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Month: July 2015

Situational terrorism

Situational terrorism

by digby

The New York Times editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal is confused:

Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who recently joined the Republican primary carnival in an “official” way, says the government should reauthorize the Patriot Act in response to the murder of four Marines in Chattanooga, Tenn., by a 24-year-old gunman.

And he suggested that changing a policy that stops military personnel from carrying weapons in certain civilian areas would have prevented the attack. Those policies “are outdated,” Mr. Walker said on Fox News, because the United States is “at war and radical Islamic terrorism is our enemy.”

After a career criminal who had illegally entered the United States killed a San Francisco woman on July 1, Bill O’Reilly demanded that Congress pass a law that would impose mandatory sentences on people who repeatedly enter the country illegally and members of the right-wing Republican caucus in the House eagerly responded.

The idea was that such a law, along with another proposal to strip cities of federal funds if their police are not required to turn over all undocumented people to the federal government, would prevent shootings like the one in San Francisco.

This leaves me a little confused.

After any highly publicized killing – like the murders in Charleston, or Newtown, or in any number of other places — advocates of gun control call for greater restrictions on the sale and use of firearms. And people on the right, like Mr. O’Reilly and Mr. Walker, reliably respond by saying that no law could have prevented those killings.

So, which is it? Can no law stop a determined person from killing another human being? Or can laws do that? It would be inconsistent, if not hypocritical, to take both positions, so there must be some logical explanation.

Mr. Walker and the Fox host Megyn Kelly tut-tutted about the fact that President Obama did not immediately call the Chattanooga killer a Muslim terrorist. They had no idea at the time whether that was true, but the point of the exchange was to attack Mr. Obama. They used it to revive another favorite talking point – that the president did not quickly label the attack on the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi as a terrorist attack (even though he actually did).

Oddly enough – or maybe not oddly at all – Mr. Walker called the murder of nine African Americans in a Charleston church a “racist” and “evil” act, but neither he, nor any other Republican candidate or public figure that I can find called it an act of terrorism, which is precisely what it was.

Senator Lindsey Graham, another Republican presidential poser, called it “racial jihadism,” but that was mainly to deflect attention from the real motivations for the murders and toss that “jihad” word out there.

I’m sure there is a logical explanation for that, too.

Yes there is. If a white American does this it’s just a sad fact of life, they have problems and there’s nothing we can do except maybe give everybody more guns. If a black person did this it would have been because he was a thug and belonged in jail long ago. If a Latino did it we need to build a wall and deport as many of them as possible. If a Muslim did it, it’s an act of war. There’s nothing confusing about it.

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You only hurt the ones you love

You only hurt the ones you love

by digby

The bullying hate bloc has to make a choice and so far, they prefer the Donald.

Donald Trump’s turn in the national spotlight is mainly taking a toll on Ted Cruz, the Texas firebrand running as an uncompromising, anti-establishment conservative.

That’s the assessment of this week’s POLITICO Caucus, our weekly survey of the leading strategists, activists and political operatives in Iowa and New Hampshire.
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Roughly a third of Iowa and New Hampshire Republican insiders pointed to Cruz as the candidate who is damaged the most in their states by Trump’s rise in the polls and emergence as a media-grabbing protest candidate.

“The Trump Circus is no doubt having the biggest impact on Ted Cruz. Cruz, the incumbent proxy for the disaffected GOP “Hell No!” Caucus, has been virtually starved of oxygen since Trump entered the race,” said an Iowa Republican, who, like all POLITICO Caucus participants, was granted anonymity in order to speak freely.

“Cruz needs to consolidate the rage-against-the-machine, anti-establishment block of Caucus votes (both the harder-edged evangelicals and tea party types) as his Iowa Caucus foundation upon which to build,” said another Iowa Republican. “Trump is sucking all the oxygen out of the room. While I seriously doubt most of those folks will ultimately caucus for Trump, his message is scratching their anti-establishment itch at a time when Cruz needs to start showing some momentum.”

In New Hampshire, where Chris Christie’s hopes are riding on a strong finish, roughly a quarter of Republicans believe the brash and straight-talking New Jersey governor is also put at risk by Trump’s emergence in the field.

