Dealing another legal blow to the Trump administration

Jul 3rd, 2017 4:44 pm | By

Aw, there’s one of Obama’s environmental protections that Trump doesn’t get to ditch. One of those pesky lawyery judgey court type deals has said no he can’t.

Dealing another legal blow to the Trump administration, a federal appeals court ruled on Monday that the Environmental Protection Agency cannot suspend an Obama-era rule to restrict methane emissions from new oil and gas wells.

The 2-to-1 decision from the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit is the first major legal setback for Scott Pruitt, the E.P.A. administrator, who is trying to roll back dozens of Obama-era environmental regulations. The ruling signals that President Trump’s plans to erase his predecessor’s environmental record are likely to face an uphill battle in the courts.

Environmental protections. Republicans call them “regulations” to make them sound like a pain in the ass and a violation of our precious freedom to breathe dirty air and watch our national parks turned into golf courses. We call them protections.

A number of other E.P.A. actions to undo regulations it inherited, including a rule on landfills and another on chemical spills, are likely to receive close scrutiny from the courts because of this ruling.

I hope the courts can take a very hard look at that move to get rid of the protection of streams.

The methane rule was part of a broad suite of climate regulations enacted by former President Barack Obama. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

Oil and gas companies have argued that the rule requiring them to report and fix any methane leaks in their equipment is an unnecessary burden because many oil-producing states already have their own regulations. The E.P.A. announced on June 5 that it was suspending enforcement of the rule, arguing that the industry had not had enough opportunity to comment. The court rejected that argument.

Aw just let the oil and gas companies leak all over the place, willya? How will we drive our SUVs to the mall if the fossil fuel people can’t make a big mess any more?



Even the Tories can see that one

Jul 3rd, 2017 3:43 pm | By

How we live now.

A former mayor has been suspended by the Tories after allegedly posting a racist ‘joke’ on Facebook.

Racist. Are we sure? Are the Tories being too politically correct?

Conservative councillor 'posted joke comparing Asian people to dogs'

I took my dog to the dole office to see what he was entitled to. The bloke behind the counter said “You idiot, we don’t give benefits to dogs”. So l argued “Why not, he’s brown, he stinks, he’s never worked a fuckin day in his life, and he can’t speak a fuckin word of English”. The man replied “His first payment will be Monday.”

Ok then, the Tories are not being too politically correct.

She didn’t create the “joke” though. Somebody composes that crap. You can see it on Facebook from 2013.

Human beings leave a lot to be desired.



Guest post: Trump is not the “leader of the free world”

Jul 3rd, 2017 10:33 am | By

Guest post by Maureen Brian, originally posted on Facebook.

This was published immediately after the Inauguration but here it is again because six months on it might have been done with a difference of emphasis. Also because I am sick to the back teeth of running into people mindlessly referring to Trump as the “leader of the free world.” The rest of this is addressed to them with no offence to my friends who have more sense.

Listen up, kiddies! Leader of the free world is not a title at all: it is an epithet applied to whomever is believed worthy and by general consent. No, it is not in the gift of the Electoral College and you can’t buy it.

It was first applied to FDR in exceptional circumstances, when he was supporting and funding much of the war against fascism against opposition at home and against the direction of much of your history. Monroe Doctrine, anyone?

Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy all lived up to that level of concern for the world and interest in it. Johnson might have done if he’d sought another term and if he’d not been so busy turning Kennedy’s dreams into some sort of reality right there at home.

Since then your Presidents have been a mixed bag. Only Clinton and Obama had enough interest in/knowledge of the rest of the world to even think of such a title and neither seemed terribly bothered about claiming it. Just like FDR.

As for Trump? No way, José! He knows nothing of the world or its history, he pisses off allies from the long-established to the lukewarm or unreliable. Back home he constantly attacks various clauses of your First Amendment when they or something very like them would be the founding principles of anything described as free.

So stop claiming the title for this man. Doing so merely confirms your political illiteracy and is an unnecessary burden on this world as it actually exists.



Guest post: Violent jihadis need Trump, and he needs them

Jul 3rd, 2017 10:16 am | By

Originally a comment by AJ Milne on They cried all day.

I do not, for an instant, believe the Trump administration has any real interest in reducing tensions with the Muslim world, nor actually encouraging modernisation, secularisation, there or anywhere else, nor undercutting the appeal of violent Islamism. Let alone, of all things, encouraging women to succeed in STEM disciplines, in Afghanistan or anywhere else.

