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Month: March 2019

Trump seems nervous about Mueller time

Trump seems nervous about Mueller time

by digby

If only Trump actually cared about (or understood) anything but the yawning maw of his own empty soul, his skepticism of law enforcement might be useful. But he and his cult ae only hostile to the FBI because they threaten Dear Leader. The minute he’s out of the picture they’ll be back to valorizing them the way they valorize ICE and the CPB today.

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The oval office infomercial

The oval office infomercial

by digby

Michael Cohen testified that Trump saw the presidential campaign as the world’s greatest infomercial for his business.

He sees the presidency itself the same way:

I guess we just shrug these days at the President of the United State shilling for his own financial gain while in the White House. After all he makes personal appearances promoting his properties nearly every weekend. But adding that it “it furthers the UK relationship” is an especially good touch. He might as well be saying, “You know where to send the bribes, Limeys!”

In case you’re wondering why he decided to do this promotion today


Donald Trump’s Aberdeenshire golf resort must pay the Scottish government’s legal costs following a court battle over a major North Sea wind power development. 

Mr Trump battled unsuccessfully in the courts to halt the project before he became US president. 

A total of 11 turbines make up the development off Aberdeen. 

Judges have now ruled Trump International Golf Club Scotland Ltd should pay the legal bills incurred.

Probably a little threat in that “UK relationship” quip too. That’s how he rolls.

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CPAC MRA’s? Sad!

CPAC MRAs? Sad!

by digby

CPAC has gone so far down the rabbit hole that they’re as lame as the dumbest Men’s Rights Activist web sites.

Some attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference took a break Friday to sing the praises of men. All of them.

While they represented disparate factions of the right, the participants in the “Tribute to Men” agreed on one thing: America is facing a plague of “soy boys,” conservative slang for a feminized, liberal man arising from the idea that eating soy products affects a man’s hormones, making him more like her.

“I don’t want to have sex with a soy boy,” declared Kaya Jones, a former member of the Pussycat Dolls who has refashioned herself as a pro-Trump pundit.

Organizer DeAnna Lorraine, upset that the Boy Scouts now accept girls, dubbed them “the soy scouts.”

Manliness, masculinity, and male essence were on the minds of the several dozen people at the Tribute to Men, held in downtown Washington’s Hotel Harrington. In a CPAC week marked by the relative tameness of the official speakers, the Tribute to Men, a separate event timed to coincide with it, stood out for its fringiness.

Speaker Brandon Straka, who rocketed to fame on the right and became a frequent Fox News guest as the organizer of the ex-Democrat “Walkaway Movement,” said that straight white men were liberals’ “target du jour.” Straka is scheduled to speak Saturday at CPAC.

Straka, who is gay, declared that “ain’t nobody loves men like I do.”

“I want an applause for straight men,” Straka said, receiving a wave of applause.

A parade of speakers at the event, who sometimes struggled to talk over a PA system blasting songs like “It’s Raining Men” and “God Bless the U.S.A.,” bemoaned the death of “traditional men” and the rise of what one speaker called “femimen.”

Participants were angry about a variety of culture war issues, from the sexual assault allegations against Justice Brett Kavanaugh to quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s Black Lives Matter protests. A speech from former Oakland Raiders safety Burgess Owens, the author of Liberalism or How to Turn Good Men into Whiners, Weenies and Wimps, was interrupted by an audience member angry about Kaepernick.

“Get that son of a bitch off the field!” the man yelled.

But nothing riled the attendees more than Gillette’s January ad against “toxic masculinity,” which suggested that American men could opt for a kinder, less aggressive kind of manliness.

Several speakers slammed what Lorraine called “that horrible Gillette ad.”

“I’m sure you’ve seen the Gillette commercial,” said PragerU YouTube personality Will Witt, prompting excited boos from the crowd.

Organizers had planned a symbolic “burning” of Gillette products in a repudiation of the company, although none ultimately took place.

The event was organized by Lorraine, who has positioned herself as a pro-Trump relationship expert with her book, Making Love Great Again, and Omar Navarro, whose election challenges to Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) made him a cause célèbre in some corners of the right. While Navarro lost both his 2016 and 2018 races by more than 50 points, he plans to run against Waters again in 2020.

