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Month: May 2022

“Contrary to the public interest”

Is the public interest still a thing in this country?

File under Not Dead Yet (Associated Press):

Maine’s secretary of state released draft rules Thursday that would eliminate references to genitalia, sex acts and profanities that proliferated after the state severely loosened language restrictions on so-called vanity license plates in 2015.

The rough and foul language on the plates led to a steady stream of complaints.

It was all too much even for a secretary of state who previously served as director of American Civil Liberties Union of Maine, which has fought for First Amendment rights to freedom of expression.

“Incitement to violence, profanity, ethnic, racial, religious, or other slurs, or reference to illegal or criminal activity – all of which unfortunately can be seen on Maine registration plates today – are all directly contrary to the public interest,” Secretary of State Shenna Bellows said in a statement.

A federal judge ruled in 2020 against a California ban on vanity plates “offensive to good taste and decency.” Maine is being more careful about how it tightens its rules.

The Trump era has been one, over-long celebration of public indecency. The MAGA crowd celebrates Donald Trump’s encouragement to be liars, bigots and obnoxious jerks in public as conservative liberation.

“I believe Donald. I tell you, he says what I’m thinking!” said a New Hampshire state representative in 2015 who claimed she’d “never been involved in politics.”  But “we’ve got people who are in positions of power who I know for a fact are liars. Liars!” She preferred a career criminal and serial liar. You know, a professional. America made great again.

Maine at least is having second thoughts about the state sanctioning jerkism. Not in the public interest? What a concept. Plus, “Fuck your feelings” is probably too long for a license tag.

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For The Win, 4th Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.

The new war between the states

It will be fought in the courts. For now.

Photo by Laurie Shaull via Flickr (CC BY 2.0).

Michelle Goldberg on the right’s war on women:

The right won’t be content to watch liberal states try to undermine abortion bans. As the draft of a forthcoming article in The Columbia Law Review puts it, “overturning Roe and Casey will create a novel world of complicated, interjurisdictional legal conflicts over abortion. Instead of creating stability and certainty, it will lead to profound confusion because advocates on all sides of the abortion controversy will not stop at state borders in their efforts to apply their policies as broadly as possible.”

Already, a Missouri lawmaker introduced a measure that would let private citizens sue anyone who helps a Missouri resident get an out-of-state abortion. More such proposals will probably follow. Under a Texas law passed last year, people in other states sending abortion pills through the mail to Texas residents could be extradited to face felony charges, though the authorities in liberal states are unlikely to cooperate.

If not a nationwide ban, Republicans are considering legislation harkening back to fugitive slave laws for women who seek legal abortion outside their home states. Lawsuits will fly in state after state. A new war between the states has begun.

“You think we hate each other now? Just wait until the new round of lawsuits start,” Goldberg concludes.

Louisiana has a bill in committee to classify abortion a homicide and to define human as beginning at fertilization:

“No compromises,” the Rev. Brian Gunter, pastor of First Baptist Church in Livingston and a leading supporter of the bill, told lawmakers before they voted on Wednesday. “No more waiting.”

[…]

The proposal is “a barbaric bill that would subject people to murder prosecutions, punishable by life without parole, for having abortions,” Chris Kaiser, the advocacy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, said in a statement. The vote for the bill to advance out of committee, Mr. Kaiser added, “gives me grave concern for what’s to come.”

“Supporters of this legislation,” he continued, “expressed no reservations about imprisoning people for exercising control of their reproduction.”

Which Republican legislature will be first to make it a felony for any man to do evil in the sight of the LORD by “spilling his seed” … on the ground, as it were?

That was a rhetorical question.

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For The Win, 4th Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.

When good government goes wrong

Red states are getting their gerrymanders. Blue states not so much.

