Daylee Picture: A Roseate Spoonbill in Florida. From Smithsonian Magazine. |
From around the corner to around the world, foreign and domestic news items -- for the more thoughtful progressive!
Friday, May 11, 2018
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: The REAL Trouble Trump Has Created for Himself
The FBI's Revenge (Mike Allen) from Axios
"Back in December, President Trump tweeted: "After years of Comey, with the phony and dishonest Clinton investigation (and more), running the FBI, its reputation is in Tatters - worst in History! But fear not, we will bring it back to greatness." The state of play: Now, the FBI is getting its revenge. All at once, Trump is being pounded by the bureau and its alumni, with a three-pronged threat. ..."
"Back in December, President Trump tweeted: "After years of Comey, with the phony and dishonest Clinton investigation (and more), running the FBI, its reputation is in Tatters - worst in History! But fear not, we will bring it back to greatness." The state of play: Now, the FBI is getting its revenge. All at once, Trump is being pounded by the bureau and its alumni, with a three-pronged threat. ..."
Hungarian "Democracy": Americans Take Notice
A Democracy Disappears (Andrew Sullivan) from New York Magazine
"The difference, of course, is that Orbán is an experienced politician, and knows exactly what he’s doing. Trump is a fool, an incompetent, and incapable of forming any kind of strategy, or sticking to one. The forces arrayed against the populist right, moreover, are much stronger in the U.S. than in Hungary; our institutions more robust; our culture much more diverse. Our democracy is far, far older. And yet almost every single trend in Hungary is apparent here as well. "
"The difference, of course, is that Orbán is an experienced politician, and knows exactly what he’s doing. Trump is a fool, an incompetent, and incapable of forming any kind of strategy, or sticking to one. The forces arrayed against the populist right, moreover, are much stronger in the U.S. than in Hungary; our institutions more robust; our culture much more diverse. Our democracy is far, far older. And yet almost every single trend in Hungary is apparent here as well. "
How to Deal with the Opioid Crisis: Look to France!
How France Cut Heroin Overdoses by 79 Percent in 4 Years ... And the United States could, too from the Atlantic
"In 1995, France made it so any doctor could prescribe buprenorphine without any special licensing or training. Buprenorphine, a first-line treatment for opioid addiction, is a medication that reduces cravings for opioids without becoming addictive itself. With the change in policy, the majority of buprenorphine prescribers in France became primary-care doctors, rather than addiction specialists or psychiatrists. Suddenly, about 10 times as many addicted patients began receiving medication-assisted treatment, and half the country’s heroin users were being treated. Within four years, overdose deaths had declined by 79 percent."
"In 1995, France made it so any doctor could prescribe buprenorphine without any special licensing or training. Buprenorphine, a first-line treatment for opioid addiction, is a medication that reduces cravings for opioids without becoming addictive itself. With the change in policy, the majority of buprenorphine prescribers in France became primary-care doctors, rather than addiction specialists or psychiatrists. Suddenly, about 10 times as many addicted patients began receiving medication-assisted treatment, and half the country’s heroin users were being treated. Within four years, overdose deaths had declined by 79 percent."
Simply Done Listening to Conservative Whining!
Conservatives Will Never Get the Respect They Crave. They Don’t Deserve It. from Washington Monthly
"...at a certain level, this tired conservative whine is correct: the people who lead and create culture don’t respect them. Artists, actors, inventors, comedians, entrepreneurs, academics, musicians, journalists and professionals across almost all creative industries have no patience for what passes for modern conservatism. And why should they?"
Put an exclamation point after that last question!
"...at a certain level, this tired conservative whine is correct: the people who lead and create culture don’t respect them. Artists, actors, inventors, comedians, entrepreneurs, academics, musicians, journalists and professionals across almost all creative industries have no patience for what passes for modern conservatism. And why should they?"
Put an exclamation point after that last question!
The Fog Clears Over "the Swamp" If Just for a Moment
Mulvaney: I Only Talked To Lobbyists Who Donated To My Congressional Campaign from Talking Points Memo
"Mick Mulvaney, the director of the White House’s Office of Budget and Management, told banking officials on Tuesday that while he was a congressman, he had a policy of only talking to lobbyists who donated to his campaign, the New York Times reported. “We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress,” Mulvaney said at an American Bankers Association conference in Washington, D.C., according to the New York Times. “If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you.”"
What a moron!! This story has not been getting nearly enough attention. It speaks volumes about the character of Trump appointments. -- Nuggetsman
"Mick Mulvaney, the director of the White House’s Office of Budget and Management, told banking officials on Tuesday that while he was a congressman, he had a policy of only talking to lobbyists who donated to his campaign, the New York Times reported. “We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress,” Mulvaney said at an American Bankers Association conference in Washington, D.C., according to the New York Times. “If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you.”"
What a moron!! This story has not been getting nearly enough attention. It speaks volumes about the character of Trump appointments. -- Nuggetsman
Trump's "Good Buddies"
Trump Has Been Afraid of Roger Stone ‘For Years’ from Mediaite
"Haberman also quoted Stone in the story, who remarked on Trump’s treatment of Cohen: “Donald goes out of his way to treat him like garbage.”
This news is more than a week old now. But it bears repeating. Wow! So Trump has been treating his Fixer-who-knows-where-all-the-bodies-are-buried guy like sh@t for decades! What a good idea! So this could end being SO COSMIC if Cohen flips -- and ultimately goes for maximum payback penetration of the Great Orange One! Ah, that we should all be so lucky to see this come to pass! -- Nuggetsman
"Haberman also quoted Stone in the story, who remarked on Trump’s treatment of Cohen: “Donald goes out of his way to treat him like garbage.”
This news is more than a week old now. But it bears repeating. Wow! So Trump has been treating his Fixer-who-knows-where-all-the-bodies-are-buried guy like sh@t for decades! What a good idea! So this could end being SO COSMIC if Cohen flips -- and ultimately goes for maximum payback penetration of the Great Orange One! Ah, that we should all be so lucky to see this come to pass! -- Nuggetsman
Seeing Trumpian Times Clearly thru the Lens of Recent History
American Democracy has Faced Worse Threats than Donald Trump (Ezra Klein) from Vox
"The triumphant story we tell about American history can obscure both the extent of our progress and the fragility of our consensus. To see what we are, or what we may become, requires clarity about what we have been. And what we have been is violent, disordered, undemocratic, and illiberal on a scale far beyond anything the United States is undergoing today. You do not need to go back to the country’s early years — when new arrivals from Europe drove out the Native Americans, brought over millions of enslaved Africans, and wrote laws making women second-class citizens — to see it."
"The triumphant story we tell about American history can obscure both the extent of our progress and the fragility of our consensus. To see what we are, or what we may become, requires clarity about what we have been. And what we have been is violent, disordered, undemocratic, and illiberal on a scale far beyond anything the United States is undergoing today. You do not need to go back to the country’s early years — when new arrivals from Europe drove out the Native Americans, brought over millions of enslaved Africans, and wrote laws making women second-class citizens — to see it."
Trump's Appeal to Evangelicals Explained
An Evangelical Professor Explains the Troubled Nostalgia and Racial Anxiety Behind Christians’ support for Trump from Raw Story
"In Fea’s analysis, three tropes—fear, nostalgia, and power—primarily account for Trump’s appeal to evangelicals. A sense of cultural disorientation tinged with racism plays into the long-standing conservative strategy—the appeal to fear, nurtured by Trump more effectively than any other candidate."
This sounds spot on!
"In Fea’s analysis, three tropes—fear, nostalgia, and power—primarily account for Trump’s appeal to evangelicals. A sense of cultural disorientation tinged with racism plays into the long-standing conservative strategy—the appeal to fear, nurtured by Trump more effectively than any other candidate."
This sounds spot on!
The Post-Trump Landscape Coming Into Viiew
Trump is where the end begins (Richard Cohen) from the Washington Post
"More likely, America’s political immune system will kick in and install a more conventional government. But Trump — with his tweets, his vulgarity, his appeal to bigotry, his insults, his carefree ignorance and his ability to maintain himself as an addictive spectacle — has changed things forever. Trump is where the end begins. He will be gone, but Trumpism will remain."
"More likely, America’s political immune system will kick in and install a more conventional government. But Trump — with his tweets, his vulgarity, his appeal to bigotry, his insults, his carefree ignorance and his ability to maintain himself as an addictive spectacle — has changed things forever. Trump is where the end begins. He will be gone, but Trumpism will remain."
Donald Trump's Double-A Team Takes the Field...
‘I Was Trump Before Trump Was Trump’ from the New York Times
"Republican candidates all over are parroting the president, spouting his catchphrases and donning his hats as they try to show loyalty."
I am going out on a limb and say that this is a good thing. I don't believe the 2018 election cycle will be the time for third-rate Donald Trumps -- which is all these people are! -- Nuggetsman
"Republican candidates all over are parroting the president, spouting his catchphrases and donning his hats as they try to show loyalty."
I am going out on a limb and say that this is a good thing. I don't believe the 2018 election cycle will be the time for third-rate Donald Trumps -- which is all these people are! -- Nuggetsman
Where America is Becoming Better...
The Reinvention of America (James Fallows) from the Atlantic
"America is becoming more like itself again. More Americans are trying to make it so, in more places, than most Americans are aware. Even as the country is becoming worse in obvious ways—angrier, more divided, less able to do the basic business of governing itself—it is becoming distinctly better on a range of other indicators that are harder to perceive. The pattern these efforts create also remains hidden. Americans don’t realize how fast the country is moving toward becoming a better version of itself. How can this be? Let me explain."
"America is becoming more like itself again. More Americans are trying to make it so, in more places, than most Americans are aware. Even as the country is becoming worse in obvious ways—angrier, more divided, less able to do the basic business of governing itself—it is becoming distinctly better on a range of other indicators that are harder to perceive. The pattern these efforts create also remains hidden. Americans don’t realize how fast the country is moving toward becoming a better version of itself. How can this be? Let me explain."
The Trump Presidency: An Exercise in Self-Immolation
There is No One Who Can Save Trump from Himself (Joe Scarborough) from the Washington Post
"Given his recent history of self-defeating statements, the president is clearly not suffering through the early stages of dementia , but is afflicted instead by the political equivalent of self-harm syndrome. ... This is not about Trumpian political disruption. It is, instead, a study in self-immolation. And one of the many tragedies of Donald Trump’s life is that there is no one on this Earth who can save this tortured man from himself."
"Given his recent history of self-defeating statements, the president is clearly not suffering through the early stages of dementia , but is afflicted instead by the political equivalent of self-harm syndrome. ... This is not about Trumpian political disruption. It is, instead, a study in self-immolation. And one of the many tragedies of Donald Trump’s life is that there is no one on this Earth who can save this tortured man from himself."
The Only Reality-Based Member of the Trump Administration: The First Lady
Melania, the steely, dead-eyed trouper (Virginia Heffernan) from the Los Angeles Times
"Melania Trump has become a stand-in for the nation, which has also been humiliated, even threatened, by the president's recklessly asserted droit du seigneur. We as a country — an electoral-college majority of us — married ourselves to a brutal overlord, and we have also made our bed. Anyone who finds fault with Melania for taking it, and for serving as an exponent of the president's bigotry, has to do what she cannot as first lady. Stand up to him at the midterms, put on some sturdy shoes and break free."
"Melania Trump has become a stand-in for the nation, which has also been humiliated, even threatened, by the president's recklessly asserted droit du seigneur. We as a country — an electoral-college majority of us — married ourselves to a brutal overlord, and we have also made our bed. Anyone who finds fault with Melania for taking it, and for serving as an exponent of the president's bigotry, has to do what she cannot as first lady. Stand up to him at the midterms, put on some sturdy shoes and break free."
African American History and Culture Nugget!
The Return of The Negro Motorist Green Book from Think Progress
"Author Jan Miles has revived the Jim Crow-era travelers' guide for black Americans, with a 21st century twist. ... She doesn’t list what restaurants, gas stations, or motels are friendly to black travelers. Instead, her Green Book documents acts of cruelty by the police, instances of racial profiling by businesses, and everyday outrages by private citizens that increasingly draw anguished attention in all forms of media."
"Author Jan Miles has revived the Jim Crow-era travelers' guide for black Americans, with a 21st century twist. ... She doesn’t list what restaurants, gas stations, or motels are friendly to black travelers. Instead, her Green Book documents acts of cruelty by the police, instances of racial profiling by businesses, and everyday outrages by private citizens that increasingly draw anguished attention in all forms of media."
Saturday, April 14, 2018
I Need Your Help...
