Something Stinks in Florida and Georgia

There was definitely a lot of good news from the midterms, but all of it was wrapped up a bow crafted from the thread by which our democracy is still barely hanging.

Voter suppression efforts of various stripes were reported around the country, and there are a number of races the outcomes of which just plain reek of election interference.

In particular, the governors' races in Florida and Georgia stink to high heaven.

Stacy Abrams refuses to concede in Georgia (GOOD!) and is vowing to keep fighting until every vote is counted:

"Democracy only works when we work for it, when we fight for it, when we demand it, and apparently today when we stand in line for hours to meet it at the ballot box," Abrams said in remarks to supporters at nearly 2 a.m. Wednesday. "I am here today to tell you there are votes remaining to be counted. Voices are waiting to be heard."

As of early Wednesday, Kemp led Abrams by about 3.1 percentage points, a difference of about 115,000 votes out of a total 3.75 million votes counted. That lead had narrowed by 5:15 a.m. to about 1.9 points and 75,000 votes out of 3.87 million counted. CBS News was characterizing the race as leaning Republican.

Before Abrams addressed the crowd, campaign manager Lauren Groh-Wargo said thousands of absentee and provisional ballots remained to be tallied.

"We have three factors to be considered here: outstanding votes, absentee ballots to be counted, and provisional ballots," Groh-Wargo said. "Given those three issues, we believe this is likely heading to a runoff."
Kemp is an unethical shit who refused to vacate his role as the Georgia secretary of state as he ran for governor, thus overseeing the election in which he was running. His anti-democratic behavior in Georgia is well-established, and we have no reason to believe that he inexplicably decided to set aside his manipulation of elections at the very moment when he has the most to personally benefit from such corruption.

Thankfully Abrams is hanging on, buying as much time as she can while the election is scrutinized.

In Florida, Andrew Gillum conceded quickly, but there is nothing that prevents him from rescinding his concession if the gubernatorial race results look fishy, which they do.


Both of these races are deeply troubling me this morning, and I hope that Democrats press for answers. I am particularly outraged that the most obvious fuckery has been deployed against Black candidates, which also makes our attention to the integrity (or lack thereof) of the elections all the more urgent.

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Midterms 2018: Democrats Win the House


So, let's start with the good news: THE DEMOCRATS WON BACK THE HOUSE! This will put subpoena power back in the Democrats' control, and I can't even wait to see what Rep. Adam Schiff does with it, along with the rest of his tenacious colleagues.

And I'm sure there will plenty of time to be disappointed by all the investigations that don't happen and all the Democrats who try to undermine Nancy Pelosi, but, for the moment, I'm just going to celebrate breaking the Republicans' stranglehold on every branch of the federal government, because that is no small thing!

The Democrats flipped at least 28 House seats last night, and/or won newly drawn districts in de-gerrymandered Pennsylvania, and a majority of the winners were women. It was a pink wave across the country, "with more than 100 women sweeping into office on the strength of a Democratic House takeover powered in large part by college-educated female voters."

A number of Democratic candidates made history last night: Deb Haaland of New Mexico and Sharice Davids of Kansas are the first Native American women elected to Congress, and Davids is also the first openly queer person to win a major office in Kansas; Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota are the first Muslim women to serve in Congress; Jared Polis of Colorado is the country's first openly gay male governor; Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is the youngest woman ever elected to Congress at age 29; and Veronica Escobar and Sylvia Garcia are the first Latinas to represent Texas in Congress.


There were some delicious defeats last night, as well: Democracy Killer #1 Kris Kobach lost his bid to be Kansas' governor to Democrat Laura Kelly! The odious Pete Sessions was defeated in Texas by Democrat Colin Allred! Notorious homophobe Kim Davis lost bigly in Kentucky to Elwood Caudill Jr.! And Putin's BFF Dana Rohrabacher got tossed out on his ass by Democrat Harley Rouda! Good riddance, y'all!

A number of progressive items on the ballot passed last night, too: In Florida, voters approved an important measure to restore voting rights to felons; in Massachusetts, voters upheld a critical state law that protects transgender people from discrimination in public accommodations; in Michigan, voters approved a necessary proposal to make voting easier and make elections more secure.

Also in Florida, and close to my heart: Voters overwhelmingly supported an amendment to phase out greyhound racing by 2020. Dudley started his life as a racer in Sarasota, so this means a whole lot to us. And because 11 of the nation's 17 remaining active dog tracks are in Florida, the passage of this amendment effectively means "that the industry will be all but 'swept away in the night,' said Carey Theil, executive director of GREY2K USA, one of the leader backers of the ban." It is a major win for animal welfare.

