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Month: June 2016

Busting the scandal bubble

Busting the scandal bubble

by digby

This Libertarian ticket of former Republican Governors Gary Johnson and William Weld is going to be very interesting.  Take this moment with Chuck Todd when Weld, who was the head of the Reagan Department’s Criminal Justice Division, blows Chuck Todd’s mind:

“I will give you one news tip,” he began. “All this stuff about Secretary Clinton’s use of email accounts and the report that came out, how she might get indicted, I’m not buying it.”

[…]
“I’m not buying it,” Weld said. “You can’t indict somebody if there’s no evidence of criminal intent, and I don’t see any evidence of criminal intent.”

You don’t have to be a federal prosecutor to make this assessment. I’ve never been able to figure out what crime people thought was committed here unless they thought Clinton was a North Korean agent or something.  Not that it matters. This is a patented Clinton scandal which always starts from the premise that there was some unspecified criminal intent and goes from there. There never is but by the time that’s proved, everyone’s been through the wringer and half the public believes forever that something illegal happened even though it didn’t. And that’s the point.

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A menace to society #gunnuts

A menace to society


by digby

The little boy in the above photo was only five years old

On a day when we had another campus shooting and lord knows how many other shootings around the country, it’s important to be reminded of the gun lobby’s insane propaganda Via TPM:

A firearms instructor urged parents to store guns in their kids’ bedrooms as a safety precaution during the National Rifle Association’s annual meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, Think Progress reported Monday.

“Why would you consider staging a firearm inside a child’s room?” Rob Pincus, owner of firearm instruction company I.C.E. training, reportedly asked the audience during a seminar on “home defense concepts.”

“It’s the first place I’m going to go!” he continued, as quoted by Think Progress. “As I’ve said…many times, if your kid is going to break into the safe just because it’s in their room, you have a parenting issue, not a home defense issue.”

At least 265 people under the age of 18 accidentally shot either themselves or someone else in 2015, according to a comprehensive study by gun violence prevention group Everytown for Gun Safety.

While the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that families who own guns keep them locked, unloaded and separate from ammunition, Pincus reportedly advised making weapons easily accessible in the case of an unwanted intruder.


I don’t think the parents of the little boy who fell into the gorilla exhibit should be prosecuted.  Accidents happen and that was a tragic one.

But any parent whose kid shoots herself or someone else with her parent’s loaded gun should be arrested and charged. It’s blatant negligence pure and simple.

And this man is a menace to society.

They’re real peaches

They’re real peaches

by digby

PPP did some polling Georgia.  They found that Trump is ahead here, unsurprisingly. They also found this:

50% of Trump fans think Hillary Clinton had some involvement in the death of Vince Foster, to only 13% who think she didn’t and 37% who aren’t sure one way or another. This is another example of the cult like aspect of Trump’s following. He says something and his voters get on board with it for the most part. We saw a similar dynamic with his claims about Arabs in New Jersey cheering on 9/11. 

-Georgia removed the Confederate flag from its state flag in 2001, but Trump fans in the state want it back. 52% want it reincorporated back into the Georgia flag, compared to only 29% who would be opposed to doing such a thing. By contrast voters with an unfavorable view of Trump oppose, 14/76, putting the Confederate flag back into the state flag. 

-Trump fans are pretty ambivalent on whether they even think it’s a good thing that the North won the Civil War. Only 37% say that they’re glad the North won, compared to 31% who wish the South had won, and 32% who aren’t sure one way or another.
-Finally we find that Trump fans support his practice of calling Elizabeth Warren ‘Pocahontas,’ 50-31. Among voters who have a negative opinion of Trump, 86% think it’s inappropriate to call Warren by that moniker to only 10% who find it acceptable.

Knowledge is for losers

Knowledge is for losers

by digby

He doesn’t need no stinking knowledge of world affairs:

“And Brexit? Your position?” I ask. 

“Huh?” 

“Brexit.” 

“Hmm.” 

“The Brits leaving the EU,” I prompt, realizing that his lack of familiarity with one of the most pressing issues in Europe is for him no concern nor liability at all. 

“Oh yeah, I think they should leave.”

That’s from Michael Wolff’s interview with Trump for the Hollywood Reporter. Trump apparently lives on Hagen Dasz and water, which is a nice detail. And he’s as uninformed as any superficial media personality. I think Ashton Kutcher would be a more knowledgeable presidential candidate.

