We Resist: Day 720

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.

* * *

Late yesterday and earlier today by me: Keep Your Eyes on Pence and Trump's F#@king Speech Thread and Rosenstein Reportedly to Leave Administration Soon and Trump Has Border-Walled Himself into a Corner.

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

[Content Note: Authoritarianism; nativism; and dehumanization. Covers entire section.]

Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: Experts Saw Signs of Growing Authoritarianism in Trump's Primetime Address. No shit. "Both Professors Ben-Ghiat and Berman agreed that authoritarians regularly inflate or entirely manufacture supposed national security crises — often based off of classified info only they have access to — in order to further cement their grip on power."


Sarah Kendzior at the Globe and Mail: Forget the Wall; Trump Is the National Security Crisis. "We are two years into the presidency of a man who launched his campaign by smearing Mexicans as rapists and murderers and then proclaimed he would make Mexico pay for a wall to keep the alleged perpetrators out. But Mr. Trump's obsession with the wall had as little to do with ensuring public safety as his prior obsession with President Obama's birth certificate had to do with legislative legitimacy. Both were rhetorical moves designed to shift the parameters of debate into rancid, racist territory."

Kate Riga at TPM: Trump Tells TV Anchors Before Speech That Border Trip Is Just a Photo Op. "Donald Trump told TV news anchors at a lunch before his Oval Office address that his upcoming trip to the border won't 'change a damn thing' and that it's really just a photo opportunity."


This is always the horror of authoritarian leadership: On the one hand, it's manufactured drama built on obvious lies. On the other, it is very real and terrifying oppression being justified by those invented crises and rank dishonesty.

Anyway. Trump's whole family seems great cough. Ed Mazza at the Huffington Post: Donald Trump Jr. Says Border Wall Is Like a Zoo Fence Protecting You from Animals. "Donald Trump Jr. is getting called out for an Instagram message he posted that compared the proposed border wall to a zoo fence. 'You know why you can enjoy a day at the zoo?' the son of [Donald] Trump wrote in an Instagram story on Tuesday night. 'Because walls work.'"


This entire fucking family JFC.

* * *

Nico Hines at the Daily Beast: Trump Campaign Consultants Cambridge Analytica Found Guilty of Breaking Data Laws. "Cambridge Analytica has been found guilty of breaking data laws after refusing to disclose how much information it holds on an American professor, where it got the data, and — perhaps most importantly — how it used it and who it gave it to. The British analytics firm, which was hired by the Trump campaign, has been accused of misusing the Facebook data of almost 100 million Americans while working to elect [Donald] Trump. ...In court Wednesday, the administrators of SCL Elections, which declared bankruptcy in May last year, finally admitted that it had broken the law. The last-minute guilty plea came on the day the trial was scheduled to begin. The judge ruled the company had shown a 'willful disregard' for the enforcement of data laws, but sentenced the company to pay less than $20,000 — even with the addition of some of the costs, the penalty was around $26,000." That'll show 'em! (Sob.)

Jennifer Rubin at the Washington Post: One More Russian Contact: Here's Why It Matters. "We've come a long way since Trump claimed neither he nor anyone on the campaign had contacts with Russians. Before the latest revelation, the Moscow Project had discovered '97 contacts between Trump's team and Russia linked operatives, including at least 28 meetings. And we know that at least 28 high-ranking campaign officials and Trump advisers were aware of contacts with Russia-linked operatives during the campaign and transition.' Furthermore, 'None of these contacts were ever reported to the proper authorities. Instead, the Trump team tried to cover up every single one of them.'"

Pilar Melendez and Julia Arciga at the Daily Beast: TSA Officers Are Already Quitting over the Shutdown, Union Says.
Airport security screeners forced to work without pay during the government shutdown have been calling out sick. But now the mad-as-hell workers are actually quitting their jobs.

That's according to union officials representing Transportation Security Administration officers, who will miss their first paycheck since the government ground to a halt Dec. 22 over a budget and border wall impasse.

"Some of them have already quit and many are considering quitting the federal workforce because of this shutdown," Hydrick Thomas, head of the American Federation of Government Employees' TSA Council, said in a statement Tuesday.

"The loss of officers, while we're already shorthanded, will create a massive security risk for American travelers since we don't have enough trainees in the pipeline or the ability to process new hires. Our TSOs already do an amazing job without the proper staffing levels, but if this keeps up there are problems that will arise — least of which would be increased wait times for travelers."

