Reasonable Suspicion, Race & SCOTUS

The above image of a woman crying is that of Daniele Watts, an actress in the film Django Unchained, being detained and handcuffed by Studio City LAPD officers on suspicion that she had engaged in an act of prostitution with her white husband, Brian James Lucas, on September 2, 2014. After eventually being released, a month later she and her husband were charged with committing “misdemeanor lewd conduct.” The police officers who detained Ms. Watts on September 2nd did not personally witness any of the alleged “indecent acts” that form the basis for the couple’s indictment. When they arrived on the scene she was standing on the sidewalk. Watts suffered cuts to her wrist from the handcuffs after being thrown into a cop car by the police. Her account of the incident can be found here on her Facebook page.

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In the rash of recent police shootings of unarmed African-Americans, many people (well, other than African Americans themselves) have begun to question the rationale for the tremendous discrepancy between rates of Black people shot by police compared to White people. Unfortunately the statistics are incomplete, since many states and counties do not voluntarily provide information on police shootings to the Department of Justice.

What I’d like to do, therefore, is focus on an area where we do have much more data: police stops of blacks as compared to whites. And the data we do have shows in almost every instance that police stop and detain African-Americans at far higher rates than they do White Americans. In addition, the chance of an arrest is quite high for many African-Americans The recent report by the DOJ regarding the Town of Ferguson’s disproportionate arrest rates for black citizens versus whites is one glaring example

Ferguson, Mo., is a third white, but the crime statistics compiled in the city over the past two years seemed to suggest that only black people were breaking the law. They accounted for 85 percent of traffic stops, 90 percent of tickets and 93 percent of arrests. In cases like jaywalking, which often hinge on police discretion, blacks accounted for 95 percent of all arrests.

… but there are many others just as bad, or worse:

At least 1,581 other police departments across the USA arrest black people at rates even more skewed than in Ferguson, a USA TODAY analysis of arrest records shows. That includes departments in cities as large and diverse as Chicago and San Francisco and in the suburbs that encircle St. Louis, New York and Detroit.

This should have come as no surprise to anyone, for we’ve seen a tidal wave of evidence of the past few years that police officers detain and often frisk African Americans at rates far in excess of detentions of whites. In Boston, an ACLU report claimed that police stop an frisks showed evidence of racial bias against blacks.

Between 2007 and 2010, out of approximately 200,000 encounters that did not result in an arrest, 63 percent of people stopped and frisked by the BPD were African American. Only 24 percent of the city’s population is black.

Additionally, the study found, stop-and-frisk instances were most likely to occur in the minority-dense neighborhoods of Roxbury, Dorchester, and Mattapan.

“These findings are clear evidence of racial bias in BPD policing,” Matthew Segal, legal director of the Massachusetts ACLU, said in a statement.

Similar results were found in studies of the NYPD by the New York Civil Liberites Union during Mayor Bloomberg’s tenure in office, when the notorious “stop and frisk” policing policy was in effect:

An analysis by the NYCLU revealed that innocent New Yorkers have been subjected to police stops and street interrogations more than 5 million times since 2002, and that black and Latino communities continue to be the overwhelming target of these tactics. Nearly nine out of 10 stopped-and-frisked New Yorkers have been completely innocent, according to the NYPD’s own reports …

On average, black residents of New York City were detained by the police at a rate roughly five times as often as whites, and when Latino Americans are added to the totals, those two groups collectively accounted for well over 80 percent of all stops by the NYPD. Whites who were stopped during the years 2003-2014 never accounted for more than 12% of all stops, and on average accounted for less than 11% of all stops. Whites make up a plurality of the residential population in New York (around 45%), and during the daytime, when workers who commute to work are considered, likely a majority, with blacks at around 25%. Yet, despite this fact, and the vast discrepancy between the races when it comes to the sheer volume of stop and frisk detentions by the cops, whites detained by the police in NYC were far more likely to be found with a weapon or “contraband” (i.e., drugs) on them then were minorities.

• The likelihood a stop of an African American New Yorker yielded a weapon was half that of white New Yorkers stopped. The NYPD uncovered a weapon in one out every 49 stops of white New Yorkers. By contrast, it took the Department 71 stops of Latinos and 93 stops of African Americans to find a weapon.

• The likelihood a stop of an African American New Yorker yielded contraband was one-third less than that of white New Yorkers stopped. The NYPD uncovered contraband in one out every 43 stops of white New Yorkers. By contrast, it took the Department 57 stops of Latinos and 61 stops of African Americans to find contraband.