Wolff concludes with this:

Before Trump trundles off to bed — actually, before that, never too tired, he plans to watch himself on Kimmel — I ask that de rigeur presidential question, which does not seem yet to have been asked of him. “What books are you reading?”

He knows he’s caught (it’s a question that all politicians are prepped on, but who among his not-bookish coterie would have prepped him even with the standard GOP politician answer: the Bible?). But he goes for it.

“I’m reading the Ed Klein book on Hillary Clinton” — a particular hatchet job, which at the very least has certainly been digested for him. “And I’m reading the book on Richard Nixon that was, well, I’ll get you the exact information on it. I’m reading a book that I’ve read before, it’s one of my favorite books, All Quiet on the Western Front, which is one of the greatest books of all time.” And one I suspect he’s suddenly remembering from high school. But what the hell.

Donald Trump simply believes he is a unique individual, one whose singular conviction that he is special makes him appealing. And pay no attention to everything else.

Yep. And millions of people believe he’s special too, based on nothing more than the fact that he’s very rich, very famous, hates the right people and never stops bragging. That’s special all right.

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“You think I’m going to change? I’m not changing.”

“You think I’m going to change? I’m not changing.”

by digby

Donald Trump is angry for some reason.  He’s won the nomination and the whole party is falling in line behind him but he’s pissed. Yesterday he lashed out at the press in a way that even had the media balking, something they seemingly never do.  Apparently calling a reporter a sleaze to his face and then announcing that you have no intention of ever moderating your behavior was enough to provoke a days worth of punditry about just what has The Donald so up in arms. There was no consensus on what it was.  If I were to guess it’s that Trump seems to have labored under the illusion that if he won the nomination that would be that. He is surprised that he is still being questioned.

But if you’re wondering if this will hurt him with his voters, Rush Limbaugh gives us a good clue:

Trump felt the need to correct the record today and did so in his own inimitable way, which basically attacked the media for dishonesty and corruption.  And the thing is he stood there for, what, 45 minutes? I mean, he didn’t hide, didn’t run away from it, answered every question. He just took them on.  They have no complaint.  They can never say Trump avoids them. They can never say Trump does this or that to try to evade any kind of scrutiny, even though he got that question about scrutiny. 

But the New York Times… This is actually kind of funny, I think, because they’re worried that Trump’s constant access to the media and his unpredictability is frustrating Hillary.  Hillary doesn’t know how to deal with this. Hillary doesn’t know how to counterprogram Trump, if you will.  Hillary doesn’t know how to go out and write her own narrative of the day.  Hillary doesn’t know whether to focus on herself or to criticize Trump or to go after Crazy Bernie. She doesn’t know what to do.  And the press doesn’t, either.

The New York Times is admitting here that their capacity, their ability to shape and control the narrative — the soap opera script — every day, is almost impossible because of Trump.  And so the Times, in this story, is struggling to figure out some kind of Fairness Doctrine solution to the problem.  I kid you not.  They’re trying to find a way they can balance this, because Trump is generating so much more coverage.  They’re not starting it.  The press isn’t.  Trump’s just out doing what he’s doing, and they are compelled to cover it.

They cannot not cover it.  But there is no… Hillary Clinton calls a press conference; it’s no big deal.  There isn’t a mad dash by countless members of the media to get there and see what she’s gonna say.  There is no comparative excitement, unpredictability, drama, entertainment, you name it. There isn’t any comparison.  Now, not to say Trump doesn’t have any competition, because he does.  That’s a crucial factor in all of this, too.  Now, the Times here, they’re hand-wringing. They’re worried. They’re complaining. (paraphrased)

“It’s not fair! It’s not fair! We can’t control the media ’cause of Trump.”  The problem is — and they don’t want to say this, but the problem is — that Trump, no matter what anybody thinks of him, is interesting.  And Trump, no matter what anybody thinks of him, is funny.  Trump, no matter what anybody thinks of him, is different.  Trump, no matter what anybody thinks of him, is drama.  Trump, no matter what anybody thinks of him, is unpredictable.  All of that means, you can’t miss it.

That’s the right’s most important propagandist who, by the way, has called himself “an entertainer” for years. Trump is his creature more than anyone else in America.

The sad truth is that close to half this country likes Trump just the way he is.

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Who needs legitimacy?

