The System Can’t Deal With Trump Piecemeal

Whether you are a Republican or a Democrat, it really shouldn’t be too much to ask that the president of the United States not commit felonies. It’d be nice if they didn’t perjure themselves or obstruct justice. No one wants to defend that kind of behavior and I still harbor a lot of resentment toward Bill Clinton for what he put Democrats through, despite the fact that nothing he did rose to the level of a high crime or misdemeanor and he definitely should have been defended against the attempt to remove him from office.

Despite this, I don’t really share John Podhoretz’s level of outrage about Donald Trump’s felonious violations of campaign finance law. Taken in complete isolation (which is impossible in this case, I know), I don’t think it’s a removable offense to pay off mistresses to keep silent about your affairs and then lie about it incessantly. If I thought that, I probably would not have defended Bill Clinton. Congress should have censured Clinton and been done with it, and if there weren’t a hundred other concerns about Trump’s fitness for office, that’s what Congress should do with this latest revelation.

I know it can be argued that the election was so close that Trump would have lost if not for his successful effort to cover up his affairs with a porn star and a Playboy bunny, and that does make it significantly more serious than lying under oath and hiding gifts related to a dalliance with a White House intern. Still, I’d let the voters handle this one and have Trump pay some fines and restitution once he’s out of office.

In truth, the proper way to deal with this is not to call for impeachment hearings or bray to this hilltops about how the president is a felon. The proper way to deal with it is to make it part of an eventual argument for removal that is based on the entire Mueller report. I’ve written about this a few times before, but we’re really stuck in a bad limbo until that report comes in because the Republicans aren’t going to stand up to their base unless or until they’re armed with the really damning stuff. We can’t deal with Trump piecemeal, but that’s the way revelations and developments have been playing out.

The Republicans in Congress could move to censure the president since they now know he’s committed felonies, and it’s a problem if they do nothing. But they really need more.

Obviously, Mueller is moving as fast as he can and yesterday showed how much progress he is making, but our system is so jangled at the moment that we can’t wait much longer.

The White House Undermines Our Elections

Despite the fact that our country is clearly on the fritz and in need of a hard reboot, people are basically holding it together. In the coming weeks, soccer matches will start up again and we’ll head to Back to School Night to meet our children’s teachers. Routine trips to the grocery or hardware stores come off just as they always have. For the most part, our interactions with our neighbors are normal.  We still spend our leisure time in the same ways and visit the same places for relaxation.  The economy is humming along well enough and no one is experiencing mass layoffs or huge losses in their retirement portfolios.  For those who are truly dissatisfied, the knowledge that elections are approaching is a solace and focal point for organization and resistance.  Maybe there’s nothing wrong with America that cannot be solved in the traditional and legal ways we’ve addressed the need for change in the past.

But what if the elections don’t bring change? What if we lose confidence that the elections were fairly and honestly conducted? In that case, how likely is it that things will continue on in a largely normal fashion?

The DNC called the FBI on Tuesday because they had been alerted to an attempt to breach their voter database. That sounds all too familiar. And it’s just one indication from yesterday that malevolent actors are still seeking to mess with our elections and influence our policies in underhanded ways.

Early Tuesday morning, Microsoft announced that parts of an operation linked to Russian military intelligence targeting the US Senate and conservative think tanks that advocated for tougher policies against Russia were thwarted last week.

It appears that the Russians are targeting Democratic candidates for office like Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri and Dr. Hans Keirstead who narrowly lost his primary bid to take on the Kremlin’s favorite congressman, Dana Rohrabacher of California. In Florida, there’s a raging dispute over whether Sen. Bill Nelson was correct or perhaps disclosed classified information when he alleged that the Russians had penetrated county election boards and “are in your records and all they have to do, if those election records are not protected, is to go in and start eliminating registered voters.” The FBI and DHS have reassured county election officers that they have no evidence that this is the case, but some anonymous intelligence sources have backed Nelson’s claims.

Whether these actions lead to concrete meddling, like deleting people from voter rolls or changing vote tallies, the mere fact that we’re talking about them serves to create doubt about the integrity of our elections. And that suits our enemies just fine.  Do you remember the final message Julian Assange sent to the Trump campaign on Election Day?

