Here’s a story by Nick Valencia about just one of tens of thousands of people who are being abducted by the government and essentially disappeared.
— On September 16, newlyweds Tucker and Barbara May walked into the downtown Los Angeles federal building believing they were there for her green card interview.
Married this spring, they had followed every rule, filed every form, and spent every dollar to prove their marriage was real.
But their interview was a trap.
“It was never going to be an interview,” he told Nick Valencia News. “It was always a setup.”
Not only was she lured there, her husband said, once inside ICE agents separated her from her lawyer with the excuse of a broken copier. Then, they put her in handcuffs.
“One officer smiled for a selfie with her as she cried,” he added.
By Saturday night, Tucker didn’t know where his wife was.
They sent her to a detention center and was told “we don’t care” when she told them she that a habeas petition and a temporary restraining order had been filed. The facility withheld the legal documents her lawyer had sent which were required to re-open her case until she had already been shipped out to an unknown location.
At every stage, the process her husband described has been calibrated not for justice but for delay—for erasing options, running out the clock, and breaking faith.
“These are abductions,” Tucker said flatly.
The government says that she missed an immigration hearing she was never told about. The government has produced no proof that they ever tried to notify her.
As the article points out, the business model for these detention centers is to have bodies kept there as long as possible. We knew that was the case didn’t we?
There was a time when the whole country was up in arms about family separations, remember? Apparently it’s just not a big story anymore. This man had to beg for a member of the press to write about it and Nick Valencia is the only one who did. I guess the fact that we’re a fascist state just isn’t big news anymore.
That’s the new editorial page editor of the Washington Post sharing their allegedly non-partisan editorial policy.
Can you see the problem here? I knew that you could. He praises Trump for wanting to go back into Afghanistan and also “praises” Democrats who criticize other Democrats he thinks are too radical. Why would anyone think they might have a pro-Trump or partisan GOP agenda? I can’t imagine.
It’s very sad to see the Post go down this road but like so many other institutions the ownership/leadership automatically bent the knee to Trump either because they actually really like the orange freak or they decided that they couldn’t take the risk that he would weaponize the government against some of their precious billions so it’s worth it to sell out the country and humiliate themselves personally.
But then the Post is owned by this piece of work with his wife who for some unknown reason thought it was appropriate to show her bra at the inauguration:
Fox News and Karoline Leavitt working hard to link yesterday's Michigan shooter to the left but can't find a connection. Oops! pic.twitter.com/96AeDx7QBD
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed on Monday that the Mormon church shooter “hated” members of the faith.
Leavitt said on Fox & Friends that she had a conversation with FBI director Kash Patel about Thomas Jacob Sanford, who drove his pickup truck Sunday into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, opened fire on worshippers, and set the building ablaze.
“From what I understand, based on my conversations with the FBI director, all they know right now is this was an individual who hated people of the Mormon faith, and they are trying to understand more about this, how premeditated it was, how much planning went into it, whether he left a note,’ she told Fox News viewers.
“All of those questions have yet to be answered, but certainly will be answered by the FBI. I think the American people in your audience can be assured.”
What? He’s not transgender Antifa? I thought all these shooters were the result of all of us commie leftists being mean to Donald Trump.
Weirdly, it seems he might even be a big Trump guy although that wouldn’t explain why he wanted to kill a bunch of Mormons.
Like all the other lone wolf shooters (and that would be 99% of it) he was clearly a screwed up person with a gun. Period. The attempt to turn all shooters into left wing terrorists is ridiculous since to the extent any of them are political, they tend to be right wing not left wing. And they’re all nuts. But that won’t stop Stephen Miller from deploying the government against all liberals as a national security threat.
BTW: he was a Trump supporter. Note the sign. Of course the two big American flags flying off the back of his Silverado was kind of a tip off too.
“I spoke to the governor, she was very nice,” Trump said. “But I said, ‘Well wait a minute, am I watching things on television that are different from what’s happening? My people tell me different.’ They are literally attacking and there are fires all over the place…it looks like terrible.”
His people are liars and Fox news shows “B” roll of the 2020 George Floyd protests all the time whenever they talk about Portland. He is clueless.