(This is not a complete list of all the ballot measures that were won by progressives last night. Please feel welcome and encouraged to share in comments what you're celebrating this morning.)

There was, of course, some bad news last night. The Republicans picked up three Senate seats. If you're looking for a silver lining: At least the GOP Senate pick-ups make it much harder for Trump to say the result is illegitimate (as he reportedly threatened to do). And there ain't a lot of practical difference if they've got 50+Pence or 55, when it's virtually impossible to peel off any of them on important votes.

The truth is that it's going to be tough to win the Senate moving forward, because progressive population concentration makes it a steeper uphill battle every election. There were possibly 6 Democratic trifectas last night (winning the governorship, state house, and state senate), which is great — but also scary in that it's an indication of how concentrated progressive voters are getting. The Senate has always been undemocratic, and it's getting increasingly more so.

There were also some very tough losses last night: Beto O'Rourke in Texas; Andrew Gillum in Florida; and maybe Stacey Abrams in Georgia — although she hasn't yet conceded and I hope she doesn't until the very bitter end, through a runoff, through investigations, through whatever it takes to expose Brian Kemp's chicanery. I don't believe for a minute that he didn't steal that race, and I don't think it's the only race where there was election interference, either.

Anyway! That's the broad overview. Lots and lots of other stuff happened, too, so share your thoughts on the good and the bad results in comments.

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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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Question of the Day

In addition to casting your vote against the Republican Party and their agenda of malice, what did you vote for today?

And, not to leave out any international Shakers: If you can't vote in the U.S., what would you be voting for, had you the option to vote in the U.S. election today?

I voted to preserve our democracy, which is imperfect, but cannot even be improved if it's altogether gone. I voted for harm mitigation. I voted for all the people who want to vote but can't. I voted for your rights, and for mine.

That's hardly a complete list, but it's a start.

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Election Night Open Thread


Today is not just Election Day at Shakes Manor — it's also Iain's birthday! The last time the election fell on his birthday, Barack Obama was elected president, so let's hope this birthday election delivers an awesome result, too!

Or even just a good one. Anything on the plus side of the spectrum would make the birthday boy very happy, not to mention the rest of us, lol.

Anyway! The point is: I'm going to be spending time away from the news tonight, and, frankly, given that there's nothing I can do now except wait and fret, it's a good thing that there's something else, especially something pleasant, demanding my attention.

So here is a thread for discussion as the returns roll in. Chat about the results, about the ongoing reports of election interference, about your concerns or hopes, and all other things election.

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Oumuamua May Be (But Probably Isn't) an Alien Probe

Last December, I wrote about Oumuamua, the curious "celestial driftwood" just passing through our solar system la-dee-da.

Now, some scientists believe that Oumuamua could be an alien spacecraft, probing our galaxy to check shit out.

A pair of Harvard researchers are raising the possibility that Oumuamua is an alien spacecraft. As they say in a paper to be published Nov. 12 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the object "may be a fully operational probe sent intentionally to Earth vicinity by an alien civilization."

The researchers aren't claiming outright that aliens sent Oumuamua. But after a careful mathematical analysis of the way the interstellar object sped up as it shot past the sun, they say Oumuamua could be a spacecraft pushed through space by light falling on its surface — or, as they put it in the paper, a "lightsail of artificial origin."

Who would have sent such a spacecraft our way — and why?

"It is impossible to guess the purpose behind Oumuamua without more data," Avi Loeb, chairman of Harvard's astronomy department and a co-author of the paper, told NBC News MACH in an email. If Oumuamua is a lightsail, he added, one possibility is that it was floating in interstellar space when our solar system ran into it, "like a ship bumping into a buoy on the surface of the ocean."

...Loeb and his collaborator, Shmuel Bialy, a postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, acknowledge that the alien spacecraft scenario is an "exotic" one. And perhaps not surprisingly, other space scientists have strong doubts about it.

"It's certainly ingenious to show that an object the size of Oumuamua might be sent by aliens to another star system with nothing but a solar sail for power," Seth Shostak, a senior astronomer at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, said in an email. "But one should not blindly accept this clever hypothesis when there is also a mundane (and a priori more likely) explanation for Oumuamua — namely that it's a comet or asteroid from afar."
BOO! So boring! I'm definitely rooting for ALIEN PROBE, even though I know how improbable it is.

And just in case the space gremlins who sent it are paying attention... I VOLUNTEER AS TRIBUTE! TAKE ME WITH YOU!!!

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Whatever Happens, Love Will Continue to Be the Center of My Resistance

[Content Note: Malice.]

Something strange has been happening to me lately.

People have been telling me that I have a kind face. Or a warm face. Or a happy face. Or variations on the same theme.

