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Month: September 2019

The children are the adults now @BloggersRUs

The children are the adults now
by Tom Sullivan

Friday was not a good day for “industrial breadwinner masculinity” built upon exploiting and subduing the natural world. The kids won’t have it anymore. They staged massive protests in 150 countries against their elders’ refusal to take action to address the climate crisis. #ClimateStrike

This movement stirred up a lot of press coverage (below). Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old Swedish climate activist, last year began spending Fridays protesting alone outside the Swedish Parliament before others finally joined her. Now she’s now inspired a global movement. There is a clear urgency among these young protesters. One-and-done protests make headlines. Persistent disruption makes change. Can we keep protests going every Friday?

“Adults keep saying we owe it to the young people to give them hope,” Thunberg told the World Economic Forum in January. “But I don’t want your hope, I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic, I want you to feel the fear I feel every day.”

Franklin Foer shares how the climate crisis has effected his daughter:

My 14-year-old daughter has been inspired by Thunberg to strike today, skipping classes to head to protests in downtown Washington, D.C. She has also suffered bouts of anxiety, and I long to build a seawall that can protect her from her fears. But her example, and Thunberg’s doomsaying, have made me realize that my parental desire to calm is the stuff of childish fantasy; anxiety is the mature response. To protect our children, we need to embrace their despair.

They seem to mean it. But to move entrenched economic powers, they’ll need to be relentless.

Friday Night Soother

Friday Night Soother

by digby

These are the most magnificent sentient creatures. We must protect them.

These organizations are working to help and protect these elephants, and you can support their efforts to keep this species from going extinct.

Wildlife Conservation Society
WildAid’s “Be Ivory Free” campaign
Save the Elephants – Elephant Crisis Fund
Elephants Without Borders
African Wildlife Foundation
International Elephant Foundation – Mounted Horse Patrol

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The Ukrainians have his number

The Ukrainians have his number

by digby

Lol:

Ukraine is ready to investigate the connections Joe Biden’s son Hunter had with the Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings, according to Anton Geraschenko, a senior adviser to the country’s interior minister who would oversee such an inquiry.

Geraschenko told The Daily Beast in an exclusive interview that “as soon as there is an official request” Ukraine will look into the case, but “currently there is no open investigation.”

“Clearly,” said Geraschenko, “Trump is now looking for kompromat to discredit his opponent Biden, to take revenge for his friend Paul Manafort, who is serving seven years in prison.” Among the counts on which Manafort was convicted: tax evasion. “We do not investigate Biden in Ukraine, since we have not received a single official request to do so,” said Geraschenko.

His remarks last week came amid widespread speculation that U.S. President Donald Trump had made vital U.S. military aid for Ukraine contingent on such an inquiry, but had tried to do so informally through unofficial representatives, including his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and Giuliani’s adviser on Ukraine, Sam Kislin.

YOu just have to laugh.

But I wouldn’t be surprised if Bill Barr says that it’s perfectly reasonable to open this investigation and he sends and “official” request. They aren’t even trying to hide their corruption now. They are just daring anyone to try and stop them.

By the way, some of this is obviously designed to make it possible to pardon Manafort by churning the waters. I’ll be shocked if he doesn’t do it.

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Whistleblowers multiplying and yet nothing happens

Whistleblowers multiplying and yet nothing happens

by digby

Apparently, there’s a whole lot of possible wrongdoing in the IC these days:

The number of complaints made to a confidential hotline designed to allow the reporting of waste, fraud and abuse in the intelligence community has skyrocketed since Donald Trump took office, government records show.

According to the latest public report by the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community, the hotline received 563 contacts last year, up from 251 in 2016 and 369 in 2017.

The numbers for the latest fiscal year are on pace to be even higher: There were 297 complaints in just the first six months — from October 2018 through last March, according to the report.

The report doesn’t describe the complaints or tally how many of those rose to the level of an “urgent concern”—a category of serious complaints that must be turned over to Congress. Officials involved in the process say that designation is rare.

With the new DNI sharing these complaints with Trump’s top henchman, Bill Barr,  and the White House whenever he wants to this seems like it might be a risky move. I’d be surprised if the numbers don’t drop precipitously after this latest assault on the notion of executive accountability for anything. Who knows if these people will follow the whistleblower laws?

And anyway we all know they are all just Deep State Hillary Clinton stooges who are out to get the president. The only people who are telling the truth are those who are defending him in all circumstances.

