current Scan & Go mobile app, shoppers can opt to scan items as they place them in their cart, then pay right on their phone. At Sam's Club Now, however, the use of mobile scan-and-pay is required, not optional.
Some regular, non-member Walmart locations are already testing the no-cashiers principle, either altogether or during low-traffic store hours, but requiring shoppers to use their own mobile phones to scan items is new.

Because Sam's Club requires a membership, Walmart already knows what Sam's Club shoppers purchase — but if the checkout app technology is rolled out to non-member Walmart stores, then it will be impossible to shop there without attaching every single purchase to your identity, thus informing Walmart about each item you buy.

That fundamentally alters the shopping experience and privacy options for shoppers.

Right now, if you don't carry and use a retailer's discount fob and if you pay in cash, your purchases aren't linked to your identity. Soon that may no longer be an option.

Because the Walton family doesn't have enough fucking money already, they need to make even more money by automating their stores and selling your data.

And, of course, because they're in a desperate battle with Amazon, which is trying to destroy the remnants of what Walmart already destroyed.

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Discussion Thread: Good Things

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

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

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

News items worth celebrating are also welcome.

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

* * *

Yesterday, Iain and I had brunch with the Space Cowpokes at a beautiful place with tasty food, and we sat for hours talking about everything, and then we walked around and took pictures under trees bright with fall foliage, and it was wonderful. And then we came home and snuggled up on the couch with dogs and cats, and watched Manchester United play Everton, and then made bread and soup, and that was wonderful, too.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat sitting on a blanket, looking thoughtful
She wouldn't tell me what she was thinking about, but we know.

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 648

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: Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and Bolsonaro Wins in Brazil and Trump Regime Now Says It Will Deploy 5,000 Troops to Southern Border.

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

This is a brilliant act of resistance! Andy Towle at Towleroad: Massive 'Trans People Deserve to Live' Banner Unfurled During Game 5 of World Series. Right on!


* * *

[Content Note: Violence; stochastic terrorism. Covers entire section.]

Robert Costa and Felicia Sonmez at the Washington Post: Trump, GOP Defiant Amid Allegations That Incendiary Rhetoric Contributed to Climate of Violence.
Trump and his Republican allies remained defiant Sunday amid allegations from critics that Trump's incendiary attacks on political rivals and racially charged rhetoric on the campaign trail bear some culpability for the climate surrounding a spate of violence in the United States.

Trump, who has faced calls to tone down his public statements, signaled that he would do no such thing — berating billionaire liberal activist Tom Steyer, a target of a mail bomb sent by a Trump supporter, as a "crazed & stumbling lunatic" on Twitter, after Steyer said on CNN that Trump and the Republican Party have created an atmosphere of "political violence."

Later Sunday, Trump lashed out again on Twitter, this time at the media: "The Fake News is doing everything in their power to blame Republicans, Conservatives and me for the division and hatred that has been going on for so long in our Country."

The GOP's defensive posture, following Saturday's deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history, came as some Trump allies sought to shift blame to others, including media figures and Democratic leaders, arguing that recent attempts by liberal protesters to challenge GOP officials in public were perhaps more responsible for the national unrest than the president's combative politics or the rise of conspiracy theories on the right.
Trump and other Republicans will use any excuse to distance themselves from accountability. And it will work, because their cultists don't care (except insomuch as they covertly or openly cheer acts of violence against their "enemies") and because the media continually allow them to get away with distancing themselves from accountability — or even shamelessly assist them with vile bothsideserism.

For instance:


Erin Durkin at the Guardian: Another Suspicious Package Addressed to CNN Intercepted. "Another suspicious package bound for CNN was discovered on Monday morning, the network said. The package was intercepted at a post office in Atlanta, where the network is headquartered, according to a statement from CNN president Jeff Zucker. ...Two of the pipe bombs sent last week to prominent political figures were addressed to CNN. Cesar Sayoc, a Donald Trump supporter from Florida, was arrested and charged with sending the devices. It was unclear if the latest package was part of the same pattern. Authorities said last week that even after Sayoc was arrested, additional devices might be found that had already been placed in the mail."