...One TSA worker at JFK International Airport in New York told The Daily Beast that at least 15 of his coworkers have called out since the shutdown began on Dec. 22 — and he might be next.

"Listen, I love my job and I have been willing to work for free as people in Washington sort everything out," said the worker, who has been on the job for about a year and asked to remain anonymous.

"But how long is this going to take? I have a newborn," he said. "I can barely afford to miss this pay period. I don't want to lose my job but I also don't want to lose my apartment, you know?"
Oliver Milman at the Guardian: Americans' Health at Risk as Shutdown Slashes EPA. "The U.S. government shutdown has stymied environmental testing and inspections, prompting warnings that Americans' health is being put at increasing risk as the shutdown drags on. More than 13,000 employees at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are not at work, with just 794 people deemed essential staff currently undertaking the agency's duties. The remaining skeleton staff are able to 'respond to emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property,' according to an EPA planning document. But many routine activities such as checks on regulated businesses, clean-ups of toxic superfund sites, and the pursuit of criminal polluters have been paused since 28 December."

[CN: Anti-choicery] Jessica Mason Pieklo at Rewire.News: GOP Women's Senate Judiciary Assignments Are About Abortion, Not Optics. "Republicans made history this week by assigning one-third of their women senators to serve on the Judiciary Committee. U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and Joni Ernst (R-IA) are set to become the first Republican women to serve on the Senate Judiciary Committee, but their assignments are about more than just addressing the horrible optics of Republicans never having had a woman on a committee that deals with fundamental constitutional privacy rights like abortion. They just added two more committed anti-choice activists and Trump loyalists to the committee charged with jurisdiction over federal civil rights law, at precisely the time the administration's attacks on civil rights — and especially reproductive rights — are reaching a fevered pitch."

[CN: Racism] Today in the New York Times going full Nazi:


[CN: Misogynoir; loss of wanted pregnancy] Tressie McMillan Cottom at Time: I Was Pregnant and in Crisis; All the Doctors and Nurses Saw Was an Incompetent Black Woman. "Everything about the structure of trying to get medical care had filtered me through assumptions of my incompetence. There it was, what I had always been afraid of, what I must have known since I was a child I needed to prepare to defend myself against, and what it would take me years to accept was beyond my control. Like millions of women of color, especially black women, the healthcare machine could not imagine me as competent and so it neglected and ignored me until I was incompetent. ...When the medical profession systematically denies the existence of black women's pain, underdiagnoses our pain, refuses to alleviate or treat our pain, healthcare marks us as incompetent bureaucratic subjects. Then it serves us accordingly."

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And finally, some good news... Samantha Young, Anna Gorman, and Ana B. Ibarra at Towleroad: Newsom Comes out Swinging on Day One for Single-Payer, Immigrant Coverage. "Within hours of assuming office Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a defiant challenge to the Trump administration with sweeping plans to expand health coverage to more Californians, pushing for a single-payer system and insurance for undocumented young adult immigrants. He also called for new state-funded subsidies to help people afford health insurance, coupled with a requirement that all Californians have health insurance. And he signed an executive order that directs state agencies to work together to negotiate prescription drug prices." Right on.

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

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The Fun and Games Thread

image of a Qwixx game card, filled out after a completed game, pictured on my dining room table along with a pen and colorful dice
Qwixx: One of the favorite games played at Shakes Manor!

Recently, I solicited ideas for new fun/nonpolitical community discussion threads. Shaker GoldFishy suggested a "fun and games" thread, where we could all share "new [or not] board games, card games, video games, etc. Also, we have this amazing new VR arcade near us that I can't wait to visit...stuff like that."

So! Here is a thread for discussion of all things gaming: Board games, card games, video games, dice games, role-playing games, strategy games, party games, whether you play in groups or on your own. Tell us all about the games you love!

Pictured above is my Qwixx game card, filled out after a recently completed game. It's a great dice game — simple and fast and a whole bunch of fun. Iain and I have been playing a lot of Qwixx lately. There's definitely some strategy to it, but it's just enough to keep the game interesting and not so much that it demands a whole lot of mental energy to play it. I really enjoy it.

What game(s) have you been playing lately?

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Trump Has Border-Walled Himself into a Corner

[Content Note: Nativism.]

So, Donald Trump gave a speech last night, and it was a dumpster full of racist lies. (If you want to read his address and/or the rebuttal by Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, NPR has complete transcripts.) Trump did not declare a national emergency, having apparently been convinced that it was a bad idea, but "a source close to the president" leaked that he still considers it an option.