“Christie is the “tell it like it is” candidate, but he certainly can’t hang with Trump in that regard,” a Granite State Republican said. “Without the oxygen of a niche, Christie is rudderless and grasping at straws.”

“Christie has placed all his eggs in New Hampshire’s basket, but Trump is right now occupying the “tell it like it is” lane with gusto,” added another New Hampshire Republican. “Same thing with Ted Cruz. If you’re a voter looking for the most conservative alternative, it’s hard to see you landing anywhere but Trump.”

Poor Cruz. He really is the OG wingnut firebrand in the race. And Christie really is the OG bombastic bully. But they’re politicians. And the wingnut faction is looking for an outsider who loves to hate and will tell everyone who isn’t them to go to hell. That’s Trump.

It will be interesting to see where that faction eventually lands. There are so many creepy haters in the race that they have a lot to choose from.

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Perry makes his move

Perry makes his move

by digby

I wrote about Rick Perry’s strategy for getting himself out of the cellar for Salon today. It’s actually pretty smart:

It was inevitable that among the huge field of Republican presidential candidates, a second-tier contender would take advantage of the opening provided by the Donald Trump phenomenon and position him- or herself as the anti-Trump. It’s not easy to stand out in that huge crowd, and this might just offer someone a chance to get some positive press and separate themselves from the pack.
It’s obvious why the first tier sees no upside in angering the Donald. As this article in the New York Times made clear, they need his fans to vote for them:
Since the start of Mr. Trump’s presidential campaign, a vexing question has hovered over his candidacy: Why have so many party leaders — privately appalled by Mr. Trump’s remarks about immigrants from Mexico — not renounced him?
It turns out, interviews show, that the mathematical delicacy of a Republican victory in 2016 — and its dependence on aging, anxious white voters — make it exceedingly perilous for the Republican Party to treat Mr. Trump as the pariah many of its leaders now wish he would become.
[W]hat remains so appealing to many of the white voters who like Mr. Trump is his perceived willingness to tell hard truths about delicate issues — racial and otherwise — that, to their mind, the party establishment is too timid to discuss.
“There are a lot of people who are very angry at the grass-roots level and who are convinced the Republican leaders in Congress are not doing everything for the conservative cause,” said Charlie Black, a former adviser to John McCain in 2008 and Mr. Romney in 2012. Mr. Trump, he said, holds undeniable appeal to such voters.
A poll released by the Pew Research Center in May found that 63 percent of Republican voters view immigrants as a “burden” who compete for jobs, housing, and health care compared with 32 percent of Democrats.
These top candidates — Bush, Walker, Rubio, Paul, Huckabee, etc. — are undoubtedly being advised by their campaign strategists to tread very softly, lest they alienate the xenophobic majority. But one of the current also-rans, who just want a chance to get into the debates, might be able to coax enough of the GOP minority who aren’t Trump followers to make the cut. It looked for a while as if Lindsey Graham would be the one to seize the day, with his strident declaration that Trump is a “wrecking ball” who is going to “kill the party.” But his point wasn’t that Trump was wrong in what he said, but that him saying it was making the GOP look bad, which isn’t the same thing at all. One might have thought that Rick Santorum, winner of the Iowa caucus in 2012 and the last man standing in the primaries after Mitt Romney, would step up with a strong moral condemnation of Trump’s degrading comments about Mexicans. But all Santorum could muster was this tepid criticism:
“While I don’t like the verbiage he’s used, I like the fact that he is focused on a very important issue for American workers and particularly, legal immigrants in this country.”
Actually, Trump isn’t focused on American workers; he’s focused on undocumented “rapists,” who he says the Mexican government is somehow “sending” here as an act of aggression against the United States. And most of the other second-tier candidates have good things to say about Trump, which one can only assume means that they genuinely agree with him.

But this week one of the candidates did decide to take a courageous step of wooing some of those non-bigoted Iowans by taking on Trump directly. It was former Texas Governor Rick Perry who threw caution to the wind, saying:
“I have a message for my fellow Republicans and the independents who will be voting in the primary process: what Mr. Trump is offering is not conservatism, it is Trump-ism – a toxic mix of demagoguery and nonsense.”

Read on. He’s also about to spend a ton of money on national ads to get his name recognition up, something that makes a lot of sense in this weird situation where national polling is going to decide whether a candidate gets to debate in Iowa. Fox will be certainly be pleased — how convenient that their rules will bring them such a nice profit.