There are no riots in Portland. There is one ICE building that has a few scattered protests outside. That’s it.
All weekend people were posting pictures of families having picnics and downtown coffee shops filled with customers with the hashtag #warravagedportland
Why we fight the budget battle this week cannot be a process fight. A both sides fight. The media will frame it that way because that’s what the media does. LOLGOP with help from Marcy Wheeler and Anat Shenker-Osorio suggested last week that you, Dear Reader, have a roll to play:
We must say loudly and proudly, “No dollars for dictatorship,” emphasizing that this fight isn’t just about Trump ripping healthcare from those who need it most to bail out billionaires. It’s also about restoring Congress’s place in our Constitutional order and rejecting the normalization of authoritarianism.
[…]
From the links we click to the posts we share, to the words we say on any platform, to whatever following we have, it all matters. It all makes the reality that the mainstream media will be feeding back to Democratic members, who must be motivated not to cave.
“We must act as if we are part of the fight, that we have some agency, and we’re not just victims of our often feckless Democratic leadership,” Jason Sattler explains.
As Marcy notes, hectoring weak Democratic leaders like Chuck Schumer will not advance the ball. Our pressure campaign on this budget has to focus on Republicans and the war they are waging against the American people. In Anat-speak, “Continuing to finance fascism means … that this isn’t fascism.”
Thrilled to see growing consensus that Dems must step up in the Continuing Resolution fight. Key to doing so? Refuse to frame this as "shutting down government." Instead, call it what it is – refusing to be an accomplice to turning the government into a weapon against the American people.
Our friend Susie Madrak is experiencing a cash crunch. She’s looking for whatever help you might lend this week. Making things worse is an insurance settlement delayed on account of paperwork. Plus:
In the meantime, my neurologist suspects I have an obscure lupus-like autoimmune disorder that’s causing all kinds of weird symptoms (for one thing, she says the signals my brain are sending to my feet aren’t making it through and I’m off balance) but first she has to rule out blood cancers, etc. There’s also a lesion on my lung and they want an MRI.
President Barack Obama, Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Sergeant James Crowley toast at the start of their meeting in the White House Rose Garden, outside the Oval Office. July 2009 White House photo.
Seth Masket at Tusk came away shaking his head after Ezra Klein’s recent interview with conservative commentator Ben Shapiro about his new book “Lions and Scavengers.” Klein works “extremely hard,” in Masket’s view, to take his arguments seriously. Perhaps because Shapiro takes himself so seriously. (There is a humility shortage on both the far right and the far left.)
Despite the massive, national backlash over the White House assault on freedom of speech, despite our horror at seeing the rule of law gutted by the Trump 2.0 administration, despite the Republican Party’s rejection of the principles of democracy, and despite their embrace of Christian nationalism and strongman rule, Shapiro argues (I haven’t read the book) that what radicalized conservatives is that the left, Klein summarizes, “has turned against the foundations of Western civilization.”
Yes, Shapiro is serious.
“It used to be a fight about policy, but now it’s a fight about whether all this is good or not. And that’s a much more fundamental kind of conflict,” Klein proposes and asks Shapiro what has changed.
So in 2008, Barack Obama ran as a unifying candidate, like him or hate him. I didn’t vote for him. I was not a fan. But Barack Obama ran as somebody who was, in his very personage, unifying America. There was no red America, there was no blue America, there was just the United States. There was no Black or white America.
There were just Americans. And the idea was that he was sort of the apotheosis of the coming together. He was going to be the culmination of a lot of these strands of American history coming together to put to bed so many of the problems that had plagued America over the course of our tumultuous history….
So he runs, he wins. Obamacare happens. There’s a big blowback in the form of the Tea Party. And he reacts to that by essentially polarizing the electorate. He decides that instead of broadcasting to the general electorate an optimistic message about America, he is going to narrowcast his election in 2012. He’s going to base it on a much more identity-groups-rooted politics. He’s going to appeal to Black Americans as Black Americans and gay Americans as gay Americans and Latino Americans as Latino Americans.