WikiLeaks didn’t write [Donald Trump Jr.] again until Election Day, November 8, 2016. “Hi Don if your father ‘loses’ we think it is much more interesting if he DOES NOT conceed [sic] and spends time CHALLENGING the media and other types of rigging that occurred—as he has implied that he might do,” WikiLeaks wrote at 6:35pm, when the idea that Clinton would win was still the prevailing conventional wisdom. (As late as 7:00pm that night, FiveThirtyEight, a trusted prognosticator of the election, gave Clinton a 71 percent chance of winning the presidency.) WikiLeaks insisted that contesting the election results would be good for Trump’s rumored plans to start a media network should he lose the presidency. “The discussion can be transformative as it exposes media corruption, primary corruption, PAC corruption, etc.,” WikiLeaks wrote.

Shortly after midnight that day, when it was clear that Trump had beaten all expectations and won the presidency, WikiLeaks sent him a simple message: “Wow.”

I’m fairly certain that Trump, who hadn’t even bothered to write a victory speech, was well prepared to follow the plan Assange had suggested. He had signaled that intention repeatedly throughout the late stages of the campaign.

Donald Trump said Thursday he will accept the results of next month’s election if he wins, a caveat that threatens to cast unprecedented doubt on the legitimacy of the electoral process.

Trump offered a stunning declaration during the final presidential debate that he might not accept the results of next month’s election. In his first speech since the debate, Trump seemed to simultaneously double down on the stance he articulated Wednesday night while also trying to clean it up.

Trump argued forcefully during a rally here that he was being asked to “waive” his right to contest the election after critics slammed him for refusing to pledge to accept the results of the election the previous night during the final presidential debate.

“I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election, if I win,” Trump told supporters here in his first comments since the final debate.

We never got to find out what he would do if he didn’t win, but a good indication is that he set up a ridiculous commission to investigate voter fraud despite the fact that he won. The chances that he would have gracefully accepted the legitimacy of a loss are zero.

Any government that rules in principle by the consent of the governed must assure that people will accept the legitimacy of its elections, but Trump has moved to undermine confidence in our elections. This is consistent with his efforts to undermine faith in federal law enforcement and our intelligence services. His refusal to acknowledge Russian meddling doesn’t mean that his other actions have bolstered confidence. The fact that he simply won’t act to protect our elections now serves the same purpose.

I don’t know why he is bent on following a strategy outlined by WikiLeaks and Russian intelligence but the result is disintegration. And unlike termite damage, this kind of rot is easily visible. There’s a limit beyond which things will not remain calm and orderly. We will not have the same neighborly relations and our routines will be disrupted. Respect for the law will vanish and belief in peaceful and legal change will disappear. Demonstrations will turn violent and domestic terrorism from all sides may emerge.

For outside actors, perhaps this is what they want for America, but I don’t get why our president wants this. I don’t understand why everything he does seems to serve Putin’s purpose.

What I do know is that a lot of people are not going to accept the midterm election results and the president is working to make sure that this is so.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Vol. 79

Welcome back, music lovers. It’s been crazy this week, yeah? I get the feeling things will get crazier before all is said and done. In the meantime, some music.

I really have no overarching theme this week, other than perhaps that of revival. In this case, I have noticed a bit of a renewed interest in late-1970s through mid-1980s postpunk. I’ll start with one my daughters turned me on to:

The Regrettes are still primarily a regional Los Angeles area act. Whether or not the break big is an open question. They are intriguing though. More to come.

Part 1 of Sears, a tale of the retail apocalypse

In the comments to Part 3 of Toys R Us, a tale of the Retail Apocalypse — Company Man, I promised “When I finish with Toys R Us, I’ll start a series on Sears.”  Here it is.

I begin with CNNMoney reporting Sears is closing 63 more stores.

The company initially announced plans Thursday to close 72 stores, but pulled back slightly and released a list of only 63 stores slated for closing – 48 Sears stores and 15 Kmart stores, spread across 29 states. The company said the nine additional stores that it initially planned to announce would close will be evaluated further.

MarketWatch put these closings in context, at least for the short term.

