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Month: December 2017

Christmas Day Soother: Baby Elephants!

Christmas Day Soother: Baby Elephants!
by digby

Here’s a sweet story for your Christmas pleasure, courtesy of the New York Times:

When an unexpectedly cold front from China descended on parts of Southeast Asia this past week, people in Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia bundled up in coats to stave off the region’s unusual weather.

But what’s an elephant to do?

The unseasonal weather hit the Winga Baw camp for orphaned elephants in Myanmar, and workers scrambled to protect the seven animals in their care, using straw to keep them warm, according to Sangdeaun Lek Chailert, founder of the Save Elephant Foundation, a nonprofit based in Thailand that is dedicated to Asian elephants.

“We haven’t had weather this cold in 40 years,” she said by phone on Sunday while traveling through northern Thailand.

Temperatures fell to 8 degrees Celsius (46 degrees Fahrenheit) in some parts of the country. But the camp, in the Bago Region of Myanmar, had another secret weapon: giant knitted and crocheted blankets.

They were donated by Blankets for Baby Rhinos, a wildlife conservation craft group founded in November 2016 on Facebook by Sue Brown, who has been involved in rhino conservation for 25 years, and Elisa Best, a veterinary surgeon.

The group of 1,500 knitters and crocheters are scattered around the globe, Jo Caris, a coordinator for Blankets for Baby Rhinos in France, said by email on Sunday. “Our largest community of knitters and crocheters are in South Africa,” she said. “After that, it’s the U.S.A., U.K., Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Europe.”

She said 95 percent are women, “but we do have a few men and, yes, they even crochet.”

According to the group, members create blankets for more than just rhinoceroses:

“We make crochet and knitted blankets for a variety of orphaned baby wildlife animals, including but not limited to rhinos, elephants, chimpanzees, baboons, vervet monkeys. We also make crochet and knitted toys that act as a surrogate mother to our primate babies.”

When the temperatures dipped, Ms. Chailert and Blankets for Baby Rhinos connected on Facebook, and the blankets-for-baby-elephants operation began.

Ms. Chailert says she runs 28 camps in Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia for elephants that were abused in the tourism and entertainment industries. For 10 years, she said, she has campaigned to persuade tourism operators to use more humane methods to handle the animals. “No more riding, no more performing,” she said.

But it has been an uphill battle. By the time the elephants arrive at the camps, she said, many are disabled, blind or otherwise sick. In all, 77 elephants are in her care.

Ms. Caris said the blankets for the Winga Baw camp were sent to Thailand around the end of October, early November. Ms. Chailert said she traveled there and had them delivered to the Myanmar elephant camp.

Ry Emmerson, project director for Save Elephant Foundation, said it was the first time the elephants had been swaddled in blankets because of the cold. “Many are orphans as a result of the illegal wildlife trade, in particular the current trend for elephant skin,” he wrote in an email.

The American Museum of Natural History says the Asian elephant is a “highly endangered species.” It once roamed “from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in western Asia, as far east as China’s Yangtze River.” But no more.

Wildlife Asia Elephants, an organization working to protect the animals, says habitat loss and illegal killing for ivory are among the greatest threats to the elephants. “Asian elephants now occur on only about 10 percent of their historical range, and many of the remaining populations are both small and isolated,” the group says on its website.

How do you keep a crocheted blanket on an elephant like Aya May? Caretakers at the camp in Myanmar tied it firmly around the belly.

Young elephants, the natural history museum added, are removed from the wild for entertainment purposes and become orphaned when their mothers die trying to protect them.

For the orphans at Winga Baw, the day starts with a blanket to keep them warm. They are tied firmly around the elephants’ midsections. Before the animals have a mud bath, the blankets come off. After a swim, the blankets are restored, Ms. Chailert said.

But how do you even begin to knit for a baby elephant?

Ms. Caris offers a handy guide online, suggesting blankets of 120 centimeters by 120 centimeters (47 inches by 47 inches) for baby elephants, and 120 centimeters by 160 centimeters (47 inches by 63 inches) for toddlers of 4 months or older.

“Mostly, members use 100 percent acrylic yarn,” she said by email, “as it’s easy to wash and wears well.” She added, “As for design, we give our members carte blanche and, believe me, some blankets are nothing short of a masterpiece.”

When the blankets arrived at the Winga Baw camp, Ms. Chailert said, “all seven babies, they loved it.” The foundation caused a stir when it shared photographs on Facebook of the swaddled elephants. One user wrote on Facebook: “Wonderful winter collection, ladies.”

Ms. Chailert said she wished that tourists would be more conscientious about elephant attractions when they travel, investigating the operations before climbing up for a ride.

