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Month: February 2023

He’s just as bad as Trump

Paul Campos on today’s NY Times pander to wingnuts:

Damon Linker advises his “fellow liberals” not to get all hysterical about a potential DeSantis presidency, because after all:

During his time as Florida’s chief executive, he has governed from the hard right, taking aggressive aim at voting rights, pursuing politicized prosecutionsrestricting what can be taught in public schools and universities, strong-arming private businesses, using refugees as human props to score political points and engaging in flagrant demagogy about vaccines. Before that, as a congressman, he supported cuts to Social Security and Medicare and voted for a bill that would have severely weakened Obamacare.

Wait a second . . . that sounds like some sort of authoritarian ethno-nationalist who would pursue nothing but the very worst reactionary policies in order to consolidate his own political power. I mean isn’t that terrible enough?

No it isn’t, because, um, what is the argument here?

But none of it makes Mr. DeSantis worse than Mr. Trump, who also did and sought to do bad things in office: the Muslim travel ban, forcibly separating migrants from their children, and much else.

Could the Trump era have been worse? Absolutely, and here liberals have a point when they suggest Mr. Trump’s ability to wreak havoc was limited by his ineptness. Based on what we’ve seen of Mr. DeSantis’s performance as governor of Florida, a DeSantis administration would likely display much greater discipline and competence than what the country endured under Mr. Trump.

Still not getting it Damon.

OK finally we get some sort of counter-argument:

So let’s stipulate that Mr. Trump and Mr. DeSantis would both try to do bad things in office. Mr. Trump still brings something distinctive and much more dangerous to the contest — or rather, several things. He’s flagrantly corrupt. He lies constantly. He’s impulsive and capricious. And he displays a lust for power combined with complete indifference to democratic laws and norms that constrain presidential power.

Note here the rhetorical copium that reduces the ongoing destruction of liberal democracy by a party now dedicated to eliminating it to doing “bad things in office,” as if we were taking about enacting suboptimal tax policies, rather than nuking the whole polity from fascist orbit.

The most striking aspect of this argument is that Ron DeSantis has always been a 100% Trumper, only now he wants the top spot in the cult. If you have always been an unambivalent Trump supporter, that means you’re more than completely OK with a president who “displays a lust for power combined with complete indifference to democratic laws and norms that constrain presidential power.” Right? So why would you be any different in that regard?

That DeSantis might not be as personally venal as Trump — this remains to be seen of course — is the least significant thing about either man. That Trump steals whatever he can get his hands on is the least dangerous thing about him: As Scott has noted many times, we would be better off if the Republican party was full of grifters rather than true believers. We know that Trump doesn’t believe any of his own bullshit; it’s always grifting all the way down with him. As for DeSantis, who knows, but does anybody want to argue we’d be better off with a sincere fascist, as opposed to somebody who puts on a fascist uniform because it looks good on reality TV?

Liberals have a long history of hyping fears of Republican presidential candidates, from Lyndon Johnson’s “daisy” ad (about Barry Goldwater and a potential threat of nuclear war) to sometimes hysterical warnings about various dire threats posed by John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney in 2012.

We heard similarly terrible things about Donald Trump in 2016 — but this time they were true. As with the story of the boy who cried wolf, a real wolf had finally arrived.

In other words, the real problem isn’t Donald Trump, personally, it’s Trumpism. Ron DeSantis is a Trumpist through and through — Linker’s whole argument admits this! — so the claim that he wouldn’t be any worse than Trump is, even if you hand-wave away the greater competency argument, totally beside the point. This ethno-nationalist authoritarian isn’t any worse than that ethno-nationalist authoritarian isn’t even an argument: It’s an admission that we’re slouching toward national catastrophe.

But of course a reasonable calm non-hysterical liberal like Linker is blind to the very implications of the argument he himself is making, because ultimately he rationalizes away everything that’s happening by pretending — in the face of all the evidence that he himself cites! — that the real problem is the personal character of Donald Trump, as opposed to the character of the movement that made Trump and his successors to that movement possible in the first place.

First, Damon Linker is a liberal? Who knew?

Second, this is all poppycock. Linker is trying to convince readers of the NY Times that it’s hysterical to be opposed to a man who is “no worse” than Trump in terms of what havoc he wants to wreak on America but he’s actually better because he isn’t totally corrupt, he has just endorsed and enabled Trump’s corruption which apparently doesn’t count.