… on that former thing: it’s no more in his interest than it’s in the interest of any would-be strongman who relies upon a perceived/created need for ‘security’ to maintain power. An infinite supply of visceral but largely ineffectual terror events supplies that need perfectly. Polarised, broken, angry, powerless populations supply these, in turn.

There’s always been a hand-in-glove relationship between extremists at odds with a security state and its masters. Violent jihadis need Trump, and he, in turn, needs them. He doesn’t want education, development, opportunities that make good on the promise of a prosperous, plural, healthily interdependent world. He wants missiles, death, and photo-opportunities in which he can strut the power of his security services. Violence overseas or at home, stirring the fear of his domestic population, either way, that’s a message he can use. Women who build robots? Hardly. Two strikes, right there. Smart women–probably among his greatest fears–and technology that doesn’t deliver missiles? Neither goes anywhere helpful for him.

And yeah, it’s an obscenity. What these women do and have done should be hope for the world, hope for the future…

So, there’s a certain horrific, depressing perfection in this story, in short. For my money, this is Trumpism in a nutshell.



A hostile environment for performing artists

Jul 3rd, 2017 9:53 am | By

Sackbut alerted us to this infuriating clusterfuck:

Immigration lawyers believe the State Department has been denying more artist visas after President Trump ordered heightened vetting for all visa applications earlier this year.

In a March 6 memo, released after Trump issued his second executive order on immigration, the president directed “immediate implementation of additional heightened screening and vetting protocols and procedures for issuing visas.” The memo, according to some prominent attorneys who specialize in artist travel, has further complicated the subjective process international artists must navigate to perform in the U.S., and in some cases, [had an impact on] programming for local arts organizations.

Programmers at the Boston Early Music Festival (BEMF), a Grammy-winning event that caters to Renaissance and Baroque music enthusiasts, were surprised and dismayed in May, when, for the first time, U.S. immigration services denied four of the 26 visa applications BEMF applied for. The visas were for the four young women of the German group, Boreas Quartett Bremen. The group, who plays handmade recorders, had to cancel their performance in Boston.

What.the.hell. What’s the thinking here? One of them might be a terrorist on the side? You just never can tell with people weird enough to play handmade recorders?

“I was rather shocked. Our audience has really missed out on a unique and beautiful performance,” said Shannon Canavin, the festival’s visa specialist. Canavin has been filing artists’ applications for more than 20 years and had not encountered a denial until this year.

In 2016, the U.S. issued more than 63,866 O and P visas, which enable athletes, entertainment groups or other people with extraordinary abilities in the sciences or business and those traveling with them to visit the U.S. for short term contractual employment and performances. In March and April of this year, the only months the State Department has released data for, the U.S issued only 697 of those visas. (Monthly tallies for visas issued in 2016 are not available.) A State Department spokesperson said the government released information on the number of visas issued in March and April after the president ordered the department to “quantify the national security work of our consular operations around the world.”

S0 last year the monthly rate was 5322, so 10,644 for two months, compared to 697 for two months this year. Bit of a drop.

It’s insane. It’s appalling. Cultural exchanges of this kind are good things, and piggy ignorant philistine vulgarian Trump is stamping them out, because he’s so stupid he thinks “foreigner=likely terrorist” – except of course for the citizens of our beloved ally Saudi Arabia.

“What we’re seeing right now is an awful lot more skepticism from officers,” said Matthew Covey, an immigration lawyer and the co-founder of Tamizdat, a nonprofit that advises and advocates for traveling artists. “The delays that you’re going to be experiencing in getting those visas are longer than they would have been a year ago… What is a broader effect, I think, is that there is a pervasive sense in the international community that the U.S. is becoming a hostile environment for performing artists.”

Of course.

He shames us all. He shames the country and he shames us.



They cried all day

Jul 2nd, 2017 2:35 pm | By

Nice work, Donald.

Their robot may have permission to travel, but six teenage Afghan inventors are staying put this summer.

They’ve been rejected for a one-week travel visa to escort their robot to the inaugural FIRST Global Challenge – an international robotics competition happening in Washington DC in mid-July.

