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Month: March 2020

When it comes to Trump, don’t trust, can’t verify

Paul Krugman’s column today provides excellent guidance:

Why did Trump and his team deny and delay? All the evidence suggests that he didn’t want to do or say anything that might drive down stock prices, which he seems to regard as the key measure of his success. That’s presumably why as late as Feb. 25 Larry Kudlow, the administration’s chief economist, declared that the U.S. had “contained” the coronavirus, and that the economy was “holding up nicely.”

Well, that was a bad bet. Since then, the stock market has more or less given up all its gains under the Trump presidency. More important, the economy is clearly in free-fall. So what should we do now?

I’ll leave health policy to the experts. On economic policy, I’d suggest three principles. First, focus on hardship, not G.D.P. Second, stop worrying about incentives to work. Third, don’t trust Trump.

On the first point: Many of the job losses we’ll experience over the next few months will be not just unavoidable but actually desirable. We want workers who are or might be sick to stay home, to “flatten the curve” of the virus’s spread. We want to partly or wholly close large business establishments, like auto plants, that could act as human petri dishes. We want to close restaurants, bars and nonessential retail establishments.

Now, there will surely be additional, unnecessary job losses caused by a plunge in consumer and business spending, which is why we should be engaged in substantial overall stimulus. But policy can’t and shouldn’t prevent widespread temporary job loss.

What policy can do is reduce the hardship facing those who are temporarily out of work. That means that we need to spend much more on programs like paid sick leave, unemployment benefits, food stamps and Medicaid that aid Americans in distress, who need far more help than they’ll get from an across-the-board cash drop. This spending would also provide stimulus, but that’s a secondary concern.

Which brings me to my second point. The usual suspects are already objecting that helping Americans in need reduces their incentive to work. That’s a lousy argument even in good times, but it’s absurd in the face of a pandemic. And state governments that have been trying, with encouragement from the Trump administration, to reduce public assistance by imposing work requirements should suspend all such requirements, immediately.

Finally, about Trump: Over the past few days state TV, I mean Fox News, and right-wing pundits have abruptly pivoted from dismissing Covid-19 as a liberal hoax to demanding an end to all criticism of the president in a time of national emergency. This should come as no surprise.

But this is where the history of the Trump pandemic — all those wasted weeks when we did nothing because Donald Trump didn’t want to hear anything that might hurt him politically — becomes relevant. It shows that even when American lives are at risk, this administration’s policy is all about Trump, about what he thinks will make him look good, never mind the national interest.

What this means is that as Congress allocates money to reduce the economic pain from Covid-19, it shouldn’t give Trump any discretion over how the money is spent. For example, while it may be necessary to provide funds for some business bailouts, Congress must specify the rules for who gets those funds and under what conditions. Otherwise you know what will happen: Trump will abuse any discretion to reward his friends and punish his enemies. That’s just who he is.

Dealing with the coronavirus would be hard in the best of circumstances. It will be especially hard when we know that we can’t trust either the judgment or the motives of the man who should be leading the response. But you go into a pandemic with the president you have, not the president you wish you had.

After his White House Briefing Room rally this morning (which I will write more about later) I would hope it’s obvious that he has gone completely off the rails. But you never know.

I don’t expect Republicans in congress to give a damn whether that lunatic will properly manage the economic crisis. They are as far gone as he is. The Democrats have to be the ones insisting on these backstops. Whether they can get it done is unknown but they need to try.

Make Trump’s Racist Comments Unprofitable @spockosbrain

Trump is calling #COVID19 the Chinese Virus. To understand why he’s doing it and how best to react read Kurt Eichenwald’s great Twitter thread and Amanda Marcotte’s excellent article at Salon.  Here are my thoughts for activists on what we can do about it.

Make Trump’s Racist Comments Unprofitable For Him.

Trump’s behavior changes when he knows it will impact him positively or negatively financially. Instead of hoping he will suddenly care about that Americans are endangered by his comments let’s use our understanding of his psyche and focus on what he cares about–money–then come up with multiple legal methods to take it away from him. The goal:

Make Trump’s businesses lose millions in revenue whenever he makes statements that reasonable people consider racist. 