Meanwhile, despite the typical dreadful punditry proliferating across cable news, the public isn't buying the "both sides" narrative, nor Trump's even more egregious framing that the shutdown is entirely the fault of Democrats.

At the Huffington Post, Ariel Edwards-Levy reports that "more than four in 10 Americans now consider the partial government shutdown a very serious problem" and "a 51 percent majority of Americans say Trump deserves at least partial responsibility for the shutdown."

And at Politico, Steven Shepard reports that "voters are opposed to shutting down the government to extract the funds for the wall's construction — and more blame Trump and the GOP for the shutdown than Democrats. Nearly half of voters, 47 percent, say Trump is mostly to blame for the shutdown, the poll shows, while another 5 percent point the finger at congressional Republicans. But just a third, 33 percent, blame Democrats in Congress."

Trump has border-walled himself into a corner, and he now faces a major problem: Even among people who agree with his premise that there's a "crisis" at the southern border, there isn't overwhelming support for building a border wall to solve the problem. And yet he's staked everything on this bullshit border wall idea.

If he backs down now, it will be a major defeat — and Trump cannot tolerate being one of the "losers" he so frequently derides from his rally podiums and Twitter account. He also can't abide being seen as weak by his deplorable cultists.

But he can't win. The longer this goes on, the more power shifts to the Democrats, who aren't backing down and refuse to give him the money to fund the wall.

Which leaves his only choice declaring a national emergency, which is such an immense abuse of power that even some members of his own party balk at the very notion.

At Vanity Fair, Gabriel Sherman reports that the border wall has become Trump's "personal Alamo."
Inside the West Wing, Trump has told aides he's prepared to stake his presidency on making a last stand. "He has convinced himself he can't win re-election in 2020 unless he gets a lot of the wall built. It's fundamental to his id," a former West Wing official said. "The problem is, the Democrats know that."

Trump's aides fear he has given himself no way out. "The president put himself in a box," the former official in touch with the White House told me. "The problem is there's no endgame. Right now the White House is at a seven on the panic scale. If this thing goes on past the State of the Union they're going to be at an 11." Another prominent Republican close to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell described Trump's handling of the shutdown as "total fucking chaos."
All of which is terrible news all around. Because it leaves us, for at least the next two years, with two options: 1. Trump continues stumbling along this hideous path, making authoritarian power grabs in order to continue to wreak his nativist malice; or 2: Trump gives up and his presidency totally collapses under the weight of such a massive failure, and we end up with President Pence, who strides into the Oval with the strength and confidence of a late-game substitute player on fresh legs.

Either way, it's going to be bad. House Democrats are going to have a lot of resistance work to do — and so are we. We're all gonna need some kind of otherworldly stamina to get through this mess.

Trump has threatened to keep the government shutdown for years, if need be, regardless of the pain to 800,000 federal workers and their families, but it's going to come to a head before that. I am dreading it. But I am ready.

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Rosenstein Reportedly to Leave Administration Soon

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link.]

Pierre Thomas, Jonathan Karl, John Santucci, and Mike Levine at ABC News: Rosenstein Expected to Depart DOJ in Coming Weeks If New Attorney General Confirmed.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein is expected to leave his role in the coming weeks, multiple sources familiar with his plans told ABC News.

Rosenstein has communicated to [Donald] Trump and White House officials his plan to depart the administration around the time William Barr, Trump's nominee for attorney general, would take office following a Senate confirmation.

Sources told ABC News Rosenstein wants to ensure a smooth transition to his successor and would accommodate the needs of Barr, should he be confirmed.

Rosenstein apparently had long been thinking he would serve about two years, and there was no indication that he was being forced out at this moment by the president.
"At this moment" is doing a lot of work there, considering that Rosenstein has been the target of Trump's ire since virtually the moment he assumed oversight of the special counsel's investigation, after former Attorney General Jeff Sessions was obliged to recuse himself.

Trump may not be actively trying to push Rosenstein out the door in this particular moment, what with being distracted by shutting down the government over funding for a monument to his white supremacy, but I don't expect that Rosenstein feels especially welcome within the administration at this point.