Yes, Shapiro is serious. What electing Obama was supposed to mean for conservatives (like Gerald Ford pardoning Nixon) was that the country would declare “the long national nightmare” of racial animus was over and finally would move on without reckoning with it.
The 2009 arrest of Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. for breaking into his own home in Cambridge; Obama said that the police “acted stupidly,” and then convened a White House “beer summit” with Gates and the arresting officer.
The 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin, after which Obama empathized, “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”
The 2014 Ferguson riots, during which Obama said that “a deep distrust exists between law enforcement and communities of color. Some of this is the result of the legacy of racial discrimination in this country.”
Never mind that the Gates arrest was in July of 2009, not during the 2012 campaign. Or that the poster below began circulating in September 2009. No, it was that in 2012 that Democrats decided that demography was their destiny and Republicans felt it was their demise.
“We’re just demographically losing the argument,” Shapiro says of conservatives. So Republicans “need to run the biggest pulsating middle finger that we can. That pulsating middle finger is Donald Trump — so we’re going to run him in 2016.” Time to burn it all down.
Or as Otter put it decades earlier, “I think that this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody’s part!”
That’s the rationalization for conservative radicalization. Not the country electing a Black president and not embracing conservative demands that we stop talking about race (see poster above again).
Masket again:
Basically, it was moments of abuse or violence inflicted upon Black people and Obama pointing out that race was a factor. The exchange after that is interesting:
Klein: It’s hard for me when I look back on that, on the “beer summit” in particular, to hear: That’s what radicalized you all?
Shapiro: Yes. And the reason is: The implicit promise of Barack Obama was the worst conflict in the history of America — which is the racial history of the United States, which is truly horrifying. That in his person, he was basically going to be the capstone of the great movement toward Martin Luther King’s dream.
And when, instead, things seemed to move in the opposite direction, which was: Well, you know, it turns out that Black people in America, they’re inherently victimized by a white supremacist system that puts Black people underfoot….
Klein: It kind of sounds like the interpretation of Obama, at least to you, was that if he’s elected, we’ll agree we’ve gotten past all this — that it’s supposed to make us feel better, and then when it didn’t, that was understood as the betrayal of a promise.
Shapiro: That is how I think most Americans saw it.
This is an important narrative, and it’s not a position just held by Shapiro. Quite a few conservative authors make a similar argument, and I’ve heard similar sentiments from some local political figures I’ve interviewed. The basic idea was that there was some sort of deal: If conservatives permit the election of the first Black president, that will essentially signal the end of institutional racism in the United States, and then we won’t have to talk about race anymore. And any time Obama brought up race he was reneging on that deal.
Now, that narratives breaks down somewhat in a few key areas, such as the fact that this “deal” only existed in conservatives’ minds, and they didn’t vote for Obama anyway. Also, MLK’s dream was about equality and justice, not about putting a Black man in the White House. But Obama, in his style of campaigning in 2007 and 2008, surely did a fair amount to suggest a “post-racial” United States, and sought to allay conservative whites’ fears that he would mainly prioritize Black voters.
My own perspective and Shapiro’s perspective on the past several decades of US politics clearly differ, but there’s a common thread in that racial politics is the main driver. Klein’s question about the Gates beer summit — “That’s what radicalized you all?” — is the right one, and the answer is yes. But it was always about more than a beer summit.
And here we are. We’ve gone from Beer Summit to Beer Hall Putsch.
* * * *
Our friend Susie Madrak is experiencing a cash crunch. She’s looking for whatever help you might lend this week. Making things worse is an insurance settlement delayed on account of paperwork. Plus:
In the meantime, my neurologist suspects I have an obscure lupus-like autoimmune disorder that’s causing all kinds of weird symptoms (for one thing, she says the signals my brain are sending to my feet aren’t making it through and I’m off balance) but first she has to rule out blood cancers, etc. There’s also a lesion on my lung and they want an MRI.
Settled legal precedent in the US is not “gospel” and in some instances may have been “something somebody dreamt up and others went along with”, the US supreme court justice Clarence Thomas has said.
