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Month: May 2022

Supreme horror

The Court is on a tear.

Once again the people who have the audacity to call themselves the “party of life” prove that the only lives, even innocent lives, they care about are fetuses within the womb.

This is sickening, horrifying, totally uncivilized. If they are willing to do this the idea that they would respect human rights is laughable:

Last December, the Supreme Court gathered to hear oral arguments in Shinn v. Ramirez, a case that could mean life or death for Barry Jones, who sits on death row in Arizona for the rape and murder of his girlfriend’s 4-year-old daughter, Rachel.

In 2018, a federal court overturned Jones’ conviction, concluding that he had failed to receive effective counsel, a violation of his Sixth Amendment rights. Had that happened, a federal judge ruled, “there is a reasonable probability that his jury would not have convicted him of any of the crimes with which he was charged and previously convicted.”

After losing in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Arizona’s attorney general appealed the decision to the Supreme Court. During those oral arguments, state prosecutors repeatedly argued that “innocence isn’t enough” of a reason to throw out Jones’ conviction.

On Monday morning, by a 6-3 vote, the Supreme Court concurred: Barry Jones’ innocence is not enough to keep him off of death row. The state of Arizona can still kill Jones, even if there exists a preponderance of evidence that he committed no crime.

The crime for which Jones was convicted is horrific. The little girl, Rachel, died from peritonitis, the result of a rupture in her small intestine that the state of Arizona claimed came from repeated physical and sexual abuse.

But Jones’s lawyers never questioned the physical evidence that led to his conviction. As Liliana Segura, an investigative reporter for The Intercept, pointed out in an exhaustive piece last year:

“Had Jones’s lawyers been up to the task, there was plenty they could have done to defend their client. They could have pointed out that the lead detective, who examined Rachel at the hospital, didn’t bother to investigate how or when the child sustained her fatal injury — or consider a single other suspect aside from Jones. They could have called a medical expert to show that there was no real evidence that the child had been raped. Most crucially, Jones’s lawyers could have called a pathologist to challenge the state’s theory of the crime, which rested on a narrow timeframe during which Jones had supposedly assaulted Rachel the day before her death. Medical experts now say that Rachel’s abdominal injury could not have become fatal so quickly.”

At the time of his trial, Jones was appointed a lawyer by the state—a fundamental constitutional right guaranteed to all criminal defendants under the Sixth Amendment. If a defendant argues, after conviction, that they failed to receive adequate counsel they are appointed new legal representation. If the new lawyer also provides ineffective counsel, a federal habeas appeal allows them to argue that their post-conviction lawyer was ineffective.

In effect, Jones argued that he received ineffective counsel not once—but twice. And the fault lies not with him, but rather with his lawyers who were appointed by the state of Arizona. By allowing him to introduce evidence of his innocence, a federal court would be, in effect, rectifying the mistakes made not just by his lawyers, but by the state responsible for appointing them.

In a 2012 case, Martinez v. Ryan, the Supreme Court ruled that a convicted defendant “is not at fault for any failure to bring a trial-ineffectiveness claim in state court”—and thus opened the door to appeals like the one brought by Jones.

On Monday the court gutted the precedent established by Martinez.

In its decision, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, the court ruled that a federal court, “may not conduct an evidentiary hearing or otherwise consider evidence beyond the state-court record based on the ineffective assistance of state postconviction counsel.” In short, a convicted defendant, like Jones, can be held responsible and kept in prison if his state-appointed lawyer provided ineffective counsel for his appeal.

It creates a truly bizarre, even Orwellian situation.

How can a defendant argue ineffective counsel if they can’t point to specific examples of that ineffective counsel? And how else can they do that other than by introducing new evidence not presented at trial, which would have likely acquitted them? Thomas is saying, in effect, that a petitioner has to rely on the record of a trial in which they were ineffectively defended—and their actual innocence is of secondary importance.

Thomas justifies the court’s decision by arguing that a federal review imposes “significant costs” on state criminal justice systems that includes potentially overriding “the State’s sovereign power to enforce ‘societal norms through criminal law.’”

One might argue that housing a man who committed no actual crime on Arizona’s death row “imposes significant costs.” One might even further argue that executing an innocent man imposes far greater societal costs—not just to the legitimacy of the criminal justice system, but more acutely to the man whose life the state ended.

As Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted in her dissent, “The Court’s decision will leave many people who were convicted in violation of the Sixth Amendment to face incarceration or even execution without any meaningful chance to vindicate their right to counsel.” She called the ruling “perverse” and “illogical,” which doesn’t really do justice to its utter obscenity..

SCOTUS’ decision will allow for an innocent man to, potentially, be killed by the state for largely procedural reasons. That Arizona even appealed the federal court’s decision in this case is truly depraved. The state could have sought a new trial or released Jones. Instead, state prosecutors took their appeal to the Supreme Court where, if they won, it risked putting a man to death when substantial doubt exists about his guilt.

What societal objective is furthered by such an outcome? Why would any prosecutor risk killing an innocent man? How does that benefit the cause of justice?

But far worse is that the Supreme Court is willing to ratify Arizona’s impaired judgment.

As Jonathan Zasloff, a law professor at UCLA, said to me, part of the problem is that “the court’s conservative majority does not fully accept the idea that there is a right to effective assistance of counsel.”

“One could argue that there is a cost for the lack of finality from new claims brought up on habeas. Every prisoner can just file a new motion to say ‘I was denied effective assistance.’” said Zasloff. “So do we as a society want to pay that price to make sure innocent people don’t get killed? Not for these guys. So much for the right to life.”

The same court that appears poised to overturn Roe v. Wade in order to protect innocents before they are born seems to lose interest when it comes to innocents later in life.

Yet, for close Supreme Court-watchers, the decision is hardly surprising. Thirty years ago, the court issued a ruling that a death row inmate presenting belated evidence of innocence is not necessarily entitled to have a federal court hear their claims. Justice Antonin Scalia went even further, noting “there is no basis, tradition, or even in contemporary practice for finding that in the Constitution the right to demand judicial consideration of newly discovered evidence of innocence brought forward after a conviction.” In an angry dissent, Judge Harry Blackmun described the majority’s reasoning as “perilously close to simple murder.”

With their decision on Monday, the conservative members of the court have ratified Scalia’s depraved thinking. Simple logic would suggest that proving one’s innocence is enough to ensure that a wrongful conviction is overturned and an innocent man or woman is set free. Such moments are the emotional high points of countless Hollywood movies. It’s the way most Americans would like to imagine our justice system should work.

But with the current Supreme Court and its increasing refusal to abide by long-standing legal precedents, basic societal norms, and simple moral constructs, the reality is something else altogether. For the highest court in the land, the state of Arizona killing an innocent man is not a perversion of the criminal justice system, but rather emblematic of its smooth functioning.

It doesn’t matter if you’re innocent. It’s far more important that lawyers and judges are not inconvenienced or embarrassed by erroneous convictions. Better to let the innocent person die. Thanks to all the “pro-life” people who made common cause with Donald Trump to make this happen.

The best endorsement money can buy?

Trump rewards the big Mar-a-lago spenders

More proof he grifts from every possible angle:

The campaigns of seven Republican candidates endorsed by former President Donald Trump spent over $400,000, combined, at his private club Mar-a-Lago in the buildup to Tuesday’s primary clashes, according to federal and state campaign finance records.

Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker’s campaign has spent almost $200,000 so far during the 2022 election cycle at the exclusive resort in Palm Beach, Florida: a payment of just over $135,000 in December and another of roughly $65,000 in April, according to Federal Election Commission filings.

In December, Walker attended a campaign fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago for his primary bid, according to a video showing him introducing Trump to the crowd of donors. “He is no doubt the greatest president to ever, ever hold office,” Walker said.

Trump endorsed Walker in September, and Walker is the favorite to become the Republican nominee to challenge Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock.

Trump’s pick for Georgia governor, former Sen. David Perduespent over $20,000 from his campaign coffers at Mar-a-Lago in May, according to state campaign finance disclosures.

But Perdue, who has campaigned in part on spreading the former president’s debunked falsehoods about the 2020 presidential election, appears to be falling badly behind incumbent Gov. Brian Kemp.

Trump has slammed Kemp as a “very weak governor” who has “failed Georgia” after Kemp recertified President Joe Biden’s win in the Peach State during the 2020 presidential election. A Real Clear Politics polling average shows Perdue down 19 percentage points to Kemp going into the primary, even after Trump’s political action committee donated $500,000 to a group blasting Kemp in the gubernatorial contest. NBC News reported that Perdue didn’t buy any television ad time in the final week of the campaign.

