Putin Threatens New Arms Race

Andrew Roth at the Guardian: Putin Threatens Arms Race If U.S. Dumps Nuclear Treaty.

Vladimir Putin has threatened that Russia will develop new missiles banned by the intermediate-range nuclear forces treaty if the U.S. exits the pact and pursues an arms buildup of its own.

The Russian president's remarks came one day after the U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, said Moscow was in "material breach" of the cold war-era treaty and issued a 60-day ultimatum for Russia to correct the alleged violations. Otherwise, he said, the U.S. would quit the 1987 accord, considered a milestone in reducing the threat of a nuclear war in Europe.

In Moscow on Wednesday, Putin told journalists the U.S. had provided "no evidence" of Russian violations, and threatened an arms race if the U.S. sought to develop new medium-range missiles after exiting the treaty.

"Apparently, our American partners believe that the situation has changed so drastically that the U.S. should also have such weapons," Putin said in remarks carried by the Interfax news service. "What response is our side to give? A simple one: Then we'll do the same."
So, there are (at least) two ways to interpret this.

One is viewing it through the lens of Donald Trump being Vladimir Putin's puppet, in which case the U.S. position could be viewed as simply giving Putin the rationale he needs to justify exiting the treaty and expanding his arsenal.

That might sound like a wild-ass conspiracy theory, except for the fact that Putin now has the rationale he needs to justify exiting the treaty and expanding his arsenal — right after his secret meeting with Trump at the G20, upon which Putin insisted after Trump tried to back out of meeting.

Within days, Pompeo was dispatched to accuse the Kremlin of violating the agreement and publicly threaten to withdraw the U.S. from the treaty, and, in response, Putin threatens to develop missiles he wants to have in his arsenal but can't develop as long as the accord stands.

Two is taking this at face value and presuming that the U.S. Secretary of State is operating in good faith to try to contain a dangerous despot who is currently escalating his aggression against Ukraine.

In which case, I will merely repeat what I said in October, which already feels like six lifetimes ago: Russia already has thousands of nukes capable of blowing the Earth to smithereens, so whether they have even more is secondary to the fact that Putin is brazenly provoking a renewed Cold War. Which is decidedly warmer these days.

When I was a kid growing up in Northwest Indiana in the 1980s, the threat of nuclear war stalked us like a relentless specter. I routinely heard the adults around me talking about "the bomb" being dropped. They would give a mirthless laugh and say things like at least we'll be first to go because we lived at the feet of steel giants. The Communists would take out the steel mills first, and we'd go with them.

It is a pointed cruelty to force people, especially children, to live under the threat of a nuclear holocaust. To be sure, the threat of war pales in comparison to actual warfare, which traumatizes and orphans and starves and injures and kills children every day — but the threat is not benign, either.

I can't relate to the sort of person who wants to impose sustained fear, terror, on other people, and I am very angry that here we are again, on the brink, with nary an effective diplomat in sight.

Everything is not fine. Not at all.

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LOL Bernie

Mark Johnson at VTDigger: Sanders Campaign Drops $300k on Private Jet Travel. "Sen. Bernie Sanders 2018 re-election campaign spent almost $300,000 on private jet service for a recent cross country tour to stump for Democrats and test the presidential waters. According to federal campaign finance reports, Friends of Bernie Sanders, the senator's official 2018 Senate campaign committee, spent $297,685.50 with Apollo Jets, a private charter jet service headquartered in New York."

So much for Mr. Man of the People Who Totally Travels Coach.

The explanation is terrific:

"He wanted to go where he thinks he can be helpful in energizing the base and bringing in young people and independent voters and working-class voters who supported him," Jeff Weaver, Sanders' 2016 campaign manager and longtime political adviser, told the Associated Press about the nine-state tour.

Arianna Jones, senior communications adviser for Friends of Bernie Sanders, said Tuesday: "This expense was for transportation for the senator's 9-day, 9-state tour to support Democratic candidates up and down the ballot ahead of Election Day."

"This cost covered the entirety of the tour from Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, South Carolina, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, California, and back to Vermont," Jones said. The senator participated in 25 events, Jones said.

Jones said it was necessary to use a private jet service "to allow the senator to campaign in all of the states where candidates wanted his help and get back to Vermont in order to join the Vermont Democratic Party coordinated campaign's final GOTV efforts. As Bernie often said while encouraging voters to get involved leading up to Election Day, this was the most important midterm election in our lifetimes and he wanted to have maximum impact."
Uh, I know that the midwest is a backwards backwater full of dum-dum future socialists who just haven't encountered complicated ideas like universal healthcare yet, but they've got airports.

Anyway.

Listen, I don't care if Bernie Sanders spends cash he raised to use a private jet if that's what he wants to do. I'm just exhausted with being shouted at by people who pretend that this guy isn't a politician exactly like other politicians.

And, frankly, if you can read about Bernie's obsession with his crowd sizes and his fixation on Facebook stream audience numbers and his continual refusal to meaningfully engage with Black leaders in Vermont and his taking credit for ideas that other politicians (often women) had long before he did and his spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on private air travel and still think he's the radical departure from "establishment" politicians that you say he is, your biggest problem isn't what I think of Bernie Sanders.

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Mueller Recommends No Jail Time for Michael Flynn

Late yesterday, Special Counsel Bob Mueller finally issued the expected memo detailing his sentencing recommendations for Michael Flynn, Donald Trump's former National Security Adviser who has been cooperating with Mueller's investigation into collusion with Russia.

