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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."

Contact Marie

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Sunday
Oct142018

The Commentariat -- October 15, 2018

Afternoon Update:

"Rogue Killers." Trump Pushes New Conspiracy Theory. Eileen Sullivan of the New York Times: "President Trump said on Monday that he spoke with the king of Saudi Arabia and that the ruler denied any knowledge of what happened to a missing Saudi dissident journalist. After the call, Mr. Trump said it was possible that 'rogue killers' were behind the disappearance of the journalist, Jamal Khashoggi.... 'It sounded to me like maybe these could have been rogue killers -- who knows,' Mr. Trump said. In introducing the possibility that another party could have been involved in Mr. Khashoggi's disappearance, the president opened a window for King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to stand by their denials.... The president said the secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, was traveling to Saudi Arabia later Monday morning to meet with King Salman.... Senator Christopher S. Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut, wrote in a Twitter post on Monday that he had heard the Saudis were pushing a 'rogue killers' theory and called it 'extraordinary' that the kingdom was able to get the president on board." Mrs. McC: A 400-pound man from New Jersey maybe? ...

... Philip Bump of the Washington Post: "Two overlapping things of widely divergent importance happened Monday morning that bring into clear relief President Trump's double standard on the proof he demands on political issues. The first was his response to a question about the missing Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.... 'I just spoke with the King of Saudi Arabia, and he denies any knowledge of what took place with regards to, as he said, to Saudi Arabia's citizen,' Trump said while talking to reporters Monday morning. 'He firmly denies that.'... In each case -- Saudi Arabia, Russia, [Roy] Moore, climate change, [Brett] Kavanaugh -- there is reason to believe, if to varying degrees, that the allegations [that Trump finds inconvenient] have merit. Trump, though, seizes on any tiny argument to reject them.... [MEANWHILE.] Trump has increasingly disparaged [Elizabeth] Warren, a likely (if not probable) Democratic candidate. Among the assertions he had made is that Warren -- who[m] he disparagingly calls 'Pocahontas' -- should have to conduct a DNA test to prove her heritage. In July, he even offered to give $1 million to charity were she to do so. When he learned Monday morning that she had, his response was curt: 'Who cares?' He also denied having offered to give $1 million to charity, despite his saying it at a campaign rally.... For Trump's opponents, any offered proof is flawed, incomplete or insufficient. For his allies, any offered evidence is robust and more than enough." Bump invokes the imaginary 400-pound guy, too, as well as Obama's birth certificate. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Warren should be demanding her $1MM loudly & often. She could donate it to Snopes. Update: Madeleine Aggeler of New York: "After the Globe published the results of her test, Warren tweeted at the president asking him to make his donation to the National Indigenous Woman's Resource Center." That's good, too. ...

Jonathan Chait: "In his interview with 60 Minutes last night, President Trump made a number of self-incriminating comments about Russia. He downplayed Russia’s certain role in conducting assassinations to a mere 'probability,' defending his skepticism by saying, weirdly, 'I rely on them, it's not in our country.'... The most revealing statement he made was when asked about Russian interference in the 2016 election.... The question [was] about Russian election interference in 2016. Trump turn[ed] it into a diatribe about China.... [An] official rollout of the new Cold War posture [highlighted by a mike pence speech & a Wall Street Journal feature story] was supposed to give Trump's hard-line stance the patina of legitimacy. But the 60 Minutes interview gives the game away. Trump is bringing up China in response to questions about Russia. The whole point of the exercise is to supply his supporters with a talking point they can use to wave away the ever-growing pile of damning evidence. The answer is to the Russia story is now, 'What about China?'"

A New York Times video op-ed by Jason Stanley:

Jamelle Bouie of Slate: No, it isn't true that the Founding Fathers favored "minority rule" & baked it into the Constitution for the good of future wingers. "... key voices [like James Madison & Benjamin Franklin] anticipated the problems the Senate might pose for governance and democratic representation. That future Americans, to whom the Framers entrusted the republic and its maintenance, might seek reform to solve those problems is not an attack on the intent of the Constitution. It is in keeping with the debates around its creation.... Calls to transform the Senate, or create new states, or even 'pack the court' aren't attacks on norms; they are Americans doing the hard work of crafting a democracy that works for them, of taking seriously the idea that the Constitution exists for us, not us for the Constitution." Thanks to PD Pepe for the link. See also David Leonhardt's column, linked below.

Heather Murphy of the New York Times: "Curtis Rogers, 80, a retired businessman..., and John Olson, 67, a transportation engineer from Texas ... began [a genealogical database] as a side project, [which] has unintentionally upended how investigators across the country are trying to solve the coldest of cold cases. Within three years, the DNA of nearly every American of Northern European descent -- the primary users of the site -- will be identifiable through cousins in GEDmatch's database, according to a study published on Thursday in the journal Science.... [So far,] GEDmatch had provided essential clues leading to a suspect in a murder or sexual assault case [in 15 cold cases], starting with the arrest in April of Joseph James DeAngelo, a former police officer, for the rapes and murders committed across California in the 1970s and 1980s by the notorious Golden State Killer."

*****

Quint Forgey of Politico: "... Donald Trump defied climate scientists, intelligence specialists and even his own defense secretary on Sunday evening, capping a week of freewheeling press engagements with a sprawling primetime network television interview in which he portrayed himself as an isolated but eminently empowered commander in chief.... The president ... dismissed the work of researchers studying increases in global temperature that could exacerbate natural disasters, purporting that 'they have a very big political agenda' and claiming that Earth's climate 'could very well go back.'" ...