Update: Here’s today’s atrocity in DeSantis’ ongoing question to follow Steve Bannon’s advice to flood the zone with shit:

Begging people to pay attention to what Governor DeSantis is proposing to do to immigrants.

Under his new plan, a mom who drove her undocumented kid to school could be guilty of a second degree felony (same as vehicular homicide) and could be sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Under this proposal, a mom or a dad driving their undocumented kid to school could be sent to prison for 15 years.

If a school bus driver knew a kid was undocumented, this law would make them a felon too!

This proposed text (which may change when the bill is introduced) is so broad that even an ambulance driver taking a person they think is undocumented to the hospital would be committing a felony.

There are no exceptions. Know they’re undocumented and give them a ride? Felony.

There is a federal crime of “transporting” an undocumented immigrant. But crucially, that law requires that the transportation be “in furtherance of [their] violation of law”—aka smuggling.

The grand jury recommendation DeSantis says he wants to pass into law has no such limit.

The language from the grand jury recommendations actually REQUIRES that anyone arrested for “transporting” an undocumented immigrant (even their own children or spouse) be held in jail without release prior to their first appearance in front of a judge.

Under the recommendations, it’s a crime to transport someone who 1) entered illegally OR 2) is present in violation of law.

So if the transportee entered illegally but later fixed their status, it’s still a felony?

To be fair, they’ll probably fix that.

Going to finish off this thread with a “don’t panic… yet” reminder. All we have now is DeSantis’s press release saying he wants to do this.

But we don’t have actual bill text yet, which could be just terrible (not horrific). And the law might not pass.

Originally tweeted by Aaron Reichlin-Melnick (@ReichlinMelnick) on February 27, 2023.

Oh come on, liberals. Stop being so hysterical about this guy. Sure he’s a fascist. But he doesn’t tweet all the time or give people crude nicknames. What’s the problem?

“Shhh. Don’t tell the audience we’re liars or they’ll leave us again…”




Howard Kurtz is in a pickle:

Fox News’s top media anchor wants to cover the bombshell messages released in the ongoing lawsuit between the network and Dominion Voting Systems over the 2o20 election—but the network won’t let him.

“Some of you have been asking why I’m not covering the Dominion Voting Machines lawsuit against Fox involving the unproven claims of election fraud in 2020, and it’s absolutely a fair question,” he said on Sunday’s MediaBuzz. “I believe I should be covering it. It’s a major media story, given my role here at Fox. But the company has decided that as part of the organization being sued, I can’t talk about it or write about it, at least for now. I strongly disagree with that decision, but as an employee, I have to abide by it.”

He could quit. But that would require a lot more integrity from Howard Kurtz than we’ve ever seen in the past.

Remember, these are the people railing daily about cancel culture and censorship.And they are keeping their own audience completely in the dark about this important story. They’re just not covering it at all.

They won’t let anyone do it on their platform:

Trump is trying to be normal

Good luck with that

Donald Trump announced his 2024 presidential campaign over three months ago. The lackluster announcement kick-off event was held at his Mar-a-Lago beach club in front of a small crowd of people, many of whom were reportedly trying to get out of the room halfway through his speech, but security refused to allow it. Some of his most loyal insiders didn’t attend at all, notably, including offspring Don Jr. and Ivanka while the networks, including Fox News, cut away part way through his rambling “low-energy” spiel. Everyone agreed that this announcement didn’t come close to the bedazzled golden escalator pageant of 2016.

So was that the best the great political impresario could do these days?

At the very least it seemed quite clear that he was out of practice. The two years he’d spent ruminating over the Big Lie and attempting to play kingmaker from afar had left him rusty. People were blaming the defeat of the midterms on his endorsements of election denier MAGA candidates and the whispers of “loser, loser, loser” were getting louder. It almost seemed as if he was … depressed, something I don’t think anyone has seen before.

I had assumed that in order to get his energy up he would jump right into his patented rallies. He’d done a few during the midterm campaign for his endorsees but they seemed a bit desultory as well. He never does well when he’s forced to talk up someone other than himself. But he hasn’t done any since his announcement. Instead, he’s been holding smaller events in early states like New Hampshire and South Carolina and appearing as he did this past week at the site of the toxic train derailment in Ohio. It’s almost as if he’s running a regular old presidential campaign. Is Donald Trump actually doing something different this time?