As Eichenwald points out, we know how Trump and the right plays the game of “trolling the Libs” then following it up with bad faith arguments and definitions.

So how do we take away Trump’s money? The New York Times did a piece on how much this crisis is costing Trump. They point out that he is not personally invested as heavily in the stock market as others.  “Trump Is Losing Money in the Markets, Too”  March 14, 2020 by David Enrich. 

Trump’s Finances Must Be Impacted Personally 

1) Tank the value of his real estate. Trump’s money is in real estate. Who buys over-priced real estate? Rich people and money launderers. When you make money for rich people they let you do what you want–but with the crash they are pissed at him. They can direct their anger at him by reducing his income in the area where his personal fortune lies–real estate.

2) Target Trump’s Revenue Streams
Trump loves his golf courses. He is invested heavily in golf courses. Do any rich Chinese-Americans golf? Might they pause their memberships at his courses briefly to send a message? What about that course in Scotland that he turned into a overpriced gas station and mandatory rest stop for the military? Can we claw back some of the previous over priced gas? Stop current revenue? Ban future revenue?

3) Expose Who has Financial Leverage Over Trump 
Are you a Chinese-American who has insider knowledge of Trump’s finances or where his revenue comes from? You could go to the media as a whistleblower but that takes time. Or you could do what he does.

  • Contact him directly and tell him what you know.
  • Ask him to stop calling it the Chinese Virus.  If he does, nobody needs to know. If he doesn’t, well then you go the whistleblower route.

4) Levy Fines, Penalties and File Lawsuits On His Properties
There are multiple methods to reduce Trump’s revenue. Impose new fines and penalties. Are you a mayor in Miami who needs properties to house the sick?  They were going to hold the G7 at Trump National Doral golf resort.

States can commandeer hotels to treat coronavirus patients. Trump’s National Doral gold Resort near Miami could house Florida’s sick, once the bedbugs are removed and it has been sanitized.

Why build hospitals when you have those lovely bungalows ready? Eminent domain is a thing in many states. Those golf course would be perfect! The point is to use multiple methods in multiple areas to reduce his revenues.  You never know whose Fox News watching mother is going to die or just died because of something Trump’s said.  Give those people a perfectly legal outlet for their anger.

5) Withhold Money 
We know that Trump uses his properties to get cash from people who want favors from him. What if a wealthy Chinese person wants Trump to stop blaming the Chinese for his own mistakes? This person could just hint that a change in language would ensure Trump keeps getting millions in bribes re-election contributions.

Worried this might be illegal? To quote Mick Mulvaney, “This happens all the time! Get over it!” Also, if Trump ends up getting the money he won’t complain. It’s not like congress allocated the rich person’s money and by law couldn’t hold it up.

Do It Publicly 
I say do all this publicly. I say use all legal methods. But that’s because I believe in the rule of law and I don’t have an army of lawyers, daddy’s money and my own personal AG to get me out of a jam.

However…rich and powerful people like to use their leverage privately. Prior to being President Trump did a LOT of private threatening of lawsuits and forced NDAs. so he knows how it works, but smart phones record everything and he shouts a lot on the phone. If Trump doesn’t stop making racist statements those tapes are released.

Some of these suggestions are for rich and powerful people. Why? Because I pay attention to WHO my target listens to and WHAT makes them change their behavior. Trump listens to rich people who have financial leverage over him because he cares about money.

Financially Hurt Trump the Person, not Trump the President
If there is a move to reduce Trump’s personal finances he will whine and respond as if America is being attacked. To counter this it should be made clear that the actions are focused on reducing Trump the individual’s profits. Concurrently there should be humanitarian outreach to all Americans. The message is:

“Trump makes racist comments. We don’t want to punish the American people for this, so here are some good things for all of you. However, the financial pain on Trump personally and his businesses will continue until he stops with his racist comments.”

People are angry at Trump. They want to do something. This is an opportunity. Share this with your friends. Do you know any rich Chinese-American golfers? Multi-millionaires who can use their real estate holdings to punish Trump?

