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Month: December 2015

Schmaht as a whip

Schmaht as a whip

by digby

Yeah, I’d feel safer with this guy at the helm:

“We have kids watching the Internet and they want to be masterminds,” Trump said at a campaign rally in Mount Pleasant, S.C. after a rant about ISIS recruiting militants online.

“We’re losing a lot of people because of the Internet. We have to see Bill Gates and a lot of different people that really understand what’s happening. We have to talk to them about, maybe in certain areas, closing that Internet up in some way.”

Gates almost certainly knows about the secret switch where you can “close up the internet” in certain areas. He’s a big billionaire you know. Yuuuge.

Media moral posing and the unasked Trump question

Media moral posing and the unasked Trump question

by digby

I wrote about Trump and the media today for Salon. Here’s an excerpt in which I discuss his long phone interview yesterday on Morning Joe:

Mark Halperin seemed to think he came loaded with questions so potent it would put Trump in his place once and for all. He repeated abstract questions designed to show that Trump does not believe in American values. It was so abstract in fact, and offered in such an obsequious tone, that it ended up meaning nothing because Halperin’s robotic questioning simply gave Trump the opportunity to spew more of his bigoted nonsense.

There was one moment in the exchange in particular worth highlighting:

HALPERIN: Did the Japanese internment camps go against American values?

TRUMP: We have to be smart, Mark. And we have to be vigilant. And honestly we also have to be tough.And if we’re not going to be those things we’re not going to have a country left.

HALPERIN: Did the internment of the Japanese violate American values ?

TRUMP: We’re not talking about internment, this is a whole different thing.

HALPERIN: I understand that but I’m just asking you to weigh in.

TRUMP: No, no you’re asking me a different question.

HALPERIN: Did the japanese internment question violate American values?

TRUMP: Mark, what about Franklin Roosevelt’s presidential proclamations 2525, 2526 and 27. Take a look at it Mark.

HALPERIN: Just asking one more time, did the internment if the Japanese Americans violate our sense of American values?

TRUMP: I don ‘t want to respond to it, you know why? That’s not what we’re doing.

HALPERIN: But for some people the same values are at stake.

TRUMP: It’s wonderful that you asked me that, it’s an entirely different question. Has no relationship to what I’m talking about.

From the discussion by various network personalities over the course of the day, they all thought Halperin was very clever by asking Trump about the Japanese internment and “American values.” But in reality it was just useless moral posing by Halperin, who could have used his time much more effectively. (Later in the program he got back to his happy place by asking Trump about his political prospects.)

It was left to Willie Geist to ask Trump how he would to make his plan work. It was an interesting exchange that left Trump looking flustered and confused as he tried to explain how the government could possibly know the religion of people trying to come into the country. (He wound up saying that a customs official would just ask people trying to enter if they were Muslim.)

But through all the interviews Trump gave yesterday nobody bothered to ask him the most obvious questions. He cited those statistics about American Muslim’s attitudes in Gaffney’s bogus polls in his official statement and in every media interview about it. He is clearly very frustrated with the American Muslim community:

“The Muslim community is not reporting what’s going on. They should be reporting that their next-door neighbor is making pipe bombs and they’ve got them all over the place. The mother’s in the apartment, other people, his friend was buying him rifles. Nobody was reporting that. The Muslim community has to help us, because without the Muslim community, we would have to get very tough and much tougher, and I don’t want to do that. But the Muslim community is not a one-way street. The Muslim community knew that this guy, what he was doing, and his wife, his very heavily radicalized wife, they knew what they were doing was wrong. Nobody called the police. Nobody said this is what happened.”

He brought this up over and over again throughout the day, along with his suspicions that the family as well as neighbors and other “members of the community” were co-conspirators. Indeed, he seemed to be obsessed with the idea, working himself into a fine frenzy over it. And not one reporter quizzed him as to why he thinks any of that’s relevant to his proposed policy of blocking foreign Muslims from coming into the country.

But he did offer up some hints about what he would do about this alleged problem. He repeatedly stressed that he didn’t want to be forced to take draconian steps if the Muslim community refused to step up, which he insisted they have not done. It’s quite clear that Trump is working himself up to some kind of action against American Muslims and others who are already in the country. He hinted at it all day long as he fulminated over the reports that the Farooks got money transfers and the idea that the mother and sister are lying. Despite their obsession with Japanese internment camps and “American values,” nobody asked him specifically what he meant when he said “we will have to get much tougher.”

Shamed into action? by @BloggersRUs

Shamed into action?
by Tom Sullivan

The Guardian is tracking the number of people killed by U.S. police (for whatever reason) in 2015. The Counted database is up to 1,058 this year as I write this. Explaining that the “US government has no comprehensive record of the number of people killed by law enforcement,” the site works like this:

The Counted is a project by the Guardian – and you – working to count the number of people killed by police and other law enforcement agencies in the United States throughout 2015, to monitor their demographics and to tell the stories of how they died.