Here’s an excerpt of one in which he’s discussing education policy, evidently intent upon one-upping Florida Governor Ron DeSantis:

That’s reminiscent of Trump’s famous Central Park Five full page ad in which he called for the death penalty and more policing in the wake of the arrest of five young men who later turned out to be innocent. He’s made it clear that one of his top issues is going to be crime and punishment with calls for an expansion of the death penalty to include drug dealers and the use of the federal government in all manner of issues that are actually under state and local jurisdiction.

He’s also put out videos promising radical energy and immigration policies and has taken up the hot new cause of banning “ESG” investing which stands for investing which takes into account environmental, social and governance concerns. None of them are what you would call a real agenda or a plan. They are more like threats. But it’s interesting that he’s doing it at all. He’s rolling out an agenda in a formal format and putting the videos on his website and his social media platform Truth Social. It remains to be seen if he’s going to start using Facebook and Twitter again now that his ban has been lifted but unless he does, these pronouncements aren’t going to get wide circulation. You have to wonder why they haven’t done that yet.

His forays to New Hampshire and South Carolina couldn’t have been more conventional. He gave speeches to smaller crowds and hob-nobbed with local endorsers. And last week’s trip to Palestine Ohio was downright homespun which is not Trump’s usual style at all. He has always thought these personal interactions with the voters were beneath him. Recall what he said in the 2016 campaign:

Don’t forget that when I ran in the primaries, when I was in the primaries, everyone said you can’t do that in New Hampshire, you can’t do that. You have to go and meet little groups, you have to see — cause I did big rallies, 3-4-5K people would come . . . and they said, “Wait a minute, Trump can never make it, because that’s not the way you deal with New Hampshire, you have to go to people’s living rooms, have dinner, have tea, have a good time.”

I think if they ever saw me sitting in their living room they’d lose total respect for me. They’d say, I’ve got Trump in my living room, this is weird.

That’s vintage Trump. He truly believes that people wouldn’t respect him if he was a regular guy, even though he loves a Big Mac and fries just like they do. But in Ohio last week, while Trump didn’t appear in anyone’s living room he did do the next best thing. He went to Mcdonald’s.

That’s Trump’s way of saying that he’s one of them. Trump Jr. went out of his way to claim that, “no one probably eats more of it, per capita, than Donald Trump and it was nice seeing his father “just sitting there at McDonald’s. It was DJT at his best.” Trump Jr’s fiance Kimberley Guilfoyle weighed in on the former president’s “authentic” eating habits as well, rattling off everything he likes to eat at Mcdonald’s including “of course, the fries.”

But there was no more ecstatic supporter than Fox News celebrity Tucker Carlson:

“It’s real,” says Carlson. Sure it is. Trump often pops by the local Mcdonald’s and orders himself and you know he always buys a round of cheeseburgers for the house.

According to the Hill, many of his advisers and allies are thrilled that he’s being more low key and running a more conventional campaign (at least by Trump standards.) He spoke behind a lectern and used some big words when he spoke about the train derailment which I guess shows that he’s evolved.

So, does all this mean that Trump has finally smoothed out all his rough edges and is going to run a regular, run of the mill campaign against Ron DeSantis and the gang? Not bloody likely. He posted a “Viewership Report” on Truth Social allegedly proving that 178 million people watched his little Ohio visit, which is so absurd it’s got to be a joke. He’s obviously dying to get back to his big rallies so I wouldn’t count on many more of these more intimate settings. They’re just too small for that colossal ego.

Salon

He was for it before he was against it

DeSantis’ RINO past

Well, well, well…

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis once strongly supported arming Ukraine to fight Russia, urging then-President Barack Obama to do so as a deterrent to Russian aggression in Eastern Europe – a position at odds with his statements this week questioning the United States’ involvement in the conflict.

As a conservative congressman, DeSantis, now a potential presidential hopeful, urged sending “defensive and offensive” weapons to Ukraine in 2014 and 2015 and even voted to refuse to fund a new missile defense treaty with Russia until they withdrew from Ukraine, according to a review of DeSantis’ past comments by CNN’s KFile.

Once an advocate of a hardline, hawkish approach to Russia by supporting Ukraine, the Florida governor shifted course this week in anticipation of a potential presidential run in a changed, more isolationist Republican party, questioning whether it was in the United States’ interest to be involved in what he called, “things like the borderlands or over Crimea.” He added that Russia was not “the same threat to our country, even though they’re hostile” and downplayed the threats that Russia could invade NATO countries.