Mueller recommended "a sentence that does not impose a term of incarceration," citing Flynn's "substantial assistance" with "several ongoing investigations, including its probe of coordination between the Trump campaign and the Russian government."

The heavily redacted memo further indicates that "the investigations in which he has provided assistance are ongoing," including "a criminal investigation — apparently separate from the collusion probe — that remains totally secret."

Last night, I noted: "Mueller recommends no prison time for Flynn because he's been cooperating. Cool reward for committing treason but being super upfront about it after you were caught."

Naturally, that resulted in immediate patronizing pushback about how I just don't understand that prosecutors need to cut deals sometimes. Which is hardly the point. Of course I understand that prosecutors need to cut deals. My issue is that Mueller is recommending the absolute minimum within the confines of the deal he struck, which had a paltry maximum in the first place.

And, to be frank, I have a real problem with someone who committed crimes as significant as Flynn has, which abetted the elevation and empowerment of a man who seeks to destroy this nation and marginalized people within it, getting off with a pat on the head for helping out.

There are people serving life sentences because they were found in possession of a joint on a "third strike." Meanwhile, Mike "Lock Her Up" Flynn is going to walk. That isn't justice.

Perhaps I would feel better if this were an exception to this investigation, but, so far, it's par for the course: George Papadopoulos walks in exchange for cooperating. Paul Manafort would have walked in exchange for cooperating, if only he'd kept his nose minimally clean for a short period of time. Flynn is going to walk for cooperating. And Michael Cohen probably will, too.

That's a lot of walking. And I'm seeing a whole lot of "it's all worth it if it means we get Trump out of office," which is just a wild expectation. Even more wild is the expectation that this investigation will result in getting Trump and Mike Pence out of office. And by "wild," I mean totally unjustifiable.

A year and a half ago, I warned against having unreasonable expectations, not because believing that Trump should be removed from office is inherently unreasonable, but because it's an unreasonable expectation based on what is possible and likely.

I hope I'm wrong, but I don't think that Mueller's investigation is going to end with Trump being marched out of the Oval Office in handcuffs, or anything like it. Which is why I can take no solace in letting traitors walk as part of this investigation.

It seems an awfully high cost just to get to a truth that has long been apparent.

* * *

At this point, I suspect that the biggest role the Mueller investigation has to play is to create the public rationale for Senate Republicans to vote to impeach, so they can install Pence.

As I've previously speculated, when Trump isn't of use to them anymore, they'll just get rid of him in exchange for Pence. And then they'll claim to be heroes for holding their own president accountable.

It would really be something if House Democrats, newly the majority again, drafted articles of impeachment against Trump, and Senate Republicans "reluctantly" supported the measure, but assured their base it was the right thing to do, meanwhile garnering extraordinary headlines about being ethical patriots, as they move to install an authoritarian dominionist who was on his way to losing his reelection bid for the governorship of Indiana when Manafort plucked him from the precipice of obscurity to be second in line to a dude colluding with the Russians to capture the White House.

In a month and a half, Pence can assume the presidency and still run for two more full times. Let's see what happens then.

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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

Suggested by Shaker Drazil: "What's a childhood memory of an adult (caregiver or not) who helped you feel safe/supported or who set a good example that has stayed with you?"

My second-grade teacher, Alma Aszman, is the first person who came to mind. I was an incredibly anxious kid, and I never really felt safe anywhere, but her classroom was probably as close as I came during my early childhood. She was very warm and very centered and made her students feel seen, all of which made me feel safe.

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Your Best Photograph

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

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

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

* * *

Here are a couple of photos I took of some decorative grass in our backyard, which was planted by the birds, lol. (You'll note it's right under one of their favorite feeders.) I'm not certain what kind of grass it is, although I believe it's a Japanese variety, but I like it a lot, at every stage throughout the year.

image of tall grass in our backyard, the ends of which are puffy curlicues
close-up of one of the puffy curlicues

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An Observation

It has been nearly a month since former Attorney General Jeff Sessions resigned. Donald Trump still has not nominated his replacement.

There are a number of reasons for this, some of them obvious and some probably less apparent. Chiefly, Trump doesn't have any immediate personal need for a new attorney general, since acting AG Matthew Whitaker is eminently willing to run interference with Bob Mueller to protect him.

In any case: This, too, is not normal.

But we have already become so inured to Trump's abnormal abuses of power that I've seen virtually no comment in the political press on how not normal this high-level vacancy, without even so much as a nominee, truly is.

No comment on the vacancy itself, as we approach a month without an AG, and no comment on how said vacancy serves the president's personal and corrupt agenda.

It's not like I'm eager for Trump to pick Sessions' replacement, as I'm sure his choice will be even worse than the loathsome Sessions.

I just needed to remark on the remarkable state of affairs that no one is remarking on how remarkable this shit is.

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Discussion Thread: How Are You?

I hate Donald Trump and his vile administration and his despicable party and his horrible family, and I resent being obliged by their malice to carry that hatred — and to carry the accompanying fear of people being harmed by their escalating abuse.

I'm sad. The house is so much quieter without Olivia, and I feel very lonesome.

I'm also overwhelmed. In addition to losing Olivia, our washing machine and my laptop failed last week, so we had to get a new washing machine — and dryer, since that was 20 years old and on its last legs, too. (Just to be abundantly clear: Sharing this is not an oblique solicitation for donations.)

In (hopefully) good news, Iain and I managed to diagnose the problem with my laptop, so as soon as the parts arrive that we ordered, I should (hopefully) be back in business. And Iain had a laptop he could lend me to use in the meantime.