The database will combine Guardian reporting with verified crowdsourced information to build a more comprehensive record of such fatalities. The Counted is the most thorough public accounting for deadly use of force in the US, but it will operate as an imperfect work in progress – and will be updated by Guardian reporters and interactive journalists as frequently and as promptly as possible.

The FBI may have been shamed into action:

The FBI plans to overhaul its system for counting the number of deaths caused by police in the US, according to federal officials, and will begin releasing information about deadly encounters involving the use of Tasers and other force, in addition to fatal shootings.

Responding to months of sharp criticism over its existing program for reporting fatal shootings by police officers, the bureau is to unveil a new system that will publish a wider range of data, resembling that currently collected by an ongoing Guardian investigation.

Stephen Fischer, a senior official in the FBI’s criminal justice information services division in West Virginia, said it had “identified a need for more robust and complete information about encounters between law enforcement officers and citizens that result in a use of force”.

About time.

A string of high-profile deaths, many captured on video, resulted in large street protests across the country and sparked the #blacklivesmatter movement. With news organizations stepping in to begin accounting for the number of deaths at police hands, finally the FBI has been shamed into action:

James Comey, the director of the FBI, said in October it was “ridiculous and embarrassing” that the Guardian and Washington Post kept better data on the topic than the federal government. “That is not good for anybody,” he said.

The Washington Post’s accounting is here.

Remembering Lone Wolves

Remembering Lone Wolves

by digby

Someone reminded me of this one the other day. I don’t recall any hysteria coming from the right over it though.

On August 5, 2012, a massacre took place at the Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, where 40-year-old Wade Michael Page fatally shot six people and wounded four others. Page committed suicide by shooting himself in the head after he was shot in the stomach by a responding police officer.

Wade Michael Page (November 11, 1971 – August 5, 2012) was an American white supremacist living in Cudahy, Wisconsin.Page was born and grew up in Colorado. He served in the U.S. Army from April 1992 through October 1998, before being forced out by a general discharge. In the Army, Page had learned to repair the Hawk missile system, before becoming a psychological operations specialist. He was demoted and received a general discharge for “patterns of misconduct,” including being drunk while on duty and going absent without leave.

After his discharge, Page returned to Colorado, living in the Denver suburb of Littleton from 2000 through 2007. Page worked as a truck driver from 2006 to 2010, but was fired after receiving a citation for impaired driving due to drinking.

Page had ties to white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups, and was reportedly a member of the Hammerskins. He entered the white power music scene in 2000, becoming involved in several neo-Nazi bands. He founded the band End Apathy in 2005 and played in the bands Definite Hate and Blue Eyed Devils, all considered racist white-power bands by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Page’s former step-mother apologized to the Sikh victims[49] and said she had not been in touch with her stepson for the past twelve years, after divorcing his father. A former friend described him as a “loner” and said he had talked about an “impending racial holy war.”

According to his neighbors, Page lived alone, rarely left his apartment, and avoided eye contact with them.

Page legally purchased the handgun used in the shooting on July 28, 2012 at a gun shop in West Allis, Wisconsin. Page passed the background checks required, and paid cash for the gun, along with three 19-round magazines. The owner of the gun shop said that Page’s appearance and demeanor in the shop “raised no eyebrows whatsoever.”

Following the shooting, photographs of Page appeared in media reports showing him with a range of tattoos on his arms and upper body, which were said to show his links to white supremacist organizations.

Wouldn’t it be neat if a reporter asked Donald Trump about this? Or the Christian extremist who shot up Planned parenthood just a week before San Bernardino? Does he plan to “do something” about these attacks?  Does he think they are threat? if not, why not?

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Sure, he’s a problem. But not so much that they can’t make the best of it.

Sure, he’s a problem. But not so much that they can’t make the best of it.


by digby

Here’s a little reminder about where the GOP is really heading with the Trump phenomenon:

In the memo on “the Trump phenomenon,” NRSC Executive Director Ward Baker said Republicans should embrace Trump’s tough talk about China and “grab onto the best elements of [his] anti-Washington populist agenda.” Above all, they should appeal to voters as genuine and beyond the influence of special interests.

“Trump has risen because voters see him as authentic, independent, direct, firm, — and believe he can’t be bought,” Baker writes. “These are the same character traits our candidates should be advancing in 2016. That’s Trump lesson #1.”

Baker’s memo, titled “Observations on Donald Trump and 2016,” amounts to a clear-eyed approach to the Trump challenge, to which many Republican elites have responded with only hand-wringing and the vague hope that somehow, someday it will disappear. In fact, the memo posits that Trump could build a powerful enough coalition to win the general election. Regardless of how far Trump’s candidacy ultimately goes, the memo is evidence of the effect he has had on his party.