A few people have commented on my selfies that I have a kind face, and a few strangers have said the same. Out of nowhere. Sometimes after doing a visible double-take after we make eye contact and I smile.

Last night, Iain and I were out for dinner, and the young woman who was serving us — a talented, beautiful, friendly Black woman, who had a kind face of her own — looked down at me, mid-meal, and exclaimed, "You have such a happy face! You seem like such a happy person! Are you happy?"

"I try to be," I told her, which is honest.

She smiled. "All right, Happy!" It was my nickname now. I didn't mind at all.

I share this story not to flatter myself (to be honest, I'm not even sure that being told one has a kind or happy face is particularly flattering as opposed to just a random observation), but because it's so unusual.

You see, I spent the first 44 years of my life hearing that my face was unwelcoming. Scowly. Angry. Bitchface. Basically every friend I've made in person has told me they thought I was aloof (at best) or mean (or worse) when they first encountered me. Partly because I'm just very shy, but also, if I'm honest, partly because of my face.

To suddenly be hearing that I have a kind face is a rather shocking deviation from four decades of previous lived experience.

Further yet, it's unaccountable.

My mouth naturally turns down at the edges, and the lines at the corners of my mouth are deepening with age. And I spend most of my waking hours feeling anxious and frustrated about the state of the world. Fear and rage certainly aren't making my face look happier.

So I'm not exactly sure what it is.

I do have a theory, though.

Alongside the stress and anger I feel every day at the relentless deployment of sickening malice, I feel a resonating empathy with the people targeted by that malice; a profound love for the people who take up space beside me in resistance to that malice; and a reverberating joy when I share even the briefest of moments of connection with other people, out in the world, strangers whose eyes meet and acknowledge each other's humanity in our shared survival.

Spending so much time in the darkness makes me love the light so very much.

This has always been true. But maybe I didn't wear it quite so readily on my face. Or maybe there just aren't as many people with kind faces and happy expressions these days.

Maybe a little of both.

What I know for certain is that the less safe I feel, the more I want people to know they can be safe with me. My conscious mind doesn't know how to communicate that to a stranger, but perhaps my subconscious figured out a way to write it across my face.

Two days after the last election, I vowed that love would be the center of my resistance. Whatever happens today, and whatever comes tomorrow, I resolve it once more.

The uglier they get, the harder I love. It is, deep within me, a reflexive resistance to malice. They will have to grind me to dust to extinguish that flame.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat lying on her back on the couch with just the tiniest bit of her little pink tongue sticking out
Her tongue!

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 656

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: ELECTION DAY! and LOL SHUT THE F#@K UP, TRUMP. And ICYMI late yesterday: Mike Pence Suddenly Doesn't Know How Culture Works When It Comes to Donald Trump's Campaign of Stochastic Terrorism.

Everything is all election news, of course, and I am far too wired for the sustained concentration it takes to do this thread, so let's all head to comments with whatever we're reading that we need to resist today! Including, naturally, any election day shenanigans that the Republicans are pulling.

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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.

I can barely even think because I'm so nervous about the election, and I bet I'm not alone, so let's have some semi-mindless and blissfully distracting conversation about television and movies!

I am majorly in love with the new Netflix film Ibiza, also known as Ibiza: Love Drunk, starring Gillian Jacobs, Phoebe Robinson, Vanessa Bayer, and Richard Madden, and written by Lauryn Kahn.

promotional image for Ibiza featuring the three female leads

So, let me tell you some of the many reasons I love this movie!

1. It's in the same sort of mold as Bridesmaids, Girl Trip, Fun Mom Dinner, the Bad Moms movies, etc. which are right up my alley. Give me a bunch of talented, hilarious ladies going haywire, and I AM IN.

2. It's a feminist romantic comedy. Take my money.

3. The cast! SO GOOD.

4. It's about an American woman and a Scottish man falling in love, to a kickass EDM soundtrack. Come on now. Was this movie literally made for me?!

[Hereafter are spoilers, so proceed with caution!]

5. The dude gets to be a nervous dork, too! He leaves a rambling voicemail! He trips when he's trying to make a cool exit! And the dude also gets to have feelings, too! "Maybe we just like each other." Swoon. When the camera just lingers on his face as he watches her being silly. Amazing. He has to go to her. YES.

6. Such affirmative messaging about how romance and sex aren't the same thing and don't have to be.

7. This is the big one: There is no contrived tension. There's no falling out where the friends all storm off in different directions because of some stupid misunderstanding that would have been easily resolved between three real friends in the actual world. (Instead, they pull together in every moment of strife.) There's no reversal where the dude does something objectively disgusting that the lady is obliged to inexplicably forgive just to arrive at a happy (?) ending. It feels real as a result.

