Skip to content

Month: January 2018

What human rights?

What human rights?by digby

That’s your looney tunes president today. Apparently he forgot about the fact that he’s the one who ended DACA in the first place. Or that he went down to Puerto Rico and threw paper towels at people who had no drinking water.
Trump (or his Iran-bot) is tweeting non-stop about human rights in Iran over the past couple of days as if he’s Gandhi. He’s just using this as a way to troll the Iranian government for his own purposes, of course. This is not to say that the Iran protesters don’t deserve our moral support. But this blunderbuss sanctimony coming from Trump is more likely to hurt their cause than help it.

Anyway, if Trump really cares about human rights here’s a human right abuse he could personally do something about right now. But he won’t. Because he’s the one perpetrating it:

The boy was crying as federal agents ordered him into the government vehicle. Tell your mother goodbye, they said.

It was late October, and Blanca Vasquez and her 12-year-old son, Luis, had only been in the United States for a few hours. They had crossed the Rio Grande near El Paso, giving themselves up to Border Patrol agents to ask for asylum. A gang in El Salvador had murdered her husband, a military sergeant, and she said they were now after Luis.

For decades, hundreds of thousands of immigrant families from Central America, escaping gang violence and political persecution, have followed a similar path, relying on international treaties protecting those seeking asylum from being summarily turned away.

Vasquez figured she and Luis would be detained, or even released, while she fought for asylum. A 20-year-old federal settlement that bars the extended detention of migrant children would ensure they stayed together.

But that was then. This summer, the practice changed.

Under orders from President Donald Trump’s administration, the federal government would begin broadly prosecuting parents who enter illegally, forcing the removal of their children. That enables the administration to detain parents until they are deported or win asylum, rather than freeing them with their children to wait for their cases in the backlogged civil immigration courts, a practice known as “catch and release” that Trump has vowed to end.

The possibility of being criminally prosecuted and separated from their children, the government argued, would deter Vasquez and other migrants from making the dangerous journey north.

But for Vasquez it was too late to turn back.

She was in federal prison. And her son Luis was, where?

No one would say.

Trump and his minions revel in this cruelty. We know this by his public rhetoric. In case you missed this during the break, in private, he’s even worse:

Late to his own meeting and waving a sheet of numbers, President Trump stormed into the Oval Office one day in June, plainly enraged.

Five months before, Mr. Trump had dispatched federal officers to the nation’s airports to stop travelers from several Muslim countries from entering the United States in a dramatic demonstration of how he would deliver on his campaign promise to fortify the nation’s borders.

But so many foreigners had flooded into the country since January, he vented to his national security team, that it was making a mockery of his pledge. Friends were calling to say he looked like a fool, Mr. Trump said.

According to six officials who attended or were briefed about the meeting, Mr. Trump then began reading aloud from the document, which his domestic policy adviser, Stephen Miller, had given him just before the meeting. The document listed how many immigrants had received visas to enter the United States in 2017.

More than 2,500 were from Afghanistan, a terrorist haven, the president complained.

Haiti had sent 15,000 people. They “all have AIDS,” he grumbled, according to one person who attended the meeting and another person who was briefed about it by a different person who was there.

Forty thousand had come from Nigeria, Mr. Trump added. Once they had seen the United States, they would never “go back to their huts” in Africa, recalled the two officials, who asked for anonymity to discuss a sensitive conversation in the Oval Office.

As the meeting continued, John F. Kelly, then the secretary of homeland security, and Rex W. Tillerson, the secretary of state, tried to interject, explaining that many were short-term travelers making one-time visits. But as the president continued, Mr. Kelly and Mr. Miller turned their ire on Mr. Tillerson, blaming him for the influx of foreigners and prompting the secretary of state to throw up his arms in frustration. If he was so bad at his job, maybe he should stop issuing visas altogether, Mr. Tillerson fired back.

Tempers flared and Mr. Kelly asked that the room be cleared of staff members. But even after the door to the Oval Office was closed, aides could still hear the president berating his most senior advisers.

Isn’t he a sweetheart? And look at General Kelly there, turning on Tillerson like a good little lapdog.

