The Ledes

Thursday, September 19, 2024

New York Times: “A body believed to be of the suspect in a Kentucky highway shooting that left five people seriously injured this month was found on Wednesday, the authorities said, ending a manhunt that stretched into a second week and set the local community on edge. The Kentucky State Police commissioner, Phillip Burnett Jr., said in a Wednesday night news conference that at approximately 3:30 p.m., two troopers and two civilians found an unidentified body in the brush behind the highway exit where the shooting occurred.... The police have identified the suspect of the shooting as Joseph A. Couch, 32. They said that on Sept. 7, Mr. Couch perched on a cliff overlooking Interstate 75 about eight miles north of London, Ky., and opened fire. One of the wounded was shot in the face, and another was shot in the chest. A dozen vehicles were riddled with gunfire.”

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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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A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Monday
Jun242019

The Commentariat -- June 25, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Caitlin Dickerson & Zolan Kanno-Youngs of the New York Times: "The Customs and Border Protection agency's acting commissioner, John Sanders, will step down in early July as the government's primary border enforcement executive, a federal official said Tuesday, a development that comes as the agency faces continuing public fury over the treatment of detained migrant children. The news of the resignation came shortly after agency officials disclosed that more than 100 children had been returned to a troubled Border Patrol station in Clint, Tex., a location where a group of lawyers who visited recently said hundreds of minor detainees had been housed for weeks without access to showers, clean clothing, or sufficient food."

Katie Rogers & Annie Karni of the New York Times: "Stephanie Grisham, Melania Trump's loyal and sometimes combative communications director, will replace Sarah Huckabee Sanders as White House press secretary, the first lady announced on Tuesday. She will also take on the added role of communications director, a job that has been vacant since the departure of Bill Shine in March, and will keep her role with Mrs. Trump."

Melanie Zanona, et al., of Politico: "Federal prosecutors have accused Rep. Duncan Hunter of improperly using campaign funds to pursue numerous romantic affairs with congressional aides and lobbyists, according to a new court filing late Monday night. The Justice Department alleged that Hunter (R-Calif.) and his wife Margaret Hunter illegally diverted $250,000 in campaign funds for personal use, including to fund lavish vacations and their children's school tuition. Monday's court filings also spell out allegations that Hunter routinely used campaign funds to pay for Ubers, bar tabs, hotel rooms and other expenses to fund at least five extramarital relationships." You might want to read on just for the fun of it.

Oregon. Will Sommer of The Daily Beast: "While the Oregon Senate walk-out has earned national headlines, this isn't the first time the state's conservatives have gone wild. Over the past few years, Oregon Republicans have fought vaccines and brought in militias as their private security. Even as they're increasingly marginalized in state government, Oregon Republicans have grown more extreme.... Oregon's political divide falls between its western urban centers and its more rural eastern parts, according to John Temple, the author of a new book on militias..., 'Oregon is an interesting snapshot of the U.S. as a whole — that divide,' Temple said.... Oregon ... was the only state whose original constitution forbid non-white people from living there." --s