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This observation by Politico spells it out pretty well

This observation by Politico spells it out pretty well


by digby







This piece is called “How Trump has handcuffed Washington” notes this salient fact:

DEMOCRATS decline to impeach the president because, in part, they’re worried about a sliver of members of Congress who have slivers of their constituencies who might or might not be offended by impeachment proceedings.

We are looking at a situation in which certain freshman Democrats are being encouraged by leadership to stand their ground against impeachment no matter what is revealed about the president because as that arch quote points out “a sliver” of their constituencies might (or might not) be offended. This is distorting the process.

Last night we learned that the president is trying to sabotage the 2020 election by extorting a foreign power to smear one of his rivals. There’s nothing new about that. He was happy as a lark when Russia did it in 2016 and has suffered no consequences for doing it. Of course he’s out there soliciting similar help from friends and foes alike. He considers this normal politics. He’s said as much.

Some people might think that using millions of taxpayer dollars to extort foreign governments to do his campaign’s dirty work is just a teensy bit beyond the pale and maybe worth taking a risky vote on in those districts with a sliver of possible Trump voters.  After all, if the Republicans can use the power of the presidency to steal elections they probably won’t be able to keep their seats anyway. It seems like a risk worth taking.

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Just Wait by tristero

Just Wait 

by tristero

It’s not merely that American democracy has collapsed. It’s that the very concept of an American democracy in the ways we understood it when I was growing up is now unthinkable.

With this and this, every last delusion that moderates held about Trump has been punctured. The gloves are starting to come off. (That’s right: up until now, I think we’ve been enjoying the halcyon years of the Trump presidency. He’s now beginning to get serious.)

Meanwhile, in response, Pelosi and Schumer have offered Trump a nice, cute photo-op on guns.  If we still had even the shards of a real democracy left, they would be immediately laughed at and driven out of office.

This may seem a bit much, I know, but barring some kind of intervention from the all-knowing Flying Spaghetti Monster, the next year will demonstrate even to the most “moderate” among us that I’m not hyperventilating. I hope to be proven wrong, but I don’t see how.

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“It was actually a beautiful conversation”

“It was actually a beautiful conversation”

by digby


My Salon column this morning:

Back in August, a lot of us were wondering what in the world was going on when President Trump suddenly decided to withhold $250 million in military aid to Ukraine. The understandable knee-jerk assumption was that Trump was once again currying favor with Russian President Vladimir Putin, particularly since he’d apparently just spent hours at the G7 meeting in France hectoring the other leaders to allow Russia back into the group. Politico reported that a senior administration figure characterized the reported slow-walking as a “review” to ensure that the money was being spent in “the best interest of the United States.”

That was an odd way of putting it, to say the least. Even the Trump administration had never come right out and said that Russian aggression against Ukraine was good for America, which would be one way to interpret the withdrawal of this support. Nonetheless, it’s always fair to speculate that anything Trump does with respect to Russia is somehow related to his inexplicable need to please Putin, regardless of how pathetic and bizarre it appears to everyone else on the planet.

But there was something else going on at exactly the same time that seemed at least as possible as a motivation. I noted it here after reading this CNN story about Rudy Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, speaking with a Ukrainian official about allegations that former Vice President Joe Biden had been involved in the dismissal of a prosecutor in Ukraine who was investigating Biden’s son Hunter. Giuliani had previously canceled a trip to Kyiv to press the Ukrainians to reopen the Biden investigation, after he got harsh pushback for interfering in in a foreign government’s internal business. This latest story indicated that he was still on the case, and the big news at the time was that the State Department had helped set up the meeting, which seemed wildly inappropriate.

It appeared possible that Trump’s overwrought defenses of Putin and his sudden withholding of $250 million in aid could be seen as an inducement (if not outright extortion) directed at new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in hopes of a criminal case against one of Trump’s main rivals in the 2020 campaign.

On Sept. 5, the Washington Post published an editorial that spelled it out explicitly:

[W]e’re reliably told that the president has a second and more venal agenda: He is attempting to force Mr. Zelensky to intervene in the 2020 U.S. presidential election by launching an investigation of the leading Democratic candidate, Joe Biden. Mr. Trump is not just soliciting Ukraine’s help with his presidential campaign; he is using U.S. military aid the country desperately needs in an attempt to extort it.