At one point it appeared that Democratic politicians had wised up and were fighting fire with fire. Now the courts have weighed in and Blue state courts say gerrymandering is bad while red state courts are saying it’s fine, at least for this election:

Josh Marshall has a subscription only post on the subject. Here are the first paragraphs:

Two very different scenes played out in Ohio and New York on Wednesday, and they illustrate in a nutshell how the difference in state laws can affect whether a state’s majority party can get away with illegal gerrymandering. 

In both states, the highest courts found that the majority party broke state anti-gerrymandering laws. In Ohio, the gerrymandered maps were pushed by Republicans; in New York, they were pushed by Democrats.

And in both states, the majority party then sought to nonetheless use their illegally gerrymandered maps in upcoming elections — specifically by citing the lack of time left to draw new ones before primaries. 

In New York, a state judge has named a court-appointed “special master” — an independent mapmaker who will draw districts without partisan favor — to draw congressional and state senate maps.

But in Ohio, crucially, the law doesn’t allow state judges to take this step for state legislative maps. 

Here’s how Politico described the New York decision:

A federal judge Wednesday denied Democrats a request for an emergency injunction to have New York use Democratic-drawn district lines for congressional elections.

Then the judge proceeded to relentlessly mock every aspect of their request.

The case stems from the surprise court decision last week to throw out the Democratic-drawn lines for House seats in New York that had left the party poised to pick up at least three seats in November.

“In the 102 years since my father, then a Ukrainian refugee, came into this country, if there were two things that he drilled into my head, they were … free, open, rational elections [and] respect for the courts,” said Southern District of New York Judge Lewis Kaplan, a Democrat. “The relief that I’m being asked to give today impinges, to some degree, on the public perception of both. And I’m not going to do that.”

A federal judge Wednesday denied Democrats a request for an emergency injunction to have New York use Democratic-drawn district lines for congressional elections.

Then the judge proceeded to relentlessly mock every aspect of their request.

The case stems from the surprise court decision last week to throw out the Democratic-drawn lines for House seats in New York that had left the party poised to pick up at least three seats in November.

“In the 102 years since my father, then a Ukrainian refugee, came into this country, if there were two things that he drilled into my head, they were … free, open, rational elections [and] respect for the courts,” said Southern District of New York Judge Lewis Kaplan, a Democrat. “The relief that I’m being asked to give today impinges, to some degree, on the public perception of both. And I’m not going to do that.”

What a relief. He’ll be able to congratulate himself while the country implodes.

Meanwhile, in Ohio the GOP legislature has basically made it impossible for the court to do anything but accept the unconstitutional maps by passing a law that says they are the only entity that can draw them. So that’s that. No muss no fuss.

In various ways, in a number of cases, Democratic legislatures took the initiative and decided to gerrymander in order to raise the possibility that they could hang on the congress. Courts in those states have tended to be less amenable to that. Meanwhile, in red states, they’ve made sure that the courts are impotent to stop them. Curses, foiled again.

Make America Dominant Again

Trump only wishes he could be this much Trump

It’s what Trump always meant…

I think this guy makes Trump look like an equivocating loser. He says what Trump would like to say:

He’s also a QAnon believer and a participant in the January 6th insurrectionist. And now he’s the Republican candidate for congress in Ohio.

A huge can of worms

The Post Roe universe is going to be a mess

I thought this article from Politico was a nice simple overview of some of the big fights to come over abortion rights if they overturn Roe. We know the trigger laws are going to take effect in a bunch of states and there are others that will immediately enact restrictions. But there is much more to come:

Our research demonstrates that a post-Roe landscape is far more complicated than most Americans appreciate. Overturning Roe won’t simply kick the matter back to state governments. It will trigger new kinds of battles — among the states, and between states and the federal government — that will strain our federalist system.

If the Court overturns Roe, as the draft opinion indicates will happen, each state will be allowed to set its own abortion policy — banning it entirely or protecting it aggressively. That means roughly half the country will ban abortion and half the country will not.

But it won’t end there. The anti-abortion movement’s ultimate goal is to end abortion nationwide. To that end, some anti-abortion legislators and prosecutors will try to legislate beyond their borders to chill abortion everywhere. In response, abortion rights legislators will attempt to make their states abortion havens.