DeSantis’ foreign policy pivot from being a self-described follower of the “Reagan school” of foreign policy to a more Trumpian worldview comes as the Republican Party’s voting base has grown increasingly isolationist. A recent poll from Pew Research Center shows 40% of Republican and Republican-leaning independent voters now believe the US is providing too much support for Ukraine, up from 9% last year.

A CNN KFile review of DeSantis’ past comments and actions found that DeSantis consistently supported sending aid to Ukraine and condemned the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 and 2015 and as late as 2017.

In a previously unreported interview with conservative talk radio host Bill Bennett in June 2015, DeSantis said he supported providing arms to Ukraine and NATO neighboring countries after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and criticized the Obama administration for not doing so.

“We in the Congress have been urging the president, I’ve been, to provide arms to Ukraine. They want to fight their good fight. They’re not asking us to fight it for them. And the president has steadfastly refused. And I think that that’s a mistake,” said DeSantis.

“I think that when someone like [Russian President Vladimir] Putin sees Obama being indecisive, I think that whets his appetite to create more trouble in the area. And I think if we were to arm the Ukrainians, I think that would send a strong signal to him that he shouldn’t be going any further,” he added.

In an interview from December 2017, DeSantis continued to align himself with the “Reagan school that’s tough on Russia,” criticizing Democrats for not supporting sending aid to Ukraine.

“A couple years ago, Obama was refusing to provide lethal aid to Ukraine, they were trying to do a reset. The Democrats lauded that,” said DeSantis on Fox News. “They viewed guys like me who are – who are more of the Reagan school that’s tough on Russia as kind of throwbacks to the Cold War. They criticized Mitt Romney in 2012. Now all of a sudden because they’re using it against Trump, they’re so concerned about Russia.”

DeSantis supported Ukraine after Russia illegally annexed Crimea in 2014

In February and March of 2014, Russia invaded the peninsula Crimea in Ukraine and occupied the territory, illegally annexing it and declaring it as a part of Russia, an act that US and European allies decried and punished.

As a freshman congressman serving on the House Foreign Affairs committee at the time, DeSantis voted for a resolution calling on Russia to withdraw its forces from Ukraine and voted on legislation authorizing $68 million in aid to Ukraine and codifying sanctions on Russia, which later passed in the House and a similar bill was later signed by Obama. He also voted to sanction Russian and Ukrainian officials involved in the annexation as well as provide economic assistance to Ukrainians.

In May 2015, DeSantis voted for an amendment in the defense spending bill that would bar funds to implement the START treaty, a nuclear deterrent treaty between the US and Russia, until then-President Obama certified Russian forces were no longer illegally occupying Ukrainian territory. The House approved the amendment, Congress passed the legislation, but Obama vetoed the bill.

DeSantis also co-sponsored a resolution in 2015 supporting free elections without Russian interference in Ukraine, a direct response to the Crimea referendum DeSantis once referred to as a “obviously a farce.”

While DeSantis strongly rebuked Russian aggression, he did not advocate for military intervention, noting in 2014 that US military options were “definitely limited.”

“We have common cause with those folks,” he said in March 2014, referring to Ukrainians who protested the annexation, “but it’s just a type of situation where militarily, we don’t really have any, any options to do much. So, I don’t know if Ukraine as a whole is written off, but I don’t see us doing very much to reunify Crimea with Ukraine.”

DeSantis argued in an interview with Fox News in May 2015 that Putin “knows he can get away with things there. And I think if we had a policy which was firm, which armed Ukraine with defensive and offensive weapons so that they could defend themselves, I think Putin would make different calculations.”

He continued, “And so I think Obama’s policy of weakness is actually making a larger conflict more likely. And I think if you had Reagan’s policy of strength, I think you’d see people like Putin not wanna mess with us.”

After the Ukraine-Russia war broke out in February 2022

Following Russia’s initial invasion in February 2022, DeSantis remained quiet on the issue until he criticized the Biden administration’s response and blamed the invasion on President Joe Biden, citing the Afghanistan withdrawal.

“My feeling is that they haven’t done enough, Europe or Biden’s administration, to really hit Putin where it counts,” he said in a February 2022 news conference, emphasizing the Russian economy’s reliance on oil and gas exports.

He also expressed support for Ukrainians, saying “I was heartened to see them having some moxie to fight back.”

“And let me tell you, if you go into another country with an armed population that is hell bent on resisting you, I mean, it’s gonna be death by a thousand cuts for the Russian army,” DeSantis added.