My shoulder continues to give me grief, so I haven't been able to swim.

I need a win, and none has been forthcoming.

I am grateful for my husband, for our home, for my friends, for all the times they make me laugh, and for Sophie, Dudley, and Zelda.

I am also, as always, glad for this community, particularly in this moment. Anyone who wants to join me in another enormous virtual group hug is welcome.

How are you?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat and Olivia the White Farm Cat lying on the sofa next to each other
Ode to Matilda and Olivia. Two of the greatest! ♥

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 684

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: Mueller Reportedly Close to Wrapping It Up and U.S. Citizen Detained and Targeted for Deportation by ICE and Ugh, Biden, No.

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

Alex Isenstadt and John Bresnahan at Politico: Emails of Top NRCC Officials Stolen in Major 2018 Hack.
The House GOP campaign arm suffered a major hack during the 2018 election, exposing thousands of sensitive emails to an outside intruder, according to three senior party officials.

The email accounts of four senior aides at the National Republican Congressional Committee were surveilled for several months, the party officials said. The intrusion was detected in April by an NRCC vendor, who alerted the committee and its cybersecurity contractor. An internal investigation was initiated and the FBI was alerted to the attack, said the officials, who requested anonymity to discuss the incident.

However, senior House Republicans — including Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), and Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) — were not informed of the hack until Politico contacted the NRCC on Monday with questions about the episode. Rank-and-file House Republicans were not told, either.

Rep. Steve Stivers (R-Ohio), who served as NRCC chairman this past election cycle, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Committee officials said they decided to withhold the information because they were intent on conducting their own investigation, and feared that revealing the hack would compromise efforts to find the culprit.
Likely story. In any case, if they weren't all compromised before (they were all compromised before), they are now.

Allan Smith at NBC News: 'Banana Republic Dictators': Democrats Fume over Last-Minute GOP Power-Grabs in Wisconsin and Michigan. "Democrats fought back Monday as Republican legislators in Wisconsin and Michigan moved to strip power from them after the GOP lost a series of crucial races last month. In Wisconsin, Republicans pressed ahead with a lame-duck session — the first held in eight years — to give GOP Gov. Scott Walker the opportunity to limit the power of his successor, Democratic Gov.-elect Tony Evers. In Michigan, meanwhile, Republicans introduced bills late last week to diminish the powers of the incoming Democratic governor, secretary of state and attorney general as well." Shades of Mike Pence's attack on Glenda Ritz in Indiana. I keep telling you: Indiana is conservatives' laboratory for terrible policy and authoritarian maneuvers.

Lauren Gambino at the Guardian: Trump's Truce with China: 'Let the Negotiations Begin'.
Trump, who refuses to use Twitter's thread function, has appeared to finish his thoughts on the ongoing trade negotiations with China. The series [of tweets] in full:

"[1] The negotiations with China have already started. Unless extended, they will end 90 days from the date of our wonderful and very warm dinner with President Xi in Argentina. Bob Lighthizer will be working closely with Steve Mnuchin, Larry Kudlow, Wilbur Ross and Peter Navarro..... [2] ......on seeing whether or not a REAL deal with China is actually possible. If it is, we will get it done. China is supposed to start buying Agricultural product and more immediately. President Xi and I want this deal to happen, and it probably will. But if not remember,...... [3] ....I am a Tariff Man. When people or countries come in to raid the great wealth of our Nation, I want them to pay for the privilege of doing so. It will always be the best way to max out our economic power. We are right now taking in $billions in Tariffs. MAKE AMERICA RICH AGAIN [4] .....But if a fair deal is able to be made with China, one that does all of the many things we know must be finally done, I will happily sign. Let the negotiations begin. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"
Yikes. He is the Tariff Man; he is the walrus; he doesn't understand how ellipses work.

By way of reminder that Donald is not the only Trump who is totes the worst:


* * *

John Dingell at the Atlantic: I Served in Congress Longer Than Anyone: Here's How to Fix It. "There are many reasons for this dramatic decline [in Americans' trust of government institutions]: the Vietnam War, Watergate, Ronald Reagan's folksy but popular message that government was not here to help, the Iraq War, and worst of all by far, the Trumpist mind-set. These jackasses who see 'deep state' conspiracies in every part of government are a minority of a minority, yet they are now the weakest link in the chain of more than three centuries of our American republic. Ben Franklin was right. The Founders gave us a precious but fragile gift. If we do not protect it with constant vigilance, we will most certainly lose it."

Definitely take the time to read Dingell's entire piece. This is a good reminder that: 1. John Dingell is a national treasure; and 2. Ageism is garbage. This guy's got better ideas at age 92 than most politicians have in their prime.

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism] Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: ICE Threatens New Jersey After State Implements Pro-Immigrant Policy. "One day after New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal unveiled the state's new 'Immigrant Trust Directive,' a spokesperson for the ICE office in Newark told NBC New York in a statement that ICE raids will 'likely increase' as a result of the directive. 'The probability is that at-large arrests and worksite enforcement operations, which already exist, will likely increase due to the fact that ICE [Enforcement and Removal Offices] will no longer have the cooperation of the jails related to immigration enforcement,' ICE spokesman Emilio Dabul told the outlet in an email." Fuck ICE. Goddammit.