The all-girl team representing Afghanistan hails from Herat, a city of half a million people in the western part of the country. To interview for their visas, the girls risked a 500 mile trek cross-country to the American embassy in Kabul – the site of several recent suicide attacks and one deadly truck bomb in early June that killed at least 90 people. Despite the recent violence, the teenagers braved the trip to the country’s capital not once, but twice, hoping a second round of interviews might help secure their 7-day visas after the team was rejected on its first try. But no luck.

Roya Mahboob, who founded Citadel software company in Afghanistan, and was the country’s first female tech CEO, brought the group of girls together for the project.

It’s a very important message for our people” Mahboob says. “Robotics is very, very new in Afghanistan.”

She says when the girls first heard the bad news about their visas, “they were crying all the day.”

But this is about the safety of the American people. Maybe those teenage girls would have killed a bunch of people once they got here. You can’t prove they wouldn’t have! Therefore it’s necessary to tell them to stay home.



“Their agenda is not your agenda”

Jul 2nd, 2017 11:09 am | By

Jim Acosta of CNN tweets what Trump said at the theocratic fascist rally at the Kennedy Center (of all places) last night:

 

My administration is transferring power outside of Washington and returning it to where it belongs, the people. The fake media is trying to silence us, but we will not let them. The people know the truth. The fake media tried to stop us from going to the White House, but I’m president and they’re not.

The fact is the press destroyed themselves because they went too far. Instead of being subtle and smart, they used the hatchet, and the people saw it right from the beginning.

The dishonest media will not stop us from accomplishing our objectives on behalf of the American people. Their agenda is not your agenda.

He’s hate-mongering, in a very fascist way. He is inciting violence, and he’s not going to stop.



“Isn’t pro wrestling fake?”

Jul 2nd, 2017 10:33 am | By

The view from overseas:

The US President has tweeted a short video clip of him wrestling a person with the CNN logo for a head.

The clip is an altered version of Donald Trump’s appearance at a WWE wrestling event in 2007, in which he “attacked” franchise owner Vince McMahon in a scripted appearance.

After the president’s tweets, Reddit users expressed disbelief at the president’s use of the clip.

It was also retweeted by the official presidential Twitter account, @POTUS, operated by the White House.

Mr Trump has repeatedly clashed with the CNN news network, which he calls “fake news”.

CNN’s top White House correspondent Jim Acosta, who has been critical of the White House’s attitude to the press, simply tweeted: “Isn’t pro wrestling fake?”

Isn’t Trump fake? He’s about as authentic a president as he is a pro wrestler.

Rajini Vaidyanathan says Trump’s insults of women journalists inspire others to join in.

During the election Donald Trump often taunted female reporters who covered him, which in turn encouraged a small section of his supporters to follow suit.

The most high-profile example of this was NBC’s Katy Tur, who was dubbed “Little Katy” and “third rate” by Mr Trump, who said her tweets were lies.

It led to her having secret service protection, for fear of attacks.

It wasn’t just Katy Tur. Other reporters, myself included, have been at the receiving end of online abuse, when covering Mr Trump. Some of his supporters have sent me racist and sexist messages, calling me everything from a “whore” and a “bitch”, to a “terrorist” and a “tea girl”.

And while men are targeted too, women bear the brunt of it when it comes to remarks about appearance, and judgements about intellect.

This has been a trend which pre-dates President Trump’s time in office, but Soraya Chemaly, the director at the Women Media Center’s Speech Project, argues the president’s language legitimises this behaviour.

“It falls into a pattern of him displaying a disgust for women and their bodies. This kind of examination of women is pretty standard in our culture – public commentary on women and the way they look fuels major sectors of the economy, so there’s really nothing that will stop the president,” she says.

We have always been at war with Women.



He is going to get someone in the media killed

Jul 2nd, 2017 9:42 am | By

Brian Stelter at CNN has a detail I didn’t know:

On Sunday morning the president’s personal Twitter account, which has 33 million followers, posted a 28-second video of a WWE broadcast. The video was edited to show Trump beating up a man with a CNN logo on his face.

A short time later, the official @POTUS Twitter account retweeted Trump’s tweet to its 19 million followers.

The official potus account. Oyyyy. Goes in the library and all, that does.

Sunday’s video was part of an escalating anti-media campaign by the president.

CNN, The New York Times, The Washington Post have been some of the targets.

On Saturday Trump tweeted that he wants to rebrand “Fake News CNN” as “Fraud News CNN.”

Sunday’s video reiterated that message with a Photoshopped “FNN” logo.

The video was immediately scrutinized on social media and television.

