Skip to content

Month: July 2021

Con Job

US election: Trump accepts Barack Obama was born in US - BBC News
Guaranteed: Not who they in mind to stop spreading disgusting lies.

If ever anyone tells you “conservatives believe in real freedom” tell them about this:

Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch on Friday said the Supreme Court should revisit the breadth of the landmark First Amendment decision in New York Times v. Sullivan and explore how it applies to social media and technology companies. That 1964 ruling created a higher bar for public figures to claim libel and has been a bedrock of US media law, but the two conservative justices said it’s time to take another look.

The thing is that they clearly wish to shut up the Anita Hills and Blasey Fords of this world while still allowing their pals — Carlson, Stone, Jones, Trump, to name just a few — to run their sleazy shows unimpeded.

I have no idea how they plan to do this, but no doubt they’ve given the matter long and hard thought.

DeSantis in the dog house

I’m sorry to keep on this. I know it’s cheap. But I just can’t help it. This guy is one of the most supercilious pieces of work in the GOP and I love seeing him squeezed by his own voters for trying to do his job:

President Joe Biden met with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday to discuss the collapsed condominium building in the town of Surfside — and some supporters of former President Donald Trump aren’t happy about it.

In particular, some Trump supporters were angry that DeSantis thanked Biden for being “very supportive from day one” of the tragedy in Surfside, which has resulted so far in 18 confirmed deaths and nearly 150 people still unaccounted for.

Many Trump fanatics said that DeSantis shouldn’t have even met with Biden, whom they believe is an illegitimate president despite beating Trump in the popular vote by more than 7 million votes and in the electoral college by 74 votes.

Wait until they get a load of this:

An orange golfer up in New Jersey just had a full blown hissy fit over that one.

Imagine the alternative

Sam Seder and I talked about Don Rumsfeld’s “legacy” on my weekly hit on Ring of Fire podcast. I brought up the sycophantic behavior of the press corps during that awful period and today I was reminded of what it might have looked like if the US press had performed real journalism instead. This is from the BBC in March of 2003 at the beginning of the invasion:

David Dimbleby: Mr Rumsfeld, does the stepping up of attacks on Iraqi positions in the no-fly zone mean, in your view, that war is now pretty much inevitable?

Donald Rumsfeld: No, I don’t see the connection really. In fact, I’m not even positive that there has been a particular step-up in the number of attacks. What – we do, the United Kingdom and the United States, have what we call response options. And when there’s some sort of an indication of aggressiveness in the northern or southern no fly zone, then we tend to respond and deal with some aspect, generally, of the air defence system.

DD: Has Saddam done anything in these last few weeks to make you think war is less likely?

DR: Not really. I think the key is whether or not one comes to develop a conviction that he’s co-operating. In other words, it isn’t ‘Do the inspectors find things’, because they’re not discoverers or finders. It’s really, is this – during this period of inspections, is he demonstrating that he has, in fact, thrown in the towel and is going to cooperate?

DD: Doesn’t the destruction of al-Samoud missiles daily suggest that he has done that?

DR: Well, I suppose to some it might. On the other hand, every single thing that he does that anyone could cite as co-operative was after some long period of denying, a refusal to do it, and ultimately a willingness to do part of it. And it is such a reluctant process that it would take so many years to ever really believe you’ve done the task of disarming.

DD: But even so, if you’ve got the inspectors there, if you’ve got Hans Blix talking about this as a very significant bit of disarmament, haven’t you got him by the tail, so that as long as the inspectors are there, as long as Blix is there, he can’t really do much damage to anyone?

DR: Well, I think that the way to think about that is that there were inspectors there before, and he continued with his weapons of mass destruction programmes. And the way he did it is he’s learned how to live in a, so to speak, in an inspections environment.

DD: But you’re not saying with all your troops there, with the overflying you have, with the satellite information, that he could seriously go on creating weapons of mass destruction, though?

DR: Oh, sure. He does things underground. He’s very skilful at denial and deception. There’s no doubt in my mind but that he has weapons, chemical and biological weapons, and has been working on nuclear weapons.

DD: The Deputy Weapons Inspector, Perricos, says that “the presence of inspectors in the country” – I quote him – “is preventing any prohibited activities from being regenerated.” You think he’s wrong?

DR: I would think that it’s a very hard statement for him to make because he doesn’t have access to the underground systems and the tunnelling and the skill that they have in deceiving. I mean, if you think of the number of Iraqi minders, people, tenders, they go along with the inspectors.

If you think of the fact that we’ve not been able to get people outside the country with their families so that they could talk honestly. If you think about the declaration that was submitted, which everyone agreed was fraudulent. It is – it would be difficult for me to make that statement.

DD: You’re sceptical about the inspectors and their role altogether?

DR: Well, I wouldn’t say altogether. I think inspections can work. They can work with a co-operative country, like they did with South Africa or Kazakhstan, or any other country that decided that it was in their interest to disarm. And what they really were looking for was not someone to come in and discover things, but they were looking for someone to come in and prove to the world that they had, in fact, disarmed. That’s a very different thing. So there’s a good role for inspectors, and I think during this period people have to make a judgment about that.

DD: But, frankly, can you see, from your point of view, any disarmament in Iraq that would satisfy you if it had happened without Saddam going, or, in effect, does Saddam have to go, from your point of view?

DR: Well, my point of view is not very important.

DD: Why not?

DR: Because it’s the president of the United States that’s going to make those judgments, and certainly not me. My task is quite different. [US Secretary of State] Colin Powell is the one working with the inspectors, and the Central Intelligence Agency is co-operating with it, as are other intelligence agencies in the world. And at some point, they will then make a judgment as to whether or not he’s co-operating.

DD: So what do you make of the countries I mean, let’s take France, for example, who are very strong on this point, that the inspectors should be given more time because they’re yielding results. There are a lot of people around the world who believe that’s the truth. You take the opposite view. You say it’s not really yielding anything. They say it’s yielding, give it more time. What’s your reaction?

DR: I think these are tough issues, and people can differ on them. And what we in the United States have decided is that we should give them more time. And that’s what’s been going on.

DD: How much more time?

DR: It’s been months. It’s been months since the United States took this issue to the United Nations. If you think back, the United Nations has had this for 11 years, 12 years. And everyone seemed very comfortable with the fact that these kinds of dual-use technologies and capabilities were flowing back and forth across his border with no one bothering to stop them, and until the president of the United States said, wait a minute, this isn’t right; this is dangerous.