A week or so later it was reported that House Intelligence Committee chair Adam Schiff, D-Calif., had issued a subpoena to Joseph Maguire, the acting director of national intelligence, which indicated that an urgent whistleblower complaint from the intelligence community was being withheld from Congress. I don’t think many of us connected all the dots at that time, but on Thursday the picture started to come into focus.

Ever since Schiff sent this subpoena, this mystery has been at the top of the news. The daily drip has revealed that the whistleblower was someone high up in the administration connected to the intelligence community, and it ultimately became clear that the person implicated in wrongdoing being reported was the president himself.

We learned that the intelligence community’s inspector general, Michael Atkinson, had found the whistleblower’s complaint both “credible” and “urgent,” but had been thwarted by Maguire from reporting the alleged wrongdoing to Congress as the law requires.

Later still, we learned that Maguire had consulted with the White House and Attorney General Bill Barr, who told him that this complaint did not fall under the relevant statute because it wasn’t strictly an intelligence matter, and instructed him not to share the information with members of Congress. The word “privilege” came up again and again.

In other words, Trump’s henchmen had circled the wagons once again around the president, conjuring up yet another excuse as to why they are not required to cooperate with congressional oversight or any form of accountability. But the details are getting out anyway, as they should have known they would.

The Washington Post reports that this whistleblower’s urgent report was about Ukraine. It appears highly probable that it regarded the alleged extortion of Zelensky’s government in hopes of digging dirt on Joe Biden for Trump’s electoral benefit. We don’t know the details, but it seems pretty clear that Giuliani has been working this for some time and that Trump himself is personally involved.

If there was any lingering doubt, all you had to do was observe Rudy Giuliani on television and social media last night. During a wild appearance with Chris Cuomo on CNN, Giuliani first denied it all and then admitted it, in an exchange reminiscent of the famous Jack Nicholson scene in “A Few Good Men”:

Then he went one step further and also pretty much admitted that the president had extorted the Ukrainian government:

I won’t go into the conspiracy theory he is referencing here. Hunter Biden has undeniably been involved in some dubious business, but the timeline of this particular complaint doesn’t make sense, and there’s no evidence that this desperate attempt to create a BizarroWorld scandal that mirrors the Russia investigation has any merit.

If all this pans out as the major scandal it appears to be, in a sane world it would mean the end of the Trump presidency. If it’s shown that the president has extorted the leader of a foreign country to help his own re-election campaign, he isn’t just committing a “High Crime,” he’s committing one that is explicitly named as an impeachable offense: bribery. It’s right there in the Constitution. Naturally enough, Trump didn’t even use his own money. He leveraged hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars for his own corrupt purposes.

But from what we can see already from the right-wing media it’s likely to be, at best, “Oops, he did it again,” and at worst a defense based on the theory that Trump has total immunity from any accountability whatsoever. This is essentially Bill Barr’s version of the “unitary executive” view. After all, when ABC’s George Stephanopoulos asked Trump whether, after everything that has happened, he would now call the FBI if a foreign emissary were peddling information about his opponent, he only said that he might. He also said he’d take the information because everybody does it: “It’s called oppo research.”

He didn’t mention demanding “oppo” from an ally under threat of withdrawing military defense funds. But in Trump’s megalomaniacal view of his presidency, any threat to him is defined as a threat to America, giving him the inalienable right to use the full power of the U.S. government to ensure his re-election. I will be shocked if even one prominent Republican contradicts him.

Update: They’re all lining up nicely so far. And I haven’t seen any movement by the Democratswither. So, it looks like the Republicans are going to be able to steal the 2020 election without much fuss. Nobody cares.

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He, Trump by @BloggersRUs

He, Trump
by Tom Sullivan

Nobody could have seen this coming, right?

Attorneys working for the acting president filed a lawsuit Thursday asserting that a sitting president cannot “be investigated, indicted or otherwise subjected to the criminal process’,” Period. Not by federal, state or local authorities for as long as he holds the presidency. Ponder that in all its implications.

Donald Trump’s lawsuit is aimed at stopping Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance from enforcing a subpoena against Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars USA, to produce eight years of his personal and corporate tax returns. Trump’s attorneys argue that because the action against Mazars is an attempt “to criminally investigate a sitting President, it is unconstitutional.”

Paul Rosenzweig aided Ken Starr’s investigation of President Bill Clinton and believes this argument will fail in court. Trump’s stacked courts:

“It cannot be the case that, as a matter of law, everybody associated with the president is immune from criminal investigation while he’s the president. But taken at its fullest, that’s what the president’s argument is,” Rosenzweig told VICE News.