That said, given that Rosenstein has long faced Trump's hostility and has repeatedly said he won't be intimidated by it, I find it curious that he's leaving now, especially if he's not being forced out the door. The acting AG, Matthew Whitaker, and the nominated AG, Bill Barr, have both been blunt about their feelings that Bob Mueller's investigation has overreached and about their intentions to leverage their positions to protect the president.

Rosenstein has always been a perplexing figure to me. I'm not sure what motivates him, and I'm not sure why he's reportedly chosen to leave now or why he's made it contingent on Barr's confirmation.

But I don't think this is a good sign, or even a neutral one.

Soon, there will be no one left in the highest levels of the Justice Department who has any interest in holding the president accountable for anything.

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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 RachelB: "What 8 people, living or dead, would you like to host for a dinner party?"

Both sets of Iain's and my grandparents. (I'm presuming Iain doesn't have to count as one of the 8, since he'll be helping with the cooking and hosting and cleaning up!) They're all dead, and some of them I never got a chance to meet, even on my own side, so I would like to meet the ones I never met, and I would love to see again the ones I had the great fortune of knowing.

And I think it would be really neat for all of them to meet each other.

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Trump's F#@king Speech Thread

image created by me featuring the graphic Trump tweeted showing his border wall, behind which I have photoshopped storm clouds and Trump's giant head mid-scream, giving the appearance that he is delivering his speech from behind his own proposed border wall, which also looks like it doubles as a prison bars

Tonight, Donald Trump will deliver an address starting at 9:00 p.m. ET in which he will reportedly try to convince the American people that he needs a border wall, using rank lies, gross fear-mongering, and vile nativist racism.

Here is a thread for discussion ahead of, during, and after his address.

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Keep Your Eyes on Pence

This is an interesting passage bured deep in Elaina Plott's piece for the Atlantic on Mike Pence's futile role in trying to end the shutdown:

White House allies on the Hill and former administration officials acknowledged privately that the vice president may be more hamstrung than ever, unable to capitalize on many of the strengths he was originally chosen for. But crucially, those sources said, Pence has never expressed any displeasure with his circumstances, and would never suggest, even privately they say, that Trump's whims have made shuttle diplomacy difficult. "There's a reason Pence has avoided the fate of so many others," another former senior White House official told me. "He acquiesces entirely to the will of Trump 100 percent of the time."
Of course he does. Because the most determined authoritarians ferociously respect authority.

Just yesterday, in an exchange about Pence on Twitter, I wrote: "People who most fervently believe in obedience to authority usually want quite desperately to BE the authority. And those are the ones most cruel when they get it."

People wildly misunderstand Pence when they mistake his fealty for weakness. He is not a lapdog. He is a snake, waiting to strike, and the rock under which he hovers for protection is the power he hopes to seize for himself someday.

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Discussion Thread: Self-Care

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

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

* * *

Well, I took my ass to therapy last night, which is always an important piece of self-care for me, and I'm going to try to swim a couple of times this week, provided my shoulder cooperates.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat curled up in one corner of a dog bed lying in the dining room, while Dudley the Greyhound is stretched out half falling off the opposite side
Sharing.

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 719

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.

* * *

Late yesterday and earlier today by me: No and No, Trump. and The Trump Regime Will Horrify You; I Hope My Typo Will Delight You and Democrats Will Present Rebuttal to Trump Tonight.

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

Devlin Barrett and Matt Zapotosky at the Washington Post: Russian Lawyer at Trump Tower Meeting Charged in Separate Case. "A Russian lawyer whose role at a 2016 meeting at Trump Tower has come under scrutiny from special counsel Robert S. Mueller III was charged Tuesday in a separate case with obstructing justice in a money-laundering investigation. Natalia Veselnitskaya became a central figure in the Mueller probe when it was revealed that in June 2016, she met with Donald Trump Jr., after an intermediary indicated she had dirt on Hillary Clinton. But the charges unsealed Tuesday say she made a 'misleading declaration' to the court in a civil case."

Meanwhile, BuzzFeed's Zoe Tillman reports on Twitter: "Paul Manafort's lawyers filed his submission due yesterday re: the allegations of a plea deal breach under seal, per spokesman Jason Maloni — 'Mr. Manafort's counsel filed their opposition yesterday under seal.'" She adds: "Recall that parts of the special counsel's filing re: what they say Manafort lied about after signing a plea deal were redacted, so it's not totally surprising that Manafort would seek to file under seal. We could see a redacted version later."