Be legal. Be polite. Be persistent
If you are successful expect to be attacked. Prepare for the threats coming back. He brags about hitting back and punching down. Note the violent words he uses.  Record the threats. Bring them to the media when they happen. There are lots of smart people who will help you.

Also, I want to STRONGLY condemn any suggestions of violence toward Trump or any members of his family. No jokes about violence either. Those who know me knowI’ve been fighting violent rhetoric from the right-wing media since 2005. De-funding them because of their violent rhetoric is a method that I have successfully used and it has made an impact on the entire industry. Act legally, non-violently and persistently. This is not Rwanda.

It will be hard to know if any of these financial pressures on Trump will stop him from making racist comments. The goal is to change his language because of the consequences to the rest of America. But even it they don’t change his language, if they cost him money that is a success, because that will hurt him.

If you really want to hurt Trump take away what he cares about most, his money.

Cross posted to spockosbrain 

GOP elites may be cowardly, irresponsible and dumb but they always look out for number one

As we watch states around the country start to shut down, one by one, as if the lights were all going out across the country, there is plenty of discussion about President Trump’s bungled response and his compulsion to deliver happy talk and disinformation to the American people. Now that he is unable to hold his beloved rallies and has taken over the daily coronavirus briefing, the opportunities for the latter are unfortunately multiplying. His performances before the cameras every day are getting more and more surreal.

On Thursday, Trump came before the country touting a supposed wonder drug that he promised looked like a major breakthrough. (In fact, it’s a standard antimalarial medication.) As usual, the experts had to walk that back later, saying that it’s just one of many drugs being considered as a possible treatment but they won’t know for months. Reports coming from within the administration confirm that the bungling continues unabated. Between Jared’ Kushner’s “shadow task force” and turf wars among the various players, it seems nobody really knows who’s running the show. It certainly isn’t Trump, who is clearly spending most of his time watching Fox News and the stock market ticker.

There was a time when we might have expected Republicans in Congress to wake up from their stupor and exert some leadership in the face of a president’s overwhelming incompetence in such a crisis. Sure, maybe they felt it was no big deal that he engaged in a criminal cover-up from the moment he took his oath, or that he extorted a foreign leader to smear his political opponent.

Maybe it doesn’t mean anything to them that he’s pretty much dismantled the executive branch as a functional part of government and completely destroyed America’s reputation abroad. Assaulting the press, nepotism, rampant corruption and intentionally dividing the country into warring camps obviously aren’t things that keep them up at night.

But you would have thought GOP lawmakers might be just a little bit concerned about their own voters getting sick and dying in droves. Not to mention the collapse of the world economy.

Unfortunately, leading Republicans don’t seem all that worked up about it, or at least not in public. Recall that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell adjourned the Senate for three days last week. He didn’t feel it was necessary to stay in session so they could put together an emergency economic package to help the millions of workers and owners who have lost their jobs and businesses overnight.

He had priorities and they didn’t include trying to mitigate the effects of what appears to be an impending economic meltdown:

McConnell finally reconvened the Senate this week and Republicans came up with their own plan on Thursday evening — over which, unfortunately, the GOP caucus is still squabbling. Politico’s Jake Sherman reports that Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.. and new White House chief of staff Mark Meadows are lobbying Trump to reject the idea of immediate cash payments. Apparently they don’t think it’s important to get money into the hands of the millions of people whose incomes have abruptly dried up, and prefer an increase in unemployment benefits. (Why this should be either/or is beyond me. Clearly, we need both.)

They aren’t the only Republican senators who don’t like the bill McConnell came up with, with some favoring loans to small businesses and others arguing against bailouts. As they continue to bicker amongst themselves. many are displaying their ignorance, shallowness and irresponsibility during this emergency.

Here’s Alaska’s long-serving solo congressman, Rep. Don Young, sounding like one of those drunken kids on spring break in Fort Lauderdale, characterizing the response to the epidemic as “hysteria” and exhorting a group of senior citizens not to follow the instructions of public health experts:

This beer virus I call it — they call it a coronavirus, I call it a beer virus — how do you like that? It attacks our senior citizens. Now, I’m one of you. I still say we have to as a nation, as a state, to go forth with our everyday activities.

Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin expressed his skepticism as well:

I’m not denying what a nasty disease COVID-19 can be, and how it’s obviously devastating to somewhere between 1 and 3.4 percent of the population. But that means 97 to 99 percent will get through this and develop immunities and will be able to move beyond this. But we don’t shut down our economy because tens of thousands of people die on the highways. It’s a risk we accept so we can move about. We don’t shut down our economies because tens of thousands of people die from the common flu.

Johnson is a multimillionaire businessman, but he seems to be a bit confused about numbers. Traffic accidents account for about 34,000 deaths per year in the U.S. If the coronavirus kills 1 to 3.4 percent of the population, that would add up to somewhere between 3 and 11 million people. I suspect that could be pretty bad for business, but what do I know?

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., wasted everyone’s time with an irrelevant amendment and gave a speech in which he referred to immigrants as “non-people.” Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said he couldn’t understand why Chinese people would be upset that Trump is calling this disease the “Chinese virus” because “Spain never got upset when we referred to the Spanish flu in 1918 and 1919.” (They did get upset. That pandemic originated in Kansas, but Spain was the only country not under wartime censorship so that’s where it was first reported. That’s not a good precedent.)

The Republicans have lost the ability to legislate, even in an emergency. All they know how to do is confirm unqualified judges and protect Donald Trump from accountability.

Well, actually — they also know how to look out for No. 1. NPR reported on Thursday that Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., had given a private briefing to some influential big donors on Feb. 27. As chairman of the Intelligence Committee as well as co-author of the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, Burr was in a good position to know what was coming down. He warned this select audience that the coronavirus was akin to the 1918 flu pandemic and that we might have to close schools, curtail travel and call out the military.

Here’s what the president was telling the American people at that time:

ProPublica reported later on Thursday that Burr had sold millions of dollars worth of stock days before he gave his big-donor buddies this helpful heads-up. As it happens, Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., whose husband just happens to be the chairman and CEO of the New York Stock Exchange, also dumped millions of dollars worth of stock immediately after a full Senate briefing on the virus by the subcommittee on health.

How likely is it that they are the only ones?

Everyone thinks the Republican establishment is afraid of Donald Trump. This entire episode suggests that’s not true. It isn’t that they’re afraid of him. They’re just like him.

My Salon column republished with permission

The Golden Age of Grifting

We square johns will remember the year 2020 as one of the most traumatic periods in our lives. But Trump and his party will fondly recall this time as The Golden Era of Grifting.

Case in point: Senator Richard Burr, an example of modern Republicanism at its purest:

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.), who had expressed confidence in the country’s preparedness for the coronavirusoutbreak, sold a significant share of his stocks last month, according to public disclosures.

The sales included stocks in some of the industries that have been hardest hit by the global pandemic, including hotels and restaurants, shipping, drug manufacturing, and health care, records show.

Until about a week ago, President Trump and GOP leaders had projected optimism in the country’s ability to manage the global outbreak of the coronavirus.

Surprised? You shouldn’t be. And this was just the beginning. Think of it this way:

The square johns are frightened. And the square johns are grateful that finally the US is setting up a trillion dollar relief program.

But that’s why square johns are such little people. Because if you’re a Republican, you don’t think like a square john, you don’t think like a little person. You think:

A trillion fucking dollars! If I could get me like even the tiniest taste… Yeah, baby, yeah!!

BTW, Burr’s not the only Senator who get what’s really happening and seized the day by its golden horns :

Burr’s sales were among those of several senators to come to light late Thursday, raising questions about whether they were influenced by private briefings on the outbreak that in subsequent weeks caused U.S. equity markets to plunge.

Also under scrutiny were sales by Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) and her husband, Jeffrey Sprecher, the chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, as well as Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and James M. Inhofe (R-Okla.).

Naturally, in a culturally healthy country, all of them would have been run out of office before midnight last night. But here we are, where we just record their lame excuses and non-sequiturs and move on to the next atrocity (seriously, Dianne, seriously?).

What a time.

Update: David Leonhardt has a round up of comments and info. Some excerpts:

Molly Knight: “Richard Burr should not hold government office by Monday. He needs to resign today.”