The same is true of other cities across America: Chicago; San Diego; Miami; and everywhere in between from Dearborn, Michigan to Madison, Wisconsin to that hotbed of leftists, Berkeley, California.

At least 70 departments scattered from Connecticut to California arrested black people at a rate 10 times higher than people who are not black, USA TODAY found. […]

Deep disparities show up even in progressive university towns. USA TODAY found police in Berkeley, Calif., and Madison, Wis., arrested black people at a rate more than nine times higher than members of other racial groups. […]

Arrest rates are lopsided almost everywhere. Only 173 of the 3,538 police departments USA TODAY examined arrested black people at a rate equal to or lower than other racial groups.

At this point, one has to question what makes it more “reasonable” for police to detain and frisk so many African Americans and Latinos, especially since whites, are stopped so much less, and yet are as likely (or in the case of New York, much more likely) to be engaged in criminal activity.

Before proceeding further, however, lets take a look at the legal standard a police officer is required to meet before he or she can lawfully detain anyone, whether you are white, black, brown or an extra-terrestrial life form. Please follow me below the fold for a discussion of the legal standard and why I contend it is being misapplied, intentionally or unconsciously, to target African Americans and other minorities by the law enforcement community, thanks in part to decisions made by the Roberts’ Court.

(cont.)
Most of us have heard of the term “probable cause” because any law enforcement official (“LEO”) must show probable cause before a person can be arrested, either before receiving a warrant from a judicial authority to arrest a person or search their home or that must be shown afterward to justify a search or arrest without a warrant. In brief, the LEO must show knowledge of facts, evidence and circumstances that would lead a reasonable person to conclude a crime has been committed by the person arrested, or that evidence of a crime will be obtained by a search of the suspect’s property or person.

The standard merely to stop and detain someone, however, is far easier to meet. That standard is referred to as “Reasonable Suspicion.” I know, that sound pretty vague. Reasonable suspicion of what? And what constitutes a reasonable versus an unreasonable suspicion on the part of a police officer. The Supreme Court of the Unite States (“SCOTUS”) first established the basis of the reasonable suspicion standard in the 1968 case of Terry v. Ohio.

In the view of the Terry majority, a police officer may stop and detain an individual he or she suspects may have committed (or is about to commit) a punishable crime without violating the Fourth Amendment provide that “in justifying the particular intrusion the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant [stopping and detaining a person].” This reasonable suspicion must not be based on an “inchoate hunch” but must be based on what a reasonable police officer would do. Subsequent case law by SCOTUS established that this suspicion must be associated with a specific individual in Ybarra v. Illinois, where a patron of a tavern was detained and searched by police even though the police merely had a warrant to search the building and no independent foundation for suspecting the defendant of any crime.

However, to fully understand how the current Roberts’ Court views the issue, we must look at its decision Arizona v. Johnson where it expanded the scope of the reasonable suspicion standard in Terry in a case involving an passenger in a vehicle stopped by police for a minor traffic offense. The defendant was only a passenger, but this did not stop the court from concluding he could be detained and frisked.

The police, all of whom were members of a “gang task force” began to question the defendant, and he answered all their questions, including telling the officer who made the stop that he lived in a town “associated with the Crips gang and had previously been imprisoned for one year for burglary. When a female police officer demanded he exit the vehicle for further questioning about his possible gang involvement, the defendant willingly complied. (As an aside, this was probably a smart move on his part, all things considered, since police around the country have shown a marked intolerance, and a tendency to resort to force, when a person shows any sign of non-compliance with their demands.) The police officer contended that his answers to her questions gave her a reason to reasonably suspect he was armed with a weapon, and she frisked him moments after he exited the car. She found a gun on him and he was convicted of unlawful possession.

He appealed his conviction on the basis that the police had no just cause to search him. The state of Arizona argued that his own “admissions” following questioning about matters unrelated to the initial traffic stop authorized the cops to pull him out of the car and frisk him based on their reasonable suspicion he was armed. The state appellate court overturned his conviction, holding that that the police officer had no “reason to believe the defendant was engaged in criminal activity” and thus the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to detain and frisk the defendant.

SCOTUS took the case on appeal by the State of Arizona. In an unanimous decision (yes all the “liberals” voted with the majority), SCOTUS voted to overturn the decision of the Arizona Court of Appeals. All nine justices held that even if the original justification for the vehicular stop did not involve the defendant personally, as he was merely a passenger in the rear seat of the car, police could still detain and frisk him, as once a vehicle is stopped for any reason, all person inside the vehicle are effectively detained and are not free to leave. I’ll highlight the most relevant portion of the opinion:

This case concerns the authority of police officers to “stop and frisk” a passenger in a motor vehicle temporarily seized upon police detection of a traffic infraction. In … Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1 (1968) … [t]he Court upheld “stop and frisk” as constitutionally permissible if two conditions are met. First, the investigatory stop must be lawful. That requirement is met in an on-the-street encounter, Terry determined, when the police officer reasonably suspects that the person apprehended is committing or has committed a criminal offense. Second, to proceed from a stop to a frisk, the police officer must reasonably suspect that the person stopped is armed and dangerous.

