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The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

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Thursday
Jul072022

July 8, 2022

Afternoon Update:

What Are the Con Men Doing Today? ~~~

     ~~~ (1) Gerrit de Vynck, et al., of the Washington Post: "Elon Musk is terminating his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, according to a filing the billionaire made with the Securities and Exchange Commission Friday. Musk's lawyers sent a letter to Twitter saying he is 'terminating their merger agreement,' according to the filing. In the letter, Musk argues he has a right to drop out of the deal because Twitter hasn't given him enough information about the company's business." ~~~

     ~~~ (2) (a) & (b) Isaac Stanley-Becker, et al., of the Washington Post: "... Donald Trump is considering sending a letter to Stephen K. Bannon saying that he is waiving his claim of executive privilege, potentially clearing the way for his former chief strategist to testify before the House select committee investigating the pro-Trump riot at the Capitol.... The letter would reiterate that Trump invoked executive privilege in September 2021, when Bannon was first subpoenaed by the House committee. But it would say that the former president is now willing to give up that claim -- which has been disputed -- if Bannon can reach an agreement on the terms of an appearance before the panel.... Bannon was charged with contempt of Congress in November 2021 for refusing to comply with the subpoena. A trial on those charges is scheduled to begin July 18, though Bannon has sought to delay the proceedings." ~~~

     ~~~ (3) Kyle Cheney of Politico: "Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes says he will waive his Fifth Amendment rights and testify to the Jan. 6 select committee if they permit him to testify in person. Rhodes, who is currently incarcerated while awaiting trial on seditious conspiracy charges for his role in the breach of the Capitol, says he wants the committee to arrange with the U.S. Marshals Service to permit him to appear in person at the Capitol complex rather than testify from the jail...."

Michael Shear & Sheryl Stolberg of the New York Times: "Under pressure to do more to respond to the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, President Biden on Friday issued an executive order that aimed to ensure access to abortion medication and emergency contraception while preparing for legal fights to come. But the order is vague about how the president hopes to accomplish those goals, leaving the details largely to Xavier Becerra, his secretary of health and human services, who has said the administration has 'no magic bullet' that can restore access to abortion. And Mr. Biden's order stops far short of demands from abortion rights advocates, who have criticized him for failing to move quickly to take action after the court’s decision two weeks ago.... 'For God's sake, there's an election in November. Vote. Vote. Vote. Vote,' the president said [before signing the order], noting that the justices in the majority 'practically dares' women to assert their political power to put in place laws that restore abortion rights. 'Consider the challenge accepted, court. But in the meantime, I'm signing this important executive order.'" A Politico report is here.

Jackson Richman of Mediaite: “Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh exited a Washington, D.C., steakhouse this week through the back door due to protesters, reported Politico. The outlet's Playbook newsletter reported on Friday that Kavanaugh 'was dining at Morton's downtown D.C. location' as 'protesters soon showed up out front, called the manager to tell him to kick Kavanaugh out and later tweeted that the justice was forced to exit through the rear of the restaurant.'" MB: I'm so sorry Bart & his friends had their meal interrupted. Now let's ask how the inconvenience of steakus interruptus compares with the inconvenience of carrying, birthing & rearing the child of one's rapist.

** Tom Jackman, et al., of the Washington Post: "The full picture of how many among the crowd [at the January 6, 2021, insurrection] were armed before the riot occurred is unclear, but court records, trial testimony and accounts from police officers and rioters have supplied growing evidence that multiple people brought firearms to Washington for Jan. 6, 2021. Six men were arrested that day for having guns in the vicinity of the U.S. Capitol, and a seventh who arrived after the riot ended was arrested the following day. Despite some instances in which alerts about people with guns turned out to be false alarms, accounts from police officers and rioters indicate that many firearms were spotted on Jan. 6 but were not seized as law enforcement focused more on defending the Capitol than on arresting gun-law violators.... ~~~

~~~ &"U.S. Capitol Police Officer Eugene Goodman, whose pursuit by a mob inside the Capitol was the subject of a viral video, has said that but for police restraint in the use of force, the riot 'could have easily been a bloodbath,' a sentiment echoed by several officers on the witness stand in Jan. 6 criminal trials. Defendants have said as much as well. In video evidence played at his trial, Guy Reffitt of Wylie, Tex., said that as he stood near the front of the mob on the west side of the Capitol, he counted eight firearms carried by five people." Read the whole report. And these, of course, are just the firearms authorities learned about. Surely there were many more. MB: I'm still amazed there wasn't more of an exchange of gunfire with large loss of life.

The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Friday are here.

Wisconsin. Patrick Marley, now of the Washington Post: "A divided Wisconsin Supreme Court barred the use of most ballot drop boxes on Friday and ruled voters could not give their completed absentee ballots to others to return on their behalf, a practice that some conservatives disparage as 'ballot harvesting.' I's a ruling feared by voting rights proponents, who said ahead of time such a decision would make it harder for voters -- particularly those with disabilities -- to return their absentee ballots.... The 4-3 ruling came a month before the state's Aug. 9 primaries.... For years, ballot drop boxes were used without controversy across Wisconsin. Election clerks greatly expanded their use in 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic.... The decision fell along ideological lines, with the justices elected with support from Republicans in the majority and justices elected with support from Democrats in dissent.... In a dissent, Justice Ann Walsh Bradley called the majority 'dangerous to democracy.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: If you read the full report, I think you'll find it pretty much falls in the "both-sides" school of journalism. I didn't notice this of Marley's reporting when he worked for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, but he seems to go out of his way to promote the pretense that Republicans' opposition to drop boxes is all about their concern for election integrity.