Brazil. Tom Phillips of the Guardian: "Since the far-right leader [Jair Bolsonaro] took office in January, his foreign policy team has set about pulverizing decades of diplomatic tradition: cuddling up to rightwing nationalists including Donald Trump, Steve Bannon and the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán; irking China, and jettisoning its position as a climate crisis leader; infuriating longtime Middle Eastern partners by embracing Benjamin Netanyahu's Israel and threatening to move Brazil's embassy to Jerusalem. All this under a Bible-bashing pro-Trump foreign minister who claims global heating is a Marxist conspiracy and Nazism is a movement of the left.... In interviews with the Guardian, doyens of Brazilian diplomacy described their bewilderment, unease and indignation at seeing such a cherished ministry -- and their country's place in the world -- turned on its head." --safari: The parallels between the two "melting pots" of the Americas is fascinating.

~~~~~~~~~~

When I spoke to the president, I said, look, I'm a mom, I have five kids, seven, nine grandchildren. And children are scared. You're scaring the children of America. Not just in those families, but their neighbors and their communities. You're scaring the children. -- Nancy Pelosi, relating her Friday conversation with Donald Trump ...

... Martha Mendoza & Garance Burke of the AP: "The U.S. government has removed most of the children from a remote Border Patrol station in Texas following reports that more than 300 children were detained there, caring for each other with inadequate food, water and sanitation. Just 30 children remained at the facility near El Paso Monday, said Rep. Veronica Escobar after her office was briefed on the situation by an official with Customs and Border Protection.... 'How is it possible that you both were unaware of the inhumane conditions for children, especially tender-age children at the Clint Station?' asked Escobar in a letter sent Friday to U.S. Customs and Border Protection acting commissioner John Sanders and U.S. Border Patrol chief Carla Provost.... Escobar said some were sent to another facility on the north side of El Paso called Border Patrol Station 1. Escobar said it's a temporary site with roll-out mattresses, showers, medical facilities and air conditioning. But Clara Long, an attorney who interviewed children at Border Patrol Station 1 last week, said conditions were not necessarily better there." ...

     ... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: This is like a shell game where the con man moves around real-life children instead of balls, only instead of the children ending up under one of the cups to they surprise of the mark, they are lost forever in the system. Every one of the con artists, from Trump on down to workers who did not report these atrocities should wind up in prison, where they are allowed to bathe only once a month, sleep on the concrete floor with only a mylar "blanket" to cover them, get only cold MREs to eat, & receive no medical attention. ...

... Ed Kilgore of New York: "... it's remarkable how erratic and politically insensitive Team Trump has been in dealing with the lethal impression that it is deliberately mistreating children as a sort of extreme version of a deterrent to future migrants. The administration has presented four quite different but equally irresponsible strategies in just the last week or so: 1. Deny any responsibility for decent conditions[.]... 2. Move the kids around[.]... 3. Blame Democrats[.]... 4. Blow everything up with mass deportations[.]" ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Kilgore didn't mention that Trump is specifically, repeatedly -- and falsely, of course -- blaming President Obama.

Clara Long & Nicole Austin-Hillery of Human Rights Watch in a CNN opinion piece report on "the devastating and abusive circumstances" they observed in their visits to children in US border facilities. "... more children are in immigration custody because over the last several years the government has slowed down the rate at which children are reunified with their families. The government has sought to use children in Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) facilities as bait to arrest and deport the family members who come forward to care for them, according to a report by advocacy groups The Women's Refugee Commission and the National Immigrant Justice Center." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: It is worth pointing out here that although Donald Trump disparages the FBI -- the federal government's principal law enforcement agency -- he has again and again commended the "great and incredible and fantastic" Border Patrol & Customs agents (the BP union supported him in 2016). He knows what those "great and incredible and fantastic" agents are doing to children (or he should), and he's good with it. Besides being an (alleged) rapist, he's a proven child abuser.

Edward Wong of the New York Times: "President Trump announced on Monday that he is imposing new sanctions on Iran, stepping up a policy of pressuring the nation's leaders and the crippled Iranian economy in retaliation for what the United States says are recent aggressive acts by Tehran. He said the order would bar Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, and his office from access to the international financial system. The Treasury Department said it also was imposing sanctions on eight Iranian military commanders, including the head of a unit that the Americans say was responsible for shooting down an American drone last Thursday." ...

... Patrick Wintour of the Guardian: "Iran says the US decision to impose sanctions on its supreme leader and other top officials is 'idiotic' and has permanently closed the path to diplomacy between Tehran and Washington.... Speaking in a live television address on Tuesday, [Hassan Rouhani, the country's president,] added: 'You sanction the foreign minister simultaneously with a request for talks?' The White House was 'afflicted by mental retardation', he said." --s ...

     ... Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Eric Hananoki of Media Matters: "During CNN's 'breaking news' coverage of the conflict between the United States and Iran, CNN political commentator David Urban advocated for a missile strike against Iran.... The network didn't disclose to viewers that Urban is a lobbyist for numerous defense contractors. Urban appeared on the June 20 edition of CNN's The Lead with Jake Tapper, where he advocated for striking Iran with a missile. CNN, Urban, and host Jake Tapper didn't disclose during the segment that Urban has extensive financial ties to military contractors." --s

Tim O'Brien of Bloomberg: "... President Trump was never going to become 'presidential.' It was inevitable instead that he would find himself most interested in frequenting the corridors of power that allowed him to operate independently.... In Trump's case it's uniquely perilous because no president in the modern era has been as ill-informed, unhinged and undisciplined as the current one. None has been as needy, nor as willing to playact without remorse while making the most consequential of decisions.... Trump has given the world a trifecta of sorts in recent weeks involving trade with Mexico, a military strike in Iran, and government raids on the homes of undocumented immigrants living in the U.S. Trump launched all three episodes with public threats and bravado showcased on Twitter, embroidered them with promises of imminent and decisive action, and tethered them to the notion that complex challenges can be solved with blunt force wielded by a single man. He then abruptly abandoned all three provocations just before they were to take effect.... The only real difference between what he's doing now and what he was doing in his businesses decades ago is who it affects." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I can't get over the idea that Trump is remarkably stupid. I think every president -- including Trump, of course -- wants to be the Best President Ever. Yet Trump guaranteed from the get-go that his presidency would be a failure (see, for instance, Axios's report on the helter-skelter Trump transition). Trump can point a stubby finger at others till it falls off; the failure of his presidency is all his doing. Update: See Akhilleus's correction in the Comments below.

The Trump Scandals, Ctd.

Judy Kurtz of the Hill: "A star-studded cast -- including John Lithgow, Alyssa Milano, Alfre Woodard, Annette Bening and many others -- will perform in a play based on the Mueller report. The performers will take the stage Monday for 'The Investigation: A Search For The Truth in 10 Acts,' a play written by Robert Schenkkan. The work by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Schenkkan is based on special counsel Robert Mueller's 448-page report on his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.... The event is being hosted and livestreamed by LawWorks.... The performance comes just days after a Washington theater announced it would host an 11-hour reading of the second volume of Mueller's report that deals with possible obstruction of justice committed by President Trump." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie (Monday afternoon): According to the LawWorks website, the play is to be performed on Monday, June 24 (i.e., yesterday) beginning at 9 pm EDT. You can stream it on the linked page. I can't tell from the site whether or not you can watch the play later. ...

     ... Update. The live performance has ended. According to the site, "A replay will be available shortly." Mrs. McC: I really enjoyed the show! John Lithgow was great as angry, inarticulate, lying Trump & Joel Gray was a funny Sessions. Those left-wing, liberal elite actors do the country proud. So far the arts are surviving Trump.

New, Credible Rape Allegation against Trump Finally Makes the Front Page of the NYT Online. Donald Trump, Discerning Rapist. Peter Baker & Neil Vigdor: "President Trump on Monday again denied assaulting a columnist for Elle magazine in the dressing room of a high-end clothing store more than 20 years ago, asserting just hours after she aired her explosive accusation on television that he would not have assaulted her because 'she's not my type.' Mr. Trump said that E. Jean Carroll, who wrote for years for Elle magazine, was 'lying' when she said that he threw her up against a wall and forced himself on her in the mid-1990s, and he insisted that he did not know her. 'I'll say it with great respect,' he said in an interview with The Hill, a Capitol Hill news organization. 'No. 1, she's not my type. No. 2, it never happened. It never happened, O.K.?'" ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: No. !, Carroll was & is a beautiful woman. No. 2, since when are rapists choosy? This is just the Liar-in-Chief adding insult to injury. ...

... Lara Takenaga of the New York Times: "After an article last week reported the advice columnist E. Jean Carroll's rape allegations against President Trump, some readers accused The Times of downplaying the story.... Dean Baquet, the executive editor [of the Times] ... said the critics were right that The Times had underplayed the article, though he said it had not been because of deference to the president.... Mr. Baquet said he had concluded that it should have been presented more prominently, with a headline on The Times's home page.... The fact that a well-known person was making a very public allegation against a sitting president 'should've compelled us to play it bigger.'" ...

... MEANWHILE, at That Bastion of Great Journalism, the New York Post. Oliver Darcy & Marianne Garvey of CNN: "The New York Post's former top editor [Col Allan], a supporter of President Trump and an old lieutenant of Rupert Murdoch who returned to the conservative tabloid as an adviser in early 2019, ordered the removal of a story about writer Jean Carroll's sexual assault allegations against President Trump, two people familiar with the matter told CNN Business. The Post's story about Carroll's sexual assault allegations was mysteriously scrubbed from the tabloid's website on Friday afternoon.... A wire story by the Associated Press which had been published on the Post's website was also removed.... Stories about Carroll's accusation against Trump remained online at The Wall Street Journal and Fox News, two other news organizations overseen by Murdoch." ...