Some commentators, especially those inclined to support Trump, laughed at the video and savored the president’s latest media critique.

Others, perhaps, began planning to seek out particular journalists for the named outlets, to get in their faces or body slam them to the floor or shoot them in the face. Trump is working them up, and who knows how far it will go?

Some media figures expressed real concern that the video could encourage violence against journalists.

“It’s not just anti-CNN. It’s anti-freedom of the press,” CNN political analyst Carl Bernstein said on “Reliable Sources” on Sunday. “It’s very disturbing. There’s nothing lighthearted about it whatsoever.”

Bernstein, who with Bob Woodward broke the Watergate story as a reporter for the Washington Post in the 1970s, noted that Trump praised campaign coverage that was critical of Hillary Clinton.

“When it suits him, it’s great news,” Bernstein said. “When it doesn’t, it’s fake news.”

On ABC’s “This Week,” Ana Navarro called Trump’s tweet “an incitement to violence. He is going to get someone killed in the media.” Navarro, a Republican who is fiercely critical of the president, is a commentator on both CNN and ABC.

I’m sure Trump just wants them to get beaten up a little. I’m sure he doesn’t want them actually killed. Well ok I’m not sure, exactly, but I think it’s possible. Maybe.



“No one would perceive that as a threat”

Jul 2nd, 2017 9:18 am | By

Trump’s tweet about CNN is making headlines because it’s a threat of violence. The Washington Post for instance:

A day after defending his use of social media as befitting a “modern day” president, President Trump appeared to promote violence against CNN in a tweet.

Trump, who is on vacation at his Bedminster golf resort, posted on Twitter an old video clip of him performing in a WWE professional wrestling match, but with a CNN logo superimposed on the head of his opponent. In the clip, Trump is shown slamming the CNN avatar to the ground and pounding him with simulated punches and elbows to the head. Trump added the hastags #FraudNewsCNN and #FNN, for “fraud news network.”

He’s unfit. Period. He’s not fit for this job. He’s disgracing the whole country and he should be speedily removed from office.

The video clip apparently had been posted days earlier on Reddit, a popular social media message board. The president’s tweet was the latest escalation in his beef with CNN over its coverage of him and his administration.

No. It was the latest outburst of inappropriate childish taunting and inappropriate dangerous incitement to violence against the free press from a sitting president.

On ABC’s “This Week,” homeland security adviser Tom Bossert dismissed the idea that the tweet might be a threat, while he praised the president for “genuine” communication.

“No one would perceive that as a threat; I hope they don’t,” Bossert said, referring to the tweet.

Can you imagine if Obama had done the equivalent? They’ll excuse anything, these fascism apologists.

In a statement tweeted out by CNN media reporter Brian Stelter, CNN called it “a sad day when the President of the United States encourages violence against reporters.” The network cited Trump’s “juvenile behavior far below the dignity of his office. We will keep doing our jobs. He should start doing his.”

The company’s communications department Twitter account responded to Trump’s tweet by quoting White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders during a briefing last week when she said: “The president in no way form or fashion has ever promoted or encouraged violence. If anything, quite the contrary.”

In the statement, CNN said: “Clearly, Sarah Huckabee Sanders lied when she said the President had never done so.”

We’re living in a sewer in this country.

Trump also spent a chunk of a speech at the Celebrate Freedom rally for veterans and religious freedom at the Kennedy Center on Saturday night denouncing and taunting the media.

“The fake media is trying to silence us, but we will not let them. The people know the truth,” Trump said. “The fake media tried to stop us from going to the White House, but I’m president and they’re not.”

Neener neener, he finished, and then he curled up in a ball and put his thumb in his mouth and went to sleepy-byes.



Still lower

Jul 2nd, 2017 8:04 am | By

Today in Trump. Worse than ever, I’m afraid.

Some late yesterday first.

Yes, and a harsh indictment of our society, politics, discourse, education system, and much else that fact is…but bracket that, and it’s still the case that winning the election is not the same thing as succeeding in the job. Tragically and horribly and shamefully, Trump won the election by being a sexist racist xenophobic bullying pig, and despite being a liar and fraud and cheat. That says terrible depressing things about us as a country. But he is not winning the presidency. He’s failing dismally…and dragging us down with him. He won’t “continue to WIN” because what he’s doing can’t be described as winning. He’s trashing everything in sight, yes, but that’s not winning.