... Axios: "Trump was discursive -- and often combative -- while defending some of his administration's most controversial policies, including family separation at the border. He ended one particularly tense exchange with [Lesley] Stahl by reminding her, 'Lesley, it's okay. In the meantime, I'm president -- and you're not.'" The report touches on some lowlights. ...

     ... Mrs. McC: In case you haven't noticed, "I'm president -- and you're not" is a form of bullying, it's insulting, and it's a logical fallacy: an argument from authority (or, more correctly, from false authority, since Trump knows nothing AND lies). Of course it's no wonder Trump was rude to Stahl throughout the interview; she is, after all, an "impolite, arrogant woman." In Trump's view, an "interview" is a tête-à-tête wherein a male journalist asks him how he got to be so great. ...

... Sarah Burris of the Raw Story: "Stahl was baffled by the friendship [Trump & Kim Jong-Un] shared. 'He presides over a cruel kingdom of repression, gulags, starvation. Reports that he had his half-brother assassinated. Slave labor. Public executions. This is a guy you love?' she asked. 'I'm not a baby. I know these things,' Trump snapped." ...

... Trump's Dictator Buddies Can Assassinate Opponents as Long as They Don't Do It in the U.S. Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post: "President Trump said he believes that Russian President Vladimir Putin 'probably' has been involved in assassinations and poisonings, but he appeared to dismiss the gravity of those actions, noting that they have not taken place in the United States. 'Probably he is, yeah. Probably,' Trump told CBS's Lesley Stahl when asked during an interview on '60 Minutes' whether he thinks Putin is involved 'in assassinations, in poisonings.' 'But I rely on them; it's not in our country,' Trump added." In the interview, Trump also credited himself for getting Brett Kavanaugh across the finish line, which he claims he did by mocking Christine Blasey Ford at a campaign rally. He also claimed he didn't really make fun of her. Mrs. McC: Yes, actually, he did. ...

... Michael Shear & Thomas Gibbons-Neff of the New York Times: "President Trump, who once called Defense Secretary Jim Mattis 'one of the most effective generals that we've had in many, many decades,' has now affixed a more ominous label to the retired four-star Marine general: 'Democrat.' In a '60 Minutes' interview broadcast on CBS on Sunday night, Mr. Trump grouped his own defense secretary in with the political party that the president now describes at every turn as 'an angry, left-wing mob' bent on destroying the country. 'I think he's sort of a Democrat, if you want to know the truth,' Mr. Trump said. But the president added that he did not know whether Mr. Mattis would be the next major departure from his administration.... 'He may leave,' Mr. Trump said of Mr. Mattis, though he called him 'a good guy' and insisted that the two men still had 'a very good relationship.'" ...

... Video & a transcript of the interview is here. ...

Painting by Andy Thomas.... Maxwell Tani & Tracy Connor of the Daily Beast: "President Trump's latest addition to White House decor is a kitschy fantasy painting that shows him relaxing with Republican presidents of the past -- an update to a best-selling image commonly found in tourist gift shops and online galleries. The artwork, 'The Republican Club' by Andy Thomas, could be seen in the background of a photo tweeted by 60 Minutes, which aired an interview with Trump on Sunday night. It shows a slimmed-down Trump sandwiched between Presidents Eisenhower and Nixon, directly across from Abraham Lincoln. Teddy Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and both Bushes are also in the imaginary scene.... Some ... amateur art critics ... said it looked like the political version of the famous 'dogs playing poker' painting.... Thomas told The Daily Beast that Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), a fan of the artist's work, gave the print to Trump. 'He had actually given a me real gracious call to tell me how much he liked it,' Thomas said of Trump. 'He was very complimentary. He made a comment that he'd seen a lot of paintings of himself and he rarely liked them.'" ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Could be because "a lot of portrait artists" paint their subjects somewhat as they are, not 75 pounds lighter & sans the fake tan & white goggles. Note that President Tacky hung not a painting, as the report states, but a print of the painting. Presidents Grant, Taft, Hoover, Harding & Coolidge (and maybe others) appear in the background.

Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man with orange hair.
I asked him please to let me pass,
But as I did he grabbed my ass.
I tried to slap him; this I swear,
Yet when I did, he wasn't there.
He wasn't there again today
I wish, I wish he'd go away...

     -- With apologies to Hughes Mearns ...

... The Man Who Isn't There. Todd Purdum of The Atlantic: "It is a poignant paradox of Donald Trump's ubiquitous presidency -- all tweets, all the time -- that a leader who prides himself as omnipresent in digital public discourse is so often absent from national life in the hundred human ways in which the country has come to expect its presidents to perform.... But think about it: Have we ever seen Trump play catch with his own 12-year-old son, Barron? Without question, the president dotes on his children, especially his daughter, Ivanka. But he's an absentee father to the nation, or at least a majority of the nation.... This reality is striking, and sad: When it comes to those personal rituals of the modern presidency that Americans have long since taken for granted, Donald J. Trump is the man who isn't there.... Trump doesn't offer ready consolation in moments of national tragedy.... Trump is just as challenged in celebrating happy occasions." --s

Victoria Fleisher & Josh Israel of ThinkProgress: "Donald Trump does not like to be criticized. When he is attacked -- or even when he thinks he might have been attacked -- he tends to fire back in the same way each time: with smears and vague aspersions. On Thursday, his former chief economic adviser Gary Cohn was the latest recipient of his apparent defamation.... [When] told by his friends at Fox News during his latest Fox & Friends phone call that Cohn might have been a source of recent negative stories about his administration, Trump had nothing nice to say. 'It could have been. A lot of people have said that, you know, Gary Cohn. And I could tell stories about him like you wouldn't believe.'... The tactic of suggesting -- with no evidence -- that Trump has embarrassing stories to tell about someone in his crosshairs is one Trump uses a lot." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Where's Pompeo? Mrs. McCrabbie: The foreign ministers of the UK, France & Germany issued a joint statement expressing "grave concern" about the disappearance of journalist & dissident Jamal Khashoggi, & calling for a "credible investigation." Khashoggi is/was a U.S. resident who worked for the Washington Post. One would think our own "foreign minister" would be just as concerned as are our close allies. But no. ...