Here are just a few of the unsettled questions coming down the pike that show the myriad uncertainties of a post-Roe country.

Can a state’s anti-abortion laws apply beyond its borders?

The end goal of the anti-abortion movement is to ban abortion nationwide. While it waits to have the votes necessary to pass such a federal law, anti-abortion legislators, prosecutors and advocates may attempt to use other state tools to stop as many abortions as possible, reaching outside state borders to limit travel or punish out-of-state providers who provide abortion for their citizens.

Missouri already has given us a taste of what this will look like. Earlier this year, a Missouri legislator introduced an amendment that would create civil liability for anyone who helps another person travel out of state to get an abortion. While this bill did not become law, it is a clear signal that anti-abortion legislators are already thinking about this next frontier.
If they do move in this direction, they will be acting against basic principles of how Americans think about travel and law. Most of us assume that if we travel out of state, we must follow the laws of wherever we are and that the laws of our home state do not apply. Think of gambling in Las Vegas before it was widely legal elsewhere — people traveled there without even a thought that their home state, where gambling was illegal, would punish them when they returned from Nevada.

However, there is no settled law that clearly reflects this understanding. Though there are strong arguments that various parts of the Constitution — including the Due Process Clause, the Privileges or Immunities Clause, the Citizenship Clause and the Dormant Commerce Clause — prohibit states from exercising their jurisdiction beyond their borders, the precedent on these points is not well developed. This lack of precedent is easily manipulable by anti-abortion judges and justices to uphold state efforts to limit abortion travel or prosecute out-of-state providers. After all, few people believed that SB8, the Texas law that creates civil liability for providers offering abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, would be upheld, but the current Supreme Court did just that.

Can liberal states provide abortion care for people from out of state?

As abortion restrictions tighten, states with abortion rights legislators are already acting to help out-of-state people seeking abortions. Connecticut is leading the way, passing a bill that awaits the governor’s signature that will make the state a safe place for providers to care for people from other states. The bill says that the courts and agencies of Connecticut will not participate in out-of-state investigations, lawsuits or criminal prosecutions related to abortion that is lawfully performed in the state. It also allows Connecticut residents to countersue in state courts if they are roped into an SB8-style civil lawsuit after offering assistance to abortion patients in another state. Efforts to pass similar laws are already underway in California, New York and Illinois, and other abortion-supportive states are sure to follow suit in the wake of Roe’s demise.

These laws are creative ways to protect abortion access. However, even these bills’ most ardent supporters recognize that they undermine some of the key principles of our federalist structure. States normally cooperate out of respect for one another. These abortion-supportive bills test this basic principle of interstate comity. We have advocated elsewhere about the importance of such laws, but we can’t fail to recognize that these laws would chip away at a key facet of our national structure. These interstate conflicts could also wind up before the Supreme Court, where basic constitutional issues around national citizenship and state sovereignty will be at stake.

What about abortion by mail?

Historically, states have controlled abortion by controlling the providers who performed abortion procedures. But medication abortion — the two-drug regimen that the FDA has approved to end a pregnancy in the first 10 weeks — is now available by mail. People who live in a state where abortion is illegal can buy abortion pills online, either on their own or with the help of international providers. And patients have found ways to obtain abortion pills via telehealth even when they live in states that forbid the practice by using mail forwarding or giving the address of a friend or family member who can forward the medication to them.

This exposes patients, particularly the most vulnerable patients, to various legal risks. But with state and local officials having no ability to tell what a package contains (and no legal authority to inspect packages without specific suspicion and a warrant), mailed pills will be difficult to police. Anti-abortion states understand that the changing landscape of early abortion care threatens to undermine abortion bans. To that end, states are increasingly passing bans on telehealth for abortion and banning distribution of the drugs within the state. Nevertheless, the practical reality is that some of those laws are going to be very difficult to enforce.