Who needs legitimacy?

by digby

This is outrageous:

The U.S. military judge overseeing the trial of the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks should step down and the case should be scrapped because he effectively conspired with prosecutors to destroy evidence, defense lawyers said in a court filing.

The motion said Judge James Pohl, an Army colonel, and prosecutors had tainted the case against Pakistan-born Khalid Sheikh Mohammed by keeping defense lawyers from learning that the evidence had been destroyed.

The motion was filed on May 10 and recently cleared for release. It raises a potential hurdle in the slow-moving capital case against Mohammed and four others charged in the hijacked airliner attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, in which 3,000 people died.

Pohl, along with prosecutors, “manipulated secret proceedings and the use of secret orders to mislead the defense and unfairly deprive Mr. Mohammed” of ways to keep the evidence from being destroyed, the motion said.

Commissions spokeswoman Lieutenant Colonel Valerie Henderson referred questions to the prosecutor’s response, which is expected to be made public in a few days.

Pohl presided over a pretrial hearing on Tuesday in the case at the U.S. Navy prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The filing alleges that Pohl authorized prosecutors to destroy evidence six months after he agreed to a defense request that it be preserved.

Defense lawyers were kept in the dark about the authorization and the contact between Pohl and prosecutors, it said.

Pohl’s order had included a provision that prosecutors give a redacted version of it to the defense. But he did not tell them to do so until 18 months after the order was issued, long after the evidence was destroyed, the filing said.

The motion does not detail what the evidence was, and classified annexes are sealed. A prosecution response filed last week has not been cleared for release.

The motion asks that Pohl recuse himself and that Army Brigadier General Mark Martins, the military commissions’ chief prosecutor, and the prosecution team be disqualified. It also asks that Mohammed’s trial be scrapped and/or the death penalty be dropped.

We don’t know what the evidence was but it doesn’t matter. In order for these trials to have even a sheen of legitimacy in the eyes of the world, this is unacceptable. The west, led by the US, managed to try the Nazis fairly and in open court, in ways which left no question about the fairness of the system. You’d think they could do it here.

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The clan leader of white America

The clan leader of white America

by digby

I wrote about one right wing intellectual’s take on the Trump phenomenon for Salon this morning:

The Trump phenomenon is presenting Republicans with one of those once in a lifetime gut checks — do you fall in line behind someone who is obviously unfit for the office of president or do you tell the truth as you see it and risk the disapprobation of your peers and the possible banishment to political Siberia? Even though the truth of the matter is obvious, I don’t think it’s fair to say that it would be easy for anyone.  To lose your place in the political ecosystem can be emotionally painful and professional very risky. The path of least resistance is to go with the flow. If Trump loses you will have a lot of company.  If he wins, well, you’ll have to live with your own conscience as to the consequences. But the people who spoke out against him will always be resented for their courage.

There are mainstream Republicans who are opting out, more than people may realize. The Stop Trump Movement boasts some major players in the GOP scene, people like Mitt Romney, George Will, Erick Erickson, David Brooks and Glenn Beck to name just a few.  Some are attempting to salvage their futures by contending that Trump is unacceptable only because he is a traitor to conservatism, which he is in some ways although that is hardly the primary case against him. The more valiant among them take the threat of Trump seriously and are willing to admit the truth, such as Bret Stephens of the Wall Street Journal who told Fareed Zakaria over the week-end:

I most certainly will not vote for Donald Trump. I will vote for the least left wing opponent to Donald Trump and I will want to make a vote that will make sure he is the biggest loser in presidential history since Alf Landon or going back further. It’s important that Donald Trump and what he represents, this “ethnic conservatism or populism” be so decisively rebuked that the Republican party and Republican voters will forever learn their lesson that they cannot nominate a man so manifestly unqualified to be president in any way shape or form.

Stephens is a traditional ideological conservative who could rail against Trump’s defense of Social Security or his anti-free trade tirades if he chose to. But except for a passing reference to “populism” Stephens indicts Trump on the right grounds: his manifest unfitness for the job. Finally, here’s something that liberals and conservatives can agree upon.

There are a few conservatives who saw the disintegration of their party coming for quite a while, notably conservative writer and former Bush speechwriter David Frum who has been committing apostasy for several years now. He wrote a thought provoking piece for the Atlantic this week in which he documents how Donald Trump has broken seven standards and norms of behavior that make it possible for democracy to function.