Also: Greg Stohr at Bloomberg: Supreme Court Receives New Filing in Apparent Mueller Case. "A new U.S. Supreme Court filing suggests the public may soon get more information about a mystery case believed to be tied to the criminal investigation being conducted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller. The filing stems from an appeals court ruling that upheld fines against a mystery company, owned by an unidentified foreign country, for failing to comply with a grand jury subpoena. The filing seeks permission to file an appeal of the ruling under seal. It also asks the Supreme Court to let a redacted version of the appeal be made public, according to the court's online docket."

Obviously, I don't know which company the filing regards, but I have a few ideas. It could be Prevezon, which is the company in the aforementioned civil case related to the charges brought against Natalia Veselnitskaya — although I'm not sure that's state-owned. I also think there's a good chance it could be Rosneft. My best guess, however, is that it's Vnesheconombank, because of the meeting Jared Kushner had with the chief of Vnesheconombank, Sergey N. Gorkov, at the urging of Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, after Vnesheconombank was on the U.S. sanctions list. I've always wondered why that meeting never seemed to get any scrutiny, but maybe it has.

In more related news: Dan Mangan at CNBC: Blackwater Founder Erik Prince Says Mueller Asked About Meeting Russian Putin Pal in Seychelles. "Blackwater founder Erik Prince said Monday that he would have preferred getting a 'proctology exam' to being interviewed by special counsel Robert Mueller's team of investigators about his meeting with a Russian investor linked to Vladimir Putin. But the controversial security consultant told CNBC's Squawk Box that his previously reported sit-down with Mueller's team regarding that curious encounter in the Seychelles islands, which took place shortly before Donald Trump became president, was 'much ado about nothing.' Prince, whose sister Betsy DeVos is Trump's Education secretary, is a supporter of the president. 'I answered their questions, and they haven't talked to me since,' said Prince, a former Navy SEAL."

There's a lot of investigative news today which Donald Trump would surely likely to overshadow. More and more reason to fear a big announcement tonight.

And speaking of Trump's immigration lies... Salvador Hernandez at BuzzFeed: Trump Claimed Former Presidents Told Him They Should Have Built a Border Wall; All Four Living Presidents Say That's Not True. "Providing no evidence, Trump has claimed wide support for the wall and, on Friday, dragged his predecessors into the ongoing debate, claiming that past presidents had privately told him they should have built the wall during their administrations. 'This should have been done by all the presidents that preceded me, and they all know it,' Trump told reporters. 'Some of them have told me that we should have done it, so we're not playing games. We have to do it.' But representatives for all four living past presidents, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, have said this is not true."

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Julian Borger at the Guardian: Trump Administration Downgrades EU's Status in U.S., without Informing Brussels. "The Trump administration has downgraded the diplomatic status of the EU mission in Washington, without informing the mission or Brussels, officials confirmed on Tuesday. The downgrade from nation state to international organisation status reverses an Obama administration decision in 2016 to grant the EU an enhanced diplomatic role in Washington, and is being seen in Brussels as a snub reflecting a general antipathy to the EU in the Trump administration. The president has supported Brexit and has described the EU as a 'foe.' The change, first reported by the German news agency Deutsche Welle, potentially means that the EU mission would have less clout and access to U.S. officials."

Lauren Hirsch at CNBC: Sears Plans to Shutter After 126 Years in Business as Chairman Eddie Lampert's Bid Fails. "Sears Holdings has rejected Chairman Eddie Lampert's bid to save the 126-year-old company, setting the storied retailer with more than 50,000 employees on a path to liquidation, people familiar with the situation told CNBC on Tuesday. Sears, which also owns Kmart, planned to announce its liquidation plans Tuesday morning, the people said. Lampert had put forward a $4.4 billion bid to save Sears by buying it out of bankruptcy through his hedge fund ESL Investments. His offer, though, was deemed insufficient by Sears' advisors, the people said."

Sears and Kmart (which Sears now owns) used to be some of those common community retailers with reliable employment, both for career service employees and for people who'd been laid off. Sears and Kmart saw through an awful lot of laid-off steelworkers in my community in the 1980s. Either probably would have made a good temporary gig for a number of federal workers during a shutdown, if the entire economy that supported Sears hadn't collapsed. Sob.