The article goes on to talk about his anger that his Muslim ban was thwarted and his alleged desire to help the DREAMers even though he wants that wall more than anything in the whole wide world and can’t seem to make up his mind whether they really need to be able to live in the country that’s the only home they’ve ever known.

Yet publicly, Mr. Trump has only employed the absolutist language that defined his campaign and has dominated his presidency.

After an Uzbek immigrant was arrested on suspicion of plowing a truck into a bicycle path in Lower Manhattan in October, killing eight people, the president seized on the episode.

Privately, in the Oval Office, the president expressed disbelief about the visa program that had admitted the suspect, confiding to a group of visiting senators that it was yet another piece of evidence that the United States’ immigration policies were “a joke.”

Even after a year of progress toward a country sealed off from foreign threats, the president still viewed the immigration system as plagued by complacency.

“We’re so politically correct,” he complained to reporters in the cabinet room, “that we’re afraid to do anything.”

I’m not sure what more he wants to do. But don’t forget that he strenuously advocated for mass deportations during the campaign and he’s pretty much come out in favor of cutting off almost all legal immigration as Jeff Sessions has been arguing for years. Maybe he can figure out a way to stop all foreign visitation for pleasure or business too. You can’t be too careful, amirite?

When a president is on record saying the things he’s said about immigrants and in private talks about foreigners in racist terms you cannot take his talk of “caring” about anyone in another country seriously. When his government separates mothers and their children who are fleeing violence and treats them like criminals, any talk of human rights rings hollow.

.

George Papadopoulos’s drunken bombshell

George Papadopoulos’s drunken bombshellby digby

I wrote about the big Papadopoulos story for Salon this morning. If you didn’t pay close attention over the week-end (say, you have life or something) it is an overview of how this advanced the Russia Investigation story:

What a shame. Just as the Trump troops had finally come up with what they thought was a put-away shot of the Russia investigation (or at least a nice shiny distraction) with their “Clinton’s phony dossier started it all” plot, the damn thing blew up in their face. And during Christmas week too.

In case you haven’t heard, the New York Times reported on Saturday that Trump’s former foreign policy adviser, George Papadopoulos, the guy who copped a plea in exchange for cooperation with Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller, got drunk in a London bar in May of 2016 and spilled to the Australian High Commissioner to Britain, Alexander Downer, that the Russians had dirt on Hillary Clinton.

That would have been less than a month after Papadopoulos first heard that Russia had emails that would embarrass the former secretary of state from Joseph Mifsud, a Maltese professor with contacts in the Russian ministry of foreign affairs. And it was months before the release of the DNC emails in July, which evidently prompted the Aussies to alert the FBI about Papadopoulos’ loose-lipped blather. It was then that the U.S. government opened a formal investigation into just what in the hell was going on with the Trump campaign and Moscow:

It was not, as Mr. Trump and other politicians have alleged, a dossier compiled by a former British spy hired by a rival campaign. Instead, it was firsthand information from one of America’s closest intelligence allies. 

Interviews and previously undisclosed documents show that Mr. Papadopoulos played a critical role in this drama and reveal a Russian operation that was more aggressive and widespread than previously known. They add to an emerging portrait, gradually filled in over the past year in revelations by federal investigators, journalists and lawmakers, of Russians with government contacts trying to establish secret channels at various levels of the Trump campaign.

It’s interesting that we now know firmly when the FBI opened its investigation, and the story about how this tied the government up in knots — not knowing quite how to deal with a counterintelligence case that potentially implicated the Republican presidential nominee — is fascinating. But this was actually a last straw rather than a single hot tip. It may have been the first time the FBI heard from a credible source that Papadopoulos knew about the Russian theft of Clinton emails before it became public, but there had been a cascade of information coming from many different allied governments for months to the effect that the Russians had an “active measures” campaign going.

Last March the Guardian reported that the British spy agency GCHQ was aware of suspicious “interactions” between Trump-affiliated people and suspected Russian agents, information which they had passed on to the U.S. And they were not the only ones:

The European countries that passed on electronic intelligence – known as sigint – included Germany, Estonia and Poland. Australia, a member of the “Five Eyes” spying alliance that also includes the US, UK, Canada and New Zealand, also relayed material, one source said. Another source suggested the Dutch and the French spy agency, the General Directorate for External Security or DGSE, were contributors.