~~~~~~~~~~

WashPo: "Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ... died after being shot at a campaign event Friday...." Stories linked below.

Seung Min Kim & Zeke Miller of the AP: "President Joe Biden will take executive action Friday to protect access to abortion, according to three people familiar with the matter, as he faces mounting pressure from Democrats to be more forceful on the subject after the Supreme Court ended a constitutional right to the procedure two weeks ago. Biden will speak Friday morning 'on protecting access to reproductive health care services,' the sources said. The actions he was expected to outline are intended to try to mitigate some potential penalties women seeking abortion may face after the ruling, but are limited in their ability to safeguard access to abortion nationwide. Biden is expected to formalize instructions to the Departments of Justice and Health and Human Services to push back on efforts to limit the ability of women to access federally approved abortion medication or to travel across state lines to access clinical abortion services." A Washington Post story is here.

Eugene Scott & Matt Viser of the Washington Post: "President Biden on Thursday awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, to 17 people in a wide variety of endeavors, including gymnast Simone Biles, Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington and, posthumously, inventor Steve Jobs and former senator John McCain. Biden's list of recipients, his first as president, reflected his personal and political identity, ranging from a labor leader, the late AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka, to a gun control activist, former congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. He named several Republicans known for working across the aisle, those who came from average backgrounds to do extraordinary things -- and, in true Biden form, a Catholic nun [Sister Simone Campbell]. 'This,' Biden said at the conclusion of the event, 'is America.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I stopped what I was doing -- still hanging that stair rail (it's complicated!) -- and watched the ceremony. It was moving, and returns the Medal of Freedom to being a meaningful award given to deserving recipients. You may remember Trump's "honorees": From the WashPo story: "During his four years in office..., Donald Trump honored 24 people, a list populated by practitioners of his favorite sport, golf -- Tiger Woods, Gary Player and Annika Sorenstam -- and some of his fiercest political allies, such as radio host Rush Limbaugh and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio)."

Jeff Stein of the Washington Post: "The commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service faces a new onslaught of questions after a report Wednesday showed that two foes of ... Donald Trump had been selected for a rare audit during Trump's administration. Charles Rettig, whose elevation by Trump to lead the service in 2018 surprised many tax professionals..., faced new scrutiny after the New York Times revealed that both former FBI director James B. Comey and his deputy, Andrew McCabe, were the subject of highly unusual audits that the IRS says was selected at random.... [Rettig] started out as a Trump ally..., shielding the former president's tax returns from public view in the face of a House Democratic lawsuit. But Rettig has proved a willing partner for the Biden administration, as well, supporting its efforts to close the gap between what taxpayers owe and what they pay, and implementing expansive new stimulus measures.... The revelation [about Comey & McCabe] will also bring new scrutiny to former Trump treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin, since Treasury oversees the IRS." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~\

     ~~~ Update. Kara Scannell of CNN: "The head of the Internal Revenue Service has asked a watchdog to investigate the decision to conduct rare tax audits of former FBI Director James Comey and former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, the agency announced Thursday. 'The IRS has referred the matter to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration for review. IRS Commissioner (Charles) Rettig personally reached out to TIGTA after receiving a press inquiry,' the IRS said in a statement." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) A New York Times story is here. ~~~

~~~ Marie: I've been hoping somebody would do this: ~~~

~~~ "What Are the Odds?" Francesca Paris & Josh Katz of the New York Times: "The New York Times has reported that the Internal Revenue Service gave one of its most rigorous types of audits to James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director, and to Andrew G. McCabe, his former deputy.... What are the odds?... If this problem were to appear in a textbook about probability, it might read like this: If there are 154 million marbles (the approximate number of tax returns filed each year) in a giant urn, and some small number of them are red (those representing Mr. Comey and Mr. McCabe among them), what are the chances that you will draw two or more red marbles if you randomly draw a few thousand from the urn (the number of audits in that year)?... If we limit the exercise to only Mr. McCabe and Mr. Comey -- this equation yields a probability of roughly one in 950 million. Those are considerably steeper odds than your chances of winning the Powerball." Emphasis added. The writers go on to suggest some other factors which reasonably would increase the odds of Comey's & McCabe's audits: like the fact that the IRS tends to choose high-earners (i.e., like Comey & McCabe) more often than others for the special audit. But still. (Also linked yesterday.)