Emily Holden at the Guardian: Carbon Emissions up as Trump Agenda Rolls Back Climate Change Work. "A new analysis shows US greenhouse gas levels are increasing as the Trump administration unravels efforts to slow climate change. Carbon emissions rose sharply last year, increasing 3.4%, according to new estimates from the economic firm Rhodium Group. That year's jump in emissions is the biggest since the bounce back from the recession in 2010. It is the second largest gain in more than two decades. ...The Environmental Protection Agency chief, Andrew Wheeler, often trumpets declines in greenhouse gases, citing data showing that they fell 2.7% from 2016 to 2017. But the EPA is rescinding Obama-era climate work... 'The tailwinds of Obama administration policy are dissipating,' said Trevor Houser, a partner at [Rhodium Group]."

Charlie Pierce at Esquire: A Joe Biden 2020 Campaign Would Be the Most Divisive Thing for the Democratic Field. "Joe Biden has run for president twice before and he was a genuinely terrible candidate both times. He found his groove — and his half-ironic, half-campy fame — only as Barack Obama's sidekick. In a time in which Hillary Rodham Clinton is being told to disappear because she lost twice, the idea that important parts of the Democratic Party are thinking about nominating Biden is bound to be notable for its obvious hypocrisy. ...Moreover, Biden has a track record that puts him on the wrong side of every issue that currently energizes his political party." Yup.

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

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Discussion Thread: How Are You?

I am feeling very anxious about what Trump is going to say tonight during his address, and about what he is going to do and say during his visit to the southern border, and about what is going to come next.

I am worried that we are quickly accelerating toward a point at which lots of people are going to be gravely hurt by widespread violence.

I hope more desperately than I can convey that I am wrong.

I am angry about this, every day but especially today:


I am fearful that if Trump is separated from the presidency, by forcible removal or resignation, that a Pence presidency would continue the worst of this administration with far less scrutiny from both the public and the press, simply because Pence is less vulgar.

I am still hopeful, in diminishing but obstinate measure, that we'll find a way through this somehow.

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. Anyone who wants to join me in another enormous virtual group hug is welcome.

How are you?

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Democrats Will Present Rebuttal to Trump Tonight

The bad news: All the major networks have committed to allowing Donald Trump free airtime tonight to disgorge his obscene lies about immigrants and the imagined danger they pose at the southern border.

The good news: The Democrats have demanded equal time to deliver a rebuttal, and, so far, "CBS, NBC, and CNN have said they will carry the response."

The Democrats haven't yet announced who will deliver the rebuttal. My fervent wish is that it's Senator Mazie Hirono.

No matter who does it, though, it's going to be impossible for them to get as much traction as the president, whose lies will be broadcast and re-broadcast and repeated in headlines and dissected by cable news panels for days on end.

Which is why the networks should never have granted him this time in the first place, knowing that he would use it just to promulgate a hateful agenda designed to engender manufactured fear and violent prejudice. They are assisting him with his campaign of stochastic terrorism, allowing themselves to be enlisted as conspirators in his war on immigrants.

And there is precedent — very recent and relevant precedent — for turning down a president who requests airtime: In 2014, President Barack Obama requested airtime for a speech on immigration and was turned down by every network.

But the rules were always different for Obama — and the rules are different for Trump. This is, after all, the candidate whose empty podium got $billions of free airtime during the election. (And gets it still.)

There are people calling for a boycott of Trump's address this evening. I understand that. The thing is, because Trump has now been granted the highly visible platform he was seeking, he's more likely to use it to maximum effect. With Trump, there's always a chance he's going to scream at everyone to look at him only to waste our time, but, given the current environment, his announcing a national emergency is a significant possibility. And boycotting the speech isn't going to change that.

So, don't watch it if you don't want to watch it. Watch it if you want to, without feeling shamed by people making a different choice. Whatever feels best to you. Life is short.

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The Trump Regime Will Horrify You; I Hope My Typo Will Delight You

[Content Note: Nativism.]

As y'all know, I am a full-tilt typo machine. While raging about the Trump Regime's nativist swill and their campaign of dishonesty leading up to Donald Trump's primetime address tonight, this happened:


That's the kind of day it's going to be, I guess.

If you are on Twitter, and would like a pie-free version of the tweet to share, here you go!

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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 bellist: "What new national holiday would you like to see made official? Yes, this is a chance to make one up."

Election Day. It's a scandal that Election Day isn't a national holiday.

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Monday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by lemon-flavored fizzy drinks.