For the duration of a traffic stop, we recently confirmed, a police officer effectively seizes “everyone in the vehicle,” the driver and all passengers. Brendlin v. California, 551 U. S. 249, 255 (2007). Accordingly, we hold that, in a traffic-stop setting, the first Terry condition–a lawful investigatory stop–is met whenever it is lawful for police to detain an automobile and its occupants pending inquiry into a vehicular violation. The police need not have, in addition, cause to believe any occupant of the vehicle is involved in criminal activity. To justify a patdown of the driver or a passenger during a traffic stop, however, just as in the case of a pedestrian reasonably suspected of criminal activity, the police must harbor reasonable suspicion that the person subjected to the frisk is armed and dangerous. […]

A lawful roadside stop begins when a vehicle is pulled over for investigation of a traffic violation. The temporary seizure of driver and passengers ordinarily continues, and remains reasonable, for the duration of the stop. Normally, the stop ends when the police have no further need to control the scene, and inform the driver and passengers they are free to leave. See Brendlin, 551 U. S., at 258. An officer’s inquiries into matters unrelated to the justification for the traffic stop, this Court has made plain, do not convert the encounter into something other than a lawful seizure, so long as those inquiries do not measurably extend the duration of the stop. […]

[Police offficer] Trevizo noticed that, as the police approached, Johnson [i.e., the defendant] looked back and kept his eyes on the officers. Id., at 12. When she drew near, she observed that Johnson was wearing clothing, including a blue bandana, that she considered consistent with Crips membership. Id., at 17. She also noticed a scanner in Johnson’s jacket pocket, which “struck [her] as highly unusual and cause [for] concern,” because “most people” would not carry around a scanner that way “unless they’re going to be involved in some kind of criminal activity or [are] going to try to evade the police by listening to the scanner.” Id., at 16. In response to Trevizo’s questions, Johnson provided his name and date of birth but said he had no identification with him. He volunteered that he was from Eloy, Arizona, a place Trevizo knew was home to a Crips gang. Johnson further told Trevizo that he had served time in prison for burglary and had been out for about a year. […]

… Officer Trevizo surely was not constitutionally required to give Johnson an opportunity to depart the scene after he exited the vehicle without first ensuring that, in so doing, she was not permitting a dangerous person to get behind her.

In effect, the Roberts’ Court effectively gutted the requirement in Terry that the police have “articuable facts” and rational inferences that could be drawn from those facts that the defendant was engaged in any criminal activity in order to justify detaining and frisking a person who is merely a passenger in a car stopped for a minor traffic violation. In my view, the fact that the defendant lived in a town associated with gang activity or that he had served a sentence for burglary does not automatically lead to the rational inference that he was armed.

At no point in the traffic stop in the Arizona case did the police see a weapon on the defendant or any visual evidence that he harbored a concealed weapon on his person. He complied with all their demands, and they frisked him automatically – literally within seconds of his peaceful departure from the car. And in the view of nine justices, including the author of the opinion, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, their detention of him and search of his body was lawful and reasonable, and did not violate the terms of the Fourth Amendment.

What’s most shocking, is that Justice Ginsberg’s opinion did not even address the issue of whether it was reasonable to search the defendant for a weapon. The only thing her opinion stated on that issue was that the defendant had no reason to believe he could depart the scene prior to the police officer frisking him to ensure her own safety. Of course, the defendant never attempted to leave the scene. And though Justice Ginsberg describes the testimony given by the arresting officer for suspecting the defendant was “engaged in criminal activity,” her opinion does not address whether those observations and “inferences” met the standard for providing the police officer a reasonable suspicion that the defendant was engaged in criminal activity, much less that he was armed.

Aside from the individual facts of the case, however, the Court’s opinion opens the door to detain individuals in traffic stops for an indefinite period of time, question everyone in the car on matters not related to the initial traffic stop, and require anyone to be frisked merely on the basis of where they might live, their past criminal record and whether they might have “intelligence” about “gang activity” or any other alleged criminal activity of which the people detained may conceivably have knowledge.