Sears said Thursday it had closed 67 Kmart stores and 41 Sears stores during the 13 weeks ended May 5, and closed 303 Kmart stores and 123 Sears stores in 2017.

CNNMoney described the longer term trend.

The company closed nearly 400 stores during the past 12 months, and now has a total of 894 left, including the 63 slated for closure. The two chains had a total of 3,500 US stores between them when they merged in 2005.

CNBC takes the longest possible view in Sears: The Rise And Fall Of The Massive U.S. Retailer.

Sears Holdings CEO Eddie Lampert admits his retail empire isn’t what he imagined it would become when he brought Sears and Kmart together 13 years ago. He had his eyes set then on being “the next Warren Buffett,” and Sears Holdings was supposed to be his Berkshire Hathaway, says one former top Sears executive. But Lampert’s strategy from the start was slashing costs to grow the bottom line, even if that meant not investing in Sears’ stores, the person explained to CNBC. Sears and Kmart were already lacking so many resources, namely investment capital to fend off online upstarts like Amazon, and an experienced bench of retail executives, so these early cuts took an enormous toll.

The video mentioned Sears selling off Land’s End and Craftsman.  According to CNNMoney, the brand the chain will sell off next is Kenmore, its line of appliances.  Lampert himself may end up owning it.  That’s one way to strip the assets of the company he runs.

All of the above examined Sears and its issues from the air.  I plan on presenting the view on the ground on Monday, when I will share three videos from Retail Archeology.  Stay tuned.

Trump’s Ship Just Took on a Lot of Water

If you’re like me, your day went a lot like this:

And if that wasn’t enough for you, Rep. Duncan Hunter of San Diego and his wife were indicted on fraud and campaign finance charges. This is extra special because Duncan Hunter and Rep. Chris Collins of New York were the first two House Republicans to endorse Trump’s candidacy and now they’ve both been indicted. The first senator to endorse Trump, Jeff Sessions of Alabama, perjured himself during his confirmation hearings and had to recuse himself from the Russia investigation.  So, there’s a nice pattern here.

But that’s still not all. There’s more!

The special counsel’s office and Michael Flynn’s lawyers were in court today where they agreed to put off sentencing for a fourth time because Flynn’s cooperation with the investigation is still ongoing.

But the big news today was that Michael Cohen pled guilty to eight federal crimes and Paul Manafort was convicted of eight federal crimes. In Cohen’s case, it almost certainly means that he will now be a fully cooperating witness, although that is not technically confirmed and any agreement is probably under seal. In Manafort’s case, it means that he’s probably already looking at three to four years in prison at a minimum, and that’s before the more serious charges are settled next month in a Washington DC courthouse in front of a Washington DC jury with a judge who is not likely to be as friendly to the defense as the judge was in the case in Virginia.  Also, when he’s sentenced for today’s convictions, it will be as a person with a clean record. That won’t be the case when he’s convicted in the next go-round.  Manafort has to hope he gets pardoned because otherwise he’ll probably die in prison.

Unless, of course, he decides to do his patriotic duty and tell the truth to the special counsel about what he did during the campaign to coordinate with the Russians, in which case he’ll see a major reduction in his prison time.

The Cohen case is more immediately serious for three reasons. First, by pleading guilty Cohen has implicated the president of the United States in a conspiracy to commit federal crimes. Cohen admitted that Trump directed him to commit felonies, and in the ordinary course of things Trump would be getting indicted. These crimes are more serious than lying about a sexual dalliance with a White House intern, although I’m not quite ready to say that, on their own, they amount to a high crime. As part of a larger case arguing for removal from office, these criminal acts should play a supporting rather than a leading role.

Second, the fact that Cohen is almost certainly now cooperating makes today’s developments in his case more of an immediate threat than the Manafort convictions. Manafort may already be looking to cut a deal, but Cohen has apparently already cut one.

Third, Cohen’s information is much more likely to be lethal to Trump than Manafort’s simply because Cohen was working on a making a Trump Tower in Moscow happen throughout the fall, winter, and spring of 2015-16 and that’s likely to involve impeachable offenses. But the one thing Trump probably cannot survive even in a Republican-led Senate is confirmation that the Steele Dossier was correct about Cohen traveling to Prague. That is the most serious allegation in the entire Russia investigation.