While CPAC itself has been relatively buttoned down, the sideshow put some of the right’s most outré figures on stage.

The far-right Proud Boys men’s group was a major presence at the event, with members regularly chanting the group’s slogan, “Uhuru.” Two of the group’s leaders, Enrique Tarrio and Luke Rohlfing, were on hand, along with a handful of members sporting the group’s signature yellow-and-black polo shirts.

Tarrio, wearing a Proud Boys shirt and hat, read from the Proud Boys manifesto and Pat Buchanan’s Death of the West, as he challenged “parasite” enemies.

Then he led the crowd in a series of toasts.

“To the entrepreneurs!” Tarrio said to cheers. “To the housewives!”

Other conservative causes made an appearance—several people in the crowd were wearing shirts declaring that “Roger Stone did nothing wrong,” a slogan that was chanted at one point during the event. The crowd was almost uniformly pro-Trump, with Jones praising the president’s handling of the first lady and his ex-wives.

“You have three wives that are taken care of very well,” Jones said.

The event came to a close with promises to redo the event even bigger during next year’s CPAC week, and a vow renewal between a married couple.

In an attempt to stress the important of men, Witt shuddered to think of what his life would be like without male groups like the Boy Scouts.

“I might be a beta male,” Witt said. “A soy boy.”

Honestly, I think this says everything we need to know about the state of the conservative movement in 2019. They are a bunch of not very bright, insecure little boys. And the females who enable them are just as pathetic.

They have no idea obvious they are.

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President Needy

President Needy

by digby

He’s been feelin’ a little bit down. CPAC was just what the doctor ordered:

President Donald Trump on Saturday delivered a scorched-earth speech to conservative activists, calling the Russia investigation “bullshit,” adopting a southern accent to mock his former attorney general, and asserting that some members of Congress “hate our country.”
The rollicking two-hour-plus appearance at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland offered the president a brief respite from an otherwise miserable week in which his much-touted summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un ended in failure and his former personal lawyer delivered explosive testimony to Congress.

Trump, basking in the adoration of the crowd, largely glossed over the North Korea summit’s collapse, instead reviving several of his greatest hits, from rehashing the 2016 election to obsessing over the crowd size at his inauguration. 

The speech amounted to a boatload of red meat for conservatives, with Trump promising he’ll protect them from undocumented immigrants, socialism and liberal Democrats he claims are dead set on bankrupting the country with proposals like the Green New Deal.
“You know I’m totally off script right now,” Trump said at the beginning of his speech. As his meandering speech continued, it became clear that his assessment was an understatement. 

At one point, Trump regaled the crowd with a story about a general he said was named “Raisin Caine” (it wasn’t immediately clear who he was referring to). He said he always sits with the pilots when airplanes are landing: “They know what we’re doing.” He said he has good eyesight and later added, “I don’t have white hair.” He derided a Hawaii senator as a “crazy person.” And he accused Hollywood of discriminating against conservatives.

He even revisited his campaign kickoff speech from June 2015. “From day one, I mentioned the word rape. If you look at that first speech, that was very innocent compared to what’s happening,” Trump said. Trump came under fire for his 2015 comments, which appeared to broadly assert that Mexicans were rapists.

Throughout, Trump revealed himself to be a president deeply scorned by what he views as unfair media coverage and a lack of recognition from many in Washington. “I get no credit,” he said multiple times throughout the lengthy speech. 

He also insisted that nobody had left the speech early, but journalists present reported that in fact, some attendees were seen departing before the close of his remarks. 

Later, the president sounded off on the 2020 election, expressing regret that he attacked Sen. Elizabeth Warren so early. “I should have saved the Pocahontas thing for another year,” he said. “I’ve destroyed her political career and I won’t get a chance to run against her and I would have loved that.” 

[…] 

Trump clearly delighted in the passion of the conservative audience, pointing to onlookers and applauding as Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” blared on the speakers. At one point, the president wrapped his arms around an American flag on the stage, mugging for the cameras as he held the hug for a moment. 

“I’m in love, you’re in love and we’re all in love together,” the president said.

