Showing posts with label Kellyanne Conway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kellyanne Conway. Show all posts

We Resist: Day 879

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Today in Rampaging Authoritarianism and Primarily Speaking and Some Good News from SCOTUS.

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

Bozorgmehr Sharafedin at Reuters: Iran Says It Dismantled a U.S. Cyber Espionage Network. (Emphasis on "says.") "Iran said on Monday it had exposed a large cyber espionage network it alleged was run by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and that several U.S. spies had been arrested in different countries as the result of this action. ...The secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, said on Monday: 'One of the most complicated CIA cyber espionage networks that had an important role in the CIA's operations in different countries was exposed by the Iranian intelligence agencies a while ago and was dismantled.' ...He did not specify how many CIA agents were arrested and in what countries."

Nasser Karimi and Jon Gambrell at the AP: Iran Says It Will Break Uranium Stockpile Limit in 10 Days. "Iran will break the uranium stockpile limit set by Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers in the next 10 days, the spokesman for the country's atomic agency said Monday while also warning that Iran could enrich uranium up to 20% — just a step away from weapons-grade levels. The announcement by Behrouz Kamalvandi, timed for a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, puts more pressure on Europe to come up with new terms for Iran's 2015 nuclear deal. The deal has steadily unraveled since the Trump administration pulled America out of the accord last year."

Aaron David Miller at USA Today: Why Are We Headed for a Blowup with Iran? It Began When Trump Scrapped the Nuclear Deal.
The Iranian regime is authoritarian, ideological, and repressive, a serial human rights abuser and regional troublemaker. But we now find ourselves in a dangerous situation largely as a result of a great unraveling begun by the Trump administration's unilateral decision last year to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement.

The accord — known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — was flawed, to be sure, and didn't address Iran's aggressive regional behavior or its ballistic missile programs. Even so, it was still a highly functional arms control agreement that imposed significant constraints on Iran's nuclear program for at least for a decade or more.

Campaigning hard against the agreement, candidate Trump vowed to renegotiate or leave what he deemed the worst agreement ever negotiated. Then as president, he pulled out of the agreement and launched his "maximum pressure" campaign. The administration reimposed sanctions on banking and petrochemicals and, in the past several months, has made a major effort to reduce Iran's lifeblood — its oil exports — to zero. As intended, all of this has wreaked havoc on the Iranian economy.

Not surprisingly, the regime, which the Iranian foreign minister quipped had a Ph.D. in sanctions busting, signaled through mine attacks on six oil tankers in the past month that it had options, too. Within hours of Thursday's attacks, oil prices spiked.

No matter how egregious the regime's behavior in other areas, pulling out of the JCPOA without a Plan B other than "maximum pressure" has more than any other factor brought us where we are today.
Well, that and the fact that Donald Trump and his advisors actively want a war with Iran.

As, it appears, does Vladimir Putin. Olga Lautman notes on Twitter: "While tensions are heating up with Iran Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak is in Iran holding talks with Iran's oil minister."

I strongly suspect the Kremlin is trying to orchestrate a U.S.-Iran war. A war that it won't even have to fight:


* * *

[Content Note: Racism; nativism. Covers entire section.]

Oliver Laughland at the Guardian: How Trump's Census Question Could Transform America's Electoral Map. "For the first time, the census could include a question on respondents' citizenship that, according to the bureau's own research, will substantially reduce the number of people willing to participate. A study published last week estimated that the addition of the question could mean up to 4 million people — mostly people of color from immigrant minority communities — could go uncounted. If such an undercount occurs the effects will be profound. It could allow for electorate boundaries throughout America to be redrawn, almost certainly favouring the Republican party. It could result in billions of dollars in federal funds being withheld from some of the most vulnerable communities in America."

Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: Census Battle over Citizenship Question Leaves Immigration Activists with Their Hands Tied.
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on the constitutionality of the the citizenship question by the end of the month, but not before the Census Bureau launched a test last Thursday to examine how its inclusion will impact responses. Approximately 480,000 housing units around the country will receive a questionnaire with households randomly assigned to one of two versions of the questionnaire: one with the citizenship question included, the other without. These results are expected to be completed by October.

So where does that leave the groups that advocate on behalf of immigrants and want to ensure their community members are counted? For now at least, their hands are tied.

Many people are not aware of the census in the first place, and a tremendous amount of resources is spent on outreach and keeping communities informed. With the citizenship question in limbo until at least the end of June, that reduces the amount of time groups can provide outreach.

"We are waiting to see what happens and then we'll decide accordingly," Zahra Billoo, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR) San Francisco Bay office told ThinkProgress. "I tell my staff we are planning to encourage participation in the census the same way we did in 2010. Because it's really important that all of these communities be counted. This matters now and well beyond this president's time in office."

But, Billoo emphasizes, that's not to say she isn't extremely hesitant.

"We recognize, of course, that we could not discourage participation in the census," she added. "The option isn't discourage versus encourage. It is neutral or silent versus encourage. Because even though I do want my community to be counted, it would also weigh heavily on me if I weren't confident in the safety, security, and secrecy of the census data."
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux at FiveThirtyEight: The Citizenship Question Could Cost California and Texas a Seat in Congress. "The results of the count determine everything from where grocery stores are placed to how congressional representatives are distributed. There are few things we care more about around here than political apportionment (although, if we're being honest, we care an awful lot about groceries, too). So we went in search of researchers who had estimated the potential effect of the citizenship question. We found several, none of whom agreed on just how big an impact this would have. But they were all on the same page about one thing — if the Supreme Court rules that the new question can be included, it could alter our political future."

* * *

Kate Riga at TPM: On Heels of Conway Rec, Dems Call for Probe into Kushner for Hatch Violations. Just days after the Office of Special Counsel recommended that White House counselor Kellyanne Conway be fired for violating the Hatch Act, Reps. Ted Lieu (D-CA) and Don Breyer (D-VA) are calling for Jared Kushner to be investigated as well. 'As you know, under the Hatch Act, federal employees are prohibited from fundraising for political candidates,' they wrote to the Office of Special Counsel. 'Alarmingly, recent media reports indicate that Mr. Kushner is nonetheless taking a direct role in raising funds for the re-election campaign of [Donald] Trump.'"

This is the right thing to do, because ethics and rules still matter. But nothing will come of it. Kellyanne Conway and Jared Kushner will not be fired. Members of the Trump administration won't stop violating the Hatch Act. The only result will be that that the Trump administration is further empowered by having visibly broken the law and gotten away with it (again). Which underlines the urgency of impeaching him now.

Rachael Bade at the Washington Post: Push to Impeach Trump Stalls Amid Democrats' Deference to — and Fear of — Pelosi. "As pressure has mounted in recent weeks on House Democrats to move more aggressively against Trump, Pelosi has demonstrated the firm grip she wields over her caucus — quashing, at least for now, the push for impeachment. It is a command that colleagues say is drawn from a deep well of respect for the political wisdom of the most powerful woman in American politics — and fear that challenging her comes with the risk of grave cost to one's career."