As I’ve said many times before, if Michael Cohen went to Prague, Trump will be removed from office. Four months ago, McClatchy journalists Peter Stone and Greg Gordon reported the following:

The Justice Department special counsel has evidence that Donald Trump’s personal lawyer and confidant, Michael Cohen, secretly made a late-summer trip to Prague during the 2016 presidential campaign, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Confirmation of the trip would lend credence to a retired British spy’s report that Cohen strategized there with a powerful Kremlin figure about Russian meddling in the U.S. election.

It would also be one of the most significant developments thus far in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of whether the Trump campaign and the Kremlin worked together to help Trump win the White House. Undercutting Trump’s repeated pronouncements that “there is no evidence of collusion,” it also could ratchet up the stakes if the president tries, as he has intimated he might for months, to order Mueller’s firing.

Donald Trump better pray that Peter Stone and Greg Gordon were catastrophically wrong in their reporting, because Cohen is going to spill the beans now on what really happened.

As for Manafort, he probably has enough information to end this presidency too, but it’s not quite as certain in his case. At least for now, he’s not talking. But it doesn’t look good having your personal lawyer and your campaign chairman convicted on the same day.

Some Republicans argue that these charges have nothing to do with Russia, but that’s delusional. Cohen worked overtime on a Moscow Trump Tower project during the campaign that the president assured us did not exist, and the taxes Manafort didn’t pay came on income from Russian proxies who were running Ukraine for the Kremlin’s benefit while the bank loans Manafort sought were at least in part to pay back nearly twenty million dollars he owed to a mobbed up friend of Vladimir Putin. Manafort even used a Russian intelligence officer who he employed for years as a contact for this Russian gangster and offered to give him private briefings on the Trump campaign. He also may have expected to get debt relief for softening the Republican Party’s platform on Ukraine, which is something he completely denied having a role in.

The truth is going to come out. Today assured us of that.

Examining Charlie Cook’s Prognostications

I have a couple of quibbles and a few observations about Charlie Cook’s prognostication on what Congress will look like next year. One thing I can endorse wholeheartedly is his caveat at the end where he states: “Humility is always necessary with election forecasting; after all, we are talking about human behavior and politics is a dynamic, not static, exercise.” I will use the same warning for what follows here.

My first problem comes from a statement Cook makes about the significance of the size of a prospective Democratic majority in the House of Representatives.

Unless Democrats score net House gains of 46 seats or more, their majority would be smaller than the current GOP majority. If Republicans retain a majority, it will certainly be smaller than it is today. Anything short of a Democratic gain of 60 or more seats means that it would a real challenge for House Democrats to get much out of the chamber (a 60-plus seat gain for Democrats is possible, but very unlikely given current congressional-district boundaries and natural-population patterns).

Cook is correct to say that it’s unlikely that the Democrats will win as many as sixty seats. Nate Silver’s 538 site currently gives the Dems a ten percent chance of winning more than fifty-two. But Cook’s cutoff here makes no sense to me.  There is no filibuster rule in the House and the minority party is essentially powerless to obstruct.   When the majority party cannot pass something, it’s because of internal divisions. The GOP suffers from these anytime they try to appropriate money or pay our debts on time, but the Democrats are much more united.  The only way the Democrats will struggle to pass bills out of the House is if their majority is significantly smaller than the one the Republicans currently enjoy.  For example, with a majority of just a handful of seats, there could be enough conservative Democrats or far left Democrats to torpedo a bill. With a split that even, there would be razor thin majorities on some committees, so that could create a problem if dissenting Democrats vote with the GOP during the markup of bills.

If I had to defend Cook’s prediction here, I’d point to two things. One is that the Democrats won’t struggle to pass spending bills of their own but may very well have problems reconciling those spending bills with a possibly Republican Senate, especially in the face of shutdown and veto threats from the president. The other is that a narrow majority will probably result in immediate turmoil over the Democratic leadership of the House, as many candidates and even a few incumbents have promised not to support another speakership for Nancy Pelosi.  But, of course, that will shake itself out in January of next year and shouldn’t create much additional or lasting obstacles to muscling home bills preferred by whatever leadership team prevails.