... Loveday Morris of the Washington Post: "Saudi Arabia on Sunday said it rejects 'threats' and political pressure over the disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi in its consulate in Istanbul, a day after President Trump said there would be 'severe punishment' if Saudi Arabia is found to have killed the Washington Post Global Opinions columnist. Threatening to impose economic sanctions and repeating 'false accusations' will not undermine the country's standing, said the statement on Saudi Arabia's official press agency, which quoted an 'official source.' The kingdom';s government and people are 'as glorious and steadfast as ever,' it said." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Philip Rucker, et al., of the Washington Post revisit the "carefully cultivated..., close partnership between [Jared Kushner and] Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, whom Kushner has championed as a reformer poised to usher the ultraconservative, oil-rich monarchy into modernity." Mrs. McC: So far MBS's big reform has been allowing Saudi women to drive, but that's not much of a big deal when you consider that he has jailed the activist women who petitioned the government for this & other fundamental human rights. ...

... Anne Applebaum of the Washington Post: "The murders [of journalists] are the consequence of the clash between a 21st century technological revolution, which has made it possible to obtain and spread information in new ways, and a 21st century offshore banking revolution, which has made it possible to steal money in new ways, to hide it in new ways and to use it to maintain power.... Often, it is journalists, especially investigative journalists, who are caught in the fault lines between them.... [Before the advent of the Internet, governments] could effectively silence a critic through censorship or exile.... Precisely because we now live in a global information network, the death of a single journalist could usefully frighten the rest -- not only in one country but around the world."

Stephen Stromberg of the Washington Post: "The top issue on every Sunday news show should have been -- but wasn't -- climate change. The United Nations released last Monday a report arguing that world leaders' pledge to keep warming below 2 degrees Celsius is too modest, and that they have about a decade to get on track.... 'I'm not denying any climate change issues,' White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said on Sunday's 'This Week' with George Stephanopoulos. Then he denied one of the most uncontroversial findings in climate science.... 'How much of it is man-made, how much of it is solar, how much of it is oceanic, how much of it is rainforest and other issues? I think we're still exploring all of that.' In fact, scientists have explored the question.... The answer continues to be an unequivocal 'no.'... Kudlow's real objection ... is that listening to the experts would force leaders to make changes that are 'way, way too difficult.'... So burn away, and enjoy the climate while it lasts! This fatalism is deeply immoral.... In the long term, the 71-year-old Kudlow will be dead, and the rest of us will suffer the consequences of the hard facts he and the rest of this administration refused to acknowledge." ...

... Feckless. Alex Ward of Vox: "The head of the US National Guard [Air Force Gen. Joseph Lengyel], one of the top military officers in charge of responding to hurricanes and other disasters affecting the United States, claims he does not know why the climate is changing. What's more, he has yet to discuss the threat climate change poses to Americans with President Donald Trump.... One of Lengyel's aides told me after the session that no one had prepared the general for questions about climate change beforehand." --safari (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)...

Watch a succession of some of the most spineless, irresponsible politicians to ever occupy office, and the takeover of sanity by the oil lobby and its paid minions. --s

... Mrs. McCrabbie: I never copy an entire story I link, even when the story is short, as that would violate copyright laws. But there's an exception to every rule. Elizabeth Kolbert of the New Yorker, a Pulitzer Prize-winning commentator & elegant writer, has written an essay for this week's edition titled, "What's Is Donald Trump's Response to the U.N.'s Dire Climate Report." Here's her column in full: "undefined"

Phil Helsel of NBC News: "... Donald Trump suggested on Saturday that he believes the controversial policy of family separations could continue in the United States and that the practice could dissuade immigrants from entering the country illegally." Mrs. McC: As we've noted before, there is no evidence that harsh immigration policies deter immigrants. Moreover, most of those seeking asylum are not coming here "illegally." BTW, do see Sarah Stillman's New Yorker article, linked below, on how Trump's administration is coercing five-year-olds into signing away their legal rights. (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Making America Mean Again. E.J. Dionne: "In the madness of the Trump era, terrible things happen with almost no notice.... A good example is the administration's decision last month to slash the number of refugees who can be resettled in the United States next year to 30,000, down from the already shamefully low level of 45,000. The new figure is the lowest ceiling imposed on the refugee program since it was created in 1980.... In all circumstances, the move would be shortsighted, mean, politically opportunistic and embarrassingly out of line with what we have always claimed our values are. But it is even more cruel and wrongheaded now, as the world confronts what Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) called the 'worst refugee crisis since World War II.'... Trumpian Republicanism means turning away from basic decency in the name of politically motivated attacks on newcomers to our shores.... Can anyone honestly believe that this makes America great?"