The first broken norm is the most obvious. The idea that America’s presidents should behave with maturity and self-restraint is a standard that most of us take for granted. Sure, they have all had different personalities but basic respect for the office and basic civility has been a given. For instance, presidential candidates have not, up until now, called their rivals pussies on the stump.  Frum refers to Mitt Romney’s righteous rant against Trump from several months ago in which he said, “think of Donald Trump’s personal qualities, the bullying, the greed, the showing off, the misogyny, the absurd third grade theatrics…” That’s Trump to a T.  And until now that would not have been a constellation of personality characteristics that one would think of as presidential.

He next points out Trump’s unusual untrustworthiness making a very important point in the process. He notes that the GOP base holds establishment leaders in contempt for their alleged failure to fulfill the mandate they were given when they won a majority in the two midterm elections. Frum writes:

As one unfriendly critic noted, the Republican rank-and-file weren’t exactly innocent victims of elite deception. Republican voters … wanted everything, and, after all, GOP leaders promised them that it was possible—even though those same leaders knew it was not. 

Place the blame for that failure where you will, however, the results were glaring: radical Republican rejection of the trustworthiness of their leaders—all their leaders.What, then, was one liar more—especially if that liar were more exciting than the others, more willing to say at least some of the things that Republicans wanted said? 

They are responding to a man who says:

“Politicians have used you and stolen your votes. They have given you nothing. I will give you everything. I will give you what you’ve been looking for for 50 years. I’m the only one.”

The next norm that’s been broken is “the expectation that a potential president should possess deep—or at least adequate—knowledge of public affairs.” It goes without saying that Donald Trump winning the GOP nomination proves that this is no longer considered necessary by a majority of Republican voters. He is, as was pointed out above, manifestly unqualified and has absolutely no intention of learning anything because he doesn’t need to.

Frum next points out that the Republican ideological standard has completely evaporated which is of greater concern for conservatives than the rest of us but his analysis of how this happened is quite interesting:

The ideology guardrail snapped because so much of the ideology itself had long since ceased to be relevant to the lives of so many Republican primary voters. Instead of a political program, conservatism had become an individual identity. What this meant, for politicians, was that the measure of your “conservatism” stopped being the measures you passed in office—and became much more a matter of style, affect, and manner.

No one exemplified this better than Frum’s old boss George W. Bush, the man everyone celebrated as presidential perfection because he was the kind of guy you wanted to have a beer with. But Trump has proved that ideology no longer matters at all to most Republicans, which does come as something of a surprise. Even the social conservatives seem to have completely given up the ghost.

Another shattered norm , and it’s a big one, is the blithe acceptance of Trump’s total lack of coherent national security worldview.  The fact that he is not a familiar neocon or a practitioner of Real Politic would be disorienting for Republicans regardless, but calling his turn to belligerent nationalism “America First” is downright hallucinatory.

Frum believes Trump has broken the norm against intolerance and it’s true that his crusade against “political correctness” and the open racism and religious bigotry are at levels we haven’t seen in decades. After surveying all the data which shows that the white ethnic tribalism we’re seeing on the right at the moment is a result of backlash against changing demographics, he writes:

Trump is running not to be president of all Americans, but to be the clan leader of white Americans. Those white Americans who respond to his message hear his abusive comments, not as evidence of his unfitness for office, but as proof of his commitment to their tribe.

Finally, Frum bemoans the harsh partisanship that leads otherwise normal people like Marco Rubio, after having denounced Trump for months as a vulgar con man, cozy up to Trump using the ludicrous rationale that he’s “even more scared about her [Clinton] being in control of the U.S. government.” That’s ridiculous and on some level Rubio knows this. Clinton is fully in the mainstream of American politics along with Barack Obama, both Bushes and Bill Clinton. Trump is not. But as is their wont, the right wing is projecting their own extreme deviation from the norm on to their opposition and their leaders are dutifully following along.

Frum’s trying to figure all this out and he’s digging deeply to do it. In fact, he’s been doing this for some time as one of the few insiders who have been clear eyed about the destruction of the conservative movement and the Republican Party over the past few years even before the appearance of Donald Trump. And he’s right about all of this.  This disconcerting breaking of the norms that make democratic governance possible has reached a critical stage.