[…]

The interstate and interjurisdictional conflicts on the horizon will test fundamental assumptions about the reach of state and federal power. If Roe is overturned, as is looking very likely, the draft opinion’s approach of returning this issue to the states could create more interjurisdictional battles than ever before, which is likely to only intensify the political conflict over abortion rights.

As I mentioned earlier, there is now a lot of talk of nullification in right wing circles these days, what with all the Trumper talk about the “independent state legislature doctrine” having to do with the electoral college. It’s easy to see why they would extrapolate from that that federal law and the US Constitution can be ignored in other areas. Will that be upheld by the Alito faction? Who knows? They do love to use “states’ rights” to destroy human progress in America. On the other hand, they may want to let federal legislators ban abortion or telehealth nationally or criminalize sending abortion pills across state lines or any number of other radical ideas. It’s true we fought a civil war over the idea of federal supremacy but as we know, refusing to accept any of that is part of many of these people’s “heritage” so I wouldn’t count on this.

The fact is that by throwing this issue back to the states where halfwits and fascists get to decide if someone should have basic human rights, they have reopened the fundamental civil rights battles of the 1960s.

An abortion story

Just one out of millions who have them

I came across this on twitter. It sounds very much like the story of an aunt of mine who went through a similar thing in the late 60s. This is what it was like. What it will be like again:

Pre-Roe, I was 8 yrs old. I came home from school to find my Mom lying in a puddle of blood. She was weak & asked me to call a neighbor. She was miscarrying, but the embryo would not abort. For 48 hours, she bled while doctors transfused blood, waiting. Abortions were illegal.

My Father was required to bring my little sister & I to the hospital boardroom to prove to the board there were children to consider. I will never forget standing there, watching my Father get on his knees & BEG the board to save my Mother. The embryo was not viable, & yet,

it was killing my Mom. I stood in that boardroom for hours, listening to a group of old men argue about saving a woman by removing an embryo. I didn’t understand what they were saying except that my Mom was going to die if they voted against an abortion.

My Father was crying. this strong man, who I had always felt so safe with, was crying because he was helpless in saving my Mom. If you don’t think that affects a child, you are SO WRONG I never forgot that scene. I had so many questions, & no one to explain.

72 hours after it began, the board voted to abort the embryo & save my Mom. 72 hours of no sleep for my Dad. 72 hours of not knowing if my Mom would live.

When Roe v Wade was decided I felt such a relief that no family member would ever have to go through the grief we went through.

2 years ago, my daughter had an ectopic pregnancy. It was attached to an artery & if it burst, she would bleed to death before she could make it to an ambulance. Because of Roe, her life was saved. She did not have 72 hours for doctors to “decide” if her life was worth

I have 5 granddaughters. I shudder to think if one of them has a pregnancy that endangers their lives, that they may not be saved. We CANNOT GO BACKWARDS!!

Originally tweeted by Masked, Vaxed, & Boosted ‘Cuz I Care About You (@DianaMiller5) on May 5, 2022.

This event happened pre-viability which means the fetus was going to die either way. They just couldn’t decide whether the woman should die too.

I am also stuck by the detail in that story that they had to “prove to the board there were children to consider.” If there weren’t would they have felt freer to let the woman die? Sounds like it.

This is the world we’re going back to — you know, when America was great.

About those excess profits …

Max Sawicky on the inflation panic

In These Times:

When the history of the 2020s is written, the current inflation panic could very well rival the ​“but her emails” canard surrounding Hillary Clinton in 2016: The impacts on U.S. politics have been profound, and decidedly negative from any progressive standpoint.

I have to admit that I previously understated the persistence of the price increases that started showing up last fall. As Yogi Berra is credited with saying, ​“Prediction is hard, especially about the future.” Still, the fact remains that the most popular explanations for inflation reflect malign political-economic motivations.

