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Month: August 2019

Irony dies 1,000 deaths by @BloggersRUs

Irony dies 1,000 deaths
by Tom Sullivan


Interactive map here.

“We have a right to vote,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) insisted Thursday. The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee skirted committee rules and waived away objections from Democratic members to advance a bill that would allow the government to extend detentions of migrant children at the southern border from 20 days to 100. The bill is not expected to pass the House, but Graham wants what he wants.

Lindsey Graham has a right to vote. Others have a privilege contingent on his mood. Since the Supreme Court’s 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision weakened the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Republicans in states they control have been of a mood to treat other people’s rights to vote as contingent as well.

In states and counties with histories of voter discrimination, 17 million voters have been purged from voting rolls over the last two years, the Brennan Center for Justice finds in a newly released study:

  • At least 17 million voters were purged nationwide between 2016 and 2018, similar to the number we saw between 2014 and 2016, but considerably higher than we saw between 2006 and 2008;
  • The median purge rate over the 2016–2018 period in jurisdictions previously subject to preclearance was 40 percent higher than the purge rate in jurisdictions that were not covered by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act;
  • If purge rates in the counties that were covered by Section 5 were the same as the rates in non-Section 5 counties, as many as 1.1 million fewer individuals would have been removed from voter rolls between 2016 and 2018.

The Brennan Center notes that while the overall rate of purges remained steady, outliers such as Indiana purged over 22 percent of its voters. Wisconsin and Virginia (both states with Republican-controlled legislatures) purged over 14 percent. Those rates are offset by New Mexico (1.4 percent) and California (2.8 percent).

Cleaning up the voter rolls is a necessary maintenance exercise. Wholesale purging is something else, the report observes:

States rely on faulty data that purport to show that a voter has moved to another state. Oftentimes, these data get people mixed up. In big states like California and Texas, multiple individuals can have the same name and date of birth, making it hard to be sure that the right voter is being purged when perfect data are unavailable. Troublingly, minority voters are more likely to share names than white voters, potentially exposing them to a greater risk of being purged. Voters often do not realize they have been purged until they try to cast a ballot on Election Day — after it’s already too late. If those voters live in a state without election day registration, they are often prevented from participating in that election.

One could make the sweeping assumption purges that ramped up after the election of Donald Trump have that very purpose. Jennifer Rubin thinks they might:

Voter purges are only one means of suppressing nonwhite and poor voters. Insufficient polling places (contributing to long lines and great travel distances to voting places), reduction in early-voting times, voter voter-ID laws and a host of other tactics like those we saw in Georgia’s governor race in 2018 suggest purges are part of a larger, deliberate plan that — oh look! — just happens to adversely affect voters you’d expect to vote for Democrats.

Rubin missed one:

A federal court for North Dakota on Wednesday upheld a law requiring voters to have a residential street address, rejecting a complaint by a Native American group that the law amounted to voter suppression, because many of its members had no such address.

A dissenting judge said the law had a “devastating effect” on Native American voters. Columbia University professor Katherine Franke tweeted that the ruling was a “huge setback for Native American voting rights.”

Some Americans have rights. Poor and nonwhite ones have contingent privileges.

Moscow Mitch haz a sad

Moscow Mitch haz a sad

by digby

New pressure on the top Republican in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, who blocked a series of elections security bills despite warnings from Bob Mueller and American intelligence that Russia is still at it. McConnell is furious with his new ‘Moscow Mitch’ nickname as progressive groups put up billboards in McConnell’s home state of Kentucky showing McConnell in a Russian military uniform. Senator Richard Blumenthal and Malcom Nance, a former counter-intelligence operative in the U-S military join The Beat.

It’s interesting that this is what finally got to him. It must have hit a nerve. Maybe because it’s true that he’s enabling foreign interference and sabotage in American elections in order to help Trump (and possibly Republicans across the board) win elections.

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The grotesque sadism of Lindsey Graham

The grotesque sadism of Lindsey Graham

by digby

If you want to know if Trump’s rank racism and xenophobia are now the central organizing principles of the GOP watch Lindsey Graham. He had been in danger of a primary challenge because he’d been seen as a “maverick” in the mode of John McCain and in the age of Trump that means you are a traitor to your king. He’s been working overtime to ensure that nobody thinks he’s anything but one of Trump’s most eager, boot-licking henchmen.