Bess Levin of Vanity Fair elaborates on the Manhattan investigation’s origins:

Vance, who agreed not to enforce the subpoena—issued to Trump’s longtime accounting firm Mazars USA—until a scheduled September 25 hearing, is investigating if executives at the Trump Organization filed false business records concerning hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who both claim to have had affairs with Trump, charges he, naturally, denies. The president’s former fixer, Michael Cohen, admitted to arranging the hush money payments and released audio of him discussing the Daniels payment with Trump.

It is just the latest in a series of lawsuits Trump has filed to keep his finances secret. He has sued congressional Democrats to keep them from obtaining his tax records which, by law, the chairman of the House Tax Committee may request from the IRS for any citizen. Trump has sued the state of New York over the TRUST Act, passed this year. Upon request, the state may release tax records of New York citizens to several congressional committees. New York’s records would include copies of Trump’s federal returns.

The latter suit Trump filed in a District of Columbia federal court before judges Trump appointed. New York’s attorneys argued this week before U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, that the case should be dismissed. It belongs in New York’s courts. The case could stretch on for months. Winning cases through “delays, evasions, and lies,” was a Roy Cohn tactic Trump has used effectively.

Democrats requested Trump’s federal records in April but have yet to request records from the state of New York. Trump filed a lawsuit against New York anyway.

Trump may be an idiot, but he’s an idiot with a preternatural knack for gaming the courts and dodging taxes. He and his family have done so with near-complete impunity for decades. In this fight, Democrats are but learners. Trump is the Master.

Federal prosecutors are barred from issuing an indictment of a sitting president by Department of Justice policy. Now Trump asserts presidential immunity extends to state investigations of him and of any firms with which he and his organization have done business. He is above the law. He is The Law.

The House Intelligence Committee will have to take the Trump administration to court to get access to a whistleblower complaint filed through formal channels by a U.S. intelligence official. Details are sketchy, but a “promise” made by Trump to a foreign head of state raised national security concerns. The whistleblower, Joel Mathis writes at The Week, is “officially saying the government should protect itself from the president.”

By statute that “urgent concern” ought to have been transmitted to congressional intelligence committees. Trump’s acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, blocked the intelligence community’s inspector general from releasing the report to Congress. Congress will have to take Trump to court. Trump himself views court action the way medieval lords viewed moats and boiling oil as ways for slowing down attackers.

Mathis sums up our plight:

This complaint may also represent the federal bureaucracy’s last stand against the president. Unless the House of Representatives switches course and suddenly impeaches Trump — and there is little sign of such a development — there is no one else to step forward and save America from him.

We are watching this amoral, corrupt, emotionally stunted megalomaniac turn the government of the United States into a branch of the Trump Organization. He is stepping over and through Washington bureaucracy like H.G. Wells’ Martian tripods, crushing normality as he goes, stopping here and there to raise his cell phone and fire a Twitter heat ray. He has proven as impervious to our usual weapons as Democrats are to the fact their usual weapons don’t work against him.

The idea we might have to wait for some political version of common bacteria to end the destruction of a republic that survived the Civil War is not at all reassuring.

Ponder again what it means that Trump believes that so long as he holds the presidency he is untouchable.

They’re not going to take your cheeseburgers. They’re going to make your cheeseburgers kill you.

They’re not going to take your cheeseburgers. They’re going to make your cheeseburgers kill you.

by digby

The Trump administration is leaving not one stone unturned:

Over a century ago, Upton Sinclair’s “The Jungle” exposed unsafe and unsanitary conditions in our nation’s slaughterhouses. Sinclair singled out breakneck line speeds as a key source of misery, noting “The main thing the men wanted was to put a stop to the habit of speeding up, they were trying their best to force a lessening of the pace, for there were some, they said, who could not keep up with it, whom it was killing.”

Sinclair’s stomach-churning account led Congress to create a new agency in charge of food safety in slaughterhouses. Among the reforms implemented were rules to slow down line speeds, so that government inspectors could ensure that diseased or feces-covered meat and poultry did not end up on consumers’ plates. Now, if the Trump administration gets its way, pork slaughterhouses will be allowed to drastically increase their line speeds, with potentially disastrous results for workers and consumers.