Still, Baker sees limits to being like Trump. He writes that it is prudent for Senate candidates to craft their own political brands distinct from Trump’s and to distance themselves by quickly condemning his more controversial comments, such as “wacky things about women.” He cautions candidates against “piling on” Trump, however, warning that Republicans up and down the ballot would suffer if the GOP vote was divided or depressed.

Implied in the memo is an understanding that the national party would back Trump if he secured the nomination — managing his candidacy rather than disowning him as the standard-bearer.

Just saying. For all the hosannas being raised in the press this morning over the likes of Paul Ryan and Dick Cheney condemning the ban on Muslims as un-American, it rings just a bit hollow when most of the other candidates were happy to jump on the idea of only allowing Christian Syrians into the country and they’ve all stood silent as he endorsed torture and killing wives and children and rounding up and deporting 12 million undocumented workers (who he defames as rapists and criminals) along with their American children.

They’re not going to abandon him. He can run as an independent and 68% of his voters say they’ll stick with him if he does it. And then they’ll definitely lose.  No principle is so important to them that they’ll knowingly jeopardize their chances.

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“Common Sense” = deport, ban and kill

“Common Sense” = deport, ban and kill

by digby

Todd Starnes of Fox News explains why the latest Trump brouhaha is music to wingnuts’ ears:

Donald Trump’s call to ban all Muslim immigration has caused anger and righteous indignation from Democrats and Republicans. Catholics and Baptists

But a good many folks across the fruited plain support Mr. Trump’s plan. Folks want to do whatever it takes to protect their families from the jihadists.

If you move beyond the toxic politics – what Mr. Trump is suggesting is not all that outrageous. It’s rather prudent.

What’s wrong with temporarily suspending Muslim immigration from countries harboring Islamic radicals?

Would it not be better to vet them over there – before they blow something up over here?

Unfortunately — these days politics trumps common sense.

I want you to remember one cold hard reality — Donald Trump is the product of a leadership vacuum in the Republican Party. So if you want to blame somebody for Mr. Trump’s candidacy — you can blame Establishment Republicans.

That’s it in a nutshell, We need “common sense” not morals and values. And common sense tells these primitive thinkers that if “get rid of” all the people who are different from them they will have nothing to worry about. It’s simple tribalism.

They are not interested in complicated arguments about how we need to be liked and admired or the necessity for allies. They don’t care about “American values.” They believe the Republican Party is refusing to do “what needs to be done” and so they turn to what feels to them like the logical answer: ship ’em out, close the doors, kill ’em. To people who think this way, the answer is to exterminate the threat.

And by the way, the bellicose saber rattling emanating from many of the so-called thoughtful people doesn’t help to rebut that simple-mindedness. Here’s Lindsay Graham, the guy who everyone turns to as the reasonable hawk because he says Trump is hurting national security with his ravings:

This chest beating just reinforces the idea that we can  “kill ’em all”. And we can’t. They propagate even after their dead. “They” aren’t just people. They’re an idea.

Graham understands this but he’s playing this game too.

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Trump’s legacy is secure

Trump’s legacy is secure

by digby

Most of it pre-existed him. But he’s brought a new element to it. I wrote about this for Salon this morning:

Yesterday I wrote a very long article about Donald Trump’s escalating demented rhetoric. I quoted him at length from his early insistence that undocumented immigrants are rapists and murderers to his promise to deport all 12 million of them along with their American children. He has since then added Syrian refugees who are already in the country to that deportation list along with an endorsement of torture as well as making the wives and children of suspected terrorists “suffer.”
And those particular demagogic atrocities are on top of daily degrading commentary on the stump talking about women, his rivals and even people with disabilities. It’s all out there, documented for everyone to see. His often vague “oh, we’re gonna be so tough, so nasty it’ll make their heads spin” sounds like a typical rightwing loudmouth, to be sure. But when he gets specific about what that means, there can be no doubt: he is proposing to use government police and military power to ruthlessly and violently oppress minorities in this country and kill foreigners around the world. That is what he’s saying, full stop.
So, when he came out with his big “statement” yesterday proposing to deny Muslims entry to the U.S. for any reason, it should not have been the earthquake that it was, at least among the chattering class. It’s very much in keeping with his earlier comments tacitly endorsing the registration, profiling and surveillance of American Muslims. He’s made it quite clear that he’s more than willing to go the extra mile.
Some of the more cynical of the commentators said this latest was in reaction to Cruz’s rise in the polls in Iowa and they pointed to other instances where he has said something outrageous to bring the attention back to himself. That’s certainly possible but he indicated last week that he was planning to unveil a new anti-terrorism policy and it seems likely this was what he was talking about. So, I’m not sure this is just a reaction to polls.
His  national security argument is that Obama isn’t doing anything and that his Republican rivals have nothing new to offer either. And despite their vociferous denunciations of his policies, aside from chest-beating and fulminating, he’s right. Islamic extremist violence and terrorism is a very tough challenge and nobody has a magic bullet. For all the GOP pearl clutching there is little daylight between their policies and Obama’s.
So Trump is saying: “This isn’t a tough problem. I’ll solve it. I’ll get rid of the Muslims.” And it’s powerful. Robert Costa on “Hardball” yesterday put it this way:
“Trump is speaking to the Republican party, he is contrasting with what the president said about being welcome to Muslims in this country. Trump is doing the exact opposite. The problem for the Republican Party at this moment is is that no one is making ads against Trump, there is no plan against Trump. They may have chastising tweets, they may have statements against Trump. But is that enough?”
Here’s an example of a “chastising tweet”:

Ted Cruz, on the other hand, remains very careful about taking on Trump:
“That is not my policy. I believe the focus should focus on radical Islamic terrorism, and we need to be directly focused on threats to the United States. We need a commander in chief that perceives what the threat is and that targets all of our resources to protecting this nation against radical Islamic terrorist.”
Trump  has them right where he wants them. And his supporters have his back. The reaction he got when he read his statement to the crowd at yesterday’s rally was very enthusiastic:
Thank you to the great crowd at the #USSYorktown in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina. Listen to the the response from the crowd to my latest proposal – and let me know if you agree with these PATRIOTS?
When he finished the entire statement he got a sustained standing ovation.
On MSNBC last night, one Trump supporter at his South Carolina rally told the reporter that we shouldn’t stop with keeping Muslims out of the country, he also said “we ought to ship ’em back.”
He evidently believed the bogus poll results Trump referenced in the speech which have been circulated by the Islamophobic Center for Security Policy. (It’s so fringe that its chairman, Frank Gaffney was banned from CPAC, the right wing’s most important conference, after he accused its organizers of being members of the Muslim brotherhood.) These phony polling numbers assert that a quarter of American Muslims condone violence and a majority believe the country should be allowed to choose Sharia law. You can certainly understand why Trump’s supporters might be confused thinking he’s for “shipping them back.” (And anyway, he’s said it dozens of times about Mexicans and Syrian refugees, why not Muslims in general?)
Is this the final straw? Who knows? But the sad fact is that Trump isn’t just shooting from the hip on this. There’s some pretty good evidence that he’s channeling the feelings of a large number of Americans. This piece by sociologist Christopher Bail in last week’s Washington Post explores the rise of Islamophobia in America since 9/11 and it’s chilling:
Over the past decade, 32 states proposed shariah law bans, controversies about the construction of mosques have increased by more than 800 percent, and the number of Americans with negative opinions of Islam has more than doubled, as my research shows.
Bail’s new book used some sophisticated techniques to show that this happened in large part because media outlets were under the influence of groups like Gaffney’s and the Middle East Forum which pushed the idea of a clash of civilizations. And the media also ignored the mainstream Islamic organizations which set out to show that the extremists like al Qaeda were small fringe groups. Those groups complained it had the perverse effect of drawing more attention to the Islamophobes. And then Islamophobia became a wingnut welfare scam:
By 2008, I show that groups arguing for Islam’s threat had amassed more than $240 million and forged ties to elite conservative groups such as the Heritage Foundation.
[…]
There has not been a lot of polling on Trump’s proposal since that really is a new idea in America. We have had a lot of racist and nativist policies in our checkered history but even back in the days when there was widespread animosity toward Catholics and Jews there were no laws banning them from entry. But that’s the danger of Donald Trump: He’s changing assumptions about American values and he’s changing them very quickly.
It may be true that Americans are becoming more anti-Muslim. And Trump didn’t invent the notion that undocumented workers are tearing this country apart. This fear and loathing of Muslims and Mexicans has been simmering on the right for years. But Trump is the first to come along and propose that the government should deny them entry by all means at its disposal and remove those who are already here.
And now that these “solutions” are on the table we will never be able to go back to a time when such a thing was unthinkable.  Trump’s brought these radical eliminationist ideas fully into the mainstream of American political life. Whatever else happens with this campaign that’s his legacy  — and it’s already secure.

More at the link.

QOTD: Krauthammer

QOTD: Krauthammer 


by digby

On Trump:

 I think that Chris Stirewalt had the answer to this dilemma; he suggested that everybody coming through from Laguardia, JFK, Dulles would be forced to eat a ham sandwich. Now that way, I would admit, that some people will be caught in the net who shouldn’t. Orthodox Jews and vegetarians. But as Trump says this is war and there will be collateral damage, so we have to get serious about this.


The Furor

The Furor

by digby

I think I’ll start calling him that — like The Weeknd.

On CNN, Trump dismissed the cover as an attack from another newspaper that’s “going out of business.”

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