White Power. Hannah Levintova of Mother Jones: "Under President Donald Trump's tax cuts, white Americans are the big winners, and the existing wealth gap between them and minority households will continue to grow. That's the conclusion of a new report released this week on the racial implications of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.... The report, from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) and the nonprofit Prosperity Now, is the first quantitative analysis of its kind.... [T]he authors conclude the law will 'supercharge' existing racial disparities in wealth 'to an alarming extent.'... The authors found that nearly 80 percent of the $275 billion in tax cuts to individual households will go to white families -- even though whites make up just two-thirds of taxpayers. In dollar terms, white families will get about $218 billion in tax cuts, while black households will see about $14 billion and Latinos about $18 billion." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

** White Power, Ctd. David Leonhardt of the New York Times: "The biggest racial preferences in this country ... have to do with political power. And they benefit white Americans, at the expense of black, Asian and Hispanic Americans. These racial preferences are the ones that dictate the makeup of the United States Senate.... The Senate gives considerably more representation to white citizens than to dark-skinned ones. It allows a minority of Americans -- white Americans -- to wield the power of a majority.... The states whose populations have grown the most over time ... are racially diverse. By contrast, the smallest states ... tend to be overwhelmingly white.... Right now, about four million American citizens have almost no congressional voting power.... Of these four million people -- these citizens denied representative democracy -- more than 90 percent are black or Hispanic. They are, of course, the residents of Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. Almost half of Washington's residents are black, and nearly all of Puerto Rico's are Hispanic. It's time fix this inequity and to make Washington and Puerto Rico the 51st and 52nd states, with full representation in the Senate and the House.... To do so, Congress would need to pass a bill, and the president would need to sign it."

Chief Crook-in-the-House. Paul Pringle & Adam Elmahrek of the Los Angeles Times: "A company owned by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy's in-laws won more than $7 million in no-bid and other federal contracts at U.S. military installations and other government properties in California based on a dubious claim of Native American identity by McCarthy's brother-in-law, a Times investigation has found. The prime contracts, awarded through a federal program designed to help disadvantaged minorities, were mostly for construction projects at the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake in McCarthy's Bakersfield-based district, and the Naval Air Station Lemoore in nearby Kings County.... [McCarthy's brother-in-law William] Wages says he is one-eighth Cherokee. An examination of government and tribal records by The Times and a leading Cherokee genealogist casts doubt on that claim, however. He is a member of a group called the Northern Cherokee Nation, which has no federal or state recognition as a legitimate tribe. It is considered a fraud by leaders of tribes that have federal recognition...." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

George Packer of the New Yorker reports on a newly-released study of tribalism in American politics. Mrs. McC: His analysis of the steps of Republican "progress" toward extreme tribalism, BTW, is exactly the progression I would have described, with the exception of the Helms-Cruz continuum, which hadn't occurred to me & which I'm not sure is warranted. Whether Helms or DeLay or Jim Jordan, one is as awful as the next.

Election 2018

North Dakota. Burgess Everett of Politico: "Republicans say they're on the cusp of delivering a knockout blow to North Dakota Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp -- and virtually ending Democrats' hopes of winning the Senate. Heitkamp is down in public polls by a significant margin, and most political handicappers think Rep. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) is the favorite to beat her. If she goes down, Democrats would basically have to run the table in every other battleground race to take the chamber. Republicans have had Heitkamp losing by double digits in their private polling for weeks, according to a GOP strategist working on Senate races. Democrats argue the race is closer but acknowledge she is down even in their polling, after her vote against Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation to the Supreme Court." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: If you live in North Dakota, please vote for Heitkamp, even though she is a DINO. Besides, Cramer has no redeeming qualities. At all.

Viriginia. Nathalie Baptiste of Mother Jones: "The Republican Party of Virginia just released a new attack ad claiming that Leslie Cockburn, the Democrat running for Congress in Virginia's 5th congressional district, 'hates America.'... It states that Cockburn 'hates' military veterans, Israel, and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the federal agency tasked with deportation and other immigration matters.... Cockburn, a former investigative journalist and producer on CBS'60 Minutes, is running against Republican Denver Riggleman, a veteran of the US Air Force and a business owner." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

** Iowa. Des Moines Register Editors: "Some have argued that this election should be a referendum on President Trump. We disagree. This is about Congress, which has abdicated much of its constitutional duty and has failed to provide a check and balance to the executive branch. Not only has the party failed to act as a check on the president, key Republicans have been complicit in trying to obstruct and undermine the investigation of a foreign power's interference in a U.S. election. And by their silence they have tacitly endorsed the president's racism, misogyny, white nationalism, divisiveness and crudity ... the party needs to be voted out of power[.] --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... ** In the paper's endorsement for J.D. Scholten [D] over Steve King [R-acist], it notes, "This one's a no-brainer for any Iowan who has cringed at eight-term incumbent King's increasing obsession with being a cultural provocateur. In his almost 16 years in Congress, King has passed exactly one bill as primary sponsor, redesignating a post office. He won't debate his opponent and rarely holds public town halls. Instead, he spends his time meeting with fascist leaders in Europe and retweeting neo-Nazis." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Arizona. Ronald Hansen of the Arizona Republic: "Republican U.S. Rep. Debbie Lesko has agreed to take down campaign signs falsely asserting her Democratic opponent, Hiral Tipirneni, is a 'fake doctor' after a medical group that backed Lesko pressed her on the issue. The reversal comes days after Tipirneni, a licensed physician and cancer-research advocate, strongly pushed back on the signs, calling Lesko's tactics 'despicable' in a meeting Thursday with the editorial board of The Arizona Republic. Lesko relented after ARMPAC, the Arizona Medical Political Action Committee, which has endorsed her, told Lesko in a meeting they viewed the 'campaign signs as an insult to the medical profession, discounting the education and training required of physicians to become licensed and credentialed.' The group said Lesko agreed to take down the signs afterward. ARMPAC maintained its Lesko endorsement." Mrs. McC: Really? The organization should rename itself the Arizona Medical Political Idiots Team, or ARMPIT. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Georgia. Amy Wang of the Washington Post: "An attempted conversation between a Georgia Tech student and Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) ended abruptly with the lawmaker snatching the student's cellphone away while he was being asked about possible voter suppression in the state. The senator's office has said the exchange ... was a misunderstanding. On Saturday, a student member of the Young Democratic Socialists of America at Georgia Tech approached Perdue, who was visiting the Atlanta campus to campaign for Brian Kemp. Kemp, a Republican and Georgia's secretary of state, is locked in a tight gubernatorial race with Democrat Stacey Abrams, a former state lawmaker. The race attracted additional scrutiny this week after the Associated Press reported that more than 53,000 voter registration applications were in limbo with Kemp's office; the overwhelming majority of those applications are for African American and other minority voters...." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: The First Amendment, among others, gets short shrift in Jim Crow's Georgia.