... Jon Allsop of the Columbia Journalism Review: "Despite the litany of claims against Trump, Carroll is only the second woman to publicly accuse him of rape. Her account is graphic and detailed; was corroborated by two friends who recall Carroll telling them about it at the time; and echoes what Trump told Billy Bush, in the Access Hollywood tape, about grabbing women 'by the pussy.' You'd think, then, that it would have been a much bigger story over the weekend. Many commentators were furious that it was not.... As Media Matters for America's Katie Sullivan pointed out, Carroll's claim did not make the front page of Saturday's New York Times, Wall Street Journal, LA Times, or Chicago Tribune; The Washington Post did put it on A1, but did not lead with it. Also on Saturday, Nieman Lab's Joshua Benton calculated that the story was not among the 164 articles featured on the Times's homepage; it appeared there later on, but the Times tagged it in its books section, and even there it was downplayed. As of [Monday] morning, the story is all but absent from the homepages of major outlets." ...

... It's Just a Woman's Issue. Amanda Marcotte of Salon: "This should be an incredibly serious story, deserving of at least the wall-to-wall coverage and outrage that greeted Bill Clinton for his icky-but-consensual affair with Monica Lewinsky.... Part of the problem, no doubt, is that there's so much horrible stuff happening right now.... But that's not the full explanation, as many of these papers front-paged much less important stories.... Also noteworthy is that the M.O. Trump described to [Billy] Bush -- taking a woman shopping and then 'mov[ing] on her like a bitch' -- is what Carroll says he did to her.... It's become clear that Republican voters do not care if their leaders are sexual predators.... They don't believe [Trump is] innocent. They just don't care if he's guilty. And they think women who speak out about sexual violence are being spoilsports.... It also matters that Trump is a sexual predator because it clearly matters to the Trump opposition. The reason the biggest protest in American history was the Women's March stems directly from women's outrage that the nation elected a shameless sexual predator.... I suspect ... the main reason the media is underplaying this story is that women are still not taken seriously as full citizens and participants in our democracy." ...

... Megan Garber of the Atlantic: "The attrition of attention when it comes to Carroll's story -- 'media fatigue,' CNN's Reliable Sources put it -- is in its own way shocking but not surprising. It is yet more proof, as if any were necessary, of how commonly women's stated experiences, particularly when the statements threaten the fragile order of things, are reflexively dismissed. Once again, the woman offers up her pain -- as testimony; as evidence; as fodder for change -- and, once again, that pain is met with a shrug. Once again, those who have an interest in disbelieving her -- including, in this case, Trump himself &-- mention money and fame as her probable motivations for coming forward. Once again, the woman's story is consumed and abstracted and diffused into the acrid air.... In Carroll's case, a perverse kind of paradox has set in: The sheer number of women who have accused the president of misconduct seems to have helped diminish the impact of her accusation.&"

Bob Brigham of the Raw Story: "Attorney General Bill Barr killed seven different investigations started by special counsel Robert Mueller just ten days after he submitted his report. CNN's Katelyn Polantz had filed a request to unseal documents related to the special counsel's investigation and on Monday the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia agreed. Chief Judge Beryl A Howell ordered the release of multiple documents, [one of which] shows seven cases that were closed on April Fools Day -- only ten days after Mueller submitted his report." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I don't know that Brigham's implication is accurate. The "Case Closed" designations could be housekeeping, or it may be that Mueller meant to abort these investigations & asked DOJ to take care of the formalities. If Barr really shut down on-going, viable investigations, this should be a big story, and it isn't. I'm linking it just in case there's some there there. Polantz, in her report on the court releases, refers only obliquely to the cases still open as of April 1.

Steve Holland of Reuters: "... Donald Trump's senior adviser Kellyanne Conway will not testify before the House of Representatives Oversight Committee this week on her alleged violations of the Hatch Act, the White House told the panel's chairman on Monday.... The Oversight Committee has said it would vote on a potential subpoena if Conway does not testify before lawmakers on Wednesday." ...

... Betsy Woodruff of the Daily Beast: "The Trump-appointed ethics official who called for Kellyanne Conway's firing last week is set to defend that decision in congressional testimony on Wednesday. Henry Kerner, the chief of the White House's Office of Special Counsel, has submitted testimony to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform in which he criticizes Conway for allegedly breaking the law by politicizing her post as White House Counselor.... 'Ms. Conway's conduct reflects not a misunderstanding of the law, but rather a disregard for it,' [Kerner will testify].... Kerner's plan to appear at the hearing, which was confirmed by a senior Democratic committee aide, is a significant move, given that a host of administration officials have recently stiff-armed congressional testimony requests and subpoenas." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Conway & the White House have been defending her political remarks on First Amendment grounds, but inasmuch as she reportedly plans to be a no-show at the Oversight Committee hearing, maybe she & they should be thinking more about her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Jordan Fabian & Saagar Enjeti of the Hill: "President Trump on Monday declined to say he has confidence in Christopher Wray and stressed that he disagrees with the FBI director, who has said he does not believe there was spying on the president's 2016 campaign. 'Well, we'll see how it turns out,' Trump said in an exclusive interview with The Hill when asked about his level of confidence in Wray. 'I mean, I disagree with him on that and I think a lot of people are disagreeing. You may even disagree with him on that.'... The president recently gave [AG William] Barr the authority to declassify information related to the origins of the federal investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 election. Trump has long claimed the probe will show there was improper surveillance on his campaign, an assertion denied by intelligence and law enforcement officials."


Alan Rappeport
of the New York Times: "The Treasury Department's internal watchdog has agreed to look into why designs of a new $20 bill featuring Harriet Tubman will not be unveiled next year. Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, last week asked the Treasury Department's inspector general to open an investigation following Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's announcement at a May Congressional hearing that designs of the new $20 would be unveiled in 2026 instead of 2020 -- the 100th anniversary of women gaining the right to vote. Mr. Mnuchin, at the hearing, would not commit to Tubman being featured on the note, diverging from the plan and timeline set by the Obama administration and leaving the decision to a future Treasury secretary. Treasury's inspector general, in a letter to Mr. Schumer dated June 21, said that the review of the $20 will be included in an already-planned audit of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing's process for designing new notes and security features."

Asawin Suebsaeng of the Daily Beast: "Jason Miller, a former top campaign aide and close adviser to Donald Trump, has left his job as a managing director at Teneo, a prominent consulting firm, days after launching a profanity-laced tirade directed at a top House Democrat.... Miller's departure from the firm comes just a few days after he went on a raging tweetstorm at House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerry Nadler (D-NY), in which he called the New York Democrat, among other things, a' fat fuck.' 'He's a fucking scumbag. Anyone obsessed with attacking innocent Hope Hicks should take a long walk off a short pier,' Miller posted to Twitter late last week.... Miller's anger had been sparked by Nadler's questioning of former Trump aide and confidante Hope Hicks during closed-door testimony several days prior. During that testimony, Nadler had referred to Hicks as 'Ms. Lewandowski.' The congressman later insisted it was a slip of the tongue, but his repeated use of the wrong surname led to the impression that he was referencing an alleged 'affair' between Hicks and one-time Trump campaign chief Corey Lewandowski.... [Teneo] "has close ties to the Clintons." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Not only are Miller's rage-tweets highly unoriginal, roly-poly Miller has a lot of nerve referring to anyone as a "fat fuck."

Presidential Race 2020

Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times: "I had the chance to watch Biden campaign three times over the weekend, when almost the entire Democratic field descended on Columbia.... Seeing Biden on the stump often feels like watching an actor who can't quite remember his lines. Even if you don't support him, it's hard not to feel anxious on his behalf.... His performance was unnerving.... Donald Trump, of course, also speaks in gibberish, but with a bombastic unearned confidence; rather than flailing around for the right figure he makes one up. Biden, by contrast, was just shaky. And while there's great affection for him on the ground, there's little excitement. You can see why his campaign has been limiting his public events and why he's been avoiding the press.... Anyone convinced that Biden is the safe choice should go see him for themselves." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: There are reasons Biden flamed out early in his previous runs for president. (One is that Biden is not a great speaker for he does well in small crowds [as pundits & I have observed]. I think that's because in a conversational situation, we are used to having our friends make misstatements & grasp for words; a politician can't get away with that in a crowd.) We should hope that Biden is once again an also-ran in 2020. Yesterday, I heard or read a pundit note that one reason Barack Obama chose Biden as his running mate in 2008 (that is, 11 years ago) was that he was too old to have presidential ambitions in 2012 or 2016, so he would be a good VP, not a self-serving, aspiring candidate.

New York columnists Zak Cheney-Rice, Benjamin Hart & Ed Kilgore discuss South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg's mishandling of race relations in his city, specifically in regard to a recent white-cop-on-black fatal shooting.

Senate Races 2020

Cristina Cabrera of TPM: "Democratic Maine House Speaker Sara Gideon on Monday launched her campaign to challenge incumbent Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME). Citing her experience with battling former governor Paul LePage (R), Gideon said in her announcement video that 'getting things done for Mainers are what we're elected to do, not falling in line behind the demands of someone else.'... 'It doesn't matter if that person is LePage, Mitch McConnell, or Donald Trump,' said Gideon, pointing at Collins' votes in favor of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and the GOP's massive 2017 tax cuts."

Eleanor Watson & Nicole Sganga of CBS News: "Retired Brig. Gen. Don Bolduc announced Monday that he would run for the U.S. Senate in New Hampshire against Democratic incumbent Jeanne Shaheen, setting up what may be one of the marquee congressional races of 2020. Bolduc, who spent 32 years in the Army, said at his announcement that the current leadership in Washington haven't secured the border, addressed student debt, or ended the opioid crisis. Although Bolduc is running as a Republican, he did not refer to President Trump in his speech. Bolduc told the crowd that he has nothing against Shaheen, who has been in the Senate since 2009, but that 'she has been a part of failed leadership in Washington for too long.' Bolduc also said that he would not 'engage in personal destruction' as a candidate." Mrs. McC: He sounds like a guy who has no idea how the Senate works. So, perfect.


Ari Berman
of Mother Jones: "A federal judge in Maryland found on Monday that the Trump administration's addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 census might have been motivated by a desire to reduce the political clout of Hispanics and said he would reopen the case, if given the opportunity, to rule on late-breaking smoking-gun evidence. With the Supreme Court set to rule on the citizenship question by the end of the week, this sets up another longshot scenario where the question could be invalidated.... Thomas Hofeller, the GOP's longtime gerrymandering mastermind, had pushed for a citizenship question in order to draw new political districts that he said would be' advantageous to Republicans and Non-Hispanic Whites.' Hofeller ghostwrote a key section of a Justice Department letter requesting the question, which was approved by Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, and told the administration to argue that it was needed to better enforce the Voting Rights Act, when Hofeller had already concluded it would hurt Hispanic voters."