“Don’t accept cruelty to animals,” she said. “I just hope that in 2018, people will be more careful and travel with care.”

We can at least do that much, can’t we?

If youfeel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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Dennis’s Christmas mix-tape

Dennis’s Christmas mix-tapeby Dennis Hartley

Being that it’s the holidays and all, it seems good a time as any to share my Top 10 favorite songs of the season. Alphabetically…
1. Alan Parsons in a Winter Wonderland – Grandaddy
The stockings are hung with irony in this CA indie band’s rendition.

2. Christmas in Hollis – Run DMC

To my knowledge, the first Xmas rap; a classic! The elf is disturbing.

3. A Christmas Song– Jethro Tull

Ian Anderson decries the commercialization; gets drunk with Santa.

4. Do They Know It’s Christmas? – Band Aid

Oy, the mullets! Still quite moving 30 years on, and for a good cause.

5. I Am Santa Claus – Bob Rivers

Funniest Christmas parody song ever, by the “Twisted Tunes” gang.

6. I Believe in Father Christmas – Greg Lake

Such a beautiful song. Great live version with Ian Anderson on flute.

7. Little Drummer Boy/Peace on Earth-David Bowie & Bing Crosby

Yes, this really happened. Years before Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga.

8. Santa Claus is Coming to Town – Alice Cooper

Not a stretch, when you consider Santa is an anagram for, you know.



9. 2000 Miles – The Pretenders

A lovely chamber pop rendition, and Chrissie’s vocals are sublime.

10. We Wish You a Merry Christmas– Jacob Miller (w/ Ray I)

An ire, ire, ire Xmas wish from the late great Inner Circle front man.

I love all of the Beatles’ Christmas records, but the one from the White Album period is my fave. The drugs had fully taken hold…

Merry Crimble, and a Happy Goo Year!

— DH

If you feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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So this is Christmas

So this is Christmasby digby

So, I went to Starbucks here in godless Santa Monica, California a few minutes ago and everyone was saying Merry Christmas to each other. It was even on the chalkboard and on the cups and one little child, still in his jammies, was dancing around singing Rudolph the Rednose Reindeer. Not one person in store felt restrained from celebrating. Our Dear Leader Donald Trump would say it’s because he’s liberated America in the global War on Christmas, but I have to say that if so Santa Monica must have been a stronghold of the Christmas underground all these years because it’s always been like that here.
But for the rest of you newly freed Christmas greeters, Merry Christmas! For those of you who don’t celebrate, enjoy the day off and the light traffic. 🙂

If you feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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Sounds like fun by BloggersRUs

Sounds like fun
by Tom Sullivan

Christmas Eve brought news that a friend was heading home from the hospital “cancer free” after completing treatments for stage 2 pancreatic cancer. Miracles still happen out there. May we all see a few more in 2018.

Writing for Digby and for you each morning is both a privilege and a tonic. Being in the fight instead of just a spectator is empowering, even when things seem pretty dark out there. It’s not out of selflessness. And it’s certainly not for the money. Being in the fight means I’m not a victim. Even when I get run over I don’t feel like political roadkill anymore.

On my way out the door last night, my mother, a child of the Depression, asked (again) when I’m going to get paid for distributing my little primer (below). About the time my sister gets paid for doing community theater, I said.

I’ll never understand the notion that no enterprise is worth doing if there isn’t money in it. Benjamin Franklin turned down a patent for his famous stove, explaining in his autobiography, “That as we enjoy great Advantages from the Inventions of others, we should be glad of an Opportunity to serve others by any Invention of ours, and this we should do freely and generously.”

Given who sits in the Oval Office, that spirit is all but gone. Unless you fight to keep it alive. Some fights are worth fighting regardless of the odds.

Not to encroach on Spocko’s turf, but that recalls a scene from the movie Star Trek: Generations. Captain Jean-Luc Picard encounters Captain James T. Kirk (long presumed dead) inside the Nexus, a realm of pleasing illusion. Piccard enlists him to fight Soran who plans to destroy a populated planet in his quest to reenter the Nexus.

Kirk: I take it the odds are against us and the situation is grim?
Picard: You could say that.
Kirk: You know if Spock were here, he’d say I was an irrational, illogical human being for going on a mission like that.
[pause]
Kirk: Sounds like fun!

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Request a copy of For The Win, my county-level election mechanics primer, at tom.bluecentury at gmail.

It’s the Holiday Season and if you feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking this year it would be much appreciated.

A Happy Christmas Story

A Happy Christmas Storyby digby

Awwww:

Happy Christmas Eve everyone!