An invitation to a March fundraising event at Mar-a-Lago for Perdue’s campaign says donors had to give or raise $24,200 in order to receive a picture with the candidate and Trump.

And they brag about their grift to the press:

Trump’s spokesman Taylor Budowich told CNBC in a text message that “candidates and causes across the nation are being funded by the unprecedented amount of money being raised at Trump properties.”

“In Republican politics today, there’s only two seasons that matter: Mar-A-Lago season and Bedminster season, because it’s where candidates, organizations, and donors want to be,” he said. The Trump National Golf Club is located in Bedminster, New Jersey.

They just say it outright. Everyone has to pay Trump to apply for his endorsement. It couldn’t be more obvious.

“Once again they are full of shit”

About that alleged Durham bombshell

Tim Miller does the job on this phony outcry in which Trump is running around saying “where do I go to get my reputation back?” Lolololol…

More than six years after the Russian government began a wide-ranging cyber attack on Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign and our political system, MAGA Republicans believe they finally have evidence that this scheme’s guilty party was neither Russia nor the Trump campaign that cheered on the attack, but Clinton herself.

This latest attempt at victim-blaming is premised on information revealed during the trial of Michael Sussmann, a lawyer who has been charged with lying to the FBI when he did not reveal his association with Clinton at a meeting during which he turned over data to the bureau that purported to show additional ties between Trump and Russia. Sussmann denies that he was working on behalf of the campaign.

The specific evidence Sussmann was providing demonstrated that there was an unusual connection between servers affiliated with the Trump organization and those connected to Alfa Bank—Russia’s largest private financial-services company. The evidence presented was based on Domain Name System (DNS) logs identified by a team of computer scientists.

Whether there was anything nefarious going on between Alfa and Trump remains a bit of a mystery. The FBI eventually closed the book on this lead—more on this a moment—resulting in a presumption that any suggestion of impropriety was false. But a satisfactory explanation for the DNS pings has never really been provided. If you want to nerd out on the various possibilities ranging from “random coincidence” to “there’s something fishy here,” the New Yorker did a deep dive on the available evidence back in 2018.

The part of Sussmann’s trial that has the Trump crowd rubbing their nipples is testimony from Clinton 2016 campaign manager Robby Mook in which he revealed that the candidate was briefed on the potentially dubious Alfa Bank accusations and was fine with the campaign’s decision to share the information with reporters. (Point of fact: Many in the Trump orbit have stated that Clinton approved the Alfa Bank oppo’s dissemination, but Mook testified that he told her only after the campaign had shared it with a reporter.)

This rather mundane bit of opposition-research dissemination was treated as a bombshell in the conservative press, where it has been presented as the long-yearned-for evidence that when it comes to Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election, it was Hillary who perpetrated a scheme on poor innocent Donny Trump, not the other way around.

“Hillary Clinton Did It,” screamed the headline from the wizened graybeards of the Wall Street Journal editorial board over the weekend. According to the WSJ, Mook’s testimony about sharing the undeveloped Alfa Bank information with the press proves that “Vladimir Putin never came close to doing as much disinformation damage” as Hillary. Интересная претензия, Comrades!

Lil’ Donny Trump Jr. chimed in, arguing that Mook’s testimony somehow proves that Hillary was “behind the Russia, Russia, Russia smears against Trump.” Elon Musk tweeted that she advanced a “hoax.” And myriad troll accounts started retweeting my old article mocking the MAGAverse’s Russia Hoax false-flag theories (which you should really treat yourself to if you haven’t).

Among the problems with the reaction from the WSJ, Jr. and assorted other MAGA media influencers: Mook’s admission didn’t come close to proving any scheme orchestrated by Hillary. The only new information he provided is that the candidate said she was okay with her campaign having shared research with reporters about potential ties between Trump and Russia amid an unprecedented cyberattack on her which had been perpetrated by Russia and, at minimum, weaponized by her opponent. (As a former Republican opposition research aficionado, I can testify that passing along not-fully-verified information to journalists in the hopes that they could suss out more details is a time-honored, bipartisan practice.)

In short: The MAGA crowd’s big gotcha is that Hillary was okay with her campaign sharing rumors of questionable veracity about her political opponent with reporters and then tweeting the published information.