Another quibble I have with Cook is his presentation of a best case scenario for the Democrats in the Senate.

Given the map, and keeping in mind the Pew study, a good case can be made that Republicans pick up at least one and as many as three seats, resulting in a GOP Senate majority of 52-54 seats. Conversely, giving Senate Democrats every conceivable break—holding all 26 of their own seats, winning the open seats in Arizona and Tennessee, and knocking off incumbents Dean Heller in Nevada (quite plausible) and Ted Cruz in Texas (tougher, but possible)—a Democratic-led 53-47 chamber is as far as it could possibly go. The reality is that no party is going to exceed 53 or 54 seats, making for a tough legislative sled given the rules and practices of the Senate.

The Democrats are unlikely to win every single competitive Senate election, and I doubt they’ll wind up with fifty-three seats, but Cook fails to mention every opportunity they have. Just five days ago, Roll Call ran an article on the election to fill out the term of Thad Cochran of Mississippi. A recent Mellman Group poll for the Democratic candidate, Mike Espy, shows him qualifying for a runoff election which he would win.

According to the Mellman data, Sen. Hyde-Smith’s advantage is only 29-27-17 percent over Espy and McDaniel. Testing potential post-general election run-off scenarios, the Mellman results find Espy holding an advantage over both Sen. Hyde-Smith and McDaniel. The Espy/Hyde-Smith run-off breaks 41-38 percent in favor of the Democrat, while Espy would defeat McDaniel, 45-27 percent if those two advance.

Under Mississippi election law, the top two special election finishers on Nov. 6 will advance to a secondary Nov. 27 run-off contest if no candidate receives majority support on the first vote. Since the three candidates are all viable, it is pretty clear that the run-off election will be required.

That would be an interesting election, coming as it would three weeks after Election Day. It’s not inconceivable that it might determine control of the Senate.

I also think it’s only fair to put Nebraska’s Senate race on the radar. The incumbent Republican Deb Fischer suffers from persistently negative approval numbers and the president’s agricultural tariff policies have dinged the most conservative region of the state, possibly leading to disgruntlement and apathy. As of today, there’s no real sign that this race is competitive, but there’s a world of hurt coming for President Trump and the Republican Party between now and election day. If conditions for the GOP deteriorate enough, the Nebraska race would be next up on the list for a possible upset.

Most polling data for the Senate has been surprisingly good news for the Democratic Party. The incumbent I initially considered the most vulnerable is Joe Donnelly of Indiana and a recent poll from the right-wing Trafalgar Group gives Donnelly a robust twelve point lead over businessman Mike Braun. They also show Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia with a ten point lead. In Montana, Sen. Jon Tester has enjoyed a small but persistent advantage. The polling out of North Dakota indicates a toss-up race between Sen. Heidi Heitkamp and Rep. Kevin Cramer, and that has to be encouraging for the Democrats considering that Trump beat Clinton there with 63-27 percent of the vote. The same cannot be said of toss-up polling out of Missouri where Claire McCaskill still looks more vulnerable than she should considering the condition of the GOP in that state. Missouri could spoil the party for the Democrats and cost them control of the Senate. But the biggest concern should be Florida where Sen. Bill Nelson narrowly trailed Gov. Rick Scott in two out of three polls released in July.

As things stand, no Democratic Senate candidate looks like a sure loser. Several incumbents from strong Trump states look shockingly sturdy.  That the Democrats are polling ahead in Arizona and looking very competitive in Tennessee, Mississippi and Texas should terrify Mitch McConnell.  To gain control of the Senate, the Democrats need only net two seats in the elections, and they look to be right in that range with more potential to grow than the Republicans appear to enjoy.  It’s a brutal map, but when we anticipate further developments in the Mueller probe between now and election day, it’s not one that should fill the GOP with confidence. It should also be remembered that as long as John McCain remains a member of the Senate but too incapacitated to serve, the Democrats will have a voting edge even in a fifty-fifty Senate.

Having said all that, Cook is correct when he says that a Democratically controlled Senate will have difficulty passing legislation. Even if they eliminate the legislative filibuster, as many people have suggested they do, they still won’t have an easy time overcoming President Trump’s veto pen.  They’ll also be conflicted about giving him legislative victories, so while they might be able to hammer out some positive achievements on infrastructure or opioids, they may be more interested in reserving those as campaign issues. Conversely, they may find that it’s impossible to reach an acceptable compromise with the administration on even those fairly low-hanging fruits.