[CN: Homophobic slur; white supremacy; anti-Semitism] Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: We're Witnessing a Massive Surge in Far-Right Violence; It's Unlikely to End Soon. "A far-right mob brutally beating counter-protesters while yelling 'faggot.' A series of pipe bombs mailed to the prominent liberals who are most featured in right-wing conspiracies. A white supremacist murder of two black senior citizens in a Kentucky grocery store. The mass shooting of eleven worshipers at a synagogue in what is described as the worst anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history. All these events have happened in just over a fortnight. More crucially, they all bear hallmarks of violent, far-right bigotry, which [Donald] Trump still refuses to call out and denounce."

He's never going to "call out and denounce" this trash, because he revels in it — and relentlessly exploits it to increase his own power and consolidate the power of his party.

[CN: Disablism] What he'll do — and what his fellow party members and their cultists will do — is continue to say that people like Cesar Sayoc, Gregory Bush, and Robert Bowers are "mentally unstable," implying that their actions are irrational.

But whether any or all of these men have mental illness, none of them behaved irrationally. It's utterly vile, unethical, and illegal behavior, but it also completely logical behavior to respond to decades (or more) of incendiary rhetoric that casts a population as a present threat with eliminationist violence.

That's why there has been no let-up (despite sustained press inattention) in anti-choice terrorism in decades. Killing abortion doctors and bombing or otherwise attacking clinics is an aggressively indecent but logical response to hearing that people who provide and get abortions are committing mass murder.

This isn't "senseless" crime. It's a sense that makes a perfect, devastating sense by obscene standards.

The fact that someone will see violence as a rational and necessary response to demonizing people as existential threats to you is exactly why and how stochastic terrorism works.

Casting the people who act on incendiary rhetoric as "crazy" is one of the key ways in which purveyors of that rhetoric distance themselves from responsibility.

And always remember that if they actually believe that the people who commit these acts are "crazy," then they are working very hard to keep those "crazy" people as "crazy" as possible and with access to deadly weapons.


* * *

Arne Delfs and Patrick Donahue at Bloomberg: Merkel Steps Down as Party Leader as Election Setbacks Take Toll. "Germany's Angela Merkel will quit as head of her Christian Democratic party and won't run for another term as chancellor, taking personal responsibility for the decline in support for the governing coalition. ...The shock decision signals the beginning of the end for a chancellor who put her stamp on Europe and beyond defending moderation and liberal values that have increasingly come under attack. ...Merkel insisted she intends to remain in power until the end of her term in 2021. But how long she's able to hang on as chancellor will depend on who wins the race to succeed her as party leader." Another stunning setback for democracy.


Josh Lederman at NBC News: Evacuated After 'Health Attacks' in Cuba and China, Diplomats Face New Ordeals in U.S. "For the past 18 months, more than two dozen U.S. diplomatic staffers once stationed in Cuba and China have endured an ordeal that is equal parts medical mystery, political stand-off, and bureaucratic muddle. ...Physicians enlisted by the State Department have identified what they call a 'Brain Network Disorder' acquired by U.S. personnel serving abroad, say U.S. officials, that includes structural changes to the brain not found in any previously known disorder. ...Equally unsettling to the diplomatic evacuees: Suspected incidents of harassment and break-ins they say have occurred since returning to the States. Four U.S. officials tell NBC that the FBI has investigated."


Luke Harding at the Guardian: Czechoslovakia Ramped Up Spying on Trump in Late 1980s, Seeking U.S. Intel. "The communist intelligence service in Prague stepped up its spying campaign against Donald Trump in the late 1980s, targeting him to gain information about the 'upper echelons of the U.S. government,' archive files and testimony from former cold war spies reveal. Czechoslovakia's Státní bezpečnost (StB) carried out a long-term spying mission against Trump following his marriage in 1977 to his first wife, Ivana Zelníčková. The operation was run out of Zlín, the provincial town in south-west Czechoslovakia where Zelníčková was born and grew up."

That's some coincidence. Unless it isn't. Especially given this bit at the very end of the piece: "[KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov] circulated a confidential personality questionnaire to KGB heads of station abroad, setting out the qualities wanted from a potential asset. According to instructions leaked to British intelligence by the KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky, they included corruption, vanity, narcissism, marital infidelity, and poor analytical skills. The KGB should focus on personalities who were upwardly mobile in business and politics, especially Americans, the document said." Welp.