Seriously, that’s all they have.

The friends of Donald Trump are upset that someone might have made an accusation that they weren’t completely, totally certain was true.

Donald Trump.

A man who can barely open his mouth without passing along a “people are saying” smear. The king of apophasis himself.

Try not to go blind from the eye-roll.

It’s too much. But they are going with it. And as Miller concludes, this stuff works. Half the country will believe there was something nefarious about the Clinton campaign pushing oppo research on Trump which somehow proves she was behind the whole Russia scandal. (Some people are very stupid. And there are a lot of them.) I mean, we have virtually the entire Republican party believing that the 2020 election was stolen despite the fact that there is ZERO evidence of fraud and Biden won the election by 7 million popular votes and 306 to 232 electoral votes. These people will believe anything.

Kellyanne tries to have it both ways

Trump’s not going to like it

Kellyanne Conway has written what sounds like a very boring, self-serving book. But this is notable:

“Despite the mountains of money Trump had raised, his team simply failed to get the job done. A job that was doable and had a clear path, if followed,” Kellyanne Conway writes in her memoir, “Here’s the Deal.” “Rather than accepting responsibility for the loss, they played along and lent full-throated encouragement (privately, not on TV) when Trump kept insisting he won.”

“The team had failed on November 3, and they failed again afterward. By not confronting the candidate with the grim reality of his situation, that the proof had not surfaced to support the claims, they denied him the evidence he sought and the respect he was due. Instead supplicant after sycophant after showman genuflected in front of the Resolute Desk and promised the president goods they could not deliver.”

You can say a lot of things about Trump and be forgiven, if he finds it useful to forgive you. Look at JD Vance. But saying he didn’t actually win the 2020 election is not one of them.

She’s basically blaming his campaign “team” which didn’t include her. I haven’t read the book so I don’t know if she personally told him that he lost. Somehow I doubt it.

The fetid Trump swamp

The most openly corrupt politician in history

He never left a dime on the table:

Three days after the October 1, 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, then-President Trump visited Las Vegas and met with victims of the shooting and first-responders. But that visit appears to have also benefited Trump financially. Secret Service records obtained by CREW show a $31,191 charge on November 1, 2017 at the Trump Hotel Las Vegas, indicating it was for “POTUS/FLOTUS.”  The visit to meet with victims of the shooting was Trump and then-First Lady Melania Trump’s only trip to Las Vegas in the preceding several months. 

The total charges to taxpayers from Trump’s Las Vegas hotel that month reached nearly $50,000, although it’s unclear whether an additional charge of $1,233 on November 2 was associated with that trip. 

This isn’t the first time it’s been revealed that Trump used his Vegas hotel for profit: in February 2020, Trump took a trip to four Western states, returning to stay in his Las Vegas hotel each night. Reporting indicated that the trip likely cost taxpayers an extra $1.1 million in Air Force One expenses, with Trump dubiously claiming that the Secret Service had requested to stay at the Trump property. In the end, CREW found that that trip funneled over $12,000 into Trump’s pockets.

Trump was not the only member of his administration funneling government money to Trump’s Las Vegas property while visiting shooting victims. A charge of $15,892 on November 2, 2017 has a notation indicating it was for “VPOTUS and SLOTUS visit.” Then-Vice President Mike Pence and his wife, then-Second Lady Karen Pence, visited Las Vegas several days after Trump, attending a memorial service for victims of the shooting on October 7. This was not the first time Pence’s official travel was used to funnel money to Trump properties–as CREW previously reported, Pence stayed at Trump’s Doonbeg resort during a 2019 trip to Ireland–on the opposite side of the country from his meetings in Dublin, which cost taxpayers nearly $600,000 in transportation expenses, and funneled over $15,000 to the struggling Doonbeg property. Pence also previously stayed at Trump’s Las Vegas hotel in early 2017, when he spoke at a Republican Jewish Coalition gathering, racking up a $20,183 hotel bill.

Over the course of his presidency, the Secret Service paid upwards of $130,000 to Trump’s Las Vegas Hotel for trips by Trump, Pence and Trump’s adult children. That number alone is staggering, but as CREW’s recent investigation found, that’s just a fraction of the at least $1.7 million that the Secret Service spent at all Trump properties during and after the Trump presidency. 

