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Month: December 2018

Let’s party like it’s 2007.

Let’s party like it’s 2007

by digby

Krugman succinctly points out how cynical, bad faith, hyper-partisanship pervades every last corner ofconservatism:

They are all liars.

Just look at the “Club for Growth” types like Stephen Moore backing Trump to the hilt despite having pent decades ranting about free trade and now holding themselves out as protectionist working class heroes sticking it to the man. “Makers not takers” remember?

If we survive this debacle, it’s going to be very tempting for the media to blame everything on Trump and declare that we much go back to “normal.”

No. That “normal” paved the way for Trump. It’s gotten us into trouble over and over again. It’s the whole movement, the whole party, the entire philosophy and worldview that is corrupt. They have a lot of ‘splainin’ to do before they can ever be trusted to argue or negotiate in good faith. A lot.

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

That Huckabee “humor”

That Huckabee “humor”

by digby

Mike Huckabee has a nasty mouth. In some ways, it’s nastier than Trump’s because he’s smarter. But it’s just as mean:

After President Trump was roasted for appearing to mock a 7-year-old girl for still believing in Santa Claus earlier this week, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) raised eyebrows when he took it upon himself to defend Trump, by claiming his comments weren’t as bad as “boiling the little girl’s rabbit.”

“What is wrong with people? It wasn’t like he was boiling the little girl’s bunny rabbit in a pot on the stove or something, I mean, he asked a simple question.

He really shouldn’t be talking about torturing and killing animals. His son and White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ brother has a history:

It seems young Huckabee spent some time as a counselor at a Boy Scouts camp called Camp Pioneer back in 1998 when he was 17-years-old. Huck happened upon a stray dog that had the misfortune to cross his path. In a move sure to send chills down the spine of parents everywhere, trusting their kids are being cared for by well intentioned summer camp counselors, David Huckabee hung the dog from a tree. His excuse, according to an interview Newsweek conducted with his father Mike: “There was a dog that apparently had mange and was absolutely, I guess, emaciated.”

Huckabee thinks he’s a comedian. Professional comedians disagree. I think this observation pretty much sums it up: “Huckabee has the humor of a serial killer who writes into a police station to tell them where to find the body.”

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

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Trump’s troops

Trump’s troops

by digby

That is troubling. It is 100% inappropriate, and just a teensy bit fascist, that Trump turns his appearances with people in uniform into MAGA rallies. In his Iraq visit yesterday he got down and dirty with it in his address to the troops:

I don’t know if you folks are aware of what’s happening. We want to have strong borders in the United States. The Democrats don’t want to let us have strong borders — only for one reason. You know why? Because I want it. (Laughter.) If I said — you know, I think, just standing here looking at all these brilliant, young faces — these warriors. You’re warriors. You know, you’re modern-day warriors. That’s what you are.

But you gave me an idea, just looking at this warrior group. I think I’ll say, “I don’t want the wall.” And then they’re going to give it to me. (Laughter.) I’ve figured out the solution, First Lady. (Laughter.) Tell Nancy Pelosi, “I don’t want the wall.” “Oh, we want the wall.” And then we get the wall. (Laughter and applause.) That’s another way of doing it. (Applause.) That’s another way of doing it.

No, we have to have it. And, you know, not only human trafficking; drugs; illegals; a lot of criminals — bad records. We’ve seen murderers come in through the — you saw what happened with the caravan, as we call it. A caravan of thousands of people.

And then he really went low:

While American might can defeat terrorist armies on the battlefield, each nation of the world must decide for itself what kind of future it wants to build for its people, and what kind of sacrifices they are willing to make for their children. America shouldn’t be doing the fighting for every nation on Earth not being reimbursed, in many cases, at all.

If they want us to do the fighting, they also have to pay a price — and sometimes that’s also a monetary price — so we’re not the suckers of the world. We’re no longer the suckers, folks. And people aren’t looking at us as suckers. And I love you folks because most of you are nodding your head this way. We’re respected again as a nation. We’re respected again.