This was all talk that was picked up as part of routine spying. These allied agencies found it odd that the Americans were so slow to act. But it’s not hard to see why U.S. intelligence services would be reluctant to go there. A presidential candidate conspiring with a foreign adversary to win an election is unprecedented: It was the hottest of hot potatoes.

It appears, however, that when this news arrived that Trump’s foreign policy adviser was drunkenly confessing to high-level diplomats that he knew the Russians were compiling dirt on Hillary Clinton — apparently for Trump’s benefit — the intelligence agencies decided they had to take it seriously. We know what happened next.

The Obama administration took the information to the congressional leadership and asked for a bipartisan show of support for alerting the public, along with state and local election officials. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell shut down the request, telling the president and the intelligence community that “he would consider any effort by the White House to challenge the Russians publicly an act of partisan politics.” In fairness, then-FBI Director James Comey was also reluctant to go public with the information, explaining later that it would be wrong to do so close to an election. (Well, unless it had to do with some Clinton emails, in which case he had no choice.)

In any case now we know what made the intelligence community rub the sleep from its eyes and realize that something serious was happening. Papadoupoulos, who Trump defenders have insisted was a minor player in the campaign, appears to have been a bigger role than we’d been led to believe. The Times story doesn’t fully explain how the man the Trump defenders call the “coffee boy” happened to share a drunken evening with the Australian high commissioner, beyond saying it came about through connections with the Israeli embassy in London. Even though the Trump campaign has insisted that they reined the kid in, he was evidently active in the highest reaches of the campaign as late as September, when he arranged a meeting between Trump and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. The coffee boy must have made an amazing espresso; he traveled in some important circles.

The Times says it has no evidence that Papadopoulos said anything to his bosses in the Trump campaign about the stolen Clinton emails he was drunkenly blabbing about to Australian diplomats, well before anyone even knew they’d been stolen. The Trump people insist he never said a thing about it. That’s about as believable as the idea that 3 million undocumented immigrants gave Clinton the popular vote in 2016. Remember, Papadopoulos is cooperating. What he knows, Bob Mueller knows. Soon enough we’ll know too.

.

Trump’s oily economy

Trump’s oily economyby digby

As you’ve undoubtedly noticed, Trump is strutting around like he’s Caesar over “his” economic prowess. Dean Baker observes that this isn’t what it seems:

The NYT had an article touting the fact that businesses are investing more under Donald Trump than before he was elected. It notes that non-residential investment has risen at an annual rate of 6.2 percent in the first three quarters of 2017. It attributes this increase to a removal of regulations leading to a new found sense of confidence among investors.

There are two important points worth noting about this increase in investment. First it is not an especially rapid rate of growth. There have been many periods in both the recent and more distant past when it grew at a more rapid pace.

For example, under President Obama, from the third quarter of 2013 to the third quarter of 2014 investment grew at a 9.1 percent annual rate. It grew at an even more rapid 11.4 percent annual rate from the first quarter of 2011 to the second quarter of 2012. Investment growth averaged 8.9 percent annually over the eight years of the Clinton administration.

The other important point about the growth of investment thus far during the Trump administration is the extent to which it has been concentrated in the mining sector. Investment as measured in 2009 chained dollars has risen by $102.0 billion from the fourth quarter of 2016 to the third quarter of 2017. Investment in mining exploration, shafts, and wells has accounted for $39.8 billion of this increase, while mining and oil field machinery have accounted for another $4.4 billion.

In total, the mining and oil sector accounted for 43.3 percent of the rise in investment thus far in the Trump administration. This means investment in the rest of the economy has been a very lackluster 3.3 percent in spite of Trump’s promises to remove regulations. (Chained dollars are not strictly additive across sectors, but this calculation should be close to a more exact one which would require applying nominal weights to each number.)

Furthermore, the investment in the mining and oil sector is almost certainly far more attributable to the rise in world oil prices than anything Trump has done in office. Oil prices collapsed in 2015 and 2016, falling from close to $100 a barrel in 2014 to a low of $32 a barrel last year. This slump led to a plunge in investment in oil and mining in 2016.