* * *

[CN: Reproductive coercion] Auditi Guha at Rewire.News: Reproductive Coercion 'Much More Prevalent' Than Once Thought. "Four in ten survivors of intimate partner violence report that a partner has tried to get them pregnant against their will or stopped them from using birth control. Eighty-four percent of these survivors of reproductive coercion became pregnant. This is one of the findings from a survey of 164 survivors in domestic violence programs and shelters conducted by the Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR). The survey, which was administered to survivors in 11 states and D.C., explores how abuse affects their abilities to secure and keep jobs, choose when to start families, and maintain good credit."

[CN: Class warfare] Monica Potts at TPM: Americans Are More Vulnerable Than Ever, and the Gig Economy Isn't Helping. "By 2010, according to the Government Accountability Office, 40.4 percent of the workforce was in 'alternative work arrangements' — up from 30.6 percent in 2005. These statistics include a range of workers who, like Milland, piece together work through short-term gigs, contract work, part-time work, or temporary positions. Some of these jobs are those where people have traditionally worked for themselves, like real estate agents or freelance writers, but there was some alarm in the wake of the Great Recession that the number of people in such arrangements was rising sharply. Some surveys found that almost all of the jobs created after the Great Recession were in this type of nontraditional, insecure job, and many were part time. Many took a second, part-time job to cover their bills. In this era, these types of jobs have taken on a new name: the gig economy."

[CN: Environmental racism] Yessenia Funes at Earther: Alaska Natives Call on Banks to Protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from Drilling. "Tiliisia Sisto, a 23-year-old mother of two, became a hunter this year. Sisto lives in Venetie, Alaska, a Gwich'in Alaska Native village, and if she wants to eat affordably while also preserving her culture, hunting is key. So are the Porcupine caribou she and her people rely on. Now, a federal proposal to open the Arctic lands on which these caribou calve to oil and gas drilling threatens the Gwich'in's primary food source and their way of life. That's why Sisto traveled all the way to New York City this week to ask major banks to withhold funding for projects seeking to develop the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). The Trump administration has been trying to fast-track an environmental impact statement to get extraction going here since the beginning of the year."

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

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Trump Regime Now Says It Will Deploy 5,000 Troops to Southern Border

[Content Note: Nativism; border militarization.]

Last week, the Trump Regime announced its plan to deploy 800 troops to the southern border in anticipation of the arrival of a caravan of migrants fleeing violence in Central America.

Now that number has suddenly jumped from 800 to 5,000.

Nancy A. Youssef and Alicia A. Caldwell at the Wall Street Journal report:

The new figure is a major increase from initial estimates of 800 troops and would represent a military force equal to about one-third the number of customs officials currently working at the border. The military sent about 2,000 National Guard troops to the area earlier this year.

The U.S. and federal law-enforcement officials said troops are likely to be deployed to ports of entry, at least in initial phases of the U.S. military mission, which the Pentagon has named Operation Faithful Patriot.

U.S. troops later expect to support border officials by doing things like building tents, providing medical support, and helping staff command and control centers.
Helping build tents sounds fairly innocuous, except for the fact that those "tents" are being used to detain children in the desert.

And let us be clear about the significance of this military build-up along the border: "The additional troops would mean that the number of U.S. forces deployed at the border would be greater than those currently in Syria and Iraq, and roughly half of those deployed in Afghanistan."

Let us also speak frankly about that mission name — Operation Faithful Patriot. That's some gross fascistic shit. Not only are they not even trying to hide the authoritarian nationalism any longer; they're gleefully broadcasting it.

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Bolsonaro Wins in Brazil

One of my continuing concerns about the political situation we face in the United States is that it's part of a larger erosion of democracy worldwide — a global trend from which it will be difficult to extricate ourselves, if it's even possible at all. There are anti-democratic forces subverting democracy everywhere around the planet, and I'm not sure even the bluest of blue waves can effectively contend with that.

On that note: Jair Bolsonaro has been elected Brazil's next president.

A far-right, pro-gun, pro-torture populist has been elected as Brazil's next president after a drama-filled and deeply divisive election that looks set to radically reforge the future of the world's fourth biggest democracy.