Here’s his latest gesture toward full-on racist sadism:

Sen. Lindsey Graham is introducing a new bill that he says will help stop the flow of immigrants from Central America and “regain control of our border.” Graham claimed that current caps in law have led to the escalation of immigrants traveling to the border as well as those in government custody

“We have a perfect storm brewing at the border because of a series of broken and outdated laws related to asylum and children,” said Graham. “No matter how high the wall will be built…no matter how many agents you put at the border, they’ll keep coming because they want to get caught.”

Graham’s bill would reverse a long-standing order on detention dubbed the “20-day rule.” The rule, adopted after the 1997 Supreme Court Flores agreement, which set the nation’s rules for the treatment of immigrant minors in federal custody, says that migrant children, whether they arrived with family or are unaccompanied, cannot be held in detention for more than 20 days. Graham’s bill would instead recommend holding migrant children with their families for 100 days.

“We need more time and more bed space. The best way to stop that flow is to send them back to their country as you would with Canada or Mexico,” he explained.

Graham told Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures” last week that his bill would help discourage adults from bringing children to the border as a legal “shield” and address the cache of asylum claims clogging up the U.S. court system.

“We’re gonna go to 100 days, we can hold minor children for 100 days so we can actually process the entire family without letting them go. We’re gonna increase judges by 500; we got almost 900,000 backlog of asylum claims. We’re gonna wipe out the backlog [of asylum claims.]”

In addition, Graham’s bill would prohibit asylum claims at the U.S. border and force migrants to apply for asylum in an American consulate in their home country, change existing laws to have minors be sent back to their home country when brought over with family, and hire 500 new immigration judges to help clear the asylum backlog.

“The incentive that is created by our laws will cease to exist,” Graham said. “This humanitarian disaster will begin to repair itself.” Graham told reporters that he’s willing to sit down with Democrats in order to address the “underlying problem in Central America” and merry any Democratic proposals to his bill.

It’s a move the Trump administration has long been pushing for ever since adopting its “zero tolerance” policy along the southern border.

That policy, which led border officials to separate migrant children from their parents as families sought asylum in the U.S., faced a flood of criticism over the treatment of young immigrants. Detention centers quickly filled up, and images of children being kept behind metal fences caused a public outcry. In the initial weeks of the zero-tolerance policy rollout, around 2,000 children, including babies, were separated from their families.

It will “repair itself” at the expense of unkonwn thousands of desperate families and their babies and kids, you cruel bastard.

I think it’s the sanctimony that gets me about Graham — the insistence that he’s a moral actor doing the right thing when he’s a vicious malevolent snake without any moral conscience at all.

And by the way, 500 judges is not nearly enough to process all those claims and he knows it. He’s just putting lipstick on his pig to pretend that he’s doing something bipartisan.

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Trump the Lion King?

Trump the Lion King?

by digby

It could have been worse. Recall this from 2016?

[A] group calling itself the Lion Guard has launched a web site, seeking to organize supporters of Donald Trump into a militia to counter protests at Trump rallies. The group claims to be “dedicated to the safety and security of Trump supporters,” but has also declared itself willing to use violence, “willing to forcefully protect” Donald Trump from people it perceives to be threats.

Over the weekend, the Lion Guard organized a Twitter account, which quickly gained over 500 followers, but then shut down in under 24 hours. This led many to believe that the Lion Guard was defunct. Attention to the militia faded, but it soon popped up again at a different Twitter account, and now is organizing through its own web site, at LionsOfTrump [.net].

The first question that comes to mind is why the militia calls itself the Lion Guard or the Lions of Trump. What’s up with the lion?

Actually, lion imagery is found throughout imagery used by Trump supporters, in bumper stickers, on tshirts, and on campaign buttons, as well as on graphics online. It’s not an accident that the Lion Guard chose that name for itself, or that it chose to create an image of a lion as its icon and as the header for its web site.

Donald Trump, the Lion, yet again

The reason Trump supporters use the lion in their materials is revealed in the main image from the Lion Guard web site, the image you see at the top of the article. The image of a lion is accompanied by the motto, “Better to be a lion for a day than a lamb for eternity.”

That motto is almost a word-for-word translation of a favorite saying of Italian Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, who said, “It is better to live a day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.” Is it a coincidence that the Lion Guard used this phrase in its call to form a militia for the “defense” of Donald Trump from protesters?

By the way:

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But she got it out there, didn’t she?