Once again, Donald Trump proved that to him, even tragedies are opportunities to make money. 

Anyone who doesn’t think he was running his businesses during this period — that Junior and Eric kept all the details from him — are kidding themselves. These visits were promotional events for the businesses and pay to play opportunities for people to seek access to the president of the United States. It was breathtaking in its brazenness.

I guess people feel there’s little chance of another president owning a bunch of resort properties he refuses to divest so there’s no chance of this ever happening again. But the lesson is simply that if a powerful politician is bold enough to flagrantly defy the law and the rules, and enough people support him in spite of it, the system is paralyzed and will not stop him. That lesson will not be lost on future leaders.

As real as it gets

Democrats need to make the Republican threat real and personal

Greg Sargent and Paul Waldman ask whether Democrats are hitting their target. Republicans threaten election subversion in state after state, but Democratic pollster David Binder’s recent focus groups in Georgia and Michigan suggest voters are not getting the message (Washington Post):

“When we talk about the ‘big lie’ and Trump, it looks to them like you’re looking backwards and getting partisan,” Binder told us. “They want a secretary of state to say, ‘I am going to make sure that everyone has the right to vote in a nonpartisan way.’ ”

Importantly, the focus groups show strong voter support for removing measures that make it harder to vote. Yet, at the same time, they show that these swing voters don’t tend to see voter suppression as an effort to “subvert democracy.”

Democrats need to address the threats as attempts to sabotage future elections, not the last one.

In truth, the backward-looking and forward-looking arguments are two sides of the same coin: When a GOP candidate announces his conviction that Trump won in 2020, that’s strong evidence that they will try to steal the 2024 election for him (or another GOP loser). But it can be hard to prove this, because the rhetoric of even the most deranged election saboteurs is clothed in high-minded claims about “transparency” and “integrity.”

Nevertheless, if voters are more interested in the future than the past, then they are focusing in the right direction. Many Trump loyalists seeking positions of control over election positions — especially governor and secretary of state — accept the presumption that only Republican victories are legitimate, and if voters decide to elect Democrats then they must simply be overruled.

Which is something all voters should be worried about. And if they aren’t, Democrats have a duty to make sure they understand the true stakes we face. In future elections.

Perhaps one reason Democrats are failing at communicating this threat to democracy is something Republicans know about their voters. Abstractions do not connect. Republicans make issues personal. They mean to get people’s backs up, make them feel personally injured. Democracy-shmocracy, what does Republicans turning the U-S-of-A into a one-party state mean for me?

Losing power is very personal for people on the right. Both left and right talk about taking “their country” back, but it seems much more personal for conservatives. In their America, it seems, there is no we, just i and me.

One place you hear it is in their rhetoric about voter fraud. It is a very personal affront to them that the power of their votes might be diminished by the Other. Every time someone ineligible casts a fraudulent ballot, they insist, it “steals your vote.” Your vote. They have convinced themselves that there are thousands and thousands of invisible felons stealing their votes every election. Passing more restrictive voting laws is a matter of justice and voting integrity, of course. What other motivation could there be for railroading eligible poor, minority, and college-age voters?

Make the Republican plot to reduce the by-God United States of America to a Potemkin village of a once-great country personal. Personalizing what voters will lose is the key both to connecting the threat to voters’ lives and to energizing pissing them off enough to get their butts to the polls in an off-year.

If American democracy is in crisis, you’d think Democrats would campaign like it. Running on mundane “bread-and-butter issues” drained of emotion cannot possibly convey the seriousness of the threat to thjeir lives.

With the U.S. a one-party state, Republicans will steal (“sunset”) your Social Security. They will strip your Medicare, your Medicaid. They will close your neighborhood public school. They will force your daughter to give birth to her rapist’s baby.

That shit is as real as it gets.

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Request a copy of For The Win, 4th Edition, my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us.
If in a position to Play to win in 2022 (see post first), contact tpostsully at gmail dot com.

Hordes of insects?

Republicans deem themselves a pestilence

“It is incumbent upon Democrats, it is 101 Politics, keep shining a spotlight on the insanity on the right,” former Republican strategist Rick Wilson told the Lincoln Project podcast last week (Politics 101: What Democrats Must Do to Win in 2022).

The Republican Party is so overtaken with “MAGA insane people” that Minnesota Republicans had to issue a special policy for attendees to its recent state convention. Democrats, this is where you should focus some messaging, Wilson said. “It’s not that hard.”