Election 2020. Matt Viser
of the Washington Post: "During the past six months, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) has built a shadow war room designed to elect Democrats across the country in the midterm elections, overtaking some of the traditional duties of Democratic Party campaign committees and further positioning herself for an all-but-certain 2020 presidential bid. Her effort, which goes far beyond the fundraising and endorsement speeches in which prospective presidential candidates typically engage, has encompassed work in all 50 states and close coordination with more than 150 campaigns. The result is a wide-ranging network.... It is unmistakably aimed at some of the early-primary states that Warren would need to contest in a presidential campaign. She has deployed staffers to all four early primary states -- two to New Hampshire and one each to Iowa, South Carolina, and Nevada -- as well as to traditional powerhouses such as Ohio, Florida, Michigan and Wisconsin." ...

     ... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Please, can we not have another preordained Democratic nominee for president? The last one was a disaster. ...

... CBS/AP: "Senator Elizabeth Warren has released the results of a DNA test reportedly showing she does have Native American ancestry, increasing speculation she may run for president in 2020. The analysis was done by Stanford University professor Carlos Bustamante, who is an expert in the field. It shows most of Warren's ancestry is European, but a Native American relative appears in her family tree 6 to 10 generations ago." Mrs. McC: This part of the report is inaccurate: "Warren’s has said that her great-great-great-grandmother, O.C. Sarah Smith, was at least partially Native American. That would make Warren 1/32nd Native American. But if her ancestor is 10 generations back, that could mean she's just 1/512th Native American, according to the report." Actually, no, you lunkheads. If, as Warren has said, O.C. Sarah Smith was "at least partially Native American," then Warren would be up to 1/32nd Native American. But any dilution in Smith's Native American heritage would pass to Warren; that is, if Smith were, say, half-Native American, Warren would be 1/64th Native American. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: One of the most disgusting things about Republicans (and there are so many!) is the way in which they demand Democrats defend not just their policies past & present or their past behavior, but also who they are. So despite all the evidence that President Obama was born in Hawaii -- his own statements, his short-form birth certificate, a 1961 birth announcement in the Honolulu Advertiser, etc. -- he still had to provide an extraordinary long-form birth certificate, & even that didn't shut up the stupidest, most virulent birthers (like Trump). However, never before has a potential candidate had to produce a DNA test to prove who she was.


Capitalism Is Awesome, Ctd. Michael Corkery
of the New York Times: "Sears, which more than a century ago pioneered the strategy of selling everything to everyone, filed for bankruptcy protection early on Monday. The company had long ago given up its mantle as a retail innovator. It was overtaken first by big box retailers like Walmart and Home Depot and then, by Amazon as the go-to shopping destinations for clothing, tools and appliances. In the last decade, Sears had been run by a hedge fund manager, Edward S. Lampert, who sold off many of the company's valuable properties and brands but failed to develop a winning strategy to entice consumers who increasingly shopped online. The result has been a long painful decline. A decade ago, the company employed 302,000. Today, there are about 68,000 people working at Sears and Kmart, which Mr. Lampert also runs." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: The sad part is that Sears pioneered all of the elements that work for Amazon & the big box stores. They have an online presence today, analogous to their famous catalogs. And, even better than Amazon (but like WalMart & Home Depot), customers can pick up their online purchases at Sears retail stores. I've done it. Recently.

Tracy Connor of The Daily Beast: "In her second day on the job, the new head of USA Gymnastics apologized for a month-old tweet that angered the sport's biggest star, Simone Biles. 'I regret the post,' former congresswoman Mary Bono [R-Calif.] said late Saturday as the sports federation was plunged into yet another round of turmoil that pitted athletes against executives. The tweet in question showed Bono using a marker to cover up the swoosh on her golf shoes a few days after Nike launched an advertising campaign that featured ex-NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick.... Nike was a sponsor of the 2016 Summer Games, where Biles won four gold medals and earned her reputation as the greatest gymnast in history.... It did not escape notice that Bono's September tweet was apparently taking a swipe at an athlete who chose to express his views -- and that the gymnasts have complained they were silenced when they spoke up about abuse." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Beyond the Beltway

Ashley Southall & Tyler Pager of the New York Times: "A brawl outside a Republican club in Manhattan involving a far-right group and anti-fascist activists spurred calls over the weekend for an investigation into the violence and whether the police handled it properly. Some Democratic politicians, including Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, also criticized the club for inviting the founder of the far-right group, the Proud Boys. Mr. Cuomo said he has asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation to look into the violence that accompanied Friday's appearance at the Metropolitan Republican Club by Gavin McInnes, a right-wing provocateur. He also assigned a State Police hate crimes unit to assist with the New York Police Department's investigation of the fighting, which he linked to President Trump." ...