This year oil prices have begun to rise again and recently topped $60 a barrel. Investment in oil and mining in the United States rose along with world oil prices, although current investment rates are still more than 30 percent below the peak of the Obama years. In any case, if we think that Trump is responsible for the rise in world oil prices then he can reasonably be given credit for the uptick in investment that has occurred during his administration, otherwise there is not much for him to boast about.

Trump boasts about how he brilliantly led the sun to come up each morning so reality won’t stop him. Still, good to know.

Here’s Trump’s boom without energy:

.

Change Icelanders can believe in by @BloggersRUs

Change Icelanders can believe in
by Tom Sullivan


Protests on Austurvöllur because of the Icelandic economic crisis (2008). Photo by Haukurth via Creative Commons.

Iceland has got a lot to teach the world:

Starting January 1, 2018, it is now illegal for employers to pay women less than men. In Iceland, both public and private employers with 25 employees or more will need obtain government certification of equal pay policies. Organizations that fail to obtain the certification will face fines.

The country, according to the 2017 Global Gender Gap Report, already has the most gender equity of any country. The report examines the gender gap across four dimensions: economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment.

The United States ranks 49th, just ahead of Kazakhstan but behind Uganda.

I’m curious just how serious those fines are. Still, how is such a thing possible? Well, almost half of Iceland’s parliament is female.

But in this country, women make up only 24.9 percent of all state legislators. In Congress, it is only 19.6 percent.

Iceland taught the world how to peacefully remove a corrupt government. The world didn’t listen. Now they’re teaching the world how to enforce equal pay. Your New Year’s resolution? Do something about those this November.

* * * * * * * *

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

A tale of two shootings

A tale of two shootings
by digby

This shows the racism and religious intolerance perfectly:

They all jumped to the conclusion that the Pennsylvania shooting was a terrorist attack but they still really don’t know that.

Meanwhile here’s a compilation of the alt-right images from the Denver shooter’s Facebook page.

The truth is that the Denver shooter sounds like he had some serious mental health issues. And frankly, the Pennsylvania shooter probably did too. But the Denver perp is the only one we know for sure found some expression for his issues in politics.

There might be a political motivation for the Pennsylvania shooter as well but they don’t really know — and yet the Trump administration immediately said that people coming to America to join family members, like this fellow, is a root cause of our problem with violence. Apparently, just being a Muslim is enough.

Nothing could be more fatuous. Nothing could be more outrageously racist and xenophobic than this knee jerk smear — and the shrugging off of the many more white Americans when they commit similar acts.

Happy New Year, everybody.

cheers — digby



.

Keep resisting people, even Trump knows it’s the greatest threat to his presidency

Keep resisting people, even Trump knows it’s the greatest threat to his presidencyby digby


They see the iceberg but they can’t change course:

Over the past few weeks — especially since Roy Moore’s defeat — sources close to Trump say he’s finally recognizing a harsh reality: If Republicans lose the House in 2018, it will pose an existential threat to his presidency, with endless investigations, legislative obstruction and a likely move toward impeachment.

“Oh, he gets it,” a source who’s recently spoke to Trump told me.

Some of Trump’s trusted advisers are stressing the crisis-level stakes of the 2018 midterms. Many believe that the White House’s political shop, run by Bill Stepien, has proven useless. And they say the Trump-endorsed outside support group, America First, is equally ineffectual. One top administration official described it to me as “not necessarily inept, but certainly inert.”

Brian O. Walsh, a top official at America First, responded to the criticism by saying: “In just a few months, we’ve taken America First from inception to an operation that’s raised over $30 million and spent more money championing the accomplishments and supporting President Trump than any other organization. In 2018, we will be even more aggressive, and are optimistic that we will get the support needed to do so.”

At a recent lunch with Trump, former chief of staff Reince Priebus said 2018 is as serious as a heart attack— and that Republicans will only keep control of the House if everything goes perfectly.

Sources who’ve spoken to Priebus say he’s pessimistic about next year and is concerned that the White House doesn’t have a single ringleader who can galvanize Republican leaders around the country.

To emphasize the potential calamity, Priebus, the former RNC chair, has been telling GOP leadership that the party needs to own the entire data and ground operation for every single congressional district, and to “spend whatever needs to be spent as if 2020 relies on it.”

Senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said she thinks the GOP can keep the Congress in Republican hands, but that a to-be-determined liability is if more and more House Republicans retire. She noted that most presidents — including Clinton and Obama — face midterm massacres but then win re-elections.