My brother's brother-in-law, Darren, has been battling pancreatic cancer for several years. What is so is that the cancer has been under control for a while but that the only course going forward involves a treatment recommended at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, one that they have some confidence it will make a real difference --but it is a treatment NOT covered by his insurance. Without the treatment, his prognosis is bad. He needs $10,000 to cover the cost of the treatment. He is a great guy who has shown tremendous courage in the face of this thing. Here is the go-fund-me page, and I request that you do what you can and to please help him out. Thanks!! Jared
TODAY's BIG NUGGET! Where the Cohen Raid Will Probably Lead
FBI Raid on Michael Cohen Is the Most Dangerous Day of Donald Trump’s Life (Rick Wilson) from the Daily Beast
"Trump must know this may be one of the most dangerous moments in his entire life, not just his presidency. The likelihood is that Mueller and the FBI are now in possession of the Black Books of Trump, NDAs from enough of Trump’s various affairs that you can staff a 12-pole strip club with plenty of girls left for the Champagne rooms. It’s only speculation at this point, but it’s quite likely that Cohen was the keeper of many of Trump’s lending documents, contracts, business arrangements, and the Kryptonite of Trump’s fragile self-worth: the long-sought tax returns. It’s an open secret and has been for quite a while, but Trump isn’t worth $10 billion. As one of my hedge-fund friends (an actual billionaire) said of Trump in 2015, “He’s a clown living on credit.”"
"Trump must know this may be one of the most dangerous moments in his entire life, not just his presidency. The likelihood is that Mueller and the FBI are now in possession of the Black Books of Trump, NDAs from enough of Trump’s various affairs that you can staff a 12-pole strip club with plenty of girls left for the Champagne rooms. It’s only speculation at this point, but it’s quite likely that Cohen was the keeper of many of Trump’s lending documents, contracts, business arrangements, and the Kryptonite of Trump’s fragile self-worth: the long-sought tax returns. It’s an open secret and has been for quite a while, but Trump isn’t worth $10 billion. As one of my hedge-fund friends (an actual billionaire) said of Trump in 2015, “He’s a clown living on credit.”"
The Cohen Raid -- More of a Threat than Muller's Investigation
Prosecutors’ Withering Rebuttal of Cohen Shows How Hard It Will Be for Trump to Sabotage Their Investigation from Slate
"That filing...makes a couple of things abundantly clear: The government has a compelling case for reviewing the material and Michael Cohen is in deep, deep trouble. ... “This whole thing is going to make it much harder for Trump to put everything that’s happening on Mueller and Rosenstein, at least for audiences who are listening and care about the facts,” Duke University School of Law professor and former lead Enron prosecutor Samuel W. Buell told Slate. “The network of federal law enforcement professionals with experience and reputations, in different respected offices, involved in these matters makes it much harder to come up with a plausible way to surgically stop this.”"
"That filing...makes a couple of things abundantly clear: The government has a compelling case for reviewing the material and Michael Cohen is in deep, deep trouble. ... “This whole thing is going to make it much harder for Trump to put everything that’s happening on Mueller and Rosenstein, at least for audiences who are listening and care about the facts,” Duke University School of Law professor and former lead Enron prosecutor Samuel W. Buell told Slate. “The network of federal law enforcement professionals with experience and reputations, in different respected offices, involved in these matters makes it much harder to come up with a plausible way to surgically stop this.”"
The Bankruptcy of Right Wing Economics
Unicorns of the Intellectual Right (Paul Krugman) from the New York Times
"... while there are many conservative economists with appointments at top universities, publications in top journals, and so on, they have no influence on conservative policymaking. What the right wants are charlatans and cranks, in (conservative) Greg Mankiw’s famous phrase. If they use actual economists, they use them the way a drunkard uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination."
"... while there are many conservative economists with appointments at top universities, publications in top journals, and so on, they have no influence on conservative policymaking. What the right wants are charlatans and cranks, in (conservative) Greg Mankiw’s famous phrase. If they use actual economists, they use them the way a drunkard uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination."
Trump's "Silent Circle of Assent"
James Comey’s memoir: Trump fixates on proving lewd dossier allegations false from the Washington Post
"Interacting with Trump, Comey writes, gave him “flashbacks to my earlier career as a prosecutor against the Mob. The silent circle of assent. The boss in complete control. The loyalty oaths. The us-versus-them worldview. The lying about all things, large and small, in service to some code of loyalty that put the organization above morality and above the truth.”"
The details and suggestions here are really disturbing and often disgusting!
"Interacting with Trump, Comey writes, gave him “flashbacks to my earlier career as a prosecutor against the Mob. The silent circle of assent. The boss in complete control. The loyalty oaths. The us-versus-them worldview. The lying about all things, large and small, in service to some code of loyalty that put the organization above morality and above the truth.”"
The details and suggestions here are really disturbing and often disgusting!
Steele Dossier Case in Point!!
I’m a Peeliever and You Should Be, Too (Jonathan Chait) from New York Magazine
"I used to doubt that this episode really happened. I now believe it probably did. I am obviously far from certain, but since Steele’s dossier came out, an accumulation of evidence has tipped the balance from unlikely to likely. Let’s review what we’ve learned since the allegation first surfaced."
"I used to doubt that this episode really happened. I now believe it probably did. I am obviously far from certain, but since Steele’s dossier came out, an accumulation of evidence has tipped the balance from unlikely to likely. Let’s review what we’ve learned since the allegation first surfaced."
The GOP: Breaking Their Brand
After busting the deficit, the GOP's gestures toward fiscal responsibility ring hollow (John Harwood) from CNBC
"Republicans keep supporting tax cuts even while failing to shrink spending. The result: since Ronald Reagan entered the White House in 1981, all three Republican presidents before Trump left office with higher federal deficits than they inherited. One Democratic president (Bill Clinton) departed with a budget surplus; the other (Barack Obama) saw the deficit decline by two-thirds as a share of the economy."
"Republicans keep supporting tax cuts even while failing to shrink spending. The result: since Ronald Reagan entered the White House in 1981, all three Republican presidents before Trump left office with higher federal deficits than they inherited. One Democratic president (Bill Clinton) departed with a budget surplus; the other (Barack Obama) saw the deficit decline by two-thirds as a share of the economy."
Russia and the NRA -- A Closer Look
Inside the Decade-Long Russian Campaign to Infiltrate the NRA and Help Elect Trump from Rolling Stone Magazine
""The idea of private gun ownership is anathema to Putin," he says. "So then the question is, 'Why?' " Why was a pro-gun campaign being hatched by a leader in Putin's own party? The answer, according to Hall, is that Putin was baiting a trap. "He's reaching out to attract the NRA, specifically, over to Russia.""
""The idea of private gun ownership is anathema to Putin," he says. "So then the question is, 'Why?' " Why was a pro-gun campaign being hatched by a leader in Putin's own party? The answer, according to Hall, is that Putin was baiting a trap. "He's reaching out to attract the NRA, specifically, over to Russia.""
A Russian Rundown for 2018's Midterms
The Moscow Midterms: How Russia could steal our next election from the New York Times
"Most of us can’t really picture what it would look like to tamper with an election, but security experts can. Even as you read this, voting systems, so dry and complicated and completely taken for granted, could well be in the midst of fending off attacks from foreign adversaries. Things could get bad — really bad. Bad like this ..."
"Most of us can’t really picture what it would look like to tamper with an election, but security experts can. Even as you read this, voting systems, so dry and complicated and completely taken for granted, could well be in the midst of fending off attacks from foreign adversaries. Things could get bad — really bad. Bad like this ..."
Are the Clinton era leftovers EVER going to be thrown out!?
The Macker readies for a second act from the Richmond Times Dispatch
"Three months after leaving the Virginia governorship, the perquisites of which included a lumbering black SUV driven by a state trooper, McAuliffe is considering a second act: the presidency."
OMG!!! What is it with former Clintonistas!?! For how many decades must the Democratic Party have to endure them hanging around stinking things up!?! Bill, Hillary, Anthony Weiner, Huma, the Thomasons, Mark Penn, and now this guy! Please: do us ALL A FAVOR and stay away! -- Nuggetsman
"Three months after leaving the Virginia governorship, the perquisites of which included a lumbering black SUV driven by a state trooper, McAuliffe is considering a second act: the presidency."
OMG!!! What is it with former Clintonistas!?! For how many decades must the Democratic Party have to endure them hanging around stinking things up!?! Bill, Hillary, Anthony Weiner, Huma, the Thomasons, Mark Penn, and now this guy! Please: do us ALL A FAVOR and stay away! -- Nuggetsman
Trump, the Man who Never Left Studio 54
How Trump Channels the 1970s (Julian Zelizer) from the Atlantic
"The one consistent message coming out of the White House was born in the 1970s: Don’t trust any institution."
"The one consistent message coming out of the White House was born in the 1970s: Don’t trust any institution."
A Job at Trump's W.H.: A Ticket to Nowhere
Trapped In The White House: Many Trump Aides Are Too “Toxic” To Get Jobs from Buzzfeed
"Trump administration officials looking to escape to the private sector are getting a rude awakening: No one wants to hire them."
Awww! How sad!
"Trump administration officials looking to escape to the private sector are getting a rude awakening: No one wants to hire them."
Awww! How sad!
Sunday, April 8, 2018
News Nuggets 1571
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: Trumpland Likely to Become More Trumpified
What’s the Matter With Trumpland? (Paul Krugman) from the New York Times
"Moretti argues that structural changes in the economy have favored industries that employ highly educated workers — and that these industries do best in locations where there are already a lot of these workers. As a result, these regions are experiencing a virtuous circle of growth: Their knowledge-intensive industries prosper, drawing in even more educated workers, which reinforces their advantage. And at the same time, regions that started with a poorly educated work force are in a downward spiral, both because they’re stuck with the wrong industries and because they’re experiencing what amounts to a brain drain."
"Moretti argues that structural changes in the economy have favored industries that employ highly educated workers — and that these industries do best in locations where there are already a lot of these workers. As a result, these regions are experiencing a virtuous circle of growth: Their knowledge-intensive industries prosper, drawing in even more educated workers, which reinforces their advantage. And at the same time, regions that started with a poorly educated work force are in a downward spiral, both because they’re stuck with the wrong industries and because they’re experiencing what amounts to a brain drain."
Coming Attractions for the Democratic Party
Watch Out, Ted Cruz. Beto is Coming (Frank Bruni) from the New York Times
"Count me among the swelling ranks of the infatuated. I, too, have been Beto-struck. ... Cruz is a rare and precious gift. He’s so loathed that any passable Democrat with a picayune chance of toppling him was bound to draw more attention and inspire more hope than the political dynamics warranted. ... But Beto is more than passable. Many of his campaign events are mobbed. People line up for selfies and then insist on hugs."
Attention Democrats!! THIS is the guy to watch for 2020 and 2024! It will be nothing short of a miracle if he beats Cruz in November -- but IF HE DOES, put him on the A-LIST for 2020. Nuggetsman.
"Count me among the swelling ranks of the infatuated. I, too, have been Beto-struck. ... Cruz is a rare and precious gift. He’s so loathed that any passable Democrat with a picayune chance of toppling him was bound to draw more attention and inspire more hope than the political dynamics warranted. ... But Beto is more than passable. Many of his campaign events are mobbed. People line up for selfies and then insist on hugs."
Attention Democrats!! THIS is the guy to watch for 2020 and 2024! It will be nothing short of a miracle if he beats Cruz in November -- but IF HE DOES, put him on the A-LIST for 2020. Nuggetsman.
Root of Illiberal Democracy: Immigration, Not Economics
The issue that’s poisoning democratic politics around the world from the Washington Post
"The immigration issue is poisoning democratic politics, and not just in the United States. Purging this poison means resisting the urge to demonize the critics of current policies and instead searching for common ground that promotes the common good. While prejudice and hatred cannot be tolerated, liberals and progressives need to pay more attention to grievances — such as fears about economic and cultural displacement, the rule of law and loss of sovereignty — that should not be dismissed as pure bigotry."
"The immigration issue is poisoning democratic politics, and not just in the United States. Purging this poison means resisting the urge to demonize the critics of current policies and instead searching for common ground that promotes the common good. While prejudice and hatred cannot be tolerated, liberals and progressives need to pay more attention to grievances — such as fears about economic and cultural displacement, the rule of law and loss of sovereignty — that should not be dismissed as pure bigotry."
Trump Supporters -- Nature or Nurture?
The Contract With Authoritarianism (Thomas Edsall) from the New York Times
"Those with a fixed worldview tend to see “American Carnage,” while those with fluid worldviews see the world as a big, beautiful place that is safe to explore. The fixed tend to be wary of what they perceive as constant threats to their physical security specifically and of social change in general. The fluid are much more open to change and, indeed, see it as a strength. For them, anger lies in holding on to old ideas and rejecting diversity. .... Citizens care less about the outcomes a policy produces and more about the groups and symbols with which a policy is associated."