... Nidhi Prakash & Tanya Chen of BuzzFeed News: "Leaders of a Manhattan political club that was once the archetype of moderate Republicanism say they stand behind the decision to invite the founder of a far-right men’s group as police investigate violence by and against his group after his speech at their clubhouse Friday night. The Metropolitan Republican Club advertised Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes’s appearance as an opportunity to see McInnes reenact the samurai sword assassination of Japanese socialist leader Inejiro Asanuma. In a Facebook post, the club called the Proud Boys founder the 'Godfather of the Hipster Movement [who] has taken on and exposed the Deep State Socialists and stood up for Western Values.'... Friday's events offer a microcosm of the disorienting speed of change inside the Republican Party in the age of Trump, as emboldened extremist groups take traditional Republican and American political institutions by storm." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Excuse me? You invite the founder of a hate group to glorify the assassination of a politician & you find that defensible? "'... we are staunch supporters of the 1st Amendment,' club officials said in a statement on Sunday night. 'We want to foster civil discussion, but never endorse violence. Gavin’s talk on Friday night, while at times was politically incorrect and a bit edgy, was certainly not inciting violence.'" The First Amendment, you dimwits, guarantees that the government cannot abridge free speech (except in certain circumstances, um, like incitement to violence), not that private organizations -- such as political clubs -- must let every insane voice be heard. And to say that someone who was extolling the murder of a political figure was "not inciting violence" is absurd. You advertised his incitement to violence, for pete's sake. If McInnes had tried this same stunt in the public square, he would have been arrested. Your club protected McInnes from the consequences of his bad act, an act that exemplifies a First Amendment exception. Idiots!

Built for the Big One. Patricia Mazzei of the New York Times: The fury of Hurricane Michael spared only one house on a beachfront block of Mexico Beach, Florida: a house built last year to construction standards far higher than Florida's building code requires.

Way Beyond

Anna Jean Kaiser of the Guardian: "Over the course of a 30-year political career, [Jair] Bolsonaro has earned notoriety from his sexist remarks, once telling a fellow lawmaker she didn't even 'deserve' being raped and more recently saying he wouldn't pay women the same salary as men. In 2013, he called the secretary of women's policy a 'big dyke'. During the impeachment of the country's first female president, he dedicated his vote to the dictatorship colonel who had overseen her torture.... Many pollsters had presumed that Bolsonaro's misogyny had created a natural limit to his share of the women's vote, but in the final stages of the campaign, that expectation has shattered.... According to polls before the fragmented first round of 13 candidates, Bolsonaro was the most popular candidate among women, with 27% of the vote. The latest poll for the runoff election says he has roughly 42% of the female electorate." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Juan Cole: "An appeals court in the Netherlands has upheld a 2015 lower court ruling in a class action case that the Dutch government needs to do more to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to 25% below 1990 levels by 2020. So far the Netherlands has only reduced 13% from 1990 levels. The court appealed to the principle that the government must attend to the welfare of citizens, enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights." --s (Also linked yesterday.)

Reuters: "City authorities in Turkey’s capital, Ankara, have renamed the street where the new US embassy is being built 'Malcolm X Avenue', after the civil rights leader, state media reported. The move coincides with a period of fraught relations between Turkey and the US and comes after other politically charged name changes to streets in Ankara.... Malcolm X remains a divisive figure in US history and Ankara's move will likely be received negatively by critics who say he stirred racist and anti-American sentiment." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

News Lede

CNBC: "Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen has died from complications of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Vulcan Inc. said Monday on behalf of his family. Allen passed away Monday afternoon in Seattle at 65 years old, Vulcan said." ...

     ... Allen's New York Times obituary is here.

Reader Comments (23)

Anybody know what happened to Lyin' Paul Ryan? He's been ducking and weaving from the media for a good while now. A cat got his tongue, or a president* grabbed his pussy, something like that?

When history looks to the most consequential American cowards of modern times, his shit-eating grin will accompany his granny-starving death glare right near the top of the page.

Deep down he knows it. And the legacy question haunts his soul as he steers clear of microphones like a stray dog in traffic.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered Commentersafari

@safari: He's been in Afghanistan, which is a good place for him, & he's about to embark on a mission to save House seats for the Deplorable party.

October 15, 2018 | Registered CommenterMarie Burns

A guide to trumps peak:
"Did you know"
(I just found this out)
"People are saying"
(I'm making this up)
"We'll see what happens"
(I have no idea what's happening)
"Fake news"
(This information makes me look bad)
"Believe me"
(I'm lying)

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered Commenterforrest morris

Fine translations, forrest, Nice to have them all in one place.

Thanks.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

@forrest morris: Thanks for the translations. Not only are you 100 percent accurate, Trump has repeated every one of these tropes again & again. It would be a stroke of good journalism if TV media ran your translations as subtitles whenever Trump utters his coded remarks.

October 15, 2018 | Registered CommenterMarie Burns

" The fury of Hurricane Michael spared only one house on a beachfront block of Mexico Beach, Florida: a house built last year to construction standards far higher than Florida's building code requires."