[CN: Nativism; eliminationist violence] Justin Glawe at the Daily Beast: Facebook Lets Users Post About Killing Immigrants and Minorities. "Facebook users freely post about killing immigrants, minorities, and public figures in spite of the company's terms of service that clearly prohibit threats of violence and hate speech. The company just two weeks ago touted new technology it says detects 52 percent of hate speech before anyone reports it. (Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg claimed the technology caught 90 percent of pro-ISIS and al Qaeda content.) Yet that technology didn't catch more than 100 instances in the last six months of Facebook users advocating to shoot or kill others, according to a Daily Beast review." Fuck Facebook, too.


[CN: Sexual assault; rape culture] Pilar Melendez at the Daily Beast: Jeffrey Epstein Apologizes in Settlement to Avoid Civil Trial and Testimony by Sex Accusers. "A civil trial involving politically connected financier and registered sex offender Jeffrey Epstein ended before it even began Tuesday with the two sides announcing a last-minute settlement and the billionaire issuing an apology. ...Three of Epstein's accusers were expected to testify before the surprise announcement of a settlement just before jury selection was about to begin, though none were present Tuesday. ...Epstein lawyer Scott Link then read out an apology statement that was part of the settlement, financial terms of which were not disclosed."

So first this guy's criminal trial is circumvented by a Trump lackey, shutting down further investigation, and now his civil case is abruptly settled, shutting down his victims from offering public testimony. JFC.

[CN: Homophobia] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Worried About 'Fashionable' Homosexuality, Pope Francis Says Gays Should Not Be Accepted into Catholic Ministry. "Pope Francis said gay people should not join the Catholic priesthood in lengthy remarks from a new book, The Strength of a Vocation, which was released yesterday in Italy. Asked about the high percentages of gay people in the priesthood, Francis responded: 'It's something that worries me. We have to discern with seriousness and listen to the voice of the experience that the Church has. When discernment is not used, problems increase. As I said before, it may be that at the moment they are accepted maybe they do not show their faces [as gay people], but later they appear.'" There's more trash where that came from. Your progressive pope, for ya!

[CN: Misogyny]


[CN: Wildfires; environmental damage] Yessenia Funes at Earther: California Wildfires Emitted as Much Carbon as the State's Entire Power Sector in 2018. "We know California wildfires can be deadly: Look no further than the Camp Fire in northern California that killed at least 88 people last month. A new analysis from the U.S. Geological Survey reminds us that these disasters can also be a slow killer through the pollution and greenhouse gases they emit. On Friday, the Department of Interior announced new findings that show that this year's wildfire season in California released the equivalent of 68 million tons of carbon dioxide. That's roughly how much carbon the state's electricity sector releases in an entire year."

[CN: Animal harm; environmental damage] Alan Grabinsky at the Guardian: Axolotls in Crisis: The Fight to Save the 'Water Monster' of Mexico City. "Carlos Sumano, who is steering my canoe through the floating gardens, or chinampas, says that sort of unfettered use has taken its toll on the ecosystem. During his six years working in Xochimilco, Sumano has come across everything from pushchairs to television sets in canals. Water pollution has also affected the region's most unique creature: the axolotl. ...The wild axolotl is racing towards extinction. A 2003 study in Xochimilco by the Mexican Academy of Sciences found an average of 6,000 axolotls for each sq km; the latest survey, in 2015, has that number down to 36. The loss of the axolotl is traumatic for Mexico City: The creature is vital not only to its ecosystem but also to its imagination. Murals and graffiti depicting the animal are ubiquitous: In fact, an axolotl recently won a contest for an emoji to represent the city."

[CN: Climate change] Matt McGrath at the BBC: Sir David Attenborough: Climate Change 'Our Greatest Threat'. "The naturalist Sir David Attenborough has said climate change is humanity's greatest threat in thousands of years. ...Sir David said: 'Right now, we are facing a man-made disaster of global scale. Our greatest threat in thousands of years. Climate change. If we don't take action, the collapse of our civilisations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.'"

[CN: Climate change] Steven Mufson at the Washington Post: 'A Kind of Dark Realism': Why the Climate Change Problem Is Starting to Look Too Big to Solve. "As the 24th U.N. conference on climate change kicks off this week, a steady drumbeat of scientific reports have sounded warnings about current climate trajectories. One warned of the need to curb global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius — 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit — over pre-industrial levels instead of the widely accepted target of 2 degrees Celsius. Another warned of the growing gap between the commitments made at earlier U.N. conferences and what is needed to steer the planet off its current path to calamitous global warming. If it sounds downbeat, that's because it is. The world has waited so long that preventing disruptive climate change requires action 'unprecedented in scale,' the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said."

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

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Ugh, Biden, No

[Content Note: Sexual harassment; rape culture.]

Arlette Saenz at CNN: Joe Biden Believes He Is the 'Most Qualified Person in the Country to Be President'.

First of all, no. He's not. But let's all take a moment to appreciate that his claim is yet another passive-aggressive swipe at Hillary Clinton, which he's been taking ever since she didn't win for reasons he will never even mention because that would mean he might have to take some responsibility as a person who was vice-president while a foreign adversary stole our fucking election.

Secondly, oh my god:

The moderator, Bruce Feiler, pointed out some of the potential liabilities of a Biden campaign, saying "He's too old. He signed, he cosponsored the crime bill. He was the chairman of the judiciary committee during the Anita Hill hearings, and he's out of touch in the era of Me Too. $1.5 million ain't gonna cut it anymore, you need $100 million. Who wants to wake up at 6 a.m. for the next two years and get insults from the President of the United States?...You're a gaffe machine. I could go on. Which of these scares you the most?"