Jair Bolsonaro, a 63-year-old former paratrooper who built his campaign around pledges to crush corruption, crime, and a supposed communist threat, secured 55.1% of the votes after 99.9% were counted and was therefore elected Brazil's next president, electoral authorities said on Sunday.

...Bolsonaro's triumph will leave many millions of progressive Brazilians profoundly disturbed and fearful of the intolerant, rightwing tack their country is now likely to take.

Over nearly three decades in politics, he has become notorious for his hostility to black, gay, and indigenous Brazilians and to women, as well as for his admiration of dictatorial regimes, including the one that ruled Brazil from 1964 until 1985.

"The extreme right has conquered Brazil," Celso Rocha de Barros, a Brazilian political columnist, told the election night webcast of Piauí magazine. "Brazil now has a more extremist president than any democratic country in the world [and] we don't know what is going to happen."

...Donald Trump called Bolsonaro to congratulate him and both men expressed a strong commitment to work together, the White House said.
Shiver.

This is not good. It's not good for marginalized people and progressives in Brazil, and it's not good for the fate of democracy worldwide.

I don't say that to discourage anyone in the U.S. from voting on November 6. To the contrary, vote like it's the last time you may get the chance. Because it might be.

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Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting

[Content Note: Gun violence; anti-Semitism; terrorism; stochastic terrorism.]

On Saturday, an anti-Semitic terrorist walked into the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and began shooting. He killed 11 people.

Joyce Fienberg, 75
Richard Gottfried, 65
Rose Mallinger, 97
Jerry Rabinowitz, 66
Cecil Rosenthal, 59
David Rosenthal, 54
Bernice Simon, 84
Sylvan Simon, 86
Daniel Stein, 71
Melvin Wax, 88
Irving Younger, 69

My condolences to their families, friends, neighbors, and community. I am so sorry.

The shooter also physically injured six people, including four police officers. Many more people have been traumatized. I hope they all have the resources and support they need to recover.

I am very sad. And I am very angry.

I am also aware that those words are insufficient. Please don't mistake my terse brevity for indifference. To the absolute contrary, I am overwhelmed by the hatred and violence being unleashed in escalating, accelerating measure across my country, and I find myself shutting down when I try to write about what I feel. My body aches all over, all the time. I feel like I'm drowning in grief, and it's hard to find the words to convey how deeply sad and how profoundly angry I am.

I share that not because I think I'm special, but because I know that I'm not — because I know that many of you are mourning and scared and full of rage, too, and I want you to know that you are not alone.

None of us who still care about one another are alone.

I take up space in solidarity, urgently and unyieldingly, with my fellow marginalized countrypeople. With anyone who still and always believes that we are stronger together.

* * *

We know who pulled the trigger, and we know who else is to blame. I've been talking a lot about stochastic terrorism on Twitter the past couple of days. I'm not going to talk about it again here (although such discussion is welcome in comments). Their names do not belong in this post. I will not give them that space.

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Open Thread

image of a purple sofa

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

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

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

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

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Friday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by cucumber watermelon water.

Recommended Reading:

Clementine Ford at Lit Hub: [Content Note: Misogyny] How Many Ways Can Men Say "Not All Men"?

Ana Barić at Longreads: [CN: War; genocide; homophobia] Returning to the City That Made Us Refugees

Carmen Scurato and Jessica J. González at Colorlines: [CN: Bigotry; privilege; silencing] The Best Way to Protect Free Speech Online? De-Platform Hate.

Miranda Martin at Ms.: Planned Parenthood Strikes Back: Preparing for the Worst in the Wake of Kavanaugh's Confirmation

Ragen Chastain at Dances with Fat: [CN: Fat hatred] If the Doctor Says a Health Issue Is Caused by Being Fat

Steve Stewart-Williams at Nautilus: [CN: Some moving GIFs at link as well as images that appear to be moving but aren't] 12 Mind-Bending Perceptual Illusions

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

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#365feministselfie: Week 43

I am again participating in the #365feministselfie project, now in its fifth year, and promised a thread for others to share selfies and/or talk about the project, visibility generally, self-apprecation, and related topics. So here is a thread for Week 43!

