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Month: June 2020

GOP response to Trump’s tear gas photo op, “I’m late for lunch.” @spockosbrain

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Every wonder what Republicans say when asked about Trump’s horrible actions? This thread has multiple examples. From Kasie Hunt @NBCNews Capitol Hill Correspondent.

Elected politicians know how to dodge questions from reporters. There are trained in multiple techniques. Constituents who challenge them sometimes can get a different response, but most politician know how to give non-answers. And the press accept it without digging.

Ignore pass off walk by Blackburn

Some politicians will try to look like they care while supporting Trump. Others are all in on Trump’s “dominance.” We know who those Republicans are and that they are expected to give a quote to support Trump.

daines and Cruz

But we often read about Republicans that say bad things about Trump in private but the press won’t identify them. This gives the politician the best of both worlds, they get to look concerned to the press, but still look like a public lackey to Trump.

It’s time to blow the cover on some of these people. But access journalists aren’t going to do it. My recommendation?

Regular citizens should listen to Q&A’s from Republicans during Town Halls & local COVID-19 press conferences. Sometimes a Republican will slip up and attack the President. When we find these examples we need to show them combined with actions against Trump. I don’t care if Ben Sasse (R) says he’s “troubled” by something Trump said or did, he votes with Trump almost all the time.

“But Spocko,” you may ask, “Why look for quotes from Republicans who condemn  Trump’s words and actions? It might help them get re-elected!” My answer?  Look for Republicans who aren’t running again in the fall. (here’s a link to all of them.) 
Retring from officeThese are the people to focus on.  Many of these legislators are waiting to come back after Trump is defeated so they can come out as “the real Republican party.”

There is a category of people that the MSM want to hear from because they want to believe that there are some good Republicans out there. That is why the MSM LOVES the Lincoln Project, Steve Schmidt and George Conway. But they aren’t willing to push current elected officials for quotes that might help gather momentum from Republicans who want Trump out.

If these Republican retirees were voters they would be called swing voters–and we know how much the media love them. But they have been ignored, taken off the board while people hang on every word of Susan Collins.

They are preparing for their post congress careers as lobbyists and pundits.  They will want to be on the Sunday morning shows in 2021 to say how bad President Biden is doing at “healing the nation.”

Now is their chance to earn some real, “I spoke out against Trump during the bad times” credibility while they are still in congress.  The reporters know who these people are, they just need to push them.

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Mike Enzi cropped
Sen. Mike Enzi emerges from a meeting with fellow Republicans at the Capitol on Tuesday. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

It’s time to see who’s available to talk after lunch.

Some justice in Atlanta

As many of you who’ve followed me for a while know, I spent years documenting taser abuse on this blog back when the practice was first being introduced all over the country. I consider it torture to force compliance rather than a substitute for lethal force. Not to mention that it is often lethal itself.

So this horror doesn’t surprise me. But in the context of the current events, it has so much more power:

The cops are being arrested for this, as they should be. Those two kids were brutalized for no good reason.

Arrest warrants have been issued for six Atlanta police officers, after video footage from Saturday night showed officers stopping two college students in a car while enforcing a curfew, firing Tasers at them and dragging them out of their vehicle.

The six officers are accused of a series of crimes, including aggravated assault, illegally pointing a Taser and criminal damage to property. Video of the encounter sparked widespread outrage, and two of the officers have been fired. The Atlanta Police Department did not immediately respond to a question about the status of the other four officers.

“The conduct involved in this incident is not indicative of the way that we treat people in the City of Atlanta,” Paul L. Howard, Jr., the district attorney, said in a news conference on Tuesday announcing the arrest warrants.

The college students, Taniyah Pilgrim, 20, and Messiah Young, 22, appeared at the news conference alongside Mr. Howard.

“I hope every police officer who thinks it’s O.K. to drag someone, beat someone, do all this stuff because they are cops — I hope they are all going to be held accountable as well,” Ms. Pilgrim said.

Tasering and casual brutality are condoned and accepted behaviors all over the country. This moment shows just how unreasonable it often is.