The tension of the film is in being a young woman in the world and taking risks. Things could go wrong, because of dodgy cabbies or dodgy dates or dodgy drugs. The tension is the same as the backdrop of any woman's life, and the truth of the film is that these women might get hurt, but they're not the ones who will hurt each other.

Ah! I love this film. That is all.

Anyway! What are you watching these days?

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LOL SHUT THE F#@K UP, TRUMP

[Content Note: Bigotry.]

This fucking guy right here:

Donald Trump said on Monday he wished he had taken a softer tone in his first two years as U.S. president, even as he continued to bash individual Democrats and fan fears over immigration while campaigning on the eve of congressional elections.
All the mirthless laughter in the multiverse! Yeah, that sounds about right.
Asked in an interview with Sinclair Broadcasting, one of the largest U.S. television station operators, if there was anything he regretted about his first two years in office, Trump said, "I would say tone."

"I would like to have a much softer tone," he added. "I feel to a certain extent I have no choice, but maybe I do and maybe I could have been softer from that standpoint."

...Trump's stated desire for a different, softer tone was not evident on Monday.

He labeled Richard Cordray, a Democratic candidate for Ohio governor, a "bad person." He also reverted to familiar themes, calling Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren "Pocahontas," bashing the news media, shouting for security to remove protesters, and criticizing Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein's role in the nomination hearing of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Trump told Sinclair Broadcasting he was not happy with the vitriol in current U.S. political discourse, but blamed it on the election season.
How convenient to blame it on electioneering, especially for the guy who never stops campaigning.

Anyway.

He's a fucking liar and a vile specimen. True on election day and every other day. I cannot wait until he's out of office. I'm literally counting the days.

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ELECTION DAY!

image of me standing outside proudly sporting an 'I Voted' sticker
I VOTED!!!

I'm sure anyone who's spent more than five seconds in this space already knows what a major democracy nerd I am and how voting is the closest thing I have to a religious ritual, so naturally I am VERY EXCITED about the opportunity to vote this morning.

Not everyone in this country who should have that opportunity does have it, and, had I been born at a different time, I wouldn't have had that opportunity, either. I carry that into the voting booth with me. I vote with urgency and pride and determination and rage and hope and lots of other feelings.

I was very happy today that I not only got to vote against Republican candidates, but that I was voting affirmatively for Democratic candidates who I really like, including my governor Tom Wolf! It was all I could do to stifle the urge to yell WHERE'S THE WOLF PACK AT?! and fist-pump with a WOOF WOOF WOOF! on my way out the door.

The turnout was like nothing I've seen since moving here, even despite some fairly dreary weather. We had to park two blocks away. (Yay!) It was overwhelmingly women. And they all looked pisssssssed. (Including me.)

My message for the polls today was decidedly less angry, though.

image of me wearing a green t-shirt that reads 'In a world where you can be anything, BE KIND'

I'm feeling pretty optimistic after voting, but I always do. Here's hoping we get a good result tonight.

*bites nails*

Please feel welcome and encouraged to leave pictures of yourself celebrating having voted in comments! (Please do NOT take/post pictures of your actual ballot, which is against the law in many places.)

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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 Lachlan R.: "What do you think is an unfairly maligned work of art?"

image of the Chicago Picasso

The Chicago Picasso in Daley Plaza, which I absolutely adore, but lots of people really don't like at all. It's more popular now than it was when it was first unveiled. At the time, there were a number of scathing reviews, including Mike Royko's famous complaint that it "looks like some giant insect that is about to eat a smaller, weaker insect."

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Monday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by falling leaves.

Recommended Reading:

Rebecca Solnit at the Guardian: [Content Note: White supremacy] The American Civil War Didn't End — and Trump Is a Confederate President

Megan O'Grady at the New York Times: How Carrie Mae Weems Rewrote the Rules of Image-Making

Kaitlin Menza at the Cut: How the Woman Who's Helped Over 500 Women Run for Office Gets It Done

Jennifer Fumiko Cahill at Bust: On Mindful Bitchface

Ryan F. Mandelbaum at Gizmodo: NASA Hopes for Martian Wind as It Extends Efforts to Reach Opportunity Rover

Grown at Curvy Woman at GACW: These Boots Were Made for Walking

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

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Mike Pence Suddenly Doesn't Know How Culture Works When It Comes to Donald Trump's Campaign of Stochastic Terrorism

Conservatives are hypocrites about a whole lot of things, but one of the most infuriating and cynical iterations of their rank hypocrisy is how the ultimate culture warriors who have spent decades exploiting social bigotries to defend and entrench their privilege suddenly pretend they don't know how the fuck culture works when it comes to being accountable for the inevitable violence that results from their othering, scapegoating, and eliminationist rhetoric.