A few of my selfies over the last two weeks:

image of me from the shoulders up; I'm standing outside on a sunny day with my hair down and contacts in, smiling
Happy on a sunny autumn day.

image of me from mid-chest up, wearing a green Mr. Celery t-shirt, with my hair down and wearing rainbow glasses frames
Me and Mr. Celery.

image of me sitting in my kitchen, with messy hair and a chapped nose, smiling
The baking assistant. Except on the days when I'm the baker.

image of my face in close-up; I'm standing in my kitchen gesturing with my thumb to a crockpot on the counter
Making a stew in the crockpot while Iain and I have the flu.

image of my face in close-up, sporting a very red, chapped nose
My nose is chapped AF, but let's just pretend I'm a red-nosed reindeer!

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

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound and Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on the living room floor, looking at me
Two good doggies are ready for their dinner now, please and thank you.

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 645

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 Considers Executive Order to Shut Down Southern Border and The Latest on Explosive Devices Sent to Trump's "Enemies".

And from Twitter, ICYMI. [Content Note: Bigotry; misogynist slur.]


* * *

In good news... Tierney Sneed at TPM: Black Voter Group Wins in Voter Registration Case in Memphis. "A state court judge in Tennessee ruled Thursday that Shelby County, which contains Memphis, must let voters whose registrations were stalled due to incomplete information to vote with regular ballots on Election Day, once the deficiencies are corrected. The ruling came in a case brought by the Tennessee Black Voter Project, which saw thousands of registrations forms it turned in deemed incomplete by the Shelby County Elections Commission."

In bad news, this thread by my pal Leah McElrath about how her vote was switched from Beto O'Rourke to Ted Cruz is a must-read in its entirety.


* * *

Margarita Antidze at Reuters: White House Invites Putin to Washington. "The White House has formally invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to Washington, U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton said on Friday, returning to an idea that was put on hold in July amid anger in the U.S. over the prospect of such a summit. ...It was not immediately clear if Putin had accepted the invitation."

Mikhail Gorbachev at the New York Times: A New Nuclear Arms Race Has Begun. "Over 30 years ago, President Ronald Reagan and I signed in Washington the United States-Soviet Treaty on the elimination of intermediate- and shorter-range missiles. For the first time in history, two classes of nuclear weapons were to be eliminated and destroyed. This was a first step. ...There are still too many nuclear weapons in the world, but the American and Russian arsenals are now a fraction of what they were during the Cold War. ...Today, this tremendous accomplishment, of which our two nations can be rightfully proud, is in jeopardy."

Lachlan Markay and Dean Sterling Jones at the Daily Beast: D.C.-Based Russian Media Venture Boasts That Indicted Kremlin Operative Is Its CFO.
When federal authorities allege a massive, foreign-government-backed campaign to undermine America's democratic institutions, the expected reaction from those accused of complicity is to put some distance between themselves and the culprits.

But when Elena Khusyaynova, the alleged financier of a sprawling Russian disinformation effort, was indicted last week, one Russian media outlet rushed to associate itself with the St. Petersburg accountant. USA Really, a conspiratorial website run by a Russian media executive and Kremlin policy adviser, quickly boasted on its website that Khusyaynova was the company's chief financial officer.

It's not clear what USA Really hoped to gain through the admission. The site is quick to deny that Russia had any involvement in the 2016 election. But its gleeful association with Khusyaynova suggests that USA Really is not the independent, inquisitive news organization that it claims to be, but rather an adjunct of a deep-pocketed propaganda apparatus that federal prosecutors say amounts to a criminal conspiracy against the United States.
* * *

[CN: Nativism; violence] Brent D. Griffiths at Politico: Nielsen: U.S. Troops Have No 'Intention' of Shooting at Caravan Migrants.
Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said on Thursday night that the military does not intend to shoot at Central American migrants if they cross into the U.S., as reports indicate that the federal government plans to send additional troops to the southern border while a large caravan of migrants continues to makes its way through Mexico.

"We do not have any intention right now to shoot at people, but they will be apprehended, however," Nielsen told Fox News host Martha MacCallum along the border in Arizona. "But I also take my officer and agent, their own person safety, extraordinarily seriously. They do have the ability of force to defend themselves."
"Right now." Right now. Fucking hell.