Thomas – part of the conservative supermajority that has taken hold of the supreme court over Donald Trump’s two presidencies – delivered those comments Thursday at the Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law in Washington DC, ABC News and other outlets reported. His remarks preceded the nine-month term that the supreme court is scheduled to begin on 6 October.
“I don’t think that … any of these cases that have been decided are the gospel,” Thomas said during the rare public appearance, invoking a term which in a religious context is often used to refer to the word of God. “And I do give perspective to the precedent. But … the precedent should be respectful of our legal tradition, and our country and our laws, and be based on something – not just something somebody dreamt up and others went along with.”
Among the various cases Thomas and his colleagues are expected to weigh in on is a request to overturn the 2015 Obergefell supreme court decision that legalized marriage for same-sex couples nationwide. Other cases being mulled by the supreme court for its 2025-2026 term involve tariffs, trans rights, campaign finance law, religious rights and capital punishment.
Thomas was in the 5-4 minority that voted against the Obergefell decision.
Remember, Roberts voted with the minority in that case so he’ll be there with Alito, Thomas and Gorsuch. Can we count on Kavanaugh or Barrett on this one? I don’t think so. Kavanaugh is having tantrums about being disrespected and Barrett is a Catholic fanatic.
Do I think they’ll do it? I don’t know. But I see no reason to assume they won’t. They don’t care about precedent that have been upheld for 50 or a hundred years. Why would they care about a ten year old precedent they truly find offensive?
They see Dobbs as their guiding principle.
They overturned Roe, knowing that it would cause a massive reaction. I see no reason they wouldn’t be willing to do the same with Obergefell.
Hegseth, a former Fox News host, last week called U.S. generals stationed around the world to Quantico, Va. The highly-unusual order, which will cost the U.S. millions of dollars to bring the generals to the U.S. on short notice, sparked concerns that the U.S. was on the brink of a major military conflict. However, insider reports indicate that the meeting is essentially a photo-op.
Hegseth plans to video himself giving a speech on “warrior ethos” to the generals, because “the guys with the stars on their shoulders make for a better audience from an optics standpoint,” an insider told CNN.
Of course. But now Trump is stealing his thunder:
President Trump is gearing up to hold court at Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s all-hands military meeting Tuesday.
The 79-year-old president’s appearance, first reported by Axios, adds much more scrutiny—and security presence–to what was already a controversial and expensive meeting.
He wasn’t going to allow Pete to have that big beautiful photo op with all that gold salad all to himself. No way.
It’s telling that the free speech warriors on the right who’ve been caterwauling about cancel culture don’t make up a majority of the GOP. What failures.
YouGov also finds an increase in the share of Democrats and political independents who rate civil rights as their “most important issue.”
Hmm. Maybe the MAGA agenda isn’t all that popular after all.
[T]he problem for Trump (and those who ignore the data) runs deeper than the topline indicates. It’s not just that more people disapprove than approve of Trump, but that the disapprovers feel their emotions much, much more intensely. Depending on the polls you pick for your average, between 46 and 50 percent of U.S. adults tell pollsters they “strongly disapprove” of the job Trump is doing as president. That is double the percent that strongly approve (24%):
This seems like an advantage for Democrats, don’t you think?
And if that’s the case it’s seems very counterproductive for strategists and candidates to rain on their parade by capitulating to the other side. Maybe don’t do that?
A man once appeared on Fox News’ morning show Fox and Friends to offer his opinion about an impending government shutdown over one of America’s perennial budget battles. He had a very clear idea of the problem and how it should be solved, telling the hosts:
Problems start from the top and they have to get solved from the top. The president is the leader, and he’s got to get everybody in a room and he’s got to lead…I really think the pressure is on the president.
The man was Donald Trump speaking about President Barack Obama in 2013.
That was then. After agreeing to meet with Democratic leaders this week to try to head off the looming shutdown next week, Trump decided it wasn’t worth his time. In a long diatribe on Truth Social he claimed that unless the Democrats dropped a dozen demands they hadn’t actually made (“transgender operations for everybody!”) he would not meet with them. So much for presidential leadership.