All the dead soldiers are suckers too, apparently. But not because they were fighting in useless wars. They were suckers because “other countries” didn’t pick up the tab. He isn’t an isolationist or a protectionist. He has no clue what those concepts areIt’s just that everything in the world to him is like a contract for floor tiles in one of his hideous hotels. He is simply incapable of seeing things any other way. It’s his only framework.

I’m guessing all those troops in the MAGA hats cheered and cheered. Sadly, many of them are cultists too.

The Iraqis weren’t quite so happy about it:

Iraqi political and militia leaders condemned U.S. President Donald Trump’s surprise visit to U.S. troops in Iraq on Wednesday as a violation of Iraq’s sovereignty, and lawmakers said a meeting between Trump and Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi was canceled due to a disagreement over venue.

Sabah al Saadi, the leader of the Islah parliamentary bloc, called for an emergency session of parliament “to discuss this blatant violation of Iraq’s sovereignty and to stop these aggressive actions by Trump who should know his limits: The U.S. occupation of Iraq is over.”

The Bina bloc, Islah’s rival in parliament and led by Iran-backed militia leader Hadi al-Amiri, also objected to Trump’s trip to Iraq.

“Trump’s visit is a flagrant and clear violation of diplomatic norms and shows his disdain and hostility in his dealings with the Iraqi government,” said a statement from Bina.

Abdul Mahdi’s office said in a statement that U.S. authorities had informed Iraq’s leadership of the president’s visit ahead of time. The statement said the Iraqi prime minister and U.S. president talked by telephone due to a “disagreement over how to conduct the meeting.”

Iraqi lawmakers told Reuters that the pair had disagreed over where their planned meeting should take place: Trump had asked to meet at the Ain al-Asad military base, an offer which Abdul Mahdi declined.

They also didn’t love his blunt comment that he didn’t plan to withdraw troops for a very long time. Imagine that.

This didn’t go over either:

“We can use this as a base if we wanted to do something in Syria,” he said. “If we see something happening with ISIS that we don’t like, we can hit them so fast and so hard” that they “really won’t know what the hell happened.”

Qais Khazali, the head of the Iran-backed Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia, promised on Twitter that Iraq’s parliament would vote to expel US forces from Iraq, or the militia and others would force them out by “other means.”
[…]
“The American occupation of Iraq is over,” al-Saida said. Trump should not be allowed to arrive “as if Iraq is a state of the United States.”

Trump believes that Iraq owes him a lot of money for the war. Because we did them a big favor. I’m not kidding. And he resents the fact that it’s still a war zone:

Q: Did you have any concerns about coming here today?

“Sure. When I heard what you had to go through?”

Q: What did you have to go through?

“I had concerns about the institution of the presidency. Not for myself personally. I had concerns for the First Lady, I will tell you. But if you would have see what we had to go through in the darkened plane with all window closed with no light anywhere. Pitch black. I’ve been on many airplanes. All types and shapes and sizes.”

“So did I have a concern? Yes I had a concern.”

President Bone Spurs was concerned for “the institution of the presidency.” Haha. He’s so much more responsible than all the other presidents who have flown into war zones for the past 60 years.

He’s been on airplanes of all types and shapes and sizes but it’s obvious that flying into the airbase with no light scared him to death.  Like most blowhards, he is a total coward. 

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year …


cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

More perilous than the journey itself by @BloggersRUs

More perilous than the journey itself
by Tom Sullivan

If you still scratch your head wondering how a hospital sent a vomiting child with a 103 degree fever back to government detention with an antibiotic and some Ibuprofen, join the club. Sally Kohn wonders what the hell we are doing locking up migrant children at all.

Besides, immigrants have historically enriched our country both culturally and economically. “Small businesses are disproportionately started by immigrants, who account for 30 percent of small business growth,” Kohn writes. “Go ahead and google that (Google, of course, was also started by immigrants).”

The fact that in America people must earn their humanity by their economic utility is a pernicious idea. No doubt, Kohn did not mean to suggest it, but that insidious notion is everywhere, even in our cultural subconscious.