"None of them," Biden said before moving on to defend some of those potential liabilities.

"I am a gaffe machine, but my god what a wonderful thing compared to a guy who can't tell the truth," he said. "I'm ready to litigate all those things; the question is what kind of nation are we becoming? What are we going to do? Who are we?"
He's ready to relitigate his shameful performance during the Clarence Thomas nomination? OH I DON'T THINK HE IS.

And the fact that he just blows that off like it's NBD is argument numero uno for why he's not the most qualified person in the country to be president.

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U.S. Citizen Detained and Targeted for Deportation by ICE

[Content Note: Nativism.]

Peter Brown is a U.S. citizen who was born in Philadelphia. But when he turned himself into the Monroe County [Florida] Sheriff's Office for a minor probation violation, he was held in custody for weeks, because the Monroe County Sheriff's Office is collaborating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to facilitate deportations. When Peter Brown turned himself in, they sent his information to ICE, who asked them to detain him, because has the same name as an immigrant that ICE wants deported to Jamaica.

The ACLU, ACLU of Florida, and Southern Poverty Law Center have brought a case against Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsey for violating Brown's Fourth Amendment rights, and they put together this video explaining the incredible facts of the case.

Video description: Peter Brown, a middle-aged thin Black man, appears onscreen. He reads: "To Whom It May Concern: I'm writing a formal statement to complain and inform that I've been wrongly accused and threatened with deportation from ICE. I am and have always been a citizen of the United States."

Image of Brown beside a copy of the formal grievance from which he was reading. Text onscreen: "A Florida jail detained Peter Brown, a U.S. citizen born in Philadelphia, so that he could be deported to Jamaica."

Video of Brown at home in his kitchen. Text onscreen: "In April 2018, Peter had turned himself in to Monroe County for violating probation for a marijuana-related offense. Instead of being released quickly, Peter was held in jail because ICE wanted to deport him."

Brown appears onscreen. He says: "I did not even realize what ICE was at the time, and, reading through it, I realized it had something to do with immigration. And, at that point, I made a comment of, 'There must've been a mistake.'"

Image of Brown. Text onscreen: "ICE had mistaken Peter for someone with the same name."

Video of Brown at home on his porch. Text onscreen: "Even though Peter repeatedly told the jail he is a U.S. citizen, and jail records confirmed his citizenship, Monroe County kept Peter behind bars."

Brown appears onscreen. He says: "The guard mocked me, singing the theme song from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, with the reference of, 'West Philadelphia born and raised,' because I had told him I was from Philadelphia. So he decides that, rather than do anything to help me, he thought that was funny and decided to mock me with that."

Video of Brown at work in a restaurant kitchen. Text onscreen: "Peter was released only after his roommate sent his birth certificate to ICE."

Image of Brown, seguing into image of prison cells. Text onscreen: "Peter is not alone: 17 Florida sheriffs, including Monroe County's, participate in an ICE pilot program that pays the counties $50 for each immigrant who they re-arrest for ICE."

Image of ICE officer. Text onscreen: "ICE frequently asks local jails to hold U.S. citizens and others who are not subject to removal, violating their Fourth Amendment rights."

Image of man with hands cuffed behind his back. Text onscreen: "The ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center are now suing the Monroe Country Sheriff."

Brown appears onscreen. He says: "I would never have expected it in a million years, that this would happen — and I can tell you it's not a good feeling. And with policies like this in order and people implementing them like that, it was only going to continue. There has to be a stop at some point, before it becomes all of us."

Logos of the ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center.
At the Washington Post, Isaac Stanley-Becker details Brown's case, the resultant lawsuit, and the collusion between sheriff's offices and ICE:
"I am, and have always been, a citizen of the United States," Brown said in a video produced by the American Civil Liberties Union and published Monday.

These facts appeared not to sway law enforcement officials, who told him that ICE was preparing to deport him to Jamaica — "a country where he has never lived and knows no one," according to a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The lawsuit was filed by the ACLU, along with the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Los Angeles-based law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. The suit accuses Richard A. Ramsey, Monroe County's sheriff, of unlawfully arresting and detaining a U.S. citizen, in violation of the Fourth Amendment and the right to be free from false imprisonment, as Florida law guarantees.

Monroe is among more than a dozen Florida counties that in January 2018 entered a new arrangement with ICE under what are called "Basic Ordering Agreements." They stipulate that the federal agency compensate sheriffs to the tune of $50 for extending the detention of "criminal aliens," as the National Sheriffs' Association put it in a statement. The ACLU argues that the set-up has created a financial motive for sheriffs to execute every single detainer request they receive, despite countervailing evidence. This approach negates basic principles of policing, such as probable cause, the ACLU reasons, and turns people like Brown into collateral damage.

"Nobody should have to endure what he endured," the complaint maintains. "He was kept in jail — away from his family, friends, and work — solely to facilitate his illegal deportation from the United States. The Sheriff's Office ignored his pleas for weeks, mocked him, and led him to believe that he would soon find himself in a Jamaican prison. He suffered severe anxiety, fear, and trauma in the process."

...Brown is hardly the only U.S. citizen to face the threat of deportation. A Syracuse University study published in 2013 used ICE records to determine that the agency had placed detainers on 834 U.S. citizens over just a four-year period.

But the details of Brown's case stand out, said Spencer Amdur, an ACLU attorney on the case.