What started with the cynical propaganda projects of Newt Gingrich to the 90s witchhunts and the dubious tactics of the long election of 2000 metastasized into the Tea Party which was born out of a belief that Barack Obama was an illegitimate president and anything he proposed was therefore invalid. Donald Trump was in the middle of that as the King of the Birthers, the man who mainstreamed the formerly fringe conspiracy theory that the president wasn’t born in America. And now that man is the Republican nominee for president.

In order for democracy to function you cannot depend entirely on the laws to enforce it.  It requires a common understanding and acceptance of  the rules and norms developed over a long period that guarantee a certain level of civilized interaction. We’re losing them and the consequences could be very serious. Trump may lose this election and there will be some kind of reset. But even if he does, these rules and norms are very difficult to put back in place once they’ve been tossed aside. It may not happen, which raises the rather chilling question of what will be left in his wake.

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Bathing OK, but not a drop to drink by @BloggersRUs

Bathing OK, but not a drop to drink
by Tom Sullivan


Flint River in Flint, Michigan. Photo: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Good news and bad news from Flint, Michigan. Well, maybe just better news:

Municipal water in Flint, Michigan, has improved significantly and is suitable for personal cleanliness uses, scientists said Tuesday in a bid to calm fears raised by actor Mark Ruffalo and others who have questioned the safety of the supply that flows into the city’s bathtubs and showers.

Marc Edwards, a Virginia Tech engineering professor whose testing last summer confirmed the lead contamination of Flint’s water, said sampling in recent months has found that lead levels are steadily declining, although they remain too high for people to drink from the tap without a filter. Also trending downward are bacteria that can cause Legionnaires’ disease, while byproducts from disinfectant chemicals are at normal levels, he and other specialists said.

“We’re seeing some very, very encouraging results,” Edwards said at a news conference in Flint, adding that he was “pretty hopeful” the water would meet federal standards for lead content within the next six months.

But they still need to replace those pipes, Edwards said:

“It would be very, very nice to get the lead pipes out,” he said, with hopes the city of Flint could be as a model for other areas. “It’s not going to be easy. Everyone realizes that now. We’re going to have to dig a lot of holes because we don’t know where all the pipes are.”

The issue may also be evolving from just the lead pipes as the culprit.

“It’s the lead that’s probably on galvanized iron, the lead on solder, the lead on brass that is probably at least half the problem,” said Edwards. “The problem, corrosion control is not as effective on those materials.”

And the bad news?

A new report obtained by the Detroit Free Press shows the average cost for replacing a service water line in the city through a pilot project that ended this month was $7,500. That’s almost double the average cost of $4,000 for each replacement estimated by the state Department of Environmental Quality at the beginning of the water crisis last fall.

The true cost could even be higher. Not included in the calculations were average permit fees of $2,400 per site, according to the 115-page report produced by the engineering company Rowe Professional Services for the State of Michigan.

A spokesman for Gov. Rick Snyder asked in an email why the city was charging so much for permits amidst the ongoing crisis. Good question. Flint remains under a state of emergency.

Congress, meanwhile, is dragging its feet despite proposals by Michigan U.S. Rep. John Conyers and others, according to the Free Press:

But Conyers’ proposal is one of several coming in the wake of the Flint water crisis that have yet to clear Congress. One — which could provide more than $100 million in grants or loans to Flint to help replace water pipes, as well as fund other water projects and public health efforts across the country — is being pushed by U.S. Sens. Debbie Stabenow and Gary Peters, both D-Mich. so far to no avail.

But defense spending? No problemo. War is like Jell-O. There’s always room for Jell-O.

This is the best we can do?

This is the best we can do?

by digby

This article about Reince Priebus, interesting in its own right, also has an interview with Trump in which he talks about how he studies the issues:

“I’m not sure I got there through deep analysis,” he said. “My views are what everybody else’s views are. When I give speeches, sometimes I’ll sign autographs and I’ll get to talk to people and learn a lot about the party.”

He says he learned that voters were disgusted with Republican leaders and channeled their outrage. I asked, given how immigration drove his initial surge of popularity, whether he, like Sessions [Senator Jeff Sessions, of Alabama], had considered the RNC’s call for immigration reform to be a kick in the teeth. To my surprise, he candidly admitted that he hadn’t known about it or even followed the issue until recently. “When I made my [announcement] speech at Trump Tower, the June 16 speech,” he said, “I didn’t know about the Gang of Eight. … I just knew instinctively that our borders are a mess.”

He must have missed “the shows” during that period. He was probably our peddling some multi-level marketing plan at the time. He’s busy.

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