He’s not as dumb as he sounds.

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Fighting Evil Corp. There’s an App For That! @spockosbrain

Fighting Evil Corp. There’s an App For That! 

by Spocko

I’m a crappy chess player. This became clear to me when my 8 year-old nephew beat me while explaining, “The horsey piece can only move in an “L” way Uncle Spocko!”

One of the things they say you learn from chess is thinking several moves ahead, anticipating your opponent’s responses and acting accordingly. I learned this skill from life experience.

Right now I’m watching Mr. Robot. They are looking at the personal reasons people fight big institutions, as well as the human cost of those fights. That’s the part people don’t see, and it can be exhausting.

Robot Fight

When I went about the process of defunding RW talk radio, I knew I needed to anticipate how they would respond to my actions.  Then, how they would respond to my responses.

When I started alerting advertisers to the violent rhetoric, sexism and bigotry coming from the RW radio hosts I knew the radio station would use multiple excuses to keep the advertisers. First they discredited me, and then the information. Next, threats of arrest from law enforcement agencies, then hints of exposure of my identity. Finally legal threats, which they carried out. They threw around phrases like libel, tortuous interference with contract and copyright violation before they settled on a bogus copyright violation action.

I had read some books on the topics to prepare, but the smartest move I made was talking to a lawyer at the Electronic Frontier  Foundation. Following that conversation, I made sure what I wrote and posted on my blog would meet the four factors of Fair Use.

Even though I met both the spirit and the letter of the law, ABC/Disney lawyers still sent an cease and desist letter to my ISP, 1&1 Hosting, who folded like a cheap umbrella.

Lawsuits: PR Gifts, Personal Nightmares or Both?

People who have money and power have easy access to lawyers and “fixers.” They see lawsuits and threats of lawsuits all the time. They use them as tools. They know when to dismiss them as “saber rattling”  or when to use them as opening shots in a longer game.

But for normal people getting threatened with a lawsuit from one of the largest media corporations in the world is the stuff of stress nose bleeds and very un-Vulcan like floods of tears.

Following my victory over KSFO/ABC/Disney I made sure everyone I talked to who wanted to use the Spocko Method understood the law, how it might be used against them and how to prepare for the attacks.  (Right now my friends in #stoprush are seeing personal attacks vs. legal attacks. Rush doesn’t have a legal leg to stand on so uses other methods. Power players don’t like it when you interfere with their revenue streams. Corporate bullies don’t always back down when they are wrong. They will play dirty especially when money is at stake.)

The good news is that for advocates who want to use copyrighted material to educate, critique, challenge or parody powerful groups, there are new tools.

Today I spotted a great app, The Fair Use App.  It was made by an organization called New Media Rights. It helps you figure out if your content meets the four factors of Fair Use.

I would have liked to have had that when I was planning my action and preparing for the reaction, but I still would have needed the help of actual human lawyers.

I thought my case was clear cut fair use, but that didn’t mean I still wouldn’t be threatened with a suit. It means little to them to send a threatening legal letter, but it was a huge deal to me. That is why someone having your back is so important.

Big institutions and ideological groups use multiple tools to stay in power and enforce their will. These days, the corporations use automated tools to protect themselves and take action. It’s hard to reason with a DCMA take down bot. You need to understand its criteria before the fight because if you try to fight it during a hot issue, the opportunity might pass.

Activists need all the help they can get.  If you donate to groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation or New Media Rights you might just be helping the next Mr. Spocko battling Evil Corp.



Top 
 “Robot Fight” by Ariel Waldman used under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 United States License
“The Fair Use App”, by New Media Rights, used under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

QOTD: a scalper

QOTD: a scalper

by digby

If you want to know what the coordinated campaign between congressional leaders and a hard core anti-abortion hoaxter outfit is all about, this should clear it up for you:

“This represents ACORN’s scalp,” Steve King said off the House floor Thursday, pulling the acorn out of his pocket. “Ask me after the appropriations cycle and see if I have a talisman in my pocket for Planned Parenthood’s.”

It might just work. Too bad about all the women who won’t get needed health care.