Edsall covers A LOT of territory in this article! It is almost a lit review of recent studies on the psychological roots of people's political and cultural preferences. A MUST READ if you want to get more grounded in the partisanship that divides us. Nuggetsman
"Those with a fixed worldview tend to see “American Carnage,” while those with fluid worldviews see the world as a big, beautiful place that is safe to explore. The fixed tend to be wary of what they perceive as constant threats to their physical security specifically and of social change in general. The fluid are much more open to change and, indeed, see it as a strength. For them, anger lies in holding on to old ideas and rejecting diversity. .... Citizens care less about the outcomes a policy produces and more about the groups and symbols with which a policy is associated."
Edsall covers A LOT of territory in this article! It is almost a lit review of recent studies on the psychological roots of people's political and cultural preferences. A MUST READ if you want to get more grounded in the partisanship that divides us. Nuggetsman
Trump Loyalism = GOP Loyalism? Maybe Not!
The Trumpification of the GOP Is Complete (Josh Kraushaar) from National Journal
"Republican voters primarily care if their candidates agree with President Trump. Even as the president diverges from a typical conservative agenda, the demand for loyalty is becoming even more intense."
I cannot see that this is anything but bad news both for the GOP and Trump voters generally. As I noted on Lynn's program the other day, Trump (thankfully) is a unique politician. I see NO ONE in the Republican Party who commands anything like the loyalty that the great orange one commands. Again, thankfully, Trump's presidency will be a finite thing. Thus, the question becomes: once the question of loyalty to Trump disappears, WHO are these people going to vote for?! Are they going to passively drift back to the Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell wing? I can't see it. How about the Trump wannabe up-and-comers?! I can't see that either. Those folks are all third rate talents -- and it remains to be seen whether any of them can actually win in a general election. This fall's election is going to reveal SO MUCH!! -- Nuggetsman
"Republican voters primarily care if their candidates agree with President Trump. Even as the president diverges from a typical conservative agenda, the demand for loyalty is becoming even more intense."
I cannot see that this is anything but bad news both for the GOP and Trump voters generally. As I noted on Lynn's program the other day, Trump (thankfully) is a unique politician. I see NO ONE in the Republican Party who commands anything like the loyalty that the great orange one commands. Again, thankfully, Trump's presidency will be a finite thing. Thus, the question becomes: once the question of loyalty to Trump disappears, WHO are these people going to vote for?! Are they going to passively drift back to the Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell wing? I can't see it. How about the Trump wannabe up-and-comers?! I can't see that either. Those folks are all third rate talents -- and it remains to be seen whether any of them can actually win in a general election. This fall's election is going to reveal SO MUCH!! -- Nuggetsman
What's Really Wrong with "Illiberal Democracy"!
‘Democracy’ Still Matters (Jan-Werner Muller) from the New York Times
"Mr. Orban has spent the past several years weakening his country’s democratic checks and balances; he has attacked independent civil society, and he has brought the media under the control of oligarchs close to his government. While doing so, he has advertised his approach as a distinctive form of democracy, one fit to meet the challenges of the 21st century. It is, he says, “illiberal democracy.” Plenty of critics have adopted this term as a description not just of Hungary, but of redesigned political systems in countries as different as Poland and Turkey. Yet “illiberal democracy” fails to capture what is wrong with these regimes."
"Mr. Orban has spent the past several years weakening his country’s democratic checks and balances; he has attacked independent civil society, and he has brought the media under the control of oligarchs close to his government. While doing so, he has advertised his approach as a distinctive form of democracy, one fit to meet the challenges of the 21st century. It is, he says, “illiberal democracy.” Plenty of critics have adopted this term as a description not just of Hungary, but of redesigned political systems in countries as different as Poland and Turkey. Yet “illiberal democracy” fails to capture what is wrong with these regimes."
More "Blow" Back from Trump's Previous Women
Third Woman Sues to Void Secrecy Pact Linked to Trump from Bloomberg
"A former employee of President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign team sued the organization to nullify a non-disclosure agreement she signed, saying it muzzled her from airing discrimination claims."
"A former employee of President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign team sued the organization to nullify a non-disclosure agreement she signed, saying it muzzled her from airing discrimination claims."
The Advice to Expect from Trump's New NS Adviser
John Bolton, cyber warrior from Politico
"Trump’s incoming adviser has said the U.S. should launch a ‘retaliatory cyber campaign against Russia’ and ‘use WikiLeaks for target practice. ... While officials and cyber specialists agree with Bolton’s push for a clearly articulated digital strike policy, the government has hesitated to dive headlong into what Bolton calls “a retaliatory cyber campaign,” wary of blowback on American businesses and infrastructure, the lack of global rules for online warfare and the debatable effectiveness of digital strikes in the first place.’"
"Trump’s incoming adviser has said the U.S. should launch a ‘retaliatory cyber campaign against Russia’ and ‘use WikiLeaks for target practice. ... While officials and cyber specialists agree with Bolton’s push for a clearly articulated digital strike policy, the government has hesitated to dive headlong into what Bolton calls “a retaliatory cyber campaign,” wary of blowback on American businesses and infrastructure, the lack of global rules for online warfare and the debatable effectiveness of digital strikes in the first place.’"
Putin and Russia: The Bigger Picture
Is Putin a C.I.A. Agent? (Thomas Friedman) from the New York Times
"Because Putin has undertaken so many actions in recent years that contributed to the weakening of Russia’s economy and human capital base that you have to wonder whether he’s secretly on the C.I.A.’s payroll. Beginning around 2007 or 2008, Putin appears to have decided that rebuilding Russia by nurturing its tremendous human talent and strengthening the rule of law was just too hard ... Instead, Putin decided to look for dignity for Russia in all the wrong places."
"Because Putin has undertaken so many actions in recent years that contributed to the weakening of Russia’s economy and human capital base that you have to wonder whether he’s secretly on the C.I.A.’s payroll. Beginning around 2007 or 2008, Putin appears to have decided that rebuilding Russia by nurturing its tremendous human talent and strengthening the rule of law was just too hard ... Instead, Putin decided to look for dignity for Russia in all the wrong places."
Dem Strategy Nugget
Republicans rigged our democracy. Here's how Democrats can fight back (David Faris) from the Guardian (of the UK)
"Republicans have been using the constitution’s flaws to wage a one-sided war against their political opponents. It’s time for Democrats to respond. .... Democrats, now that they are in the minority for the foreseeable future, must pay homage to their Republican overlords and use what little power they have to slow down legislation, turn the public against the Republican Congress, and then retake total power in 2018 and 2020. Then, what they must do with that power is to fundamentally alter key aspects of our political system that we take for granted but that are not, contrary to popular belief, outlined in the US constitution."
"Republicans have been using the constitution’s flaws to wage a one-sided war against their political opponents. It’s time for Democrats to respond. .... Democrats, now that they are in the minority for the foreseeable future, must pay homage to their Republican overlords and use what little power they have to slow down legislation, turn the public against the Republican Congress, and then retake total power in 2018 and 2020. Then, what they must do with that power is to fundamentally alter key aspects of our political system that we take for granted but that are not, contrary to popular belief, outlined in the US constitution."
The Cornerstone of NRA Influence: The Ballot Box
We’ve Fought the NRA for Decades—We’ve Never Seen It as Panicked as It Is Now from the Daily Beast
"In the immediate aftermath of the Parkland shooting, we drew on our combined 50 years of experience battling the National Rifle Association to predict that nothing would change on guns. Those same 50 years of experience now tell us we were wrong. Why? Because we have never seen the NRA more vulnerable. The NRA derives its power on one thing and one thing only: their ability to determine outcomes at the ballot box."
WHAT HAPPENS if being a lawmaker with great scores from the NRA becomes a LIABILITY in an election!? What happens if young anti-gun voters begin showcasing ads blasting you for those scores (and the NRA campaign donations) that have spelled electoral victory for you for years!? It may not happen in Georgia -- but in suburban Illinois, Indiana or Michigan it might. -- Nuggetsman
"In the immediate aftermath of the Parkland shooting, we drew on our combined 50 years of experience battling the National Rifle Association to predict that nothing would change on guns. Those same 50 years of experience now tell us we were wrong. Why? Because we have never seen the NRA more vulnerable. The NRA derives its power on one thing and one thing only: their ability to determine outcomes at the ballot box."
WHAT HAPPENS if being a lawmaker with great scores from the NRA becomes a LIABILITY in an election!? What happens if young anti-gun voters begin showcasing ads blasting you for those scores (and the NRA campaign donations) that have spelled electoral victory for you for years!? It may not happen in Georgia -- but in suburban Illinois, Indiana or Michigan it might. -- Nuggetsman
Trade Wars' Biggest Casualties: Trump Voters
Farmers and business groups warn trade war with China will wreck Trump country: ‘This has to stop’ from Raw Story
"“The last thing the administration should be doing is starting a trade war on the backs of American farmers,” said Minnesota Soybean Growers President Michael Petefish. “We have already seen soybean futures down nearly 40 cents as of this morning,” says Minnesota Soybean CEO Tom Slunecka. “That’s more than a billion dollars lost in value for our crop just this morning."A Tra
"“The last thing the administration should be doing is starting a trade war on the backs of American farmers,” said Minnesota Soybean Growers President Michael Petefish. “We have already seen soybean futures down nearly 40 cents as of this morning,” says Minnesota Soybean CEO Tom Slunecka. “That’s more than a billion dollars lost in value for our crop just this morning."A Tra
Red State Risings
Behind The Wave Of Red-State Teacher Walkouts from the National Memo
"“We have the worst pay in the nation for our teachers,” he continued, but pay is just the tip of the iceberg. Arizona teachers have been struggling with years of divestment from Republican governors who slashed education funding to pay for tax cuts. Thomas dates the worst of Arizona’s tax cuts back to the reaction to the 2008 Great Recession. “Before the recession, we were spending $1,000 more a student on supplies, teacher salaries and staff hirings and building repair, all of the money that goes into that.”"
It is interesting here how long-term conservative contempt (I don't know what else you can call it) for public sector works simply became too open since the great recession. They seemed to feel that they could treat them like crap and that workers themselves WOULDN'T NOTICE! What shockers! -- Nuggetsman
"“We have the worst pay in the nation for our teachers,” he continued, but pay is just the tip of the iceberg. Arizona teachers have been struggling with years of divestment from Republican governors who slashed education funding to pay for tax cuts. Thomas dates the worst of Arizona’s tax cuts back to the reaction to the 2008 Great Recession. “Before the recession, we were spending $1,000 more a student on supplies, teacher salaries and staff hirings and building repair, all of the money that goes into that.”"
It is interesting here how long-term conservative contempt (I don't know what else you can call it) for public sector works simply became too open since the great recession. They seemed to feel that they could treat them like crap and that workers themselves WOULDN'T NOTICE! What shockers! -- Nuggetsman
Disenfranchisement Textbook Nugget
There’s no good reason to stop felons from voting (George Will) from the Washington Post
"Meade is one of 1.6 million disenfranchised Florida felons — more than the total number of people who voted in 22 separate states in 2016. He is one of the more than 20 percent of African American Floridians disenfranchised. The state has a low threshold for felonious acts: Someone who gets into a bar fight, or steals property worth $300 — approximately two pairs of Air Jordans — or even drives without a licensefor a third time can be disenfranchised for life. "
"Meade is one of 1.6 million disenfranchised Florida felons — more than the total number of people who voted in 22 separate states in 2016. He is one of the more than 20 percent of African American Floridians disenfranchised. The state has a low threshold for felonious acts: Someone who gets into a bar fight, or steals property worth $300 — approximately two pairs of Air Jordans — or even drives without a licensefor a third time can be disenfranchised for life. "
Sunday, April 1, 2018
Hey everyone! For my Pittsburgh fans, I wanted to let you all know that I will be on Lynn Cullen's program on Wednesday, April 4 from 10 to 11am. You can catch it live or watch the podcast at the Pittsburgh City Paper website HERE!
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: 2nd Week in a Row "Who Called It!?" Nugget
Michael Cohen’s Attorney May Be an Even Worse Lawyer Than He Is (Margaret Hartmann) from New York Magazine
"Later in the interview Schwartz suggested Cohen regularly set up these sorts of agreements without telling his client — which seems to back up reports that Trump’s attorneys “took care” of dozens of women during the campaign."
Surprise, surprise! If you look back to News Nuggets 1569, I had speculated that this was precisely where things were going to go.
"Later in the interview Schwartz suggested Cohen regularly set up these sorts of agreements without telling his client — which seems to back up reports that Trump’s attorneys “took care” of dozens of women during the campaign."
Surprise, surprise! If you look back to News Nuggets 1569, I had speculated that this was precisely where things were going to go.
Trump's Legal Team of Amateurs
Trump Is Defenseless Against Robert Mueller (Lithwick and Stern) from Slate
"Trump desperately needs a crack legal team. But his lawyers are no match for Mueller, and no sane attorney would join them now."
