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Month: March 2023

Why isn’t Trump back on twitter?

A theory

I’ve been wondering about this too. It’s rather bizarre. He’s in the midst of what is already a tough primary fight and his twitter game was instrumental in his 2016 campaign. But despite Elon Musk’s entreaties to return he’s not back on the platform for some reason where he still has a massive following.It just seems unlikely that he’s content with Truth Social where his engagement is tiny by comparison.

Today in the Bulwark, Kimberley Whele discusses that SEC investigation I mentioned the other day in which Trump may be implicated in a money laundering crime to do with his Trump Media company. In the process she notes that this may be the reason he’s not returning to twitter:

Donald Trump is involved in yet another probe that could potentially result in criminal charges against him or his associates, this one a yearslong federal investigation by the SEC and DOJ relating to the creation and funding of his Truth Social platform.

A final twist in the criminal probe involving Trump Media involves the former president’s use of social media. He was banned from Facebook and Instagram following the January 6th attack on the Capitol, but Meta (which owns those platforms) announced in January that he would be reinstated, and on Friday of last week, he resumed posting on Facebook.

Yet he has not yet returned to what was once his favorite mode of communicating with the public—tweeting—even though Elon Musk reinstated Trump’s Twitter account last November. Trump’s Truth Social platform has, again, a total of 2 million monthly users; his dormant Twitter account is vastly larger, with 87.4 million followers as of today. So why has he stayed away from Twitter?

The reasons no doubt include the stalled merger. If Trump gets back on Twitter, he will devalue his own platform and disappoint investors. Shareholders could then sue him. Columbia University law professor Eric Talley told Semafor: “If it’s going to look, later on, that he never had that intention” of staying off Twitter “but he just wanted to convince people that they should go ahead and close [the SPAC deal] that’s kind of a textbook securities fraud lawsuit.”

That makes perfect sense. He’s pulled a shady deal to get this silly platform going and now he’s stuck. How very Trumpy.

Grooming kids for what?

People in the comments are all protesting that the shirt isn’t really about that. But she’s right:

These people, including Rand Paul are “grooming” kids to be violent sexual psychos.

Somebody’s having a rough time

DeSantis gave a back-handed statement this morning in which he repeatedly used the words hush money payments to a porn star” repeatedly. (The video is in a post below.) Trump isn’t happy about it

Did he just hint that Ron DeSantis molested young men when he was a high school teacher? Lol. It’s going to be a long campaign.

His meltdown is impressive. This is just from the last 48 hours. And it’s not all of them:

Let it sink in once again that this man is the leader of the Republican Party, was president of the United States and has a decent chance of becoming president again. And he is certifiably nuts.

But then, so are his fans:

20 years ago today

The press got so excited

Those who were following politics 20 years ago surely remember how the media reacted to the invasion of Iraq. I’ve never seen them so stimulated. Here’s what I wrote on this day in 2003:

Resistance Is Futile

The United States knows all and sees all. Schwartzkopf said he’s never seen anything like this “awesome” technology. The BBC said “it’s as if the US has a 3 dimensional picture of every single thing that is happening in Baghdad.” No need to tell the Brits about the strike, though. Gotta move fast. They may represent 70% of the coalition ‘o the willin’, but Blair is still a limey twit, always making Bush sound stupid. Killing Saddam’s like swatting a fly. We have X-Ray vision and he’s probably dead. We think. Like Osama.

Oh wait.

We got to watch Bush putting on his make-up on the BBC feed for about 5 minutes before the speech. He looked psyched. I believe he mouthed the words “what, me worry?”

Aaron Brown may cry at any moment with all this “exquisite tension.” I believe he soiled his trousers when Nic Roberts said the word “anti-aircraft.” Brian Williams needs some of that white stuff under his eyes but his shirt is mighty crisp. Oliver North is “embeded” with the Army and can’t stop himself from screaming “charge, you cowards, charge!” The troops smile indulgently.