But she got it out there, didn’t she?

by digby

Someone turned over a rock and out slithered Tomi Lahren:

While vehemently live-tweeting the second round of the second Democratic debate on Wednesday evening, Fox Nation host Tomi Lahren was shut down by at least two female contributors to Fox News for making the baseless, ugly claim that Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) slept her “way to the top” in her career.

Fox News contributor Kat Timpf retweeted Lahren and questioned why she would bring up a woman’s sexual life for no reason.

Fox News contributor and Fox Nation host Britt McHenry — who recently accused a Fox News co-host of sexual harassment — more forcefully blasted Lahren for the remark.

After the condemnations, Lahren didn’t respond, but instead doubled down, saying people should ask Willie Brown, whom Harris dated at one point, about how Harris got her position as attorney general in California.

On Thursday morning, she issued an apology, calling her sexist attack the “wrong choice of words.”

She did her job. This sexist smear got a whole lot of traffic.

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The racism now defines them

The racism now defines them

by digby

Actually, it always did.

The theme of the day seems to be that the presidential candidates all made a big mistake last night by criticizing President Obama on the debate stage last night. I suspect that it will be forgotten by this evening when Donald Trump holds a rally and leads the crowd in a “lynch them” chant. I agree that it’s not a good political strategy unless you want Joe Biden to win. Obama is very popular with Democrats, particularly African Americans, who comprise a vital voting bloc if you want to win delegates in half the country.

Whatever. As I said, it’s so early that it’s kind of useless to even think too much about it. In 2012 around this time, the Republicans were all gathered in a Church (without Romney, the eventual winner) and Michele Bachman was serving them water like she was Mary Magdalen.

Tonight we will be treated to the 7,425th Trump rally at which we will see how much steam his racist campaign strategy is gathering. I have a sneaking suspicion we won’t be hearing “send her back” … but they’ll come up with some really ugly about Baltimore. (“Clean it up!” maybe? “Rats, rats, rats!” ?) But I think it’s safe to say that this line of attack is not going away. White nationalism is the organizing principle of his cult.

Greg Sargent addresses the larger question this raises:

But, whatever is to be in Ohio, we need to ask a broader question about all this: To what degree are the national security professionals in Trump’s own administration concerned that his use of racist and white nationalist tropes risks emboldening white supremacist and white nationalist activity?

We know those professionals believe such activity is a serious threat, because they’ve said so. FBI director Christopher A. Wray and other FBI officials recently said the bureau has recorded some 90 domestic terrorism arrests in the past nine months, and of the cases that involve a racial motive, a majority are thought to be driven by white supremacy.

More broadly, FBI officials have also said that of the hundreds of overall domestic terrorism cases being investigated, a majority of those that are racially motivated are thought to be white supremacist in nature.

But here’s what we need to know more about: what those officials think about the impact of Trump’s rhetoric on such activity.

Outside analysts sound the alarm

National security analysts outside the government see this as a serious factor. Frank Figliuzzi, a former assistant FBI director for counterintelligence, has a new piece raising alarms about Trump’s fanning of white nationalist and white supremacist sentiment.

Figliuzzi cites reporting that indicates Trump’s recent rants against nonwhite lawmakers “emboldened white hate groups and reinforced racist blogs, news sites, and social media platforms.” Figliuzzi adds that Trump “empowers hateful and potentially violent individuals with his divisive rhetoric and his unwillingness to unequivocally denounce white supremacy.”

A former Department of Homeland Security analyst named Daryl Johnson — who was pushed out from the Obama administration after warning of resurgent white supremacy — recently told me that Trump’s language is emboldening hate groups.

What exactly can be discerned about the role of Trump’s rhetoric is complicated. But as that analyst noted to me, the constant drumbeat of Trumpian tropes — build the wall, keep out the swarthy invaders, George Soros is behind the caravans — has them “energized,” because the president is “mainstreaming their message.”

Since then, we’ve seen Trump tell elected nonwhite members of Congress to “go back” to their crime-infested hellhole countries, even though three were born here, which recycled his opposition to admitting people from “s—hole countries.” He spent days attacking an African American congressman’s Baltimore district as “infested” with rats and crime, exaggerating absurdly to do so.

Trump, then, is moving effortlessly between “s—hole countries” and “s—hole districts.” The suggestion is that the nonwhite “Squad” lawmakers, tainted by roots in specific hellhole countries, are not fundamentally part of the American nation. Multicultural urban America, places run by and for nonwhites, are to be hated and feared as unclean, as “infested,” also a stereotype with deep roots in American history.