The last point here is key! Like most of the people in Trump's administration, his legal team is a crew of second-rate, self-dealing sycophants ... who have kept Trump happy by telling him what he wants to hear (e.g. the investigation will be over by Thanksgiving, etc.). What's going to happen when Mueller's indictment missiles start landing on Kushner, Don Jr. and himself? I would not want to be in their shoes. Mueller has stacked his legal lineup with a Murderer's Row team. What has Trump got? A political AA-ball team from Rochester? Nuggetsman.
"Trump desperately needs a crack legal team. But his lawyers are no match for Mueller, and no sane attorney would join them now."
The last point here is key! Like most of the people in Trump's administration, his legal team is a crew of second-rate, self-dealing sycophants ... who have kept Trump happy by telling him what he wants to hear (e.g. the investigation will be over by Thanksgiving, etc.). What's going to happen when Mueller's indictment missiles start landing on Kushner, Don Jr. and himself? I would not want to be in their shoes. Mueller has stacked his legal lineup with a Murderer's Row team. What has Trump got? A political AA-ball team from Rochester? Nuggetsman.
What We Can Expect from John Bolton
The second-most dangerous American (George Will) from the Washington Post
"Bolton will soon be the second-most dangerous American. On April 9, he will be the first national security adviser who, upon taking up residence down the hall from the Oval Office, will be suggesting that the United States should seriously consider embarking on war crimes. ... Bolton, for whom a trade war with many friends and foes is insufficiently stimulating, favors real wars against North Korea and Iran."
"Bolton will soon be the second-most dangerous American. On April 9, he will be the first national security adviser who, upon taking up residence down the hall from the Oval Office, will be suggesting that the United States should seriously consider embarking on war crimes. ... Bolton, for whom a trade war with many friends and foes is insufficiently stimulating, favors real wars against North Korea and Iran."
The Paradox of Anti-globalization in 2018
Globalization’s Backlash Is Here, at Just the Wrong Time from the New York Times
"[Backlash] is coming after the major costs of globalization have already been borne. And it comes just as billions of people who have become integrated into the global economy over the last three decades are starting to become rich enough to become valuable consumers. In short, the anti-globalization drive that is spreading across the Western world may be coming at exactly the wrong time — too late to do much to save the working-class jobs that were lost, but early enough to risk damaging the ability of rich nations to sell advanced goods and services to the rapidly expanding global middle class."
"[Backlash] is coming after the major costs of globalization have already been borne. And it comes just as billions of people who have become integrated into the global economy over the last three decades are starting to become rich enough to become valuable consumers. In short, the anti-globalization drive that is spreading across the Western world may be coming at exactly the wrong time — too late to do much to save the working-class jobs that were lost, but early enough to risk damaging the ability of rich nations to sell advanced goods and services to the rapidly expanding global middle class."
Some Good News Book Review Nugget!
Dear Democrats, Don’t Despair (Charles Kenny) from the Washington Monthly
"Even in the age of Donald Trump, at least in some ways, things have never been better. ... While Pinker enumerates the many ways America and the world has made material and social progress over the past two centuries, Easterbrook focuses on why these positive trends will seemingly continue in the years to come. As he writes, “this book will show a range of reasons why the Western way of life is more robust than meets the eye—and why a better world is closer than it looks.”"
"Even in the age of Donald Trump, at least in some ways, things have never been better. ... While Pinker enumerates the many ways America and the world has made material and social progress over the past two centuries, Easterbrook focuses on why these positive trends will seemingly continue in the years to come. As he writes, “this book will show a range of reasons why the Western way of life is more robust than meets the eye—and why a better world is closer than it looks.”"
Looking Forward, Where Hope Resides!
In America, Endangered By Trump And Bolton, The Young Bring Hope (Gene Lyons) from National Memo
"Bolton was memorably described as a “kick-down, kiss-up” bureaucratic infighter by colleagues during 2005 congressional testimony. Every large organization has them. A leader who keeps such sycophants near him is invariably characterized by weakness, incompetence and false bravado. ... I’m persuaded that hope resides mainly in the young: specifically the amazing kids of Parkland, Florida and their cohort nationwide. Should Trump provoke a showdown, millions of patriotic Americans would fill the streets of every big city in America."
I completely agree with Lyons here. Millennials are the largest generation in US history, and they are mobilizing on two key fronts now: anti-Trump politics and gun control. For years, this group tended to be deeply jaded and reluctant to get politically active. Well, under Trump, there have been clear costs associated with this reluctance! Even those who remain disenchanted with the two political parties now have a clear home with the gun control movement. For decades, the GOP has successfully positioned itself as the party looking out for "the next generation." It is remarkable seeing so many prominent right-wing talking heads now ATTACKING young people. All they are doing now is giving Millennials more reasons to vote against them. See the final nuggets for today just as an example. Nuggetsman
"Bolton was memorably described as a “kick-down, kiss-up” bureaucratic infighter by colleagues during 2005 congressional testimony. Every large organization has them. A leader who keeps such sycophants near him is invariably characterized by weakness, incompetence and false bravado. ... I’m persuaded that hope resides mainly in the young: specifically the amazing kids of Parkland, Florida and their cohort nationwide. Should Trump provoke a showdown, millions of patriotic Americans would fill the streets of every big city in America."
I completely agree with Lyons here. Millennials are the largest generation in US history, and they are mobilizing on two key fronts now: anti-Trump politics and gun control. For years, this group tended to be deeply jaded and reluctant to get politically active. Well, under Trump, there have been clear costs associated with this reluctance! Even those who remain disenchanted with the two political parties now have a clear home with the gun control movement. For decades, the GOP has successfully positioned itself as the party looking out for "the next generation." It is remarkable seeing so many prominent right-wing talking heads now ATTACKING young people. All they are doing now is giving Millennials more reasons to vote against them. See the final nuggets for today just as an example. Nuggetsman
In the White House Now, Bewildered Resignation
After Another Week of Chaos, Trump Repairs to Palm Beach. No One Knows What Comes Next. from the New York Times
"The decisions attested to a president riled up by cable news and unbound. Mr. Trump appeared heedless of his staff, unconcerned about Washington decorum, or the latest stock market dive, and confident of his instincts. He seemed determined to set the agenda himself, even if that agenda looked like a White House in disarray. Inside the West Wing, aides described an atmosphere of bewildered resignation as they grappled with the all-too-familiar task of predicting and reacting in real time to Mr. Trump’s shifting moods."
"The decisions attested to a president riled up by cable news and unbound. Mr. Trump appeared heedless of his staff, unconcerned about Washington decorum, or the latest stock market dive, and confident of his instincts. He seemed determined to set the agenda himself, even if that agenda looked like a White House in disarray. Inside the West Wing, aides described an atmosphere of bewildered resignation as they grappled with the all-too-familiar task of predicting and reacting in real time to Mr. Trump’s shifting moods."
Targeting Putin
Putin Has Overplayed His Hand (William Burns) from the New York Times
"Mr. Putin’s muscular revanchism can camouflage his weakness, but it cannot erase it. He remains reliant on a one-dimensional economy, constrained by sanctions, mired in the reckless adventures he’s pursued in Ukraine and Syria, and increasingly subordinate to China and its growing ambitions. An effective diplomatic response needs to expose Mr. Putin’s vulnerabilities as effectively as he has sought to exploit ours."
"Mr. Putin’s muscular revanchism can camouflage his weakness, but it cannot erase it. He remains reliant on a one-dimensional economy, constrained by sanctions, mired in the reckless adventures he’s pursued in Ukraine and Syria, and increasingly subordinate to China and its growing ambitions. An effective diplomatic response needs to expose Mr. Putin’s vulnerabilities as effectively as he has sought to exploit ours."
How Long Can Republican Lawmakers Hide From Voters?
Gun reform activists demand town halls. Many Republicans have ducked them since 2017 from McClatchy News Service
"“This is not an unreasonable thing to expect. If they can meet with donors every recess they can take an hour to talk to constituents – it is called ‘district work period,’” said Nathan Williams, managing director of the Town Hall Project, which is helping out March for Our Lives organizers on the issue. ... The town hall on gun violence hosted by CNN in February after the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that killed 17 people in Parkland, Florida, was a “red flag” for many Republicans, according to Scott Jennings, a Republican political strategist and special assistant to former President George W. Bush."
"“This is not an unreasonable thing to expect. If they can meet with donors every recess they can take an hour to talk to constituents – it is called ‘district work period,’” said Nathan Williams, managing director of the Town Hall Project, which is helping out March for Our Lives organizers on the issue. ... The town hall on gun violence hosted by CNN in February after the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that killed 17 people in Parkland, Florida, was a “red flag” for many Republicans, according to Scott Jennings, a Republican political strategist and special assistant to former President George W. Bush."
The Fading of Christianity in Europe and the US
The Barely-Beating Heart Of Christendom (Rod Dreher) from the American Conservative
"The report’s findings aren’t surprising, exactly, but they are shocking. They confirm that Europe’s is a post-Christian civilization, and they make clear the stark challenges facing the churches there going forward. For American Christian readers, the report may serve as a portrait of our own civilization in the future, if we don’t take strong measures now to prevent that fate."
Dreher, a sane voice of Christian conservatism, may be whistling past the graveyard here. I have long felt that evangelical Christians pulled their faith into the gutter when they (a) became so politically tied to the GOP back in Reagan's time; and (b) when, more recently, they have merged evangelicalism with white nationalism. It is now commonplace for them to take positions completely antithetical to the core principles of their faith and to embrace policies that not only alienate moderates and most young people -- but they come off as just ... NUTTY! See the last post from today's nuggets. Nuggetsman
"The report’s findings aren’t surprising, exactly, but they are shocking. They confirm that Europe’s is a post-Christian civilization, and they make clear the stark challenges facing the churches there going forward. For American Christian readers, the report may serve as a portrait of our own civilization in the future, if we don’t take strong measures now to prevent that fate."
Dreher, a sane voice of Christian conservatism, may be whistling past the graveyard here. I have long felt that evangelical Christians pulled their faith into the gutter when they (a) became so politically tied to the GOP back in Reagan's time; and (b) when, more recently, they have merged evangelicalism with white nationalism. It is now commonplace for them to take positions completely antithetical to the core principles of their faith and to embrace policies that not only alienate moderates and most young people -- but they come off as just ... NUTTY! See the last post from today's nuggets. Nuggetsman
The GOP Controls Most Branches of Gov't -- But All their Attention is on One Thing
The Republicans Are Clinging Frantically to Power (Joy-Ann Reid) from the Daily Beast
"The GOP is desperately seeking to build a wall around its power, fearing its imminent erosion as a host of forces—demographic, cultural, and political—come barreling its way."
"The GOP is desperately seeking to build a wall around its power, fearing its imminent erosion as a host of forces—demographic, cultural, and political—come barreling its way."
The Crisis of Conscience Facing Real Conservatives
This madness will pass. Conservatives can’t give up (Michael Gerson) from the Washington Post
"So how do we split the political difference on this one? Shall we talk about Mexican migrants as rapists on every other day? Shall we provide rhetorical cover for alt-right bigots only on special occasions, such as after a racist rally and murder? ... While some Republicans have criticized media bias, Trump has attempted to systematically delegitimize all critical information as “fake news” and referred to the media as “the enemy of the people.” While other politicians have pushed back against investigations, Trump has attempted to discredit federal law enforcement as part of a “deep state” plot against him."
Gerson, a conservative columnist, is spot on with how untenable the current situation is with Trump. It is impossible to be a principled conservative under his tenure. Sadly, i think he is wrong about where this will all end up. When the dust settles, all that will be left will be revanchist white nationalism completely unmoored from reality. -- Nuggetsman
"So how do we split the political difference on this one? Shall we talk about Mexican migrants as rapists on every other day? Shall we provide rhetorical cover for alt-right bigots only on special occasions, such as after a racist rally and murder? ... While some Republicans have criticized media bias, Trump has attempted to systematically delegitimize all critical information as “fake news” and referred to the media as “the enemy of the people.” While other politicians have pushed back against investigations, Trump has attempted to discredit federal law enforcement as part of a “deep state” plot against him."
Gerson, a conservative columnist, is spot on with how untenable the current situation is with Trump. It is impossible to be a principled conservative under his tenure. Sadly, i think he is wrong about where this will all end up. When the dust settles, all that will be left will be revanchist white nationalism completely unmoored from reality. -- Nuggetsman
Right Wing Nuttiness Nugget!
Rep. Mary Franson compares 'March for Our Lives' kids to Hitler Youth from City Pages
"Back in December, the state representative from Alexandria refused to meet with a group of politically active high school students, kids who live in her district, because the small outfit was made up of Democrats. ... This past weekend, Franson offered a clearer understanding of why she might be afraid to interact with young progressives. She fears they might be Nazis."