Care more about the entire country than your careers, Democrats. For fuck's sake.

If we wanted opportunistic careerists who didn't give a flying fuck about the nation's future, we could just vote for Republicans. Get a goddamned grip.

* * *

[CN: Misogyny; racism] Isabella Dally-Steele at Ms.: This Week in Trump's War on Women. "On Tuesday, Politico revealed that claims of racism and sexism in the Treasury Department, which came to a head after Secretary Steve Mnuchin's decision to delay the historic rebranding of the $20 bill by changing out Andrew Jackson's image for Harriet Tubman's until at least 2026, were spot on. Nancy Cook revealed that the department's lack of diversity is much more than skin deep — with only three women and one person of color in Department's 20-person senior staff and an overwhelmingly white, male boys club culture permeating the workplace. 'For women and people of color,' said one of Cook's sources, a former Treasury official, 'there is just a general feeling when you walk in and there are all white men that it is not a comfortable environment.'"

[CN: Sexual assault; war on agency] Staff at AP: Ex-Pastor in Texas Accused of Sexually Abusing Teen Relative. "A former Southern Baptist pastor who supported legislation in Texas that would have criminalized abortions has been arrested on charges of child sex abuse, accused of repeatedly molesting a teenage relative over the course of two years." Men who object to women's right of consent over our own bodies when it comes to healthcare frequently don't care about our right of consent in any circumstance.

[CN: Misogyny] Sam Stein at the Daily Beast: Exclusive Poll Reveals Dems' Sexism Problem in 2020.
Sexism is weighing down the women running for the Democratic presidential nomination, a new public opinion survey conducted by Ipsos for The Daily Beast reveals.

A full 20 percent of Democratic and independent men who responded to the survey said they agreed with the sentiment that women are "less effective in politics than men." And while 74 percent of respondents claimed they were personally comfortable with a female president, only 33 percent believed their neighbors would be comfortable with a woman in the Oval Office.

That latter number, explained Mallory Newall, research director at Ipsos, was a strong tell about how gender dynamics were souring voters on certain candidates. Asking respondents how they believe their neighbors feel about an issue is "a classic method to get around people being reluctant to admit to less popular views."
Jesus fucking Jones, dudes. Get your shit together.

* * *

Jaclyn Jeffrey-Wilensky at NBC News: Without Swift Action on Climate Change, Heat Waves Could Kill Thousands in U.S. Cities. "If global warming sometimes seems like a distant or abstract threat, new research casts the phenomenon in stark, life-or-death terms. It predicts that in the absence of significant progress in efforts to curb emissions of temperature-raising greenhouse gases, extreme heat waves could claim thousands of lives in major U.S. cities. If the global average temperature rises 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels — which some scientists say is likely if nations honor only their current commitments for curbing emissions — a major heat wave could kill almost 6,000 people in New York City. Similar events could kill more than 2,500 in Los Angeles and more than 2,300 in Miami."

Brian Kahn at Earther: Half of Greenland's Surface Started Melting This Week, Which Is Not Normal. "Greenland has been scorching (by Greenland standards) for the past few days, with temperatures rising 10-20 degrees Celsius (18-36 degrees Fahrenheit) above normal across the island. Ruth Mottram, a climate scientist with the Danish Meteorological Institute, told Earther that the weather station at the top of the ice sheet saw temperatures reach above freezing on Wednesday and they were headed that way again on Thursday. That puts them just a degree or so away from setting the all-time heat record for June, which is currently held by June 2012."

Erin McCormick, Bennett Murray, Carmela Fonbuena, Leonie Kijewski, Gökçe Saraçoğlu, Jamie Fullerton, Alastair Gee, and Charlotte Simmonds at the Guardian: Where Does Your Plastic Go? Global Investigation Reveals America's Dirty Secret.
What happens to your plastic after you drop it in a recycling bin?

According to promotional materials from America's plastics industry, it is whisked off to a factory where it is seamlessly transformed into something new.

This is not the experience of Nguyễn Thị Hồng Thắm, a 60-year-old Vietnamese mother of seven, living amid piles of grimy American plastic on the outskirts of Hanoi. Outside her home, the sun beats down on a Cheetos bag; aisle markers from a Walmart store; and a plastic bag from ShopRite, a chain of supermarkets in New Jersey, bearing a message urging people to recycle it.

Tham is paid the equivalent of $6.50 a day to strip off the non-recyclable elements and sort what remains: translucent plastic in one pile, opaque in another.

A Guardian investigation has found that hundreds of thousands of tons of U.S. plastic are being shipped every year to poorly regulated developing countries around the globe for the dirty, labor-intensive process of recycling. The consequences for public health and the environment are grim.
This is a must-read report.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 629

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Trump Lies About Women; His Crowds Chant for Revenge and Hurricane Michael to Make Landfall in Florida Today and Trump Trauma.

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

[Content Note: Death; descriptions of violence] Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Jamal Khashoggi Wanted to Launch a Pro-Democracy Group; Then the Saudis Disappeared Him. "Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi Arabian journalist and legal United States resident who wrote for The Washington Post opinion section, entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Sept. 28. Then he disappeared. Turkish government sources have told numerous outlets, including the New York Times, that they believe Khashoggi was killed in the consulate, dismembered, and smuggled out piece by piece. The Saudi government, meanwhile, has maintained that Khashoggi left unharmed. Khashoggi frequently criticized the Saudi government in his newspaper columns. And before his disappearance, he planned to turn his arguments into action. Sources familiar with his plans told The Daily Beast that he was working to launch a non-governmental organization whose stated purpose was to boost democracy and human rights in the Arab world."


I'd really like to know if U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley was aware, when she resigned yesterday, that U.S. intelligence reportedly knew about the plan to capture Khashoggi before it happened.

* * *

Zoe Tillman at BuzzFeed: A Man Charged in Connection with Mueller's Russian Troll Farm Case Was Sentenced to Six Months in Prison. "A California man who pleaded guilty to selling fraudulent bank account numbers — information that Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office says was used to finance Russian election interference efforts — was sentenced on Wednesday to six months of prison followed by six months of home detention. Richard Pinedo, 28, wasn't accused of knowingly helping Russian companies and individuals accused of orchestrating campaigns to influence the 2016 presidential election. But his fraud scheme nevertheless landed him in the middle of the special counsel investigation."

I have repeatedly expressed my grave concerns for nearly a year now that the objective of Mueller's investigation is not to deliver meaningful accountability to a treasonous president and his accomplices, but instead to create the illusion that our institutions still work, long enough to give Republicans time to consolidate power behind this presidency, ensuring that the findings will never matter, anyway.

Fourteen days for Papadopoulos and a sweet deal for Manafort. Now six months for this guy. I don't know, y'all.

There is no urgency in response to this crisis. Too much time has passed for defenses of his allegedly methodical approach to matter.

We're two years into Donald Trump's presidency and less than a month out from midterms, and the Republican Party has consolidated power behind Trump, including a staunchly conservative majority on the Supreme Court.