If you’ve had a little eggnog or a shot of the good stuff and you feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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The only people who matter weigh in on their Dear Leader’s tax cuts

The only people who matter weigh in on their Dear Leader’s tax cutsby digby

I know you were dying to hear what Trump voters think about the Trump tax cuts and the AP comes through! They are the most important people in the whole wide world, after all. I know it will shock you to learn that they like ’em.

“I believe we’re in the process of making America great,” Martel said, echoing Trump’s campaign slogan. “We’re changing a lot of the policies that were done with Obama, and I’m not really concerned about how it was done and finding out what’s in the bill after it was passed.”

Rich George, a farmer outside Detroit who boards horses, expressed hope that the tax plan’s provisions for the wealthy will ultimately help him because they will benefit his upper-income clients. He dismisses studies that show the tax plan will swell federal deficits by more than $1 trillion over a decade, even after accounting for any additional economic growth the tax cuts help produce.

“When they talk about, ‘This is going to add trillions of dollars to the deficit,’ I know it’s not going to happen,” George said. “You’re going to give people more money. They’re going to do more business. There’s going to be more people employed. There’s going to be more commerce. Manufacturing is going to go up.”

Some Trump supporters in Iowa said that for now at least, they were choosing to focus on the bright side.

“They needed to get a legislative win,” Heather Kruse, a 34-year-old physician in an affluent Des Moines suburb, said of Republicans.

She acknowledged that the tax plan’s passage was “hastily done.”

Like many voters, Kruse said she didn’t know most of the details and was disappointed by the reports that it won’t likely help the middle class much. But Kruse said she was cautiously hopeful that the benefits of lower taxes for companies would resonate beyond corporate America.

“If that’s true that it makes us more competitive in the global market, I can see that being a positive thing,” she said,

There were a few who were skeptical. But for the most part they trust their Dear Leader is helping them. And they are the only people who matter.

If you are doing last minute shopping this week-end and feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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Headline O’ The Day

Headline O’ The Dayby digby

He does have a bit of a “horsey” look about him, don’t you think?

Are there any normal people in Trump’s cabinet besides the guy called “Mad Dog?”

If you are doing last minute shopping this week-end and feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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“You all just got a lot richer”

“You all just got a lot richer”by digby

Blue collar billionaire …

Merry Christmas rubes!

President Trump told members of his exclusive Florida resort “You all just got a lot richer,” just hours after signing a sweeping $1.5 trillion tax reform bill that critics said would disproportionately help the wealthiest Americans, a report on Sunday said.

Trump made the announcement during a dinner at Mar-a-Lago – the “Winter White House” – on Friday evening, boasting to his fellow one-percenters that the “biggest in history” tax cut he signed earlier in the day would make them even wealthier, CBS reported, citing people sitting near the president’s table who heard the remarks.

Yeah, he said it. You know he did. Because he cannot help bragging about all that winning…

If you are doing last minute shopping this week-end and feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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They’re working overtime to change the narrative and the media is starting to weaken

This post will stay pinned at the top of the page for a while. Please scroll down for newer posts. 🙂

They’re working overtime to change the narrative and the media is starting to weakenby digby

When Republicans weren’t completely crazy

Like most of you, I imagine, I am convinced that something very hinky went on between the Trump campaign and Russian agents during the campaign. I don’t know if it affected the election results but the more I learn about the breadth and power of cyber-propaganda the more I think it might have. In a close election, there are probably a dozen reasons one can attribute to the loss, so who knows?

But the fact that it happened and there’s a ton of evidence that Russian agents tried to infiltrate the campaign and we know that Trump himself has behaved very oddly with respect to to Russia and Vladimir Putin, means there’s solid reason to pursue this. It’s a very worrying development and the fact that our president is a pathological liar who declares that any negative facts are “fake news” — and has a party that’s cravenly dropped its own grip on reality and is falling in line behind him — is downright scary. This is a real threat and we don’t have a clue as yet how to properly defend against it.

Keep in mind that it doesn’t have to be Russians who do this. It could be anyone, including the Koch brothers.

Right now, we are seeing the right wing fight back and fight back hard. I’m watching Republicans all over my TV say today that the Mueller team is tainted because the team he assembled aren’t all Republicans who support Trump. This is amazing. If you’ll recall during the interminable Whitewater/Lewinsky scandal it was an article of faith that only right wing Republicans were qualified to investigate a Democratic president because otherwise they might go too easy on him. I know you’ll be shocked to find out that they are inconsistent and hypocritical.

But this is a big problem. We’re not talking about some ancient land deal in Arkansas or lying about a consensual affair. This is about foreign interference in the election, the possibility that the person who won knew about it and attempted to cover it up after the fact.

This is as serious as it gets.

I hope everyone can pay close attention to this issue as we go forward but if you have a busy life and don’t have time to do all the curating of relevant news, I hope you’ll continue to stop by here from time to time. I’m following it in detail every single day and trying to synthesize and analyze what’s happening as best I can.