And then there was a unanimous Security Council resolution. I think it was back in October, if I’m not mistaken. And he said let’s give ’em time. But the idea that he was in a box, as they used to say, that he was contained, just wasn’t a fact. He was proceeding apace.

And if you think of the idea of containment with respect to the old Soviet Union, time was on our side because they had a system that was coming apart in the centre. In this case, the time is really not on the international community’s side, because these weapons programs have been proceeding.

DD: But, of course, people would say that you are one of those people who always thought Saddam had to go anyway and said as much five years ago and that really events have played into your hands with 11 September. You never had any intention, if you got into the position you’re in now, of seeing Saddam remain in power in Iraq.

DR: I think that over a period of 12 years, or if you want to go back a few years, eight years, an awful lot of people in the world did come to the conclusion that he, as a regime leader, was an unlikely candidate to decide that it was in his country’s interest and his interest to voluntarily disarm. And that’s the reason that in 1998 the Congress of the United States, Republicans and Democrats alike, passed legislation calling for a regime change.

DD: So what do you say to what the French are putting forward? You need more time, things are working. I mean, the French Foreign Minister yesterday, for instance, and I know your view of France is that it’s old Europe and you don’t really count it or rank it very high. But he said, you can’t –

DR: I don’t know that you ought to be putting words in my mouth.

DD: Well, you called them old Europe; I didn’t.

DR: What I did was, I was asked a question about Europe being opposed to the US position. And my response was that there were a couple of countries that were opposed and that a large number of countries were supportive. The eight countries had already signed, and 10 countries later signed, and I said the centre of gravity is shifting in Europe. I was thinking of Nato when I said old Europe. I was thinking old Nato, because the next sentence, old Nato is at 15, the new Nato is at 26 countries, and the centre of gravity has shifted. It was not disparaging of any of those countries. Those countries are allies with us in Nato.

DD: So were you surprised they got so upset by it? I mean –

DR: Well, I was.

DD: [French President] Mr Chirac was extremely upset by this.

DR: Yeah, I was surprised, to be very honest. It was – I mean, I served as ambassador to Nato. I’ve got a great many friends in both of those countries, and I think that it is more an indication of a sensitivity that surprised me.

DD: Well, they’re sensitive because you don’t take their argument seriously.

DR: Well, of course we do. If the people said there should be more time, the president has given them more time.

DD: Well, let’s just go back to the French Foreign Minister and what he said yesterday. You can’t say “I want Saddam to disarm”, and at the same time when he is disarming saying they’re not doing what they should. I mean, a lot of people in Europe, and I suspect a lot of people in this country from what one hears, think that is the case and think that you are piling on the pressure because whatever happens you want – you don’t want war, but you want to get rid of Saddam, and that’s really what’s behind it.

DR: Well, I suppose anyone can decide what they think is behind it and what motives are. The president of the United States is very clear on what his intent is. What his words say is what he means. And he said it very clearly, and he’s provided leadership on this. And he has said to the international community and to our Congress that he really believes it’s important that Iraq be disarmed. It is not the job of the Secretary of Defence to be involved in those issues. I’m not. You keep saying, you, but I suppose you mean you, the United States.

DD: No, I see you as part of the senior part of the administration as well as Secretary of Defence, indeed.

DR: I am, sure. But the job of a Secretary of Defence is quite different than making those judgments. Those judgments are judgments the president makes, and I work for the president. And I happen to agree with his statements, and I support him.

DD: Are people who want to defer war appeasers?

DR: No, I’ve never used that word. I think these are very tough issues. I think that the 21st Century is a different century. We’re in a different security environment. And people have got to think through what it means, what this new security environment means. And I think probably one of the differences is that the United States was the country that was attacked on September 11.

And so there is a great deal of support for the president’s position. It wasn’t some of the European countries that was attacked on September 11, and their publics and their leadership look at this somewhat differently. It seems to me that that’s to be expected when you take very difficult issues about the fact that we could have a September 11 where not 3,000 people were killed, but maybe 30,000 could be killed, or 300,000 could be killed. And then the question is, well, what do you do about that, and those are big ideas. They’re big concerns. And people need time to discuss them. So using words like you used, and I did not –

DD: The Prime Minister of Britain used the words, not me, about appeasers. I mean he used it in the context of the way that people treated Hitler, and he said the appeasers may have been well-intentioned, but they were wrong.

DR: Well, there’s no question but that people in that period who were looking for a peaceful way with Adolf Hitler were proven wrong.

DD: Can we come to –

DR: At great expense.

DD: Can we come to where things stand at the moment? The administration is now seeking backing for a second resolution. It’s also saying that if it doesn’t get the second resolution, it’s going to ignore the UN Is this a credible position to hold?

DR: You’re asking me is the president’s position credible, and I would say yes, not surprisingly. It seems to me that what he said when he went in to the United Nations was that he thought it was important that the world engaged this issue because it’s a big issue, an important issue, and it’s an issue that we’re going to be faced with in this century.

He also said that, needless to say, member states reserve the right of self-defence, and, therefore, he wanted to bring it into the United Nations and have them address this, but that by doing so he did not want anyone to believe that he would, as a country, make a conscious decision that he would forego the right of any member state to self-defence.

DD: In what way is Iraq a threat to the United States that would allow it to act in self-defence of American interests?

DR: The issue that’s before the world, it seems to me, is the pervasiveness of weapons of mass destruction and the spread of these, the proliferation of these technologies, chemical and biological weapons, increasingly nuclear weapons. We could in 10 years have double the number of nuclear powers in the world.

The situation with Iraq is that we’re at the end of the string. We’ve tried diplomacy for 12 years. We’ve tried economic sanctions, and they have not worked. The effort on the part of the international community to prevent him from having those things that enable him to develop those capabilities failed. And he was not contained, and he was not in a box. And even limited military action in the north and the south has really not done it.

The critical issue is the relationship between weapons of terrorist states, which Iraq is, by everyone’s agreement –

DD: America took it off the list of terror states 20 years ago.

DR: I don’t know that. I accept –

DD: When you – when you – sorry. When you visited Iraq and negotiated with Saddam Hussein, when America wanted Saddam Hussein for its own purposes, America took Iraq off the list of terrorist states and, indeed, supplied it with the wherewithal to make the chemical weapons they’re now trying to remove.

DR: I’ve read that type of thing, but I don’t know where you get your information, and I don’t believe it’s correct. They may have been taken off. I was a private businessman. I was asked for a few months to assist after the 241 Marines were killed in Beirut, Lebanon. And I did meet with Saddam Hussein. I did not give him or sell him or bring him any chemical weapons or any biological weapons, as some of the European press likes to print. It’s just factually not true.