Days later, DeSantis said in a news conference, “I think that Putin would probably not have done this if he thought the United States was strong, but I think he thinks that the United States is weak because of the impotence of Biden’s administration.”

DeSantis also highlighted his previous support for Ukraine in a different news conference, pointing to weapons for Ukraine funded during the Trump administration.

Now he’s spewing mealy mouthed rubbish like this:

He described the Biden administration’s policy as a “blank check,” implying that his administration would restrict or end aide to Kyiv. (“Just saying it’s an open-ended blank check, that is not acceptable.”)

–He dismissed the notion that Russia poses a threat to American allies, interests, or values. (“It’s important to point out the fear of Russia going into NATO countries and all of that, and steamrolling that is not even coming close to happening. I think they’ve shown themselves to be a third-rate military power.”)

–He blamed the invasion not on Vladimir Putin but on Joe Biden. (“I don’t think any of this would have happened, but for the weakness that the president showed during his first year in office, culminating, of course, in the disastrous withdrawal in Afghanistan.”)

–And he used the fallacious conflation of Ukraine’s national sovereignty with immigration policy in the United States, creating an imagined choice between stricter enforcement of the southern border and helping Ukraine:

“So I think while he’s over there, I think I, and many Americans, are thinking to ourselves, okay, ‘He’s very concerned about those borders halfway around the world. He’s not done anything to secure our own border here at home.’” We’ve had millions and millions of people pour in, tens of thousands of Americans dead because of fentanyl, and then, of course, we just suffered a national humiliation of having China fly a spy balloon clear across the continental United States. So, we have a lot of problems accumulating here in our own country that he is neglecting.”

He sounds like Marjorie Taylor Greene.

He knows what you’ll buy

Putin the salesman

NOTE: An update-related laptop crash kept me from posting this while on the road on Sunday. Two hours of Windows reset and some rebuilding later, it’s fixed.

When health insurance industry whistleblower Wendell Potter spoke here (pre-pandemic), someone asked about those ubiquitous Medicare advantage TV ads. Stay away, Potter advised. Sure, they make the plans sound good, Potter said. They know what you’ll buy.

So does former KGB agent Vladimir Putin.

The Russian dictator is selling. The American right is buying, and some on the left too. If Putin sounds as if he’s running for president in 2024, that’s no accident, writes E.J. Dionne:

“Look at what they’ve done to their own people,” he said of us Westerners. “They’re destroying family, national identity, they are abusing their children. Even pedophilia is announced as a normal thing in the West.” Never mind that Russia is a world leader in sex trafficking.

Putin didn’t stop there. In one rather convoluted passage, he came out against same-sex marriage, backed off a bit and then doubled down:

“And they’re recognizing same-sex marriages,” he said. “That’s fine that they’re adults. They’ve got the right to live their life. And we always, we’re very tolerant about this in Russia. Nobody is trying to enter private lives of people, and we’re not going to do this.”

Well, not quite, but he pressed on: “However, we need to tell them, but look at the scriptures of any religion in the world. Everything is said in there. And one of the things is that family is a union of a man and a woman.”

You can bet Putin reads scripture like George C. Scott in Patton: “Every goddamn day.”

Putin is working to create a right-wing nationalist movment worldwide, Dionne suggests. Right-wing extremists in this country are lining up to join, polls indicate.

Dave Neiwert, an authority on right-wing extremism, commented Sunday on the parallels between the Nazi view of Ukraine and the Russian one today:

From the Haaretz opinion Neiwert cites.

“I was struck how the [Nazi] burning of Belarussian villages bears no slight resemblance to the [Russian] bombing of Ukrainian theaters,” Neiwert tweeted.

Dionne focused Sunday on how Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, a Republican widely assumed to be running for president in 2024, has shifted with Republican opinion away from support for Ukraine. But it is also important to monitor opinion on the far left.

There is a brand of progressive who wakes up each morning and asks, “Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the progressivest of all?” They are so programmatically opposed to U.S. government action, to U.S. historical imperialism, to the military-industrial complex, and to finding fault with anything Democrats in power do, that some have bought into Russian rhetoric and oppose U.S. aid to Ukraine’s fight for survival.

Putin may know what the American far right will buy, but he also understands “horseshoe politics” and what some on the far left will.

Responding to but-what-about-slavery and but-what-about-the Wagner-Group pushback from the left on Sunday, Neiwert answered, “There have been no Ukrainian bombings of Russian theaters, no wanton massacres of Belarussian civilians.”