Maybe we will see some real change out of all this.

This is how it’s done

Any president but Trump would have given a speech like this. Biden gave it because he knows how to do it. Trump does not. He only knows how to do campaign rallies and tweet.

Black Lives Matter making a difference

COPS TAKE A KNEE WITH PROTESTORS AT PHILLY'S CITY HALL | Fast ...

New polling from Monmouth today:

A majority of Americans (57%) say that police officers facing a difficult or dangerous situation are more likely to use excessive force if the culprit is black, compared to one-third (33%) who say the police are just as likely to use excessive force against black and white culprits in the same type of situation. The current findings represent a marked change in public opinion from prior polls. In a poll of registered voters taken after the police shooting of Alton Sterling in Louisiana in July 2016, just 34% said blacks were more likely to be subject to excessive force while 52% said they were just as likely as whites. In December 2014, after a grand jury declined to indict a New York City police officer in the chokehold death of Eric Garner, the results were 33% more likely and 58% just as likely.

Nearly all black Americans (87%) feel that individuals of their race are more likely than whites to experience excessive force. This is up slightly from 77% in a 2016 poll, but the overall shift in public opinion on this question is due mainly to an increase among other racial groups. Currently, 49% of white Americans say that police are more likely to use excessive force against a black culprit, which is nearly double the number (25%) who said the same in 2016. Another 39% of whites say police are just as likely to use excessive force regardless of race, which is down significantly from 62% four years ago. Among Americans of Latino, Asian and other minority backgrounds, 63% say black individuals are more likely to be subject to excessive force by police, which is up from 39% in 2016. Just 27% of this group say police are as likely to use excessive force in a situation with a white or black person, which is down from 43% in 2016.

“It seems we have reached a turning point in public opinion where white Americans are realizing that black Americans face risks when dealing with police that they do not. They may not agree with the violence of recent protests, but many whites say they understand where that anger is coming from,” said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute.

[…]

Just over half (53%) of the public feels that race relations have worsened since Trump became president. Only 10% say they have gotten better and 33% say there has been no change. These results, though, are similar to opinion during Barack Obama’s time in office. In 2016, 53% said race relations had worsened during Obama’s term, 10% said they had gotten better and 33% said there was no change. The similarity in these topline results masks some contradictory shifts underneath the numbers. In the current poll, blacks (75%) and other minorities (65%) are more likely than whites (45%) to say that race relations have gotten worse during Trump’s presidency. Four years ago, whites (59%) were more likely than blacks (37%) and other minorities (38%) to say that race relations had worsened in the Obama years.

Meanwhile:

In other poll findings, the incumbent president’s overall job rating continues on a downward trend since hitting a high point three months ago. Trump’s performance now earns a 42% approve and 54% disapprove rating from the American public. He held a 43% to 51% rating in May, a 44% to 49% rating in April, and a 46% to 48% rating in March. His February rating, before the coronavirus pandemic spread, was 44% to 50%.

[…]

Currently, 21% of the public says the country is headed in the right direction while 74% says it is on the wrong track. This result is more negative than it has been in Monmouth polling going back to 2013. This metric stood at 33% to 60% in May and hit 39% to 54% back in March. The last time the right direction/wrong track metric approached its current low level was December 2017 when it stood at 24% to 66%, with the prior low in Monmouth’s seven-year trend being 23% to 69% in December 2014. The biggest drop in the past month has come among Republicans, from 64% right direction and 28% wrong track in May to 45% right direction and 46% wrong track now. It has also declined among independents (29% to 63% in May and 17% to 78% now) and Democrats (13% to 83% in May and 4% to 92% now). It has dropped about equally among whites, blacks, and other minority groups.

Aaand:

Keep in mind that some of those white people who disapprove probably think he’s not being tough enough. Still, the cult as a whole seems to be divided over this.