Now, whether or not the United States at some point, when I was not part of the government, decided to take him off a terrorist list, you may be right. In fact, I –

DD: Are you saying you don’t know, you didn’t know when you went there whether he was on the list of terror states or not? You were trying to reopen –

DR: I believe he was.

DD: – a relationship between the United States and Iraq.

DR: That’s right. And I believe he was on the list of terrorist states when I went there.

DD: We’re being diverted a bit here, but let’s just go into this, because it’s another of the causes of a lack of credibility, or a credibility gap that you particularly have to fill, that you were there and met the man.

DR: I was there with the President and Secretary Shultz to meet with him and to see it was one of the few Middle Eastern countries that had not re-established relationships with the United States after the earlier Middle East war.

DD: But you aren’t saying that you weren’t aware that he was using chemical weapons, because the Secretary of State at the time had said they were using them.

DR: I was certainly aware of that. I didn’t say I wasn’t aware of that. I said I was not aware that the United States gave him, as you suggested, or I gave him, and that I had some burden to bear. That’s just utter nonsense.

DD: I’m not suggesting you had a burden to bear. I was saying that there was one of the reasons you lacked –

DR: You said you particularly.

DD: No, you went and talked to the man.

DR: I did.

DD: But what I’m suggesting is that the United States in the world outside, over and over again people say, well, now they’re trying to get rid of the weapons, as Jesse Jackson put it when he was at Hyde Park Corner a week ago, for which the United States has the receipts. I mean, that’s the problem, that you created this monster, evil, as you know –

DR: You who?

DD: You, the United States, not you personally.

DR: Well, first of all, you’re wrong. If you look at the record of the European countries, and the other technologically advanced countries of the world and the relationships with Iraq, I think you’ll find that the United States ranks relatively low in terms of trading with Iraq and assisting Iraq with respect to weapons. I think that’s correct. I don’t have the data, but I think you’ll find that’s the case. And I think, furthermore, that if at some point a ground truth is achieved, it will be embarrassing to countries that have been providing Saddam Hussein’s regime with a great deal of those technologies.

DD: Can I come back to UN and the second resolution? Is one of the reasons for that, or indeed perhaps the sole reason for that to keep Tony Blair on side, the British Prime Minister, in the difficulties that he has politically at home?

DR: Well, again, you’re out of my lane in terms of the subject matter. But I don’t doubt for a minute but that the fine job and leadership that Prime Minster Blair has been providing on this subject in the world is something that’s very much on President Bush’s mind. And when you’re working with other countries, as he is, he obviously wants to work in a way that’s helpful to the leaders of other countries who are trying to work together on it. I keep reading that the United States is unilateralist and that we’re ‘Going it alone’. There will be more countries, with or without a second UN resolution, involved in a coalition of the willing, if force has to be used, than there were in the 1991 Gulf War, in my judgement.

DD: Assuming war does come, will it be short, as the British Defence Secretary suggested at the weekend?

DR: I don’t know. I don’t know. I think there’re so many unknowns in war, and so many dangers, and so many things that can go wrong, one – you know, one would hope so. And certainly there’s no question but that Saddam Hussein is a repressive regime, and one has to believe that people would rather not be repressed, and that therefore there will be people who, as was the case in 1991, who surrendered and who came over to the other side, and who were relieved and felt liberated rather than having some reason to want to fight for the Saddam Hussein regime. I think that’s the hope.

DD: Is Saddam Hussein’s death or capture a war aim?

DR: A war aim? My aim would be that there would not be a war, that, in fact, there would be some way that it could be avoided, and that’s still my hope. Now, how might that happen? One would be that he would decide to co-operate, which he hasn’t thus far. A second would be that he would decide to leave the country. A third would be that there could be a coup against him.

Now, any one of those would be preferable if the alternative to him was somebody who wanted to co-operate and see that the country was disarmed, who didn’t want to have weapons of mass destruction, who didn’t want to threaten its neighbours, who didn’t want to use chemicals on its own people, or its neighbours, didn’t want to fire ballistic missiles into four of his neighbouring countries, and who did want to liberate the people of Iraq and allow some sort of representation and the end of repression.

DD: Is there a danger, do you think, that Saddam Hussein will use these very weapons of mass destruction that you think he still has in the event of war?

DR: Certainly there’s a danger. He could use them on coalition forces. He could use them on neighbouring countries. He could use them on his own people and try to blame it on the coalition.

DD: How damaging to the war plans is Turkey’s refusal to let their bases be used?

DR: There are workarounds. We’ll be fine. Turkey is a democracy, it’s a moderate Muslim country, it’s a friend, it’s an ally in Nato, and they’re going through a democratic process, and we accept that. My guess is that when all is said and done we’ll have some degree of co-operation from them, as we do from many of the states in that region.

DD: Can I come to the question which seems to me to be at the heart of all this, of the credibility of the United States’ position, which clearly exercises the British Prime Minister, the American President and the administration, and one hears a lot of doubt cast on America’s motives for this. Do you think you’d win more backing in the outside world if you’d spent a fraction of the time on the Israeli-Palestinian problem as you’ve spent on Iraq?

DR: Well, probably. I think that the president and Secretary Powell have worked on the Palestinian, Arab-Israeli problem a good deal in the past two years. They have the president’s made several speeches on the subject, Secretary Powell has been involved, there’ve been special envoys involved. That is a problem that’s a tough one, and it’s been a tough one my entire adult lifetime, and that it has not been solved in the last 20 months ought not to be a surprise to anybody. The president cares about it; he is concerned about it; he has addressed it. And I think that had there been success there, there would have been, possibly, greater support.

On the other hand, the implication of your question is that there is not great support, and there is great support. There are a very large number of nations that will be participating in a coalition of the willing in the event Saddam Hussein refuses to co-operate and force has to be used.

DD: And yet America is seen as applying double standards in this, isn’t it? I mean, using the UN against Iraq, for instance, and then you yourself saying – repeating two or three times, in the context of Israel and the UN resolutions there, that the occupied territories on the West Bank are so-called occupied territories. That’s the kind of thing that makes people think, well, actually America is not serious about this, they’re so pro-Israel that they’re not.

DR: Interesting –

DD: Well, you said that.

DR: Well, first of all, I did not repeat it two or three times. You’re just factually wrong.

DD: You said it twice in the same series of remarks. You used the expression “so-called”.

DR: Fair enough. I was in a meeting, and I was asked a question, and the phrase came out.

DD: But is it what you think that they’re so-called occupied, or do you think they’re occupied and should be given up?