Last week in a press conference, a reporter asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy what his worst day of the war was. He replied, “Bucha.”

There’s plenty of Bucha video.

We interrupt this fascism….

Will the RW pause its transgender freakout and book banning?

Wuhan Institute of Virology main entrance. Photo by Ureem2805 via Wkipedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

The Department of Energy has a special announcement.

Well, it’s not that special, really. It’s another “low confidence” finding not unlike the Cochrane mask study that Bret Stephens hyped last week in the New York Times. In a classified report, the DOE finds based on new intelligence that there is a low probability that COVID-19 originated from an accidental lab leak in China.

Then come the caveats (New York Times):

Some officials briefed on the intelligence said that it was relatively weak and that the Energy Department’s conclusion was made with “low confidence,” suggesting its level of certainty was not high. While the department shared the information with other agencies, none of them changed their conclusions, officials said.

Biden national security adviser Jake Sullivan would not confirm the intelligence, telling CNN on Sunday “there is no definitive answer” the the origin of the pandemic. The 18 services in the intelligence community have differing assessments.

In addition to the Energy Department, the F.B.I. has also concluded, with moderate confidence, that the virus first emerged accidentally from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a Chinese lab that worked on coronaviruses. Four other intelligence agencies and the National Intelligence Council have concluded, with low confidence, that the virus most likely emerged through natural transmission, the director of national intelligence’s office announced in October 2021.

“Natural” would be the Wuhan animal market theory.

Also naturally, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and colleagues jumped right on hyping the news, proven or not.

It is important to understand where the virus originated for knowing how to stop future pandemics. The Biden administration ordered intelligence agencies to investigate COVID-19’s origins early in his administration.

The Times report continues:

The intelligence agencies have said they do not believe there is any evidence that the coronavirus that causes Covid-19 was created deliberately as a biological weapon. But they have said that whether it emerged naturally, perhaps from a market in Wuhan, or escaped accidentally from a lab is the subject of legitimate debate.

The only debate the extremist right will have over the next few days is whether to take a break from demonizing transgender people, immigrants, and public education, and from its embrace of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, to attend to demonizing China. Media executives at Fox will have to ask themselves whether the network and its audience has the bandwidth.

NOTE: An update-related laptop crash kept me from posting while on the road on Sunday. Two hours of Windows reset and some rebuilding later, it’s fixed.

Woody Harrelson should keep it zipped

I like the guy but …no

It’s bad enough that we have wingnut anti-vaxxers spreading lies and making the world a more dangerous place. Do we really need supposedly left wing movie actors doing the same thing?

After a winding story about smoking weed — shouting-out his pot shop in West Hollywood, The Woods, and claiming his manager, Jeremy, transported weed from the LA shop to New York for him — Harrelson went into a spiel about the pandemic.

The self-proclaimed “anarchist” joked about a supposed movie script, a clear metaphor for the pandemic, that went, “The biggest drug cartels in the world get together and buy up all the media and all the politicians and force all the people in the world to stay locked in their homes, and people can only come out if they take the cartel’s drugs — and keep taking them — over and over.”

Except for the deadly virus that actually killed well over a million people in the US alone in less than two years, this is super right on.

He’s been saying stupid shit about the pandemic for a while. Maybe he could just hang out with Joe Rogan and do that instead of going on SNL?

A phony from the word go

This piece in Forbes takes a look at Trump’s signature building Trump Tower. Let’s just say that like everything else about Trump it’s more BS than reality:

The offices of the New York attorney general and the Manhattan district attorney have both focused on Trump Tower as part of their probes into Donald Trump’s efforts to mislead lenders about the value of his assets. The attorney general filed a $250 million civil suit in September, accusing Trump, his business and his underlings of fraud. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg inherited a related criminal probe when he took office last year, but he hesitated to file charges, and two top prosecutors resigned. Bragg’s office says it is still investigating. Perhaps the district attorney is hoping to turn up additional information.

Forbes has some. Since the early 1980s, long before our efforts had anything to do with a quarter-billion-dollar lawsuit or potential criminal charges, we have been scrutinizing various aspects of Trump’s properties. Our latest look at Trump Tower uncovered three new pieces of potential evidence:

-Property records show that the real estate mogul has been lying about the financial performance of the building since it first opened in 1983.