If Mueller's investigation wasn't explicitly designed to keep us complacent and trusting that our democratic institutions will save us even as the GOP obliterates them, it's effectively working that way all the same.

Suffice it to say, I don't find it reassuring that we're being asked to put our faith in an investigation that hasn't even come close to curtailing the abuses of this administration — and in an election that is indubitably compromised by gerrymandering and voter suppression, and will probably be compromised by election interference both foreign and domestic.

Speaking of which:


Like I keep saying: I am going to vote. I hope it still matters.

* * *

Kate Riga at TPM: FBI Director Wray Confirms That White House Limited Kavanaugh Probe. "During a Senate Homeland Security Committee hearing Wednesday, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) asked FBI Director Christopher Wray if the investigation into sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh was curtailed by the White House. Wray confirmed that it was. 'I think I would say that our investigation here, our supplemental update to the previous background investigation, was limited in scope and that that is consistent with the standard process for such investigations going back quite a long ways,' he said." We all knew it, but there's confirmation under oath, at least. For all it matters.

Staff and agencies at the Guardian: Trump Attacks Democrats as 'Radical Socialists' and Scorns Universal Healthcare Plan. "Donald Trump put his name to an opinion article in USA Today published on Wednesday, in a rallying cry to voters ahead of the midterm elections and warning that a big Democratic win would bring America closer to socialism and 'suffering, misery, and decay.' ...Trump's article warned: 'If Democrats win control of Congress this November, we will come dangerously closer to socialism in America. Government-run healthcare is just the beginning. Democrats are also pushing massive government control of education, private-sector businesses, and other major sectors of the US economy.' He urged that this is a fight the Republicans “must win” and issued further dire predictions about a 'radical' agenda. 'Every single citizen will be harmed by such a radical shift in American culture and life. Virtually everywhere it has been tried, socialism has brought suffering, misery, and decay,' he wrote." Projection.


If you can't see the image in the embedded tweet, the highlighted passage from Pence's interview on China reads: "[Donald] Trump and I, and our administration, are committed to taking the kind of action that will change the trajectory of this relationship. The president's imposed $250 billion dollars in tariffs with the possibility of more. We're rebuilding our military, making historic investments in our military. And make no mistake about it, we will continue to stand by all of our interests across the Asia Pacific." Shiver.

[CN: Racism] Zack Ford at ThinkProgress: Kansas Republican Says Democratic Native American Candidate Should Be Sent Back 'to the Reservation'. "A Republican official in Kansas is under fire for a Facebook message he sent Sunday lashing out at Sharice Davids, the Native American, lesbian, MMA fighter, and lawyer who appears poised to win her race for Congress. Michael Kalny, an elected Republican precinct committeeman, sent the nasty note to Anne Pritchett, president of the north chapter of the Johnson County Democratic Women. She took a screenshot of the message, which subsequently went viral. 'Little Ms. Pritchett – you and your comrades['] stealth attack on Yoder is going to blow up in your leftist face[s],' Kalny wrote, referring to incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder (R). 'The REAL REPUBLICANS will remember what the scum DEMONRATS tried to do to Kavanaugh in November. Your radical socialist kick boxing lesbian Indian will be sent back packing to the reservation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'" JFC.

[CN: Child abuse; hostility to tribal sovereignty]


[CN: Trans hatred; gun violence] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Transgender Student Barred from Taking Shelter in Male and Female Locker Rooms During Active Shooter Drill. "A student at a middle school lockdown in Stafford, Virginia, was barred from taking shelter in the male or female locker rooms with other students during an active shooter drill while the student watched teachers debate where she should go. Equality Stafford's Lesley Woods reported the incident on Facebook... 'Let me be clear. During an event that prepares children to survive an attack by actual assailants, she was treated as if she was so much of a danger to peers that she was left exposed and vulnerable.'" Rage seethe boil.

[CN: War on agency; misogyny; Holocaust reference; video may autoplay at link] Alanna Vagianos at the Huffington Post: Pope Francis Says Getting an Abortion Is Like 'Hiring a Hitman'.
Pope Francis likened getting an abortion to "hiring a hitman" during an address at the Vatican on Wednesday.

"I ask you: Is it right to 'take out' a human life to solve a problem? What do you think? Is it right? Is it right or not?" Francis asked the thousands of people in attendance, according to Reuters.

When the crowd responded "No," the pope continued: "Is it right to hire a hitman to solve a problem? It is not right to kill a human being, regardless of how small it is to solve a problem."

Some outlets, including Reuters and The Guardian, translated Francis' comments as likening abortion to hiring "a hitman." Other outlets, such as Al Jazeera and Politico, translated Francis' quote as saying "a contract killer." Either way, his meaning is clear.

...Francis' comments are in line with his last remarks on abortion, which he made in June. He denounced abortion at the time, and likened it to the "white glove" equivalent to Nazi-era eugenics practices.

"Last century, the whole world was scandalized by what the Nazis did to purify the race. Today, we do the same thing but with white gloves," Francis said.
I have been saying for many years that this Pope is hardly the "progressive" that people inexplicably like to imagine he is, and I've taken a lot of abuse for saying that. Surely, by now, his rank illiberalism is apparent.

Again, another issue in which people could have listened to women instead of shouting at us about what fucking ingrates we are for not "appreciating" men who are supposedly "on our side."

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 441

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Trade Wars: So Now I'm NOT Supposed to Care About Middle America? and Trump Announces Plan to Militarize the Border and And Again.

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

Let's start out with Bernie Sanders being a racist dipshit yet again, shall we?

The Senator thought it was a great idea, apparently, to use the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to shit-talk the nation's first Black president:


I'm honestly amazed he didn't throw in a comment about how "articulate" Obama is, in addition to being "charismatic."

And if throwing thinly veiled racist shade at Obama weren't enough for you, how about promising to "try to do better" representing racial minorities in Vermont, while 'splaining at them that his record is already stellar?
Sanders said he will "try to do better" in reaching out to racial justice leaders in Vermont in response to criticism that he has fallen short in representing the state's minorities during his long political career.

"Well, you know, I'm sorry to hear that and I will try to do better," the independent lawmaker said in response to a question about concerns voiced by African-American leaders in Vermont that he had done little to stay in touch with them.

"I think if anyone looks at my record here in Vermont and nationally on issues of racial justice, I think it's a pretty strong record and will continue to be," he said.
Cool cool cool.

While he was being awesome, he also decided to again brush off the idea that Russian interference on his campaign's behalf made any difference — or indeed that Russian interference mattered at all.
On Russian influence on the 2016 election, Sanders said: "Their goal is to divide this country up, and to try to create antagonisms and hatred between different groups of people. My suspicion is what happened is that at the end of my campaign, when it became apparent that I wasn't going to be the Democratic nominee, what they attempted to do is to reach out to people that they felt were my supporters and to tell them not to vote, or not to vote for Clinton or to vote for Trump, and trying to say really hateful and really ugly things about Secretary Clinton."

Sanders concluded, "I don't suspect it had a major impact" on the outcome of the election.
Oh.