The war show is, so far, very disappointing. When Bernie and Peter were hiding under their beds back in ’91 at the Baghdad Hilton, and a handsome gas masked Bibi spoke calmly from Tel Aviv in his mellifluous American accent, it was new and exciting. The Patriot missiles were faster than a speeding scud and could pluck that baby right out of the sky. Cool fireworks. (Of course, we later found out they couldn’t hit water if they were pushed over the side of a boat.)

Still, it all was new and so post-pac man. I’m not seeing it now, no matter how they rhapsodise about the technology. I wonder if people are still watching. Especially since there’s nothing to watch. We just turned on “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”

But, I imagine it’s pretty darned exciting in Baghdad this morning. I imagine it feels pretty real and stimulating to them.

In fact, I would imagine that in a day or two all those men and women and kids in Baghdad are going to feel like New Yorkers on the morning of September 11th .

They deserve it just as much as we did.

——————-

The War Show

CNN has it goin’ on. Baghdad Under Seige, Part I put them on the map and they own the sequel, too, so far. Nic Robertson is the only guy worth watching. Aaron Brown’s trying to be Dan Rather, but Dan Rather is still here and he does this verbose sanctimony so much better.

FoxNews proves what we always knew. It is to real news as professional wrestling is to boxing. Fake. They have nothing to offer when something real is happening. Colonel Ollie is unintentionally hilarious.

CBS has the insignia of the military unit in which their correspondent is “embedded” up as a huge logo on the side of the screen, while said correspondent, all dressed up like big grown-up soldier, broadcasts by video phone which delivers its images in an otherwoldly green.

Brokaw suddenly and shockingly looks old and Ted Koppel looks uncomfortably like Dukakis in a tank. Big hair just doesn’t work with the military thing.

And, according to Strangefeld, the war hasn’t even started. When “Shock and Awe” does start, it will be “something we have never seen before.” Cool. Maybe phasers and lasers and MOABS. So, there is still time to get the show together. Tom Friedman’s poppin’ up the Reddenbacher as we speak, rootin’ for president Quarterback’s Hail Mary to hit Saddam right between the eyes. I’ll bet he’s got that CD of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” playing on a loop..

We’re at blinking, neon orange. Tents are being pitched all over Washington as we speak. 

How to deal with a Dear Leader under indictment

“Fall in line” seems to be the order of the day

Donald Trump announced over the weekend that he was going to be arrested on Tuesday by publishing a series of hysterical posts on his Truth Social media platform exhorting his followers to take to the streets in protest. As it turns out he doesn’t actually know that he’s being arrested on Tuesday but surmised it from the media reports and decided to signal his loyal followers to get organized. As I write this it seems that an indictment is imminent but there is at least one more witness scheduled to testify to the grand jury today (Michael Cohen’s former lawyer), so it’s unclear exactly when it’s coming.

Trump isn’t taking it well:

Social media set itself on fire over Trump’s announcement and some of Trump’s minions appeared on TV to echo his rage suggesting that the case is being brought to hide the crimes of the “Biden Crime Family” which includes the widow of the late Beau Biden. One Fox News commentator bizarrely suggested that Manhattan District Attorney (DA) Alvin Bragg is being funded by the federal government and is therefore tampering with the 2024 election:

Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani wailed that prosecuting political figures is a sign of a nation in decline. “You can look at ancient history, and you can see this is the kind of thing that ends a civilization.” Alex Jones claimed that this is timed with the International Criminal Court charging Russian president Vladimir Putin for “evacuating children from a war zone” (actually child trafficking) because it’s a globalist conspiracy. An attorney who represents January 6 defendants even went so far as to compare Trump to Nelson MandelaMartin Luther King Jr. and yes, even Jesus Christ. It is Lent, after all.

The Republican establishment was hardly more restrained.

Here we go again — an outrageous abuse of power by a radical DA who lets violent criminals walk as he pursues political vengeance against President Trump. I’m directing relevant committees to immediately investigate if federal funds are being used to subvert our democracy by interfering in elections with politically motivated prosecutions.

After a flurry of media criticism (and probably some quick polling) he called for “calmness” on Sunday, weirdly insisting that Trump didn’t actually mean that people should protest when he posted “PROTEST, PROTEST, PROTEST!”