-Tax and lending documents indicate that Trump lied about the square footage of the office and retail space at the base of the property (not to be confused with his lying about size of the penthouse atop the building, which Forbes previously exposed).

-Portions of a 2015 audio recording, released here for the first time, prove that Trump was personally involved in the efforts to lie about the value of Trump Tower’s commercial space.

Nine days ago, Forbes reached out to the Trump Organization to ask for explanations about various discrepancies in its past statements. An attorney for the firm replied by asking for four weeks to respond, explaining that the legal team was “already quite busy.” Forbes granted a few extra days. A spokesperson for the Trump Organization then sent a statement that did not address the discrepancies but instead took issue with the attorney general’s case. “The attorney general’s attempt to interfere with private loan transactions between sophisticated business parties is utterly baseless and a complete overreach,” the statement said. “Not only was there never a loan default, but all the loans are either current or have been completely paid back in full in the ordinary course of business. Indeed, all of the Wall Street banks that issued these loans profited handsomely.”

It is true that Donald Trump has already taken care of some of the loans at issue in the attorney general’s case. But it is also true that Forbes’ latest revelations, combined with earlier reporting and stacks of documents now in prosecutors’ hands, all point to a simple conclusion: The Trump Organization lied about the value of its properties to lenders for years, and although multiple people inside the firm participated in those efforts, the person at the center of the deceit was Donald Trump.

The article goes on to document in fine detail just how much of a liar he’s been on this topic. It’s voluminous. And it concludes:

There is no doubt about Trump’s personal involvement in this. His 2015 financial statement is explicit: “The estimated current value of $880,900,000 is based on an evaluation by Mr. Trump in conjunction with his associates and outside professionals.” Over the years, similar lines appeared throughout his pumped-up statements, in reference to various assets. He once testified, under oath, that he reviews the annual statements with his chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, and that he generally keeps them handy at his own desk. Despite the absurd numbers that the documents contain, Trump has also signed paperwork in his own hand certifying their accuracy. And he has personally sent the statements to banks. “Hopefully you will be impressed!” he said in a 2011 note to the CEO of Deutsche Bank Securities.

He dispatched his employees to help push the numbers. In one instance, Trump’s CFO Weisselberg told a reporter that the building’s commercial space measured 257,000 square feet, a figure that also appeared on some city filings but was higher than the number listed on lending and tax documents. But no one took things as far as Trump, as became evident in a September 2015 interview with Forbes inside Trump Tower.

“If I wanted to sell Trump Tower today, I’d get $2.5 billion,” he said, roughly doubling the number that Weisselberg had previously suggested to Forbes and tripling the figure listed on his pumped-up financial statement.

“We tried to tell it to [another reporter],” Weisselberg jumped in, perhaps forgetting that the number he tried to tell the other reporter was a fraction of the figure Trump was now claiming. “There’s a comp right across the street for $1.8 billion. Ignored me. Just totally—”

“That sold for $1.8 billion, and it’s smaller,” Trump said, referring to the neighboring Crown Building, which was in fact nearly 150,000 square feet larger than his space in Trump Tower, according to the Trump Organization’s own documents.

Trump then upped the sales price of the Crown Building, suggesting that its storefronts alone fetched $1.8 billion and lamenting the much-lower estimate Forbes had suggested. “When this thing sells, the retail over here sells, for $1.8 billion, and you got me down at $469 million?” Trump said. “It’s a joke.”

Later in the conversation, one of the reporters asked Trump about the profits at his building.

Weisselberg jumped in. “Go by the comp,” he said, referring to the recent sale, even though the Trump Organization valued the building in other years based on its profitability. “You have a comp. You have a real comp.”

But Trump couldn’t resist an opportunity to pump up his profits, too. “What’ll it make, $80 [million]? $70?” he asked Weisselberg, before answering himself. “It’ll make $80, $90 million this year.” The building actually earned more like $15 million of net operating income that year, according to both lending and tax records.

The lies were as clear as they were endless, a continuation of Trump’s years-long crusade to convince everyone—his lenders, the media and the public—that he was billions of dollars richer than he actually was.

If the Manhattan DA or even possibly the SDNY ever decide to take up this obvious fraud in a criminal case, he will just blame everyone but himself. I suspect they know that and it’s probably not easy to prove what everyone knows is true — that Trump, a pathological liar, is the one who directed all this.

I have no illusions that he will ever be held accountable for this stuff. I don’t know if he’ll ever be held accountable for anything. He’s so over the top with his lies that I think he proves that sheer chutzpah can often provide a get out of jail free card.