First and foremost, we hear that inflation is due to excessive economic stimulus, especially from the eternal enemies of economic stimulus. Hence the outsized political role of Sen. Joe Manchin (D‑W.V.) — the self-styled economic genius who constantly worries about inflation — and the endless nattering of budget hawks. According to this outlook, the federal government (under Trump as well as Biden) gave people too much money, and, as everybody knows, inflation is the result of ​“too many dollars chasing too few goods.” As usual, what ​“everybody knows” serves as an inadequate guide.

The dollars chasing goods are reflected in what economists call consumption expenditures. If there are too many dollars, so to speak, then consumption spending would outrun the normal growth of GDP. As economist Dean Baker notes, this has not been the case during the ongoing panic, either in the United States nor in the nations of the European Union, where inflation has been similarly elevated.

Another pandemic effect cited by Baker is the shift within consumer spending from services to goods: less travel and eating out, more staycations and ordering in. Here again, goods producers can adjust, but that takes some time. 

This takes us from the demand side — consumer spending — to the supply side. Here the problems are obvious. The pandemic disrupted ​“supply chains,” i.e. the transactions among firms within industries. 

As Josh Bivens of the Economic Policy Institute notes, if one producer is temporarily sidelined, or otherwise forced to cut back production, this provides opportunities for competitors that are not as hampered to jump in with price increases. This dynamic is not a matter of the long-running growth of monopolies, in tech or elsewhere, but a case of temporary market disruptions. Pandemic lockdowns in China — the world’s manufacturing colossus — have been significant, resulting in downstream impacts. 

The bottom line, as Bivens shows, is that profits have increased rapidly, while labor costs have not. The profit increase reflects the ability of firms to exploit kinks in the supply chain. Most of these price increases have gone to profits, not to labor.

As Bivens writes, ​“The historically high profit margins in the economic recovery from the pandemic sit very uneasily with explanations of recent inflation based purely on macroeconomic overheating.”

Sawicky goes on to point out that this is a function of capitalism and normally would work itself out. But because of the war in Ukraine which is affecting gas prices and grain production, it’s taking longer. These are complicated issues that are difficult to fit on a bumper sticker and anyway, the explanations don’t do much to help people who are reeling from sticker shock. He says that low income people should be given some help to get through this period.

But also:

Bivens suggests an excess profits tax as one remedy. Another would be increased benefits in programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (a.k.a. ​‘food stamps’) and unemployment insurance to alleviate inflation effects on lower income families. The federal government could also do something about the high prices of prescription drugs. The impact on overall inflation itself for these remedies is dubious, but it would help if the Democrats showed they were doing something. The most important likely remedy is time, but in politics those who stand back and wait are in for a shellacking.

I’m one of the ignorant people who doesn’t understand all the economic ins and outs and that explanation certainly speaks to me. I expect it would make sense to a lot of people.

Sawicky writes that the economy is doing very well otherwise, with wage growth being especially phenomenal. And he wonders why we aren’t hearing more about that? I agree. I read something (can’t find it right now) about how people are freely quitting jobs they hate or because they aren’t making progress in their careers to move to new ones. This hasn’t happened in decades. It’s a big deal, especially to young people who have everything togain by being able to be flexible and mobile in their employment.

As Sawicky says, the media paints an unrelentingly gloomy picture of the economy and it’s affecting everyone’s mood.

He takes on the Democratic messaging and he’s sadly right about this:

On the policy front, we have two problems. One is a further indication of misfeasance from the Biden administration, in the form of new blather about the success of deficit reduction. It’s one thing to be blocked from worthwhile reforms like Build Back Better by a couple of intransigent Democratic senators. It’s another to celebrate the results. 

This is very much a replay of the Obama 2010 playbook, when his administration failed to cobble together a congressional majority to support its initiatives, failed to note the shortcomings of what had been enacted, and failed to talk about what should have been done instead. Then, in the 2010 midterms, the Democrats, as Obama said, got ​“shellacked” and lost their majorities in Congress.