"Back in December, the state representative from Alexandria refused to meet with a group of politically active high school students, kids who live in her district, because the small outfit was made up of Democrats. ... This past weekend, Franson offered a clearer understanding of why she might be afraid to interact with young progressives. She fears they might be Nazis."
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: The "Who Called It" Nugget!!
Karen McDougal is the woman with the best chance of bringing down Trump from Think Progress
".... Daniels and McDougal have sued, asking the court to formally invalidate their agreements and let them speak freely. But the nature of the agreements signed by Daniels and McDougal are quite different. From a legal perspective, the structure of McDougal’s contract appears to be worse for Trump and his associates."
See the Daniels story from News Nuggets 1568! To quote myself from March 11: "ALL of the women who have signed NDAs with Trump will go back and find that he didn't sign their agreements either -- and thus they would be free to speak. It is my sense that some of those cases go way beyond consensual affairs but deal with sexual harassment, rape, and worse." And here we are just 10 days later! I thought I was going out on a limb with my prediction. I am going to follow on here with another prediction: it is now not a question as to if any more will come forward. The question is how many? I feel like I should start a pool! Now, the second issue I raised in my last post was "It seems to me that law abiding people sign an NDA. More nefarious folks simply blackmail. I suspect Trump has had to deal with both types many times." What could this look like? See the following nugget! -- Nuggetsman
".... Daniels and McDougal have sued, asking the court to formally invalidate their agreements and let them speak freely. But the nature of the agreements signed by Daniels and McDougal are quite different. From a legal perspective, the structure of McDougal’s contract appears to be worse for Trump and his associates."
See the Daniels story from News Nuggets 1568! To quote myself from March 11: "ALL of the women who have signed NDAs with Trump will go back and find that he didn't sign their agreements either -- and thus they would be free to speak. It is my sense that some of those cases go way beyond consensual affairs but deal with sexual harassment, rape, and worse." And here we are just 10 days later! I thought I was going out on a limb with my prediction. I am going to follow on here with another prediction: it is now not a question as to if any more will come forward. The question is how many? I feel like I should start a pool! Now, the second issue I raised in my last post was "It seems to me that law abiding people sign an NDA. More nefarious folks simply blackmail. I suspect Trump has had to deal with both types many times." What could this look like? See the following nugget! -- Nuggetsman
Why Have Security Clearance? The Trump Example
The Stormy Daniels Saga Shows How Vulnerable Trump Is To Blackmail from the Huffington Post
"I mention the nitty-gritty, behind-the-scenes things we had to deal with not to be a martyr or because any of us felt the intensity of the questioning was unfair or inappropriate. I tell you this because it was a job to complete this form, and it was a job we all — senior advisers and junior assistants alike — took seriously. We knew that the security of the United States could be compromised if we screwed up the SF86. ... We are talking about the president. With every passing news cycle, the current administration is learning this lesson, about the importance of telling the truth, an even harder way. The total failure to follow protocol, to tell the truth about staffers’ backgrounds, is biting them in the ass."
"I mention the nitty-gritty, behind-the-scenes things we had to deal with not to be a martyr or because any of us felt the intensity of the questioning was unfair or inappropriate. I tell you this because it was a job to complete this form, and it was a job we all — senior advisers and junior assistants alike — took seriously. We knew that the security of the United States could be compromised if we screwed up the SF86. ... We are talking about the president. With every passing news cycle, the current administration is learning this lesson, about the importance of telling the truth, an even harder way. The total failure to follow protocol, to tell the truth about staffers’ backgrounds, is biting them in the ass."
A GREAT DETAILED PRIMER on Firing or Not Firing
Trump would love to fire Mueller. But here’s why he’s been afraid to so far. from Vox
"It is certainly possible that Trump could change his mind and decide that, despite all this, Mueller’s probe is so dangerous that it’s worth casting caution to the wind and firing him. But he’s been afraid to take that step so far — and for some very good reasons."
"It is certainly possible that Trump could change his mind and decide that, despite all this, Mueller’s probe is so dangerous that it’s worth casting caution to the wind and firing him. But he’s been afraid to take that step so far — and for some very good reasons."
Assessing Trump's Young Presidency: Check out the Superlatives!
Trump’s presidency is unravelling. But he won’t fall without a push (Gary Younge) from the Guardian (of the UK)
"Witnessing Trump’s presidency unravel so spectacularly provokes a perverse joy. The venality is so baroque, the vulgarity so ostentatious, the inconsistencies so stark, the incompetence so epic and the lies so brazen, it leaves you speechless. His vanity is without guile and the scandals that embroil him without end. Almost everything he says and does has been publicly contradicted, by himself, usually on Twitter. "
"Witnessing Trump’s presidency unravel so spectacularly provokes a perverse joy. The venality is so baroque, the vulgarity so ostentatious, the inconsistencies so stark, the incompetence so epic and the lies so brazen, it leaves you speechless. His vanity is without guile and the scandals that embroil him without end. Almost everything he says and does has been publicly contradicted, by himself, usually on Twitter. "
Trump "growing into his Presidency"
White House shakeup shows Trump tired of hearing 'no' for an answer from Reuters
" Almost 14 months into Donald Trump’s turbulent White House tenure, loyalists are in, dissenters are out and the president himself is acting on his own instincts more swiftly than ever to make decisions on policies from trade to North Korea."
Oh happy day!
" Almost 14 months into Donald Trump’s turbulent White House tenure, loyalists are in, dissenters are out and the president himself is acting on his own instincts more swiftly than ever to make decisions on policies from trade to North Korea."
Oh happy day!
On Trump's New Cabinet: There's Madness to His Method
Trump is systematically removing the guardrails in his cabinet from the New Republic
"These changes suggest a president who is convinced that he has grown into the job and, more troublingly, has come to resent the numerous guardrails that were erected around him to protect the country (and the world) from his erratic instincts. Trump is remaking his cabinet—filling it with hawks and cable news pundits—into his own image."
"These changes suggest a president who is convinced that he has grown into the job and, more troublingly, has come to resent the numerous guardrails that were erected around him to protect the country (and the world) from his erratic instincts. Trump is remaking his cabinet—filling it with hawks and cable news pundits—into his own image."
The Politics of Sophistry and Cynicism
Trump's maximal tribalism (Damon Linker) from The Week
"Without fully grasping the consequences of his words and deeds, President Trump has done more than any previous president to advance a politics of sophistry and cynicism. It's a politics defined by the unrelenting effort to prove that every apparent act of virtue is in fact an example of something lower — of the very tribalism that motivates Trump's every public utterance and act."
"Without fully grasping the consequences of his words and deeds, President Trump has done more than any previous president to advance a politics of sophistry and cynicism. It's a politics defined by the unrelenting effort to prove that every apparent act of virtue is in fact an example of something lower — of the very tribalism that motivates Trump's every public utterance and act."
2018 House Election Prediction Nugget!
Insiders See Democratic House Gains of 30-45 seats from Roll Call
"Seven and a half months before the midterm elections, the combination of attitudinal and behavioral evidence leads to a single conclusion: The Democrats are very likely to win control of the House in November. Just as important, Republican and Democratic campaign strategists also agree that an electoral wave has already formed. The attitudinal evidence begins with national polling."
I think this analysis is VERY CONSERVATIVE! If Dems do as well in November as they have done on average in the special elections from last year and this year, the GOP actually has close to 110 House seats in danger. Now -- I think there is no way the Dems will get anything close to 110. I am predicting more like a 65-70 seat pickup. No one else is predicting this. You heard it here first. One caveat: I fully expect Russian hackers will be targeting election outcomes by finding ways to actually alter vote totals. If this happens on anything like a meaningful scale, all bets are off.
"Seven and a half months before the midterm elections, the combination of attitudinal and behavioral evidence leads to a single conclusion: The Democrats are very likely to win control of the House in November. Just as important, Republican and Democratic campaign strategists also agree that an electoral wave has already formed. The attitudinal evidence begins with national polling."
I think this analysis is VERY CONSERVATIVE! If Dems do as well in November as they have done on average in the special elections from last year and this year, the GOP actually has close to 110 House seats in danger. Now -- I think there is no way the Dems will get anything close to 110. I am predicting more like a 65-70 seat pickup. No one else is predicting this. You heard it here first. One caveat: I fully expect Russian hackers will be targeting election outcomes by finding ways to actually alter vote totals. If this happens on anything like a meaningful scale, all bets are off.
The Bigger Picture on Russian Poisoning in the UK
Poisoning of Russian ex-spy puts spotlight on Moscow’s secret military labs from the Washington Post
"During his last run for the presidency, in 2012, Russian leader Vladimir Putin startled U.S. military experts with a mysterious pledge to develop novel kinds of weapons to counter the West’s technological edge. Armies of the future, he said, would need weapons “based on new physical principles” including “genetic” and “psychophysical” science."
There is every indication that Putin has been investing A LOT in unconventional forms of weaponry. We are now somewhat privy to the kind of cyber warfare he will wage. Russia has long been the leader in chem-bio WMDs. This seems like a clear extension of that. If you want to see the bigger historical picture, see David Hoffman's Pulitzer prize winning book, The Dead Hand.
"During his last run for the presidency, in 2012, Russian leader Vladimir Putin startled U.S. military experts with a mysterious pledge to develop novel kinds of weapons to counter the West’s technological edge. Armies of the future, he said, would need weapons “based on new physical principles” including “genetic” and “psychophysical” science."
There is every indication that Putin has been investing A LOT in unconventional forms of weaponry. We are now somewhat privy to the kind of cyber warfare he will wage. Russia has long been the leader in chem-bio WMDs. This seems like a clear extension of that. If you want to see the bigger historical picture, see David Hoffman's Pulitzer prize winning book, The Dead Hand.
On the McCabe Firing
I stand with Andrew McCabe (Ronald Klain) from the Washington Post
"A president who doesn’t respect the rule of law will always have the upper hand over imperfect but fundamentally decent civil servants."
"A president who doesn’t respect the rule of law will always have the upper hand over imperfect but fundamentally decent civil servants."
Immigration Nugget
Is it still worth trying to come to America as an asylum seeker? I don't think so (Luis Mancheno) from the Guardian (of the UK)
"I know you will come because I am a refugee living in the United States and I know what it means to escape death. I am so ashamed that we will do this to you and I am angry because my new country has betrayed me and every other person who believed in it. This place is not what it used to be. Just know that."
"I know you will come because I am a refugee living in the United States and I know what it means to escape death. I am so ashamed that we will do this to you and I am angry because my new country has betrayed me and every other person who believed in it. This place is not what it used to be. Just know that."
Gun Control Reform Nugget!
Maher panel proposes a new way of taking down the NRA — and the gun organization should be afraid from Raw Story
"“Why does the NRA get a tax exemption and how to do we take it away?” host Bill Maher proposed as his audience applauded. “They would like to say that they don’t run a political action committee, but they do have that wing, saying they are a grassroots non-profit organization,” Sirius radio host Nayyera Haq explained as comedian Pete Dominick interjected, “Elect Democrats.”"
"“Why does the NRA get a tax exemption and how to do we take it away?” host Bill Maher proposed as his audience applauded. “They would like to say that they don’t run a political action committee, but they do have that wing, saying they are a grassroots non-profit organization,” Sirius radio host Nayyera Haq explained as comedian Pete Dominick interjected, “Elect Democrats.”"
Sunday, March 11, 2018
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: The Trump Presidency: "Worse Than I Had Imagined..."
It’s Worse Than We Thought (Josh Marshall) from Talking Points Memo
"While I’ve been following the Trump era for going on three years and long been a pessimist about the depth of his corruption – both venal and otherwise – the last two weeks has made me think the situation is significantly worse than I’d imagined. Let me refer very briefly to two points."
"While I’ve been following the Trump era for going on three years and long been a pessimist about the depth of his corruption – both venal and otherwise – the last two weeks has made me think the situation is significantly worse than I’d imagined. Let me refer very briefly to two points."
Trump, Now Liberated to Act on His Impulses... ?!
“Trump is Going for a Clean Reset": Fuming in the West Wing (Gabriel Sherman) from Vanity Fair
"Donald Trump was telling friends he was tired of being reined in. “I’m doing great, but I’m getting all these bad headlines,” Trump told a friend recently. A Republican in frequent contact with the White House told me Trump is “frustrated by all these people telling him what to do.” With the departures of Hope Hicks and Gary Cohn, the Trump presidency is entering a new phase—one in which Trump is feeling liberated to act on his impulses."
AH! So what we have seen so far has been the buttoned down, under-control Trump!!
"Donald Trump was telling friends he was tired of being reined in. “I’m doing great, but I’m getting all these bad headlines,” Trump told a friend recently. A Republican in frequent contact with the White House told me Trump is “frustrated by all these people telling him what to do.” With the departures of Hope Hicks and Gary Cohn, the Trump presidency is entering a new phase—one in which Trump is feeling liberated to act on his impulses."
