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Digby's Hullabaloo Posts

Your Country on Trumpism

Behold, your tax dollars at work

I appropriated Bad Bunny’s message from his celebratory Super Bowl performance for a little overpass work on Monday: THE ONLY THING MORE POWERFUL THAN HATE IS LOVE. The response from commuters was joyful. Except for the guy who flipped two middle fingers from the top of his steering wheel. There’s always at least one.

That suggests that the majority of Americans would find this upsetting:

For the first time, someone who worked inside the Baltimore ICE detention facility at the center of a viral video showing severe overcrowding is speaking out publicly — and exclusively to WUSA9.

The former worker whose identity WUSA9 is disguising at his request because they signed a non-disclosure agreement and could face legal action, provided internal documents and described conditions they say went far beyond what appeared in January’s viral video.

“I worked there for several months and it was probably day one, day two that I saw the abuse,” the worker said. “I saw people laying in feces. People throwing up, people laying in urine.”

The former worker provided WUSA9 with what they claim are internal head count sheets from December showing conditions worse than the viral video: 47, 50 and 56 detainees in the same cell — more than the worker counted in the video itself — and as many as 50 in an even smaller cell.

Non-disclosure agreements. For keeping trade secrets, sure. For concealing crimes or criminal treatment of human beings, no. Why does Donald Trump demand them? Make them a campaign issue.

Maryland Representative April McClain Delaney (D) visited the Baltimore facility after being delayed for months:

She called conditions “heartbreaking” and “horrendous.”

“This whole detention center is really only meant to hold people for 12 hours and is being used to hold people for 24, 48, 72 hours or longer, depending on if they’ve asked for habeas corpus or if they have medical conditions or the transport planes are full,” the congresswoman said. 

She said detainees sleep on thin mats with foil blankets placed directly on concrete floors, and she reported that some of those being detained in the facility told her they were hungry and thirsty.

McClain Delaney described one room “with probably 50 people, concrete floors, a bench around the perimeter, and a makeshift bathroom in the middle that has minimal privacy.”

The men who flip me off likely celebrate their country treating other people like this. The decent, civilized, compassionate America recoils.

There are more of us than there are of them. And more of us than Megyn Kellys.

They ARE Us

What insane xenophobic drivel:

We know he won’t be caught dead in hellholes like California but maybe he should spend some time in Texas and Florida, two red states, to see just how Latino this country is and always has been. He will be surprised.

Republicans clearly don’t think they need Latino voters so they are calling them criminals and invaders and insulting the culture that’s been part of America since the beginning. I can’t see why any Latino, American or otherwise, would ever support these people again.

Steve And Jeffrey’s Excellent Adventure

CNN took a look at their relationship:

Jeffrey Epstein’s life as a free man was about to end, but first he needed to cancel breakfast plans with a friend: Steve Bannon, the right-wing influencer and former adviser to President Donald Trump.

In the days leading up to Epstein’s arrest in July 2019, the two men exchanged a steady stream of text messages, veering from breezy banter and dark humor to more serious strategizing around Bannon’s efforts to foment a global populist movement.

Writing from Paris, Epstein pressed Bannon to rally US support behind a Slovakian leader seeking a top NATO post. Bannon, meanwhile, wanted Epstein’s help connecting a close ally in Israel with the country’s former prime minister. They also traded barbs about the indictment of a British anti-Muslim activist and made plans to meet the morning of July 7 once Epstein returned from Europe.

The conversation came to a halt on July 6. After messaging with Bannon that day about their upcoming rendezvous, Epstein suddenly wrote, “All canceled.” He sent the message at 7:37 p.m. ET, according to US Department of Justice records. By then, federal authorities had intercepted Epstein at a New Jersey airport and arrested the New York financier on charges he sex trafficked minors.

Bannon and Epstein were plotting Bannon’s creepy global “populist” movement which is incredibly rich considering his relationship to all the world’s oligarchs.

For years, Bannon has served as a leading voice for the American alt-right, and he has sought to spread to other countries the movement that helped propel Trump to the presidency. Until now, his maneuverings abroad, well documented by US and foreign media, have drawn little speculation that Epstein played any role.

Conspiracy theories surrounding Epstein — whose body was found in his jail cell while he was awaiting trial in August 2019, with his death ruled a suicide — have long animated Bannon’s followers, generally directed at the same elites he regularly targets and not Bannon himself. Last summer, Bannon joined other MAGA loyalists in criticizing the Trump administration’s handling of documents related to Epstein’s crimes. He has been far less vocal, however, about his own relationship with Epstein.

Bannon did not return phone calls and text messages from CNN.