Recommended Reading:

Monica Roberts at TransGriot: Rep. Jennifer Wexton Displays Trans Pride Flag Outside Her DC Congressional Office

Stephanie Ho with Sophia Nguyen at the Washington Post: [Content Note: War on agency] The Other Abortion Ban: I Wanted to Provide Abortions for My Patients; My Med School Wouldn't Teach Me How

Francesca Volpe at Bust: [CN: Sexual assault and interpersonal abuses] Surviving R. Kelly Is Dark, Revealing, and Absolutely Necessary TV Viewing

(Note from Liss: Any thoughtful content about the rape culture produced by smart and decent people like dream hampton is crucial. And it is sometimes impossible for survivors to watch. It's okay if you can't watch it. You don't need to watch it to support survivors and their advocates. You can read and share reviews like this one, or amplify the voices of the survivors who participated and/or of the people who helped tell their stories.)

Emily Temple at LitHub: How Zora Neale Hurston Helped Create the First Realistic Black Baby Doll

Alana Semuels at the Atlantic: How to Lose Tens of Thousands of Dollars on Amazon

Laura Thomas at the Guardian: [CN: Diet talk; references to disordered eating] High on Fat, Low on Evidence: The Problem with the Keto Diet

And finally: This is a really terrific Twitter thread by my friend Dianna E. Anderson explaining the basics of how marginal tax rates work.

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

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Fat Fashion

This is your semi-regular thread in which fat women can share pix, make recommendations for clothes they love, ask questions of other fat women about where to locate certain plus-size items, share info about sales, talk about what jeans cut at what retailer best fits their body shapes, discuss how to accessorize neutral colored suits, share stories of going bare-armed for the first time, brag about a cool fashion moment, whatever.

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Welcome to the first Fat Fashion thread of the year! Below, my look for New Year's Day dinner out with friends:

image of me smiling with my hair pulled back into a ponytail, wearing large retro-styled black glasses frames, a black top, and a large gold and turquoise statement necklace

Those are frames I purchased relatively inexpensively from Zenni ("relatively," because my very strong prescription makes my glasses more expensive than for most folks), paired with a $9 top from Old Navy, and a $19 necklace I bought on Etsy about a decade ago.

I was also wearing an ancient pair of Torrid jeans and my black Westley loafers.

None of it was new, all of it was fairly cheap, I felt good, I received lots of compliments, and my transition to Fat Anne Bancroft is nearing completion. Let's go, 2019!

Anyway! What's up with you?

Have at it in comments! Please remember to make fat women of all sizes, especially women who find themselves regularly sizing out of standard plus-size lines, welcome in this conversation, and pass no judgment on fat women who want to and/or feel obliged, for any reason, to conform to beauty standards. And please make sure if you're soliciting advice, you make it clear you're seeking suggestions—and please be considerate not to offer unsolicited advice. Sometimes people just need to complain and want solidarity, not solutions.

[Note: I am not receiving anything in return for my recommendations here, nor am I affiliated in any way with any of the companies mentioned herein. Any endorsements made are on products I purchased myself, just because I like them!]

Open Wide...

No and No, Trump.


[If you can't view the embedded tweet, it is a tweet authored by me linking to a New York Times article with the headline "Trump Wants to Deliver Prime-Time Address on Government Shutdown and Will Visit the Border." My commentary reads: "No and no," followed by an edited quote from the article: "Trump announced he would address the nation from the Oval Office on Tues. evening to discuss what he called the crisis at the southern border and...would travel to the border as part of his effort to persuade Americans of the need for a wall."]

So, as is any U.S. president's prerogative, Donald Trump is requesting airtime from the broadcast networks tomorrow night to deliver an address from the White House during which he'll presumably ramble incoherently, rant vengefully, and wax racist in order to try to convince us that his vile nativist agenda isn't based on lies (it is) and that a border wall is both urgent and necessary (it isn't).

He may use that opportunity to declare the national emergency he believes will entitle him to do an end-run around Congress to build the wall.

And then he'll haul his racist ass down to the border for a hideous stunt that will reaffirm his legacy as King of the Deplorables.

Fuck Trump. Fuck every one of his enablers. And fuck all of this. Fuck.

Open Wide...

Daily Dose of Cute

Some weekend photos of the furry residents of Shakes Manor...

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat standing in my bed beside me, looking at me expectantly
If I'm in bed, Sophie's in bed.

image of Dudley the Greyhound running toward me in the backyard
Here he comes! It's Lord Dudlington!

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt snuggling up adorably in a pile of pillows on the sofa
Zelly Belly the Cuddly Little Boo-Boo.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...