In a perfect and terrible example of this gross dynamic, here is our profoundly mendacious Vice-President Mike Pence defending his boss' obscene campaign of stochastic terrorism, which is underwriting acts of public violence against marginalized people and vocal critics of the regime:

"We condemn political violence in the strongest possible terms. It will not be allowed. It will not be tolerated," he said. "We saw that last summer with the attack on the Republican baseball practice, of course, we saw the suspect mailing pipe bombs to prominent political figures this week, [and] the horrific and anti-Semitic attack that took place in Pittsburgh grieves our hearts. We need to continue to work as a nation to bring these senseless acts of violence to an end, and we will."

"But," he added, "I think we need to be very careful…about associating acts of violence with strong political debate in America. Throughout our history, we've always had strong political debate, and then we settle those things at the ballot box. I think what the president is determined to do is continue in the days that remain in this election and going forward to make sure that we preserve the freedom of speech, and the ability of Americans to have those debates, to work out our issues in the public domain, and then carry that into the ballot box and resolve our differences there."
Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck youuuuuuuuuuuuuuu.

There is a meaningful, significant difference between "strong political debate" and incendiary rhetoric designed to dehumanize entire classes of people on their basis of their (our) identities and to put targets on the backs of one's political opponents.

And the distinction is not at all difficult to make.

Pence is deliberately refusing to make it, because he is a piece of a shit and malice is the agenda.

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The NaNoWriMo18 Thread

Every November is National Novel Writing Month, aka NaNoWriMo, during which countless writers commit to writing a 50,000-word novel in the 30 days of the month, or 1,667 words every day.

I always wish I could participate in this project, but I just don't have the mental energy for a thousand extra words every day on top of what I already write every day. It bums me out that I can't do it, but I'm really excited for everyone who gives it a go!

I know a bunch of Shakers are participating this year, so here's a thread for discussion! Let me know in comments if you want this to be a regular thread throughout the month.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound and Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying next to each other on the couch, napping, taking up the entire thing
Oh, did you want a seat on the couch? Too bad!

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 655

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Trump Is a F#@king Liar and My Nerves Are Rattling Like Ghosts in an Attic About the Midterms Tomorrow.

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

Richard L. Hasen at Slate: Brian Kemp Just Engaged in a Last-Minute Act of Banana-Republic Level Voter Manipulation in Georgia.
In perhaps the most outrageous example of election administration partisanship in the modern era, Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, who is running for governor while simultaneously in charge of the state's elections, has accused the Democratic Party without evidence of hacking into the state's voter database. He plastered a headline about it on the Secretary of State's website, which thousands of voters use to get information about voting on election day.

It's just the latest in a series of partisan moves by Kemp, who has held up more than 50,000 voter registrations for inconsistencies as small as a missing hyphen, fought rules to give voters a chance to prove their identities when their absentee ballot applications are rejected for a lack of a signature match, and been aggressive in prosecuting those who have done nothing more than try to help those in need of assistance in casting ballots.

But the latest appalling move by Kemp to publicly accuse the Democrats of hacking without evidence is even worse than that: Kemp has been one of the few state election officials to refuse help from the federal Department of Homeland Security to deter foreign and domestic hacking of voter registration databases. After computer scientists demonstrated the insecurity of the state's voting system, he was sued for having perhaps the most vulnerable election system in the country. His office has been plausibly accused of destroying evidence, which would have helped to prove the vulnerabilities of the state election system.

...If anyone is to blame for vulnerabilities with the voting system it is Kemp. And now he's trying to turn those vulnerabilities into crass political advantage by blaming Democrats without evidence for the state's failings.
Adam Gabbatt at the Guardian: Stacey Abrams Condemns Brian Kemp After He Accuses Democrats of Voter 'Hack'. "The Democratic candidate for governor in Georgia, Stacey Abrams, said on Monday her opponent had 'abused his power,' a day after Brian Kemp, who is also Georgia's secretary of state, announced an unexplained investigation into alleged 'cybercrime' by the state Democratic party. ...'I think, unfortunately, Secretary Kemp has not only abused his power, he has failed to do his job,' Abrams said in an interview with ABC. 'And you don't deserve a promotion when you do not serve the people you've been hired to serve.'" Right on.