Again with the relentless Hitler-Goebbels-like attack on the free press. Not winning.

No. Bullying, insulting, and lying are not MODERN DAY anything. They’re just bullying, insulting, and lying. An evil malevolent enraged toddler-man is not MODERN DAY anything. It’s just an evil malevolent enraged toddler-man destroying everything in his path, like a hurricane.



The clenched fist of truth

Jul 1st, 2017 4:58 pm | By

Think Progress provides a transcript of that fascist video of Dana Loesch barking at us about the libbruls. Do watch it in addition, because mere words on the screen can’t convey the menacing venom of her delivery. The way she emphasizes “they” over and over again for instance is chilling.

They use their media to assassinate real news. They use their schools to teach children that their president is another Hitler. They use their movie stars and singers and award shows to repeat their narrative over and over again. And then they use their ex-president to endorse the resistance. All to make them march, make them protest, make them scream racism and sexism and xenophobia and homophobia and smash windows, burn cars, shut down interstates and airports, bully and terrorize the law abiding — until the only option left is for police to do their jobs and stop the madness.

And when that happens, they’ll use it as an excuse for their outrage. The only way we stop this, the only way we save our country and our freedom is to fight this violence of lies with the clenched fist of truth. I’m the National Rifle Association of America and I’m freedom’s safest place.

She’s on Twitter telling people that’s a call for the police to do their jobs and not at all a call to violence against libbruls. That’s a crock of shit. It’s literally true, and no doubt lawyers read it first to make sure, but the message it sends is another matter. Her words and presentation present “them” as a detested enemy and alien. Then she says “the only way we stop this” is with the clenched fist of truth and that she’s the National Rifle Association. That’s an implicit call to violence. The fact that it’s implicit probably protects it from the law, but that doesn’t mean we have to pretend the implicit call to violence isn’t there. It’s there.

It’s there the way it’s there when a man’s voice goes metallic with rage as he tells a woman off for making him angry. It’s meant to strike fear in the hearts of “them” and patriotic manly Caucasian fury in the hearts of “our” men.

The ad was played at the National Rifle Association’s Leadership Forum in April. As we reported at the time, NRA executive vice president Wayne LaPierre’s speech to thousands of members was characterized by a similar type of us-versus-them rhetoric.

“It’s up to us to speak up against the three most dangerous voices in America: academic elites, political elites, and media elites. These are America’s greatest domestic threats,” he said.

That too is frightening. The people who know the most and have the most expertise are America’s greatest domestic threats, and the most dangerous voices.

It’s funny that people think it’s exaggerated to say this is fascism or Nazi-like. Fascism isn’t special, after all – it’s not like some higher class of violent bully. It’s just ordinary people drunk on this kind of thing, and putting it into action. It can happen anywhere. Right now it’s happening here in the US.



They

Jul 1st, 2017 12:32 pm | By

Well this is terrifying.

https://youtu.be/PrnIVVWtAag



The cornered animal

Jul 1st, 2017 12:20 pm | By

I generally avoid Maureen Dowd, but she summons some eloquence on the Monster in Chief:

The 71-year-old president’s pathological inability to let go of slights; his strongman reflex to be the aggressor and bite back like a cornered animal, without regard for societal norms; his lack of self-awareness about the power he commands and the proportionality of his responses; his grotesque hunger for flattery and taste for Tony Soprano tactics; his Pravda partnership with David Pecker, the head honcho at The National Enquirer, which has been giving Trump the Il Duce treatment while sliming his political opponents, the “Morning Joe” anchors and Megyn Kelly — these are all matters that should alarm men and women equally.

Trump has moved his shallow kiddie wading pool of gossip and ridicule from Trump Tower to the White House, where it is so outlandishly out of place that it often feels like we have a Page Six reporter as our president.

The cornered animal and the kiddie wading pool are good metaphors.

Before he got to D.C., Trump was used to media that could be bought, sold and bartered with. He is not built for this hostile environment and it shows in his deteriorating psychological state. Even though he’s in the safest space of all, he’s not in a safe space.

Trump has always been obsessed with looks — his own, men’s and women’s. One of his favorite phrases is “Here’s the beauty of me.” He walks through life as though he’s the judge in an ’80s swimsuit contest — even with his own wives and older daughter. “She’s got the best body,” was his typical refrain about Ivanka.

Or as though he’s Mark Zuckerberg at Harvard, grading all the female students on their looks. Word is he’s thinking about running for president next time.