“However, in the age of Trump,” she added, “history tends to be made, not repeated.”

Conway said she remains optimistic because she believes Democrats “have nothing positive or concrete to run on and wasted the year talking about Russia instead of America, and holding up a stop sign screaming ‘resist and obstruct’.”

You bet, Conway. Resisting and obstructing a man with a 35% approval rating who’s under investigation for conspiring with a foreign adversary and does promotional appearances at his commercial properties every week-end is a terrible idea. Be sure to send him out on the trail frequently. That can only help the ball team. The Democratic ball team.

She knows better, of course. She’s citing her patented “alternative facts”.But she’s betting that when all is said and done she will be welcomed back into the mainstream GOP fold. It’s likely she will be. But no one else should ever let her forget her role in this political atrocity.

Or Priebus’s either. Now he’s trying to steer the Titanic away from the iceberg but the Captain is crazy and just keeps gunning the engines.

Happy New Year, everybody.

cheers — digby

.

Is Trump being loose-lipped with his intelligence briefings again?

Is Trump being loose-lipped with his intelligence briefings again?by digby

He didn’t even wait 12 hours before causing the first international incident of 2018:

He didn’t get this one from Fox and Friends. This was the only thing I found on Fox News’ website. They reported the tweet and added:

It was not immediately clear why Trump opted to tweet on Pakistan. The U.S. has long accused Istanbul of allowing militants to operate relatively freely in Pakistan’s border regions to carry out operations in neighboring Afghanistan.

Fox News doesn’t seem to know the difference between Islamabad and Istanbul but that speaks to the fact that Trump didn’t get his “intelligence” from them this time.

Its possible that one of his cronies at the big Maralago party was carrying on about Pakistan and he decided to vent. But isn’t it more likely that he heard something from the intelligence community and screwed the pooch again by tweeting about it?

I’ll bet money we find out that that’s what happened in a few days. He’s feeling his oats and he’s ready to rumble.

Happy New Year, everybody.

cheers — digby

The party of law and order

The party of law and orderby digby

I think this sums up the current state of the right wing in America:

Apparently, York has forgotten something:

The final toll of Watergate:

one presidential resignation

one vice-presidential resignation – although Agnew’s crimes were unrelated to Watergate

40 government officials indicted or jailed

H.R. Haldeman and John Erlichman (White House staff), resigned 30 April 1973, subsequently jailed

John Dean (White House legal counsel), sacked 30 April 1973, subsequently jailed

John Mitchell, Attorney-General and Chairman of the Committee to Re-elect the President (CREEP), jailed

Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy (ex-White House staff), planned the Watergate break-in, both jailed

Charles Colson, special counsel to the President, jailed

James McCord (Security Director of CREEP), jailed

But he’s right about one thing. If they had the right wing propaganda network (and the help of foreign actors) of today they might have all gotten away with it.

To Byron York and his Republican fellows that would have been “a good thing!”

Happy New Year, everybody.

cheers — digby

A cramped, withered, racist oligarchy

A cramped, withered, racist oligarchyby digby

This piece by Evan Osnos in the New Yorker seems to be causing some dissonance among right wingers. They love Trump but this result of Trumpism doesn’t seem to have occurred to them:

When the Chinese action movie “Wolf Warrior II” arrived in theatres, in July, it looked like a standard shoot-’em-up, with a lonesome hero and frequent explosions. Within two weeks, however, “Wolf Warrior II” had become the highest-grossing Chinese movie of all time. Some crowds gave it standing ovations; others sang the national anthem. In October, China selected it as its official entry in the foreign-language category of the Academy Awards.

The hero, Leng Feng, played by the action star Wu Jing (who also directed the film), is a veteran of the “wolf warriors,” special forces of the People’s Liberation Army. In retirement, he works as a guard in a fictional African country, on the frontier of China’s ventures abroad. A rebel army, backed by Western mercenaries, attempts to seize power, and the country is engulfed in civil war. Leng shepherds civilians to the gates of the Chinese Embassy, where the Ambassador wades into the battle and declares, “Stand down! We are Chinese! China and Africa are friends.” The rebels hold their fire, and survivors are spirited to safety aboard a Chinese battleship.