"It's particularly stark just how many indications the sheriff had that Peter Brown was a U.S. citizen," Amdur said in an interview with The Washington Post. "It doesn't happen in every case that not only is the person telling everybody he can find and filing written complaints, but the sheriff's own records have his citizenship and birthplace. Peter was very assiduous."
There is much more at the link, including Brown's disclosure that he was particularly afraid of the threat to be deported to Jamaica, because he is gay, and Jamaica remains violently homophobic. Brown also lost his job because of the weeks-long detention.

This is utterly contemptible and terrifying. It is also the inevitable consequence of a vile nativist agenda, financially incentivizing nativist policing, the dehumanization of immigrants, and a contempt for the rule of law among its enforcers.

What is even more troubling is that Donald Trump and the Republican Party are busily stacking the courts, so that people like Peter Brown and his advocates will increasingly find no remedy to the gross violation of their rights.

And, as Brown pointedly notes, that could be any of us.

[H/T to Aphra_Behn.]

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Mueller Reportedly Close to Wrapping It Up

Today, Special Counsel Bob Mueller is scheduled to file a detailed memo in support of the sentencing of Michael Flynn, which will "include information about any 'bad acts' Flynn committed for which he was not charged, and details about his cooperation with the special counsel." There is, to put it mildly, a good chance this memo will not reflect well on Donald Trump.

Mueller will also file detailed memos on Friday in support of the sentencing of Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen. Those are also unlikely to reflect well on Trump.

Mueller is thought to be nearing the end of his investigation:

Mueller's prosecutors have told defense lawyers in recent weeks that they are "tying up loose ends" in their investigation, providing the clearest clues yet that the long-running probe into Russia's interference in the 2016 election may be coming to its climax, potentially in the next few weeks, according to multiple sources close to the matter.

...The only other publicly known matter Mueller is believed to be focused on relates to former Trump adviser Roger Stone and conspiracy theorist Jerome Corsi — both of whom have been aggressively investigated to determine if they had advance communications with WikiLeaks or associates of the group about its plans for the release of stolen emails of Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta in the final weeks of the 2016 presidential election.
Mueller's filings on Flynn, Manafort, and Cohen will be made public, though parts of them may be redacted. So we'll have something to scrutinize, even if his final report is tanked by acting AG Matthew Whitaker.

Whatever we get to see by the end of this thing, it's going to look bad for Trump. It already looks bad for Trump. What remains to be seen is whether it will be bad for Trump — whether it will result in any meaningful consequences for him, or whether it will just be another round of bad press for him to weather, from which he ultimately emerges unscathed, his enormous power remaining firmly intact and unchecked.

It's not reassuring that Trump is, virtually on the daily, tweeting execrable bombast about the investigation that is tantamount to obstruction, to no consequence.

Trump, however, doesn't have only Mueller to worry about anymore. House Democrats are preparing investigations of their own, and he's still facing challenges over his business: "The attorneys general of the District of Columbia and Maryland said Monday that they are moving forward with subpoenas for records in their case accusing [Donald] Trump of profiting off the presidency. U.S. District Court Judge Peter J. Messitte approved the legal discovery schedule in an order Monday. Such information would likely provide the first clear picture of the finances of Trump's Washington, D.C., hotel."

It seems inconceivable that all of the investigations into Trump's plethoric and obvious corruption would not result in multiple legal troubles from which it would be impossible to totally extricate himself, but I suspect we're about to find out how truly powerful the office of the presidency is when its occupant is willing to wield that power to shield himself from accountability.

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Open Thread


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

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Goodbye, Olivia

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat sitting on the stairs
Olivia

The Monday before Thanksgiving, we took Olivia to the vet. She had lost some weight, which isn't unusual for a nearly 15-year-old cat, but it was almost exactly a year since her cancer surgery. She was coughing. And the tone of her purr had changed, just enough that no one else might have noticed, but I did.

The vet examined her and took her away for an x-ray. When he came back into the room, he first pulled up her chest x-ray from before her surgery last year, and showed us her lungs — healthy black voids. Then he pulled up the x-ray he'd just taken. Her lungs were almost completely solidly white with cancer.

I think he showed us the films because he couldn't quite believe it himself — that this frisky, energetic, bright-eyed cat in front of us was so ill. It was difficult for us to believe, too. She was still eating like a horse, as she always had. She was still grooming herself, still playful, still social. She could still breathe.

I commented to the vet that he seemed surprised by how advanced the cancer was, given her behavior. He said he was very surprised. He told us we had a month, if that.

image of Olivia lying between my legs

I knew that Olivia would tell us when she was ready. Not like anyone else would. She wouldn't give up eating, or start to hide. She would keep being the indubitable tank that she had always been, and one day she would just find her own way to tell me it was time.

And so she did.

We took her back to the vet late Friday. We started the year losing Matilda, and we ended it losing Olivia. It's nearly more than I can bear.

I told Iain that I don't know why they call it heartbreak; it should be called bodysmash, because every part of me aches with grief.

image of Olivia looking content as I pet her head

Everyone who had the fortune to know Olivia (and the misfortune of trying to eat a meal around her!) knows she was an absolute force of nature. She was the most tenacious being I've ever known. Determined, resilient, smart, comical, and fiercely sweet.

She literally came flying into our lives at 60mph and was an indomitable presence for just shy of 15 years. Her personality was as big as her appetite. Our house feels empty without her.