David French, The Dispatch: “The potential insider trading is dreadful and possibly criminal, but what could elevate this to a historic scandal is the idea that senators may have known enough to be alarmed for themselves yet still projected rosy scenarios to the public AND failed to make sure we were ready.”

David Frum of The Atlantic wants to know who else may have sold stock: “What did the Trump family sell, and when did they sell it?”

In 2012, Robert Reich notes, Burr was one of only a small number of members to vote against a law that barred them for trading on inside information.

Exponential epidemic meets Trump slow-roll

This 2009 photograph captured a sneeze in progress, revealing the plume of salivary droplets as they are expelled in a large cone-shaped array from this man’s open mouth, thereby, dramatically illustrating the reason one needs to cover his/her mouth when coughing, or sneezing, in order to protect others from germ exposure. CDC/Public domain.

Epidemiologist Larry Brilliant gave Wired a sober (and sobering) analysis of where we are in this pandemic and where we are headed. Brilliant helped the World Health Organization (WHO) eradicate smallpox, and served as senior technical advisor for Contagion. He warned TED of the next, inevitable pandemic in 2006.

He tells Wired:

People say Contagion is prescient. We just saw the science. The whole epidemiological community has been warning everybody for the past 10 or 15 years that it wasn’t a question of whether we were going to have a pandemic like this. It was simply when. It’s really hard to get people to listen. I mean, Trump pushed out the admiral on the National Security Council, who was the only person at that level who’s responsible for pandemic defense. With him went his entire downline of employees and staff and relationships. And then Trump removed the [early warning] funding for countries around the world.

As we await the daily smoke-blowing exercise from the White House, Brilliant agrees states are doing some things are right: social distancing, school closings, cancellation of events. Flatten the curve to bridge the months needed to develop a vaccine. Between survivors acquiring immunity and a vaccine, we can beat the epidemic, he believes. Perhaps some antiviral drugs will help in the interim.

But the lack of testing is hampering our ability to target resources. “We should be doing a stochastic process random probability sample of the country to find out where the hell the virus really is,” Brilliant says.

What else should be done? What would he do if he were president?

I would begin the press conference by saying “Ladies and gentlemen, let me introduce you to Ron Klain—he was the Ebola czar [under President Barack Obama], and now I’ve called him back and made him Covid czar. Everything will be centralized under one person who has the respect of both the public health community and the political community.” We’re a divided country right now. Right now, Tony Fauci [head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases] is the closest that we come to that.

Klain worked for Barack Obama. Not going to happen under Donald Trump. He’s spent his presidency unmaking the last one.

Even so, the former hippie hopes the pandemic will help Americans find a better version of themselves, inspired perhaps “young kids, millennials, who are volunteering to go take groceries to people who are homebound, elderly” and by “heroic nurses, who are coming and working many more hours than they worked before, doctors who fearlessly go into the hospital to work. I’ve never seen the kind of volunteerism I’m seeing.”

Meanwhile, federal resources await orders from the top. Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie tells Politico the designated backup health system for natural disasters sits making preparations:

The VA is “preparing for a national call on this matter,” Wilkie said in a telephone interview, likening the personnel to military reservists who can be called up by the president at any time. “They know that they can be deployed anywhere in the country. Just like the reserves, their physicals are up to date, their shots are up to date. That prepares them to launch when called upon.”

Only the White House has not made the call.

In Iast week’s in the Wall Street Journal, Walter Russell Mead condemned Trump’s mishandling of the crisis, calling it “improvisational and chaotic.” A pandemic is not something he can “bluff, threaten or placate.”

“He approaches politics as entertainment and has repeatedly foiled opponents by turning potentially disastrous developments—impeachment, for example—into thrilling new episodes of ‘The Trump Show,'” Mead wrote.

Indeed, the daily COVID-19 briefings substitute for the showboating Trump usually reserves for his rallies now cancelled on account of plague. Each day he teases some new, headline-grabbing development. Followup reporting finds it is vaporware. The next day’s news cycle is the same. Tease-headline-debunk. A news media starved of daily briefings for the last year eagerly regurgitates Trump’s statements and corrects the record later.