If you are doing last minute shopping this week-end and feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking, it would be most appreciated. As always, I’m immensely grateful for all of my readers. It’s what keeps me going.

Happy Hollandaise everyone! Together we will get through this.

Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

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States that do not matter by @BloggersRUs

States that do not matter
by Tom Sullivan


Land for sale in Pottawatomie County OK.

A year-old post from Rick Perlstein at Bill Moyers’ website came across Twitter yesterday and led to discovering that BillMoyers.com went into archive mode on December 15. I was delighted to have Bill’s team run a couple of my Hullabaloo pieces this year and will miss his spotlighting posts like Perlstein’s Mother Jones piece. It has gnawed at me since reading it.

Perlstein was teaching a weeklong seminar on the history of conservatism in Oklahoma ahead of last year’s election. One straight white male, a very bright kid Perlstein dubs “Peter” wrote an essay for the class that he found “extraordinary” on why he was supporting Donald Trump. In a private postscript, Peter wrote:

“My wishful hope is that my compatriots will have their tempers settled by Trump’s election, and that maybe both sides can learn from the Obama and Trump administrations in order to understand how both sides feel. Then maybe we can start electing more moderate people, like John Kasich and Jim Webb, who can find reasonable commonality on both sides and make government work.”

That’s pretty stunning. But what drew a gasp and applause when Peter read it to the mostly black class was (emphasis mine), “for those people who have no political voice and come from states that do not matter, the best thing they can do is try to send in a wrecking ball to disrupt the system.”

In trying to make sense of Peter’s accounting for the Trump victory, Perlstein asks, “Is it, in the main, a recrudescence of bigotry on American soil — a reactionary scream against a nation less white by the year? Or is it more properly understood as an economically grounded response to the privations that neoliberalism has wracked upon the heartland?”

Plenty of studies suggest the former. Upon doing a little research (it doesn’t take much), Perlstein discovered the latter does not hold much water. By comparison with Detroit or Chicago, median household incomes, poverty rates, GDP growth, and cost of living in Peter’s remote town of 3,000 was no worse off or even better:

Peter, though, perceives the region’s economic history as a simple tale of desolation and disappointment. “Everyone around was poor, including the churches,” he wrote, “and charities were nowhere near (this wasn’t a city, after all), so more people had to use some sort of government assistance. Taxes went up [as] the help became more widespread.”

He was just calling it like he saw it. But it’s striking how much a bright, inquisitive, public-spirited guy can take for granted that which just is not so.

(The historian of conservatism couldn’t help throwing in a Reagan reference.)

“Is it bigger than the Daniel Building?”

A close high-school friend grew up Greenville, SC in the 1960s. At 25 floors, the Daniel Building downtown was the tallest building in the state. “Is it bigger than the Daniel Building?” he once asked in reference to something large. I’m from Chicago. Twenty-five floors is nothing. He measured bigness by his experience.

It struck me that Perlstein countering Peter’s sense of poorness by referencing Detroit or Chicago misses that. Peter measures poorness and economic decline by what he knows, not by comparing himself to places he doesn’t.

Perlstein writes:

Feelings can’t be fact-checked, and in the end, feelings were what Peter’s eloquent essay came down to ­— what it feels like to belong, and what it feels like to be culturally dispossessed.

Peter’s sense that people like him come from “states that do not matter” ought to give us pause as progressives work to retake the House and Senate and state legislatures across the country. As I have argued repeatedly here, geography matters in our system. Whether or not the left and right coasts like it, the left needs to be more competitive in those “flyover states” and rural counties that don’t matter because they hold fewer votes. They still hold state legislative and U.S. Senate seats. But they won’t be won by seeing the people in them as a means to an end.

Howard Dean got that. The Democratic establishment still doesn’t. Rebuilding trust is doable, but time-consuming. Campaigns are more about expediency and efficiency than building relationships. They are all about shortcuts and timelines and win numbers. You don’t win people’s hearts by changing their minds. It’s the other way around.

First you have to care enough to show up, whether it’s Flint, MI or Shawnee, OK.

Markos Moulitsas and Jerome Armstrong wrote in 2006 about then-Virginia governor Mark Warner:

As Warner asks, how many more times will the Democrats run presidential campaigns where they abandon thirty-something southern and western states and “launch a national campaign that goes after sixteen states and then hope that we can hit a triple bank shot to get that seventeenth state?”

For another decade at least.

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Request a copy of For The Win, my county-level election mechanics primer, at tom.bluecentury at gmail.

It’s the Holiday Season and if you feel like putting a little something in the Hullabaloo Christmas stocking this year it would be much appreciated.