AH! So what we have seen so far has been the buttoned down, under-control Trump!!
America: A Hapless Cartoon Character on the World TV Screen
Trump is Wile E. Coyote (David Ignatius) from the Washington Post
" When it comes to global diplomacy, America under President Trump has become something of a hapless cartoon villain, detonating bombs on itself and running into walls — while our nimbler adversaries dart away in a blur of dust. ... His strategy, if you can call it that, has been to disrupt America’s traditional economic and security relationships and commitments. He must imagine that this gives him new leverage, but mostly the result has been a series of self-inflicted wounds."
" When it comes to global diplomacy, America under President Trump has become something of a hapless cartoon villain, detonating bombs on itself and running into walls — while our nimbler adversaries dart away in a blur of dust. ... His strategy, if you can call it that, has been to disrupt America’s traditional economic and security relationships and commitments. He must imagine that this gives him new leverage, but mostly the result has been a series of self-inflicted wounds."
Time for Kushner's Close Up -- and It Isn't Pretty!
The corruption of Kushner (Ryan Cooper) from The Week
"Obviously, the Kushner situation is galactically worse than Trump simply hiring a relatively dim relative. Indeed, Kushner (who recently lost his Top Secret security clearance) is also up to his armpits in extremely shady business deals that reek of corruption. In a healthy democracy, law enforcement would already be closing in. ... Let's just run through just a few publicly known facts and see if we can't connect the dots."
"Obviously, the Kushner situation is galactically worse than Trump simply hiring a relatively dim relative. Indeed, Kushner (who recently lost his Top Secret security clearance) is also up to his armpits in extremely shady business deals that reek of corruption. In a healthy democracy, law enforcement would already be closing in. ... Let's just run through just a few publicly known facts and see if we can't connect the dots."
For Christians, After Trump, What Could They Ever Be "Public Witnesses" To?
The Last Temptation (Michael Gerson) from the Atlantic
"Loyalty to Trump has involved progressively more difficult, self-abasing demands. And there appears to be no limit to what some evangelical leaders will endure. ... The moral convictions of many evangelical leaders have become a function of their partisan identification. This is not mere gullibility; it is utter corruption. Blinded by political tribalism and hatred for their political opponents, these leaders can’t see how they are undermining the causes to which they once dedicated their lives. Little remains of a distinctly Christian public witness."
"Loyalty to Trump has involved progressively more difficult, self-abasing demands. And there appears to be no limit to what some evangelical leaders will endure. ... The moral convictions of many evangelical leaders have become a function of their partisan identification. This is not mere gullibility; it is utter corruption. Blinded by political tribalism and hatred for their political opponents, these leaders can’t see how they are undermining the causes to which they once dedicated their lives. Little remains of a distinctly Christian public witness."
Prince and Obstruction of Justice?
Erik Prince Might Want To Shift Investments To Private Prison Industry from Talking Points Memo
"Prince appears caught conducting clandestine business, which may not be criminal in itself (you can meet people in the Seychelles) but may or may not be part of a broader criminal conspiracy. But here he may be caught not only in a lie but a highly material lie and perhaps one that is so clear-cut and designed to impede a lawful investigation that he can be prosecuted for it."
Prince has been one of the more prominent war profiteering shit heels for many years. This couldn't have happened to a nicer guy!
"Prince appears caught conducting clandestine business, which may not be criminal in itself (you can meet people in the Seychelles) but may or may not be part of a broader criminal conspiracy. But here he may be caught not only in a lie but a highly material lie and perhaps one that is so clear-cut and designed to impede a lawful investigation that he can be prosecuted for it."
Prince has been one of the more prominent war profiteering shit heels for many years. This couldn't have happened to a nicer guy!
More Dangers in the Daniels Discolsures
One Night with Stormy Daniels, the Hero America Needs from Rolling Stone Magazine
""Penguins have terrible breath," she says. "How do you know penguins have terrible breath?" I ask. "They smell like they've been eating bad vagina. I got to pet one at a zoo – if you ever go to the zoo, the penguin habitat is the stinkiest one. It smells like a really bad porn set." ... this meeting began with one such message, promoting a "Make America Horny Again" tour date at a club on Long Island. The release was riddled with typos..."
Wow! Jennifer Flowers and Monica Lewinski look like really classy dames (like for real) compared to this one. The Donald sure can choose them!
On a more serious note, I think there is A LOT of danger to Trump in this Daniels business. I think it is inevitable that all the lurid details and photos (and accessories?) will come out. But the danger comes from (at least two fronts)-- fronts that go beyond what most reporters are talking about right now: first, that ALL of the women who have signed NDAs with Trump will go back and find that he didn't sign their agreements either -- and thus they would be free to speak. It is my sense that some of those cases go way beyond consensual affairs but deal with sexual harassment, rape, and worse. Second, if this stand alone sex case metastasizes into dozens involving much darker behaviors, at what point will this scandal cross the Russia probe -- where we ultimately confirm the worst allegations from the Steele Dossier with actual videos involving a range of characters and situations? It seems to me that law abiding people sign an NDA. More nefarious folks simply blackmail. I suspect Trump has had to deal with both types many times.
If you want to get a sense of the salacious aspects of his affair with Daniels, see THIS.
""Penguins have terrible breath," she says. "How do you know penguins have terrible breath?" I ask. "They smell like they've been eating bad vagina. I got to pet one at a zoo – if you ever go to the zoo, the penguin habitat is the stinkiest one. It smells like a really bad porn set." ... this meeting began with one such message, promoting a "Make America Horny Again" tour date at a club on Long Island. The release was riddled with typos..."
Wow! Jennifer Flowers and Monica Lewinski look like really classy dames (like for real) compared to this one. The Donald sure can choose them!
On a more serious note, I think there is A LOT of danger to Trump in this Daniels business. I think it is inevitable that all the lurid details and photos (and accessories?) will come out. But the danger comes from (at least two fronts)-- fronts that go beyond what most reporters are talking about right now: first, that ALL of the women who have signed NDAs with Trump will go back and find that he didn't sign their agreements either -- and thus they would be free to speak. It is my sense that some of those cases go way beyond consensual affairs but deal with sexual harassment, rape, and worse. Second, if this stand alone sex case metastasizes into dozens involving much darker behaviors, at what point will this scandal cross the Russia probe -- where we ultimately confirm the worst allegations from the Steele Dossier with actual videos involving a range of characters and situations? It seems to me that law abiding people sign an NDA. More nefarious folks simply blackmail. I suspect Trump has had to deal with both types many times.
If you want to get a sense of the salacious aspects of his affair with Daniels, see THIS.
When You Have No Shame, Scandals Don't Matter
The President and the Porn Star: A Story’s Slow Rise Above the Din (Matthew Flagenheimer) from the New York Times
"Here is a leader who crowds out scandal with more scandal, who tends to insist that the buck stops elsewhere, who boasted of sexual assault on tape and got to the White House anyway. It is not quite that nothing sticks to Mr. Trump; it is that so much sticks that nothing stays visible for very long. ... The moment touches several crosscurrents of the Trump age: an administration defined largely by its chaos; the #MeToo movement; and a news media still grappling, nearly three years after Mr. Trump declared his candidacy, with how to cover his excess of excesses. “Scandals run on shame. Trump is completely exempt from any shame,” Mr. Murphy said. “So instead of talking about the crime, we just score-keep.”"
"Here is a leader who crowds out scandal with more scandal, who tends to insist that the buck stops elsewhere, who boasted of sexual assault on tape and got to the White House anyway. It is not quite that nothing sticks to Mr. Trump; it is that so much sticks that nothing stays visible for very long. ... The moment touches several crosscurrents of the Trump age: an administration defined largely by its chaos; the #MeToo movement; and a news media still grappling, nearly three years after Mr. Trump declared his candidacy, with how to cover his excess of excesses. “Scandals run on shame. Trump is completely exempt from any shame,” Mr. Murphy said. “So instead of talking about the crime, we just score-keep.”"
No Staff -- No Problem
Devastating graphic featured by MSNBC’s Katy Tur destroys the White House spin on its staffing crisis from Raw Story
“President Trump does not treat his staff well, he publicly embarrasses them and undermines them,” noted former White House press secretary Josh Earnest. “So if you know you’re going to get criticized or undermined by your boss before you even get there, and once you get there you’re not likely to have influence on the process, then why would you even go?”
“President Trump does not treat his staff well, he publicly embarrasses them and undermines them,” noted former White House press secretary Josh Earnest. “So if you know you’re going to get criticized or undermined by your boss before you even get there, and once you get there you’re not likely to have influence on the process, then why would you even go?”
A Fully Automated McDonalds on the Horizon
Meet Flippy, the world's first burger-flipping robot from The Week
"Artificial intelligence is poised to enter yet another aspect of your life: fast food. After years of preparation, a burger-flipping robot named Flippy made its debut on Monday at the Pasadena, California, location of the restaurant chain CaliBurger."
"Artificial intelligence is poised to enter yet another aspect of your life: fast food. After years of preparation, a burger-flipping robot named Flippy made its debut on Monday at the Pasadena, California, location of the restaurant chain CaliBurger."
Sunday, March 4, 2018
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: Trump Gradually Losing His Marbles
The great unraveling: Trump's allies are really worried about him (Gloria Borger) from CNN
"Not since Richard Nixon started talking to the portraits on the walls of the West Wing has a president seemed so alone against the world. One source -- who is a presidential ally -- is worried, really worried. The source says this past week is "different," that advisers are scared the President is spiraling, lashing out, just out of control."
"Not since Richard Nixon started talking to the portraits on the walls of the West Wing has a president seemed so alone against the world. One source -- who is a presidential ally -- is worried, really worried. The source says this past week is "different," that advisers are scared the President is spiraling, lashing out, just out of control."
The Emerging Landscape of Partisan Demographics
New Survey Shows Young People Are Staying Liberal and Conservatives Are Dying Off (Jonathan Chait) from New York Magazine
"... the fact remains that America is politically sorted by generations in a way it never has before. The oldest voters are the most conservative, white, and Republican, and the youngest voters the most liberal, racially diverse, and Democratic. There is absolutely no sign the dynamic is abating during the Trump years. If anything, it is accelerating."
"... the fact remains that America is politically sorted by generations in a way it never has before. The oldest voters are the most conservative, white, and Republican, and the youngest voters the most liberal, racially diverse, and Democratic. There is absolutely no sign the dynamic is abating during the Trump years. If anything, it is accelerating."
Chain Reactions for the Common Good
The Force of Decency Awakens (Paul Krugman) from the New York Times
"Political scientists have a term and a theory for what we’re seeing on #MeToo, guns and perhaps more: “regime change cascades.” Here’s how it works: When people see the status quo as immovable, they tend to be passive even if they are themselves dissatisfied. Indeed, they may be unwilling to reveal their discontent, or to fully admit it to themselves. But once they see others visibly taking a stand, they both gain more confidence in their dissent and become more willing to act on it — and by their actions they may induce the same response in others, causing a kind of chain reaction."
"Political scientists have a term and a theory for what we’re seeing on #MeToo, guns and perhaps more: “regime change cascades.” Here’s how it works: When people see the status quo as immovable, they tend to be passive even if they are themselves dissatisfied. Indeed, they may be unwilling to reveal their discontent, or to fully admit it to themselves. But once they see others visibly taking a stand, they both gain more confidence in their dissent and become more willing to act on it — and by their actions they may induce the same response in others, causing a kind of chain reaction."
Mueller ... Going Deep
Robert Mueller Has Trump and Family in His Crosshairs (Jonathan Chait) from New York Magazine
"One safe conclusion is that the investigation is probably not near done. Another is that Trump and his family are not safe. ... The big picture is that, after Trump burned enough creditors that American banks stopped dealing with him, he became deeply reliant on Russian capital. The Russian economy is deeply connected to Vladimir Putin, and uses its leverage to advance political goals."
"One safe conclusion is that the investigation is probably not near done. Another is that Trump and his family are not safe. ... The big picture is that, after Trump burned enough creditors that American banks stopped dealing with him, he became deeply reliant on Russian capital. The Russian economy is deeply connected to Vladimir Putin, and uses its leverage to advance political goals."
Trump's People Following the Watergate Play Book
Robert Mueller Doesn’t Need a Smoking Gun (Elizabeth Drew) from the New Republic
"The latest indictments suggest a pattern of behavior on the part of Trump and his associates—the kind of pattern that brought down Richard Nixon."
"The latest indictments suggest a pattern of behavior on the part of Trump and his associates—the kind of pattern that brought down Richard Nixon."