Dan Lamothe & Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post: "Michael Flynn, the retired Army general and onetime adviser to ... Donald Trump, was cited by the Defense Department inspector general for failing to disclose lucrative speaking engagements and other business arrangements with foreign entities, prompting the U.S. government to pursue tens of thousands of dollars in penalties against him.... Investigators determined that Flynn received nearly $450,000 from Turkish and Russian interests in 2015, including for an appearance in Moscow alongside President Vladimir Putin, but found no records that he had sought government approval beforehand. Their findings are detailed in a January 2021 memo to the Army released through the Freedom of Information Act on Thursday. The Army notified Flynn in a May 2 letter ... that it would seek to recoup $38,557.06 from him, zeroing in on money and in-kind compensation he received for a gala dinner celebrating the 10th anniversary of RT, the Kremlin-run news agency.... It was not clear why the Army sanctioned Flynn for the Moscow visit but not his other work." The money can be recouped from Flynn's retirement pay.

Sahil Kapur & Frank Thorp of NBC News: "Senate Democrats have reached an agreement to raise taxes on some high earners who they say are abusing a loophole to slash their tax bills, two sources familiar with the discussions said. The lawmakers, the sources said, plan to close the tax break for those earning more than $400,000 a year, requiring them to pay 3.8% in taxes on certain income from pass-through businesses, in what is effectively a slimmed-down package after the Build Back Better Act stalled last year. They project that closing the tax loophole would raise about $200 billion over a decade, a source said, which would be used to pay for Medicare through 2031 in an effort to keep the federal health care program from going bankrupt."