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[CN: White supremacy; violence; murder]


Justin Fox at Bloomberg: Housing Is Tanking in the Northeast. Guess Why. "There was one region of the country, though, where home sales were definitely down by a lot. That would be the Northeast, where new home sales fell year over year at a rate somewhere between 31.2 percent and 71.4 percent (midpoint: 51.3 percent)... Why might this have happened? Nationwide, rising interest rates would seem to be the obvious culprit for any decline in home sales. ...But there's this other thing that's weighing on the Northeastern housing market: The provision in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed by Congress and signed into law by [Donald] Trump in December that restricts deductions for state and local taxes (aka SALT) to $10,000 a year. Some homeowners in states with (1) high housing prices and (2) high property tax rates will see much bigger tax bills as a result. Those homeowners happen to be concentrated in the Northeast."

[CN: Sexual harassment/assault]


And finally... Ruby Cramer at BuzzFeed: Bernie Sanders Isn't Tired. He's "Just Waking Up."
On the road, Sanders is obsessive about how many people are following his tour via Facebook and Twitter. Of the staff he's brought along with him, nearly half are dedicated to video and social media. At every stop, they chase after him with a camera. Everything is filmed and livestreamed and tweeted. As soon as Sanders gets in the van, or on the plane, the first question for his staff is always the same: "So, what are the numbers?"

He doesn't just want to know that 3,000 people attended his rally in Bloomington. He wants to see how many likes are on the Facebook post about the rally. He wants to know how many people they are reaching — by the hour. He wants to hear which videos are performing well, and about which issues. His aide will usually show him on a laptop, which Sanders reads by holding the machine in the air, screen close to his face. He is very aware that a Social Security event at a public library in Indiana may draw a crowd of 200 people in the room — but that 200,000 people are following along online.

...For the senator, those numbers are not only a measure of enthusiasm. They are "accomplishments," he says during an interview between stops in Iowa. "So if you're gonna ask me about some of my proudest accomplishments in the last two years — we have done three town meetings that I've gotten between a million and 2 million viewers. The ability to talk about our issues, directly to people, is extraordinary."
1. That's a pretty clear indicator that Sanders is not in this for the right reasons. 2. It's also exactly the sort of person that Hillary Clinton was always accused of being (but never was) that supposedly made her unfit for the presidency, according to Sanders supporters. Welp.

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

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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!

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image of a cheesecake fresh out of the oven, sitting in a sheet pan on my stovetop, still in a springform pan, the bottom of which is wrapped in tinfoil

Above is a cheesecake I made the other night, when I was teaching Iain how to make cheesecake! It's my favorite cheesecake recipe, using my favorite baking technique. And it's delicious.

Ingredients:

Crust:

1 and 3/4 cups finely crumbed graham crackers
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup melted butter

Filling:

4 8-oz packages of room temp. cream cheese (regular or whipped)
1/2 cup room temp. sour cream
3 room temp. eggs
1 cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 350. Mix the graham cracker crumbs, sugar, and salt in a large bowl, then add the melted butter. Work the butter through the dry ingredients until they are well-mixed. Press the mixture into a thin layer across the bottom and partially up the sides of a 9-inch springform pan. Bake for 8-10 minutes until golden. Set aside.

(For the next step, you can either do this in a stand mixer or use a hand mixer. I prefer to use a hand mixer, because I can better keep an eye on the consistency of the batter to make sure I don't overmix it. If you opt to use a stand mixer, instead of beating all the eggs first, add them last, one at a time, incorporating them on a low setting.)

Beat eggs in a large bowl, then add sour cream, sugar, and vanilla. Gently mix with spatula, breaking up any large chunks of sour cream. Add the cream cheese, and break up loosely with spatula. Mix with hand mixer on low to medium and be careful not to overmix. Once the batter is smooth and starts to glisten, transfer into the springform pan.

Double-wrap the bottom of the springform pan with foil (as pictured above). Then place the springform pan into a larger pan surrounded by hot water, at least 3/4 of an inch and no higher than the top of the foil.

(Note: I recommend against using boiling water, because the water tends to slosh as you're putting it into the oven and you don't want to burn yourself! Hot tap water is fine.)

Bake for 60-70 minutes until the top is starting to brown and the edges are set, but the center remains slightly jiggly.