DR: I think that that’s what a negotiation is going to solve. I mean, that is what the negotiation is about. Obviously Israel has offered to give back a major portion of the occupied territories. We know that. The agreement was there. It could have been solved if Arafat had accepted it. He didn’t.

DD: But your use of the word “so-called”.

DR: If it bothered you, then don’t use it.

DD: It’s not me it bothers. It’s the other Arab states it bothers.

DR: Well, don’t you agree that the purpose of a negotiation is to decide those things? It seems to me that’s fairly reasonable. Israel has offered to give up a major percentage of the occupied territories.

DD: Let me ask you about America’s position in all this. The president has talked about the axis of evil. If there is a war against Iraq, if it’s prosecuted successfully, do you, as Defence Secretary, then have plans for further military action, for instance against Iran, perhaps?

DR: No, my hope is that Iran will – first of all, the Pentagon has to have plans that the president asks it to have. But that is not what’s happening. My hope there is that, in the case of Iran, that the people of Iran – I don’t think that they’re terribly enamoured of the small group clerics that are running that country. And there are stirrings in the women and the young people. And I would suspect that at some point those stirrings will end up changing that system in some way.

DD: A regime change will happen there. But I want to ask you this. Are you saying you have –

DR: Don’t put those words in my mouth.

DD: Alright. Are you suggesting a regime change?

DR: No, I’m suggesting exactly what I said, that the women and young people in that country that are uncomfortable with the rule of the small handful of clerics are stirring, and that at some point my guess is they will accomplish some sort of a change in how that system works.

DD: Do you have any plans for any further military activity apart from in Iraq in the Middle East?

DR: First of all, we don’t discuss military plans. And, second, plans are plans. Our obligation in any ministry of defence in the world is to look at potential threats and capabilities that can threaten your country and develop appropriate contingencies. That’s what we do. That’s our job.

You’re asking a question that should be asked the president – does he has anything specific that he intends to do in the event force has to be used in Iraq? And that’s a question for the president to answer. But I can say this, he does intend to, very definitely, continue to pursue the global war on terrorism, which, in fact, he has been doing. We’ve got 90 nations in a coalition – it’s probably the largest coalition in the history of mankind – that are participating in a variety of different ways to try to track down terrorist networks and stop them from killing innocent men, women and children. And that’s a good thing to be doing. And there are a number of places in the Middle East where those terrorists are finding havens. Iran is one of the countries.

DD: You say –

DR: And Iraq is one of the countries.

DD: So Iran should be in your sights on those grounds?

DR: I wouldn’t use words like the hot button words like that, “in your sights”. I think that that’s not the case. I like the way I answered your question just fine.

DD: You say that’s a good thing. Aren’t people, though, right to be suspicious who aren’t Americans of one country, in effect, shaping the world to suit itself, to suit its own values?

DR: No. No. Well, first of all, now you’re back to one country, as though the United States is acting unilaterally. In the global war on terrorism there are 90 nations. Never in the history of mankind have there been that many countries working together on exactly the same –

DD: I’m only thinking about what the president said. “The course of this nation does not depend on the decisions of others” – i.e. it’s true you have a number now, America will nevertheless go it alone if necessary. He said it.

DR: Yeah. If any leader of any country were to say anything other than that they recognise their responsibility as the leader of those countries to defend those countries, they probably wouldn’t be in office. There’s no question but that the obligation of the president under our Constitution is to defend our country.

DD: “Some of the history of the world and civilization was written by others, the rest will be written by us.” There is a sort of American empire seeming to burgeon here in the language that’s being used.

DR: Interesting. I don’t find it that way. Let me give you an example of why I don’t find it that way. If you think of how powerful and lethal biological weapons are, nuclear weapons are, they can kill hundreds of thousands or millions of people. I mean, smallpox put in three locations in a country can kill a million people in a matter of months. Now, that’s a serious problem for the world. There’s nothing the United States can do about that alone. We have to work with other countries. It takes the co-operation of other countries. Other publics have got to engage this issue, other governments have to engage this issue. Look at the problem with North Korea. The United States can’t solve that alone. It takes the co-operation of a lot of countries if we’re going to stop the proliferation of those weapons.

DD: One last question. America is obviously having some difficulty in Europe getting support, and –

DR: Some difficulty? Wait a minute now –

DD: Oh, no. Oh, no –

DR: The overwhelming majority of the countries in Europe are supportive.

DD: One of your key allies, the Spanish Prime Minister, Aznar, says we need a lot of Powell –

DR: I saw that.

DD: – and very little Rumsfeld.

DR: Yeah.

DD: Are you saying things the rest of the administration won’t speak out about? Are you part of the problem of the United States getting the kind of backing it needs?

DR: Well, I doubt it. Certainly the president doesn’t think so. My words are very similar to what he says and what Colin Powell says.

DD: Mr Rumsfeld, thank you very much.

DR: Thank you.

Secular nation

Offered without comment:

Hmmm. I wonder why?

The recovery recovers

From Dean Baker, this latest jobs report is a breath of fresh air:

850,000 new jobs

The June employment report showed very strong employment growth in establishment survey, while the household survey showed little improvement from May. The 850,000 gain was the largest since an increase of 1,583,000 last August. By contrast, the household survey showed no change in the employment to population ratio or labor force participation rate. The unemployment rate edged up slightly, as employment in the household survey slipped by 18,000.

It is not unusual to see sharp monthly divergences between the two surveys. Over a longer period, they tend to show a similar picture of the labor market, but the household survey can have erratic movements that don’t seem to correspond to anything in the economy. For example, in October of 2017 the household survey showed a drop of employment of 633,000, and then in August of 2018 it showed a decline 619,000. In both periods the economy was growing at a healthy pace and there was no evidence of weakness in other economic data. These drops were preceded and/or followed by months with large gains.

Establishment Job Gains Driven by Growth in Hard Hit Sectors

The biggest job gains were in state and local education (229,700), restaurants (194,300), and hotels (75,100). The gains in state and local education indicates schools returning to in-class teaching, although employment is still down by 583,000 from the pre-pandemic level. The arts and entertainment category also showed a large gain of 73,600, as many venues that had been closed due to the pandemic were able to reopen in June.

The retail sector added 67,100 jobs as large gains in general merchandise stores and clothing stores, more than offset losses in food stores. Manufacturing added 15,000 jobs, but is still down by 471,000 from the pre-pandemic levels. Growth in the sector was slowed by a loss of 12,300 jobs in the auto industry, the result of continuing shortages. Construction jobs fell by 7,000, the third consecutive decline. This likely also reflects shortages of materials.