Ninety percent of asylum seekers pass a “credible fear” test for whether they might face persecution if returned to their home countries, Kohn adds. This is just what U.S. and international laws governing asylum are for. Instead of honoring those commitments and the country’s immigrant heritage, the president portrays these desperate migrants as disease-invested, criminal vermin.

For incompetent and incapable Trump to be a hero, he needs a helpless foil. And the scare tactics he employed during the campaign are only being turned up now that the disaster of his presidency is in full bloom. His hope is that his MAGA followers won’t notice that their jobs, their farms, their kids’ schools and the whole economy have been destroyed so long as they’re distracted by hate and, better yet, blame immigrants for their problems—instead of Trump.

[…]

Trump doesn’t want to actually fix the immigration system. If he did, he wouldn’t be putting vulnerable, lawful asylum seekers in warehouses and cages, amidst inhumane conditions including limited medical care. He’d be focused on overstayed visas. But Trump doesn’t care what the real issues are, for which there are actual bipartisan solutions on the table. That’s because Trump desperately needs a broken immigration system that he can exacerbate and exploit.

Blame-shifting is reflex for this president. He has spent a career dodging the law while using lawsuits as a cudgel against critics. His Make America Grotesquely Authoritarian movement follows his lead. Right-wing pundits blame migrant parents so fearful for their children’s safety they would risk a perilous journey to the U.S. for putting their children at risk to come here. How dare they ask for more?

The Trump administration’s Bumbles want to make falling into the hands of U.S. authorities the most perilous part of the journey.

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

What’s to Be Done About Conservatives? by @Batocchio9

What’s to Be Done About Conservatives?
by Batocchio

What’s to be done about American conservatives and the Republican Party? For decades, they’ve stood for plutocracy and bigotry, and using the latter to achieve the former. Almost none of their policies help Americans as a whole; instead, their policies benefit a select few, most often those who are already rich and powerful. Conservatives and Republicans serve their donors, not the majority of their constituents. On the merits, their policies are awful, so they lie about them constantly. About their only true principle is acquiring more power and keeping it, by almost any means necessary – norms of governance, democratic representation and fair play be damned.

Their supporters come in different flavors, mostly unsavory. Many simply seek short-term personal gain, ignoring long-term harm, to their descendants if not themselves. Others, the dark money crowd and their eager servants, truly wish to further entrench the powerful as a ruling class. The most rabid members of the conservative base are frightening, cherishing spite more than their own children. (Who needs a decent wage when you can ‘own the libs’? Who needs bread when you have the Fox News circus?) The remainder are mostly loyal Republican voters – “nearly 90 per cent of self-described Republicans voted for Trump, very similar to the proportion in previous elections.” None of the horrible things Trump said or did prior to the 2016 election were dealbreakers for them. They rationalized that Hillary Clinton was worse or simply voted their true values instead of their stated ones. To use the terms of an old post, conservatives are a mix of reckless addicts, stealthy extremists and proud zealots, with far too few sober adults to be found.

As for the media, good journalists still exist and always deserve support, but many corporate media outlets aren’t truly focused on creating a more informed citizenry. Instead, they churn out a thin, news-like substance to try to fill their never-ending news cycle – they need volume, and high quality isn’t cost-effective. Conscientious citizens might want good, better government, and the fact-checking and other essential information to help achieve that – and some journalists really do work hard to provide it – but media company owners need sales and profits. Stories deemed too complex aren’t covered – for example, explaining the abuse of Senate procedures and contextualizing them. More importantly, calling out one political side is simply not good business, especially when one side is consistently worse about lying, violating political norms and screwing over the citizenry. One of our national political discourse’s key scourges is false equivalence, or “both siderism,” claiming both sides are just as bad even when evidence to the contrary stands overwhelming. (For much more on this, see the archives of Digby, driftglass, alicublog, Balloon Juice, LGM or my own archives.)