After spending the last seven years chanting “lock her up!” at every political gathering they are now declaring the end of the republic if Trump is prosecuted.

It’s very interesting to see all these newly minted civil libertarians clutching their pearls at an “overzealous prosecution” after denigrating DAs all over the country for using prosecutorial discretion. It’s equally notable that after spending the last seven years chanting “lock her up!” at every political gathering they are now declaring the end of the republic if Trump is prosecuted. Consistency is not their strong suit.

More concerning is the prospect of real violence breaking out over this There is already some talk on the Trump forums about surrounding Mar-a-Lago to prevent police from entering. Some posters even suggested they be prepared to shoot helicopters out of the sky. There was a time when I think we would have ignored such talk as the cosplaying of a bunch of online poseurs but after January 6 you can’t brush this kind of talk off lightly.

Trump’s attorney has been all over TV assuring the public that he will voluntarily appear if he is indicted so a big Florida confrontation is unlikely. According to the Guardian, when Trump traveled to Tulsa Oklahoma on Saturday for the NCAA Wrestling Championship, he indicated that he would like to personally go to the Manhattan criminal court so that he can turn it into a massive spectacle, which sounds like him. As long as it’s happening anyway he might as well get some face time on TV, right? His lawyers disagree, wisely suggesting that they try to negotiate a surrender at a remote location for security reasons. Who knows what he’ll ultimately decide to do?

As Mike Pence and Kevin McCarthy and dozens of others including Marjorie Taylor Green, R-Ga., JD Vance, R-Oh.,and Elise Stefanik, R-NY, rushed to condemn the impending indictment, not a word was heard from the presumed presidential candidate and Trump’s greatest rival. Recall, DeSantis stepped up immediately after the Mar-a-Lago search last August and ranted against the federal government for failing to raid Hillary Clinton’s house. “They’re enforcing the law based on who they like and who they don’t like. That is not a republic, maybe it’s a banana republic when that happens!” he thundered. So far this time, on news of a looming indictment, crickets.

This has not gone unnoticed by the Trump people. The New York Times reported that the knives are out. There is a concerted effort across the right-wing media to call DeSantis out for failing to support the former president against the witch hunt:

Mr. Trump has used the possibility of charges, which would stem from an investigation into hush money Mr. Trump’s lawyer paid to a porn actress before he was elected in 2016, to cast himself as a victim of political persecution. Although his rivals largely want to keep a distance, Mr. Trump’s team is bent on pushing them to choose sides, risking the wrath of Republicans loyal to the former president.

You have to almost admire the elegance of the straight jacket in which Trump has wrapped DeSantis. If he defends Trump he looks like a weakling, especially in light of the barrage of insults Trump has been hurling at him over the past couple of weeks. If he doesn’t he offends the MAGA base that he’s been turning himself inside out for to prove that he’s more Trump than Trump. And although it’s unlikely, DeSantis could be forced into an even more painful position should Trump decide not to surrender, requiring his rival to decide whether to extradite him to New York.

Trump has been telling everyone who will listen that this will actually help his campaign by rallying the troops. If he’s right that may just leave DeSantis standing there at the station as the Trump train speeds right by him. Donald Trump is the only politician in America whose criminal indictment might very well wind up destroying his top rival’s candidacy as he sails to the Republican nomination. 

Update —

Lol:

He does manage to say “hush money to a porn star” over and over again too, so hats off to him. Unfortunately, he may think that bothers the MAGA crowd and I think we know they actually admire it.

Ain’t that the truth?

Luckovich again

https://twitter.com/mluckovichajc/status/1637797215484669955

Gov. Wokety-woke DeWoke has even lost Bret Stephens (like I care): “He’s showing he’s just another George Costanza Republican, whose idea of taking a foreign-policy stand is to “do the opposite” of whatever the Democrats do.”

Gail Collins and Stephens got distracted by DeSantis before making a passing reference to the prospect of a Donald Trump indictment this week.