Airlines added 7,800 jobs, leaving employment 83,400 (16.1 percent) below the pre-pandemic level. The motion picture industry continues to be the hardest hit. While it added back 5,400 jobs in June, it is still down 149,400 jobs (33.8 percent) from the pre-pandemic level. Nursing homes lost another 3,600 jobs in June, continuing a pattern of job loss since the pandemic hit. Employment is now down 210,500 (13.3 percent) from February, 2020. This may reflect a drop in the number of residents due to the pandemic.

Wage Growth at the Bottom Remains Strong

The average hourly wage from production and non-supervisory workers continued to rise rapidly, increasing at a 5.9 percent annual rate comparing the last three months (April, May, June) with prior three months (Jan, Feb, Mar) and 3.7 percent YOY. The lowest paying sectors had even more rapid increases, with wages in the retail sector rising at an 11.7 percent annual rate over the last three months, but just 2.5 percent YOY. For restaurants the annual rate is 25.1 percent, and 11.2 percent YOY. These sharp wage gains at the bottom are impressive, but not likely to be inflationary since they account for a relatively small share of the total wage bill. The average hourly wage overall is up 3.6 percent from its year ago level.

Hours Dip Slightly

One item that doesn’t fit with the widespread labor shortage story is a small dip in the length average workweek from 34.8 hours to 34.7 hours, after a similar decline in May. If employers were really having trouble finding workers, we would expect to see them trying to work the employees they have more hours.

The drop in hours is also encouraging from the standpoint of productivity. With GDP growth likely to exceed 8.0 percent, and hours rising at a roughly 4.0 percent annual rate, it looks like we will see another quarter of very strong productivity growth.

Self-Employment Still Strong

The number of unincorporated self-employed was little changed from May, but leaving it almost 300,000 above the 2019 average. These data are erratic, but it could mean many workers are starting their own businesses rather than returning to their old jobs.

Long-term Unemployment Inches Up

The share of long-term unemployed rose by 1.2 pp to 42.1 percent — just below the recession peak and a level only exceeded in a few months in the Great Recession. Since these workers historically have found it more difficult to find jobs, which may slow further declines in the unemployment rate. In the same vein, the share of unemployment due to temporary layoff edged down to 19.0 percent, from 19.6 percent.

The share of unemployment due to voluntary quits rose by 1.5 pp to 9.9 percent. This is still well below the 14.0-15.0 percent range we would expect in a strong labor market.

Asian American Unemployment Still Above Rate for Whites

The Asian-American unemployment continues to run above white unemployment, 5.8 percent to 5.2 percent. Before the pandemic it was typically a small amount lower. With this pattern continuing, it is possible that racism spurred by the pandemic and the Trump administration may be a factor.

Another Solid Jobs Report

The job growth figure was somewhat better than most economists had predicted. A big factor is that schools are finally calling back many of the teachers laid off in the pandemic. The small rise in unemployment in the household survey is disappointing, but almost certainly an anomaly that will be reversed in future months. We will likely continue to see strong job growth, coupled with declines in unemployment.

It is worth mentioning that the decision by most Republican governors to end the $300 weekly unemployment insurance supplements, had almost no impact on this report. Only Mississippi, Iowa, and Alaska had ended the supplements by the June 12th reference date for the survey.

Even with the indictment, Trump is thrilled

Donald Trump’s company and its chief financial officer were indicted on Thursday on multiple felony counts and the prosecutors went to some lengths to say they weren’t finished yet. In a sane world, one would think that presents a real problem for a man who is planning to run for president but this is Trump we’re talking about and he’s survived dozens of legal challenges as a businessman and as a politician so it’s a fairly good bet he’ll wriggle out of this one too. After all, in the last 18 months he’s been impeached twice, botched the handling of a historic global pandemic resulting in more than 600,000 American deaths, incited an insurrection against the US Congress and his supporters love him more than ever. He famously said he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and not lose any votes and it appears to literally be true.

This is probably why he is reportedly happy about the indictments, “thrilled” they are what he thinks of as light charges, and anticipating how the cases can be leveraged for his big comeback in 2024 because it will “hurt Sleepy Joe.” He plans to make this latest “witch hunt” a theme of his upcoming rallies and since his political career has been built upon relentless whining, which his followers eat up with a spoon, he may just be right.

Since January 6th, there is a very powerful, unspoken threat should any real danger to Trump and his future plans present itself: violence. It’s doubtful that anyone involved in these or any other cases aren’t constantly weighing the risks against the benefits in taking steps to hold Trump accountable. He’s gotten away with so much that even grounded, rational people have to be asking themselves if he’s literally made a deal with the devil.

According to Politico, people around him say that while he has been spending some time at Trump Tower (since he’s summering at his Bedminster Golf Club) and has been concerned about these cases, it’s far from his top priority.

Aides said that Trump’s interest in the Manhattan D.A.’s case pales in comparison to his obsession with the idea that he could still prove to be the winner of the 2020 election. “His world is seriously consumed by that,” said another Trump adviser. “In comparison to election fraud, [the D.A.’s investigation] is not even close.” According to this adviser, Trump is holding out hope that if the Arizona “audit”/fishing expedition ends up in his favor, a few other states will follow suit, triggering some sort of legal process that would make him president.

He’s even questioned the merits of the Constitution, if it can’t be used to investigate election fraud.

He must have been awfully pleased to see that the Supreme Court seemed to agree with him, at least to the extent that states should be able to make it as hard for people to vote as possible, ostensibly to protect itself from voter fraud, which doesn’t exist. Thursday’s ruling on the voting case Brnovich v. DNC, from Arizona, ground zero for Trump’s Big Lie hysteria, with the full conservative bloc coming together to further weaken the Voting Rights Act, must have made his day.

The court upheld a series of voter restrictions much like the ones that are popping up all over the country in the wake of Trump’s Big Lie, although it did not, as was feared, completely eliminate all barriers to such restrictions. It created a new set of criteria for determining if a voting law is discriminatory, one of which seems to say that any restrictions which may have been in place in 1982 (when the Voting Rights Act was amended) are acceptable. (I guess this is yet another form of “originalism?”) The majority opinion cites this example:

“it is relevant that in 1982 States typically required nearly all voters to cast their ballots in person on election day and allowed only narrow and tightly defined categories of voters to cast absentee ballots.”

So much for mail-in voting.