Related to this, in our current mainstream national political discourse, we generally do not discuss policy in any meaningful way. That’s not to say everyone needs to read policy papers, which will always be done by a more niche group – but we do not discuss policies and their proven or likely effects. We do not talk about their effect on actual human beings and their lives. We do not accurately assign praise or blame to politicians and political parties, or engage in more nuanced analysis and discussion. For instance, who did this tax bill benefit, and who did it benefit the most? How successful was this antipoverty measure? What effects did providing more health care have on this community? Maybe we could provide some statistics, but also talk to some people, and put a human face on these issues? Coverage on the 2016 presidential race almost entirely ignored policy issues and focused on shallow issues with false balance. Obviously, this approach gives a tremendous, unfair advantage to the candidates with worse policies, nebulous positions or a vaguer grasp of important issues. It makes it much easier for them to bullshit, which really doesn’t help for the whole informed citizenry, better government thing.

For all their faults, though, mainstream corporate media outlets normally get basic facts correct. Some media outlets are little more than propaganda operations. Dodgy left-leaning outlets do exist, but don’t have nearly the influence of conservative outlets, most of all Fox News. Rank-and-file conservatives believe false things and are fearful in part because they have been lied to and fed fear. Several studies have shown that Fox News viewers score less accurately on basic news tests than people who don’t watch the news, yet Fox News viewers are also more likely to believe that they’re better-informed than their fellow citizens. Stewing in Fox News makes them both less informed and more certain. (That’s a feature, not a bug, of course.)

Ideally, policies would be discussed on their merits, and praise and blame (or measured, nuanced assessments) would be accurately assigned. In actual practice, due to all the factors discussed above, conservatives and Republicans are rarely held accountable for their policies and decisions. The conservative movement works to prevent any such reckoning.

(It might help to look at some specific policies. but before that, a brief segue.)

Conservative Versus Republican

Anyone’s who criticized conservatives in some depth has probably encountered pushback that, for example, George W. Bush wasn’t a true conservative, or Trump isn’t, or neither of them is emblematic of the true Republican Party (never mind those pesky votes and other support).

It’s true that “conservative” and “Republican” aren’t always synonymous, but since the two major political parties realigned in the 1960s, the Republican Party has been more conservative on almost every issue, and the majority of Republicans consistently identify themselves as conservative. As Digby’s observed, conservatives like to pretend that conservatism cannot fail; it can only be failed. (Self-described libertarians love this “no true Scotsman” game, too.) Every time conservatives are discredited, it’s common to see a disowning of key figures, plus conservative rebranding efforts. We’ll also see pundits yearning for the more reasonable, decent conservatives and Republicans of yesteryear, and not just for, say, Eisenhower (for whom some good arguments can be made), but Goldwater, Nixon, Reagan, and both Bushes, among others. Although those individuals may indeed have been better than the current crop in some particulars, an honest, fair assessment would judge that many of their policies stunk and quite a few of them had pretty crazy views. The Democratic Party has become more liberal over time, and the Republican Party more conservative, but the Republican drift has been more extreme. The Republican Party Platform of 1956 would be denounced as socialist by the conservatives and Republicans of today. In contrast, the Democratic Party Platform of 1972 is quite similar to recent platforms on many issues, except that contemporary platforms are much stronger on LGBT rights and other social issues. The Democratic Party does have an establishmentarian, corporatist faction, but also a more liberal one. The Republican Party is not a mirror image; it’s purged almost all nonconservatives from office. Republican officials are more conservative and extreme than many members of their own party, and much more conservative and extreme than their constituents as a whole. Voters may have more variety, but when it comes to political figures, for practical purposes, “conservative” and “Republican” are generally effectively the same. Accordingly, in this piece I’m using the terms fairly interchangeably unless the distinction matters (for instance, discussing conservative Democrats).