Paul Demko of Politico: "The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a challenge from health insurers who argue the federal government owes them hefty Obamacare payments, stoking the possibility the Trump administration could be forced to pay out billions of dollars for a law it's tried to dismantle. The insurers claim they are due money from an Obamacare program helping companies that attracted sick and expensive customers in the early years of the law's insurance marketplaces. The justices' decision to take the case means it will reconsider an earlier appellate court ruling that the federal government isn't on the hook for the payments.... The insurers' case involves the Affordable Care Act's risk corridors program.... Republicans balked at spending taxpayer dollars to cover the program's deficit -- decrying it as a bailout for insurers -- and blocked the federal government from making payments. That contributed to skyrocketing premiums in the ACA's fledgling marketplaces after they launched in 2014, and it also helped push many nonprofit insurers seeded with Obamacare funds into financial collapse."

Richard Wolf of USA Today: "A federal law requiring longer prison sentences for using a gun during a 'crime of violence' is unconstitutionally vague, a deeply divided Supreme Court ruled Monday.... Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch joined the court's four liberals and wrote the decision. Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh delivered a fiery dissent for the court's other conservatives. The Justice Department had warned that if the law was struck down, it 'will inundate courts with collateral-review petitions by some of the most dangerous federal prisoners and will frustrate efforts to prosecute current and future violent criminals.' That argument was reinforced by Kavanaugh's dissent, which labeled the 5-4 ruling 'an extraordinary event in this court.'... 'In our constitutional order, a vague law is no law at all,' [Gorsuch] said in announcing the verdict from the bench."

Rafi Schwartz of Splinter: "As the debate over Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's characterization of American migrant detention facilities as 'concentration camps' enters its second, aneurysm-inducing week, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has entered the fray.... In a press release posted to its website on Monday, the museum wrote that it 'unequivocally rejects efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events, whether historical or contemporary,' and directed readers to a six-month-old essay that cautions against 'careless Holocaust analogies [which] may demonize, demean, and intimidate their targets' and 'distract from the real issues challenging our society, because they shut down productive, thoughtful discourse.'... If, as the museum claims, 'efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events' are to be unequivocally rejected, then what's the point of learning about the Holocaust in the first place? As rabbi Danya Ruttenberg succinctly put it last week in the Washington Post: '"Never Again" means nothing if Holocaust analogies are always off limits'... As Ocasio-Cortez herself explained, concentration camps are not the sole province of Nazis. It's the museum itself (along with plenty of bad-faith Republicans) that made the leap from 'concentration camps' to 'Holocaust analogy' without for a moment recognizing -- or at least admitting -- the term's well-established historical independence from the Nazi's treatment of European Jewry." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: The Smithsonian article (Nov. 2017) on the history of concentration camp (linked last in the excerpt of Schwartz's post) is quite interesting. Some of those historical camps were very much like the camps in which Trump has put migrants & their children.

Damian Carrington of the Guardian: "G20 nations have almost tripled the subsidies they give to coal-fired power plants in recent years, despite the urgent need to cut the carbon emissions driving the climate crisis. The bloc of major economies pledged a decade ago to phase out all fossil fuel subsidies.... China and India give the biggest subsidies to coal, with Japan third, followed by South Africa, South Korea, Indonesia and the US. Global emissions must fall by half in the next decade to avoid significantly worsening drought, floods, extreme heatwave and poverty for hundreds of millions of people. But emissions are still increasing, with coal-fired power the biggest single contributor to the rise in 2018." --s

Damian Carrington: "The world is increasingly at risk of 'climate apartheid', where the rich pay to escape heat and hunger caused by the escalating climate crisis while the rest of the world suffers, a report from a UN human rights expert has said. Philip Alston, UN special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, said the impacts of global heating are likely to undermine not only basic rights to life, water, food, and housing for hundreds of millions of people, but also democracy and the rule of law." --s

Beyond the Beltway

Kentucky. Tom Loftus of the Louisville Courier Journal: "Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd on Monday ruled the [Kentucky Governor] Bevin administration intentionally violated the Kentucky Open Records Act in refusing to release a copy of an economic analysis of the administration's 2017 pension reform plan. In a 19-page final order in the case, Shepherd ordered the economic analysis be released and -- because the violation of the open records law was willful -- directed the state to pay $72,833 in attorneys' fees and costs to the person who requested the record." --s

Sunday
Jun232019

The Commentariat -- June 24, 2019

Michael Shear of the New York Times: "President Trump on Sunday shrugged off the brutal dismembering of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, just days after a United Nations report described how a team of Saudi assassins called Mr. Khashoggi a 'sacrificial animal' before his murder. The U.N. report urged an F.B.I. investigation into the slaying. But in an interview with NBC's 'Meet the Press,' Mr. Trump said the episode had already been thoroughly investigated. He said the Middle East is 'a vicious, hostile place' and noted that Saudi Arabia is an important trading partner with the United States.... Mr. Trump also said he was 'not looking for war [with Iran],' but added that if the United States went to war with Iran, 'it'll be obliteration like you've never seen before.'... Mr. Trump also falsely blamed former President Barack Obama for his policy of separating families at the border, lashed out at his Federal Reserve chairman and said the biggest mistake of his presidency was selecting Jeff Sessions to be his attorney general." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Here's the full, unedited interview via NBC News. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Dan De Luce of NBC News: "Long before Trump was elected, advocates of the nuclear agreement -- including then-President Barack Obama, French President Emmanuel Macron and others -- had argued that abandoning the accord carried grave risks that could lead to an armed conflict. 'So let's not mince words. The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy or some form of war -- maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,' Obama said in a speech in 2015 defending the deal before a congressional vote.... Obama said that without an agreement limiting Iran's nuclear program in return for sanctions relief, any U.S. administration would be left with only one option to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon -- 'another war in the Middle East.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

David Boddiger of Splinter: "A day after Donald Trump announced via Twitter that he was postponing nationwide raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deport thousands of families, senior administration officials are furious, blaming acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan for leaking details of the raids to the press. It was no secret that McAleenan opposed the massive operation, which was supposed to target 10 major U.S. cities on Sunday morning, and he had commented to The Washington Post that such raids could risk separating more children from their parents. He also warned that ICE did not have the resources to carry out such sweeping deportation raids.... On Saturday, former ICE acting director and recently named 'border czar' Tom Homan criticized McAleenan during an appearance on Fox & Friends, claiming to know the source of the leak." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

The Trump Scandals, Ctd.

Jonathan Swan, et al., of Axios: "Nearly 100 internal Trump transition vetting documents leaked to 'Axios on HBO' identify a host of 'red flags' about officials who went on to get some of the most powerful jobs in the U.S. government.... The massive trove, and the story behind it, sheds light on the slap-dash way President Trump filled his cabinet and administration, and foreshadowed future scandals that beset his government.... In the chaotic weeks after Trump's surprise election victory, Trump fired Chris Christie as the head of his transition. The team that took over -- which V.P. Mike Pence helmed -- outsourced the political vetting of would-be top officials to the Republican National Committee.... Traditionally, any would-be top official faces three types of vetting: an FBI background check, a scrub for financial conflicts of interest from the Office of Government Ethics, and a deep dive from the president-elect's political team, which veteran Washington lawyers often handle.... But in many cases -- for example the misguided choice of Andrew Puzder as Labor Secretary -- this RNC 'scrub' of public sources was the only substantial vetting in Trump's possession when he announced his picks." ...

... Jonathan Swan talks to Chris Christie about the Trump transition. Most of what Christie says isn't news, but it's worth hearing it again:

Andrew Desiderio of Politico: "The White House is expected to move to block former top aide Annie Donaldson from answering the House Judiciary Committee]s written questions about her tenure as White House deputy counsel, according to sources familiar with the matter. Donaldson, who was a central witness in special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation, struck a deal with the committee that would allow her to submit written responses instead of showing up for her scheduled public testimony on Monday. Donaldson is pregnant and lives in Alabama, her attorney Sandra Moser said, adding that it's difficult for her to travel to Washington at this time."

Andrew Desiderio: "The House Oversight and Reform Committee will vote to authorize a subpoena for White House counselor Kellyanne Conway on Wednesday if she does not show up for the panel's hearing on her alleged violations of the Hatch Act, according to a memo sent to lawmakers. The U.S. Office of Special Counsel has cited Conway for multiple violations of the Hatch Act, and earlier this month, Special Counsel Henry J. Kerner recommended that President Donald Trump terminate her White House employment. Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), the chairman of the committee, invited both Kerner and Conway to attend Wednesday's hearing."


Serena Marshall, et al., of ABC News: "From sleeping on concrete floors with the lights on 24 hours a day to no access to soap or basic hygiene, migrant children in at least two U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities face conditions one doctor described as comparable to 'torture facilities.' The disturbing, first-hand account of the conditions were observed by lawyers and a board-certified physician in visits last week to border patrol holding facilities in Clint, Texas, and McAllen, a city in the southern part of the state. The descriptions paint a bleak image of horrific conditions for children, the youngest of whom is 2 1/2 months old.... [Dr. Dolly Lucio Sevier] compared it to being 'tantamount to intentionally causing the spread of disease.' In an interview with ABC News, Lucio Sevier said the facility 'felt worse than jail.'" ...