It's funny how Sanders spent the day trashing Democrats and President Obama, and then accused the Russians of trying "to divide this country up, and to try to create antagonisms and hatred between different groups of people," and then suggested it doesn't matter. What a piece of work.

* * *


[Content Note: Islamophobia] Robert Maguire at OpenSecrets: Robert Mercer Backed a Secretive Group That Worked with Facebook, Google to Target Anti-Muslim Ads at Swing Voters. "Most Americans have never heard of the far-right neoconservative nonprofit that ran the ads. It has no employees and no volunteers, and it's run out of the offices of a Washington, D.C. law firm. More importantly, most voters never saw the ads. And that was by design. The group, a social welfare organization called Secure America Now, worked hand in hand with Facebook and Google to target their message at voters in swing states who were most likely to be receptive to them. And new tax documents obtained by OpenSecrets show that the money fueling the group came mostly from just three donors, including the secretive multimillionaire donor Robert Mercer."


Luke Harding at the Guardian: Former Trump Aide Approved 'Black Ops' to Help Ukraine President. "Donald Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort authorised a secret media operation on behalf of Ukraine's former president, featuring 'black ops,' 'placed' articles in the Wall Street Journal and U.S. websites, and anonymous briefings against Hillary Clinton. The project was designed to boost the reputation of Ukraine's then leader, Viktor Yanukovych. It was part of a multimillion-dollar lobbying effort carried out by Manafort on behalf of Yanukovych's embattled government, emails and documents reveal."

* * *

You have to ignore the terrible headline on this solid piece by Greg Sargent at the Washington Post, because the content of the piece doesn't support it:


Asawin Suebsaeng and Lachlan Markay at the Daily Beast: John Kelly to Scott Pruitt: The Scandals Need to Stop. "The day after Scott Pruitt was called by [Donald] Trump, who reportedly told him to 'keep your chin up' amid a torrent of controversy, the EPA chief got another phone call from a top White House official that was noticeably less encouraging. Chief of Staff John Kelly wanted to know, after revelations had surfaced that Pruitt had been renting living space in Washington, D.C., from a pair of high-powered lobbyists — one of whom was lobbying his agency at the time — what other shoes, if any, were going to drop. ...The chief of staff then impressed upon Pruitt that, though he has the full public confidence of Trump for now, the flow of negative and damning stories needed to stop soon, as one source briefed on the contents of the call described."

And "for now" may have been a window that already closed. Kate Riga at TPM: White House Deputy Press Secretary: 'I Can't Speak to the Future of Scott Pruitt'. LOL oh.

[CN: Addiction stigma; carcerality; capital punishment] Amanda Michelle Gomez at ThinkProgress: Kellyanne Conway Sells Mandatory Minimums at Influential Drug Conference. "Conway — who is for some reason in charge of the White House's efforts to tackle the opioid crisis — pleaded with stakeholders at the largest annual conference on the epidemic on Wednesday to change fentanyl sentencing laws. She called for longer prison time for small-time fentanyl dealers and echoed the president's call for the death penalty "in very special circumstances" for drug traffickers." Fucking hell.

* * *

[CN: Misogyny; toxic masculinity]


* * *

[CN: Nativism; genital cutting] Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Want Asylum in America? Get Ready for Hell.
Two months ago, an Ethiopian woman seeking asylum in the United States went to her interview with an American official who would decide her fate. She was expecting it to be tough. But the officer asked her a series of questions her attorney had never heard before.

Like many Ethiopian women, this one survived female genital mutilation when she was 7 years old — a dangerous and medically unnecessary practice deplored by human rights groups around the world.

And the asylum officer grilled her about it.

"Tell me where they cut you," the officer asked, according to the woman's lawyer, Alan Parra. "What did they use? Did it hurt? What did they cut specifically? Did they use anesthesia?"

The woman broke down crying.

This type of exchange with officers — lengthy, and filled with personal questions — is increasingly common among people seeking asylum in the United States, according to a host of immigration attorneys who spoke with The Daily Beast.

Officials with United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said there haven't been any formal changes in policy or practice on interviews. But the lawyers who help their clients through these interviews insisted that the process has gotten significantly longer and harder. On top of that, the lawyer said, officers are losing their clients' paperwork.
Fuck this administration. Goddammit.


Tina Vasquez at Rewire: What Is Deferred Enforced Departure? It's Complicated. "Liberians who were first granted TPS [Temporary Protected Status] in the 1990s through 2002, later received protection under DED [Deferred Enforced Departure]. 'Those with DED now are the people who have been here the longest, the people who have legally resided in the U.S. since 2002,' [Royce Bernstein Murray, policy director at the American Immigration Council] added. Bernstein Murray further explained: 'The idea that we would send 10,000 people, which is the number of people at that time who had TPS, back to a war-torn country, was obviously absurd and would have created a bad relationship with Liberia. You can see how the different conditions in Liberia lead to different statuses.'"

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 411

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: OMFG Trump Is Appallingly Ignorant and On Chaos.

Jill Colvin at the AP: Ex-Trump Aide Says He'll Likely Cooperate with Mueller. "A former Trump campaign aide spent much of Monday promising to defy a subpoena from special counsel Robert Mueller, even throwing down the challenge to 'arrest me,' then backed off his defiance by saying he would probably cooperate in the end. In an interview with The Associated Press, Sam Nunberg said he was angry over Mueller's request to have him appear in front of a grand jury and turn over thousands of emails and other communications with other ex-officials, among them his mentor Roger Stone. But he predicted that, in the end, he'd find a way to comply. 'I'm going to end up cooperating with them,' he said."

Huh. So Nunberg's "meltdown" yesterday was all an act? You don't say. (I did say.)

Meanwhile...


I know there will be fully a million jokes about this because what do you even expect it's Trump blah blah fart, but that is, quite literally, a perfect example of how deeply broken the federal government is.

And it's just the start.

* * *

[Content Note: War crimes] Kareem Shaheen at the Guardian: Russia Suspected of Using 'Dumb' Bombs to Shift Blame for Syria War Crimes. "The Russian air force has used unguided 'dumb' bombs in Syria, in what UN sources say could be an effort to shift responsibility for possible war crimes and civilian deaths to their ally, the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad. UN sources told the Guardian that Moscow's use of less accurate bombs, which are closer in their capability to the Syrian air force's weapons stockpiles, could be intended to make it more difficult for war crimes investigators to identify those responsible for civilian deaths from airstrikes in Syria. ...'There seems to be a concerted effort for very similar weaponry to be used [by the Syrian and Russian air forces],' said one UN official. 'Since the Syrian air force is using older planes with pilots untrained in smart weapons capabilities, they [Russia] would use less smart weapons capabilities. I suspect they want to use those weapons because it makes attribution more difficult.'"

Maybe if we still had a functional State Department and a president who wasn't a Russian puppet, the U.S. government would care about that.