Mead writes, Trump is “stalling for time as he processes the nature of the threat and tests rhetorical and policy responses to it.” But like the honey badger, the coronavirus doesn’t give a shit.

Trump might have unleashed the full potential of the federal response at his fingertips weeks ago. He might have kick-started the manufacture of needed medical supplies. But the slow-roll keeps him in the spotlight and gives him the daily attention he requires as much as oxygen.

Republicans for the Rule of Law hope to make him pay a price for that starting this morning.

[h/t/ SR]

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

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Where’s Mike Pompeo?

His state department should be the agency handling this and they are apparently dealing with no guidance from DC and have no idea what to do about this problem:

Gayle Guynup, 68, is one of hundreds of U.S. citizens stuck in Morocco, on a vacation they can’t find a way to end.

It’s become an all-too-familiar story with international borders closing as governments respond to the coronavirus pandemic, leaving people stranded.

Guynup, of Santa Rosa, Calif., said her vacation deteriorated fast. She checked the news Saturday night to see reports that Morocco was suspending all international flights. By Monday, she was part of a frantic crowd at the airport trying to rebook a seat out to no avail. That same day, Morocco, which hosts around 12 million tourists yearly, ordered hotels, restaurants and entertainment centers to close. The country has 37 coronavirus cases and one related death.

She said she feels abandoned by her government.

“Egypt, Turkey, France and Great Britain have already taken actions on getting flights for their nationals out,” she told The Washington Post. “And our embassy [in Morocco] has not reached out to any of us.”

These people are stuck and have nowhere to go.

There were Americans stranded in Peru as well, probably all over the world., actually. One of those in Peru was on TV this morning and said they were only given 12 hours notice and they couldn’t get out. Trump gave a snotty response to questions about it in his White House rally this morning, implying that these people just weren’t fast enough off the mark.

They could have thought this through and made contingency plans for people stuck outside the US. But Jared and Stephen Miller were the ones pushing this decision and they can’t think of everything …

What Amanda Sez

Amanda Marcotte is exactly right. Trump’s “Chinese virus” comment is a deliberate troll (as well as red meat for his deplorable racist base). Its purpose is to get us talking about his racism instead of his incompetence. That way, he (and his enablers) can turn the conversation to a discussion of when a racist comment is not a racist comment and exactly how it’s not racist. The conversation then just drops far, far down the rabbit hole and the real issue — Trump’s total incompetence — is lost.

The appropriate response is to (1) forcefully denounce the racism but (2) ignore efforts by the right to make racism the topic, and then (3) go back immediately to the topic of Trump’s thorough unfitness for office.

In short, acknowledge his racism, but don’t take the bait. The real subject is that Trump has absolutely no business being president. His racism is central to that, of course, but the point is to get him out of there as soon as possible.

Who was the wingnut grifter throwing Trump red meat questions at the daily Trump rally?

Trump and Chanel Rion at Mar-a-lago two weeks ago

They “treat me very nicely.”

If you were wondering about that bizarre question above from the Trumpandemic rally this morning, recall that the questioner was the one who traveled with Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to get the dirt on Biden for the blockbuster OAN documentary.

The videos present a panoply of allegations revolving around Marie Yovanovitch, George Soros, and the Franklin Templeton investment firm.

Based on interviews with deeply compromised characters such as former prosecutors general Yuriy Lutsenko and Viktor Shokin, OAN heralds the “documentary series” as debunking the impeachment narrative put forth by House Intelligence Committee chair Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA).

Among other things, OAN host Chanel Rion claims to have been told that 1,000 Ukrainian troops were ordered to the capital “within hours of news breaking of our presence.”

She also says that the group decided to leave the country abruptly after they learned that “media was closing in on our location.”

Upon arrival at the airport, Rion added, they were greeted by dozens of black Mercedes cars. Both Ukrainian oligarch Viktor Pinchuk and global right-wing boogeyman George Soros were spotted in the area, Rion reported.

A Pinchuk spokeswoman told TPM in a statement that the oligarch “vigorously den[ies]” the report.