Epstein offered Bannon the same things he extended to many powerful confidantes: strategic advice, connections to the highest levels of government and business, and access to his vast wealth. He appeared increasingly invested in Bannon’s success even as he recognized his own history — Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to two state prostitution charges, one involving a child — could complicate their cause. “Lets make sure you are keeping your own path on front burner. Strategy etc.,” he wrote Bannon in August 2018, before adding: “at the same time. Take no heat re me. Not worth it for the moment.”

Bannon, for his part, appeared eager to capitalize on the relationship despite Epstein’s criminal past. He regularly shared headlines from his efforts abroad and tapped into Epstein’s extensive network. At one point, he asked Epstein: “Do u know anyone in Europe that wants to control the European Parliament and with it the EU.”

In private exchanges, the two sometimes plotted next steps and workshopped Bannon’s messaging. The night before Bannon was set to appear at a September 2018 forum hosted by The Economist, Epstein suggested framing for how Bannon should discuss Trump’s contentious trade wars. “Brilliant brilliant brilliant,” Bannon responded, “help me develop that argument.”

The way everyone genuflected to that guy is truly amazing.

Bannon is someone who had a close relationship with Epstein right up until the moment he was arrested in 2019. Why hasn’t he gotten more scrutiny?

Ghislaine Puts Her Cards On The Table

Trump is pardoning every criminal who pays for access to him (reportedly for millions of dollars) so why not Ghislaine Maxwell? It’s not like he cares if anyone sees this sort of thing as a textbook quid-pro-cuo. After all, he’ll accept ridiculous gifts from foreign players in exchange for favors without batting an eye:

Ghislaine Maxwell, who was sentenced to prison for 20 years for conspiring with Jeffrey Epstein to abuse minors, sent a clear message to Donald Trump on Monday that if the president were to grant her clemency, she would clear his name of any wrongdoing as it pertains to Epstein.

The extraordinary overture, stated by Maxwell’s lawyer Monday morning during her virtual deposition before the House Oversight Committee, ensures the Epstein saga will continue to remain a political hotspot.

“Ms. Maxwell is prepared to speak fully and honestly if granted clemency by President Trump,” attorney David Oscar Markus said in a statement during the deposition, which he later posted on X. “Only she can provide the complete account. Some may not like what they hear, but the truth matters. For example, both President Trump and President Clinton are innocent of any wrongdoing.” Markus also said that: “Ms. Maxwell alone can explain why, and the public is entitled to that explanation.”

Trump has not ruled out the possibility of offering Maxwell a pardon or commutation.

I would assume that he’d openly tout her “exoneration” as being the end of the story without even acknowledging that she did it solely because he agreed to commute her sentence. And his cult will accept that without question.

They’re Worried About Looking Callous?

It’s a little late for that

Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos was reportedly angry with now-former CEO Will Lewis partying it up in San Francisco during Super Bowl Week, right as he was laying off hundreds of employees at the paper.

The Financial Times on Saturday night reported that was the “last straw” for Lewis, according to one newsroom source.“Bezos lost patience after the Super Bowl thing,” the source told FT.

That report came out right after Lewis stepped down as the chief executive and publisher of The Washington Post on Saturday evening.“Senior management at The Post were livid when they discovered that Lewis was attending festivities around the Super Bowl in San Francisco around the time of the news of the jobs cuts,” the source told FT. “It came off as ‘callous.’”

Yeah, whatever. Maybe Bezos could pull some money out of his couch cushions to pay for this, if he wants to stop looking callous:

After The Washington Post was hit with layoffs cutting a third of its staff, its international reporters are faced with finding away home, some currently in war zones.

Following Wednesday’s restructuring at the Jeff Bezos-owned company, Tokyo/Seoul bureau chief Michelle Ye Hee Lee launched a GoFundMe campaign in attempt to help the “dozens of international employees who were essential to our coverage of global events” in getting home safely.

“These workers are not eligible for protection under the Washington Post Guild and are, in many instances, being laid off with less favorable terms while also facing immense logistical challenges and, in certain cases, serious security risks,” the crowdfunding page reads. “Please help us support this deeply courageous team of people.”

[…]

Lizzie Johnson, a correspondent covering Ukraine, was one such person impacted by this week’s layoffs. “I was just laid off by The Washington Post in the middle of a warzone. I have no words. I’m devastated,” she wrote on X from Kyiv.

Former employees of the second most wealthy man on the planet have to rely on a GoFundMe to get them home after being abandoned in far far flung foreign locales. Talk about callous.


They Never Quit

I don’t think this is going to have the effect they are hoping for:

American Sovereignty, a conservative nonprofit focused on border security and community safety, will launch a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign over the weekend to press for support for ICE. The ad spots aim to remind the public that ICE agents are family men and women who are part of the fabric of their communities on and off the job — and among those who put themselves in the most danger to protect the homeland.