Worse still, it effectively makes racial profiling by police extremely easy to get away with. The reasonable suspicion standard necessary to frisk a person after a stop (and we know police can always manufacture a reason to stop a black man or woman if they are in a place they aren’t supposed to be – just ask Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates) has been ground down to the point any officer can be reasonably justified of suspecting criminal activity on the basis that the suspected person is dressed a certain way, lives in the wrong part of town, or has a past criminal record.

All the cop has to say is that you acted nervously (and who does not feel nervous when stopped by the police, even white males such as myself?), and despite your full compliance with everything the cop demands, you may still be detained, frisked, and even arrested on some trumped up charge. Naturally, that risk is highest among members of minority communities, most prominently African Americans, of course, but also Latinos, LGBT people and those with mental disorders, disabilities, or even political activists.

Is it any wonder that the Ferguson Police Department, and countless police departments around the country, target African American communities, either to generate income or out of sheer racial animus? There is certainly nothing in the SCOTUS Fourth amendment decisions by the Roberts’ Court, many of them listed in Justice Ginsberg’s opinion in Arizona v. Johnson, to discourage disparity in police treatment of African-Americans. If anything, decisions such as Arizona v. Johnson have allowed officers and/or their superiors to believe they can manufacture the flimsiest of excuses to stop and frisk people, in their cars or on the streets, without regard to any consequences.

In essence, black people in America can be, and often are considered by the police as criminal suspects simply because of the melanin content of their skin, and those suspicions are more, not less, likely to be deemed “reasonable” by the courts these days. We may have laws on the books that prohibit discrimination and the violation of civil rights based on race, but those laws are increasingly becoming nothing more than a mere fig leaf to cover the obscene injustice that is being perpetrated upon black people by our so-called justice system.

If you are an African American member of this blog community, you already know this to be true, either through your own personal experiences or from the experiences of family, friends and neighbors. Sadly, not even the most liberal members of SCOTUS are willing to protect you from these ongoing abuses by the police. Indeed, I argue that the decisions by the Roberts’ Court have eliminated many of the legal safeguards prior courts extended to black people, while expanding the ability of the police to act with impunity and at the end of the day have their conduct declared legal regardless of the consequences to the people they harm.

While the law my claim that police cannot act against African Americans solely on the basis of their race, the sad truth is that the de facto situation in America is a person with dark skin who encounters a police officer is far too often reflexively assumed to be a criminal suspect. And those suspicions will far too often be held to be “reasonable” after the fact by far too many judges at both the trial and appellate levels.

It’s my hope that you takeaway at least this one fact about our current racial divisiveness: It’s not going to be solved by any action taken by the Supreme Court, or any court for that matter. Indeed, anyone looking to the judiciary to rectify this situation is sadly misguided. The days of the Warren Court are long gone. The courts at every level are full of conservatives judges, many of them older white men of high status. The ranks of minorities among them are thin, to say the least, both at the state and federal level:

As of early August 2009, 70 percent of federal judges were white men, 15 percent were white women, 10 percent were minority (African-American and Hispanic) males, and 3 percent were minority females.

Obama may have improved that somewhat in his appointments to the Federal Circuit Courts, but a Republican President could change that dynamic in a heartbeat. Furthermore, Republicans dominate many state courts, and conservative billionaires are doing their best to support that effort. I don’t see the courts acting to reversing the trend of the police targeting black people for detention and arrest anytime soon.

In short, the cops don’t need a reason to stop black people on the street or in their cars, other than the simple fact that they are not white. And this practice will continue in this country as long as we – and here I am talking to white people in particular – fail to make this an major national issue that must be addressed by our politicians, by the leaders of our local police forces and by the media.

Right now, a growing number courageous black youth (and their supporters among some whites) are attempting to reinvent the Civil Right Movement with Black Lives Matters and other organized attempts to bring this country face to face with the ever resilient racism in our institutions, both private and public, and among far too many white Americans, who would like to believe the myth that all this was resolved by Martin Luther King getting his name on a holiday. Regrettably, though, with a few exceptions, the major media outlets are either ignoring the movement, or in the case of conservative media, actively disparaging and demonizing it.

Our upper-crust elites and institutions are not going to offer any top-down solution to the crisis of our nation’s systemic and societal racism. No, this will have to be a bottom-up, grass roots effort by all people of good will from every race, ethnicity, religion (or non-religion), gender, et alia, to bring about the change we need. You can start by going to the Black Lives Matter website and seeing what you can do to help in whatever way you can this effort.