... ** Salt Lake Tribune Editors: "... the places into which we are herding tens of thousands of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers are ... properly called concentration camps. Because that is precisely what they are. When some in the public eye dare to tell that truth, as the media-savvy Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez did the other day, enablers of the administration's cruel policies cry foul.... [The Nazi Holocaust] worked its way up, from nasty political speeches (check) to politicians seeking and gaining power with promises to protect the purity of the nation from foreign invasion (check) to denying basic human rights and decency to people of an unfavored class (check)." Mrs. McC: A powerful piece by a conservative editorial board. Read it all. ...

... Ben Fenwick of the New York Times (June 22): "... more than 200 demonstrators arrived at Fort Sill on Saturday to protest the government's latest plan for the base: to house 1,400 undocumented children who arrived in the United States without a parent or a legal guardian. The protesters called the plan, which was announced this month, a return to one of the nation's great shames.... The Obama administration held several thousand immigrant children at Fort Sill in 2014.... Satsuki Ina, who was born in a Japanese-American internment camp during World War II ... protested then, too.... In the 19th century, the Army held hundreds of Chiricahua Apache warriors who surrendered in the conflicts between Native Americans and the United States; Geronimo was one of them and is buried at the base. During World War II, a distraught Japanese detainee, Kanesaburo Oshima, was fatally shot there as he tried to climb the barb-wire fence, becoming a symbol of a mass exclusion program that the United States has formally apologized for in 1988." ...

... Adam Serwer of The Atlantic: "The [Trump immigration] policy's cruelty is its purpose.... The barbarism of deliberately inflicting suffering on children as coercion, though, has forced the Trump administration and its allies in the conservative press to offer three contradictory defenses. First, there's the denial that the policy exists.... The policy is both real and delightful. The conservative radio host Laura Ingraham called the uproar 'hilarious'.... Others in the administration -- such as [former] Attorney General Jeff Sessions and his former aide, the White House adviser Stephen Miller -- offer a third defense. The policy exists, they say, and it's necessary to uphold the rule of law.... It is not an accident that these three defenses -- the policy does not exist, the children are better off under the policy, and the policy is required by law -- are contradictory. The heart of Trumpism is both cruelty and denial. The administration and its supporters valorize cruelty against outsiders even while denying that such cruelty is taking place."

Helena Evich of Politico: "The Trump administration has refused to publicize dozens of government-funded studies that carry warnings about the effects of climate change, defying a longstanding practice of touting such findings by the Agriculture Department's acclaimed in-house scientists.... All of these studies were peer-reviewed by scientists and cleared through the non-partisan Agricultural Research Service, one of the world's leading sources of scientific information for farmers and consumers. None of the studies were focused on the causes of global warming -- an often politically charged issue. Rather, the research examined the wide-ranging effects of rising carbon dioxide, increasing temperatures and volatile weather."

NOPEStephanie Covery of the Guardian: "One of the biggest knitting websites in the world, which claims to have more than 8 million members, has announced that it will ban users from expressing support for Donald Trump, saying that to do so constitutes 'white supremacy'. On Sunday, administrators for Ravelry, a site for knitters, crocheters, designers and anyone dabbling in the fibre arts, said that they were making any expression of support for Trump and his administration in forum posts, patterns, on their personal profile pages or elsewhere permanently off limits.... The policy drew on a similar statement made last year by roleplaying game site RPG.net, which banned advocacy of Trump from its forums on the grounds that the Trump administration was an 'elected hate group'.... The knitting and crochet community has played a prominent role in the anti-Trump movement in the past, with women wearing homemade pink 'pussy' hats to demonstrations around his election and inauguration becoming a distinctive symbol of protest against his presidency."

Presidential Race 2020

Dan Merica & Donald Judd of CNN: "Presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg faced the raw and unvarnished emotion of his community at a town hall in South Bend, Indiana, on Sunday as the mayor attempted to soothe the pain caused by the recent killing of a black man by a police officer. The shooting of Eric Jack Logan, who police alleged was breaking into cars and wielding a knife when he was shot by officer Ryan O'Neill last Sunday, has roiled the Indiana community, putting the spotlight on years of racial tension between the South Bend Police Department and the city's African American residents.... The free-wheeling town hall -- which included a mix of questions, storytelling and protesting from attendees who spoke to the mayor -- focused on how the police department has interacted with the community for years, long before the shooting.... Under Buttigieg, the South Bend Police Department has slowly -- but consistently -- become less diverse."

Bianca Quilantan of Politico: "Joe Sestak, a retired three-star Navy admiral and former two-term congressman from Pennsylvania, on Sunday became the latest Democratic contender to announce a bid for the presidency. Sestak, in a video released on his campaign website, drew heavily on his naval career, saying he 'wore the cloth of the nation for over 31 years in peace and war, from the Vietnam and Cold War eras, to Afghanistan and Iraq and the emergence of China.'" Mrs. McC: Time for the Ghost of Pat Paulsen to announce his candidacy:

Murtaza Hussain of The Intercept: "For over 17 years, Moath al-Alwi ha been held at Guantánamo Bay without charge. A Yemeni citizen, al-Alwi is one of Guantánamo's 'forever prisoners,' those whom the U.S. government has not charged with a crime but is unwilling to release. On June 10, the Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in his case, the latest setback in al-Alwi's long effort to obtain due process rights. The Supreme Court rejection ... briefly brought al-Alwi's case back to national attention. Little noted, however, were the eyebrow-raising assertions that the government has made in this case about its powers to indefinitely detain not just al-Alwi, but anyone -- including U.S. citizens." --s

Joe Drape of the New York Times: "Another horse died at Santa Anita Park in Southern California on Saturday -- the 30th since Dec. 26 and the fourth this month -- prompting the owners of what has become one of the deadliest racetracks in America to bar Jerry Hollendorfer, the horse's Hall of Fame trainer. American Currency died after a training session Saturday. The horse was the fourth trained by Hollendorfer to die at Santa Anita Park since the meeting opened on Dec. 26. The spike in fatalities at the landmark racetrack has put a bull's-eye on the very existence of one of America's oldest sports. The deaths have prompted an investigation by the Los Angeles County district attorney's office and earned public rebukes from Gov. Gavin Newsom of California and Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California.... The Stronach Group, which owns Santa Anita and six other American racetracks, has blamed corrupt trainers and owners for the deaths...." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I suppose when we have a POTUS* who "shrugs off" the assassination of a political journalist, the suspicious deaths of dozens of racehorses may seem less significant. But just because we have a president* who sees murder as an excusable cultural phenomenon and the criminal abuse of children & asylum-seekers as an acceptable "deterrent" to immigration doesn't mean the rest of us should become desensitized.

Way Beyond the Beltway

Carlotta Gall of the New York Times: "President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey was confronting recriminations within his governing party and the wider circle of his supporters on Monday as the scale of the defeat of his candidate in the Istanbul mayoral race became clear. The opposition candidate, Ekrem Imamoglu, emerged as the landslide winner of the mayoral election redo against Mr. Erdogan's candidate, Binali Yildirim, according to preliminary results announced on Monday by Sadi Guven, the head of the High Election Council, confirming a significant defeat for the governing party."

Sunday
Jun232019

The Commentariat -- June 23, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Michael Shear of the New York Times: "President Trump on Sunday shrugged off the brutal dismembering of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, just days after a United Nations report described how a team of Saudi assassins called Mr. Khashoggi a 'sacrificial animal' before his murder. The U.N. report urged an F.B.I. investigation into the slaying. But in an interview with NBC's 'Meet the Press,' Mr. Trump said the episode had already been thoroughly investigated. He said the Middle East is 'a vicious, hostile place' and noted that Saudi Arabia is an important trading partner with the United States.... Mr. Trump also said he was 'not looking for war [with Iran],' but added that if the United States went to war with Iran, 'it'll be obliteration like you've never seen before.'... Mr. Trump also falsely blamed former President Barack Obama for his policy of separating families at the border, lashed out at his Federal Reserve chairman and said the biggest mistake of his presidency was selecting Jeff Sessions to be his attorney general." ...

... Here's the full interview via NBC News. ...

... Dan De Luce of NBC News: "Long before Trump was elected, advocates of the nuclear agreement -- including then-President Barack Obama, French President Emmanuel Macron and others -- had argued that abandoning the accord carried grave risks that could lead to an armed conflict. 'So let's not mince words. The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy or some form of war -- maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,' Obama said in a speech in 2015 defending the deal before a congressional vote.... Obama said that without an agreement limiting Iran's nuclear program in return for sanctions relief, any U.S. administration would be left with only one option to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon -- 'another war in the Middle East.'"

David Boddiger of Splinter: “A day after Donald Trump announced via Twitter that he was postponing nationwide raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deport thousands of families, senior administration officials are furious, blaming acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan for leaking details of the raids to the press. It was no secret that McAleenan opposed the massive operation, which was supposed to target 10 major U.S. cities on Sunday morning, and he had commented to The Washington Post that such raids could risk separating more children from their parents. He also warned that ICE did not have the resources to carry out such sweeping deportation raids.... On Saturday, former ICE acting director and recently named 'border czar' Tom Homan criticized McAleenan during an appearance on Fox & Friends, claiming to know the source of the leak."

Joe Drape of the New York Times: "Another horse died at Santa Anita Park in Southern California on Saturday -- the 30th since Dec. 26 and the fourth this month -- prompting the owners of what has become one of the deadliest racetracks in America to bar Jerry Hollendorfer, the horse's Hall of Fame trainer. American Currency died after a training session Saturday. The horse was the fourth trained by Hollendorfer to die at Santa Anita Park since the meeting opened on Dec. 26. The spike in fatalities at the landmark racetrack has put a bull's-eye on the very existence of one of America's oldest sports. The deaths have prompted an investigation by the Los Angeles County district attorney's office and earned public rebukes from Gov. Gavin Newsom of California and Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California.... The Stronach Group, which owns Santa Anita and six other American racetracks, has blamed corrupt trainers and owners for the deaths...." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I suppose when we have a POTUS* who "shrugs off" the assassination of a political journalist, the suspicious deaths of dozens of racehorses may seem less significant. But just because we have a president* who sees murder as an excusable cultural phenomenon and the abuse of children & asylum-seekers as an acceptable "deterrent" to immigration doesn't mean the rest of us should become desensitized.