According to Politico he was actually asked by the GOP congressional leadership not to meet with them as he’d planned. I would guess that’s almost certainly because they were afraid TACO Trump would make some kind of cockamamie deal that would put their members in jeopardy. The last thing you want to do is let Trump be alone in a room with anyone. He is so scattered and undisciplined you just never know which way he’s going to go.
Trump has always believed that government shutdowns would be good for him so he appears to have washed his hands of the matter. GOP elected officials know better. Politico reports that they are badly divided on the best strategy to handle the fact that the Democrats seem to be strangely united and unwilling to bend. They don’t have any practice in dealing with such an unusual phenomenon.
One side, led by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, wants to keep everything simple by saying that the Democrats are refusing to sign on to a clean continuing resolution to extend the budget negotiations (again) for another seven weeks. The idea is to portray the Democrats as being unreasonably obstructionist. The other side, led by House Speaker Mike Johnson wants to scream bloody murder that the Democrats are angling to reverse laws that give undocumented immigrants government benefits. I assume they each have their polling and focus groups backing up their strategies but at this point they’re just drowning each other out.
I made the point a couple of weeks ago that one of the main reasons Democrats were belatedly awakening to the fact that there is no margin in accepting handshake agreements or assumptions of good faith by the Republicans is the fact that the former author of Project 2025 and current Director of Office Management and Budget, Russell Vought, had basically thrown bipartisanship in the garbage and set it a fire when he promoted the highly controversial use of “pocket rescissions”, to unilaterally claw back spending that had already been signed into law. Vought went ahead and did it, using this contested mechanism to cancel $5 billion in congressionally appropriated foreign aid, proving that nothing will stop the administration from going back on its word.
Vought made clear how he feels about bipartisanship with these comments to the Christian Science Monitor last July:
“The appropriations process has to be less bipartisan. I actually think that over time, if we have a more partisan appropriations process—for a time—it will lead to more bipartisanship,
That last line brings to mind a comment by anti-tax advocate Grover Norquist years ago who famously said about Democrats, “they will only become acceptable once they are comfortable in their minority status. Any farmer will tell you that certain animals run around and are unpleasant, but when they’ve been fixed, then they are happy and sedate.” It is an article of faith among many Republicans that once Democrats learn to accept their permanent minority status they will happily do as they are told.
Last week Vought decided to deploy yet another scare tactic by ordering all agencies that are not considered “essential’ in a shutdown to prepare to permanently fire employees if the Democrats don’t bend to his will. This was a fear expressed in the last shutdown by Sen. Schumer but that was back in the early days of the DOGE purges and the Capitol was still a bit shell shocked. Today, nobody is cowed by threats of mass firings since they have been doing it for months. It doesn’t take a shutdown to give them the green light to fire anyone they choose.
Moreover, their mass firings have proven to be resounding failure. They are reportedly desperate to reinstate many of those who were dismissed and have actually wasted massive amounts of money due to the lack of necessary staff to keep the government functioning. Vought can fire everyone if he wants to and new cases can wend their way through the courts but there is no reason for the Democrats to make a deal with them to stop it since they just lie and do what they want anyway, no matter the cost.
It’s taken a while for Washington Democrats to accept that this is now the operating principle of the Republican Party. But they appear to understand it now. They are demanding that the Republicans restore the health care cuts that were in the Big Beautiful Bill which includes those massive cuts to Medicaid and the Obamacare subsidies that are going to hit millions of Americans very soon. They know that the Republicans are already feeling heat for what they did and it’s only going to get worse for them going into the mid-terms if they have to face more angry constituents in a shrinking job market who are losing their health care.
I don’t know how this is going to end up. The Republicans still hold the institutional power and I would never underestimate the willingness of some Democrats to delude themselves into believing that their fellows on the other side of the aisle are operating in good faith. But so far, they are holding the line. After all, Democrats have a base too, which is overcome with horror at what the Trump administration and its congressional toadies are doing to this country. They may not win in the end but the 263 million people in America who didn’t vote for this travesty deserve to have someone in Washington fighting for them.
Update: So Trump now says he’ll meet with the Democratic leaders on Monday. I guess someone told him that it made him look like a loser and a quitter to refuse to do it. The word is that he’s going to tell them to go fuck themselves. Really.