Black Lives Matter website

Black Lives Matter Facebook Page

Black Lives Matter tumblr

and Black Lives Matter Twitter

Thank you

Steve

Goldberg’s Piece is Not Agitprop

Jeffrey Goldberg has a big extensively reported piece in the Atlantic on European Jews and whether or not they should leave the Continent. Joseph Cannon is very offended by Goldberg’s conclusion. I have a different reaction. Goldberg is free to have his opinion. It’s based on very personal considerations and his own family history.

It’s disturbing that this is even something under discussion, and I don’t think Goldberg’s reporting about the experiences of Jewish communities in Europe can just be dismissed.

I certainly do not agree with this:

This article by Jeffrey Goldberg in The Atlantic is a despicable piece of agit-prop designed to convince Jews that they are all unsafe outside of their supposed “homeland.” Jews are being told that the year is still 1944. Jews are being told that all gentiles — every last one of them — are ruthless, mindlessly bloodthirsty Jew-haters, reared on the Protocols and anxious to break out the Zyklon B. Anyone who opposes the Israeli plan to exterminate all Palestinians must be a Jew-hater who wants to exterminate all Jews.

That is not even a remotely fair representation of Goldberg’s article.

In Goldberg’s concluding paragraph he cops to having a biased view.

I am predisposed to believe that there is no great future for the Jews in Europe, because evidence to support this belief is accumulating so quickly. But I am also predisposed to think this because I am an American Jew—which is to say, a person who exists because his ancestors made a run for it when they could.

Yeah, I think this is alarmist. But I don’t think it’s agitprop. It appears sincere to me. And Goldberg dutifully reported that many of the European Jews he encountered were very uncomfortable with Netanyahu’s recent recruitment efforts.

The Israeli government, as one might expect, is interested in accelerating the departure of Jews from Europe. Israeli leaders have lectured French Jews about the necessity of aliyah, or emigration to Israel, in ways that have displeased French leaders, including the prime minister, and have also frustrated some French Jewish leaders. “To all the Jews of France, all the Jews of Europe, I would like to say that Israel is not just the place in whose direction you pray. The state of Israel is your home,” the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said after the kosher-market attack. (He reprised this entreaty after the attack in Copenhagen a month later.)

Even some French Jews who are contemplating aliyah, and who tend toward the right end of the Israeli political spectrum, told me that they found Netanyahu’s remarks unhelpful. Others noted that life in Israel is not especially tranquil. Jews die violently in Israel, too.

Goldberg did not endorse aliyah as the solution, either.

Yet Israel’s future as a Jewish haven is an open question. Alain Finkielkraut, the French philosopher who is a harsh critic of his country’s management of the jihadist threat, is also a strong critic of current Israeli policy. “It is an irony of history that people who move to Israel as Jews might be moving to a state that in the next decades becomes a binational state with a Jewish minority, because of the occupation of the West Bank and the settlements,” he told me when we talked in Paris in January. “Moving from France to escape the attacks of Arabs to a country that will not be Jewish does not make a lot of sense.”

He never does offer an outright recommendation, but if people follow his ancestors’ example, they’ll immigrate to the United States, not Israel. And nothing Goldberg writes is fairly interpretable as “all gentiles — every last one of them — are ruthless, mindlessly bloodthirsty Jew-haters, reared on the Protocols and anxious to break out the Zyklon B.”

I’m embarrassed by Cannon’s take on this piece.

A Noun, a Verb, and Iran and Hamas

Benjamin “Noun, Verb, Iran and Hamas” Netanyahu has done his best Rudolph Giuliani impersonation and now he’s on the cusp of taking a sharp jab in the nose (at a minimum) or, perhaps, suffering a fatal political death of his own making.

I was up a good part of the night reading everything I could find on tomorrow’s elections in Israel, and I think the one thing that is certain is that it will take a little while to figure out what the returns are going to mean. The unlikeliest outcome is that Bibi emerges stronger than when he dissolved the Knesset in December and called for new elections.

While there’s definitely some uncertainty about what the raw vote totals will be, the real mysteries revolve around how the “winner” will manage to cobble together a majority coalition, if they can at all. If the polls are believable, Netanyahu will not get the first shot at forming a government, and that alone will be a humbling moment for Likud and the Israeli right.

Ed Kilgore did a piece a few minutes ago that said basically what I intended to say about the American implications of such an outcome. It’s safe to say that the Republicans will be disoriented. If Israelis reject Netanyahu’s fear-mongering about Iran, does that make them anti-semitic cowards?

Isaac Herzog, who leads the Zionist Union (ZU) coalition, has said that he will not invite the Arab parties to join his majority, and the Arab parties have said that they have no intention of joining any majority. Those predictions may well hold, as Herzog would probably lose nearly as many votes as he gained by making common cause with the Arab-Israelis. But the dynamic is already visible. Sometime in the not distant future the Israeli left will join with the Arab parties to form a majority. If not in the next month, then in the next election, or the election after that.