As for Trump specifically, occasionally, we’ll see some bullshit arguments that he’s some sort of aberration, but some style differences aside, Trump is firmly in the conservative tradition. Some conservatives effectively admit this – they might criticize Trump’s style, but support his policies nonetheless. Neither major political party is entirely pure or evil, but comparisons are both possible and essential. The truth is, Republicans are primarily to blame for the political problems in Washington, D.C. and the nation, and that definitely includes the rise of Trump.

Conservative Policies

Conservative policies almost always benefit the rich and powerful – the donor class – rather than average constituents and the country. That’s no accident. Although sincerely held ideology might drive some conservatives and Republicans, in many cases, their motivation amounts to simple corruption. For the horrendous Republican tax bill of December 2017, Republican representative Chris Collins flat-out admitted, “My donors are basically saying, ‘Get it done or don’t ever call me again.’ ” (And sure enough, after the bill passed, the donors were pleased.) Let’s take a look at some policies.

Inequality: Wealth and income inequality in the U.S. are at their worst since the gilded age, and are likely to become more extreme. This neofeudal model stands in sharp contrast to the New Deal and post-WWII policies aimed at helping the nation as a whole. Those policies gave the U.S. the “great compression,” a period of enormous economic growth, decreased inequality, an expansion of the middle class and shared prosperity (with some important caveats about denied opportunities based on race, gender, etc.). A model of hoarding power and prosperity versus sharing it is probably the defining difference between conservatives and nonconservatives (liberals and so-called moderates). The aforementioned 2017 Republican tax bill was designed – like Reagan’s and all major Republican tax proposals since Bush’s twin tax cuts – to massively benefit the already wealthy. It remains bad fiscal, economic and social policy. As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities summarizes, “The major tax legislation enacted last December will cost approximately $1.5 trillion over the next decade and deliver windfall gains to wealthy households and profitable corporations, further widening the gap between those at the top of the income ladder and the rest of the nation.” (As the report continues, wage stagnation certainly doesn’t help.) Those are features, not bugs, as are decades of conservatives yelling that any effort to lessen massive inequality is communism. Americans as a whole want a more fair system, but Republicans are more likely to think the current system is already fair and that poverty is due a lack of effort instead of circumstances beyond one’s control. (They are wrong.) However, Americans really have no idea how bad inequality is, and even rank-and-file Republicans favor a more equitable distribution when it’s presented as a choice. Inequality remains a major issue beyond economic matters – conservatives and Republicans stand for acquiring more power and keeping it, even if it hurts the country at large.

Climate Change: The Trump administration, true to Republican form, has decided to ignore climate change, including the government’s own National Climate Assessment. Meanwhile, an alarming new report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns of potentially terrible consequences as soon as 2040. Some Democrats are also beholden to the fossil fuel industry, but industry donations heavily favor Republicans, and conservative Republicans are the group most opposed to acknowledging climate change and to doing anything about it. That position is one of many conservative shibboleths to affirm tribal identity. Climate change is arguably the single most important issue we face, because human life on the planet could significantly, negatively change if it’s not addressed. Yet the Republican Party is just about the only major political party in the world to deny climate change and oppose universal health care. Speaking of which…

Health Care: The Affordable Care Act is about the most conservative health care plan possible that can actually work – it doesn’t dismantle private, for-profit health insurance, and uses that mechanism to provide health care for the majority of Americans. It’s a far cry from the better, universal health care systems that most other industrialized nations have, and that liberals favor, but the ACA has had a positive effect: “In 2016, there were 28.6 million Americans without health insurance, down from more than 48 million in 2010.” Rather than addressing that remaining gap, Republicans voted to repeal the ACA over 70 times as of July 2017. Republicans had promised for several years to produce an alternative to the ACA, but never offered a coherent, workable plan. When Republicans finally did produce something, their plan allowed states to waive the provision that prevents insurance companies from refusing to cover or to charge more to people with pre-existing conditions. Such a move would save for-profit insurance companies money, of course, but would be absolutely horrible for citizens. Naturally, conservatives lied about this. It’s important to note how much bad faith has featured in conservative arguments about health care, captured by Jonathan Chait’s

Non-essential personnel furloughed to Palm Beach

Non-essential personnel furloughed to Palm Beach

by digby

In case you wondered who is minding the shurdown while the president is staging a lame photo-op in Iraq, at least we can feel relieved that it isn’t those two.