And this:


* * *

E.A. Crunden at ThinkProgress: E.U. Moves to Slap U.S. Heartland with Tit-for-Tat Tariffs in Response to Trump. "The European Union is preparing retaliatory tit-for-tat tariffs on a number of well-known U.S. brands and products in response to [Donald] Trump's moves to impose tariffs on aluminum and steel imports from other countries. A list tallied by the European Commission indicates a 25 percent levy on multiple U.S. goods, Bloomberg reported Tuesday. The tariffs will impact upwards of 2.8 billion euros ($3.5 billion) in U.S. exports, including agricultural and steel products. Motorcycles and blue jeans are also among the items included. The range of goods listed will disproportionately hit parts of the United States with strong manufacturing centers, including the Rust Belt and larger Midwest and Appalachia regions."

Erica Werner and Damian Paletta at the Washington Post: 10 Years After Financial Crisis, Senate Prepares to Roll Back Banking Rules.
The Senate is preparing to scale back the sweeping banking regulations passed after the 2008 financial crisis, with more than a dozen Democrats ready to give Republicans the votes they need to weaken one of President Barack Obama's largest legislative achievements.

Congress's appetite for pulling back bank regulations shows the renewed clout of the financial sector in Washington, not just in the GOP but also among Democrats. Eight years after nearly every Senate Democrat backed a sweeping set of new rules for financial firms large and small, the party is now split, with moderates, several of them facing tough midterm election contests, working with the opposing party.

The core of the new bill exempts about two dozen financial companies with assets between $50 billion and $250 billion from the highest levels of scrutiny by the Federal Reserve, the nation's central bank. Supporters argue that the legislation would bring much-needed relief to midsize and regional banks that were treated like their much larger counterparts under the 2010 legislation known as Dodd-Frank. Opponents say it would weaken the oversight needed to stave off the type of dangerous lending and investing that brought the U.S. economy to its knees.

The Senate is slated to take an initial procedural vote this week to move the measure forward, and if it eventually becomes law, it would be the most substantial weakening of Dodd-Frank since it was passed.
Fucking hell. The bill seeks to: Relax mortgage regulations for small banks; issue broad exemptions from oversight for regional banks with up to $250 billion in assets; create a mandate that the Fed tailor its rules for big banks; and give many of the nation's largest lenders easier capital and liquidity requirements. ALL OF THESE THINGS ARE TERRIBLE IDEAS.

For example... Jesse Hamilton at Bloomberg: Volcker Rule to Undergo 'Material Changes,' Fed's Quarles Says. "Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Randal Quarles says U.S. financial regulators are working quickly to make 'material changes' to the Volcker Rule, one of Wall Street's most hated post-crisis restrictions. ...The measure named for former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker was included in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act as a way to reduce risk-taking by banning banks from trading with their own money. It has been a top target of Trump administration plans to dial back financial regulations as a way to spur economic growth." Which is bullshit. It will only spur more exorbitant bonuses for banking executives.

Hamilton Nolan at Splinter: Hey, Here's an Extremely Bad Idea. "Thankfully, the Republican party has heard the people's collective cry: Please deregulate the big banks! And now, the party of the Blue Collar Billionaire is set to roll back banking regulations that were put in place after the financial crisis of 2008, to try to make it less likely to have another crisis. For example, for several years, banks have been required to hold a certain amount of capital that can be easily liquidated during a crisis, so that they can continue to fund themselves during times of peril, so they don't blow up and require an enormous public bailout. Let's get rid of that! People hate that! We demand that banks instead be able to own riskier assets like municipal bonds, that will increase their profits but will also be more likely to cause another crisis!"

Zachary Warmbrodt at Politico: Warren Slams Senators for Backing Bank Deregulation Bill. "Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Tuesday blasted Republicans and fellow Democrats for backing a sweeping rollback of banking regulations that the Senate will likely pass as soon as this week. ...She said Democrats and Republicans were backing the legislation because of years of sustained bank lobbying in the wake of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, the landmark law that strengthened banking oversight in the wake of the Wall Street meltdown. 'The people in Congress may have forgotten the crash 10 years ago, but I guarantee that people across this country have not forgotten the pain that these giant banks caused, and they do not want to see Congress move toward deregulating these banks,' she said."

And all of this is getting far less attention that it needs and deserves, because Sam Nunberg "freaked out" on teevee yesterday and Trump tweeted about chaos this morning, so most of the political press is fixated on that instead of the Senate fixing to create another major financial crisis for the American people so that bank execs can take home even more money.

* * *

Eugene Robinson at the Washington Post: The Trump Presidency Could Cost the Nation More Than We Realize.
As the saying goes, you don't miss the water until the well runs dry: This deeply aberrant presidency threatens to cost the nation much more than even some of [Donald] Trump's harshest critics may realize.

From 1988 to 1992, I was The Post's correspondent in Buenos Aires, covering all of South America. It was a time when countries such as Argentina, Brazil, Peru, and Chile — emerging from years of authoritarian rule — were struggling to reestablish democratic norms, and I learned one important lesson: It's easy to lose the habits and values of democracy, but incredibly hard to get them back.

Perhaps most difficult is to recover lost faith in the rule of law. That is why Trump's very public desire to use the legal system as a weapon against his political opponents is so damaging. "Lock her up" is more than a call to imprison Hillary Clinton. It is, potentially, a tragic epitaph for the consensus view of our legal system as a disinterested finder of fact and dispenser of justice.
This is, of course, a point I have made many times, and why I continually grouse about the necessity of urgency with regard to Special Counsel Bob Mueller's investigation. The longer the Republicans have to consolidate power behind Trump, the less incentive they'll have to do anything with Mueller's eventual report but flush it down the toilet. (And that's presuming his findings even include actionable items on Trump, which is no certain thing.)

We're quickly approaching a threshold past which none of Mueller's recommendations will matter, because the Republicans won't feel beholden to the public at all.

If Mueller doesn't make something happen before then, and it doesn't have to be the final piece of the investigation, but it has to be the first piece of accountability, we will have lost. That has to come while there's still some reasonable expectation that the Democrats, the press, and a public majority combined can put pressure on the GOP to take action.

The fact that we know it would take the combined influence of the Democrats, the press, and a public majority is an indication of how close we are already to losing any chance to hold this administration accountable.

And with every step closer we get to that threshold at which the GOP doesn't have to care even about that combined advocacy, the erosion of trust continues and becomes ever more difficult to recover.

* * *

Monique Judge at the Root: Trump Is 'Unstable, Inept, Inexperienced, and...Unethical': Former CIA Director. "Deadline's Nicolle Wallace asked Brennan what keeps him up at night or wakes him up with a start in the middle of the night, and he said, 'It is no secret to anybody that Donald Trump was ill-prepared and inexperienced in terms of dealing with matters that a head of state needs to deal with. I think this is now coming to roost..." Brennan said that our country 'needs confidence' that we will be able to deal with both Russia and North Korea, but 'if we have somebody in the Oval Office who is unstable, inept, inexperienced, and also unethical, we really have rough waters ahead.'" Welp.