What I wasn’t able to find in any of the pieces I read last night was a real analysis of what that would mean for Israel and Israeli society.

Religion & the Invention of Racism in Early Modern Europe – Part 1

(One in a series of posts on George Fredrickson’s 2002 book, Racism: A Short History.)

Ancient Greeks “distinguished between the civilized and the barbarous“; Romans between slaves and citizens; Christians and Jews between believers and unbelievers, but racism as we understand it today did not exist in the ancient Mediterranean world. (p. 17)

Turning to the medieval era, Fredrickson distinguishes among anti-Judaism and antisemitism:  “Anti-Judaism became antisemitism whenever it turned into a consuming hatred that made getting rid of Jews seem preferable to trying to convert them, and antisemitism became racism when the belief took hold that Jews were intrinsically and organically evil rather than merely having false beliefs and wrong dispositions.” (p. 19)

It was in the 12th and 13th centuries—in the wake of the First Crusade (1096)—that massacres of Jews became more common across Europe.  Even then, Fredrickson observes, baptism was typically an alternative to death.  “That so many Jews chose to die was a testament to the strength of their faith and that of their executioners rather than a prelude to the Holocaust.” (p. 20)

The emerging racism of late medieval Europe wasn’t aimed solely at Jews and Muslims.  Fredrickson cites historian Robert Bartlett’s argument that as Catholic European powers expanded, “the prejudice and discrimination directed at the Irish on one side of Europe and certain Slavic peoples on the other foreshadowed the dichotomy between civilization and savagery that would characterize imperial expansion beyond the European continent“.  Some German laws banned intermarriage with Slavs and Anglo-Irish cities barred membership in guilds to those of “Irish blood or birth“. (p. 23)

Despite that, Fredrickson resists calling these behaviors racist:  “What was missing—and why I think such ethnic discrimination should not be labeled racist—was an ideology or worldview that would persuasively justify such practices.” (p. 24)  Even the increased demonization of Jews by Christians in the wake of the catastrophic Black Death epidemics of the 14th century does not rise, in Fredrickson’s view, to the level of racism.

GOP "Big Brains"

M was smart.  My high school graduating class valedictorian.  We knew each other, but other than gym, she wasn’t in any of my classes.  Only once did we have a one-on-one conversation and that was in our senior year.  A rainy day when we were stuck in the gym locker room with nothing to do.  As these times often go for me, we began sharing what we had been reading for pleasure.  

M monopolized the conversation and I politely listened.  Kept expecting her to move on to a book or magazine that we both had read or at least one that interested me.  I’d been reading Camus and Harper’s, and working on my lines for a little theater production of The Night of the Iguana (which was of zero interest to M).  Her pleasure reading passion – and she was passionate about it – was contemporary romance novels.  Instead of smart, she sounded dull.  And boring.

Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton, and Rand Paul remind me of M.  Labeled smart and academically impressive.  Then they open their mouths without a script.

Paul was admitted to medical school after five semesters of college.  Apparently because his MCAT scores were at the top.  Cruz graduated cum laude from Princeton (presumably on the four year program) and magna cum laude from Harvard Law.  Then there’s Tom Cotton:

Harvard College, AB magna cum laude 1998 (graduated in three years)
Claremont College – 1998-99
Harvard Law, JD, 2002
clerk, U.S. Court of Appeals, 2002-2003
Gibson Dunn & Crutcher – 2003-04
Cooper & Kirk
US Army – January 2005-09
McKinsey & Co. – 2009

I’ve known and worked with many attorneys.  Most not graduates of prestigious law schools.  All were intelligent to highly intelligent.  (With one exception, but that seemed to be due to aging and/or alcoholism and not his Harvard Law degree.)   I’ve also worked with a few McKinsey & Co folks who ranged from bright to wicked smart.  Not one of them would ever have received an assessment of his/her work product like this one:  

Reluctantly, Rep. Cotton withdrew his amendment when basically everyone on the Committee informed him that he is a dumb, ridiculous piece of shit and a complete embarrassment to the entire state of Arkansas, and even to Congress. The GOP Committee chair basically laughed in his face and told him to go blow a goat.

His amendment?

Rep. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on Wednesday introduced legislation that would “automatically” punish family members of people who violate U.S. sanctions against Iran, levying sentences of up to 20 years in prison.