A new rule, finalized today, would reduce the number of government food safety inspectors in pork plants by 40 percent, and remove most of the remaining inspectors from production lines. In their place, a smaller number of company employees — who are not required to receive any training — would conduct the “sorting” tasks that USDA previously referred to as “inspection.” The rule would also allow companies to design their own microbiological testing programs to measure food safety, rather than requiring companies to meet the same standard.

Equally alarming, the new rule would remove all line speed limits in the plants, allowing companies to speed up their lines with abandon. With fewer government inspectors on the slaughter lines, there would be fewer trained workers watching out for consumer safety. Faster line speeds would make it harder for the limited number of remaining meat inspectors and plant workers to do their jobs.

The experience from a long-running pilot project that involved five large hog slaughterhouses offers some insight into the possible impact of such radical deregulation. Consumer groups reviewed the government’s data from the five pilot plants and other plants of comparable size. They found that the plants with fewer inspectors and faster lines had more regulatory violations than others.

Indeed, the pilot project gave no indication that allowing companies to police themselves produces safe food. Nevertheless, USDA concluded that self-policing would ensure food safety, based on a technical risk assessment that — in violation of OMB guidelines — was not peer-reviewed before USDA published its rule. Later, three of the five peer reviewers indicated that the study was fundamentally flawed. USDA has pressed forward with its rule regardless, dismissing this criticism as mere technicality.

It’s not only consumers of meat who would pay a price for this misguided and dangerous new rule. There are more than 90,000 pork slaughterhouse workers whose health and limbs are already at risk under the current line speed limit of 1,106 hogs per hour. Pork slaughterhouse workers will tell you that they can barely keep up with current line speeds. They work in noisy, slippery workplaces with large knives, hooks and bandsaws, making tens of thousands of forceful repetitive motions on each and every shift to cut and break down the hogs.

USDA is ignoring three decades of studies indicating that faster line speeds and the forceful nature of the work in meatpacking plants are the root causes of a staggeringly high rate of work-related injuries and illnesses.

This has been the most chaotic, outrageous, lawless administration in history.

But you have to admit if you are a big corporation of any kind you have to be thrilled with the rollbacks of regulation that have taken place under Trump. Combined with the court-packing to deny the ability of people to successfully sue, they are happy as can be. This has been the most comprehensive destruction of the regulatory system in history. They have taken a wrecking ball to anything that protects the environment and our health and safety. It’s actually kind of awe-inspiring.

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President Blabby at the Wall

President Blabby at the Wall

by digby

As everyone wonders what in the world Trump blabbed to some foreign leader that cause the Inspector General of the DNI to term a whistleblower’s complaint an urgent matter of national security, just note that he was blabbing just yesterday about the technology of his own wall because he can’t stop bragging:

“Look at the inner tube to see what happens, because after the wall is up, we pour concrete and concrete goes into the tube, and in addition to that we have rebar,” Trump explained to reporters, referring to a stack of the hollow steel beams that would eventually make up the wall.

“So if you think you’re going to cut it with a blowtorch, that doesn’t work because you hit concrete,” he continued, “and if you think you’re going to go through the concrete, that doesn’t work because we have very powerful rebar inside.”

Trump also talked up the concrete filling being used for the beams, telling reporters that workers were using “a very powerful concrete.”

“And a lot of technological advances have been made with concrete,” he added. “It sounds pretty simple but it’s not. It’s a pretty powerful concrete. So you have the rebar, you have the outer crust and you have — the inside is concrete and it’s pretty amazing.”

The wall, which Trump said had been described to him as the “Rolls-Royce version” of a border barrier, had even undergone extensive testing to ensure that immigrants would be unable to scale the structure.

“We actually built prototypes and we have, I guess you could say, world-class climbers,” he said. “We had 20 mountain climbers. That’s all they do, they love to climb mountains.”

“Some of them were champions, and we gave them different prototypes of walls, and this was the one that was hardest to climb,” he continued, gesturing to the stack of beams behind him.

After allowing his acting heads of Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection, and the Army Corps of Engineers to discuss other features of the wall, the president began to elaborate on the structure’s technological assets.

“One thing we haven’t mentioned is technology,” Trump said. “They’re wired so that we will know if somebody’s trying to break through.” He then offered the floor to Lt. Gen. Todd Semonite, acting head of the Army Corps, who quickly answered: “Sir, there could be some merit in not discussing that.”

It wouldn’t surprise me if in the middle of bragging about his massive military build-up he ended up giving away the most tightly held nuclear secrets to Vladimir Putin . He literally doesn’t understand why he shouldn’t.

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