Perhaps the national security professionals in Trump’s administration who are tracking domestic right-wing extremism don’t think his rhetoric plays any role in emboldening such activity. It would be good to know either way. Congressional Democrats could hold a hearing and press them more aggressively on these points.

“Trump’s racist, xenophobic, and otherwise extremist language must be worrying national security leaders in our government, as they think about its potential to spark violence,” Joshua Geltzer, senior counterterrorism director at the National Security Council from 2015 to 2017, told me. “Wray and others should be asked specifically whether Trump’s language contributes to that threat.”

I have a sneaking suspicion they won’t answer it.

And if Trump has his way he’ll have his personal henchmen at the top of the DOJ and the Intelligence Agencies ensuring that this problem will not be properly addressed. They are there to serve him and him alone. And these right wing terrorists are part of Trump’s base.

And then there are the rest of his accomplices:

A big question about Republicans

The chants of “send her back” ultimately caused heartburn among Republicans — some of whom may have been sincerely horrified — because it showcased the naked hatred and white nationalist impulses undergirding Trumpism on national television, too vividly to explain away.

But this only raises further questions about the limits on the willingness of GOP officials to condemn Trump’s racist incitements. Little by little, the boundaries of what they will tolerate are expanding outward.

“Trump is making the unacceptable acceptable to them,” Geltzer told me. “He’s getting a wide circle of elected Republicans to acquiesce in his horrible language, and some even to excuse it.”

Democrats can bear down harder on this point — that is, on the consequences of Trump’s racism. As former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke put it, Trump’s racism is “changing this country.”

Or at least he’s changing what GOP voters expect from their elites, as political theorist Jacob T. Levy suggests, and with it, the conduct of those elites. GOP lawmakers condemned the “send her back” chants when they became too uncomfortable. One must ask whether they no longer see it as their role to reflect on the potential impact of Trump’s regular drumbeat of racism on the country.

If they have a conscience, which I guess some of them do, they are either frightened of losing their seats or they are frightened of their own constituents if they quit and say anything. They are traitorous cowards. The rest are racists themselves. Obviously.

Update:
Also this, from John Amato

Most domestic terrorists come from the white supremacist, anti-abortion, anti-government, and militia movements. Now the FBI is recognizing “conspiracy theorists” as new domestic terrorist threat.

We’ve seen the insane nut-baggery cause real harm since Trump began his run for office.

Yahoo! News broke the story:

The FBI for the first time has identified fringe conspiracy theories as a domestic terrorist threat, according to a previously unpublicized document obtained by Yahoo News. (Read the document below.) 

The FBI intelligence bulletin from the bureau’s Phoenix field office, dated May 30, 2019, describes “conspiracy theory-driven domestic extremists,” as a growing threat, and notes that it is the first such report to do so. It lists a number of arrests, including some that haven’t been publicized, related to violent incidents motivated by fringe beliefs. 

The document specifically mentions QAnon, a shadowy network that believes in a deep state conspiracy against President Trump, and Pizzagate, the theory that a pedophile ring including Clinton associates was being run out of the basement of a Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant (which didn’t actually have a basement). 

Christopher Wray, the FBI Director, recently told a Congressional hearing that White Supremacists are major cause of domestic terrorism.  

“The Bureau has recorded about 100 arrests of domestic terrorism suspects in the past nine months and that most investigations of that kind involve some form of white supremacy,” Wray testified. 

Conspiracy theorists are nothing new but they’ve become much more dangerous and insidious. I doubt any domestic terrorism attack was fueled over the debate about the JFK shooting.

The FBI acknowledges conspiracy theory-driven violence is not new, but says it’s gotten worse with advances in technology combined with an increasingly partisan political landscape in the lead-up to the 2020 presidential election.

It would be nice if Republican Congressmen like Rep. Jim Jordan, Louie Gohmert, Matt Gaetz and many others who have been promoting the phony ‘deep state’ conspiracies against Trump would be called to account for these actions by the FBI.

Donald Trump promoted the racist and insane Birther movement against President Obama and that is a national threat as well.

In fact, Trump promotes every conspiracy theory floating out online that supports him. Claiming it was Hillary Clinton who started the Birther movement again is dangerous and unethical.

If Trump continues with his behavior and people get hurt (pipe bomber anybody?) will the FBI classify him as a domestic terrorist threat?