Cotton also seeks to punish any family member of those people, “to include a spouse and any relative to the third degree,” including, “parents, children, aunts, uncles, nephews, nieces, grandparents, great grandparents, grandkids, great grandkids,” Cotton said.
“There would be no investigation,” Cotton said during Wednesday’s markup hearing before the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Can Harvard Law revoke a JD?  With his “Iran letter,” Harvard might want to consider revoking his AB in Government as well.  Or perhaps Cotton should demand a refund because he didn’t get an education.  Although he did pass the AR bar exam and was admitted on 4/9/03

Cotton on Face the Nation today wrt Iran:

They already control Tehran and, increasingly, they control Damascus and Beirut and Baghdad. And now, Sena’a as well.

Duh!

The Atlantic has some choice bits from Cotton’s senior thesis.  

Men who seek national office, Cotton wrote in his thesis, are the most ambitious men, seeking the headiest sort of power over a nation’s commerce, finance, and affairs of state. Self-selection ensures that they have “a superior intelligence compared to the unambitious and to the lesser ambitious.” This does not necessarily mean that they are wise, he notes, but “it does imply some amount of sheer, raw brainpower. National officeholders will all possess something akin to shrewdness, cleverness, or perhaps even cunning.”

As sophomoric as that reads, do wonder if his thesis and law school papers could withstand a close scrutiny for plagiarism.  Particularly in light of the high probability that AIPAC wrote “his” Iran letter.

Will let Jim Wright at Stonekettle Station take it from here: The Second Coming of Richard Milhous Nixon


We haven’t lost enough of America’s future in the Middle East.

We haven’t bled enough.
It’s never enough for these sons of bitches.

People like Senator Johnson, they walk past those 58,220 names inscribed on the cold black granite of the Vietnam Memorial, they can see it, they can touch it, they argue over the endless appropriations for war and its terrible aftermath, trillions in blood and treasure, bills they can not afford to pay and that they have mortgaged our children’s future for, they have their noses rubbed in the futility and the utter criminal waste of it all every single goddamned day and it’s still not enough for these insane fuckers.  

It will never be enough. Never.

Ted Cruz’s Moment of Moral Clarity

Unfortunately, there are parents in the world who take their children to see Sen. Ted Cruz without warning them that his apocalyptic bullshit is just a scam to scare the rubes. The result is predictable.

Tampa Bay Times political editor Adam Smith noted on Twitter that Cruz had to pause his speech to respond to a little girl in the audience who was young enough to be carried by her mother.

“Ted Cruz literally just scared a little girl in NH,” Smith wrote. “‘The world is on fire?!’ she asked, repeating his line on Obama-Clinton foreign policy.”

“The world is on fire,” Cruz replied, turning to face the girl and her mother. “Yes! Your world is on fire!”

Realizing that his rhetoric might have gone too far, the Texas Republican decided to do some damage control.

“But you know what?” he asked. “Your mommy is here and everyone is here to make sure that the world you grow up in is even better.”

All this is, really, is a moment of moral clarity.

It also demonstrates that Ted Cruz has limits. Little girls young enough to be carried by their mothers cannot vote. Therefore, there’s really no point in ramping up their anxiety level.

The rest of us?

He hopes we wet our pants.

Racism: A Short History

To attempt a short formulation, we might say that racism exists when one ethnic group or historical collectivity dominates, excludes or seeks to eliminate another on the basis of differences that it believes are hereditary and unalterable.

We might say that.

In fact, by the time one reaches that humbly framed concluding sentence of George M. Fredrickson’s aptly titled Racism: A Short History (only 170 pages, introduction, epilogue and appendix included), Fredrickson has demonstrated such a comprehensive knowledge of his topic and field that the reader is likely to agree with—or at least, give serious consideration to—almost anything he writes.

Based on Fredrickson’s lifetime of scholarly study on racism, Racism: A Short History provides an overview of 600 years of racism—starting in late medieval Europe as Portugese and Spanish explorers first encounter Africans on the Guinea coast and drive Jews out of the emerging Spanish nation-state, continuing with the 18th and 19th century emergence of modern, scientific racism in the wake of the Enlightenment, climaxing with the rise (and decline) of overtly racist regimes (i.e., the Jim Crow South, Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa)—that brings all of that history up to the dawn of the 21st century and lays its legacy squarely before us, its inheritors.