Olivia was a juggernaut of intense cuteness and abundant love, who showered us with affectionate head-bumps and kisses, and who followed me around the house all day, wherever I went. If I had the temerity to close a door behind me, her big white paw would come sliding under the door, petitioning for admittance. She just wanted to be involved, always. We'd play fetch for hours at a time, her favorite fetching toy being a ball of tinfoil, which I'd later find tucked deep into the toe of one of my shoes.

I'm honestly not sure if her heart or her stomach was bigger, so I'm going to call it a tie.

She was as food-driven as any beastie has ever been: The day we found out the cancer had returned, we had spaghetti and meatballs for dinner, and she jumped up and took a bite directly out of my meatball the moment I set down my plate on the table.

Food stolen by Olivia over her lifetime included: A taco, most of a flounder sandwich, an entire cheeseburger, meatballs, cheese, pasta, bread, and literally anything else left unattended for a nanosecond by human, dog, or cat.

She also routinely dunked her filthy litter paws into any glass of water, coffee, or tea that wasn't being watched like a hawk, then would create a colossal mess drinking whatever was left.

When we came home from Livsy's final visit to the vet, it didn't register with Sophie right away that her sister wasn't here anymore. It was only after she failed to show up for dinner that Sophs realized what was happening. She let out a howl like we have never heard — a mournful wail that sounded exactly like I felt.

image of Olivia standing at the top of the stairs, looking at me

Livs drove us absolutely bonkers with her infamous food aggression, but it was probably the fact that she kept her appetite which gave her as much quality of life as she had so far into her disease. Her tenacity was always her worst and best quality, and even when she would make me cross with her relentlessness, I admired the hell out of her for it. She inspired me.

I haven't eaten a meal or had a drink at home for 14 years that I didn't have to spend defending it from Livs. And as much as it annoyed me, it taught me patience. I wish full-heartedly that she were here, strolling across my keyboard trying to get at my glass of water right now.

Someone who didn't know her might think she was greedy, but, for all her naughty thievery, when she caught a mouse, she brought it to me.

image of Olivia with her eyes closed, grinning

Her last day was a good one. She had breakfast, second breakfast, third breakfast, snacks, more snacks, and hours of cuddles. She had enough left to still enjoy all of it, before it was time to go.

I loved Ms. Olivia Twist mightily, and I will miss her so, so much. I feel desperately sad, and I feel profusely lucky to have known her for as long as I did.

My life is better because she was in it. I hope I returned the favor.

[Note: I will be taking the rest of the day off, and I will return tomorrow.]

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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 mints.

Recommended Reading:

Joe Sexton at ProPublica: [Content Note: Police brutality; gun violence; self-harm] "I Don't Want to Shoot You, Brother": A Shocking Story of Police and Lethal Force; Just Not the One You Might Expect

Shani Saxon at Colorlines: [CN: Police brutality; gun violence; racism] Alleged Mall Shooter Arrested, Police Still Can't Explain Why Officer Killed Emantic Bradford Jr.

Bernard E. Harcourt at the New York Review of Books: [CN: White supremacy] How Trump Fuels the Fascist Right

Maya Wei-Haas at National Geographic: Strange Waves Rippled Around the World, and Nobody Knows Why

CB at Celebitchy: [CN: Rape culture; sexual assault] On People's Despicable Matt Lauer Profile

Heather Havrilesky at the Cut: Ask Polly: 'I'm Broke and Mostly Friendless, and I've Wasted My Whole Life'

Teddy Grant at Ebony: Viola Davis to Star in Shirley Chisholm Biopic for Amazon Studios

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

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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.

* * *

My top five good things, in order of meeting them:

1. Iain
2. Olivia
3. Sophie
4. Dudley
5. Zelda

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of my desk and chair; Sophie the Torbie Cat is sitting on the top of the back of my chair, with her back to the camera, her leg and tail draped over one side
Normal cat stuff.

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 680

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: "Guidance Regarding Political Activity" Forbids Resistance; Will Constrain Whistleblowers and Trump Wanted to Give Putin $50M Trump Tower Penthouse During the 2016 Campaign and Democrats Are on It.

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


Andrew Roth at the Guardian: 'Danger Never Went Away': Ukrainian Cities Feel Cornered by Russia. "Even before the clash on Sunday in which Russia's coastguard seized three Ukrainian ships, Moscow had spent months strangling the sea trade into the vulnerable Ukrainian port cities between mainland Russia and Crimea. ...'It began this summer, the Russian federation's answer to us,' said Alexander Barchan, the head of the Berdyansk sea port authority, in an interview at his offices by the docks. Year on year, he said, shipping had already dropped 50%. 'I think we can safely call it an economic blockade. We're losing cargo flow, we're losing profit. We've moved just half the cargo that we did in previous years.' Russia has denied any disruption to Ukrainian shipping. Asked how long it could continue, Barchan paused, put up his hands and said: 'We don't even want to speculate.' The emergence of a naval front has ignited concerns that the simmering conflict between Russia and Ukraine could lead to open war."


Good. Unfortunately, our president is still a fucking puppet of Putin.

Speaking of which... Carol D. Leonnig and Josh Dawsey at the Washington Post: 'Individual 1': Trump Emerges as a Central Subject of Mueller Probe. "In two major developments this week, [Donald] Trump has been labeled in the parlance of criminal investigations as a major subject of interest, complete with an opaque legal code name: 'Individual 1.' New evidence from two separate fronts of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III's investigation casts fresh doubts on Trump's version of key events involving Russia, signaling potential political and legal peril for the president."