I’m not going to bother putting up any clips. Just take my word for it. He was on a roll, the extreme need for the adoration from his fans written all over his face. He’s a sick cookie. 

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The John Dean playbook

The John Dean playbook

by digby

John Dean wrote an op-ed for the New York Times about Michael Cohen. He compares the two testimonies pointing out that he testified for five long days and many more people saw it but it looks as though the reaction is roughly similar to the early polling on Cohen:

Polls varied widely after my testimony. One said 50 percent of Americans believed me, 30 percent did not, and 20 percent were not sure. Another poll had 38 percent believing the president, who denied my statement, and 37 percent believing me. The instant polls on Mr. Cohen’s testimony vary by party affiliation, as was the case with my polls. But 35 percent found him credible. I believe that number will grow.

While my testimony was eventually corroborated by secret recordings of our conversations made by Mr. Nixon, before that it was other witnesses who made the difference. I was surprised by the number of people who surfaced to support my account. The same, I suspect, will happen for Michael Cohen. The Mafia’s code of omertà has no force in public service. I have heard no one other than Roger Stone say he will go to jail for Donald Trump.

Mr. Cohen should understand that if Mr. Trump is removed from office, or defeated in 2020, in part because of his testimony, he will be reminded of it for the rest of his life. He will be blamed by Republicans but appreciated by Democrats. If he achieves anything short of discovering the cure for cancer, he will always live in this pigeonhole. How do I know this? I am still dealing with it.

Just as Mr. Nixon had his admirers and apologists, so it is with Mr. Trump. Some of these people will forever be rewriting history, and they will try to rewrite it at Mr. Cohen’s expense. They will put words in his mouth that he never spoke. They will place him at events at which he wasn’t present and locations where he has never been. Some have tried rewriting my life, and they will rewrite his, too.

I am thinking of people like Mr. Stone, the longtime Trump associate who worked on the 1972 Nixon campaign and so admires the former president that he has a tattoo of the man’s likeness between his shoulder blades. Mr. Stone, whom I never met while at the White House, has been indicted as part of the inquiry by the special counsel, Robert Mueller, on charges of lying to Congress about his efforts to contact WikiLeaks during the 2016 presidential campaign.

He prides himself as a political dirty trickster, and he has never met a conspiracy theory he did not believe. Mr. Cohen can be sure that Mr. Stone will promote new conspiracy theories to defend Mr. Trump and himself, even if it means rewriting history. Presidential scandals tend to attract a remarkable number of dishonest “historians.”

There is one overarching similarity that Mr. Cohen and I share. He came to understand and reject Mr. Trump as I did Mr. Nixon.

Mr. Nixon first called on me regarding Watergate some eight months after the arrests of his re-election committee operatives at the Watergate. We had 37 conversations, and when I felt I had his confidence, I tried but failed to get him to end the cover-up. The day I told Mr. Nixon there was a cancer on his presidency was the day I met the real Nixon. I knew I had to break rank.

Mr. Cohen has likewise come to see Mr. Trump for his true nature. At the very end of his testimony before the House Oversight Committee, he sought permission to read a closing statement.

He thanked the members, and again accepted responsibility for his bad behavior. He then told the legislators, “Given my experience working for Mr. Trump, I fear that if he loses the election in 2020 that there will never be a peaceful transition of power, and this is why I agreed to appear before you today.” This was the most troubling — actually, chilling — thing he said in his five hours before the committee.

Since Mr. Cohen’s warning came in his closing words, there was no opportunity for committee members to ask follow-up questions. So I double-checked with his lawyer, Lanny Davis, if I had understood Mr. Cohen’s testimony correctly. Mr. Davis responded, “He was referring to Trump’s authoritarian mind-set, and lack of respect for democracy and democratic institutions.”

Indeed, what is most similar about my and Mr. Cohen’s testimony is that we both challenged authoritarian presidents of the United States by revealing their lies and abuses of power. Mr. Trump is the first authoritarian president since Mr. Nixon, and neither he nor his supporters will play fair. Mr. Cohen will be dealing with these people the rest of his life.