~~~~~~~~~~

The Latest from the Sadist-in-Chief. Michael Shear & Zolan Kanno-Youngs of the New York Times: "President Trump on Saturday delayed plans for nationwide raids to deport undocumented families, but he threatened to unleash Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in two weeks if Democrats do not submit to changes in asylum law they have long opposed. The announcement, made on Twitter as Mr. Trump was meeting with aides at Camp David, was the president's latest attempt to pressure his adversaries into making immigration changes. Last month, he threatened to levy tariffs on Mexico unless it did more to stop the flow of migrants into the United States.... The specter of high-profile immigration raids had risked imperiling ... passage [of a $4.5 billion humanitarian border aid bill].... Some Democrats, including members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, had threatened to withhold their support for the funding package.... Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Mr. Trump on Friday evening to persuade him to cancel the raids.... The president did that a few hours later, announcing that 'at the request of Democrats, I have delayed the Illegal Immigration Removal Process (Deportation) for two weeks.'... He said he had delayed the raids 'to see if the Democrats and Republicans can get together and work out a solution to the Asylum and Loophole problems at the Southern Border. If not, Deportations start!' he tweeted." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: No one can tell me that vicious SOB doesn't get off on throwing his weight around & bullying people. The more helpless his victims, the better. He's a sociopath with the soul of a common criminal. He'll want some fava beans & a nice chianti. ...