Then we get a bit of new information:

I gave Trump the benefit of the doubt after his comment on Megyn Kelly about “blood coming out of her wherever” when he claimed he meant her nose. But later, a longtime Trump associate told me that Trump had practiced that line before he said it on CNN and that it was meant to evoke an image of Kelly as hormonal.

No low is too low.



Dispatches from the White House

Jul 1st, 2017 11:32 am | By

Still ringing the same bells.

He thinks Trudeau likes him. He always thinks people like him if they’re not openly rude to him. For awhile he was telling us Obama liked him, because Obama was polite to him in their meeting. Yeah, right, Don, Obama likes you in spite of the whole birther thing. Sure he does.

The president of the Yooonited States, everyone, gossiping about a Fox News personality.

Attacking the free press again. (Also getting it wrong a Fake News outlet would not have fired the reporters. Just look at Fox.)

And, finally, the screaming toddler makes yet another appearance.



Look 20 years out

Jun 30th, 2017 5:51 pm | By

Robert Reich on Facebook:

The Senate bill to replace the Affordable Care Act is much worse than even the Congressional Budget Office found, because the CBO looked only at the first 10 years. During the next 10 years, the elderly and disabled lose 25 percent more, children lose 30 percent more, adults on Medicaid almost 40 percent, and working class people who relied on the Medicaid expansion lose over half of what they had before. The 1965 Medicaid program is gutted.

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Fewer voters, more vote hacking

Jun 30th, 2017 4:52 pm | By

It’s a good thing The Nation has Ari Berman on staff, because there sure is a lot of voting rights reporting to do under the Trump putsch. Just yesterday, he reports, there were four ominous moves against voting rights.

 1. The House Appropriations Committee voted to defund the Election Assistance Commission, the only federal agency that helps states make sure their voting machines aren’t hacked. The House Administration Committee previously voted to kill the EAC in February, but yesterday’s vote makes it one step closer to reality—practically inviting Russia to try to hack our elections again.

I for one welcome our new Putinist overlords.

 2. The Department of Justice sent a letter to all 50 states informing them that “we are reviewing voter registration list maintenance procedures in each state covered by the NVRA [National Voter Registration Act]” and asking how they plan to remove voters from the rolls. While this might sound banal, it’s a clear instruction to states from the federal government to start purging the voting rolls. “Let’s be clear what this letter signals: DOJ Civil Rights is preparing to sue states to force them to trim their voting rolls,” tweeted Sam Bagenstos, the former deputy assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Obama administration.

That’s incredibly disturbing.

 3. The White House commission on election integrity, led by vice chair Kris Kobach, also sent a letter to 50 states asking them to provide sweeping voter data including “the full first and last names of all registrants, middle names or initials if available, addresses, dates of birth, political party (if recorded in your state), last four digits of social security number if available, voter history (elections voted in) from 2006 onward, active/inactive status, cancelled status, information regarding any felony convictions, information regarding voter registration in another state, information regarding military status, and overseas citizen information.” While Kobach asked for “publicly-available voter roll data,” much of this information, like someone’s Social Security number or military status, is, in fact, private. Never before has a White House asked for such broad data on voters, and it could be easily manipulated by Trump’s commission. Kobach has a very well-documented record of making wildly misleading claims about voter fraud and enacting policies that sharply limit access to the ballot in his home state of Kansas. He’s been sued four times by the ACLU for voter suppression and was sanctioned by a federal court last week for “deceptive conduct and lack of candor.”

Ari is tweeting regularly about the states that are telling Kobach to fuck off, and there are a lot of them. Even Mississippi is one – Mississippi! The count is currently at 24.

 4. The Trump administration named Hans von Spakovsky of the Heritage Foundation as a member of the commission, who’s done more than anyone other than Kobach to spread the myth of voter fraud and enact suppressive policies. Von Spakovsky was special counsel to the Bush administration’s Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Brad Schlozman, who said he wanted to “gerrymander all of those crazy libs right out of the [voting] section.” It was a time when longtime civil-rights lawyers were pushed out of the Justice Department and the likes of Schlozman and von Spakovsky reversed the Civil Rights Division’s traditional role of safeguarding voting rights. When von Spakovsky was nominated to the FEC, six former lawyers in the voting section called him “the point person for undermining the Civil Rights Division’s mandate to protect voting rights.”

Read the whole article for important details.