I’ll have more to say about the book, but here are some opening thoughts and observations (mostly from Fredrickson himself).<!–more–>

First, some attempts at definition.  Racism:

       

  • “is not merely an attitude or set of beliefs; it also expresses itself in the practices, institutions, and structures that a sense of deep difference justifies or validates”;
  •    

  • “directly sustains or proposes to establish a racial order, a permanent group hierarchy that is believed to reflect the laws of nature or the decrees of God”;
  •    

  • “has a historical trajectory and is mainly, if not exclusively, a product of the West”;
  •    

  • “originated in at least a prototypical form in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries rather than in the eighteenth or nineteenth (as is sometimes maintained) and was originally articulated in the idioms of religion more than in those of natural science”. (p.6)

Fredrickson says his conception of racism “has two components: difference and power“. (p. 9)  Racism divides a society on the basis of unalterable differences between two groups, with one group “rightfully” wielding dominant power over the other.  “In all manifestations of racism from the mildest to the most severe, what is being denied is the possibility that the racializers and the racialized can coexist in the same society, except perhaps on the basis of domination and subordination”. (p. 9)

Fredrickson’s definition includes both white supremacy and antisemitism as variant forms of racism; and he focuses on Western racism for several reasons:

“First…the virus of racism did not infect Europe itself prior to the period between the late medieval and early modern periods.  Hence we can study its emergence in a time and place for which we have a substantial historical record.  Second, the varieties of racism that developed in the West had greater impact on world history than any functional equivalent that we might detect in another era or part of the world.  Third, the logic of racism was fully worked out, elaborately implemented, and carried to its ultimate extremes in the West, while at the same time being identified, condemned, and resisted from within the same cultural tradition.” (p. 11)

As you can see, Racism: A Short History synthesizes vast amounts of human history and thinking.  In addition to laying out his current thinking about racism, Fredrickson engages deeply with the work and views of other historians and thinkers, generously pointing out interpretations that differ from his own and taking the time to explain how his own thinking has evolved over the course of a five decade career.

As Fredrickson notes at the end of his introduction, “investigations of antisemitism and white supremacy have, for the most part, gone their separate ways“. Thus, this book (published in 2002) is the first “extensive comparison of the historical development over the past six centuries of these two most prominent expressions of Western racism“. (p. 12)

More to come.

Crossposted at: https:/masscommons.wordpress.com

The EU Experiment Has Gone Off Track and Needs To Be Halted

ECB building €1.3bn protest Blockupy   10k protesters attracts at least 10k police!! Official opening will been off limits for the press, only representatives of accredited press agencies will get permits to cover event. Will journalists join the street protest?

Europe does not want to be transformed to Atlantic capitalism of the US, Canada and UK. Stop the secrecy on the negotiations with the multinationals on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. Capitalism will be favored and consumer protection will be buried, the labour rights will be washed out to the ocean bassin separating the two continents. Bashing Putin is part of the game, Europe including Germany should not look eastward but become a greater part of US corporatism.

TTIP must not allow companies to sue EU countries for environmental laws | The Guardian |

A major free trade deal should not allow US companies to sue European nations when they pass environmental laws that hurt their profits, MPs said on Tuesday.

The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), which is being negotiated between the EU and US, may contain a mechanism called investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). This would allow investors and companies to sue countries when they introduce laws that restrict their business practices.

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'Blockupy' activists start protest action in Frankfurt {Deutsche Welle)

A report by the UK’s parliamentary Environmental Audit Dommittee (EAC) said: “EU states must retain their `right to regulate’, but a TTIP treaty text that enshrines such a safeguard will be meaningless if the prospect of ISDS [investor state dispute settlement] litigation produces a chilling effect on future regulation-setting.”

Joan Walley, the committee’s chair, said that once the trade treaty is signed it must include a guarantee that states could protect the environment with impunity.

“Any dispute settlement provision must unambiguously deny US companies any opportunity to sue us when we look to introduce necessary environmental or public health safeguards,” said Walley, the Labour MP for Stoke-on-Trent North.  

Where can I find out more?

Opponents use the hashtag #stoptafta

For getting to grips with the arguments over potential threats to sovereignty, read Owen Jones in the Guardian on the threat TTIP poses to democracy.

The Guardian’s Brussels correspondent Ian Traynor tweets at @traynorbrussels and has written on European divisions over TTIP.

Policy experts at the thinktank European Council on Foreign Relations have put together a proposed compromise on the deal.

TTIP: Shaping the Future of Investor−State Dispute Settlement?

(Chathan House) – The proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, two of the world’s largest economies, is intended to remove trade barriers, create wealth and promote investment. On 13 January, the European Commission published the results of its public consultation on investment protection and investor−state dispute settlement (ISDS) in TTIP.  Of the 150,000 responses, 97 per cent were negative. Critics have stated that the ISDS proposals would allow corporates to undermine regulation by governments in fields such as environmental protection. A further consultation is promised.