K.K. Ottesen of the Washington Post Magazine interviews civil war expert Barbara Walter on right-wing extremeist plans for civil war against the U.S.: "What we're heading toward is an insurgency, which is a form of a civil war. That is the 21st-century version of a civil war, especially in countries with powerful governments and powerful militaries, which is what the United States is.... An insurgency tends to be much more decentralized, often fought by multiple groups. Sometimes they're actually competing with each other. Sometimes they coordinate their behavior. They use unconventional tactics. They target infrastructure. They target civilians. They use domestic terror and guerrilla warfare. Hit-and-run raids and bombs." ~~~

~~~ Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "A new Monmouth University poll ... shows more Republicans regard Jan. 6 as a 'legitimate protest' than a 'riot' [much less an 'insurrection].... Whereas more Republicans once said it was a 'riot' than a 'legitimate protest,' by a 15-point margin, that has been flipped, with Republicans favoring the 'legitimate protest' label by 16 points. A majority of Republicans no longer even regard Jan. 6 as a 'riot.'"

Charles Blow of the New York Times on showing the carnage: "... on some level, not allowing the public access to some version of the gore is extending a form of disinformation, permitting a warped, naïve or incorrect impression to persist when it could be corrected.... We need to see these images not for shock value but for truth value." MB: At the top of his column, Blow describes some observations by Dr. David Baum, an obstetrician who was on the scene at Highland Park because he was attending the parade with his family. Baum, according to Blow, has taken to calling the scene "horrific" & "unspeakable," but when I heard him on cable news a short time after the mass murder, Dr. Baum described heads partially blown away & body cavities open to expose torn-up organs. Pictures of the Uvalde massacre, mostly of little children, some of whom had to be identified by their clothing because their faces were blown away, would be even more horrible. These are the pictures that should go on every Republican legislator's desk. Then let them talk about prairie dogs. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: "Last week, the Supreme Court announced it would hear arguments in Moore v. Harper, a challenge to North Carolina's new congressional map.... A Republican victory at the Supreme Court would, according to the election law expert Rick Hasen, '... could essentially neuter the ability of state courts to protect voters under provisions of state constitutions against infringement of their rights.'... This radical interpretation of the Elections Clause of the Constitution [-- called 'the independent state legislature doctrine --] also extends to the Presidential Electors Clause, such that during a presidential election year, state legislatures could allocate Electoral College votes in any way they see fit.... Under the independent state legislature doctrine, the next time Trump tries to overturn the results of an election he lost, he won't need a mob."

Erin Griffith of the New York Times: "Ramesh Balwani, a former top executive at Theranos, was found guilty on Thursday of 12 counts of fraud, in a verdict that was more severe than that of his co-conspirator, Elizabeth Holmes, and that solidified the failed blood-testing start-up as the ultimate Silicon Valley cautionary tale. Mr. Balwani and Ms. Holmes, who together pushed Theranos to soaring heights with a promise to revolutionize health care, are the most prominent tech executives to be charged with and convicted of fraud in a generation. A jury of five men and seven women took 32 hours to produce a verdict, convicting Mr. Balwani, known as Sunny, of all 10 counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud." The Guardian's story is here.

Quelle Surprise. Faiz Siddiqui & Gerrit De Vynck  of the Washington Post: "Elon Musk's deal to buy Twitter is in serious jeopardy, three people familiar with the matter say, as Musk's camp concluded that Twitter's figures on spam accounts are not verifiable. Musk's team has stopped engaging in certain discussions around funding for the $44 billion deal, including with a party named as a likely backer, one of the people said.... The spam accounts are not the only reason Musk might try to wriggle out of the deal. Twitter's share price has fallen dramatically since his takeover bid in April, leading to the impression that he is overpaying." A Guardian story is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Elon seems to love the publicity, but maybe this latest reluctant-suitor story is an attempt to change the focus from this story:

     ~~~ Sara O'Brien of CNN: "Elon Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO and world's richest man, welcomed twins last year with an executive at one of his other companies, Neuralink, Insider reported on Wednesday. Musk, who posted a tweet on May 24 saying 'USA birth rate has been below min sustainable levels for ~50 years' and pinned it to the top of his more than 100 million-follower Twitter account, quietly fathered the children with Shivon Zilis, who works for Musk at the company which hopes to develop an implantable computer chip for the human brain, according to documents obtained by Insider.... On Thursday morning, Musk appeared to acknowledge the story on Twitter by reiterating his stance about birth rates. 'Doing my best to help the underpopulation crisis,' he tweeted. 'A collapsing birth rate is the biggest danger civilization faces by far.'"

Beyond the Beltway

Arizona Gubernatorial Race. Yvonne Sanchez of the Washington Post: "Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) on Thursday endorsed real estate developer Karrin Taylor Robson in the battleground state's GOP primary race for governor, arguing that she is best positioned to succeed him over a Trump-backed candidate. The endorsement puts Ducey, a two-term governor who is head of the national Republican Governors Association, head-to-head against ... Donald Trump and his favored candidate, former TV anchor Kari Lake.... The leading candidate for the Democratic nomination is Secretary of State Katie Hobbs." CNN's report is here.

Arizona Senate Race. Jonathan Weisman of the New York Times: "Blake Masters, a Republican candidate for the Senate in Arizona who won the endorsement of ... Donald J. Trump, has been dogged by a trail of youthful writings in which he lamented the entry of the United States into the First and Second World Wars, approvingly quoted a Nazi war criminal and pushed an isolationism that extended beyond even Mr. Trump's.... As a candidate, Mr. Masters, now 35, takes a position diametrically opposed to that of his younger self and in line with Mr. Trump's views: He favors militarizing the border and ending what he calls an 'invasion' by immigrants entering the country illegally.... Mr. Masters has also been denounced for contemporary statements, like his April 11 remark that America's gun violence problem boiled down to 'Black people, frankly,' and his apparent embrace of the 'replacement theory; promulgated by white supremacists...." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Masters' "trail of youthful writings" traces back to the days he was a student at Stanford, a prestigious school. I have been wonderling for some time about our supposedly prestigious universities. When a liberal educational institution keeps producing nitwits like Masters and most of the confederate Supremes, how useful is the curriculum, how effective the professors? I think a lot of departments, run by dotty deans, think they're showing how open-minded they are by throwing academic robes around the shoulders of right-wing hacks, but in fact those right-wing hacks are giving ideas and cover to the narrow-minded, privileged little snots who increasingly run our government.

Georgia Senate Race. Brad Reed of the Raw Story: "A person described as a 'closely connected adviser' to [Herschel] Walker's Senate campaign has shared internal campaign messages with the [Daily Beast] that show a chaotic candidate who is mistrusted by his own campaign staff, who also express concerns that he 'isn't mentally fit for the job.' This adviser ... tells The Daily Beast that Walker tells lies 'like he's breathing' and further said that 'he's lied so much that we don't know what's true.' The adviser came forward ... after The Daily Beast reported on multiple undisclosed children that Walker has fathered over the years. According to the adviser, Walker lied to his own staff about the children, which led the campaign to put out claims about them that were later shown to be false."