Russia Scandal: Biggest Political Scandal ... Ever
Collusion or not, Russia probe is worst political scandal in decades (Chuck Todd) from NBC News
"Whether or not Mueller ever finds a smoking gun that Trump and his campaign colluded with Russia, this is already the biggest political scandal in decades. And we are just more than a year into Trump’s presidency and nine months into Mueller’s probe. “Clearly the worst presidential scandal since at least Iran-Contra, but probably since Watergate,” said political scientist Jonathan Bernstein."
When it's all over, Watergate will look like the equivalent of Travelgate from the Clinton years! Biggest political scandal in US history! That's what we are looking at with Trump."
"Whether or not Mueller ever finds a smoking gun that Trump and his campaign colluded with Russia, this is already the biggest political scandal in decades. And we are just more than a year into Trump’s presidency and nine months into Mueller’s probe. “Clearly the worst presidential scandal since at least Iran-Contra, but probably since Watergate,” said political scientist Jonathan Bernstein."
When it's all over, Watergate will look like the equivalent of Travelgate from the Clinton years! Biggest political scandal in US history! That's what we are looking at with Trump."
Trump's Road Has No Rails
Trump Thought the Rules Didn’t Apply—and Now He’s Paying the Price (David Graham) from the Atlantic
"The Trump administration decided early on that many guidelines were either antiquated or punitive, and is belatedly discovering that they were there for its own protection."
"The Trump administration decided early on that many guidelines were either antiquated or punitive, and is belatedly discovering that they were there for its own protection."
Trump's Partisan Corruption Fairness Doctrine
Trump urges national unity, investigation of 'the other side' amid Russia probe from Politico
"Saying there were "no phone calls, no meetings, no collusion," President Donald Trump on Saturday pushed for an investigation of "the other side" amid the FBI probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election ..."
Left unattended, Trump always reveals what he really thinks. He thinks Sessions and the Justice Department needs to be investigating the Dems out of some warped version of partisan "fairness". In his world view, since he is under so much investigation, the DOJ should be investigating the Dems FOR SOMETHING! On his own, he couldn't come up with any real reason to -- but it should happen. Obama, Hilary, the party, whatever. Trump's view: invent something! -- Nuggetsman
"Saying there were "no phone calls, no meetings, no collusion," President Donald Trump on Saturday pushed for an investigation of "the other side" amid the FBI probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election ..."
Left unattended, Trump always reveals what he really thinks. He thinks Sessions and the Justice Department needs to be investigating the Dems out of some warped version of partisan "fairness". In his world view, since he is under so much investigation, the DOJ should be investigating the Dems FOR SOMETHING! On his own, he couldn't come up with any real reason to -- but it should happen. Obama, Hilary, the party, whatever. Trump's view: invent something! -- Nuggetsman
Were Some Trump Folks Too Stupid to be Worth Recruiting by Russians?
Russian Spies Thought Trump Adviser Carter Page Was an ‘Idiot’—But Still Tried to Recruit Him from the Daily Beast
"... the FBI had been watching Page as a potential Russian spy since 2013, long before Page was mentioned in the dossier of dirt on the Trump-Russia connection compiled by former British intelligence operative Christopher Steele over the summer and fall of 2016."
"... the FBI had been watching Page as a potential Russian spy since 2013, long before Page was mentioned in the dossier of dirt on the Trump-Russia connection compiled by former British intelligence operative Christopher Steele over the summer and fall of 2016."
Trump Routinely Ignores Advice of his Legal Team
Trump ignored 'bright line' on discussing Russia with Hicks from Politico
"President Donald Trump’s lawyers have urged him not to discuss details of the unfolding Russia investigation with anyone outside his legal team, warning of a conversational “bright line” that could put aides and associates in legal jeopardy, according to current and former Trump aides. But Trump often ignores that legal advice in the presence of senior aides — including his departing confidante and White House communications director, Hope Hicks."
"President Donald Trump’s lawyers have urged him not to discuss details of the unfolding Russia investigation with anyone outside his legal team, warning of a conversational “bright line” that could put aides and associates in legal jeopardy, according to current and former Trump aides. But Trump often ignores that legal advice in the presence of senior aides — including his departing confidante and White House communications director, Hope Hicks."
Economic Trouble Nugget!
The Mortgage Market Is Moving Into the Shadows from Bloomberg
"The last financial crisis occurred in part because unregulated lending in the mortgage market got out of hand. Believe it or not, it’s starting to happen again, and could ultimately precipitate another disaster unless regulators get their act together."
Regular NN reader Keith Richmond and I have been tracking a number of important stories on the economy. Neither of us are buying all the happy talk about the economy. In their hearts, most economists know that we are DUE for a downturn right about now -- and there are MANY indicators of conditions that resemble what was occurring right before the great recession. Not enough was done after the last recession to prevent future bubbles and abuses. -- Nuggetsman
"The last financial crisis occurred in part because unregulated lending in the mortgage market got out of hand. Believe it or not, it’s starting to happen again, and could ultimately precipitate another disaster unless regulators get their act together."
Regular NN reader Keith Richmond and I have been tracking a number of important stories on the economy. Neither of us are buying all the happy talk about the economy. In their hearts, most economists know that we are DUE for a downturn right about now -- and there are MANY indicators of conditions that resemble what was occurring right before the great recession. Not enough was done after the last recession to prevent future bubbles and abuses. -- Nuggetsman
Right Wing Pundit Nugget!
If this is what conservatism has become, count me out (Max Boot) from the Washington Post
"That, in a nutshell, is the credo of today’s high-profile conservatives: Say anything to “trigger” the “libtards” and “snowflakes.” The dumber and more offensive, the better. Whatever it takes to get on (and stay on) Fox News and land the next book contract! Naturally, just as drug addicts need bigger doses over time, these outrage artists must be ever more transgressive to get the attention they crave."
"That, in a nutshell, is the credo of today’s high-profile conservatives: Say anything to “trigger” the “libtards” and “snowflakes.” The dumber and more offensive, the better. Whatever it takes to get on (and stay on) Fox News and land the next book contract! Naturally, just as drug addicts need bigger doses over time, these outrage artists must be ever more transgressive to get the attention they crave."
Another Right Wing Pundit Nugget!
I’m Glad I Got Booed at CPAC (Mona Charon) from the New York Times
"... this time, and particularly in front of this crowd, it felt far more urgent to point out the hypocrisy of our side. How can conservative women hope to have any credibility on the subject of sexual harassment or relations between the sexes when they excuse the behavior of President Trump? ... I watched my fellow panelists’ eyes widen. And then the booing began. I’d been dreading it for days, but when it came, I almost welcomed it. There is nothing more freeing than telling the truth."
I have NEVER liked Mona Charon. She has always seemed to me to be way too ideologically straight-jacketed -- so I am glad to see her breaking with her crowd. Having said that, there is so much about her column that speaks to where the conservative movement went wrong. Example: she says at the end of the column, "Just before I reached the exit, a woman approached me and called my name. “That was so brave!” she told me. She was one of my fellow panelists." This fellow panelist spoke at CPAC, took the big payday, mouthed some alt-right bromides and will live large on all the follow-on business that comes from it, This, despite the fact she was unwilling to speak the truth. Charon herself for years was one of those folks who were featured speakers on high-priced, donor ass-kissing cruises. For so many of these people (and I include the Limbaughs and Inghrams in this conversation), they are too addicted to the big paydays that come with being a right-wing talking head. What can you say about a crowd that continues to this day to milk 1990s era Bill and Hilary stories to keep their readers/listeners tuned in and hopping mad?! -- Nuggetsman
"... this time, and particularly in front of this crowd, it felt far more urgent to point out the hypocrisy of our side. How can conservative women hope to have any credibility on the subject of sexual harassment or relations between the sexes when they excuse the behavior of President Trump? ... I watched my fellow panelists’ eyes widen. And then the booing began. I’d been dreading it for days, but when it came, I almost welcomed it. There is nothing more freeing than telling the truth."
I have NEVER liked Mona Charon. She has always seemed to me to be way too ideologically straight-jacketed -- so I am glad to see her breaking with her crowd. Having said that, there is so much about her column that speaks to where the conservative movement went wrong. Example: she says at the end of the column, "Just before I reached the exit, a woman approached me and called my name. “That was so brave!” she told me. She was one of my fellow panelists." This fellow panelist spoke at CPAC, took the big payday, mouthed some alt-right bromides and will live large on all the follow-on business that comes from it, This, despite the fact she was unwilling to speak the truth. Charon herself for years was one of those folks who were featured speakers on high-priced, donor ass-kissing cruises. For so many of these people (and I include the Limbaughs and Inghrams in this conversation), they are too addicted to the big paydays that come with being a right-wing talking head. What can you say about a crowd that continues to this day to milk 1990s era Bill and Hilary stories to keep their readers/listeners tuned in and hopping mad?! -- Nuggetsman
2018 Campaign Nugget!!
Do Democrats Really Need a Message? from the New Republic
"...one positive effect of the lack of a “message” is that it allows a candidate to define his or her own race and to come off as authentic rather than as a party tool. Running as an individual can also protect a candidate from being “Nancy Pelosied.” "
"...one positive effect of the lack of a “message” is that it allows a candidate to define his or her own race and to come off as authentic rather than as a party tool. Running as an individual can also protect a candidate from being “Nancy Pelosied.” "
Movie Nugget!
As 'Black Panther' hits screens in Africa, 'the hero is all of us' from the Christian Science Monitor
"In Marvel's depiction of Wakanda, many African fans see something rarer than vibranium: a big-screen image of Africa that defies Hollywood stereotypes."
Hollywood Academy Awards Nugget!
At 101, a Survivor of Hollywood’s Golden Age Throws Down the Gauntlet from the New York Times
"In the era of “I, Tonya,” the Oscar-winning actress Olivia de Havilland’s lawsuit against FX and Ryan Murphy Productions has a certain potent symbolism."
"In the era of “I, Tonya,” the Oscar-winning actress Olivia de Havilland’s lawsuit against FX and Ryan Murphy Productions has a certain potent symbolism."
Saturday, February 24, 2018
TODAY'S BIG NUGGET: The GOP Leaves the Door Open for Russian Interference -- To Win in 2018 They Will Make That Deal
America Is Under Attack and the President Doesn't Care (David Frum) from the Atlantic
"This Mueller indictment references only Russian operations on Facebook. It does not deal with the weaponization of hacked information via WikiLeaks. Or the reports that the Russians funneled millions of dollars of election spending through the NRA’s political action committees. ... Americans once thought it was a big deal that Alger Hiss rose to serve as acting temporary secretary general of the United Nations. This time, a Russian-backed individual was installed in the Oval Office. ... At every turn, Trump has failed to do what a patriotic president would do—failed to put the national interest first. He has left the 2018 elections as vulnerable as the 2016 elections to Russian intervention on his behalf. The president’s malignant narcissism surely explains much of this passivity. He cannot endure the thought that he owes the presidency to anything other than his own magnificence. ... Authoritarian nationalist parties across the western world have outright cooperated with the Russians. Russian money has helped to finance the National Front in France, and the election and re-election of the president of the Czech Republic. In Germany, Russia first created a hoax refugee-rape case—then widely publicized it—in an effort to boost its preferred extremist party in that country’s 2017 election, the Alternative for Germany. Russia supported pro-AfD comment in media favored by Germany’s surprisingly substantial Russian-speaking communities. ... To what extent does President Trump—to what extent do congressional Republicans—look to Russian interference to help their party in the 2018 cycle? ... in front of our very eyes we can observe that they are leaving the door open to Russian intervention on their behalf in the next election. You might call it collusion in advance—a dereliction of duty as grave as any since President Buchanan looked the other way as Southern state governments pillaged federal arsenals on the eve of the Civil War."
Frum gives an excellent "big picture" look at Russia's interference both with the Trump administration and in the larger picture! Well worth quoting at length here! Nuggetsman
"This Mueller indictment references only Russian operations on Facebook. It does not deal with the weaponization of hacked information via WikiLeaks. Or the reports that the Russians funneled millions of dollars of election spending through the NRA’s political action committees. ... Americans once thought it was a big deal that Alger Hiss rose to serve as acting temporary secretary general of the United Nations. This time, a Russian-backed individual was installed in the Oval Office. ... At every turn, Trump has failed to do what a patriotic president would do—failed to put the national interest first. He has left the 2018 elections as vulnerable as the 2016 elections to Russian intervention on his behalf. The president’s malignant narcissism surely explains much of this passivity. He cannot endure the thought that he owes the presidency to anything other than his own magnificence. ... Authoritarian nationalist parties across the western world have outright cooperated with the Russians. Russian money has helped to finance the National Front in France, and the election and re-election of the president of the Czech Republic. In Germany, Russia first created a hoax refugee-rape case—then widely publicized it—in an effort to boost its preferred extremist party in that country’s 2017 election, the Alternative for Germany. Russia supported pro-AfD comment in media favored by Germany’s surprisingly substantial Russian-speaking communities. ... To what extent does President Trump—to what extent do congressional Republicans—look to Russian interference to help their party in the 2018 cycle? ... in front of our very eyes we can observe that they are leaving the door open to Russian intervention on their behalf in the next election. You might call it collusion in advance—a dereliction of duty as grave as any since President Buchanan looked the other way as Southern state governments pillaged federal arsenals on the eve of the Civil War."