Ivanka Trump rang in the holiday on Tuesday by stepping out for a stroll near her family’s Palm Beach Estate.

The first daughter walked hand-in-hand with her husband Jared Kushner on Christmas Day wearing a slinky long green spaghetti strap dress around Mar-a-Lago.

But Trump teamed her item, ideal for the Florida sun, with a full straw straw visor hat embellished with a black ribbon to accommodate her bun hairstyle.

The blonde teamed the items with casual flat sandals and her spouse followed suit with the relaxed dress code, donning a white T-shirt and cap, blue shorts and flip flops.

Accompanied by a Secret Service team, Trump clutched a pile of books as the men helped her cross the road.

All members of her group shielded their eyes with dark sunglasses in the images obtained exclusively by DailyMail.com.

But as was evident earlier in the day, they made no attempt to keep a low profile.

Why would they? They love to get written up in the gossip pages.

They are top senior advisers but obviously not essential personnel. Maybe they should just stay there.

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Whitaker not be best

Whitaker not be best

by digby

Among other things, he also lies on his resume:

Acting Attorney General and former hot tub salesman Matthew Whitaker claimed he earned “All-American” academic honors during his University of Iowa football days on his resume and on government applications, but there’s no record of it being true, the Wall Street Journal found.

Whitaker claimed to have achieved the status of “Academic All-American” while he was a tight end at the University of Iowa in the early 1990s. The College Sports Information Directors of America told the Journal it had no record of bestowing the honor, which requires a 3.3 GPA, on Whitaker.

Whitaker claimed to have been awarded the honor in a 2010 application for an Iowa judgeship and in a resume sent to the patent marketing firm that he twisted arms for. The FTC shut down that firm this year, calling it a “scam.”

A Justice Department spokeswoman told WSJ that Whitaker had relied on a 1993 media guide for University of Iowa football, which caused him to make the error. Whitaker’s last year playing college football was 1992.

Recall that he was also the spokesman for a toilet designed for the exceptionally well-endowed man. It’s fair to assume that, like his benefactor, he’s prone to exagerration.

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

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Preznit give me shutdown

Preznit give me shutdown

by digby

One of the very oldest memes in the blogosphere was that one above from the immortal Atrios on the occasion of Bush’s triumphal visit to Iraq at Thanksgiving in 2003. It was in reference to the gaga reaction from the sycophantic press corps, which acted as if he had personally led the troops into battle and had engaged in hand to hand combat with Osama bin laden.

Trump isn’t getting the same treatment mainly because this is the first time he’s bothered to visit any battlefield since he took office. It’s also peculiar to choose this moment to do it since the government is shut down and thousands of people are suddenly not getting paychecks.

Even as photo ops go it isn’t all that great. Bringing the glamourous Melania along, dressed as if she’s a tuba player in Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club band, kind of ruins the idea that he was courting some kind of danger by going to a war zone.

They aren’t good at anything, not even staged photo-ops designed to make the press pant with delight. And it’s not that hard to do it.

I mean:

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated to the anual holiday fundraiser, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would still like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

Little Prince Bone Spurs

Little Prince Bone Spurs

by digby

An 18 year old invalid

Of course, his father got him out of the draft. Of  COURSE he did. After all, his father got him out of every jam he ever got into for the next 30 years. And the list of jams is endless. It is the story of his life:

In the fall of 1968, Donald J. Trump received a timely diagnosis of bone spurs in his heels that led to his medical exemption from the military during Vietnam.

For 50 years, the details of how the exemption came about, and who made the diagnosis, have remained a mystery, with Mr. Trump himself saying during the presidential campaign that he could not recall who had signed off on the medical documentation.

Now a possible explanation has emerged about the documentation. It involves a foot doctor in Queens who rented his office from Mr. Trump’s father, Fred C. Trump, and a suggestion that the diagnosis was granted as a courtesy to the elder Mr. Trump.