Caitlin MacNeal at TPM: George W. Bush Quips That Trump Makes Him 'Look Pretty Good'. "Former President George W. Bush has reportedly found the silver lining in Donald Trump's presidency. Bush has been overheard remarking that Trump's run in the White House is going poorly and makes him look good as a result, the National Journal's contributing editor Tom DeFrank reported on Monday. 'Sorta makes me look pretty good, doesn't it?' Bush often says of Trump's presidency, according to the National Journal." 1. That's really saying something, since Bush was a fucking vile disaster. 2. I'm really getting sick of this asshole pretending like the Trump presidency would have ever happened if his own presidency hadn't paved the way for it.

Kira Lerner and Joshua Eaton at ThinkProgress: Kansas Secretary of State Seeks to Deliver a Devastating Blow to Voting Rights. "Kansas began to require documentary proof of citizenship from all Kansas residents when they register to vote in 2011, though courts have since blocked that law. The state passed the requirement after Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R) took office and began pushing for laws he claimed would protect against the threat of non-citizens casting ballots. ...Since 2011, Arizona, Alabama, and Georgia have all passed proof of citizenship laws similar to the one Kobach wrote in Kansas. Courts have blocked all three states' laws. Now the Kansas law could meet a similar fate. ...Starting Tuesday, Kobach will have to defend his law in a federal courtroom, as the ACLU attempts to prove that it is unconstitutional. Over about a week, the ACLU will question Kansas voters in court over the discriminatory effects of the law. Kobach, who is representing himself, will call as one of his witnesses a researcher whose work has been discredited time and time again."


[CN: Nativism] Alfonso Serrano at Colorlines: Immigrant Rights Group Sues ICE for Illegally Jailing 18-Year-Olds. "An immigrant advocacy group filed a class action lawsuit on Monday (March 5) against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on behalf of immigrant teenagers who arrived in the United States alone and were subsequently detained in ICE centers after turning 18. Federal law states that when unaccompanied migrant children in custody of the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Refugee Resettlement turn 18, ICE must 'consider placement in the least restrictive setting available after taking into account the [individual's] danger to self, danger to the community, and risk of flight.' The suit, filed by the National Immigrant Justice Center, argues that ICE routinely fails to comply with that federal measure and systematically jails teens in adult prisons."

And finally... Bonnie Malkin at the Guardian: China's Tiangong-1 Space Station Will Crash to Earth Within Weeks. "China's first space station is expected to come crashing down to Earth within weeks, but scientists have not been able to predict where the 8.5-tonne module will hit. The US-funded Aerospace Corporation estimates Tiangong-1 will re-enter the atmosphere during the first week of April, give or take a week. The European Space Agency says the module will come down between 24 March and 19 April. In 2016 China admitted it had lost control of Tiangong-1 and would be unable to perform a controlled re-entry. The statement from Aerospace said there was 'a chance that a small amount of debris' from the module will survive re-entry and hit the Earth. ...Aerospace warned that the space station might be carrying a highly toxic and corrosive fuel called hydrazine on board." But don't worry — you are more likely to win the lottery than get hit by debris. So buy a lottery ticket and good luck!

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 376

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by Aphra Behn: Dear NYT: This Is No Time to Obscure White Supremacism. And by me: Authoritarianism Watch: A Deeply Chilling Monday Night and Trump Turns SOTU into Tacky Fundraising Event.

[Content Note: Threats of violence] Nicole Lafond at TPM: Schiff's Office Receiving Calls and Death Threats over Nunes Memo. "Rep. Adam Schiff's (D-CA) office has received crude phone calls and death threats over the 'Republican spin memo' that reportedly proves some type of anti-[Donald] Trump bias within the FBI and the Department of Justice, Axios reported Tuesday. Schiff told Axios that the outrage against his office is fueled by Republican rhetoric, which he called 'reckless hyperbole' that is 'just so destructive to our democracy.'"

This is where we are: A Democratic member of Congress who takes his responsibilities seriously and stands up to this administration and its party's gross abuses of power is now getting death threats.

This is not a functioning democracy. It has not been for some time, but that reality has become so abundantly clear at this point that any politician, journalist, or person of influence in any industry who does not acknowledge this fact and behave accordingly should be presumed to support the dismantling of the republic. There is no neutral anymore.

* * *

Stephanie Kirchgaessner and Nick Hopkins at the Guardian: Second Trump-Russia Dossier Being Assessed by FBI. "The FBI inquiry into alleged Russian collusion in the 2016 U.S. presidential election has been given a second memo that independently set out many of the same allegations made in a dossier by Christopher Steele, the British former spy. The second memo was written by Cody Shearer, a controversial political activist and former journalist who was close to the Clinton White House in the 1990s."

I'm still digging into this story, but I know it'll be a big item today, so, at this point, I'm just sharing it with this caveat: I am not convinced that this report is authentic and/or that the "second memo" is real. I also suspect that, even if it is real, its existence is only truly relevant insofar as it will be used to try to delegitimize the Steele dossier, by virtue of its alleged Clinton-connected authorship.

Take this one with a big grain of salt, unless and until there is well-sourced confirmation.

* * *

Carol E. Lee at NBC News: Trump's Gripes Against McCabe Included Wife's Politics, Comey's Ride Home. "The day after he fired James Comey as director of the FBI, a furious [Donald] Trump called the bureau's acting director, Andrew McCabe, demanding to know why Comey had been allowed to fly on an FBI plane from Los Angeles back to Washington after he was dismissed, according to multiple people familiar with the phone call. McCabe told the president he hadn't been asked to authorize Comey's flight, but if anyone had asked, he would have approved it, three people familiar with the call recounted to NBC News. The president was silent for a moment and then turned on McCabe, suggesting he ask his wife how it feels to be a loser — an apparent reference to a failed campaign for state office in Virginia that McCabe's wife made in 2015. McCabe replied, 'Okay, sir.' Trump then hung up the phone."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Jennifer Jacobs at Bloomberg: On Flight to Davos, Trump Erupted over DOJ Role in Russia Probe. "Trump erupted in anger while traveling to Davos after learning that Associate Attorney General Stephen Boyd warned that it would be 'extraordinarily reckless' to release a classified memo written by House Republican staffers. ...Trump's outburst capped a week where Trump and senior White House officials personally reproached Attorney General Jeff Sessions and asked White House Chief of Staff John Kelly to speak to others — episodes that illustrate Trump's preoccupation with the Justice Department, according to two of the people. Trump warned Sessions and others they need to excel at their jobs or go down as the worst in history, the two people said."

Just two more examples of a man who is temperamentally unfit to be president; who is an inveterate bully; who has naught but contempt for the rule of law.

About all of which plenty of people, especially women, urgently warned before he was elected.

* * *

Kellyanne Conway continues to be extraordinarily awful, telling Chris Cuomo on CNN's New Day that Russian interference in the 2016 election doesn't matter, and it's the press who are the real culprits: "Everybody who said Donald Trump couldn't win — every screaming headline, every wrong poll, every anchor, every pundit who said this is over, it's a joke, he can't win — tried to interfere in the election." OMFG.