Leng rescues an American doctor, who tells him that the Marines will come to their aid. “But where are they now?” he asks her. She calls the American consulate and gets a recorded message: “Unfortunately, we are closed.” In the final battle, a villain, played by the American actor Frank Grillo, tells Leng, “People like you will always be inferior to people like me. Get used to it.” Leng beats the villain to death and replies, “That was fucking history.” The film closes with the image of a Chinese passport and the words “Don’t give up if you run into danger abroad. Please remember, a strong motherland will always have your back!”

When I moved to Beijing, in 2005, little of that story would have made sense to a Chinese audience. With doses of invention and schmalz, the movie draws on recent events. In 2015, China’s Navy conducted its first international evacuation, rescuing civilians from fighting in Yemen; last year, China opened its first overseas military base, in Djibouti. There has been a deeper development as well. For decades, Chinese nationalism revolved around victimhood: the bitter legacy of invasion and imperialism, and the memory of a China so weak that, at the end of the nineteenth century, the philosopher Liang Qichao called his country “the sick man of Asia.” “Wolf Warrior II” captures a new, muscular iteration of China’s self-narrative, much as Rambo’s heroics expressed the swagger of the Reagan era.

Recently, I met Wu Jing in Los Angeles, where he was promoting the movie in advance of the Academy Awards. Wu is forty-three, with short, spiky hair, a strong jaw, and an air of prickly bravado. He was on crutches, the result of “jumping off too many buildings,” he told me, in Chinese. (He speaks little English.) “In the past, all of our movies were about, say, the Opium Wars—how other countries waged war against China,” he said. “But Chinese people have always wanted to see that our country could, one day, have the power to protect its own people and contribute to peace in the world.”

As a favored son of China, celebrated by the state, Wu doesn’t complain about censorship and propaganda. He went on, “Although we’re not living in a peaceful time, we live in a peaceful country. I don’t think we should be spending much energy thinking about negative aspects that would make us unhappy. Cherish this moment!”

China has never seen such a moment, when its pursuit of a larger role in the world coincides with America’s pursuit of a smaller one. Ever since the Second World War, the United States has advocated an international order based on a free press and judiciary, human rights, free trade, and protection of the environment. It planted those ideas in the rebuilding of Germany and Japan, and spread them with alliances around the world. In March, 1959, President Eisenhower argued that America’s authority could not rest on military power alone. “We could be the wealthiest and the most mighty nation and still lose the battle of the world if we do not help our world neighbors protect their freedom and advance their social and economic progress,” he said. “It is not the goal of the American people that the United States should be the richest nation in the graveyard of history.”
[…]
For years, China’s leaders predicted that a time would come—perhaps midway through this century—when it could project its own values abroad. In the age of “America First,” that time has come far sooner than expected.

There is a necessary discussion to be had about America’s role in the world. But leaving it to a cretinous imbecile who wants to spend trillions building up the military is a bad idea. America doesn’t have to run the world. But it’s kind of sad to see it become a withered, cramped, racist oligarchy known for big walls and big guns and money laundering.

The US never fully lived up to its ideals but there was progress. And the fact that immigrants from everywhere on the globe wanted to come here said something good about the place.

It would be one thing if Trump actually had a philosophy and a foreign policy, whether realpolitik or isolationism. But he doesn’t. He’s been spouting cliches about bad deals and America being laughed at for more than 30 years and that is the extent of his belief system. So whatever comes of this inane experiment in Trumpism will be an accident. I suppose that might work out ok. But it’s a hell of a risk.

Happy New Year, everybody. Keep the faith.

cheers — digby

Reality on trial

Reality on trial
by digby

Last New Years Eve, this was the state of the Republican party:

Nearly half of registered Republicans believe Hillary Clinton’s failed presidential campaign is implicated in a satanic child abuse ring operated from beneath a Washington, D.C., pizzeria, according to the results of a new poll released this week.

In spite of being debunked and refuted as a baseless conspiracy theory, 49 percent of Republicans questioned during a recent YouGov/Economist survey said there’s at least some truth to the so-called “Pizzagate” scandal said to involve Mrs. Clinton’s campaign.