Joe Scarborough (like I care) believes any indictment will fire up Trump’s base briefly before fading, and any indictment will erode Trump’s support in Wisconsin, in Michigan, in Pennsylvania and elsewhere. Sounds about right.

But before that fade happens:

It’s not paranoia if….

Coming soon to a red state near you

Dominic Anthony Walsh/Houston Public Media

Further evidence this morning that opposition to democracy has become a feature of the Republican Party. And not of the Trumpublican Party, mind you. This trend predates the Menace from Mar-a-Lago.

Will Bunch comments on doings in Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s Texas that merit attention yet again. Texas officials last week announced the state’s takeover of the eighth-largest public school system in the country: Houston’s.

Take note, Bunch cautions:

First of all, the move is outrageous. Despite facing the same struggles as most large urban school districts around poverty and disinvestment, topped by the double whammy of COVID-19 and the natural disaster of Hurricane Harvey, Houston schools have been improving under metrics set by the state. Even the one “failing high school” cited by the Texas Education Agency for its takeover — which will allow the GOP administration to supersede the elected school board and appoint its own superintendent — has raised its grade to a passing “C.”

No wonder most local leaders in the Gulf Coast metropolis think this move by Abbott’s minions has little to do with what’s best for Houston’s 195,000 public schoolkids — 62% Latino and 22% Black — and everything to do with the grown-up politics of punishing a city now run by people of color who vote mostly Democratic, as well as giving Team Abbott a new venue to wage the GOP’s war on what they call “woke education.”

“Woke” now being MAGA-ese for nonwhite. Bishop James Dixon, president of the local NAACP, told U.S. News & World Report the move reflects a pattern in a “war against minority culture and especially African Americans and Latinos.”

Bunch continues:

Increasingly, Republicans are using their control of statehouses in red America to simply override election results in blue-dot localities that they don’t like, but especially when the ballot box winners are the choice of Black and brown voters. In Houston, where seven of Houston’s nine elected school trustees are African American or Latino, the Abbott administration’s moves against the school district accelerated around the same time that the city’s Harris County also elected 19 judges who are Black, female and Democratic.

But nationwide, this isn’t even the worst example of predominantly white Republicans establishing a new “cancel culture” against Black and brown democracy. That would be in Jackson, Miss., where what critics call “a Jim Crow bill” that would take at least some of the judicial system in the Black-majority capital city, and control of the police, away from elected officials and put it into the hands of the heavily GOP statehouse. Although the latest version of the bill has been moderated — perhaps under the sunlight of bad publicity —the measure is still opposed by officials like Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, who calls it “plantation politics.”

Readers may recall, as Bunch does, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently removing an elected Democratic prosecutor in Tampa he did not like. Republicans in control of Pennsylvania’s state House chamber “impeached Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner over policy — no misconduct was alleged — less than a year after city voters had overwhelmingly reelected him.”

It’s a bad look for a Republican Party emboldened enough not to care about appearances, Bunch suggests.

For much of American history, the ultimate goal of their movement — white, patriarchal rule, at any cost — was maintained through a combination of populist mob rule and disenfranchisement of women until 1920 and Black voters until 1965. Plan B since that latter year’s enactment of the Voting Rights Act has included less blatant forms of voter suppression — from strict ID laws to felon disenfranchisement — but even that hasn’t prevented the white-dominated GOP from becoming a national minority party, still believing in its entitlement but lacking the numbers.

In 2023, there is nothing subtle about the anti-democratic and arguably fascist bent of this effort. Much attention has understandably been focused on the most blatant manifestation — Donald Trump’s attempted coup on Jan. 6, 2021, and his supporters’ arguments that state lawmakers can overrule the popular vote in awarding presidential electors. But the essence of their authoritarianism is taking root in the arena where Republicans have the most leverage: The power of GOP legislatures to strip home rule from the blue cities in their jurisdictions.