As soon as it's out of the oven, run a spatula or knife around the rim to loosen the cake away from the pan. Let the cake cool at room temperature for an hour, then chill in refrigerator for at least six hours (still in pan).

Serve and enjoy!

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The Latest on Explosive Devices Sent to Trump's "Enemies"

[Content Note: Terrorism; eliminationism.]

After "suspicious packages" were sent to George Soros, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Maxine Waters (D.C. and L.A.), Eric Holder, John Brennan (at CNN headquarters), Joe Biden (New Castle and Wilmington), and Robert De Niro, two more "suspicious packages" have been intercepted by law enforcement this morning: One to Senator Cory Booker and anther to former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.

That's 12 devices in 5 days. Chilling.

And here is what Donald Trump tweeted early this morning: "Funny how lowly rated CNN, and others, can criticize me at will, even blaming me for the current spate of Bombs and ridiculously comparing this to September 11th and the Oklahoma City bombing, yet when I criticize them they go wild and scream, 'it's just not Presidential!'"

Then later: "Republicans are doing so well in early voting, and at the polls, and now this 'Bomb' stuff happens and the momentum greatly slows — news not talking politics. Very unfortunate, what is going on. Republicans, go out and vote!"

Note the quote marks he puts around the word bomb.

He is as revolting as he is dangerous.

UPDATE: MSNBC's Kyle Griffin tweets: "NBC's Pete Williams just reported on MSNBC that a man in Florida has been taken into custody for questioning in the mail bomb case, according to two law enforcement officials."

UPDATE 2: Sarah Isgur Flores, Director of Public Affairs at the Department of Justice, tweets that the DoJ will hold a press conference to discuss the arrest at 2:30pm ET. Please note that I will not be posting a separate thread. Use this thread for discussion of the presser and any additional news items regarding the arrest.

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Trump Considers Executive Order to Shut Down Southern Border

[Content Note: Nativism.]

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. The Trump Regime's vile nativism is policy of malice built around invented threats used to justify white supremacy and fear-mongering to rally their deplorable base (and to funnel taxpayer dollars to private prison profiteers).

Further, it is both federal and international law that asylum-seekers must be allowed to seek refuge at the border. Even if it were not a legal requirement, basic decency suggests that desperate people fleeing violence and/or abject poverty should be given an opportunity to apply for residency in a country that can absolutely accommodate them.

Nonetheless, Donald Trump is both exploiting and threatening the refugee caravan on its way to the southern border.

Ted Hesson, Nancy Cook, and Andrew Restuccia at Politico: White House Weighs Executive Actions to Block Migrant Caravan at the Border.

The White House is weighing an executive action and regulatory change to block a caravan of Central American migrants from entering the United States, according to a DHS official, an administration official and three people familiar with the move.

Under the plan, the Trump administration would publish fast-track regulation that would restrict certain migrants' ability to seek asylum. The regulation would be paired with a related proclamation from [Donald] Trump.

The executive actions would follow the playbook of Trump's most sensational immigration moves and test the bounds of public approval and legality, according to those familiar with it.

..."The administration is considering a wide range of administrative, legal and legislative options to address the Democrat-created crisis of mass illegal immigration," a White House official said. "No decisions have been made at this time. Nor will we forecast to smugglers or caravans what precise strategies will or will not be deployed."

...The actions appear to lean on the same statute behind Trump's travel ban, according to those familiar with it. The statute states that the president can suspend entry of foreigners deemed “detrimental to the interests of the United States."

The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the third version of the travel ban in June. In a 5-4 decision, the justices ruled the president has vast powers in the realm of national security.

...Eleanor Acer, a director with the pro-immigrant Human Rights First, said in a written statement that the plan amounted to a "Latino ban" and would not be judged constitutional in court.

"Any attempt to block from the United States the vulnerable men, women, and children who come here seeking safety is a shameful new low for this administration," she said.
This news, of course, comes one day after the announcement that Trump will deploy "additional U.S. troops to assist in security operations at the southern border in response to a caravan of migrants traveling north on foot through Mexico."

This is ugly. And it's going to get uglier.

Trump warned from Day One that this is what he was going to do if elected president. And far too many people spent far too much time treating him like a joke instead of taking him seriously and taking his threats seriously, including most of the political press. And now here we are. Sob.

Open Wide...