And those suburban women don’t seem to be any more impressed with Trump’s leadership on this than they with anything else he does. Seniors either…

The Cowardly Liar takes a walk

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The Washington Post on Trump’s odious photo-op yesterday:

[T]he amount of “guts” demonstrated by the photo … depends on your acceptance or understanding of how much effort went into making the trip possible.

First and foremost was the removal by force of protesters who were demonstrating peacefully in the park between the White House and the church. Shortly before Trump began speaking to reporters in the Rose Garden, insisting that he was an “ally of all peaceful protesters,” police and members of the National Guard began clearing the area. Those at the scene indicated that the security forces used tear gas, concussion devices and physical strength to scatter demonstrators before the president arrived. Clergy working at the church, aiding protesters, were caught in the cloud of gas and forced out of the way.

That incident quickly became notorious. It speaks for itself in terms of the scale of preparation required for Trump’s trip out of the White House — a trip, later reporting indicated, spurred by Trump’s frustration over reports that he was moved to a secure area of the mansion during Friday night’s demonstrations.

[..]

They couldn’t have been more obvious that this was a photo-op for a campaign ad. Late last night they put this out:

[T]he idea that this particular jaunt demanded exceptional bravery is undercut by the scale of the protective efforts shown by the video itself.

It opens with the same shot of the White House. In the small stretch of roofline visible between trees, we see three people standing guard. This is normal; there are always protective personnel stationed there. As the first shot of the video, though, it establishes the pattern: The president can do what he does because he has people watching over him.

The video shows Trump walking from the mansion across the North Lawn. A number of staffers are on the path behind him, including Attorney General William P. Barr. Arrayed around him in a semicircle are a number of Secret Service and other security officials. There is another Secret Service agent to his right on the sidewalk.

Another shot shows Trump walking through Lafayette Square, which an hour earlier had been filled with protesters. The pool reporter covering the White House on Monday indicated that she and others traveling with the president were left “coughing and choking” from remnants of the gas used to clear the area.

It’s hard to pick out members of the Secret Service in particular, but there are clearly several visible.

As Trump arrives at the church, the presence of security is obvious. Several members of the Secret Service arrive with Trump, and a loose phalanx of police is arrayed on the sidewalk ahead of his arrival. Most are looking outward, away from Trump, scanning for possible threats. The man at far right in the still below is accompanied by a police dog.

Notice that in the still above, Trump does not have the Bible he is shown holding up in front of the church, a central element in the photos he came to take. As he departs the church, accompanied by his security detail, he is holding it.

As he heads back to the White House after exiting Lafayette Square, the full scale of the security measures deployed on his behalf is made obvious: dozens of police in riot gear, holding shields and batons form a protective corridor for the president. He gives them a fist-pump of support.

On his way back to the White House, Secret Service agents lead the way, and armed personnel watch from above.

Again, the president should and must be protected. The intent is that the president should be able to operate without constraints imposed by security concerns.AD

What’s different in this case is that the president is using that protective bubble in an effort to demonstrate his own strength. He is co-opting the necessary measures used to keep him safe in order to send a message to the American public that, far from hiding in a bunker, he is confident walking in the streets. Who wouldn’t be, when the streets are lined with armed men who work for you?

Of course the wingnuts got all sweaty and aroused over their cowardly, fake, celebrity, photo-op Dear Leader:

By the way, when they cleared the protesters they also cleared out the priests at the church Trump needed for his photo-op.

The photo opportunity had an eerie quality: Trump said relatively little, positioned stoically in front of the boarded-up church, which had been damaged the day before in a fire during protests sparked by the death of George Floyd on May 25 in Minneapolis.

The church appeared to be completely abandoned.

It was, in fact, abandoned, but not by choice: Less than an hour before Trump’s arrival, armored police used tear gas to clear hundreds of peaceful demonstrators from Lafayette Square park, which is across the street from the church.

Authorities also expelled at least one Episcopal priest and a seminarian from the church’s patio. “They turned holy ground into a battleground,” said the Rev. Gini Gerbasi.