Bringing employment back to nearly its pre-pandemic level in a year’s time was a great achievement, but we can do better. Employment should keep up with population growth — and that means 2022 population, not 2020 population.

The other policy issue is the posture of the Federal Reserve, using the hammer it has while defining everything as a nail. By pushing up interest rates in pursuit of inflation reduction, the Fed will end up pushing down employment and GDP growth, while possibly worsening supply-chain difficulties. 

This past Thursday, the Commerce Department announced that GDP in the first quarter of this year had declined by 1.4 percent on an annual basis. It’s not news that the stock market has also taken a dive this year, especially this past month, which further retards consumer spending. People feel, and are, less rich — and they spend less as a result.

Even the European Central Bank has pointed out the gap between the incoming Fed bombardment and the problem it is held to address: 

“Higher interest rates won’t solve the imbalance between supply and demand, energy prices and base effects that are currently pushing up prices: they won’t make more shipping containers available or boost the supplies of semiconductors and fuel.” 

The pandemic relief has been a huge success. Supply-chain disruptions cannot be attributed to the White House, nor repaired by the Fed’s jack-up of interest rates. The economy’s inflation problem is being misdiagnosed and mistreated. All this adds up to a terrible political situation in the run-up to the midterm elections that puts our entire democracy at risk.

Oy… why can’t we ever learn?

Click over to read the whole thing. it’s worth it.

The GOP Agenda

Hunter Biden

You may think they don’t have one but Dana Milbank found it:

Republicans have been cagey about what their agenda would be if they gain control of Congress in November. “I’ll let you know when we take it back,” is all Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) will tell voters.

Why so reticent? Because while Americans worry about such things as inflation and the war in Ukraine, the top concerns of congressional Republicans can be ranked roughly as follows:

1) Hunter Biden

2) Hunter Biden

3) Hunter Biden

4) Hunter Biden

He’s not really exaggerating, at least as far as what the oversight committee will be doing under Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), the man in line to become chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.

“Congressional Republicans plan to open up five avenues of investigation into Hunter Biden,” the New York Post reported last week, citing Comer’s prospective panel.

The FBI and the Justice Department have undertaken a multiyear investigation into Hunter Biden’s business activities. But Republicans are apparently planning on subjecting Biden père et fils to the Benghazi treatment. In that case, after no fewer than eight congressional investigations, the GOP failed to find wrongdoing by Hillary Clinton related to the terrorist attack in Libya — but they did uncover her private email server.

Comer, who has vowed to be “all over Hunter Biden,” told Fox News on April 28 that “Hunter Biden and Joe Biden’s shady business dealings with Russia and with China” were responsible for drug smuggling. “China’s making so much money off the fentanyl that’s crossing the border. Is the reason Joe Biden has an open border because of his being compromised with China?”

Actually, U.S. authorities seized 5,300 pounds of fentanyl so far this fiscal year and 11,200 pounds last year along the supposedly “open” border — more than double the pace of interdiction under President Donald Trump.

Three weeks earlier, Comer floated another conspiracy theory on Fox News: “At the same time that Joe Biden’s trying to convert everyone in the United States from fossil fuel to electric vehicles, we put China in a stronger competitive advantage over the United States in the battery market because of the rare earth minerals, and Hunter Biden was front and center in that.” In Comer’s telling, the Biden administration supports EVs not to reduce carbon emissions but because Hunter Biden brokered a 2016 deal “between an American company and a Chinese company” over a “Congo mine with cobalt.”

Comer alleged other ways “Hunter’s shady dealings have impacted Joe Biden’s decisionmaking.” For example: “One of the oligarchs in Russia that Hunter Biden received money from” wasn’t among the “oligarchs who were sanctioned by the Biden administration in Russia.” (The Post’s Fact Checker found that the allegation that Biden the younger received funds from the oligarch is based on “flimsiness.”)