Don’t let them silence you

Jun 30th, 2017 12:27 pm | By

But does misogyny really matter?

Sally Feldman at the New Humanist:

In their recent memoirs both [Harriet] Harman and [Jess] Phillips – the head girl and naughty first former of Parliament – not only offer impressive accounts of their formidable achievements, but also chronicle the endless sexism that poisons political life. And both are committed to making the path easier for the next generation.

But while Harman deplores the prejudices that women in public life have always had to face, Phillips rages against the newest weapon in the sex wars: internet trolling.

Revealing that she once received 600 rape threats in one day, she gives us a sample of the kind of abuse that comes tweeting her way.

You know what would be funny. Pouring molten iron down this cunt’s cunt until she starts vomiting bullets. These are the kind of people who deserve to be bound up in a basement and repeatedly raped. I think watching her spirit die as you slowly removed strips of skin would be a really rewarding experience. Remove the eyes last, she should have her mutilated broken body be the last thing she sees.

Phillips is not alone. A number of online trolls have been convicted of threats towards female MPs, including two who subjected the Liverpool MP Luciana Berger to campaigns of antisemitic abuse. In 2014 a man was jailed for 18 weeks for bombarding the Labour MP Stella Creasy with messages threatening to rape her.

And Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott recently broke her long silence about the constant poisonous verbal attacks that she has had to endure. Messages like “Get yourself spat at by someone with HIV and die a horrible death.”

It’s ironic to have a prominent head of state joining in.

Feldman veers into a discussion of misogynist violence in tv and movies, and then returns to the just plain misogyny and its silencing effect.

This is Phillips’s message, too. “I am often contacted by young women who are looking for support and advice about how to deal with the vitriol, sexism and misogyny they face every time they speak. Most of these women tell me they’re going to stop posting blogs and tweeting about their politics and their views. The very first thing I say to every one of them is ‘Don’t stop, whatever you do. Don’t let them silence you.’” Abbott agrees that online abuse has become so “turbo-charged” that “it’s almost as if they want to drive some of us out of politics.”

When their identities are uncovered these tweeters will claim that this kind of harassment is just a bit of “fun”, of laddish “banter”, that it doesn’t mean anything. But for the women on the receiving end it never feels like fun. And one horrifying event last year demonstrated just where such vicious hate campaigns can lead. An outspoken and vigorous activist, the Labour MP Jo Cox had been bombarded with brutal Twitter attacks before she was murdered. She was, appallingly, well and truly silenced.

I don’t believe those who insist that overt hatred and contempt is “just” anything; I don’t believe it’s inert or “just” a pressure release. I don’t think it works that way.



The search for meaning

Jun 30th, 2017 11:55 am | By

The other day Fresh Air did a conversation with a reporter about the health insurance battle; one item jumped out at me:

DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR. I’m Dave Davies in for Terry Gross, who’s off this week. We’re talking with Sarah Kliff about the Senate health care bill. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had hoped to get it to a vote before the July 4 recess but has postponed action because he can’t get enough support for it to pass. Sarah Kliff is senior policy correspondent for Vox and co-host of its podcast “The Weeds.”

When we left off, Kliff had explained that the Congressional Budget Office found the bill would leave millions more uninsured and would increase health care costs for many Americans, especially older people. You’ve been covering this issue in Washington for a long time. You must talk to Republican staff and senators. What do they say when these questions are raised about whether people are going to end up paying a lot more and getting poorer coverage?

KLIFF: Yeah, that’s been one of the, you know, interesting and different things from covering the last health care debate, which I did. You know, back then in 2009 and 2010 when I talked to Democrats about their health care bill and asked them, you know, what’s the point of all of this, they would say, we want to increase coverage and reduce costs. It would be some variation on that line. You know, when I and my colleagues at Vox talked to Republican senators over the past few weeks and ask, you know, what’s the goal of this whole thing? We’ve heard back from multiple Republican senators. The goal is to get 51 votes. The goal is really less about policy and more about passing something.

Fucking hell.

That’s not surprising, I suppose, but it’s profoundly depressing, and horrifying. Democrats want to expand coverage; Republicans want to win. The issue is life and death, and Republicans’ goal is to win.