Frum gives an excellent "big picture" look at Russia's interference both with the Trump administration and in the larger picture! Well worth quoting at length here! Nuggetsman
What Trump is Up to and the Damage He's Causing
Whatever Trump Is Hiding Is Hurting All of Us Now (Thomas L. Friedman) from the New York Times
"Trump is either trying so hard to hide it or is so naïve about Russia that he is ready to not only resist mounting a proper defense of our democracy, he’s actually ready to undermine some of our most important institutions, the F.B.I. and Justice Department, to keep his compromised status hidden. That must not be tolerated. This is code red. The biggest threat to the integrity of our democracy today is in the Oval Office."
Friedman is using the word "either" here. It is multiple versions of "all of the above."
"Trump is either trying so hard to hide it or is so naïve about Russia that he is ready to not only resist mounting a proper defense of our democracy, he’s actually ready to undermine some of our most important institutions, the F.B.I. and Justice Department, to keep his compromised status hidden. That must not be tolerated. This is code red. The biggest threat to the integrity of our democracy today is in the Oval Office."
Friedman is using the word "either" here. It is multiple versions of "all of the above."
The Russia Probe Starting to Hit Trump's Congressional Cronies
Latest Twist in Russia Investigation Involves Unnamed Member of Congress from Roll Call
"The wide-ranging investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign took an unexpected diversion to Capitol Hill on Friday, when former Trump campaign aide Rick Gates pleaded guilty to lying to investigators about a meeting between his boss Paul Manafort and an unnamed member of Congress. ... Public filings show that the the March 19, 2013 meeting detailed in court documents coincided with a meeting between Manafort and Dana Rohrabacher, a Russia-friendly Republican congressman from California, Bloomberg reported Friday."
With Nunes's nonsense on the House oversight committee, you had to know the Russia probe was going to eventually suck in Republican leaders in the House and Senate. Who is next? Nuggetsman
"The wide-ranging investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign took an unexpected diversion to Capitol Hill on Friday, when former Trump campaign aide Rick Gates pleaded guilty to lying to investigators about a meeting between his boss Paul Manafort and an unnamed member of Congress. ... Public filings show that the the March 19, 2013 meeting detailed in court documents coincided with a meeting between Manafort and Dana Rohrabacher, a Russia-friendly Republican congressman from California, Bloomberg reported Friday."
With Nunes's nonsense on the House oversight committee, you had to know the Russia probe was going to eventually suck in Republican leaders in the House and Senate. Who is next? Nuggetsman
Progressivism Paying Off on the Local Level
The Anti-Trump Movement Has Already Made Profound Progressive Change from New York Magazine
"Elections aren’t everything. The far left is right to insist that workers, tenants, and communities can expand the boundaries of political possibility by organizing and exercising their collective power outside of the ballot box. Nonetheless, through good, old-fashioned electoral politics, progressives can make this country a significantly better place — and in 2018, they already have."
"Elections aren’t everything. The far left is right to insist that workers, tenants, and communities can expand the boundaries of political possibility by organizing and exercising their collective power outside of the ballot box. Nonetheless, through good, old-fashioned electoral politics, progressives can make this country a significantly better place — and in 2018, they already have."
Underlying Beliefs of Young People Driving Them to the Democratic Party
The Kids are all Democrats (David Faris) from The Week
"...the data gets worse for Republicans the deeper you dig into it. In 2016 exit polling, for instance, 18- to 24-year-olds went more heavily for Hillary Clinton than their older millennial counterparts, suggesting that, if anything, the Republican position is falling apart with the tail end of the millennial generation. Had complacency and the wreckage of the bitter Democratic primary not led many millennials to vote for Jill Stein or Gary Johnson, those numbers would likely look much worse. And it gets even worse for the GOP: A 2017 Pew poll found that fully a quarter of young Republicans had defected to the Democrats since 2015. Nor does the increasing progressivism of America's youngest voters seem to be driven by short-term reactions to particular political figures or developments. Instead, the avocado toast and Instagram set is being driven into the arms of Democrats by their underlying beliefs. An astonishing 66 percent of respondents in that youthful age bracket told Pew that they favor single-payer health care. Nearly three-fourths of the youngest Americans favor gay marriage. We are likely witnessing the maturation of the most liberal generation of voters since the New Deal."
"...the data gets worse for Republicans the deeper you dig into it. In 2016 exit polling, for instance, 18- to 24-year-olds went more heavily for Hillary Clinton than their older millennial counterparts, suggesting that, if anything, the Republican position is falling apart with the tail end of the millennial generation. Had complacency and the wreckage of the bitter Democratic primary not led many millennials to vote for Jill Stein or Gary Johnson, those numbers would likely look much worse. And it gets even worse for the GOP: A 2017 Pew poll found that fully a quarter of young Republicans had defected to the Democrats since 2015. Nor does the increasing progressivism of America's youngest voters seem to be driven by short-term reactions to particular political figures or developments. Instead, the avocado toast and Instagram set is being driven into the arms of Democrats by their underlying beliefs. An astonishing 66 percent of respondents in that youthful age bracket told Pew that they favor single-payer health care. Nearly three-fourths of the youngest Americans favor gay marriage. We are likely witnessing the maturation of the most liberal generation of voters since the New Deal."
Gun Activists Nugget
The NRA is being supported by these companies from Think Progress
"Much like AARP or AAA, the organization promotes its discounts for members as a selling point for why people should join. The “valuable 5-star benefits” promised include not just a subscription to an NRA magazine and a gun-owner liability protection policy but also savings on insurance, identity theft protection, hearing aids, car rentals, moving vans, shipping, and even wine. While some of these perks are provided by in-house subsidiaries, many are offered through corporate partners — including some household names."
"Much like AARP or AAA, the organization promotes its discounts for members as a selling point for why people should join. The “valuable 5-star benefits” promised include not just a subscription to an NRA magazine and a gun-owner liability protection policy but also savings on insurance, identity theft protection, hearing aids, car rentals, moving vans, shipping, and even wine. While some of these perks are provided by in-house subsidiaries, many are offered through corporate partners — including some household names."
The Challenge of Having an Honest Debate on Guns
Why is only one side in the gun culture war required to show respect? (E.J.Dionne) from the Washington Post
"Those in favor of reforming our firearms laws are scolded as horrific elitists who disrespect a valued way of life. And as the mass killings continue, we are urged to be patient and to spend our time listening earnestly to the views of those who see even a smidgen of action to limit access to guns as the first step toward confiscation. Our task is not to fight for laws to protect innocents, but to demonstrate that we really, honestly, truly, cross-our-hearts, positively love gun owners and wouldn’t for an instant think anything ill of them. What is odd is that those with extreme pro-gun views — those pushing for new laws to allow people to carry just about anytime, anywhere — are never called upon to model similar empathy toward children killed, the mourning parents left behind, people in urban neighborhoods suffering from violence, or the majority of Americans who don’t own guns."
"Those in favor of reforming our firearms laws are scolded as horrific elitists who disrespect a valued way of life. And as the mass killings continue, we are urged to be patient and to spend our time listening earnestly to the views of those who see even a smidgen of action to limit access to guns as the first step toward confiscation. Our task is not to fight for laws to protect innocents, but to demonstrate that we really, honestly, truly, cross-our-hearts, positively love gun owners and wouldn’t for an instant think anything ill of them. What is odd is that those with extreme pro-gun views — those pushing for new laws to allow people to carry just about anytime, anywhere — are never called upon to model similar empathy toward children killed, the mourning parents left behind, people in urban neighborhoods suffering from violence, or the majority of Americans who don’t own guns."
American Culture in 2018: A Culture "Yearning to Give Up"
The Poison We Pick (Andrew Sullivan) from New York Magazine
"The scale and darkness of this phenomenon is a sign of a civilization in a more acute crisis than we knew, a nation overwhelmed by a warp-speed, postindustrial world, a culture yearning to give up, indifferent to life and death, enraptured by withdrawal and nothingness. America, having pioneered the modern way of life, is now in the midst of trying to escape it."
"The scale and darkness of this phenomenon is a sign of a civilization in a more acute crisis than we knew, a nation overwhelmed by a warp-speed, postindustrial world, a culture yearning to give up, indifferent to life and death, enraptured by withdrawal and nothingness. America, having pioneered the modern way of life, is now in the midst of trying to escape it."
Immigration insanity mainlined in the GOP
CPAC Immigration Panel Goes Off The Rails from Talking Points Memo
"As David Bier, a policy analyst with the libertarian Cato Institute, attempted to lay out research proving that immigrants actually have lower crime rates than native-born Americans, contribute significantly to the economy and are assimilating just as well or better than past generations of immigrants, his fellow panelists derided his statements as “nutty” and angry audience members shouted him down."
"As David Bier, a policy analyst with the libertarian Cato Institute, attempted to lay out research proving that immigrants actually have lower crime rates than native-born Americans, contribute significantly to the economy and are assimilating just as well or better than past generations of immigrants, his fellow panelists derided his statements as “nutty” and angry audience members shouted him down."
Hollywood Culture Nugget!
Why ‘Black Panther’ Is a Defining Moment for Black America from New York Times Magazine
"Ryan Coogler’s film is a vivid re-imagination of something black Americans have cherished for centuries — Africa as a dream of our wholeness, greatness and self-realization."
"Ryan Coogler’s film is a vivid re-imagination of something black Americans have cherished for centuries — Africa as a dream of our wholeness, greatness and self-realization."
Sunday, February 18, 2018
Well, the gritty, ugly details are FINALLY starting to ooze out from this cesspool of an administration! This week's nuggets begin to open up in detail what Russia's campaign to influence our elections actually looked like on the ground. And if you care about our country, one can only say we look like a country of f#@&ing imbeciles!! The ease with which a group of cyber-slaves in Saint Petersburg was able to screw our politics and play all the right notes to turn us against each other will make you physically ill. I can only say, don't look away. Read the posts below; start to get grounded in what actually happened -- because it is heading our way AGAIN this November! -- Nuggetsman
POWERFUL Big Nugget of the Day: The Anatomy of the Russian "Campaign" of 2016
The 21st-century Russian sleeper agent is a troll with an American accent from the Washington Post
"The secretive, multimillion-dollar disinformation campaign, which U.S. officials said was called the “Translator Project,” sought to undermine Clinton, bolster Donald Trump and turn Americans against each other — all from the remove of thousands of miles away, in an office building in St. Petersburg. ... The Russians involved in the campaign executed it with almost perfect pitch — learning to mimic the way Americans talk online about politics so well that real Americans with whom they interacted found them in no way suspicious. Such deception did not happen by accident. Russian trolls worked hard to sound like Americans and camouflage their political messages in other content."
"The secretive, multimillion-dollar disinformation campaign, which U.S. officials said was called the “Translator Project,” sought to undermine Clinton, bolster Donald Trump and turn Americans against each other — all from the remove of thousands of miles away, in an office building in St. Petersburg. ... The Russians involved in the campaign executed it with almost perfect pitch — learning to mimic the way Americans talk online about politics so well that real Americans with whom they interacted found them in no way suspicious. Such deception did not happen by accident. Russian trolls worked hard to sound like Americans and camouflage their political messages in other content."
Russian Collusion: A Campaign "Bigger Than Jeb Bush's..."
‘Go Donald!’: Inside the Russian shadow campaign to elect Trump from the Washington Post
"The Russian effort to meddle in the 2016 presidential election spanned at least two countries and multiple states, and included fake rallies, false identities and divisive slogans intended to magnify Trump’s message and undermine Clinton’s candidacy, according to a 37-page indictment of a notorious Russian troll farm announced by the Justice Department’s special counsel. “I’m amazed — and I suppose I shouldn’t be — what a widespread campaign it was,” said Republican consultant Doug Heye. “It looks like the size of this was probably bigger than Jeb Bush’s primary campaign.”"
"The Russian effort to meddle in the 2016 presidential election spanned at least two countries and multiple states, and included fake rallies, false identities and divisive slogans intended to magnify Trump’s message and undermine Clinton’s candidacy, according to a 37-page indictment of a notorious Russian troll farm announced by the Justice Department’s special counsel. “I’m amazed — and I suppose I shouldn’t be — what a widespread campaign it was,” said Republican consultant Doug Heye. “It looks like the size of this was probably bigger than Jeb Bush’s primary campaign.”"
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