Jana Winter at the Boston Globe: Hackers Targeting Election Networks Across Country Prior to Midterms. "Hackers have ramped up their efforts to meddle with the country's election infrastructure in the weeks leading up to Tuesday's midterms, sparking a raft of investigations into election interference, internal intelligence documents show. The hackers have targeted voter registration databases, election officials, and networks across the country, from counties in the Southwest to a city government in the Midwest, according to Department of Homeland Security election threat reports reviewed by the Globe. The agency says publicly all the recent attempts have been prevented or mitigated, but internal documents show hackers have had 'limited success.' The recent incidents, ranging from injections of malicious computer code to a massive number of bogus requests for voter registration forms, have not been publicly disclosed until now."

Staff at the AP: What Russians Have Been up to Ahead of 2018 U.S. Midterm Vote. "As Americans prepare for another election, Russian troublemakers have again tried to divide U.S. voters and discredit democracy. ...Russia is not alone — it's just one source of online manipulation ahead of Tuesday's election. Russia denies interference, and may not be able to affect the outcome anyway, but has reason to be interested in the election result." The AP covers four major areas of attempted disruption by Russia: Funding trolls, creating "Faux-American" sites, tricky tweets, and probing candidates.

Relatedly:


Dole, who was permanently injured fighting the Nazis in WWII. Wow.

Angela Charlton at the AP/Global News: Here's What Russia and Vladimir Putin Stand to Gain from Meddling in U.S. Elections. "The Kremlin likes Trump because he's one of the rare Western leaders to embrace Russian President Vladimir Putin... Some Russians, meanwhile, wear the U.S. accusations as a badge of honor, a sign that their country is a fearsome world power again. ...By discrediting Western democracy, that strengthens Putin's argument to his own voters that his authoritarian model of governance is best. 'The growing confrontation with the West and a focus on it on national television channels probably helped consolidate this effect of a fortress under siege,' one of Putin's metaphors for modern Russia, [analyst Masha Lipman] said. 'And pledging allegiance to the leader is a matter not only of loyalty but even of national security and national identity.'"

In other election news...

Nicole Lafond at TPM: Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh Set to Appear with Trump at Monday Rally. "According to Variety, the Trump campaign is promoting the rally as an event that will feature special appearances from Limbaugh and Hannity, as well as country music singer Lee Greenwood, but Fox News told TPM that Hannity will only be hosting his show at the rally and interviewing the president. ...Hannity, who maintains a close friendship with the president, has been pegged as Trump's 'shadow' chief of staff who has a significant amount of influence over the president's decisions."

[Content Note: White supremacy] Stephanie Kirchgaessner at the Guardian: Trump Ally Kris Kobach Accepted Donations from White Nationalists. "The Republican candidate for governor of Kansas, Kris Kobach, who has close ties to the Trump administration, has accepted financial donations from white nationalist sympathizers and has for more than a decade been affiliated with groups espousing white supremacist views. Recent financial disclosures show that Kobach, a driving force behind dozens of proposals across the U.S. designed to suppress minority voting and immigrant rights, has accepted thousands of dollars from white nationalists."


Brian Kahn at Earther: A Major Storm Will Hit the Eastern U.S. on Election Day (But Please Go Vote Anyway). "The weather doesn't stop for anyone, including voters. For many folks heading to the polls this week, a big mess of rain, snow, and possibly severe weather is on tap starting on Monday and stretching into Tuesday. But the impacts aren't expected to last all day, so you should be able to find a window to go vote. ...Bundle up if you think there will be a line at your polling place, and drive safe (or tell your free or discounted Uber or Lyft driver to do so). While there's going to be some butt weather out there, there will still likely be times of the day when things are less butt, so hit the polls then if you can."

* * *

Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey, and Philip Rucker at the Washington Post: Trump Administration Prepares for Massive Shake-Up After Midterms. "Some embattled officials, including Attorney General Jeff Sessions, are expected to be fired or actively pushed out by Trump after months of bitter recriminations. Others, notably Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, may leave amid a mutual recognition that their relationship with the president has become too strained. And more still plan to take top roles on Trump's 2020 reelection campaign or seek lucrative jobs in the private sector after nearly two years in government. The expected midterm exodus would bring fresh uncertainty and churn to a White House already plagued by high turnover and internal chaos."

What should terrify all of us about that is the character and quality of a person who would accept a job in the Trump administration at this point. They know, keenly, that malice is the agenda, and they'll be on board with that. Even more than Jeff Sessions and Kirstjen Nielsen are, which is scary AF.

Staff at the Daily Beast: Trump to Meet Putin and Erdogan at First World War Ceremonies. "Donald Trump will hold meetings with both Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan this week as leaders from around the world descend on Europe to mark 100 years since the end of the First World War. ...Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to use the events to warn about history repeating itself and that a nationalist resurgence led by authoritarian leaders is threatening liberal democracies."