Comer also claimed that, because of Hunter Biden, Democrats won’t “investigate the origination of covid-19 in that Wuhan lab” (Biden ordered and made public an intelligence review on the topic) and “don’t want to do anything against China on the manipulation of their currency.” (Perhaps Hunter Biden also caused the Trump administration to remove China’s designation as a currency manipulator in 2020.)

Comer previously proposed that Hunter Biden would have special insight into “energy companies in China or Ukraine” that “spent money lobbying for the Paris climate accords.”Advertisement

And Comer said the “strange relationship between Hunter Biden and China” is the only thing that could explain why “the administration and the deep state [would] be reaching out to their Chinese counterparts to try to give them warning of any potential military action by the United States.” Never mind that those calls by Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark A. Milley occurred during the Trump presidency.

Now, Comer charges that “the Russian government is attempting to influence American policy in Ukraine by exploiting Hunter Biden’s connection with his father.” His letter was signed by 13 other Republicans — one of 14 such releases in which oversight committee Republicans have mentioned Biden in the past five weeks alone. House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) also frequently calls out the president’s son and has blessed the idea of probing him.

So, to recap, Hunter Biden controls cobalt in Congo, fentanyl in Mexico, coronavirus in Wuhan and war in Ukraine. It is just a matter of time until Republicans find a Hunter Biden angle in Jeffrey Epstein’s demise and UFOs off the coast of California.

I think they have a very nefarious reason for going here, even aside from simply “I know you are but what am I” payback for the Trump investigations. I think they believe that since Biden is very sentimental about his children (and they’ve convinced themselves that he’s fragile and dying) they can “break him” by harassing Hunter, his only surviving son. That’s how bullies think. It’s the “Canuck Letter” writ large.

But I also think they believe they can “break” Hunter who has had a longstanding problem with drugs. I can imagine them fantasizing about forcing him into a marathon session as they did with Hillary in the hopes of having him break down on national television. Again, that’s how these people think.

They have a real agenda, of course. It’s to rile up the culture war to a fever pitch, roll back as much progress as possible and reward their rich donors. But The Hunter Show will be quite the spectacle I have no doubt. They know what works. If they play their cards right they can turn him into Hillary Clinton.

Murder in Louisiana

They’re rushing to get even more draconian abortion laws on the books

It’s getting very Gilead in here. Louisiana state house Republicans justvote out a “fetal personhood” bill making abortion a crime of homicide from the moment of fertilization. The bill could allow prosecutors to charge patients with murder along with anyone who aids and abets them.

Rep. Danny McCormick said his House Bill 813 should move forward even though the U.S. Supreme Court seems poised to overturn Roe v. Wade that guarantees abortion rights as soon as June, according to an opinion leaked from the high court this week.

“We can’t wait on the Supreme Court,” said McCormick, a Republican from Oil City.

McCormick’s bill says the unborn should be protected at fertilization.

He said the Rev. Brian Gunter of First Baptist Church in Livingston helped author the bill.

“No compromises; no more waiting,” Gunter said. “The bloodshed in our land is so great we have a duty … to protect the least of these among us.”

Bradley Pierce of the Foundation to Abolish Abortion said state legislatures have the right to ignore the U.S. Supreme Court if they disagree with any high court decision.

“If the Supreme Court ignores the (U.S.) Constitution, you should ignore the court,” Pierce said. “The Legislature has the right to disregard the Supreme Court.”

Opponents argued the bill would not only put the mother and doctor at risk of murder prosecution but criminalize in vitro fertilization and perhaps some forms of birth control.

Ellie Schilling, an abortion rights attorney, said the bill would “annihilate” the Constitution. 

As Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern wrote, “when abortion is outlawed, every uterus becomes a potential crime scene.”

Also, note the language these neanderthals have all picked up about the supremacy of state legislatures from the Trumpers. Apparently, they think it applies to all federal laws now. I’m sure they’ll be fine as long as the Court does exactly what they want.

Nice little federal judiciary you have here. Be a shame if anything happened to it.