“[Pinchuk] had NO idea and NO interest when and where this crew was going to depart,” the spokeswoman told TPM. “In addition we’d like to mention that Mr Pinchuk doesn’t use Mercedes and he has no idea about the visits to Ukraine of Mr. Soros for the last several years.”

Here’s a little taste of it:

Wonkette had an excellent rundown on Rion. Apparently, she is engaged to Courtland Sykes, a wingnut candidate for the Senate in Missouri who describes her this way on his official website:

Chanel Rion is an American author, political illustrator and commentator, who was born in Texas and grew up in Missouri, and overseas—in France and South Korea.

Chanel has become widely known as the best political illustrator in the country for constitutional conservative and anti-leftist causes and as President Trump’s most stalwart graphic warrior against leftism.

Chanel is also the developer, author, and illustrator of the first three volumes of her traditional girl’s mystery series. Chanel’s mission is to promote the spirit of the traditional family, and the self-reliance, ingenuity, independence, and strength of American girls who believe in traditional homes, in conservative values, in having faith, and in having lives and futures that encourage families to succeed at home.

What a gal! Wonkette continues:

Chanel also has an extensive “about me” section on her own site, in which she discusses how her family fled America after Clinton was elected — fearing communism — in order to go to South Korea, and then to France. The reason they went to France, apparently, was so that the family could see how bad socialism really was.

A large part of the second half of her very long About Me section is dedicated to discussing her career as a political illustrator:

Chanel has become widely known as the best political illustrator in the country for constitutional conservative and anti-leftist causes and as President Trump’s most talented and stalwart graphic warrior against leftism.

Chanel has been frequently described as one of Hillary Clinton’s “worst nightmares” because she stands as a fierce foe of anything Clinton, of everything Obama, and as a total and unrelenting enemy of academic left-liberalism and political correctness anywhere—she’s out to stamp it out and when Chanel skewers the enemy, it can be a powerful thrust—sometimes shocking, always articulate—linguistic and graphic gems that strikes the heart of the insanity of the political left.

Another conservative broadcaster adds, “Nobody captures the enemy graphically like Chanel. People are wearing her T-Shirts, putting up posters of her political art on walls all over world—hell, she even does Merkle and May—where it’s almost illegal to draw them in Germany and England.”

“Political illustrator” is otherwise known as political cartoonist. And nobody has ever heard of Rion or seen her cartons except on her own website. About thos alleged “traditional girls” books:

Chanel’s “Mystery by Design” series for girls Available January 1 stands apart from the gender-hostile, Hollywood “rip and hate” spirit of radical feminism that has brought so much coldness, pain, failure and disappointment to so many young women whose lives radical feminism has twisted and irreparably ruined with its toxic and confused mental stew of pointless competition, manophobia, hatred, gender-confusion and blame that radical feminism is and has always been about. She rejects it outright and wants as many girls as she can reach to reject it too.

According to Wonkette, these books are nowhere to be found and despite the fact that they seem to be unavailable Rion contends that they are being used as “language trainers” in other countries.

It also turns out that she didn’t actually go to Harvard, she took some extension courses there. She is now OAN’s “chief White House correspondent.”

Read the whole Wonkette piece. It’s unbelievable. The Daily Beast’s Will Somer has covered her too.

The president’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani made a “documentary” with this grifter. Now she is attending these press briefings that are limited to very few reporters at the White House and is asking INSANE questions which the president uses to slam the media and anyone who disagrees with him.

In the middle of the worst public health crisis in American history.

He still believes this is mainly a PR crisis. For him.

The “wartime president” is determined to blame China, the press, the Democrats, the Governors —- anyone but himself, as usual

But be especially aware of what he’s doing with blaming China. The right-wing media are full of conspiracy theories and he’s very tuned into them. He’ thinks’ they’re real and I could easily see him persuaded to take some sort of aggressive action if he gets really desperate to turn this thing around:

That might be something to consider generally speaking. But issuing such threats in the middle of this pandemic might be a tad counterproductive. In fact, considering the reliance on the Chinese supply line, Trump might want to STFU about China until we are out of the woods.

On the other hand, his instinct is to always make things worse, so I could see him deciding that now is the time to suspend all trade with China. What’re a few more deaths, amirite?