In fact, all Americans are affected by the growing authoritarianism that made Mr. Trump president. These people who facilitated his rise will remain long after Mr. Trump is gone. We need to pay more attention.

Agreed. I noted the same thing.

It’s unlikely there will ever be the kind of smoking gun like the tapes that took Nixon down. That was something out of a movie. But Dean is right that there are other witnesses and there are documents to back up Cohen’s testimony. And while there are many similarities between this scandal and Watergate, the sheer number of felonies Trump is suspected of committing as a businessman, his total incompetence as president and the fact that he may have literally betrayed the nation puts him in a much grander category of political than Nixon. Nixon was much smarter and even more malevolent in some ways but he understood the limits of his power in a way that Trump doesn’t. I think Trump is more dangerous.

I wrote about the Cohen – John Dean thing last summer:

Is Michael Cohen ready for the John Dean role: A hero who saves America from Donald Trump?

If there’s one thing that must give a shady businessman or corrupt politician sleepless nights it’s the knowledge that his attorney is about to cooperate with federal prosecutors in a case against him. The lawyer is the one person, with the exception of one’s spouse (and maybe not even then) entrusted with their most nefarious secrets. If that lawyer is also his self-described “fixer” already known to pay hush money and personally threaten people on his behalf well, let’s just say sleepless nights aren’t the half of it.


Back in April of 1973, the very shady President of the United States, Richard Nixon, woke up one morning to learn that his former White House counsel, John Dean, had been cooperating with federal prosecutors who were investigating his administration’s involvement in the break-in of the Democratic National Committee the previous previous spring. And he had good reason to be sweating bullets about that since Dean had been instrumental in the cover-up the president had personally directed. 


After months of a slow news drip implicating various Nixon associates in slush funds and dirty tricks the scandal had reached the oval office.The FBI director had resigned over having destroyed evidence, Nixon had fired Dean and he had been forced to ask his most trusted henchmen H.R. Haldeman and John Erlichman to resign. He knew that Dean wanted to cooperate with the investigation so it wasn’t a huge surprise to learn that he was telling all but it still had to be a very bad day. 


Dean turned out to be an incredibly effective witness. He had tried to get documentary evidence out of the White House to back up his story but had been unable to do it. However he had an extremely sharp memory for detail and unlike today where the congress is actually participating in the cover up, there were public hearings and Dean’s testimony was dramatic and unforgettable. He told the story of how he had participated in White House efforts to hide its involvement in various crimes and how he went to the president and famously told him that there was a “cancer on the presidency.” When it was later revealed that the White House had taped the president’s conversations, Dean’s recollections were proven to be nearly word for word.


I would never compare John Dean to Donald Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen in terms of legal skill or intellect. But it’s interesting that here we are 45 years later and once again we see the president’s lawyer as a possible star witness against him. Cohen gave an interview to ABC news’ George Stephanopoulos over the week-end in which he strongly implied that he was prepared to cooperate with prosecutors if he is, as expected, indicted on federal charges.


Obviously, the situation is different in dozens of ways, not the least of which is that Cohen, unlike Dean, was the president’s personal and business attorney not the White House counsel. And the issues which may involve the president are as likely to pertain to personal business as they are to the investigation into the presidential campaign. But there is no doubt that Cohen, like Dean, was involved in a cover-up. In Cohen’s case it has to do with paying hush money to porn actresses and playmates. And there is also suspicion that he was involved in covering up some aspects of Russian collusion. He does not appear to be willing to take the fall for any of it. 


Recall that two weeks ago, ABC’s Stephanopoulos broke the story that  Cohen was changing lawyers and follow up reporting by others indicated that there were some complications with the payment of legal fees, which had been handled at least in part by the Trump organization. It was suspected that Trump’s public distancing from his former lawyer and his unwillingness to part with a dollar was showing Cohen that he was on his own. Now Stephanopoulos gets another scoop, this time an interview in which Cohen makes it very, very clear that he is no longer Trump’s loyal sycophant.