They’re national ads with more running in DC Michigan, Georgia and North Carolina.

The “Patriots” ad will highlight how ICE agents and staff are often neighbors down the block, family or friends, and people who should be able to do their jobs without being sabotaged by organized violent demonstrations and agitators. “They’re friends and neighbors. Sons, fathers. They’re Little League coaches and veterans. They’re people who love this country,” the narrator says as relevant imagery crosses the screen.

Maybe if they stopped acting like masked barbarians and behaved like professional law enforcement they wouldn’t have this image problem.

“These are Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. They are removing violent criminals from our streets and neighborhoods. It’s dangerous and difficult work, but ICE has one mission: to make America a safer place to live,” the ad continues. “And that’s what they’re doing. This is law enforcement. This is ICE.”

On the other hand:

While “Patriots” strikes an uplifting tone, “Criminals” begins from the opposite perspective.”Immigration and Customs Enforcement has removed thousands of criminal illegal aliens from the U.S.,” the narrator says in “Criminals.” As he speaks, mugshots of several captured illegal immigrant criminals flash across the screen — denoted in large letters with their most serious convictions.”Kidnapping, child pornography, rape, child molestation…” the shots read as snippets from news articles describing violent crimes appear over their faces.

“They entered the United States illegally and committed violent crimes against our mothers, children, and friends. Every day, Immigration and Customs Enforcement takes them off our streets — every removal makes us safer and America stronger. This is what ICE does. This is Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”

Right:

Go Figure

Do they only see what they want to see?

Still image from The Sixth Sense.

Here’s a morning headline from the AP: FBI concluded Jeffrey Epstein wasn’t running a sex trafficking ring for powerful men, files show

A line from The Sixth Sense comes to mind: They only see what they want to see.

And that was?

The FBI pored over Jeffrey Epstein’s bank records and emails. It searched his homes. It spent years interviewing his victims and examining his connections to some of the world’s most influential people.

But while investigators collected ample proof that Epstein sexually abused underage girls, they found scant evidence the well-connected financier led a sex trafficking ring serving powerful men, an Associated Press review of internal Justice Department records shows.

Videos and photos seized from Epstein’s homes in New York, Florida and the Virgin Islands didn’t depict victims being abused or implicate anyone else in his crimes, a prosecutor wrote in one 2025 memo.

An examination of Epstein’s financial records, including payments he made to entities linked to influential figures in academia, finance and global diplomacy, found no connection to criminal activity, said another internal memo in 2019.

A lot of stories lacking enough evidence to support charges, records indicate. Including allegations by the late Virginia Roberts Giuffre. In lawsuits and interviews, Giuffre “accused Epstein of arranging for her to have sexual encounters with numerous men, including Britain’s former Prince Andrew.” But two other Epstein victims Giuffre named did not corroborate the “lent out” story, according to a 2019 internal prosecution memo.

No videos or photos showed Epstein victims being sexually abused, none showed any males with any of the nude females, and none contained evidence implicating anyone other than Epstein and Maxwell, then-Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey wrote in an email for FBI officials last year.

Had they existed, the government “would have pursued any leads they generated,” Comey wrote. “We did not, however, locate any such videos.”

Investigators who scoured Epstein’s bank records found payments to more than 25 women who appeared to be models — but no evidence that he was engaged in prostituting women to other men, prosecutors wrote.

Other women filed sexual misconduct lawsuits against an Epstein massage recipient. One was dismissed or withdrawn. (Was a quiet cash settlement involved?) Another is pending.

As we know from voter fraud allegations, lots of smoke does not necessarily mean a fire. But to my knowledge, no one has lost a royal title over voter fraud allegations or killed themselves over them. Several have in the Epstein case.

It is clearer than ever that Epstein class predators have powerful friends and enjoy a legal system built to insulate them from justice. Including Trump’s DOJ. Whom can you trust?

Bad Bunny Spikes The Football

Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin with the assist

“God bless America,” shouted superstar Bad Bunny in English to end his Puerto Rico-themed Super Bowl halftime show. Then he recited, south to north, the names of countries spread across North and South America.

Donald Trump believes they are his to dominate. But Bad Bunny told the stadium and over 120 million viewers globally, in song, dance and imagery, oh, hell no. Then he spiked a football reading, “Together, We Are America.” Behind and above him, a massive jumbotron displayed, in bold black and white, Bad Bunny’s message to the world.

Hollywood Reporter:

Lady Gaga made a surprise cameo, singing a Latin-inspired rendition of her and Bruno Mars’ song, “Die With a Smile.” She and Bad Bunny then went on to dance together at what appeared to be the wedding’s reception.