That opinion was written by Samuel Alito, a sure signal to the GOP establishment that this one was for them. (Alito is, by far, the most flagrantly partisan Justice on the court.) This decision, which endorses the idea that states can restrict voting because of (non-existent) voter fraud is solely a Republican Party project. This decision makes it clear that while this court may throw a bone to the left once in a while, when it comes down to securing power for the Republican Party, their allegiance is clear. Mitch McConnell must have strained a muscle patting himself on the back for his efforts to make that happen.

At this point, the entire Republican establishment, which includes the Supreme Court majority, is working together to take advantage of the opening Trump’s Big Lie has given them. The party strategically targeted the states that Biden won closely and is feverishly passing laws to disenfranchise Democratic voters there. At the same time they are assiduously working to disempower any form of non-partisan oversight of the election apparatus.In fact, they are using every lever of power at their disposal, from legislative control in the states, to the filibuster and the Supreme Court.

Yet even in light of that, the Democrats are saying that any changes to voting laws must be bipartisan and are letting the GOP get away with obstructing voting legislation for the dumbest possible reason: they think they need to hold on to the filibuster to stop Mitch McConnell and a future GOP president from doing things they don’t like in the future. As if McConnell and the Republicans haven’t made it crystal clear that they will do as they like by any means necessary. If Republicans need to nuke the filibuster in the future they will not hesitate to do it. In fact, they may do it just to troll the libs the minute they get back the majority.

The consensus among the political press is that this battle is over. CNN’s Senior White House correspondent Phil Mattingly insisted on Thursday that the handful of Democrats who believe this drivel are not going to change their minds and the rest of the party is accepting their fate, with the White House planning to fall back on the “bully pulpit” to tell people how they might avoid the undemocratic roadblocks the Republicans are putting in their way.

That’s right. The party that controls the House, the Senate and the White House apparently believes it is impotent to protect American democracy from a bunch of right-wing crazies who worship Donald Trump so they’re planning to give some speeches instead.

If this cynical consensus is right (and I fervently hope it isn’t) all I can say is that it’s a good thing we have an empathetic mourner-in-chief in Joe Biden to comfort us when our democracy finally dies. Unfortunately, we probably won’t be able to hear his consoling words over the giddy laughter of Trump and the Republicans. They couldn’t have dreamed the Democrats would go down so easily. 

Salon

“Permanent emergency”

Lytton, B.C. well before the inferno, via Google Maps.

Far outside Washington, D.C., the Associated Press reports:

A wildfire that forced people to flee a small town in British Columbia that had set record high temperatures for Canada on three consecutive days burned out of control Thursday as relatives desperately sought information on evacuees.

The roughly 1,000 residents of Lytton had to abandon their homes with just a few minutes notice Wednesday evening, after searing the previous day under a record high of 121.2 F (49.6 C).

The province’s public safety minister, Mike Farnworth, said Thursday afternoon that most homes and buildings in Lytton had been destroyed and some residents were unaccounted for.

The British Columbia Wildfire Service said the Lytton blaze was raging out of control over an area spanning roughly 80 square kilometers (30 square miles). Several other fires were burning in the region as a heat wave baked western Canada.

Smoke from the wildfires created its own clouds, generating lightning that started even more fires. Hundreds of “sudden deaths” across Canada are still under investigation.

“This is the beginning of a permanent emergency,” Washington state’s governor, Jay Inslee, told MSNBC this week. “We have to tackle the source of this problem, which is climate change.”

“I fear for the future of humanity” 

David Wallace-Wells adds at New York Magazine:

Elsewhere in Washington State, the roads were melting and agricultural workers as young as 12 and as old as 70 were starting their shifts at 4 a.m. to try to harvest the region’s cherries and blueberries before the fruit was fried by the heat. In Sacramento, residents complaining that the tap water tasted too much like dirt, thanks to the ongoing drought that may be the worst the American West has seen in millennia, were told to “add lemon.” In Santa Barbara, people have been advised to jerry-rig DIY “clean-air rooms” in preparation for the coming fire season, now already in full swing — months ahead of what used to mark the beginning of peak activity in the fall. Suppliers of sparklers were shuttered headed into the Fourth of July weekend. In Alaska, at the edge of the heat dome, the climate writer Eric Holthaus noted, “calving glaciers are producing ‘ice quakes’ as powerful as small earthquakes as they crumble into the sea.” It was hotter in parts of Canada and Oregon, climate scientist Zeke Hausfather pointed out, than it has ever been in the history of Las Vegas, smack in the middle of the Mojave Desert.

Portland’s Jean Flemma directs the Ocean Defense Initiative. She told Axios on Sunday, “If our decision makers do not take this heat wave as a harbinger of things to come and act quickly to adopt the climate change policies we all know are needed, I fear for the future of humanity.”

And well she should. Climate crises have occured repeated across the globe in recent years. Yet the memory of them fades almost as soon as the smoke settles and the air clears, warns Wallace-Wells:

Earlier this month, a heat wave across the Middle East saw five countries hit temperatures above those seen in the western U.S. and Canada. In Pakistan, 20 children in a single classroom collapsed from heat stress and were rushed to the hospital. Already, scientists have discovered that across Pakistan and throughout the Persian Gulf, regions have reached combinations of temperature and humidity that are literally beyond the human threshold of survivability. The term for this measure is “wet-bulb temperature,” and it is sure to become terrifyingly more familiar in the years ahead, just as “red flag warning,” “fire tornado,” and even “carbon dioxide equivalent” and “1.5 degrees Celsius” have in the years just past.

“What kind of awareness quotient are we looking for?” the writer Sarah Miller asked Wednesday, in a brilliant, raw blog post, republished by Nieman Lab, meditating on the limits of climate communication in the face of rolling disaster. “What more about climate change does anyone need to know? What else is there to say?”

Saying is not the issue. Doing is. And back in Washington, D.C., doing too little too late is S.O.P.

Who counts and who does not

Screenshot from NYT “Day of Rage” video compilation.

Most Christian fractures over the centuries, an old friend observed, boil down to arguments over the metaphors people use to understand the faith. Now a Greek Orthodox priest, he went on to say but they are just metaphors, not the faith itself. If one doesn’t work for you, find another that does. No need to go to war over metaphors.

People do anyway. Consider January 6, 2021.

Michael Hattem (“Past and Prologue: Politics and Memory in the American Revolution“) is Associate Director of the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. His Twitter thread Wednesday considers how the left and right define this country, what it is for, and how (to extend his argument) that has become a cultural flash point along similar lines to religious disputes.

Our current historical discourse is shaped by longstanding conflicting notions of patriotism. Broadly, conservatives believe that patriotism is expressed through worship of individuals while liberals see patriotism as a commitment to further realizing our revolutionary ideals.