His election as president was the inevitable consequences of our celebrity culture. Someone was bound to figure out how to game it for the purpose of gaining political power. That it was that orange ignoramus who managed to do it is a sad comment on our society.

I gotcher cancel culture for ya, right here

It’s hard to believe that these right wingers are whining incessantly about free speech and cancel culture but this is just fine::

IN EARLY 2018, the American national security apparatus was fixated on reports that North Korea was building nuclear weapons that could reach the U.S. or that Russia was plotting chemical weapons assassinations in Europe. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump was busy targeting his idea of an enemy of the state: late night host Jimmy Kimmel

The then-president, according to two former Trump administration officials, was so upset by Kimmel’s comedic jabs that he directed his White House staff to call up one of Disney’s top executives in Washington, D.C., to complain and demand action. (ABC, on which Jimmy Kimmel Live! has long aired, is owned by Disney.)

In at least two separate phone calls that occurred around the time Trump was finishing his first year in office, the White House conveyed the severity of his fury with Kimmel to Disney, the ex-officials tell Rolling Stone. Trump’s staff mentioned that the leader of the free world wanted the billion-dollar company to rein in the Trump-trashing ABC host, and that Trump felt that Kimmel had, in the characterization of one former senior administration official, been “very dishonest and doing things that [Trump] would have once sued over.” 

The incident was so bizarre that news of it spread around the corridors of power in Washington, D.C. Other administration officials who had nothing to do with the pressure campaign began hearing from their contacts at Disney about how confused they were that the White House kept telling them Trump wanted Kimmel to tone down his anti-Trump humor.

“At least one call was made to Disney [that I know of],” a third former official, who worked in the Trump White House, recalls. Sources spoke to Rolling Stone on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely and to preserve ongoing relationships in Trumpworld and conservative circles. “I do not know to who[m], but it happened. Nobody thought it was going to change anything but DJT was focused on it so we had to do something…It was doing something, mostly, to say to [Trump], ‘Hey, we did this.’” 

Rolling Stone was able to identify one target of the White House’s ham-fisted, destined-to-fail pressure campaign: former Disney top lobbyist Richard Bates. The sources say Trump’s staff reached out to Bates to convey the president’s anger regarding Kimmel’s monologues and jabs. Bates, who served as a prominent Disney executive and was a Washington fixture for over 30 years, passed away in December 2020.

The pressure campaign ultimately failed, but the previously unreported effort marked yet another moment in which Trump showed an eagerness to wield the immense powers of his office for personal gain and highly petty reasons. (Indeed, one of Trump’s two impeachments was caused by this very impulse.)

And now, as Trump campaigns for the White House once again, there is no sign that his desire to use federal power in this way has ebbed an inch. In a recent radio interview, the former president said he’s entitled to a “revenge tour” if he wins the presidency in 2024 while claiming he wouldn’t avail himself of the opportunity in the event he’s reelected.

But throughout his presidency, Trump devoted inordinate amounts of time toward threatening late night television shows and celebrities over their jokes about the famously thin-skinned former game show host.

In 2018, Trump’s FCC chairman Ajit Pai announced that the agency would investigate a crass joke from Late Show host Stephen Colbert about Trump’s cozy relationship with Vladimir Putin. Trump fumed at Colbert in an interview and called him a “no-talent” who uses “filthy” language. But despite the president’s irritation and complaints from viewers, the FCC ultimately declined to take action against the late night host. As the matter was being examined, the then-president took enough of an interest in it to repeatedly ask aides for updates on if the FCC had made a decision yet, a source with direct knowledge of the queries says.

It is not censorship for private companies to decline to carry speech they find offensive or refuse to platform writers and artists who are associated with socially unacceptable worldviews. (That’s what’s happened with Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams this weekend after he went on a crude racist rant about Black people.) It IS censorship for the government to force them to do that. We used to understand that distinction, as messy as that sometimes is.

They did succeed in getting twitter to remove a tweet that offended but this article shows that tweet was actually 100% correct:

In 2019, Trump’s White House reached out to Twitter and demanded that the social media company remove a tweet from Chrissy Teigen calling Trump a “pussy ass bitch,” according to recent testimony from a former Twitter trust and safety official.

The truth hurts.

Ronna McDaniel is a comedian

He won’t accept the results of the GOP primary unless he wins either. And everyone knows that’s going to be a shitshow.