Pres. Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen to @GStephanopoulos on @GMA: “I am not a villain of this story, and I will not allow others to try to depict me that way.” http://abcn.ws/2MDLLxK 

273 people are talking about this





Most of the pundits and analysts assume that Cohen was making a Hail Mary pass at Trump to issue him a pardon before he gets indicted and spills everything to the prosecutors.And that’s certainly possible. In the interview he was asked whether he could say that Trump told him to pay off Stormy Daniels and whether Trump knew about the Trump Tower meeting with the Russian lawyers and he said that he could not answer on the advice of his attorney which certainly does imply that the answer to both of those questions is yes. And Trump would know the answer was yes. If he’s inclined to issue a pardon, Cohen is saying that he’d better do it soon. 


But keep in mind that this is Trumpworld we’re talking about and among those people you really don’t exist unless you’re on TV. I suspect that this has much more to do with the fact that Michael Cohen is trying to figure out how he can possibly parlay this situation into a new career in media once this mess is over. And there’s only one way for him to do that: take the John Dean route and become the man who saved America from Donald Trump. After all, Dean lost his law license and did four months in jail but he is now considered a hero and a national icon. It’s not a bad model. 


This idea isn’t coming out of thin air. Emily Jane Fox of Vanity Fair reports that Cohen has finally accepted that Trump never had any loyalty to him and that he’s on his own. Friends are telling Cohen, Fox writes, that he could change the course of history, sending messages like this: “Please let him know that he could go down in history as the man that saved this country. I think his family would be so proud of him. Even people like me that were disgusted with the things we heard on those audio recordings, would totally forgive him.” She also reports that Cohen has been planning a big media push for some time — this is just the beginning.


That’s heady stuff for anyone but particularly someone who is possibly facing years in prison or a presidential pardon that will still leave him broke and without a future. This could be a way for him to become as big a star as Donald Trump. Nothing would be a sweeter revenge.


The rot runs deep by @BloggersRUs

The rot runs deep
by Tom Sullivan


Looking inside the hollow of the President’s Oak//Photo by Bryce Richter, UW-Madison

RNC chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, speaking this week at the Conservative Political Action Conference, framed next year’s general election as a choice between individual freedom, liberty, entrepreneurship, innovation, and the American dream (Team Republican) versus a socialist path where Democrats take over your healthcare, make you eat dog food (Trump is trying to make it harder for three-quarters of a million to get food), and promote a Green New Deal that will cost $93 trillion. She’s crunched the numbers!

McDaniel spoke in support of a president (apparently a career criminal) who believes you are either a predator or a loser — not exactly the poster man-child for market capitalism.

The American Enterprise Institute’s James Pethokoukis does not think so either. The portrayal of the choices presented at CPAC are “clownish” and likely to undermine support “for capitalism among those already capitalism-skeptical younger Americans,” he writes at The Week:

Of even greater concern is that Trump’s portrayal of himself as a capitalist hero and his policies as true capitalism will further increase that skepticism. Tariff Man rejects the notion that the free exchange of goods and services between nations can be mutually beneficial. As Adam Smith writes in The Wealth of Nations, “In every country it always is and must be the interest of the great body of the people to buy whatever they want of those who sell it cheapest.”

To protectionist Trump, a basic tenet of market capitalism is elitist drivel, the wisdom of suckers. This helps explain his confused trade war with China. Most American businesses and policymakers want less interference by Beijing in the Chinese economy. They want it to re-embrace markets rather than slip further back into central planning. But Trump is actually pushing for greater “state capitalism” in China by demanding Beijing direct the purchase of more American products to reduce the trade gap between the two economies. Under Trump, America forsakes its role in promoting democratic capitalism across the globe.

Not to mention Trump’s dalliances with white nationalism and foreign autocrats.

The Pethokoukis defense of free-market capitalism is another version of “Conservatism never fails. It is only failed.” Trump is a bad capitalist, you see, as George W. Bush was a bad conservative. At CPAC, Bush has already disappeared down the memory hole. Give them a few years and Trump will vanish too.

There is a reason engines have governors: to keep them from revving beyond the redline and flying apart. After free-market zealots began removing the controls from the economy under Ronald Reagan, twice things have flown apart: during the savings and loan crisis and during the financial collapse of 2008. The predators have prospered and the rest of the country has lost ground. Capitalism ungoverned is not the well-oiled machine its fans advertise.