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They just like the guy

They just like the guy

by digby

The new Fox News poll has the latest:

Among Republican primary voters, Trump captures 18 percent. He’s closely followed by Walker at 15 percent and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush at 14 percent. No one else reaches double-digits.

Support for Trump is up seven percentage points since last month and up 14 points since May. He’s also the candidate GOP primary voters say they are most interested in learning more about during the debates.

And why do they like Trump?

Trump’s June 16 announcement speech included provocative comments on illegal immigration that people are still talking about a month later, including the suggestion that the Mexican government is sending criminals and rapists to the United States. Whatever the blowback, his views resonate with many: 44 percent of voters think Trump is “basically right” on the issue. A 53-percent majority disagrees.

Among Republican primary voters, 68 percent say he is right.

Only 22 percent of GOP primary voters know that Mexico is not “sending” all its rapists and drug dealers to American to work in our kitchens, clean our houses, raise our children and pick our vegetables for us.

Houston, we’ve got a propaganda problem.

Elizabeth Warren at Netroots Nation, on Insiders, Outsiders and Change, by @Gaius_Publius

Elizabeth Warren at Netroots Nation, on Insiders, Outsiders and Change

by Gaius Publius

Fresh from the YouTube presses, here’s Elizabeth Warren’s speech at this year’s Netroots Nation. It’s a terrific watch.

If you want the short form, start listening at 20:50, when she talks about the coming presidential election. Otherwise, just click and enjoy. (And thanks to Sarah Kirshtein for putting it up so quickly.)

Does she lay down the gauntlet for … (shh, not telling)? Does she all but endorse … (shh, not telling)? Fun speech though, with interesting implications. And she has a terrific performance style. In actor’s terms, she confidently occupies the space around her — watch her hands and arms as she speaks.

Two points. First, I’ve said Sanders and Warren would “tag-team on message through the primary without any visible signs of coordination.” Is this an example?

Second, for Clinton fans, this is still her game to lose. There’s an explicit ask in this speech, and also a measuring rod. There’s still time to respond credibly.

GP

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“You maniacs!” by @BloggersRUs

“You maniacs!”
by Tom Sullivan

Pretty dry out here in the American West. From ProPublica and Matter:

“Killing the Colorado,” a joint reporting project by ProPublica and Matter, set out to tell the truth about the American West’s water crisis. As serious as the drought is, the investigation found that mismanagement of that region’s surprisingly ample supply has led to today’s emergency. Among the causes are the planting of the thirstiest crops; arcane and outdated water rights laws; the unchecked urban development in unsustainable desert environments; and the misplaced confidence in human ingenuity to engineer our way out of a crisis — with dams and canals, tunnels and pipelines.

All that’s missing in this drought photo spread is Charlton Heston in a loincloth dropping to his knees and shouting, “God damn you all to hell!”

You Maniacs!

Now *that* was a scandal

Now *that* was a scandal

by digby

I remember it that way too. I was on summer vacation and being the sad political nerd that I was, riveted to the hearings every single day.  It was the most electrifying moment in a rolling scandal full of them. When people say something is a political bombshell this is the bar it has to meet.

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Runferyerlives! (Maybe)

Runferyerlives! (Maybe)

by digby

The powerful Chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security had some very scary news for us:

A shooting that killed four Marines in Chattanooga, Tennessee, appears to be inspired by ISIS, and the gunman’s communication devices are being analyzed in search of directives from the terrorist group, Congressman Michael McCaul said Friday at MacDill Air Force Base.

The FBI has opened a terrorism investigation related to the case, said McCaul, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. The gunman could have been radicalized through online communication with ISIS, a process that poses an increasing threat to the United States.

“The threat is real, and it comes from the internet,” said McCaul, a Republican representative from Texas. “This is a new generation of terrorist. This is not Bin Laden in caves with couriers anymore. This is what the new threat of terrorism looks like.”

While the investigation is still in its early stages, McCaul told reporters that signs point to the shooter, Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez, of Hixson, Tenn., having been compelled by ISIS to open fire at a military recruiting center in a Chattanooga strip mall Thursday and then a nearby military training center.
[…]

“We can only be lucky so many times,” McCaul said. “We can only stop so much. They only have to be right one time, one percent, and unfortunately I believe yesterday they were.”

Sounds pretty open and shut.

Well, except for this:

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