They should.

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Round 2 or Final Jeopardy? by @BloggersRUs

Round 2 or Final Jeopardy?
by Tom Sullivan

The problem for many of the Democrats seeking the presidency is they present themselves as if they have entered a contest for who would make the best public servant. That is the job they seek, ultimately. What they don’t seem to grasp is the primary is really a contest for best presidential candidate. Different thing.

As they had on Tuesday night, CNN moderators framed questions built on Republican talking points and designed to goad candidates into fighting among themselves. More so than on the previous night, Wednesday’s group obliged.

Former vice president Joe Biden took the brunt of the pile-on Wednesday night, fending off one attack after another on his decades-long political career. From his positions on criminal justice to women’s rights to health care and immigration, Biden tried to regain some stature lost to California Sen. Kamala Harris’s tongue-lashing during their first encounter. This time out, other candidates joined in on assaulting Biden’s polling atop the pack of 20 that earned a place on stage in Detroit.

Standing between Harris and Sen. Corey Booker of New Jersey, Biden caught it from both sides.

“Everybody’s talking about how terrible I am on all these issues,” an exasperated Biden explained after coming under attack for a 1990s crime bill Booker (and others) complain led to mass incarceration of black men. “Barack Obama knew exactly who I was. He had ten lawyers do a background check and everything about me on civil rights and he chose me and said it was the best decision he ever made.”

Not exactly a stinging counterpunch.

New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand brought along an article of Biden’s in which he argued women working outside the home would lead to the “deterioration of family.”

Health care took up a substantial part of the debate, as it had on Tuesday with the first ten Democrats. Whether to build on Obamacare or to expand Medicare, whether to eliminate private insurance and how. Biden criticized the cost of Harris’s proposal and defended Obamacare. Harris defended, or half-defended.

Jake Johnson at Common Dreams summarized:

Biden and Harris released their healthcare proposals in the days leading up to the second Democratic presidential debate, and both were criticized as inadequate to the task of overhauling America’s deadly, profit-driven status quo.

The former vice president’s plan would create a public option and expand Affordable Care Act subsidies. Harris’s proposal, which she misleadingly described as “Medicare for All,” would expand Medicare and preserve a major role for private insurance.

With ten candidates on stage, it was never going to be simple. All God’s children got plans. The others on stage angled for camera time and to survive to the next round. For many, it was Final Jeopardy.

Esquire’s Charlie Pierce tweeted, “By the way, if the Republican all-stars in 2016 had gone at Trump as hard as the folks are going at Biden tonight, we might’ve been spared the nightmare.” The Week’s Joel Mathis writes that facing the heat now will toughen up Democrats for the fusillade of poo Trump will fling at the Democrats’ eventual nominee.

Booker had a good night. But he complained, “This pitting against progressives, against moderates…that to me is dividing a party and demoralizing us in face of the real enemy here.”

That is what got lost last night. As candidates argued they were the party’s true champion and sniped at details of each other’s records and proposals, none last night looked like the kind of candidate that would inspire a movement the way Obama did in 2008. He inspired an army of young, first-time voters to take to the streets to support him.

If on Election Night 2020, the presidential contest is at all close and Trump is behind, things could get very, very ugly. The country’s historic record for peaceful transfer of power could end up on the proverbial ash heap of history, as many of our other norms have since Trump’s Electoral College total edged out Hillary Clinton in November 2016.

Republicans have spent decades convincing their voters with wild accusation after wild accusation that their opponents cheat. Republican voters themselves seem to have few qualms about that so long as they are beneficiaries of their party’s cheating or, now, of foreign agents’ on their behalf. Democrats cannot afford a narrow victory next year.

Determined to register and vote for the first time ever in 2008, but unsure where to, a seventyish African-American parked near this city’s bus terminal. The well-dressed man walked through downtown asking for directions to the Board of Elections office. He ended up walking half a mile.

Upon arrival, he realized he’d left his identification back in his car and turned to go. A poll greeter ran after him and offered a ride to his car. The man declined. “Oh, I’ll come back,” he smiled. He returned again after almost an hour, on foot, to register and vote.

The question at hand now is not which Democrat has the better policy, who is more progressive than whom, or who, if elected, would make the better public servant. It is who would make the best candidate to inspire that kind of commitment not just to defeating Donald Trump in 2020 but to electing the Democrat?

Hillary Clinton was an eminently qualified public servant.