Gerbasi, who serves as rector at a different St. John’s Episcopal Church, in nearby Georgetown, arrived at St. John’s Lafayette earlier that day with what she said were at least 20 other priests and a group of laypeople. They were organized by the Episcopal Diocese of Washington to serve as a “peaceful presence in support of protesters.”

The volunteers and clergy offered water, snacks and hand sanitizer to demonstrators who were gathered in Lafayette Park across the street — which sits directly in front of the White House — to denounce racism and police brutality after the death of Floyd.

But sometime after 6 in the evening, when volunteers were packing up supplies, Gerbasi said police suddenly began to expel demonstrators from the park — before the 7 p.m. curfew announced for Washington residents earlier in the day. “I was suddenly coughing from the tear gas,” she said. “We heard those explosions and people would drop to the ground because you weren’t sure what it was.”

The Rev. Glenna J. Huber, rector of the Church of the Epiphany, another downtown Washington church, was at St. John’s but left as the National Guard arrived. She said she watched as police rushed into the area she had just fled. Concerned, the priest sent a frantic email to clergy at the church urging them to be careful.

Back at St. John’s, Gerbasi said she was dressed in clerical garb and standing on church grounds as police approached. “I’m there in my little pink sweater in my collar, my gray hair up in a ponytail, my reading glasses on, and my seminarian who was with me — she got tear gas in her eyes,” she said.

Gerbasi said that as she and the seminarian watched, police began to expel people from the church patio. “The police in their riot gear with their black shields and the whole bit start pushing on to the patio of St. John’s Lafayette Square,” she said, adding that people around her began crying out in pain, saying they had been shot with nonlethal projectiles.

Gerbasi and others eventually fled the scene, leaving emergency medical supplies behind. By the time she reached K Street several blocks away and checked her phone, Trump was already in front of the church holding a Bible.

“That’s what it was for: to clear that patio so that man could stand in front of that building with a Bible,” said Gerbasi.

He has defiled every other institution in the country. Yesterday he finally got the military and the church.

As a General loses his honor

Embedded video

Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was seen walking the streets of Washington, D.C., in battle fatigues after curfew Monday night — a scene that sparked an intense wave of criticism. 

“We’ve got the D.C. National Guard out here, and I’m just checking there and seeing how they’re doing, that’s all,” Milley said as he strolled the nation’s capital on Tuesday, two hours after the city’s curfew which started at 7 p.m.

The presence of the military general followed a conference call on Monday in which the president resorted to name-calling, suggesting many of the nation’s governors were “weak” in their ability to restrain racial turmoil. On that same call, Defense Secretary Mark Esper employed the military strategy term “battlespace” to the streets that have become the stomping grounds for nationwide demonstrations against police brutality. Esper said the streets need to be dominated in his view to return to the “right normal.” 

David Frum, a writer for The Atlantic and a former speechwriter for George W. Bush, suggested that Milley should consider resignation. 

Was he just following orders?

Depravity, Inc.

The warnings have become clichés. There is no bottom. When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time. You can fool some of the people all of the time, etc. But as the country devolves into what the rest of world might describe as a hellhole, it is not clear what comes next after Monday. But it won’t be pretty.

There is no bottom

What to make of a man so depraved he would order peaceful protesters cleared from Lafayette Park with flash-bangs, tear gas, and rubber bullets so he could stage a crude photo-op holding a Bible in front of a historic church? Even driving a priest and a seminarian from church grounds?

Donald J. Trump drew ridicule for hiding out Sunday night in an underground bunker with the White House’s exterior lights turned out. By Monday evening he needed to prove (to himself, at least) he was in control. The man whose entire presidency has been a photo-op needed another one and relished the thought of busting heads to get it.

Or rather, asking others to bust heads. Someone described Trump as the drunk at the bar who wants to start a fight but expects his friends to fight it for him. Now he has more than shady lawyers to do his fighting. He has the U.S. military, at least those who would place fealty to him over their oaths to the constitution. Plus the armed cosplayers who back him.