Alex Kingsbury of the New York Times Editorial Board warns that after Trump, getting America back to normal, as Rep. Elijah Cummings recommended this week, is not an option. “Normal” is how we got here. Michael Cohen’s testimony this week is a “devastating indictment” of normal where, just as there are two economies, one for the rich and another for the rest, there are two systems of justice in this country:

… decades of declining prosecutions of white-collar crimes may have allowed Paul Manafort, a man guilty of tax evasion and bank fraud, to lead a presidential campaign. If the number of white-collar crimes prosecuted by the Justice Department had not fallen more than 40 percent in the past 20 years, perhaps Mr. Cohen, who committed tax fraud and bank fraud, might not have ascended to become deputy finance chairman of the Republican National Committee, a post he held until June 2018.

Then there’s the president himself, Exhibit A of what happens when a country spends decades treating crimes by the poor as felonies and crimes by the powerful as misdemeanors.

Now is not the time, Kingsbury concludes, to return to normal but for Normal America to learn from mistakes of the past. The CPAC crowd simply buries the past and moves on unenlightened by it. Looking in the mirror is not their style.

Friday Night Soother

Friday Night Soother

by digby

Yes, dog and cats can live together:

I don’t know about you but I needed a sweet story tonight…

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Trump fans behind bars

Trump fans behind bars

by digby


This is undoubtedly what Cohen was afraid of:

An heir to the Gambino crime family has issued a stark warning to Michael Cohen, predicting that President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney may face retaliation behind bars over his Congressional testimony.

‘A message for Michael Cohen: He better keep his mouth shut,’ Giovanni Gambino told DailyMail.com on Wednesday morning, blasting Trump’s former fixer shortly before he publicly testified.

Giovanni, the 43-year-old son of late Sicilian mob boss Francesco ‘Ciccio’ Gambino and cousin to infamous crime boss Carlo Gambino, speculated that Cohen’s withering testimony could have harsh consequences.

‘Inmates love Trump, and hate rats. If he wants to get out alive, he better keep his mouth shut about Trump,’ Giovanni said.

Here’s the story about that picture above:

A newly uncovered video appears to contradict Donald Trump’s claim that he never knew a high-stakes gambler who was banned from New Jersey casinos for alleged ties to organized crime.

The reputed mob figure, Robert LiButti, can be seen standing alongside Trump in the front row of a 1988 “WrestleMania” match in Atlantic City, N.J. LiButti wasn’t there by accident, according to his daughter, Edith Creamer, who also attended the event. “We were his guests,” she told Yahoo News in a text message this week.

The video was given to Yahoo News by a confidential source who discovered it in the online archives of World Wrestling Entertainment, the sponsor of “WrestleMania.”

The video appears to lend new support to assertions Trump once had close relations with LiButti, who was banned from the state’s casinos in 1991 because of his ties to Mafia boss John Gotti, then the chief of the Gambino crime syndicate.
[…]
In the past, Trump has consistently downplayed his relationship with LiButti. “If he was standing here in front of me, I wouldn’t know what he looked like,” Trump told the Philadelphia Inquirer when he was first questioned by Johnston about LiButti in 1991.

Earlier this year, when questioned again about LiButti by Yahoo News, Trump emailed a reporter: “During the years, I very successfully ran the casino business, I knew many high rollers. I assume Mr. LiButti was one of them, but I don’t recognize the name.”

He knew him. And it’s the same mob family that made that threat against Cohen in the article above.

I don’t know how many inmates love Trump but there is no doubt that Trump has mob connections — and that he used the word “rat” to describe Cohen to send a message to them.

This is what  happens to “rats”.
If I were Cohen I’d be scared too.

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Cow pies

Cow pies

by digby

They used to be hysterical about gun-grabbing. Now it’s hamburglerizing:

They are obsessed with the idea that Democrats are trying to stop them from eating their favorite foods. Remember what they did to Michelle Obama when she had the audacity to suggest that kids eat their vegetables and go play outside.

Or this fatuous gambit:

I’m beginning to think the biggest problem on the right is simple arrested development. They are literally toddlers refusing to eat their broccoli.
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