“But when you have to say to people, you can’t bring acid, water balloons, air guns, guns, BB guns, water guns/cannons, squirt bottles, wrist rockets/slingshots, rocks, explosives/bombs, missiles, cannons, flamethrowers, torches, potato guns, dry ice bombs, stick bombs, fireworks, fire extinguishers, cowbells, air horns, fire alarms, personal PA systems, large signs, non-approved banners, drones, blimps/derrigibles, hot air balloons, radio-controlled aircraft, radio jamming devices, air tanks, strobe lights, lasers, high-powered flashlights, beach balls, tennis rackets, ball bearings, BBs, large knives (over 2”), hordes of insects, animals (other than service animals), spray paint, zip ties, excessive tools, irritant sprays, or anything else that might harm individuals or disrupt the convention’s proceedings…. Folks, that’s where you should shine the light.”

A-n-d there was chaos.

Like Wilson said, shining a spotlight on the MAGA insane people is not that hard.

Wikipedia: Georgia Guidestones

The Democratic Party should be figuring out how to get 100 more voters registering 1,000 voters per week each in the Atlanta suburbs, says Wilson. Or in Brown County, Wisconsin or Oakland County in Michigan. They ought to thinking about the fundamental blocking and tackling of campaigning, doing the voter registration and organizing. But Democrats would rather focus on kitchen-table issues.

The footer links below are the sort of blocking and tackling Wilson is talking about: 1) get-out-the-vote mechanics and logistics at the county level, and 2) an unnoticed voter registration tactic state parties might deploy if they could think outside the box (says voice crying in the wilderness).

(h/t SS)

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Request a copy of For The Win, 4th Edition, my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us.
If in a position to Play to win in 2022 (see post first), contact tpostsully at gmail dot com.

The GOP Agenda

Mehdi Hassan:

In just 60 seconds, I listed the dozens of common-sense, hugely-popular Democratic bills that House Republicans have voted against: from baby formula money to free hearing aids to background checks to $1400 checks to many more.

Originally tweeted by Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) on May 23, 2022.

Keep this in mind when you hear the Republicans say they will help all the women who are forced to give birth against their will keep this in mind. The only thing they will ever willing spend money on is rich people and weapons.

Actual righteousness or self-righteousness?

The Southern Baptists have a choice to make

A new report on the Southern Baptists’ cover up of sexual abuse has the religious right in a tough place. Should they do something about it or simply dismiss it as more “woke” nonsense designed to turn men into pansies and empower women to dominate them? There’s every reason to assume they will do the latter, I’m afraid. The minute they made common cause with the lying, libertine, con man Donald Trump, I’m afraid they revealed their true character.

Here’s Ed Kilgore’s take on the whole ugly story:

The Southern Baptist Convention is America’s largest Protestant denomination, with over 14 million members, and a powerhouse in conservative politics and culture. It is famed for its self-conception as an assembly of believers committed to righteous living according to a strict ethos based on biblical inerrancy. But in 2019, Southern Baptists were roiled by an elaborate investigative report from the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News documenting 700 cases of sexual abuse by clergy and other employees of SBC churches:

The newspapers spent nearly a year building a database of church leaders and volunteers who pleaded guilty or were convicted of sex crimes in the past 20 years. Most are now in prison or are registered sex offenders. More are from Texas than from any other state …

Victims of sexual abuse had pleaded for the SBC to act, saying it was allowing predators to move from church to church. But the SBC in 2008 rejected all proposals to produce such a registry, saying the organization could not tell its 47,000 member churches whom to hire or ordain.

As voices within and beyond the denomination blasted the SBC for its apparent refusal to deal with a sexual-abuse crisis, the 2021 annual meeting of the SBC authorized a third-party investigation into the allegations. The designated investigator, Guidepost Solutions, has now issued a scathing 400-page report making it clear not only that the allegations were accurate but that the SBC’s powerful executive committee had itself tracked abuse cases for years and deliberately covered them up. Here’s the core finding of the “bombshell report,” according to the Houston Chronicle:

For 20 years, leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention — including a former president now accused of sexual assault — routinely silenced and disparaged sexual abuse survivors, ignored calls for policies to stop predators, and dismissed reforms that they privately said could protect children but might cost the SBC money if abuse victims later sued.