Georgia. Livia Albeck-Ripka of the New York Times: "An explosive device that 'unknown individuals' detonated early Wednesday destroyed a granite monument in Georgia that was built under mysterious circumstances more than four decades ago and promoted by state officials as 'America's Stonehenge,' the authorities said. The monument, known as the Georgia Guidestones, which was built about nine miles north of Elberton, Ga., had four granite slabs connected to a center pillar, with a capstone on top.... It is unclear why the 19-foot granite slabs were there, or what they meant...." Some right-wing conspiracy theorists, including Alex Jones, have described the stones as designed to send some dire or satanic message. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Here's more from Amy Cheng of the Washington Post: "In a 2008 documentary, [Alex Jones] pointed to the granite slabs as evidence that global elites were plotting to enslave most of the world.... Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) ... told Jones in an interview Wednesday that the monument represented a future of 'population control' as envisioned by the 'hard left.'... Educator Kandiss Taylor, who finished a distant third ... [in the state's GOP gubernatorial primary], pledged to dismantle the monument and fight the 'Luciferian Cabal' that she suggested was behind it." MB: Is it really a "documentary" when it's all pure fantasy? I thought a documentary was supposed to document facts.

Jay Senter & Shaila Dewan of the New York Times: "A white Minneapolis police officer whose murder of a Black man outside a convenience store touched off protests around the world was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison on Thursday.... The former officer, Derek Chauvin, 46, was sentenced for using excessive force under color of law against both George Floyd, the man who died in the encounter, and a 14-year-old boy, also Black, who was injured in an unrelated, though similar, incident. With time already served deducted, Mr. Chauvin's sentence amounts to 20 years and five months, near the lower end of the range of 20 to 25 years prescribed by the sentencing guidelines. His federal and state sentences are to be served concurrently." The Guardian's story is here.

Pennsylvania. Christine Chung of the New York Times: "Two days after Timothy Loehmann, the former Cleveland police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014, was sworn in as a police officer for a rural Pennsylvania community, he left the position, the borough of Tioga announced on Thursday. It came after a public outcry in response to the Williamsport Sun-Gazette article that revealed his hiring. David Wilcox, the mayor of Tioga, appeared on Wednesday at a community protest against Mr. Loehmann's hiring.... He stood atop a pickup truck and told residents that he had 'zero knowledge of the candidate that we just hired for our police department,' according to a video posted by The Wellsboro Gazette.... But Henry Hilow, a lawyer for Mr. Loehmann, called Mr. Wilcox’s statement disingenuous. He said the mayor had been aware of Mr. Loehmann's history. According to Mr. Hilow, Mr. Loehmann decided to resign because he did not want to be part of 'infighting' between the Tioga borough board and its mayor."

Texas. Arelis Hernández of the Washington Post: "Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered state National Guard soldiers and law enforcement officers Thursday to apprehend and return migrants suspected of crossing illegally back to the U.S.-Mexico border, testing how far his state can go in trying to enforce immigration law -- a federal responsibility. The order comes days after a group of right-wing Texas officials -- alongside a few former Trump administration leaders and U.S. Rep. Chip Roy (R-Tex.) -- asked the Republican governor to invoke the state and U.S. constitutions in declaring an 'invasion' at the southwest borde and to use his powers to repel it. The leaders of the sparsely populated counties near the border with Mexico complain that they have been overrun by smuggling attempts and increasing numbers of migrants evading detection.:

Way Beyond

** Japan. Michelle Lee of the Washington Post: "Former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe was shot at a campaign event Friday, public broadcaster NHK reported, citing Japanese police sources. Party officials cited in Japanese media said Abe is unconscious. He was giving a speech in Nara to support a campaigner, according to NHK. A short time later, NHK reported that Abe was showing no vital signs. At least two gunshots were heard on-site. The incident comes ahead of elections Sunday for Japan's upper house of parliament." This is all there is to the story at 11:20 pm ET Thursday. ~~~

     ~~~ ** Update: "Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a towering political figure at home and abroad, died after being shot at a campaign event Friday, doctors said, shocking a nation where firearms laws are among the world's strictest and gun violence is rare. Abe, 67, was stumping for a fellow politician from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in Nara, near Osaka, on Friday morning when a gunman opened fire with what police described as a homemade weapon. Hidetada Fukushima, head of the emergency center at the Nara Medical University Hospital, said Abe arrived at the hospital at 12:20 p.m. Friday without vital signs. Doctors found two gunshot wounds to the neck, and one of the bullets had reached the heart, Fukushima said.... The assassination of Japan's longest-serving prime minister, and a staunch U.S. ally, sent shock waves throughout the country ahead of elections for the upper house of parliament on Sunday. Police arrested a suspect, a man from Nara in his 40s named Tetsuya Yamagami, and seized a gun. Yamagami was a member of the Japan Maritime Self Defense Forces for three years, defense officials told Japanese media."

     ~~~ The New York Times is live-updating developments here. ~~~

     ~~~ The Guardian's story is here. The Guardian's live updates are here. ~~~

     ~~~ Japan Times: "Former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe -- one of the most consequential leaders in Japan's post-war history -- was shot in the chest while he was making a stump speech on a street in the city of Nara on Friday in what appears to be an assassination attempt. He is reportedly under cardiopulmonary arrest. He was unconscious when he was rushed to a hospital and was bleeding from the chest. The police have arrested the man suspected of attacking Abe.... Abe was transported via a medical helicopter to Nara Medical University in the city of Kashihara, south of central Nara, according to NHK, who quoted ambulance officials." ~~~

     ~~~ Abe's New York Times obituary, by Motoko Rich, is here. ~~~

     ~~~ President Biden's statement, via the White House, is here.

Mexico. Mary Sheridan & Gabriela Martínez of the Washington Post: "Mexican prosecutors are investigating former president Enrique Peña Nieto in a case involving the suspicious movements of millions of dollars, authorities said Thursday. It was the first announcement of a corruption probe into the ex-leader. Pablo Gómez, head of the Treasury Ministry's financial crimes unit, told reporters that officials had detected 'a scheme through which a former president received economic benefits.' He said the findings had been handed over to the attorney general's office, which has opened an investigation. Peña Nieto has not been charged with a crime.... Gómez said the ex-leader had received 26 million pesos -- around $1.3 million -- in transfers in 2019 and 2021 from a relative who was making large deposits and withdrawals of cash from a bank account."

Netherlands. The Woes of Bezos. Claire Moses of the New York Times: "Jeff Bezos will not be able to sail a new, more than 400-foot-long superyacht through the waters of the Dutch city of Rotterdam anytime soon. The port city faced an uproar months ago as it considered dismantling a section of a 95-year-old bridge to allow the Amazon founder's yacht to pass. But now the boat's builder, the Dutch company Oceanco, has decided to refrain from applying for a permit, according to a Rotterdam City Council member. It was unclear how Mr. Bezos' yacht would leave the area or whether Oceanco would finish the boat.... The yacht was supposed to sail through the Koningshaven Bridge, known locally as 'De Hef,' over the summer and was on track to become the largest sailing yacht in the world at 417 feet, according to the superyacht industry publication Boat International."

U.K. The Guardian is live-updating developments Friday in Boris Johnson's long good-bye. ~~~