Meanwhile, back on Planet Earth... Gordon Corera at the BBC: Russia 'Will Target U.S. Midterm Elections' Says CIA Chief. "Mike Pompeo told the BBC there had been no significant diminishing of Russian attempts at subversion in Europe and the U.S." Of course there hasn't! Why would there be?! The U.S. president and the majority party in Congress are busily pretending that Russia didn't interfere in the 2016 election and giving Putin everything he wants! They have served Russia zero consequences for meddling in past U.S. elections and have put in place zero safeguards to prevent them from meddling in future U.S. elections! OF COURSE THEY WILL CONTINUE TO DO IT.

And in other election news... Pema Levy at Mother Jones: Millions of Voters Will Cast Ballots in November in Unconstitutionally Gerrymandered Districts. "This fall, millions of voters will cast ballots in legislative districts that have been deemed unconstitutional. Courts have repeatedly tossed out Republican-drawn electoral maps for excessive gerrymandering, but those maps will remain in effect through November, potentially changing who controls Congress and state legislatures for the next two years."

It will never cease to be incredible to me how many people unaccountably believe that the Republican Party who has spent decades rigging elections themselves are somehow gonna start caring about Russian election meddling.

And because the Republicans are in power, federally and in a majority of state legislatures, all the same problems that resulted in the hideous outcome of the 2016 election will still be there for the 2018 election. And then some.

* * *

In the aforementioned interview with the BBC, Mike Pompeo said some other cool stuff! D. Parvaz at ThinkProgress: Mike Pompeo Keeps Saying North Korea Could Nuke the U.S. in a 'Handful of Months'. "CIA Director Mike Pompeo told the BBC that North Korea will be able to launch nuclear strikes against the United States within a few months. 'With respect to our understanding of the program, I think that we, collectively, the United States and our intelligence partners around the world, have developed a clear understanding of [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Un's capability,' Pompeo said in the interview published on Tuesday. 'We talk about him having the ability to deliver a nuclear weapon to the United States in a matter of a handful of months,' he added. Pompeo's been doing this for a while now."

Just super responsible stuff from a super cool administration: The CIA Director repeatedly saying that North Korea might nuke us in a few months. No biggie.

And it looks like Trump is going to echo these comments, or amplify them into something truly terrifying, during tonight's SOTU:


Fuck.

Robert Burns at TPM: Pentagon Orders Restrictions on Release of Afghanistan War Data. "The Pentagon has ordered an independent federal auditor to stop providing the public with key information about U.S. war efforts in Afghanistan, accelerating a clampdown on data, such as the size of the Afghan military and police forces, that indicate how the 16-year-old stalemated war is going. ...The restrictions fly in the face of Pentagon assertions over the past year that it was striving to be more transparent about the U.S. war campaigns across Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan."

A lack of transparency is yet another feature of authoritarian regimes.

Adrian Florido at NPR: FEMA to End Food and Water Aid for Puerto Rico. "In a sign that FEMA believes the immediate humanitarian emergency has subsided, on Jan. 31 it will, in its own words, 'officially shut off' the mission it says has provided more than 30 million gallons of potable water and nearly 60 million meals across the island in the four months since the hurricane. The agency will turn its remaining food and water supplies over to the Puerto Rican government to finish distributing. Some on the island believe it's too soon to end these deliveries given that a third of residents still lack electricity and, in some places, running water, but FEMA says its internal analytics suggest only about 1 percent of islanders still need emergency food and water. The agency believes that is a small enough number for the Puerto Rican government and nonprofit groups to handle."

Rage seethe boil. If places that had electricity and running water before don't have electricity and running water now, then the humanitarian emergency has not "subsided." JFC.

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

Open Wide...

I Write Letters

[Content Note: Anti-feminism.]

Dear Washington Post:

What are you even doing?


Do I really need to point out that privileging the unintentional awareness-raising of feminism by a woman rejecting the label over the intentional, thoughtful, deliberative work of actual proud feminists is itself deeply anti-feminist?

And over a woman's byline, no less.

Gross, WaPo. Gross.

No Love,
Liss

[If you cannot see the embedded screencap of the headline, it reads: "'Feminism' is Merriam-Webster's word of the year, thanks in part to Kellyanne Conway."]

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 151

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: Seven Stories.

REMINDER: KEEP CALLING YOUR SENATORS TO TELL THEM TO VOTE NO ON REPEALING AND REPLACING THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT.

I'll just preface this first item with the note that it's hardly the most important story in the news, but it's so emblematic of Donald Trump's personality, and his incessant gross and humiliating pronouncements disgorged from his soapbox positioned at the intersection of ignorance and arrogance, that I loathe this forgettable brief as much as just about any other item today...

Madeline Conway at Politico: Trump: 'Panama Canal Is Doing Quite Well'. "Donald Trump asserted Monday that the Panama Canal, which opened in 1914, is 'doing quite well' and that the U.S. 'did a good job building it.' Trump made the comment in the Oval Office, where he was sitting for a brief media availability alongside Juan Carlos Varela, the president of Panama who is in Washington for a visit. 'It's our great honor to have President and Mrs. Varela from Panama,' Trump told reporters. 'We have many things to discuss. We're going to spend quite a bit of time today. The Panama Canal is doing quite well, I think we did a good job building it. Right?' Trump said, turning to Varela. 'Very good job.'"

Deep breaths. Deep breaths.

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse] Jessica Mason Pieklo at Rewire: Trump Administration Won't Protect Undocumented Parents Whose Children Are U.S. Citizens.
The Trump administration on Thursday walked away from an Obama-era policy designed to protect undocumented immigrants with children in the United States who are either permanent residents or U.S. citizens.

Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, set forth a policy that de-prioritized detention and removal proceedings of those undocumented immigrant parents. Conservatives have long criticized the policy, with 26 states suing, arguing President Obama overstepped his authority in enacting it. A federal court agreed and blocked the administration from enforcing the policy. In June 2016, a deadlocked U.S. Supreme Court kept that order in place, and the program has since been on hold as the legal challenges continue.

Thursday's announcement that the Trump administration was rescinding the policy means the administration will no longer defend the policy in court, stating in a press release that "there is no credible path forward to litigate the currently enjoined policy."

This reflects the administration's shift to harsher immigration raids that have separated parents from their children, prompting some city officials to declare themselves "sanctuary cities" for undocumented people in opposition to [Donald] Trump's draconian immigration policies.
[CN: Nativism] Esther Yu Hsi Lee at ThinkProgress: Trump Administration Prepares to Deport Immigrant Who Helped Clear Hazardous Rubble After 9/11.
Carlos Humberto Cardona, an immigrant from Colombia who lives in New York City, helped to clear the hazardous rubble in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. According to the New York Daily News, he is now facing deportation proceedings for a 30-year-old criminal conviction.

...His lawyer has since filed a legal action for a federal judge to request the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to expedite a decision on his 2014 marriage petition with his wife Liliana, a naturalized U.S. citizen.

Cardona has been held at the Hudson County Correctional Facility in New Jersey since his arrest.

"I can't believe that this is happening to him after all of the sacrifices he has made. He says he feels like he's being treated like a criminal," Liliana told the Daily News. "He's suffering from depression being locked up in there."