... David Boddiger of Splinter: "Trump's constant strategy of dictating irrational or inhumane threats only to call them off at the last minute and claim victory is becoming increasingly common as he eyes reelection in 2020 amid falling poll numbers. In addition to temporarily calling off the raids, which were widely condemned by rights groups, Democrats, and pretty much anyone with a sense of decency, Trump also has threatened to close the U.S.-Mexico border, impose tariffs on all goods imported from Mexico, and attack Iran. Stable genius, indeed.... The nationwide ICE raid, which would have targeted some 2,000 families who had received deportation orders in 10 U.S. cities ... was so unpopular that not even his acting secretary of Homeland Security appeared to be on board. According to The Washington Post's Nick Miroff, Acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan had urged ICE, which is part of the agency he runs, to conduct a 'more targeted operation' that would focus on 150 families, instead of thousands.... Trump reportedly bypassed McAleenan and dealt directly with Acting ICE Director Mark Morgan and other ICE officials regarding the details of the raid, which Trump first announced on Twitter last Monday."

David Sanger of the New York Times: "President Trump's last-minute decision to pull back from a retaliatory strike on Iran underscored the absence of appealing options available to him as Tehran races toward ... building up and further enriching its stockpile of nuclear fuel..., [a] program [that] stemmed in substantial part from the president's decision last year to pull out of the 2015 international accord, while insisting that Tehran abide by the strict limits that agreement imposed on its nuclear activities.... The president ... [said] that he planned to impose 'major' additional sanctions [on Iran] on Monday. At the same time, administration officials are beginning to experiment with more aggressive options, including cyberattacks. On Thursday, the United States Cyber Command conducted one such operation against an Iranian intelligence group that is believed to have helped plan the recent attacks against oil tankers...." ...

... Tami Abdollah of the AP: "U.S. military cyber forces launched a strike against Iranian military computer systems on Thursday..., U.S. officials said Saturday. Two officials told The Associated Press that the strikes were conducted with approval from Trump. A third official confirmed the broad outlines of the strike.... The cyberattacks -- a contingency plan developed over weeks amid escalating tensions — disabled Iranian computer systems that controlled its rocket and missile launchers, the officials said. Two of the officials said the attacks, which specifically targeted Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps computer system, were provided as options after Iranian forces blew up two oil tankers earlier this month. The IRGC, which was designated a foreign terrorist group by the Trump administration earlier this year, is a branch of the Iranian military.... In recent weeks, hackers believed to be working for the Iranian government have targeted U.S. government agencies, as well as sectors of the economy, including finance, oil and gas...." ...

... Trump Eyes Ayatollah as Potential BFF. Julian Borger of the Guardian: "Donald Trump has said that if Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon, it will be prosperous and have the US president as 'a best friend' -- but also warned that the Islamic Republic would be 'obliterated' in any war between the two countries. Trump's remarks on Saturday morning ... are significant in that they differ starkly from the official line of his own administration: that Iran must fulfil a list of 12 US demands before sanctions can be lifted.... Iran has insisted it has no intention of acquiring nuclear weapons and the International Atomic Energy Agency has said there is no recent evidence of development or experimentation with weaponisation." ...

... Juan Cole: "Trump can't get the conservative script right to save his life.... Trump is now citing Iran's non-existent bomb-making as the reason for his breach of the [2015 Iran nuclear] treaty and not mentioning any of the things the hawks mind.... Under [Obama's Iran deal], there is no way Iran can make a bomb without everybody knowing it is trying.... So if what Trump wanted was no Iranian nuke, he had that when he was sworn into office in 2017.... He has stopped Iran from selling its oil, a form of blockade that probably amounts to an act of war. He is also stopping European concerns from investing in Iran. It is frustrating that Trump is dancing on the brink of a war for a purpose that had already been attained. This is why it is bad to elect people to high office who have mental health problems." --s

Patrick Caldwell of Mother Jones: "A day after New York magazine published a bombshell story by journalist E. Jean Carroll that detailed when ... Donald Trump raped her in the mid-1990s, the husband of one of Trump's most prominent aides published an op-ed saying that his fellow Republicans should take the rape accusation seriously. In a Washington Post op-ed, George Conway, the husband of Kellyanne Conway, compared Carroll's account to the allegations Juanita Broaddrick made that former President Bill Clinton had raped her. Trump invited Broaddrick as his guest to the second presidential debate of the 2016 campaign, and Trump, at the time struggling to respond to the release of the Access Hollywood tape, began referring to Broaddrick on the campaign trail to attack his opponent, Hillary Clinton.... 'Trump called Broaddrick "courageous," and if Broaddrick was courageous, then certainly Carroll is as well,' [Conway] writes [in his op-ed]. 'For Carroll's story is at least as compelling as Broaddrick's -- if not more so.'... Back in the 2016 campaign, Kellyanne Conway went on TV to defend Trump's decision to revive the Broaddrick's allegations as part of the presidential campaign." ...

... Katie Sullivan of Media Matters: "A new report of sexual assault committed by ... Donald Trump has come to light, but several major newspapers didn't find the story important enough to place on their front pages.... [E. Jean Carroll's account] is horrific, detailed, and extremely similar to the accounts of numerous other women. It also echoes comments Trump has made in the past, saying in 2005, 'I'm automatically attracted to beautiful -- I just start kissing them. It's like a magnet. Just kiss. I don't even wait. When you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. Grab 'em by the pussy. You can do anything.'"

Pamela Brown & Manu Raju of CNN: "The House Judiciary Committee appears to have reached a deal with former White House aide Annie Donaldson that would allow her to not appear before the committee by a Monday deadline and answer written questions instead, according to sources familiar with the matter.... The committee issued a subpoena in May for her testimony by Monday. But Donaldson's attorney and Democrats have discussed allowing her to answer written questions instead, in part because she is pregnant and lives in Alabama. Under the terms outlined, Donaldson would be required to answer questions within a week and the committee would reserve the right to bring her in for testimony after November 1, according to one of the sources.... But how much information Donaldson will ultimately be able to provide the committee is another question. The White House has claimed that current and former White House officials have absolute immunity...."

David Lightman & Ben Wielder of McClatchy DC: "Twenty-five of the 30 states ... Donald Trump won in 2016 have received bigger shares of funding from a federal transportation program that has shifted to favoring rural projects over urban, according to a McClatchy analysis of Department of Transportation data.... The Trump administration insists that the generous tilt towards rural projects was done to compensate for an Obama-era preference for urban grants. Critics, however, say the Trump program has too often focused on its own version of the Three Rs: Rural, Republicans and Roads.... Trump&'s political strength rests in small town and rural communities. Being able to cite road improvements is a valuable political weapon, experts said." --s

Emily Holden of the Guardian: "Senate Democrats are charging that the Trump administration has gone 'dangerously off the rails', in failing to implement landmark legislation meant to protect people from toxic chemicals. In a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency, five senators say Trump officials are ignoring new authorities made available to them, favoring the chemical industry over the health of Americans. The senators are presidential candidate Cory Booker, Tom Udall, Ed Markey, Jeff Merkley and Sheldon Whitehouse.... A recent report from the Environmental Defense Fund finds that EPA has approved more than 80% of the chemicals it reviewed over the past year, clearing them for unrestricted use." --s

The Part of the U.S. Where There Is No Bill of Rights but Plenty of Law Enforcement Officers. Journalist Seth Harp, a U.S. citizen, gets stopped at the Tex-Mex border & subjected to a Customs & Border Protection "secondary screening" where he finds out the hard way he had no Fourth Amendment rights (against unreasonable search & seizure). Also too, no Sixth Amendment rights (to an attorney), Harp reports in the Intercept. First Amendment freedom of speech & of the press? Not so much.