Mr. Trump, center, during his senior year at the New York Military Academy. He would receive a medical exemption from the draft a few years later.

Mr. Trump, center, during his senior year at the New York Military Academy. He would receive a medical exemption from the draft a few years later.

The podiatrist, Dr. Larry Braunstein, died in 2007. But his daughters say their father often told the story of coming to the aid of a young Mr. Trump during the Vietnam War as a favor to his father.

“I know it was a favor,” said one daughter, Dr. Elysa Braunstein, 56, who along with her sister, Sharon Kessel, 53, shared the family’s account for the first time publicly when contacted by The New York Times.

Elysa Braunstein said the implication from her father was that Mr. Trump did not have a disqualifying foot ailment. “But did he examine him? I don’t know,” she said.

For decades, Dr. Braunstein saw patients in a congested ground-floor office below Edgerton Apartments in Jamaica, Queens, one of dozens of buildings owned by the Trumps in the 1960s. The family sold the building in 2004, records show.

A portrait of Dr. Braunstein from his podiatry school yearbook. His daughters say he made the diagnosis as a favor to Fred C. Trump, Donald’s father.

A portrait of Dr. Braunstein from his podiatry school yearbook. His daughters say he made the diagnosis as a favor to Fred C. Trump, Donald’s father.

“What he got was access to Fred Trump,” Elysa Braunstein said. “If there was anything wrong in the building, my dad would call and Trump would take care of it immediately. That was the small favor that he got.”

No paper evidence has been found to help corroborate the version of events described by the Braunstein family, who also suggested there was some involvement by a second podiatrist, Dr. Manny Weinstein. Dr. Weinstein, who died in 1995, lived in two apartments in Brooklyn owned by Fred Trump; city directories show he moved into the first during the year Donald Trump received his exemption.

Dr. Braunstein’s daughters said their father left no medical records with the family, and a doctor who purchased his practice said he was unaware of any documents related to Mr. Trump. Most detailed government medical records related to the draft no longer exist, according to the National Archives.

In an interview with The Times in 2016, Mr. Trump said that a doctor provided “a very strong letter” about the bone spurs in his heels, which he then presented to draft officials. He said he could not remember the doctor’s name. “You are talking a lot of years,” Mr. Trump said.

Little princelings didn’t go to Viet Nam and Trump was a very, very privileged little princeling. He was sent to military school, trained to be an officer but there was no way he was going to go to an actual war. He was much too valuable to be wasted on something like that. That was for others.

I don’t hold it against people for not wanting to go, of course. It was a terrible war. People like Bill Clinton didn’t have the money to buy off doctors but he worked the system furiously for years to get out of it, including calling on powerful local friends to help him out. But the rich kids like Trump and George W. Bush just had their daddies write a check or make a call even as they and their friends all supported the war. And then their supporters went crazy on politicians like Clinton while ignoring their own offspring who couldn’t be bothered.

Trump is even doing it today, going after Senator Richard Blumenthal who did join the military and made the mistake of calling himself a Vietnam vet instead of a Vietnam era vet. Of course he is shameless in every way, why should this be an exception?

Trump’s voters, who spent their lives waving the flag and railing against anyone who didn’t serve are now completely tolerant of their cult leader’s privileged refusal to join. Nothing new there. Recall that Dick Cheney said he “had better things to do.” There were plenty of other right wing war mongers who did the same thing.

Trump hasn’t started a new war yet. He’s threatened one, of course, and it’s a big one, so nobody should feel too sanguine about his alleged “isolationism.”

I wouldn’t be too impressed with his abrupt withdrawal of troops from Syria and Afghanistan either. Keep in mind that those wars were begun under other presidents and his fundamental foreign policy, from the Paris accords to Russian sanctions to NAFTA is to simply reverse everything his predecessors did. That’s all he knows. If he wants to start a new war, all his own, he will do it without a second thought.