Relatedly, Politico's Kyle Cheney reports: "Prosecutors are considering retrying Manafort on the 10 charges that resulted in a hung jury in Virginia in August. They're also still weighing whether to file new charges based on what they say is Manafort's breach of the plea agreement."

* * *

[Content Note: War; death] Staff at the Daily Beast: U.S. Airstrike in Afghanistan Killed 23 Civilians, Mostly Women and Children, Says U.N. "A U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan on Tuesday killed as many as 23 civilians, mostly women and children, according to the United Nations. Investigators say that as many as 10 children and eight women may have been killed in the strike on a compound in Helmand province. The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan said Tuesday's helicopter strike took place amid a firefight between Afghan special forces and Taliban fighters, and that the Taliban had been using the compound 'as a fighting position' and accused the militants of using civilians as human shields. ...The U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan has recorded 649 civilian casualties (dead and injured) as a result of aerial attacks in the first nine months of this year — the highest since records began in 2009."

[CN: Nativism; child abuse] Laura C. Morel and Patrick Michels at the Texas Tribune: No One on the Inside Can Talk About What's Happening at the Tent City for Migrant Kids.
Months after the government erected a tent city in the desert, most of what happens inside the encampment remains hidden, even from curious neighbors in the nearby town of 1,600 residents. The only images of the minors in the camp, standing outside in an orderly line or playing soccer, have been released by the Department of Health and Human Services.

"We have the same access that the whole world has," said Tornillo schools Superintendent Rosy Vega-Barrio, "which is none."

There is one local organization that gets inside the camp regularly: Diocesan Migrant & Refugee Services. The El Paso legal nonprofit is among dozens of groups funded by the government to provide legal services to immigrant children in custody.

But lawyers at Diocesan Migrant & Refugee Services, known locally as DMRS, can't speak publicly about the children at Tornillo. Their contract prohibits them from talking to the media, Executive Director Melissa Lopez said in an interview. It's another aspect of the conflict of interest built into the funding for legal aid, which also prevents lawyers from taking the government to court to get children released.
There is much more at the link.

Zack Whittaker at Techcrunch: Marriott Says 500 Million Starwood Guest Records Stolen in Massive Data Breach. "Starwood Hotels has confirmed its hotel guest database of about 500 million customers has been stolen in a data breach. The hotel and resorts giant said in a statement filed with U.S. regulators that the 'unauthorized access' to its guest database was detected on or before September 10 — but may have dated back as far as 2014. ...Some 327 million records contained a guest's name, postal address, phone number, date of birth, gender, email address, passport number, Starwood's rewards information (including points and balance), arrival and departure information, reservation date, and their communication preferences. Starwood said an unknown number of records contained encrypted credit card data, but has 'not been able to rule out' that the components needed to decrypt the data wasn't also taken."

Scott Bland at Politico: Pro-Bernie Group Hacked in Quarter-Million-Dollar Email Scam. "The political nonprofit launched by Sen. Bernie Sanders in 2016 lost nearly a quarter-million dollars to an email scam that year, according to new tax documents obtained by Politico. Our Revolution 'was the victim of a Business E-Mail Compromise scam that took place in December 2016 but was not discovered until January 2017, resulting in the loss of approximately $242,000 via an electronic transfer of funds to an overseas account,' the group disclosed in its tax forms covering the year 2017, which were filed earlier this month." If it was discovered almost two years ago, why are we only hearing about it now?

[CN: Anti-semitism] Ryan Mac at BuzzFeed: Sheryl Sandberg Emailed Staff to Conduct Research on Billionaire George Soros. "Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg requested research on a perceived company enemy, the billionaire George Soros, according to an internal email described to BuzzFeed News and confirmed by Facebook. Sandberg has previously said that she was unaware of the work done by Definers Public Affairs, a communications firm that Facebook hired for public relations and opposition research on competitors and critics, including Soros. ...While a Facebook spokesperson maintains that Sandberg did not direct Definers, it now acknowledges that she did in fact request research on Soros following comments he made at the World Economic Forum in January." She's really leaning in to Facebook's values, eh?

[CN: Climate change; environmental racism] Yessenia Funes at Earther: Climate Change Threatens Priceless Knowledge Held by Indigenous Communities, Federal Report Warns.
There are myriad ways society can benefit from indigenous knowledge. For instance, climate scientists are now working with Alaskan Native hunters to document changing Arctic ice conditions. However, the people who rely on this knowledge every day — to subsistence hunt, for example — are struggling to come to terms with the changes they're seeing on their land. These changes are outside historical patterns, so this traditional knowledge? In some cases, it seems to be losing its place.

That caribou's migration route may have changed. Or that herb used for ceremony isn't blooming during its usual time. These sorts of changes have severe impacts on indigenous peoples' health, both physical and mental. The assessment doesn't shy away from this reality. It states:
Indigenous health is based on interconnected social and ecological systems that are being disrupted by a changing climate. As these changes continue, the health of individuals and communities will be uniquely challenged by climate impacts to lands, waters, foods, and other plant and animal species. These impacts threaten sites, practices, and relationships with cultural, spiritual, or ceremonial importance that are foundational to Indigenous peoples' cultural heritages, identities, and physical and mental health.
Losing their sense of place and associated cultural practices will be devastating for indigenous communities, said [Elizabeth Brabec, the director of the Center for Heritage and Society]. There's actually a term for this loss: solastalgia.

"That's going to destabilize culture, and it's going to destabilize communities," Berbac told Earther.
And finally, to bring today's thread full circle with a giant lolsob...


*jumps into Christmas tree*

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

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