The house stands alone because–––(loud trumpet here, please) it's called intelligent design and god has nothing to do with it. It's called preparing for the worst–-it's called being smarter than a state's building code. Now if we could only instill this "being able to foresee farther than your money belt" maybe we could get something done about climate change. It breaks my heart to understand the ignorance and duplicity of those like the president* of this country who continue to question the validity of scientific facts. These fuckers will all be dead and will never know the devastation they will have left for future human beings––-and given their mindsets, I doubt whether they give a flying fig––or in this case frogs which by that time will be completely wiped out.

By the way––yes, MBS allows women to drive but a man must accompany them or so I read somewheres.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterPD Pepe

Glad to hear Ms. Warren does have a teensy bit of Native American blood. Imagine that news will bring the Pretender up short next time he has an urge to mock her.

Now how about DNA testing for McCarthy's brother-in-law who reportedly received government contracts on the basis of his doubtful claim of Native American ancestry?

To be fair, if he fails the test, shouldn't he give all that money back, and voluntarily shame himself by taking a new name, something along the lines of "Chingachgook" in Pretender speak?

(After two years of the Pretender and his blatant racism, I can't imagine a single Native American who does not personally own a casino--and even that might not be enough to mask the stench-- voting for a Republican. No wonder North Dakota suppresses their votes.)

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

MINORITY RULE DOES NOT HAVE TO BE HERE FOREVER:

This is an important piece from Slate––possibilities, people, possibilities!
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/10/minority-rule-not-in-the-constitution.html

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterPD Pepe

Lesley Stahl's response: "I have a brain, and you don't"

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterNJC

WoPo:Trump speaks with Saudi king, sends Pompeo to meet him over missing journalist. Trump said that the Saudi king "denies any knowledge".

The international investigation is over!

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterMarvin Schwalb

President Knuckle Rapper has Spoken!

The little dictator, when questioned about what he'd do if it turns out that his pal, Mohammed bin Salman, had ordered the torture, murder, and dismemberment of Jamal Kashoggi, promised potentially severe punishment. No one is sure if the potential part applies to severity or to any punishment at all, but intrepid reporting has turned up this list of potential punishments.

(Okay, he dropped it when going through a McDonald's drive through for his usual seven Big Macs, five fried fish sandwiches, triple Super Sized fries, and extra large Coke. He meant to hand the kid at the window a piece of paper reading "IOU for whatever the fuck this costs because I'm the president and you're not". While stiffing the kid, this list fell on the ground.)

POTENTIALLY SEVERE POTENTIAL PUNISHMENTS FOR MBS

For murdering a journalist working for the horrible Amazon Washington Post, then cutting him up and not sending me any pieces, especially gooey ones, for my Donald J. Trump Presidential Keepsake Chest, I, Donald J. Trump, President--not like all of you losers--do hereby potentially decree the following potential punishment ideas. Potentially.

1. No Fortnite for, well, a fortnight. Unless he really wants to.

2. Playing with the Orb is strictly forbidden between 2:10 am and 2:11 am. And I mean it!

3. That gigantic, biggest ever arms deal negotiated by my genius son in law will be increased in price to $110,000,000,000.01 AND the secret, hidden genius agreement for those ten nukes? Forget it. It's now only nine nukes. So there.

4. The yuuuuge 40 ft. tall portrait of MBS planned for the lobby of my tower in Riyadh is now down to 39 feet 11 inches.

5. Three day suspension from the Murdering Dictator's Club, pending the okay by the co-chairs, my good buddy Vlad and my love interest Kim. That'll show 'im. (And if he murders anyone during that supension, ooooooh, will he get it!)

And the worst potentially potential severe potential punishment thing for my good pal MBS who probably didn't kill that Kaghogah guy, but whatev, who really cares even if he did?....is

6. Next time there's a hurricane in Riyadh. NO PAPER TOWELS!

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Please, please, please, why are we always responding to assholes?

Elizabeth Warren got a DNA test? What the hell for? Because Trump calls her Pocahontas? So let him. What does she care? And even worse, the test says something like "Hey, could be some Native American blood here, we're not sure" which is almost worse. Even if it showed she was Crazy Horse's great-granddaughter it wouldn't make a difference, so why bother?

And not for nothin' but I really don't think she's ready for a presidential run. She is extremely valuable right where she is. Plus, I'm not entirely sure she could win in 2020. In fact, I'm not sure at all. Of course it's not like there's anyone else out there who looks like a heavyweight contender. Cory Booker? Not on your life. Kamala Harris. Yeah, I like her. I'd vote for her. But if she's gonna do it, she better jump on it soon. Like today. Joe said no (thank god). Bernie? Don't think so.

Whatever, just so long as Wasserman Schultz is not involved in the decision making process.

But Warren is much more useful where she is, in my opinion. Besides, if the Democrats take back the Senate, she'll get a nice chairmanship from which she can ram large, thorny objects up Confederate butt cheeks.

But can we refrain from responding to racist, stupid, incendiary, and--did I say stupid?--insults from assholes? It's a waste of time. It's not like Trump will now say, "Oh gee, I guess I was wrong". They're only going to make more fun of her now and Democrats will have to spend time defending her.

If any of you guys are thinking that she was right to do this, I'd love to hear the rationale. Maybe I'm way off base. It's been happening a lot these days. Crazy has moved in and refuses to leave. He's even commandeering the remotes and has stocked the fridge with crap.

Maybe I'll ask him to take a DNA test and see if he's related to Trump.

For all the good that'll do me. Because IT WON'T MATTER!

Let's spend time on important stuff. If Warren wanted to do this just for herself, fine. But keep it there. Waving around a "Maybe I'm one-fiftieth Native American" banner is something jabronis do.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Forrest,

Love the list. Keep adding to it.