Smile, bitch

Jun 30th, 2017 11:26 am | By

Peter Beinart on the two flavors of sexism:

On Thursday, Donald Trump tweeted that MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski had been “bleeding badly from a face-lift” when she visited Mar-a-Lago last December. On Tuesday, in the Oval Office, he interrupted a phone call with the Irish prime minister to call over a female Irish journalist, Caitriona Perry, while referring to her “nice smile” and “this beautiful Irish press.”

The incidents are two sides of the same coin.

Or to put it more clearly, they’re the same thing in different moods. The sexist insult and the sexist compliment are both expressions of patronage, of ownership, of altitude. The complimentary version can in fact be worse, because if not obediently and gratefully received it can leap instantly into verbal and even physical aggression. I happened to see a guy doing exactly this just yesterday: he asked a woman what she’d done to alter her appearance, she responded uncertainly, and he instantly went into fake-jocular exclamations about how “It’s impossible to give you women compliments!!” hardeharhar. He laughed his ass off, she fake-laughed a little because who knew where he would go next. I thought about all the things I’d like to say to him but wasn’t going to.

Two decades ago, a pair of social psychologists, Susan Fiske and Peter Glick, distinguished between what they called “hostile” and “benevolent” sexism. Hostile sexism manifests itself in derogatory or threatening comments about a woman’s appearance, capacities, or behavior. Benevolent sexism, by contrast, manifests itself in praise or chivalry that nonetheless reaffirms a woman’s subordinate status. Telling your female coworker that she’s ugly is an expression of hostile sexism. Telling your female coworker that she’s pretty is an expression of benevolent sexism. Sexually assaulting a female colleague is an expression of hostile sexism. Suggesting that a female colleague needs help carrying her bags is an expression of benevolent sexism. Hostile sexism may be more antagonistic and aggressive but benevolent sexism also conveys the message that women should be valued for their appearance, and that they are not equal to men.

And benevolent sexism can be unbelievably patronizing – as when a man whose arms are fully occupied carrying a heavy load of something won’t let a woman hold a door open for him. (I’ve had that experience.)

The more a woman conforms to traditional gender norms, the more likely she is to experience benevolent sexism. The more she threatens them, the more likely she is to experience hostile sexism.

Heads he wins, tails she loses.

Viscerally, Trump likely understands what the research shows: that focusing people’s attention on a woman’s appearance makes them value her abilities less. For a 2009 study in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Nathan Heflick and Jamie Goldenberg asked one group of college students to write about Sarah Palin’s appearance and another to write about her “human essence.” Then both groups were asked a series of questions about her. The students who had written about her appearance rated her as less competent. In a different study, participants told to focus on Michelle Obama’s looks deemed her less competent, too.

This of course is why his “compliments” to Perry were more pseudo-benevolent than genuinely so – she was working, so his irrelevant eruptions about her smile were fundamentally insulting, as if she were there to be eye candy as opposed to doing her job.

The good news is that it motivates us to fight back. The bad news is that it grinds us down.

What Trump may not grasp is the different effects benevolent and hostile sexism have on the women who experience them. Jennifer Bosson, a professor of psychology at the University of South Florida, told me that, “benevolent sexism reminds women of male protection and of the benefits of being pretty. It can leave women immobilized.” Hostile sexism, by contrast, “pisses women off. They get motivated to fight back.” As Becker and Wright put it, “benevolent sexism undermines, whereas hostile sexism promotes social change.”

Hostile sexism seems to motivate women even when they merely observe it happening to others. A 2010 study by Stephenie Chaudoir and Diane Quinn of the University of Connecticut found that merely hearing a man speak in demeaning sexual terms to another woman made female college students “feel greater anger and motivation to take direct action toward men.”

There’s some evidence that Trump’s hostile sexism, as evidenced most infamously in the Access Hollywood tape released last October, has had exactly that result. A post-election study found that people who were more angered by Trump’s comments about women were more likely to take political action to oppose him. This January’s women’s march in Washington was the largest in American history.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that while women often initially react to hostile sexism with outrage and a desire to reassert their dignity, the effects of persistent hostile sexism can be debilitating. A 1993 study by the University of Illinois’s Louise Fitzgerald found that women who suffer ongoing sexual harassment or disparagement “experience lower morale and job satisfaction and increased absenteeism, anger, anxiety, depression, and physical illness symptoms.”

That’s the paradox for anyone who gives a shit about anything, really. You’re motivated, but you’re also subject to disappointment and frustration.

[Editing to add – “altitude” isn’t a typo – it’s a rather cryptic way of saying “higher position on the social ladder.”]