MAGA-fied, the GOP no longer feels the need to be coy about its antidemocratic sentiments nor to conceal its efforts at power consolidation as a minority party. North Carolina Republicans in November won control of the state Supreme Court. Republican legislators promptly asked the court to rehear a case concerning GOP-drawn redistricting maps ruled illegal partisan gerrymanders by the previous court one year ago. Maps drawn under court order and used in 2022 resulted in a 7-7 congressional delegation in the evenly divided state. Republicans mean to make most of the Democratic incumbents one-termers in 2024.

Then there is Moore v. Harper. The case pending before the U.S. Supreme Court (again, from North Carolina) involves the “fringe independent state legislature (ISL) theory” that would sanction state legislatures overruling the will of voters in assigning presidential electors.

“It is rare to encounter a constitutional theory so antithetical to the Constitution’s text and structure, so inconsistent with the Constitution’s original meaning, so disdainful of this Court’s precedent, and so potentially damaging for American democracy,” wrote respected conservative circuit court Judge J. Michael Luttig (retired) and others in an amicus brief.

As for Republicans’ moves against public schools, I haven’t the time to link to all the posts I’ve written about GOP efforts to divert states’ mandated public education funding into the hands of for-profit grifters.

Just yesterday, local legislators warned a forum here of GOP proposals to attach partisan labels to candidates in school board races in North Carolina.

They’re using any and every tool at their disposal to secure their grip.

Girls banned from talking about their periods?

That seems to be on the agenda in Florida

This is the nonsense Ron DeSantis and the GOP brain trust believe will win them a general election:

As Florida Republicans are introducing and advancing a wave of bills on gender and diversity that are likely to be signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), one GOP lawmaker acknowledged this week that his proposed sexual health bill would ban girls from talking about their menstrual cycles in school.

During a Florida House Education Quality Subcommittee hearing Wednesday, state Rep. Ashley Gantt (D) questioned her Republican colleague, state Rep. Stan McClain, on his proposed legislation that would restrict certain educational materials used in state schools, which Democrats and critics have likened to banning books. House Bill 1069 would also require that instruction on sexual health, such as health education, sexually transmitted diseases and human sexuality, “only occur in grades 6 through 12,” which prompted Gantt to ask whether the proposed legislation would prohibit young girls from talking about their periods in school when they first start having them.

“So if little girls experience their menstrual cycle in fifth grade or fourth grade, will that prohibit conversations from them since they are in the grade lower than sixth grade?” Gantt asked.

McClain responded, “It would.”

The GOP lawmaker representing Ocala, Fla., later clarified that it “would not be the intent” of the bill to punish girls if they came to teachers with questions or concerns about their menstrual cycle, adding that he’d be “amenable” to amendments if they were to come up. The bill ended up passing, 13-5, on Wednesday in a party-line vote, as GOP legislators make up a supermajority in the chamber.

It’s nice of him to say that he might allow girls to talk about their periods in the lower grades but DeSantis and his accomplices think it’s “sexualizing” them so I would guess this will be a point of contention in Florida’s schools regardless of what it says in a final bill. Teachers are going to be worried about saying anything that has to do with race, gender, bodies or sexuality in any context. That includes menstruation.

I went to grade school in the dark ages when nobody talked about anything. And even then it wasn’t this bad. This is like something from the Ayatollah’s morality police.

Can this win a national election? I really doubt it.

Fox is not news

It’s part entertainment and part GOP activism. But it’s not news.

Margaret Sullivan notes that they are knowingly misinforming their audience while claiming to be protected by the first amendment:

As it tries to defend itself against the accusation that it knowingly spread lies about the 2020 presidential election, Fox News has touted some lofty notions about the role of journalism in a democratic society.

“There will be a lot of noise and confusion generated by Dominion and their opportunistic private equity owners,” said a recent company statement, “but the core of this case remains about freedom of the press and freedom of speech, which are fundamental rights afforded by the Constitution and protected by New York Times v Sullivan.

The background, of course, is that Dominion Voting Systems is seeking $1.6bn in damages from the media giant, arguing that Fox News spread damaging falsehoods purporting that the voting machine company rigged the election to defeat Donald Trump. Dominion intends to show that network representatives at the highest levels – right up to Fox News’s founder, Rupert Murdoch – knew that this was utter nonsense, that the election was valid, and that their primary concern was not truth-telling but appeasing their disappointed pro-Trump audience.