[CN: Nativism] Amanda Macias at CNBC: Trump's Border Deployments Could Cost $220 Million as Pentagon Sees No Threat from Migrant Caravan. "Donald Trump's move to deploy troops to the U.S.-Mexico border is so far shaping up to have a cost of $220 million, according to two U.S. defense officials who were not authorized to speak publicly. The initial cost estimate, a figure that could change based on the ultimate size and scope of the mission, comes as nearly 4,000 troops moved to the border Saturday as Trump has repeatedly warned of a caravan of migrants from Central America." Imagine what we could do for refugees with $220 million.

[CN: Nativism; video may autoplay at link] Mary Papenfuss at the Huffington Post: Armed Militia Groups Head to the Border, Sparking Military Concerns. "Armed bands of civilian militia members are traveling to the southern U.S. border, where [Donald] Trump has ordered thousands of active-duty troops to rebuff the approaching migrant caravan. About '200 unregulated armed militia members [are] currently operating along the southwest border,' says a planning document for Army commanders leading the 5,200 troops Trump has deployed at the border, according to Newsweek. The groups 'operate under the guise of citizen patrols supporting' border officials, the document says, pointing out 'reported incidents of unregulated militias stealing National Guard equipment during deployments.' The U.S. Border Patrol late last month warned landowners in Texas to expect 'possible armed civilians' to come onto their property because of the caravan, The Associated Press reported."

* * *

[CN: White supremacy; misogyny] Janet Reitman at the New York Times: U.S. Law Enforcement Failed to See the Threat of White Nationalism; Now They Don't Know How to Stop It. "White supremacists and other far-right extremists have killed far more people since Sept. 11, 2001, than any other category of domestic extremist. ...These statistics belie the strident rhetoric around 'foreign-born' terrorists that the Trump administration has used to drive its anti-immigration agenda. They also raise questions about the United States' counterterrorism strategy, which for nearly two decades has been focused almost exclusively on American and foreign-born jihadists, overshadowing right-wing extremism as a legitimate national-security threat."


[CN: Misogynist abuse; racism; gun violence] David Mack, Amber Jamieson, and Julia Reinstein at BuzzFeed News: The Tallahassee Yoga Shooter Was a Far-Right Misogynist Who Railed Against Women and Minorities Online.
The man who shot and killed two women at a yoga studio in Tallahassee, Florida, on Friday before killing himself was a far-right extremist and self-proclaimed misogynist who railed against women, black people, and immigrants in a series of online videos and songs.

Scott Beierle, 40, was named by Tallahassee police as the shooter who opened fire inside the Hot Yoga Tallahassee studio, killing two women, and injuring four other women and a man.

Those killed were identified as Dr. Nancy Van Vessem, 61, who worked at Florida State University's College of Medicine, and FSU student Maura Binkley, 21.

On a YouTube channel in 2014, Beierle filmed several videos of himself offering extremely racist and misogynistic opinions, in which he called women "sluts" and "whores," and lamented "the collective treachery" of girls he had gone to high school with.

"There are whores in — not only every city, not only every town, but every village," he said, referring to women in interracial relationships, whom he said had betrayed "their blood."
Beierle also had a history of arrests for grabbing women on the FSU campus and at a public pool.

Every. Damn. Time.

* * *

Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: The Supreme Court Just Agreed to Hear a Case That Could Nuke the Separation of Church and State. "In what will almost certainly be a victory for the religious right, the Supreme Court announced on Friday that it will decide whether the Constitution permits a local government to display 'on public property a 40-foot tall Latin cross, established in memory of soldiers who died in World War I.' Although a federal appeals court held that this cross violates the Constitution's ban on laws 'respecting an establishment of religion,' the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh — which gave Republicans a solid five-person majority on the Supreme Court — all but guarantees that this lower court decision will be reversed."

And finally, some important acts of resistance...

[CN: Nativism; reference to self-harm] Renée Feltz at Rewire.News: Pennsylvania Mural Highlights Migrants Who Were Traumatized in 'Family Prison'.
Karen (a pseudonym) struggled to comfort her then-5-year-old son after he twice attempted suicide during the 651 days they were held in detention, while seeking asylum from extreme violence in El Salvador.

"What would you tell your son if he asked, 'Why can't I be free?'" she once demanded to know from a guard at the Berks County Residential Center.