The SBC professed helplessness in dealing with sexual abuse, though it had managed to militantly stamp out any sign of “liberalism” in its churches following the “conservative resurgence” that took over the once proudly decentralized denomination in the 1980s and 1990s. The Chronicle reported:

Anyone who contacted the national office to report a suspected case of sexual abuse at a Southern Baptist church was either met with silence or told that the SBC had no power to take action against congregations that concealed abuses.

The SBC’s governing documents allowed for the removal of churches that ordained women or “endorse” homosexuality, but leaders said they had no such oversight when it came to churches led by convicted sex offenders. “Behind the curtain, the lawyers were advising to say nothing and do nothing, even when the callers were identifying predators still in SBC pulpits,” Guidepost found.

While the sexual-abuse cover-up did not follow strict factional lines, the same people who demanded an investigation of the sexual-abuse cover-up were calling for greater SBC accountability on racism and were warning of the denomination’s political alliance with Donald Trump and the Republican Party. The most prominent dissenter, former denominational spokesman Russell Moore, who cut ties with the SBC last year over its stonewalling of various concerns, told Christianity Today the new report showed the sexual-abuse scandal was far worse than he had realized:

For years, leaders in the Executive Committee said a database — to prevent sexual predators from quietly moving from one church to another, to a new set of victims — had been thoroughly investigated and found to be legally impossible, given Baptist church autonomy. My mouth fell open when I read documented proof in the report that these very people not only knew how to have a database, they already had one.

Allegations of sexual violence and assault were placed, the report concludes, in a secret file in the SBC Nashville headquarters. It held over 700 cases. Not only was nothing done to stop these predators from continuing their hellish crimes, staff members were reportedly told not to even engage those asking about how to stop their child from being sexually violated by a minister. Rather than a database to protect sexual abuse victims, the report reveals that these leaders had a database to protect themselves.

The SBC Executive Committee issued a statement saying “they were grieved by the report and committed to ‘doing all we can to prevent future instances of sexual abuse’ in churches,” the Chronicle reports.

The timing of the Guidepost Solution report is important: Next month, the SBC is holding its annual meeting in Anaheim, California, and the fresh allegations could take some of the wind out of the sails of militant conservatives who want the SBC to double down on political engagement by doing more to fight “critical race theory” and any hint of tolerance for feminism or LGBTQ+ rights. The designated ultraconservative candidate for the SBC presidency is Florida pastor Tom Ascol, who, according to Baptist News, is focused on the alleged threat of liberalism rather than conservative hypocrisy: “One of the major wedge issues between current SBC leadership — which is conservative by any external standard — and the groups supporting Ascol … is fear that the SBC is sliding into ‘liberalism’ and its leaders are being too influenced by a ‘woke’ agenda that is feminizing men and challenging male authority.”

I’ll be shocked if they don’t go that way.

The former head of the SBC Russell Moore who resigned in protest over this and other misdeeds wrote a piece about this that opens like this:

They were right. I was wrong to call sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) a crisis. Crisis is too small a word. It is an apocalypse.

Someone asked me a few weeks ago what I expected from the third-party investigation into the handling of sexual abuse by the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee. I said I didn’t expect to be surprised at all. How could I be? I lived through years with that entity. I was the one who called for such an investigation in the first place.

And yet, as I read the report, I found that I could not swipe the screen to the next page because my hands were shaking with rage. That’s because, as dark a view as I had of the SBC Executive Committee, the investigation uncovers a reality far more evil and systemic than I imagined it could be.

Yeah. I would add that their approach to politics is more evil and systematic than any of imagined it would be, Listening to their flock out there screeching about morality is pretty hard to take these days.

Mutual grievance among friends

It’s a powerful bonding experience

 Credit:Nathanial Schmidt, special to ProPublica

If all politics is local, we really do have a problem. This story by ProPublica about one guy in Wisconsin shows that many of the battles we wage are going to happen on the ground. I hope progressives are getting prepared for this

Jay Stone grew up in the rough-and-tumble world of Chicago ward politics, the son of a longtime city alderman. But his own forays into politics left him distrustful of Chicago Democrats.

When he ran for alderman in 2003, he was crushed at the polls after party leaders sent city workers out to campaign against him. Even his own father didn’t endorse him.