"He's very much an American," Cardona's attorney Rajesh Barua told the publication. "He's scared of going back to Colombia. He doesn't know how he'll maintain a living and what kind of treatment he'll have for respiratory problems, which are very real."
Rage seethe boil.

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Scott A. Schoettes at Newsweek: Trump Doesn't Care About HIV; We're Outta Here. "Five of my colleagues and I resigned this week from the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA). As advocates for people living with HIV, we have dedicated our lives to combating this disease and no longer feel we can do so effectively within the confines of an advisory body to a president who simply does not care. The Trump Administration has no strategy to address the on-going HIV/AIDS epidemic, seeks zero input from experts to formulate HIV policy, and—most concerning—pushes legislation that will harm people living with HIV and halt or reverse important gains made in the fight against this disease."

Natasha Geiling at ThinkProgress: Trump's Reported Pick for the Number Two Spot at EPA Is a Fossil Fuel Lobbyist. "Jeff Holmstead, a former EPA official under President George W. Bush and current lobbyist for the fossil fuel industry, is the Trump administration's top candidate for Deputy EPA Administrator, the number two position within the agency, Axios reported. Holmstead, who has spent the last few years lobbying on behalf of some of the largest utilities and fossil fuel companies in the country, has met with Administrator Scott Pruitt, according to Axios, and has full support of the White House. Axios notes 'there is no other serious contender for the job at this moment.'"

[CN: Misogyny; racism] Josh Rogin at the Washington Post: The State Department Just Broke a Promise to Minority and Female Recruits.
Dozens of young minority and female State Department recruits received startling and unwelcome news last week: They would not be able to soon join the Foreign Service despite having been promised that opportunity. Their saga is just the latest sign that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's rush to slash the size of the State Department without a plan is harming diplomacy and having negative unintended effects.

The recruits, who are part of the State Department's Rangel and Pickering fellowship programs, have already completed two years of graduate-level education at U.S. taxpayers' expense plus an internship, often in a foreign country. The deal they struck with the federal government was that after completing their educations they would be given an inside track to become full-fledged U.S. diplomats abroad if they also satisfied medical and security requirements. In turn, they promised to commit at least five years to the Foreign Service.

These minority and female candidates already went through a competitive application process, meaning they are some of the best and brightest young graduates around. It also means they have other options. Young stars don't join the State Department for the money or the glory; they want to serve and represent their country and are willing to make sacrifices to do it.

Many were shocked when they received a letter telling them they had one week to decide if they wanted to take a much less appealing job — stamping passports in a foreign embassy for two years — with the prospect but no guarantee of becoming a Foreign Service officer even after that.

"This is no way to treat our next generation," one Foreign Service officer serving overseas told me.

Meanwhile, even Trump reportedly knows what a fucking disaster of a president he is, but he doesn't want to quit because that would mean admitting what a big league loser he is. Buried at the very end of a piece at Politico by Annie Karni comes this shit:
But Trump, too, is cognizant of the comparison to Nixon, according to one adviser. The president, who friends said does not enjoy living in Washington and is strained by the demanding hours of the job, is motivated to carry on because he "doesn't want to go down in history as a guy who tried and failed," said the adviser. "He doesn't want to be the second president in history to resign."
So he'd rather keep failing than admit he is failing and step aside in favor of someone who wants the job and has a modicum of ability to do it. What an egotistical shitlord Trump is. A dangerous, pathetic, cruel man.

Rosalind S. Helderman, Tom Hamburger, and Rachel Weiner at the Washington Post: At Height of Russia Tensions, Trump Campaign Chairman Manafort Met with Business Associates from Ukraine. "In August, as tension mounted over Russia's role in the U.S. presidential race, Donald Trump's campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, sat down to dinner with a business associate from Ukraine who once served in the Russian army. Konstantin Kilimnik, who learned English at a military school that some experts consider a training ground for Russian spies, had helped run the Ukraine office for Manafort's international political consulting practice for 10 years. ...Kilimnik, who provided a written statement to The Washington Post through Manafort's attorney, said the previously unreported dinner was one of two meetings he had with Manafort on visits to the United States during Manafort's five months working for Trump."

Louis Nelson at Politico: Conway Repeats Lawyer's Claim: Trump Didn't Admit to Being Under Investigation. "When [Donald] Trump wrote online last week that 'I am being investigated for firing the FBI Director,' it was not an admission that he is indeed being investigated, counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway said Monday morning, but instead a Twitter-shortened reaction to media coverage of ongoing probes into his 2016 campaign. Conway's insistence Monday morning that Trump's tweet last Friday was not what it seemed followed in the footsteps of the president's personal attorney, Jay Sekulow, who said Sunday in an array of political talk show appearances that regardless of what he has written online, Trump is not under investigation." Good grief.

Dell Cameron and Kate Conger at Gizmodo: GOP Data Firm Accidentally Leaks Personal Details of Nearly 200 Million American Voters. "Political data gathered on more than 198 million US citizens was exposed this month after a marketing firm contracted by the Republican National Committee stored internal documents on a publicly accessible Amazon server. The data leak contains a wealth of personal information on roughly 61 percent of the US population. Along with home addresses, birthdates, and phone numbers, the records include advanced sentiment analyses used by political groups to predict where individual voters fall on hot-button issues such as gun ownership, stem cell research, and the right to abortion, as well as suspected religious affiliation and ethnicity. ...Deep Root Analytics, a conservative data firm that identifies audiences for political ads, confirmed ownership of the data to Gizmodo on Friday. UpGuard cyber risk analyst Chris Vickery discovered Deep Root's data online last week. More than a terabyte was stored on the cloud server without the protection of a password and could be accessed by anyone who found the URL." Fucking hell.

Robert Barnes at the Washington Post: Supreme Court to Hear Potentially Landmark Case on Partisan Gerrymandering. "The Supreme Court declared Monday that it will consider whether gerrymandered election maps favoring one political party over another violate the Constitution, a potentially fundamental change in the way American elections are conducted. The justices regularly are called to invalidate state electoral maps that have been illegally drawn to reduce the influence of racial minorities by depressing the impact of their votes. But the Supreme Court has never found a plan unconstitutional because of partisan gerrymandering. If it does, it would have a revolutionary impact on the reapportionment that comes after the 2020 election and could come at the expense of Republicans, who control the process in the majority of states." Too bad Merrick Garland isn't on the Court that will make this decision.

Oliver Milman at the Guardian: A Third of the World Now Faces Deadly Heatwaves as a Result of Climate Change. "Nearly a third of the world's population is now exposed to climatic conditions that produce deadly heatwaves, as the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere makes it 'almost inevitable' that vast areas of the planet will face rising fatalities from high temperatures, new research has found. Climate change has escalated the heatwave risk across the globe, the study states, with nearly half of the world's population set to suffer periods of deadly heat by the end of the century even if greenhouse gases are radically cut. 'For heatwaves, our options are now between bad or terrible,' said Camilo Mora, an academic at the University of Hawaii and lead author of the study."

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

Open Wide...