Don’t get me wrong. I believe press rights belong to a wide spectrum of media organizations, whatever their political leanings.

But Fox’s reliance on first amendment protections – while part of a legal strategy that may prove successful in court – is the height of hypocrisy. America’s founders believed it was essential that American citizens be well-informed about the behavior of public officials and other powerful entities, and thus be capable of self-governance.

The recent revelations from court filings, however, make it clear that such a noble mission was far from top of mind at Fox, not just in the aftermath of the 2020 election but going back years.

Take, for example, one of the network’s biggest stars, Sean Hannity, who ventured far outside the bounds of journalistic norms when he appeared with Trump at a 2018 campaign rally. (Fox brass, normally tolerant of their stars’ excesses, went so far as to reprimand him.)

Hannity, who has stated that he’s not a journalist, has played the role of a Trump insider – even an informal adviser to Republican officials. Recall his January 2021 text message to former chief of staff Mark Meadows and Republican congressman Jim Jordan: “Guys, we have a clear path to land the plane in 9 days,” apparently referring to persuading Trump to conclude his presidency peacefully before inauguration day.

“When Hannity advised the president about the ongoing insurrection he did not do so as a journalist but as an ally, a confederate, a teammate, rather than an umpire or observer,” the famed first amendment lawyer Floyd Abrams told me last year, characterizing this as “non-journalistic behavior, in fact almost the precise opposite of journalistic behavior”.

And given Fox’s clear reliance on the landmark press-rights case Times v Sullivan, why haven’t its journalists grilled their new heartthrob, the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, about his newsworthy desire to weaken the journalistic protection it provides?

DeSantis wants the courts to revisit Times v Sullivan, but somehow this doesn’t get the attention of Fox News interviewers. His alarming views on that landmark decision, which established a higher bar for defamation lawsuits involving public figures, haven’t provoked a single challenge in his 12 Fox appearances this year, according to a Media Matters for America database.

Initially, Fox even forbade its own Howard Kurtz, who hosts a weekly show on the news media, from covering the Dominion case. After Kurtz, to his credit, publicly expressed his disagreement with that prohibition, and after plenty of outside criticism followed, the bosses relented long enough last weekend to let him discuss the case and call it a test of the first amendment.

Meanwhile, Fox hosts for years have urged their grievance-hungry audience to despise journalists. (Granted, over the years, Fox has sometimes filed “friend of the court” briefs in support of other media outlets.)

Rants against the media are a mainstay for personalities like Laura Ingraham, who drops disparaging phrases like “leftwing media hacks” and “regime media” into her segments.

But it took Tucker Carlson – the very face of Fox News – to go further in a 2021 interview, calling mainstream journalists “cringing animals not worthy of respect”.

“It just makes me sick. I really hate them,” said Carlson, who more recently has been busy portraying the violent insurrection on 6 January 2021 as a largely peaceful protest or even a friendly tourist visit.

Yet somehow, when it comes time to defend the network’s profit-driven willingness to circulate lies, Fox News is eager to claim solidarity with those supposedly despicable cowards. Now, you see, it’s all about journalists standing together, arm-in-arm, on the very underpinnings of American democracy.

I’m all for press rights and for applying them broadly. But somehow, I don’t think this was what the founders had in mind.

Fox News doesn’t deserve the second word in its name.

\

No it does not.

You love to see it

Huckleberry hoist by his own petard

He created this monster and now it’s trying to destroy him.

I guess Lindsey is banking on the idea that Republicans are so racist that they’ll rally behind moves to go to war with China. And he may be right. But he’s on the wrong side of the argument when it comes to Russia and Ukraine. They support Vladimir Putin, an anti-gay, authoritarian, white nationalist and they don’t give a damn about Ukrainian children. They don’t give a damn about any American children who aren’t the spawn of right wing bigots.

And Lindsey, they don’t really care about family values. They’re Trump voters. Think about it.