Ricky Martin later made a surprise appearance in the latter part of the show, before Bad Bunny ended his performance with his hit song “DtMF.”

The screens inside Levi’s Stadium also featured the message, “The only thing more powerful than hate is love” — something Bad Bunny has expressed before.

I admit it. I teared up.

Asawin Suebsaeng at Zeteo observes:

If anyone wants to argue Bad Bunny avoided partisan politics during the Super Bowl, he sort of did – on paper, with the thinnest veneer of plausible deniability. His message couldn’t have been clearer, and it joyfully spat in the face of what Donald Trump, JD Vance, Stephen Miller, and the rest of the gang running the federal government stand for. But if the NFL wants to pretend its halftime show didn’t have an inherently anti-Trump message to it, the Trump administration is already showing it’s not willing to give them a pass.

“The Super Bowl Halftime Show is absolutely terrible, one of the worst, EVER! It makes no sense, is an affront to the Greatness of America, and doesn’t represent our standards of Success, Creativity, or Excellence, the literal US president whined on his social-media app Sunday night. “Nobody understands a word this guy is saying, and the dancing is disgusting, especially for young children that are watching from throughout the USA, and all over the World.”

Yet Daily Beast reports that Bad Bunny’s performance played across several screens at Trump’s West Palm Beach Super Bowl party. Trump avoided attending the game in person, knowing he’d be loudly booed, live, in front of the entire planet. (And, yes, Donald Trump, charter member of the Epstein class, wants you to believe he cares about young children.)

Bad Bunny addressed the language question during a pre-game interview with a clever quip: “English is not my first language. But it’s okay, it’s not America’s first language either.” Forbes reports that it instantly went viral.

Former Trump Surgeon General Jerome Adams posted a little Super Bowl history lesson for anyone on X needing one, including his former boss.

It’s Airborne

It’s become a global symbol: “a militia that kills” (Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala’s quote), “not welcome” (Lombardy Governor), with protests involving stones, flares, and water cannons right outside the Olympic Village.

In Italy, ICE is seen as the export of the worst of American policy – racism, excessive force, warrantless deportations. The protests started back in January, ramped up before the opening, and now form the backdrop to the entire Games: anti-Americanism + climate + housing + gentrification.

Good.

San Francisco Isn’t A Shithole?

Imagine that

I just love this. All these right wingers have been fed a bunch of propaganda and they are stunned when they find out that liberals aren’t actually living in Mad Max Thunderdome:

To right-wing influencers and conservative media outlets, San Francisco is a wasteland where the once-glimmering downtown mall is dead, the sidewalks are filled with homeless encampments and drug users are shooting up in the streets. To San Franciscans and civic leaders, however, that caricature has never been accurate. And certainly not after a recent A.I. boom downtown and the redoubling of efforts to improve the quality of life.

San Francisco still has its share of down-and-out areas. And the city has not fully recovered its pre-Covid workweek energy. But local champions have insisted that much of the place remains vibrant, and that a sun-splashed walk along the Embarcadero and a Mission-style burrito can make anyone feel better about the city.

The arrival of the Super Bowl this week in the Bay Area has given San Francisco its biggest opportunity since the pandemic to change hearts and minds. And, in a polarized nation in which many Americans seem incapable of moving off deep-seated beliefs, some visitors said they had been wrong about San Francisco after actually seeing it in person.

“What we thought we were walking into here was, uh, a dump,” Pat McAfee, the ESPN host who caters to a young, male audience, said during the first national broadcast of The Pat McAfee Show from San Francisco. “It’s not at all. It was a beautiful walk this morning.”

On social media, posts about the city’s parks and sandwich shops from journalists covering the Super Bowl have often outpaced commentary about the game itself. A stretch of February sun and 70-degree weather has helped the cause, especially as the rest of the country was recovering from snowstorms.

Among the first-time visitors this week to San Francisco was Brayden Landis, 21, a sports management student at York College in Pennsylvania, who was in the Bay Area as part of a class trip. The city had been an immediate shock to the senses, Mr. Landis said. On his first day in town, he passed out from heat exhaustion. He was struck by the city’s contrasts.

Toward the ocean, the lush expanse of Golden Gate Park greets visitors with scents of eucalyptus and morning dew. Elsewhere in the city, there are alleys where pedestrians have to avoid needles and feces. “To me, the city was known for homelessness, fog and hippies,” he said. “But the stereotypes melted away. You see the city for what it really is, good and bad, pretty quickly. I think it’s my favorite city I’ve ever been to.”

Could it possibly be that the right wing media is lying?