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405

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The gift I got from Dr. Christine Blasey Ford @spockosbrain

The gift I got from Dr. Christine Blasey Ford

By Spocko

I got a lot of fun and thoughtful gifts for Christmas this year. But I realized the best gift I got this year was from Dr. Christine Blasey Ford.

Reuters / Jim Bourg

Her testimony had a serious impact on my entire mind, not just my conscious thought. I know this because of the horrible nightmare I had last night. I don’t want to go into details, but in the nightmare I ended up having to tell my story to the police, the court and on TV.

In the nightmare I was preparing to go on TV to tell the public my story.
 I was thinking about the strength and courage Dr. Christine Blasey Ford showed when she testified in the Kavanaugh hearing.

 Pool Photo by Tom Williams

As I walked into a TV studio I remember being depressed and disgusted by the fact that as a man my story would be taken more serious than a similar story from a woman.

As I sat before the cameras I though about how sad it was that for some white men the only way they could get the seriousness of an assault was for it to happen to one of their own.

 Pool Photo by Tom Williams

These men had shown an inability to empathize with a woman’s experience. But if the only way to reach them was for me to give a painful public testimony, then it was my duty to go through with it.

Remember, this was just a nightmare/dream. I didn’t actually have to go thought any ordeal, but I was ready; to do anything less was to dishonor the courage of Dr. Ford. My subconscious mind would not allow it.

This year I got to know some smart, funny and brave women in the gun violence prevention world. They actually have had to go through these kinds of ordeals.

They are courageous and persistent. They are also often ignored.
Some are told to sit down and shut up.
When they don’t, and speak up, they are threatened both online and in person by men with guns.
Yet they persist.

Pool/Getty Images Andrew Harnik

These women gave me a gift of showing  the power of continual, thoughtful action.

The process of changing an entire mindset is hard. It takes actions both big and public, as well as small and local.

The women might not think they are making progress, but they are. Kavanaugh was placed on the Supreme Court. Does that mean Dr. Ford’s testimony was worthless? No, it does not.

You can never know how your actions, attitudes and words will have an impact on people. Your words and actions may be the ones that reconfigure people’s minds. Long-held attitudes and perceptions may have been changed by something you did that appeared to be a failure.

In the Christmas Carol story Scrooge said this about the ghosts that led him to his change.

“You may be an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of underdone potato. There’s more of gravy than of grave about you, whatever you are!”

This was Scrooge’s way of dismissing what his subconsciousness mind was telling him. When I woke up this morning I blamed the peanut sauce, raspberry sorbet or wild blueberry pancakes for my nightmare.

Vegan Wild Blueberry Pancakes.  Acacia Patisserie in Frederiksberg, Denmark. Photo by Spocko
But the food didn’t create the fears that fueled my nightmare, it just triggered my mind to reveal them. The sorbet didn’t create my need to be brave like Dr. Ford, it just set up the scene where I saw it was there.

I had a dream about you last night…” 

When a guy tells a woman he had a dream about them there is often an awkward pause where he rushes to assure her it wasn’t one of “those” kind of dreams. In this case none of the women I mentioned were actually IN my nightmare/dream. What WAS in my mind during the nightmare was a memory of those women’s strength.

My gift from Dr. Ford was a model of strength of character. I now have a vision of what it looks like and what it might feel like. I  can draw upon this if I am ever in a similar situation.

 Pool photo by Michael Reynolds

Since I can’t tell Christine Blasey Ford directly how much her actions impacted me, I decided to tell this to the women I actually know. Thank you for taking nightmare situations and turning them into mind changing actions.

LLAP,

Spocko

If you value what we write here, I hope you’ll consider supporting the blog with a couple of bucks. If you’ve already donated, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If you haven’t and would like to, the paypal buttons are on the sidebar and below as is the snail mail address.

Buckle up everybody. It’s going to be a very bumpy New Year!

cheers — digby

Digby’s Hullabaloo
2801 Ocean Park Blvd.
Box 157
Santa Monica, Ca 90405