~~~ Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha. Pippa Crerar of the (U.K.) Daily Mirror: "... the Prime Minister and wife Carrie have planned a lavish bash at the grace-and-favour country home to mark their marriage. The couple tied the knot in a secret ceremony at Westminster Cathedral in front of just a handful of guests in May 2021. They then celebrated in the Downing Street garden but were only allowed 30 guests because of Covid restrictions in place at the time. The couple's Chequers do, planned for July 30, is expected to be a much bigger and more glamorous affair. Two separate sources told the Mirror that Mr and Mrs Johnson were keen to go ahead with the party, to which they have invited many of their family and friends.... The PM, who has finally announced that he would resign, would have to cancel the lavish do if he leaves office immediately." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ In a comment early yesterday, this is what Akhilleus predicted would happen. Chequers is the country home of the PM, so if Boris quit right off, as the Mirror sez, he could not hold the "lavish bash." ~~~

~~~ Jonathan Freedland of the Guardian: "Lies and a brazen contempt for the rules powered [Boris Johnson's] rise; lies and a brazen contempt for the rules brought his fall.... What began as defects in the personality of one man ended as defects in his party and his government, inflicting great damage on the entire country.... The last, fatal lie was his claim that he had not been told directly of complaints of sexual misconduct committed by the former deputy chief whip Chris Pincher, a claim rapidly exposed as false in a rare intervention from a former permanent secretary at the Foreign Office, Simon McDonald. It turned out that Johnson had indeed been briefed about Pincher.... But though that newest dishonesty was the last straw first for Sajid Javid, then minutes later for Rishi Sunak, and, over the dizzying 36 hours that followed, dozens of others, triggering a wave of resignations and withdrawals of backbench support that ultimately brought Johnson's removal, it was hardly what broke the Johnson premiership.... Dishonesty has been the one constant through Johnson's career. Famously, he was sacked from his first job, at the Times, for making up a quote, and later he was sacked from Michael Howard's frontbench for lying to the then party leader about an affair." And so forth. ~~~