Election 2020

David Corn of Mother Jones: "There's a widespread perception that federal laws ban foreign spending in political races, and that's true, but only to an extent. In addition to the unknown quantities of illegal money pouring into US elections through shell companies and other illicit pathways, gaping loopholes in these laws could allow substantial foreign spending on the 2020 presidential election, fully within the boundaries of the law. The judicial branch has increasingly pried the door open to more foreign spending -- and allowed it to stay secret.... Here are several ways that foreign individuals, companies, and states could influence the 2020 election legally[.]" --s

David Siders & Nolan McCaskill of Politico: "For nearly 90 minutes on a sweat-soaked stage in South Carolina on Friday night, it was almost as if Joe Biden had put the uproar surrounding his comments about segregationists behind him. Speaking at a gathering of 21 presidential candidates here, the former vice president did not mention the controversy from the platform. Nor did his rivals confront him about it directly at Rep. Jim Clyburn's annual fish fry event, a reflection of their reticence to criticize Biden in front of a crowd that adored him.... The meeting of 21 candidates here came at a turning point in the presidential primary. After crisscrossing the country for months on largely divergent paths, the candidates will collide next week for the first primary debates of the campaign. The fish fry -- a mainstay on the presidential campaign circuit where candidates wearing blue Clyburn T-shirts posed for photographs with each other and with members of the crowd -- served as a dress rehearsal for those debates."

Marianne Williamson, "Dangerous Wacko." Jay Michaelson of the Daily Beast: "To most observers, Marianne Williamson's quirky presidential candidacy is a footnote. She's running at around 1 percent in the polls. Few Americans know who she is, even though she's written a few best-sellers and has managed to qualify for the 20-person Democratic debate squad next week. But that may change thanks to Williamson's anti-vaxxer statement last week that policies requiring children to get life-saving vaccines is 'Orwellian' and 'draconian' and that the issue is 'no different than the abortion debate.' Now she's headline news -- at least in the context of the noxious, moronic, false, and dangerous anti-vaxxer conspiracy theory, which now has a Democratic presidential candidate backing it. (Donald Trump, of course, has backed it for years.)... She's been anti-science, anti-medicine, and anti-rationality for decades." Although Williamson appeared to back off her anti-vaxxer remarks in a Friday tweet, a close reading of her tweet says she did not.


** Ian Millhiser in the New Republic: "Nearly four decades ago, Anne Gorsuch Burford resigned as the head of the Environmental Protection Agency. Though at the helm for less than two years, she left behind a notorious anti-environment legacy, slashing the agency's budget by 22 percent and claiming to have cut the length of clean water regulations by more than 90 percent. Burford died in 2004, but her approach to the planet lives on in her offspring: Neil Gorsuch, Trump's first appointment to the Supreme Court. And on Thursday, Gorsuch proved that he truly is his mother's son handing down an opinion [in dissent] in which he threatens to give Republicans on the Supreme Court veto power over countless federal regulations -- and potentially render the EPA an impotent husk." Brett Kavanaugh did not participate in the decision because he was not on the Court when it heard arguments. "... when the next case arises, Kavanaugh will be there, and that means that there will almost certainly be five votes to write Gorsuch's views into the law. Gorsuch's opinion leaves little doubt that this new Supreme Court regime will seek to dismantle laws that permit agencies to regulate."

Jeff Toobin of the New Yorker: "A Mississippi prosecutor went on a racist crusade to have a black man executed. Clarence Thomas thinks that was just fine.... As [Justice Brett] Kavanaugh recounted in his opinion, [prosecutor Doug] Evans's actions were almost cartoonishly racist.... [Thomas] filed a dissenting opinion that was genuinely outraged — not by the prosecutor but by his fellow-Justices, who dared to grant relief to [the plaintiff Curtis Flowers, who has spent more than two decades in solitary confinement at Mississippi's notorious Parchman prison.... Thomas all but called for the overturning of the Court's landmark decision in Batson v. Kentucky, from 1986, which prohibits prosecutors from using their peremptory challenges in racially discriminatory ways." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Either Thomas is a masochist or he wakes up every morning & sees a KKK wizard in the mirror.

Erin McCormick, et al. of the Guardian: "A Guardian investigation reveals that cities around the country are no longer recycling many types of plastic dropped into recycling bins. Instead, they are being landfilled, burned or stockpiled. From Los Angeles to Florida to the Arizona desert, officials say, vast quantities of plastic are now no better than garbage.... Once the largest buyer of US plastic waste, [China] shut its doors to all but highest-quality plastics in 2017.... Analysis of US export records shows that the equivalent of 19,000 shipping containers of plastic recycling per month, once exported abroad, is now stranded at home. This is enough plastic to fill 250 Olympic swimming pools each month." --s

Beyond the Beltway

Florida. Michael Sasso of Bloomberg News: "... it's increasingly looking like Florida's 1.4 million disenfranchised ex-convicts won’t be the potent voting bloc they might've been. Seven months ago, almost two-thirds of [Florida] voters approved Amendment 4, which restores registration rights to many felons.... Many saw Floridians' vote as bringing the state into the U.S. mainstream.... However, Governor Ron DeSantis [R] is expected to sign a bill within days that critics say will blunt much of Amendment 4's impact. The bill passed by the Republican-led Legislature would require felons to pay off restitution, court fees and fines before registering.... So far, the number of former inmates who have visited a local supervisor of elections office to register has been a modest 2,000, according to one estimate."

Oregon. Anti-Earth Militia Shuts Down State Capitol. Sarah Zimmerman & Gillian Flaccus of the AP: "The Oregon Capitol [was] closed Saturday due to a 'possible militia threat' from right-wing protesters as a walkout by Republican lawmakers over landmark climate change legislation drags on. Republican state senators fled the Legislature -- and some, the state -- earlier this week to deny the majority Democrats enough votes to take up the climate bill.... Gov. Kate Brown then dispatched the state police to round up the rogue lawmakers, but none appeared in the Capitol on Friday and the stalemate seemed destined to enter its third day with a week left in the legislative session. Right-wing groups posted their support for the GOP lawmakers Friday on social media -- in one instance offering to provide escorts to them should the state police come for them. A group of local Republicans were set to protest inside the Capitol on Saturday when lawmakers were present, and anti-government groups threatened to join, prompting the statehouse shutdown. One of the groups, the Oregon Three Percenters, joined an armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in 2016."

Way Beyond

Carole Cadwalladr of the Guardian: Documentary filmmaker Alison Klayman caught Steve Bannon on tape working on copy for Boris Johnson, top contender for prime minister & Telegraph columnist. Release of Klayman's film "The Brink" "is terrible timing for Johnson.... This link to Bannon, like so many things, is something [Johnson] has denied. It was nothing more than 'a lefty delusion', he said last summer.... But what's new and potentially toxic for Johnson is what the apparent relationship with Bannon says about him.... What's no longer in doubt is that Bannonism has entered mainstream British politics. Wherever that may lead." --s