Then when Stone sought the mayor’s office in 2010, he only mustered a few hundred of the 12,500 signatures needed to qualify for the ballot. He filed a federal lawsuit over the requirement and lost.

His father, Bernard Stone, who held office for 38 years, once told the Chicago Tribune: “My son is very good at what he’s trained to do. And that’s not politics.”

Jay Stone’s training was in hypnotherapy, and he eventually walked away from Chicago politics, carving out a living using hypnosis to help people with anxiety, weight gain, nicotine addiction and other issues. Only in retirement, and after a move to Wisconsin, did he finally find his political niche.

In 2020, Stone played a crucial, if little-known, role in making Wisconsin a hotbed of conspiracy theories that Democrats stole the state’s 10 electoral votes from then-President Donald Trump. The outcry emanating from Wisconsin has cast Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as a force of untoward political influence and helped create a backlash against using private grants, including large donations from Zuckerberg, to assist election officials across the country.

In Wisconsin, Stone has finally been embraced politically, by activists and politicians who, like him, didn’t approve of the so-called “Zuckerbucks” or of big-city Democratic mayors. They, too, are unhappy with the way the 2020 presidential election was run in Wisconsin and how it turned out. And they, too, show no inclination of giving up, even when their claims have been rejected and other Republicans have told them it’s time to move on.

“The best part of getting involved in politics in Wisconsin is the wonderful people I’ve been meeting,” Stone said in an interview. “They’re just a great group of men and women that I admire and respect.”

[Do not underestimate the power of community in fueling all this grievance. people bond ofverthis stuff. And they are having fun doing it.]

The questioning of the legitimacy of President Joe Biden’s 20,000-vote victory in Wisconsin continues thanks to Stone and others who have emerged to take on outsize roles after the election. Among them: a retired travel industry executive who has alleged voter fraud at nursing homes. Ten alternate GOP electors who signed documents to try to subvert the certification of Biden’s election. And some state legislators who are still looking for ways to hand the state to Trump, a year and a half after the election.

Stone hasn’t garnered much public attention, but records indicate that in the summer of 2020 he was the first person to complain to state authorities about grant money accepted by local election officials. The funds were earmarked for face masks, shields and other safety supplies, as well as hazard pay, larger voting facilities, vote-by-mail processing, drop boxes and educational outreach about absentee voting.

Stone, however, saw the election funding, which came from a Chicago nonprofit, as a way to sway the election for Biden by helping bring more Democratic-leaning voters to the polls in Wisconsin’s five largest cities.

The Wisconsin Elections Commission rejected Stone’s claim last year, on the grounds that he didn’t live in any of the cities he mentioned and that the complaint did not allege any violations that the commission had the authority to investigate. A separate complaint Stone filed with the Federal Election Commission, in which he objects to the Zuckerberg money, has not been resolved.

Nonetheless, the idea that the election was somehow rigged lives on.

Chief among the election deniers is Michael Gableman, who served on the state Supreme Court for a decade. A Trump ally, Gableman was named as special counsel by the GOP-controlled State Assembly to investigate the legitimacy of Biden’s victory in Wisconsin. Not only did Gableman give Stone’s accusations a platform, he took them even further. In his review for the Assembly, Gableman labeled the grants a form of bribery.

Gableman expressed his admiration for Stone during a March interview on the “Tucker Carlson Today” show, which streams online.

It’s “a private citizen, a guy named Jay Stone, who really deserves a lot of credit,” Gableman said, referring to questions about the election grants.

“He saw all of this coming,” Gableman said. “And he’s not a lawyer. I don’t know what his particular training is — he’s trained in the medical field. He filed a complaint with the Wisconsin Elections Commission back in August of 2020, well before the election. And he foresaw all of this, he foresaw the partisan nature of all of the Zuckerberg money and all of the Zuckerberg people coming in to influence the election.”

Gableman, who has not responded to requests for an interview, had hired Stone as a paid consultant for his review by the time he appeared on Carlson’s show.

But that’s not the only thing keeping Stone from a quiet retirement in Pleasant Prairie, not far from the Illinois border, where he grows his own fruits and vegetables and heats his home only with firewood. Once again, he’s got his eyes on political office. This time he’s running for the Wisconsin State Senate.

He could very easily win and you know what a guy like him will do with that power.

Read on. It’s a fascinating look at the post-democracy American right.