The trauma they endured there was hard to ignore this week when their eyes — and her son's question — were painted in an 88-foot mural across the steps of Pennsylvania's capitol building in Harrisburg, about an hour's drive from Berks. The massive image is part of a citywide art project that includes several billboards and three bus shelter displays featuring the images and words of parents and children who were held at the controversial facility.
Yessenia Funes at Earther: Opponents Plan to Stop Controversial Hawaiian Telescope's Construction 'at Whatever Cost'. "Last Tuesday, the Hawaiian Supreme Court ruled to approve the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT), an observatory that would have the ability to gaze farther into the universe than any current telescope can. Its creation could literally transform our understanding of the world. But that's only if community members allow it to be built, and opponents don't plan on backing down easily. 'We're at the last straw,' Hanalei Fergerstrom, a Native Hawaiian priest and opponent to the project who has testified against the project in court, told Earther. 'The last thing we have is our sacred space, and it's come down to the point where we must take a stand. Period. At whatever cost it's gonna cost — and we're prepared to exhaust those costs.'"

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

Open Wide...

My Nerves Are Rattling Like Ghosts in an Attic About the Midterms Tomorrow

[Previously: Trump Suggests the Midterms Will Be Compromised, I Am Very Worried About the Midterms, I Am (Still) Very Worried About the Midterms, I Remain Very Worried About the Midterms, and Yup, Still Worried About the Midterms.]

First, let me say that I'm hopeful. I am hopeful that there will be amazing turnout on Election Day, and that all the votes cast on the day and all the votes that have been cast via absentee ballots and early voting will be counted fairly, and that the Democrats will at least regain a House majority.

I am still not in the business of telling other people what to do with their vote, but I will tell you what I'm going to do: I am going to vote for Democrats, like my life depends on it, because it just might.

(And as a person with multiple preexisting conditions, including an illness for which I need drugs to keep me alive, who is not independently wealthy, that's not hyperbole.)

I am hopeful that lots and lots of other people are as keen to vote for Democrats tomorrow as I am, and I am hopeful that all the dire predictions about turnout regarding this demographic group or that one are wrongity-wrong. I am hopeful that good people of all stripes will turn up tomorrow.

Now, let me confess that I am incredibly anxious about the outcome of the midterms tomorrow.

I'm anxious about the possibility that there will be election interference from foreign (Russia) and/or domestic (Republicans) actors.

I'm anxious about the fact that federal agencies "have logged more than 160 reports of suspected meddling in U.S. elections since Aug. 1, and the pace has stepped up in recent weeks, when there have been as many as 10 incidents a day," but we're not even having a serious public conversation about it, instead continuing to inexplicably pretend that our elections are secure.

I'm anxious about the certainty that there will be voter suppression, and that the election will not be free and fair, even if there is no additional interference than the gerrymandering, voter roll purges, voter ID requirements, felon disenfranchisement, and other tactics the Republicans have been using to try to steal elections for decades.

I'm anxious about the finger-pointing and blaming that will happen in the immediate aftermath of the midterms, if the "blue wave" that so many folks are certain is coming doesn't actually materialize. I'm anxious about how divisive that will be for an already fragile progressive coalition, and I'm anxious about those narratives taking hold before we even find out if they're valid.

I'm anxious about the fact that I'm beginning to think the worst-case scenario is Democrats winning just the House — which is also the most likely scenario — because winning just the House will still leave them largely impotent, which most people do not understand. (Hell, most people don't understand why the Dems aren't doing more when they're in the minority in all three branches of government.) The Democrats, and very specifically Nancy Pelosi, will be further demonized for a failure to restore our democracy.

(Also: Even if we manage to retake the Senate majority, too — a long shot — we won't have a veto-proof 2/3 majority. The importance of which, again, most people do not understand, in terms of governing power and holding Donald Trump accountable.)

Meanwhile, Trump will declare the election illegitimate and conspiracy theories will spread like wildfire throughout his base that the Democrats and liberals stole the election with "illegals" committing voter fraud.

It's not that I want Democrats to lose the House, of course! I just fear that, even if we win, it's going to be ugly AF. Maybe even uglier, in the short term, than if we lose.

If the Democrats win the House in a squeaker, Trump and the GOP will also use it to undermine the argument regarding election interference and Trump's fealty to Russia, i.e. If the Democrats can win, it's proof that Trump isn't colluding with Russia!

A squeaker in the House could severely undercut Mueller's case. Not actually, but rhetorically.

And I still fear that a close race in which a Democrat wins will somehow be revealed to have been "fixed," turning the narrative back to Trump's contention that it was the Democrats who were colluding all along.

Basically: I'm anxious that we are going to lose either way.

Finally, let me state firmly that I am resolved. No matter what happens tomorrow, it's not going to be the end of our fight to preserve our democracy. In even the wildest, most improbable, best-case scenario tomorrow, Donald Trump will still be president and all the damage he and his party have done won't magically disappear.

We have a long slog ahead of us, regardless of the outcome tomorrow, so I am ready to persist nevertheless, no matter what.

Let's go.

Open Wide...