There are other greatest hits as well:

"Everyone is saying..."
translation:
"No one is saying. Just me."

and

"I have tremendous respect for women."
translation:
"Check out the tatas on that babe!"

alternative translation:

"Jesus, what a dog."

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

About Warren and the Presidency, Akhilleus, I fully agree.

But rising to an asshole's bait? Maybe. Depends on how she follows up on the Bully's bet.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2018/10/15/trump-dared-elizabeth-warren-take-dna-test-prove-her-native-american-ancestry-now-what/?

Welcher-in-Chief?

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

Ken,

Yeah, I still don't know. Marie makes a good point about Confederates demanding that Democrats like Warren and Obama prove who they are, but on the flip side, they don't have to prove anything. Ever. They have a congenital liar for a leader who just says shit off the top of his head and when called on it says, "Well, you're not even the president. I am!" Oh gee, well, now that you proved your last lying statement, I guess I should just shut up.

I think jumping when they say jump is not a good policy.

The birth certificate thing, maybe. Obama had a strong case and it was easily provable. But did it change anyone's mind? No. Not at all. Instead we had a president jumping through hoops because a lying piece of shit (and the right-wing media, after him) was demanding he do so. It just looked bad.

Trump says "innocent until you're proven guilty". Exactly, but that's not how R's play it. In their game you're whatever they say you are, even if you can prove otherwise. Warren getting a DNA test makes her look weak. She's playing their game. In that round, they won. And Confederate voters are so inured to lies that they'll just assume the results were made up, because their guys make shit up all the time and they've convinced their base that Democrats are one part Hitler, two parts Karl Marx, and three parts Genghis Khan.

Sorry, this stuff makes me crazy. We need to be moving from a position of strength, not playing by their rules. That's a sucker's game.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

The Warren DNA test and our reactions to it seem another facet of the "when they go low, we go high" or alternatively " we'll kneecap the sons-a-bitches" debate, which has no easy answer.

That choice is always there, and unfortunately I don't think either one is guaranteed to work well with the majority of American voters.

A response to a lie or personal attack is as likely to be seen as weakness insofar as it places the responder at the same low level as the attacker, as is no response at all, which will be characterized not as taking the high road, but as acquiescence or cowardice.

Here, as in most political calculus, it's the audience that matters.

Warren's audience is assuredly not the Confederates, about whom you are absolutely right. They will not be moved.

I'm not sure who Warren has in mind with this testing thing, and that's what troubles me.

Probably not people like us, like me anyway, who think about these things too much.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

@AK: I said the same thing about Warren eons ago––she's a bull dog I'd like to keep in the senate plus I questioned her foreign policy acumen–-something she rarely gets into. Kamala, I think, would have a good shot––she's got the "something in the way she moves" and the experience that could carry her through that long slog of a campaign. and let's not forget Eric Holder who said he was going to throw his hat in. But as I write this, it seems surreal that Warren and the rest would be SO superior in every way to Dumbo Donnie –-in fact, I'd bet even Booker would be better.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterPD Pepe

Safari: I live in Lyin' Ryan's district. He has been busy - not meeting
with constituents of course - but continuing to rail against "entitlements", raising funds for his Super Pac that is funding some despicable Repub campaigns, and endorsing his "clone"- a guy who looks just like him and has the same lying tendencies. And who will probably win because they're doing an effective hatchet job on the Dem candidate who apparently has some skeletons in his closet that he should have owned up to earlier.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered Commenterjoynone

PD,

A Chatty Cathy doll would be better than the imbecile we have now. I'm more concerned at this point about actual electability.

There's something about Booker that just doesn't sit well with me. Harris would be a fine candidate, I'm thinking, but she'll have a long, hard road. Not only a woman, but a black woman. The racists and misogynists would have a hoe-down to beat the band. The vote suppression would be Homeric.

Trump would paint himself as a victim and tell all his knuckledraggers that allowing Harris to be elected would be a guarantee that white men would all be locked up, that Christianity would be outlawed, and that abortion clinics would pop up on every street corner and Christian girls would be chained up when pregnant and required to abort their babies, lest they grow up and vote R.

But that's his guaranteed 30-40% or whatever it is now.

The rest of America has got to stand up and be counted. If we can't extricate ourselves from the clutches of a greedy, ignorant, racist pig and his Party of Traitors, then we don't deserve democracy. Either that or they're better at election rigging and rat-fucking than I think they are now.

But whatever happens, whoever decides to run, they better get cracking. Trump will have a billion dollars in his war chest by the time some Democrat announces.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

I think I've figured out why all the presidents in the Andy Thomas
painting are smiling. If you blow it up (not literally), there appears
to be lines of coke on the table and Ike is staring at it. Or could
just be reflections from the president's* halo.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered Commenterforrest morris

Forrest,

Those aren’t lines, those are rails. Ike is thinking, “Man, someone better call Mamie. I’m gonna be up for a week!”

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

I knew better, but I did it anyway.

Watched the Vox video documenting the Right's denial of climate change that Safari linked.

Beautiful Fall day here in the Pacific Northwest and my back doesn't ache as much as it sometimes does, but thanks to the video now I'm not feeling so chipper.

Oh, what are we doing to ourselves?

I used to worry about the country's future when I encountered a teacher who didn't measure up, someone I thought not smart or knowledgable enough to be guiding children into adulthood.

Don't know why I worried about unqualified teachers when it is evident our political system allows, encourages and even paves the way for us to choose incompetent leaders for the entire country.

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

Should have written, "smart, knowledgable or KIND enough..." for as someone said, "The greatest of these is..."

October 15, 2018 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes
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