~~~ Sarah Lyall of the New York Times: "After a lifetime of swaggering and dissembling his way through one scandal after another on the strength of his prodigious political skills -- a potent mix of charm, guile, ruthlessness, hubris, oratorical dexterity and rumpled Wodehousian bluster -- Boris Johnson has finally reached the end. It seems that the laws of gravity apply to him after all.... Over the years, he has routinely been described as mendacious, irresponsible, reckless and lacking any coherent philosophy other than wanting to seize and hold on to power.... In contrast to ... Donald J. Trump..., Mr. Johnson's approach has rarely been to double down on his lies or to delude himself for consistency's sake into acting as if they were true. Rather, he recasts them to fit new information that comes to light, as if the truth were a fungible concept, no more solid than quicksand.... His government weathered scandal after scandal, much of it centered on Mr. Johnson's own behavior.... His resignation speech, in which he vowed to remain in office until the Conservatives could choose a new leader, was notable for its lack of self-awareness and its misreading of the curdled mood of his former supporters."

Ukraine, et al.

The New York Times' live updates in developments Friday in Russia's war on Ukraine are here. The Guardian's live updates for Friday are here. ~~~

     ~~~ The Washington Post's live updates for Friday are here: "The governor of Ukraine’s Luhansk region, which is now almost completely under Russian control, said Friday that the city of Severodonetsk is facing a 'humanitarian disaster.'... [U.S.] Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Russia to end its blockade of Ukrainian grain exports in a contentious closed-door session of Group of 20 foreign ministers in Indonesia on Friday. It is the first time top Russian diplomat Sergei Lavrov has been face to face with many of his Western counterparts since the war began, though many have refused to meet with him alone. Meanwhile, the U.N. World Food Program warned of a 'looming hunger catastrophe' because of the war.... Vladimir Putin said Thursday that the war is just getting started, as he dared Ukraine's Western partners to fight his troops on the battlefield.... Blinken said he would not relent until 'wrongfully detained' WNBA star Brittney Griner is freed from Russian detention." ~~~

~~~ Robyn Dixon of the Washington Post: "American WNBA star Brittney Griner pleaded guilty to carrying cannabis oil on the second day of a trial in Moscow that could see her sentenced to 10 years in prison. 'I'd like to plead guilty, Your Honor,' Griner said, according a Reuters reporter in the court. 'But there was no intent. I didn't want to break the law.' She then asked to give her testimony at a later date, saying she needed time to prepare, and the court adjourned." The AP's report is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

News Ledes

CNBC: "Job growth accelerated at a much faster pace than expected in June, indicating that the main pillar of the U.S. economy remains strong despite pockets of weakness. Nonfarm payrolls increased 372,000 in the month, better than the 250,000 Dow Jones estimate and continuing what has been a strong year for job growth, according to data Friday from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The unemployment rate was 3.6%, unchanged from May and in line with estimates."

New York Times: "Tony Sirico, the actor who played the eccentric gangster Paulie Walnuts on 'The Sopranos,' died Friday in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He was 79."

Reader Comments (14)

I meant to relay this the other day, but oh well…

On the Fourth, while tending the grill on the back deck, I put on some music appropriate for the day, including a CD of Sousa marches (I love that stuff), and one of Stephen Foster songs featuring baritone Thomas Hampson, former Met opera star, with Jay Ungar and Molly Mason whose work you may recall from the opening theme to Ken Burns’ “The Civil War”.

One song in particular stood out (a tough thing to do, considering all the excellent Foster songs) because of its relevance to our own times: “That’s What’s the Matter”. Written in 1862 as Civil War raged, it offers a simple solution for the secession minded confederates, a plan we might want to adopt in dealing with our own bunch of traitors. Here’s how it starts:

We live in hard and stirring times,
Too sad for mirth, too rough for rhymes;
For songs of peace have lost their chimes,
And that’s what’s the matter!

The men we held as brothers true,
Have turned into a rebel crew;
So now we have to put them thru’,
And that’s what’s the matter!

chorus:

That’s what’s the matter,
The rebels have to scatter;
We’ll make them flee,
By land and sea,
And that’s what’s the matter!

Oh! yes, we thought our neighbors true,
Indulg’d them as their mothers do;
Thy storm’d our bright Red, White and Blue,
And that’s what’s the matter!

We’ll never give up what we gain,
For now we know we must maintain
Our Laws and Rights with might and main;
And that’s what’s the matter!

I’d suggest a slight change in the lyrics to “the bastards have to scatter”, but the sentiment is the same.

Check it out. A rollicking song about kicking rebel ass, and anyway, it made the grilling even more fun than usual.

https://youtu.be/psa6VfXMTqQ

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

AK: Your Fourth of July grill story mit thrills of Sousa's marching bands accompanying reminded me of a scene in the film "Goodbye Columbus" (based on Philip Roth's book of the same name) when Brenda Patimkin's brother, a jock of muscular proportions, would emerge from his room at odd times, naked except for shorts, to give a hello to Brenda's boy friend* while Sousa's marching bands are heard blasting from his bedroom. Imaging you grilling while humming–-unless you have a voice for singing––-along with " THAT'S WHAT'S THE MATTER." was music to my ears. Good show!!

So Boris is bye, bye, which is not a surprise although apparently in this country it takes forever to get one of our leaders to leave but then our system of government is structured so that getting rid of the dodgy dimwits is like the blind trying to thread a needle.

* I once had a lover who when I suggested we have a cookout he claimed he had no idea how to grill. "WHAT–-you don't know how to grill?" I'm old fashioned about a few male/female attributes––-it's sometimes the little things that tell you a lot about the bigger, more important things.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterP.D. Pepe

Marie,

I'll go with the "narrow-minded, privileged little snots" and would toss the word "selfish" in there somewhere, but I can't point the finger of blame at the schools...How much influence they have on minds, young or old, remains to me an open question.

I say that having toiled in the educational vineyards for most of my professional life. I did manage to teach some kids some things and even ended up being a memorable presence in some young lives, but it was only rarely, if ever, that I had the sense I'd wreaked any fundamental change in a student's personality or outlook.

Teachers work with the material they get, and I would think at the university level where the relationship between teacher and student is most often more distant than it is in earlier years, those teachers/professors have even less effect on their students' psychology and values.

That said, kinda wish my very conservative father were still alive so we could consult him. He'd probably contradict all that.

He died still thinking my university ruined me.`