Similar divides along the political spectrum have long existed in relation to the nation’s two founding documents. For much of AmHist generally, liberals have seen the DOI as the doc that defines our revolutionary ideals/legacy while for conservatives its been the Constitution.

Our contemporary conflicts, as in the past, are less about facts than about emphasis. Choosing what to emphasize from our past is how we define historical memories and the meaning of our past. In other words, citizens engage in a process of selection just like historians do.

We inherited from England the idea that returning to our “first principles” is how to stave off a society’s decline. Over the last 300 years, we have intensified that idea in practice. As a result, many of the fights we’ve had/are having are about defining those first principles.

Are our revolutionary “first principles” liberty and equality or constitutionalism and federalism? Are they democracy or republicanism? Are they individualism or communalism? Are they best determined by urban or rural citizens? Etc….

In my work, I’ve found a few conditions that produce more intensive fights over the AmRev & AmHist: high partisanship, activism over inequality, a rise in immigration & anniversaries. In other words, we’re experiencing a perfect storm of conditions for fighting over our past.

Understanding that we have been fighting over our past like this since at least 1800 is important and valuable context because if you think everything happening now is new and unprecedented, it raises the stakes disproportionately, which is never productive.

Hattem’s demarcation of the American divide over first principles — liberty and equality or constitutionalism and federalism, democracy or republicanism, individualism or communalism — arrives as we consider the Supreme Court’s voting rights ruling Thursday that further undermined the now near-toothless Voting Rights Act. The court majority issued an opinion on who literally counts in this country and who does not.

In her dissent, Associate Justice Elena Kagan begins, “If a single statute represents the best of America, it is the Voting Rights Act. It marries two great ideals: democracy and racial equality. And it dedicates our country to carrying them out.” But the Act also represents the worst of America, “Because a century after the Civil War was fought, at the time of the Act’s passage, the promise of political equality remained a distant dream for African American citizens. Because States and localities continually “contriv[ed] new rules,” mostly neutral on their face but discriminatory in operation, to keep minority voters from the polls.”

But in the wake of the 2020 presidential election and the Jan. 6 MAGA insurrection, it is clear, as in Hattem’s formulation of American oppositives, that democracy and racial equality are not ideals held by what were once Republicans and now are Trumpists. They are at open war with democracy. They look at the same two foundational American documents and come to very different conclusions about what this country is for and for whom.

CNN’s Brandon Tensley has pondered that divide since a hysterical Jan. 6 insurrectionist reacted to the fatal shooting of Ashli Babbitt in the Capitol, saying, “This is not America. They’re shooting at us. They’re supposed to shoot BLM, but they’re shooting the patriots.”

The patriots are Us. BLM are Them.

Tensley interviewed The Atlantic‘s Adam Serwer (“The Cruelty Is the Point: The Past, Present, and Future of Trump’s America“) about who counts as an American and who does not:

You’ve popularized the defining slogan of an age. Why do you think that “the cruelty is the point” has resonated so deeply with so many people?

I think that the column I wrote popularized the phrase because it articulated in a concise way something that we were all feeling when we watched Trump rallies — including the people who enjoyed the rallies — which is that the people at these rallies really have a lot of fun when Trump is attacking the people they don’t like.

That ritual of public humiliation didn’t merely diminish Trump’s enemies — it also forged a kind of community, a bond, between Trump and his audience. As I write in the column, this is a part of human nature. When we’re children, the cool kids tease the nerds, and that’s what makes the cool kids cool and the nerdy kids nerdy. It reminds everybody of their place and draws boundaries. It also forges a strange kind of intimacy, separating the people who are acting in a cruel fashion from the people who are being acted upon.

For all the conservative pretensions about freedom, it is freedom exclusively for Us and not for Them. Maintaining the formal and informal caste system behind the American flags and police lines, behind a system mostly neutral on its face but discriminatory in operation, is a paramount first principle for nearly half the country. The election of a Black president represented an abrogation of that informal arrangement and sent the Right over the authoritarian edge on which it already teetered.

Ahead of the Fourth of July, some Republican politicians are railing against the newly nationally recognized Juneteenth National Independence Day. They make the stunning claim that recognizing or interrogating the dark currents of US history is unpatriotic and even dangerous. Where does this apocalyptic thinking come from?

I think that the nature of Republican Party politics in the Trump era is incentivized by the structure of our political system, which substantially increases the influence of the most conservative elements of the polity. And those elements tend to be White.

In 2016 and 2015, Trump is essentially repeating back to conservative audiences what he’s consuming on Fox News. And what he’s consuming on Fox News is sort of 24 hours of trying to convince conservative White people that their way of life is in danger, that their entire existence is at risk of imminent destruction because of what liberals or Democrats or people of color are doing.

Democracy or republicanism? They choose not sharing power with the nerds. Nerds should know their place. The Supreme Court majority agrees.

Freedom plus groceries

Gene Lyons is right. He usually is:

Many Democrats are leery about the party’s ability to retain control of Congress in 2022. The incumbent president’s party normally loses ground in midterm elections, and Democrats have little margin for error.

Lose a half-dozen House seats, and the Biden administration will find itself stymied. Lose the Senate, and total paralysis will set in: zombie government personified by Sen. Mitch McConnell.

It’s been reported that President Joe Biden believes that when people understand all that Democrats have done for them — bringing the COVID-19 pandemic under control, restoring the U.S. economy, bringing unemployment down, passing long-delayed, badly needed infrastructure repair — things will take care of themselves at the polls.

With all respect, if Biden thinks that, he’s dreaming.

Honestly, I think it’s vital that Democrats deliver and that they brag about it all day long. As Rick Perlstein has often pointed out, the fundamental promise of the Democratic Party is “freedom plus groceries.”

But they really need to emphasize the fact that the right wing is trying to deprive them of their freedom and their democracy. If they don’t, there is every chance the voters will just stay home to enjoy the bounty and not recognize that that they are going to lose everything if these monsters gain power again.

Anyway:

What got Biden elected, what drove the voter turnout that won him an extraordinary 81 million votes, was the majority’s revulsion and fear regarding Donald Trump. If Democrats want to prevail in 2022, good government won’t be enough. They need to turn the midterm elections into a referendum on the Trump cult and GOP sycophancy toward his alarming assault on democracy.

“Here in the U.S., there’s a growing recognition that this is a bit like [WWE] — that it’s entertaining, but it’s not real,” Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said recently. “I think people recognize it’s a lot of show and bombast, but it’s going nowhere. The election is over. It was fair.” Would that it were so.