In his statement Monday, Trump said, “I am mobilizing all available federal resources — civilian and military — to stop the rioting and looting, to end the destruction and arson, and to protect the rights of law-abiding Americans, including your Second Amendment rights.” It was, Will Bunch writes, “not so much a dog whistle as a siren blast” to armed, cosplaying “Boogaloo Bois” to open fire with his blessing.

When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time

Earlier Monday, rumors flew that Trump would invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807 to send active-duty troops into America’s streets to show who’s boss.

“If a city or state refuses to take the actions that are necessary to defend the life and property of their residents, then I will deploy the United States military and quickly solve the problem for them,” Trump said in Rose Garden statement before walking to the church.

It may once again be empty bluster. But whether or not the act allows him to do so legally is not the point. He and his Republican enablers have shown us for decades neither the spirit nor the letter of the law is an impediment their designs. This is how the extremist Republican Party rolls:

1. Find the line
2. Step over it
3. Dare anyone to push you back
4. If no one does, that’s the new line
5. Repeat

Trump has repeatedly suggested violence against opponents. He may be a coward, but by instincts a violent one. The man who swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States to the best of his ability has demonstrated none. His oath is as much an inconvenience as the laws for which his entire life he’s flaunted his contempt, save for those he can use to flog opponents.

Republican “invertebrates” such as the “bottomlessly loathsome Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida” are abetting Trump’s efforts to turn the world’s oldest democracy into a dictatorship. They will not stop him. Indeed, from Watergate to Iran-Contra to state-sponsored torture to targeting “African Americans with almost surgical precision,” they have proven their disdain for democratic processes for decades.

“History is written by the winners,” Trump’s attorney general declared recently. Principles be damned. Might makes right. Trump and his enablers have no interest in governing. They mean to rule. They mean to dominate.

You can fool some of the people all of the time

The unanswered question now is whether the country will survive until November, much less next January. A party that has demonstrated by its unwavering support for Donald Trump it will say anything, do anything, to maintain power by any means necessary. Trump means to win be keeping fooled the faction he can fool all the time into thinking this is still a democratic republic. His enablers at Fox News and in conservative media are content to remain fooled. Their paychecks depend on it. Their audience will wave flags and Bibles all the way to fascism if need be.

It’s up to the rest of us to prove to ourselves and the world we still have spines to stand against them.

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For The Win, 3rd Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free countywide GOTV mechanics guide at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.
Note: The pandemic will upend standard field tactics in 2020. If enough promising “improvisations” come my way by June, perhaps I can issue a COVID-19 supplement.

Governors are not impressed

Trump has had quite a day.

https://twitter.com/atrupar/status/1267598346061074437

As far as I can tell today, Baker is the only Republican to speak out against Trump’s lunacy. No word from any of the congressional GOPers.

They own this as much as he does.

Reality Show Commander

This is so tiresome. He put on quite a show just now. They gassed the peaceful protesters at Lafayette Park to clear the way for Trump to “go outside” and walk to church without getting all scared by the big mean American citizens after he gave a pathetic chest thumping speech that really didn’t add up to anything more than posturing about what yuge hands he has.

He did not invoke the Insurrection Act. He just spewed a bunch of bullshit which his aides and Bill Barr clearly told him was muy macho .

He has clearly terrified of the protesters and the press coverage of him hiding in the bunker so this was his way to get back in the center of attention and show his cult that he’s still in charge. This reality show nonsense is the best he can do. It’s all he can do:

He did some major military cosplaying with this silly stuff before his silly photo-op:

President Donald Trump has ordered the creation of a military “central command center” to deploy federal assets to local governments struggling to respond to a surge of protests and riots over the death of George Floyd in police custody, the White House said on Monday.

The operation will be led by Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, alongside Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Attorney General William Barr, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said.

“There will be a central command center in conjunction with the state and local governments that will include Gen. Milley, Sec. Esper and AG Barr,” she told reporters at a briefing.

It’s meaningless nonsense they are all doing to make him feel better.

At some time it may not be and he’ll pull the trigger. But he didn’t do it today.