Second thought: Some schools do operate as deliberate purveyors of propaganda...I'm thinking of Hillsdale College, which accepts no federal money, and touts business interests, Christianity, and especially those colleges directly allied with fundamentalist religions.

But even there it's a chicken and egg issue. Their students are self selected to begin with, so how much effect they have on their eventual "product" would be interesting, if hard, to measure.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winke

Ken: I'd be very interested in why your "very conservative" father thought your university ruined you. Was it because you emerged liberal and secular?

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterP.D. Pepe

Long story, P. D., but I'll leave it at this for now:

To this day, I have a lot of that father in me. Just left the rigid Catholicism, most of the racism, and a lot of his absolutist true believer psychology behind me.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winke

@Ken Winkes: First, let me just say that my freshman year at the University of Wisconsin was an eye-opener for me. It's not that I believed the crap in my high school textbooks (the six causes of the civil war we had to regurgitate on a test did not include slavery), but I had no solid foundation in what to believe. Until I took a couple of college history courses.

Now, let's say young Sam Alito was a student of mine (not impossible to imagine!) at Princeton,* and he turned in an undergrad paper displaying the quality of "reasoning" he showed off in his Dobbs opinion. I'd have handed the paper back to him toot sweet & said, "Good punctuation, Sam. Now write something that in logically consistent. Because this is bullshit. Alternatively, you can accept a D- on the paper, and that elevated grade only because I gave you extra points for punctuation."

Now let's say I had become an admissions interviewer for Yale Law School (more difficult to imagine) and I was assigned to talk to young Sam, whose fuzzy thinking remained intact. I'd have recommended against admitting him.

*Not that Princeton is exactly a center of enlightenment & radical liberal thought. A cousin of mine, who attended Princeton as an undergrad, even wrote a whiny (but popular!) book about what a bunch of bullying, elitist snobs his classmates were.

July 8, 2022 | Registered CommenterMarie Burns

As the Brits prepare to clean up Boris’ mess, I’m thinking that whole affair seems like the aftermath of a failed one might stand. A smooth talking liar promising that his prowess is not to be believed. Next morning, the mark wakes up, completely fucked, and not in a good way. Also, the car keys, the car, and the wallet are gone. Smooth Talk has run up thousands on your credit card before it can be cancelled and is off on another adventure, leaving you to pick up the pieces. Oh, and a few days later you find out you’ve got an STD.

This is the standard arc of right-wing con artists. Fill you with bullshit and lies, take what they want, don’t deliver on any of their big promises, and leave you to pick up the check.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Mettle, metal, meddle, medal…who’s got the medal?

Jim fucking Jones? I forgot about that (or more likely some kindly brain synapse refused to process that information and deleted it permanently from my long term memory bank).

Of course, of all the homophones listed above, if you’re talking about Fatty and his band of idiots and traitors, you can forget all but “meddle”. Remember that all Trump “medals” are illegitimate. He was once given a Purple Heart by a misguided vet who actually earned the medal. Fatty, pleased as punch, admitted that “always wanted one” but didn’t want to do what was required to get one on the up and up. No shit.

So then I realized that a conniving, lying little shit like Gym Jordan was never given an actual Medal of Freedom. He got the Meddle of Freeeedumb.

And he’s still meddling.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Marie: You sound just like a professor I had in my graduate studies–-"Bull!" across papers –––or " Get your head out of that sand"–-and on a friend's paper she wrote: " I'd recommend strongly you go into a different field of study."

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterP.D. Pepe

Marie,

We didn't experience it directly but the reverberations of the loyalty oaths required of professors and the black listing of some in various public institutions in the late 1940's and early 1950's still echoed when we matriculated.

Now that the Kochs and their ilk endow chairs, the narrowing thought at some schools may not be as obvious, but I suspect it remains a powerful influence on university behavior.

Money...money....money...

Whatever happened to my beloved PAC-12?

Oh, I know: Money.

Wonder if I'll get a cable discount when it becomes the PAC-12 becomes the PAC-2.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

@Ken Winkes: I vaguely wondered the other day why, among restrictions Ron DeSantolini was putting on Florida's professors, he included dropping out of the usual university accreditation process. This seemed weird to me because for a university to garner any academic prestige, it has to be, at minimum, accredited. Your post caused me to figure out the reasoning behind the accreditation thing: the accreditation board would not allow state politicians or, say, someone who endowed a chair, to place limitations on how a professor approached her topic. For instance, the Kochs could probably endow a chair for the study of libertarian political philosophy, but they couldn't specify that the recipient teach libertarianism as a good thing or otherwise approach their subject in a particular way. And the Florida legislature couldn't insist that the history department teach a course titled "DeSantolini the Bravehearted."

My husband and I endowed a chair at Berkeley, and as I vaguely recall, my husband did want to put some kind of limitation on it, probably to keep some academic rival from getting the chair. The university politely told my husband to forget it.

July 8, 2022 | Registered CommenterMarie Burns

The Wisconsin Supreme Court says that use of stand-alone ballot drop boxes is illegal because the law says that absentee ballots need to be delivered to an election clerk. For ballot integrity and security.

But it is legal to put those same mail-in ballots in your curbside house mailbox for the postperson to pick up and deliver through the USPS to your election clerk. Just raise the red flag on the box, as with all other mail, to let the postperson know there's outgoing mail.

Q: Which is more secure? (A: the Drop Box)
Q: Which is illegal in Wisconsin now? (A: the Drop Box)

And as for integrity -- that's provided by the physical properties of the ballot and by the registration procedures, not the type of box you put it in.

And ... you would think putting it in a USPS blue mailbox would be secure, but around here some thieves have keys for those and steal mail so they can doctor checks. So I schlepp our outgoing to a USPS post office. Fortunately, it is not far and part of the route for other chores. But a drop box is more secure than the USPS blue boxes around here.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterPatrick

"... the Kochs could probably endow a chair for the study of libertarian political philosophy ... "

Actually, they used their $ to turn George Mason U (Virginia) into Koch U in all but name. It is one of the "establishment" megaphones of RW philosophy.

July 8, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterPatrick

@Patrick: Yes, and George Mason's law school -- briefly & officially named ASSLaw (for Antonin Scalia School of Law) -- must be pretty great, too.

July 8, 2022 | Registered CommenterMarie Burns
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