Anyway, only a bit like the World Wrestling Entertainment? Not for nothing is Trump a member of the pro wrestling Hall of Fame. As I pointed out in 2016, he basically stole his whole act from Dr. Jerry Graham, the bleach-blond supervillain of 1950s TV rasslin’ at Sunnyside Gardens in Trump’s native Queens. The swaggering, the boasting, the pompadour hairdo — “I have the body that men fear and women adore,” Graham used to say — it’s all the same.

Asked the subject of Graham’s doctorate, his manager once confided, “He’s a tree surgeon.” Smashing rivals with balsa wood chairs, bleeding copiously from chicken blood capsules, the Graham Brothers drew 20,000 fans to grudge matches in Madison Square Garden. Riots broke out among those naive enough to believe the mayhem was real.

But few confused pro wrestling with a real sport. In the eighth grade, I thought it was the funniest thing on TV. Trump appears to have drawn a different lesson: The bigger the lie and the more flamboyant the liar, the more some people will believe it. Hence his “Stop the Steal” rallies this summer. And yes, most of the costumed bumpkins in the red MAGA hats believe Trump’s preposterous falsehoods about his landslide victory.

He’s turning the GOP into an anti-democratic cult of personality. Precious few Republicans have the political courage of a Mitt Romney, a Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., or a Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill. Trump’s doing his best to purge any Republican who’s ever crossed him. This is providing Democrats with a political opportunity not to be missed.

Polls show that upward of half of GOP voters believe that “audits” like the farcical spectacle under way in Arizona will reverse the 2020 election; fully 3 in 10 expect that Trump will somehow be “reinstated” as president this summer. It’s beginning to appear that the Big Man with the bouffant and the diseased ego may actually believe this fantasy, too.

Two thoughts: America being America, some form of ritual violence will almost surely result. Something like Jan. 6, except with guns. Second, 3 in 10 Republicans amounts to maybe 10%, give or take, of the national electorate. (The party’s been shrinking since Trump took over.) That’s roughly the same proportion that pollsters say subscribes to the QAnon delusion that Satan-worshipping pedophiles control the Democratic Party.

No doubt there’s significant overlap.

So they say they want a culture war? Democrats should give them one. Have you noticed that for all the determination of Georgia Republicans to suppress voter turnout, nobody has seriously challenged the accuracy of that state’s two 2020 U.S. Senate races?

That’s because once the Big Loser and his surrogate candidates turned the runoff into a referendum on Trumpism, Democrats and Independents turned out in record numbers to defeat them. Fear and anger drove them. If that can happen in a Deep South state like Georgia, what’s apt to happen in swing districts across the country?

So by all means, run on good government bread-and-butter issues. Remind people of the good things the Biden administration has done for them.

But also nationalize the election: Blanket the airwaves with TV ads showing before-and-after footage of GOP Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and McConnell first condemning the Jan. 6 insurrection, then making weasel-worded alibis for Trump’s role in it. Tie bizarre figures like Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert and Matt Gaetz around their necks like anvils.

Give voters a clear choice: Trumpism, or democracy?

The Pew Poll analysis of the 2020 election was released this week. I’m going to write more about it later. But the upshot is that Biden won not because of monster turnout of the Democratic base, although he did get that. But Trump got that too and he did better than expected with a fair number of the people Democrats assumed would be for them — working class African Americans, Hispanics and white women. The people who put him over the top were suburban, college educated voters and, surprisingly, educated white men.

Those people voted for Biden and the Democrats in order to stop Trump. I suspect that January 6th and the on going assault on democracy isn’t making them feel any more kindly toward the GOP. That’s where the fault line is running and it’s getting wider.

Democrats should do well if they can show those working class constituencies that voted for Trump that the “groceries” the Democrats are delivering are making their lives better. Maybe a few will come back to the fold. But if the Dems want to hold on to those educated voters they’d better fight like hell for democracy and make sure everyone knows which side they are on. That’s what’s animating that group — and the Dems need every vote they can get.

Did Trump know what was going on in his company?

So far, Trump CFO Allen Weisselberg is the only individual to have been indicted on tax fraud charges for failing to declare compensation. The Trump organization has been indicted too. Read all about it.

But just in case Trump ends up saying that he knew nothing about anything, recall this:

Here’s Trump in a New York Times interview in 2016:

TRUMP: Now, according to the law, see I figured there’s something where you put something in this massive trust and there’s also — nothing is written. In other words, in theory, I can be president of the United States and run my business 100 percent, sign checks on my business, which I am phasing out of very rapidly, you know, I sign checks, I’m the old-fashioned type. I like to sign checks so I know what is going on as opposed to pressing a computer button, boom, and thousands of checks are automatically sent. It keeps, it tells me what’s going on a little bit and it tells contractors that I’m watching.

You may recall that he also signed checks in the Oval Office. For Stormy Daniels …

Gary Legum:


Who among us does not notice all the $35,000 checks we are signing? During an interview on CNN’s New Day on Wednesday morning, Alisyn Camerota was gobsmacked by the idea that Donald Trump wouldn’t.

“That is absurd!” Camerota gasped to Maggie Haberman of The New York Times.

Camerota and co-host John Berman were interviewing Haberman about her latest story for the Times, documenting when the president signed a series of such checks to reimburse his personal fixer, Michael Cohen, for paying off Stormy Daniels.

Haberman and co-writer Peter Baker got hold of copies of six of the checks signed by the president, along with one signed by his son, Donald Trump Jr., and another signed by Allen Weisselberg, chief financial officer of the Trump Organization. Cohen has alleged that all the checks were reimbursements to him for fronting the money to Daniels to ensure she would stay silent before the 2016 election about an affair she had with Trump.

Haberman stated that her sources contend Trump may not have known exactly what he was paying Cohen for, and may have thought the checks were for general legal services. This led to Camerota’s outburst.

“That Donald Trump every month would sign by hand a check for $35,000 and not know. This is a man who didn’t even pay his vendors when they completed work for him. This is somebody who doesn’t part with $35,000,” she said, referencing Trump’s legendary cheapness that led him to stiff contractors, lawyers and others who did work for him during his long business career.

Haberman disagreed, saying that wealthy people like Trump sign large checks all the time for personal expenses. Trump very well may have had Cohen doing enough work for him that he genuinely didn’t know exactly what he was paying for. This comment raised the intriguing question, which the reporters briefly touched on, that Trump might have been reimbursing Cohen for other payoffs or activities that he did not want revealed to the public.

Camerota was right.