Pollsters questioned 1,376 adults between Dec. 17 and Dec. 20 on various topics concerning the 2016 U.S. presidential election, including a handful involving conspiracy theories discussed during the course of the latest White House race.

Americans are more likely to buy into certain theories depending on their own political leanings, pollsters indicated Tuesday, and are often inclined to subscribe to politically-charged arguments even after they’ve been widely refuted.

Among the questions asked by pollsters was whether respondents believed that leaked emails stolen from Mrs. Clinton’s campaign manager and published by WikiLeaks prior to the Nov. 8 election “contained code words for pedophilia, human trafficking and satanic ritual abuse — what some people refer to as ‘Pizzagate.’ “

More than a third of American adults said the so-called Pizzagate accusations involving Mrs. Clinton’s staff were “probably” or “definitely” true, as did nearly half of registered Republicans, according to pollsters.

I don’t know how many still believe this nonsense. Some do. This right wing alleged journalist got herself in trouble by calling Chrissy Tiegen and John Legend pedophiles on her twitter feed and Tiegen says she’s going to sue. Here’s her latest:

I couldn’t find any current numbers on “Pizzagate” which you’ll recall was flogged by Michael Flynn’s son and alluded to by him as well. But we do know that they still believe Obama is a Muslim born in Kenya. This is from a couple of weeks ago:

Survey results released by YouGov Friday show that 51 percent of Republicans said they think former President Barack Obama was born in Kenya, compared to just 14 percent of Democrats. Perhaps unsurprisingly, respondents who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election were especially convinced of Obama’s African origins: Fully 57 percent said it was “definitely true” or “probably true” that the 44th president came from Kenya.

Basically, most Republicans based upon zero evidence, believe that President Barack Obama was a Muslim plant, probably a terrorist and that Hillary Clinton, the 2016 Democratic nominee for president and former Secretary of State, is a child sex trafficking pedophile. But the Russia investigation, headed by the former director of the FBI and endorsed by every Intelligence Official free to speak on the record, is a hoax.

It’s enough to give you a very, very big headache. Which I have. Every day. Trying to keep up with this weirdness that has become our daily reality isn’t easy. Like many of you, I wake up in the morning and reach for my phone to see whether the world is still spinning on its axis. I’m never quite sure it will be.

So far, we’re hanging on but this next year is going to be a huge challenge. Trump isn’t getting any better, he’s getting worse. Now that he’s adjusted to being the president he’s recognized that he has virtually unlimited power as long as his party is in power and as long as it backs him. And he’s seeing that they aren’t going anywhere. Indeed, they are coming around. He may understand that members of his family are in danger but he also understands that he is personally invulnerable to everything but impeachment or the 25th Amendment and that’s all dependent on the sycophantic opportunism of the GOP.

And he can always pardon his family. After all, Republicans are traditionally just fine with Republican presidents pardoning other Republicans for political purposes.

Trump is sensing that he can do anything. He can literally define reality and even if many people rant and rave that it’s just not true, it changes nothing unless Republican official abandon him.

I don’t mean to sound defeatist. Much of the harm he’s doing can be mitigated by taking away the GOP’s institutional power. That means taking back at least one house of congress. There will then be hearings and real congressional investigations and potentially some movement to shore up our election systems by 2020. If they don’t, we may very well see a replay. (And keep in mind that since Republican voters are now living permanently in Bizarroworld, they will never accept the outcome of elections again if they don’t go their way. That’s just something we’re going to have to live with for the foreseeable future.)

Anyway, I’m hopeful that 2018 is going to bring even greater activism than 2017 and it will be energetic enough to outweigh any institutional interference from the Republicans. I’ll be watching Trump and his minions like a hawk, of course. Everything he does from paid promotional appearances at his own properties every week-end to ignorant saber rattling against North Korea because of something he saw on Fox and friends is abnormal. We have to keep pointing it out and we have to keep reminding ourselves and everyone else that it’s abnormal. We have to make sure that kids who are coming up, knowing nothing more than the Trump era, understand this.

I’m going to keep trying to do that as best I can. I hope you’ll continue to stop by from time to time when you need a dose of reality.

Together we can get through this.

If you feel like dropping a little something into the Hullabaloo kitty, I would be most appreciative.

Happy New Year, everybody.

cheers — digby


.