One observation I have on Cook’s analysis comes from this:

Republicans desperately hope that geography will trump a challenging political environment, pointing to the recent Pew Research Center study showing that in regular and special Senate elections held since 2013, 69 out of 73 were won by the party carrying that state in the most recent presidential election. Every single Senate race in 2016 was won by the same party that prevailed in presidential balloting there.

That trend is bad news for many Democratic Senate candidates, but it should be kept in mind if Democrats nevertheless prevail in states like Mississippi or Texas or Arizona. If the Democrats win statewide elections in any of those states this November it’s likely that they’ll be winnable for the Democratic presidential candidate in 2020. That’s true for those states but not states like North Dakota and West Virginia because the southern states don’t behave like northern states. If the Republicans lose in Texas or Arizona, it’s because demography has caught up with them, but when they lose in North Dakota and West Virginia it’s because those states have a history of sending Democrats to Washington DC regardless of their overall conservative bent.

The last observation I have on Cook’s piece is that he predicts that the Democrats will focus on “subpoenas and impeachment” because of their inability to legislate. That’s a very uncharitable characterization of Congress doing their job. The president obviously needs to be removed from office and it’s hard to find anyone who has wielded a position of responsibility who will give you an honest and objective opinion otherwise. At the very minimum, Congress needs to exercise much more robust oversight of how the courts are being filled and the various agencies are being staffed and run. Cook thinks Congressional paralysis will wind up transferring more power to the Executive Branch. I think real oversight will result in the opposite effect.

Trump Called Manafort a Crook

I’ve been in a holding pattern today, just in case the jury in the Manafort trial completed their work and delivered their verdicts. I guess that isn’t going to happen on a timetable that is convenient for me. So, instead of commenting on the outcome of that trial, I’ll just remind you that however bad you think Manafort is, he’s actually worse.

There’s an interesting aspect to the White House spin on this trial that doesn’t get enough attention. In the part of the Steele Dossier that discusses the firing of Paul Manafort, it is noted that Corey Lewandowski truly hated the man and played a role in his demise. And that can’t be ignored when considering the following, but it’s still worth noting that this was published at all.

On December 4, 2017, Politico Magazine published an advanced excerpt of the forthcoming book Let Trump Be Trump, co-written by Lewandoski and David Bossie. It described how candidate Trump discovered that Manafort had been receiving off-the-books payments from the pro-Russian  Party of Regions and their leader Viktor Yanukovych. It began with Manafort inviting Steve Bannon up to his Trump Tower apartment:

Manafort wanted Steve to look at a transcript of a story, yet another one, that a New York Times reporter had sent to him. Bannon read the first three paragraphs and then looked up him.

“Twelve-point-seven-million-dollar payment from Ukraine?”

“How much of this is true?” Bannon asked.

“It’s all lies,” Manafort said. “My lawyers are fighting it.”

“When are they going to run it?” Bannon asked.

“They’re threatening to publish tomorrow.”

“Does Trump know about this?”

“What’s to know? It’s all lies.”

“But if it’s in the paper someone has to give Trump a heads-up, because if it’s in the paper, it’s reality.”

“It was a long time ago,” he added. “I had expenses.”

Bannon knew what he had in his hand.

It was an explosive, Page One story. And even if the story wasn’t true, it was in the fucking New York Times. At the very least it would leave a mark.

Just as Steve had thought, the story ran the next day, August 15, on Page One, above the fold.

“I’ve got a crook running my campaign,” Trump said when he read it.

This article was published about five weeks after Manafort surrendered to the FBI after having been indicted by a grand jury. At the time, the idea was that Manafort was as guilty as he looked and that he had been fired immediately once Trump realized that he was a crook.

That actually would have been a solid defense. If Trump inadvertently hired someone who was looking to use him as a way to satisfy a debt approaching twenty million dollars to Putin and Russian mafia-connected oligarch Oleg Derispaska, that could have been an innocent mistake. Saying that they fired him as soon as they learned that he was compromised would have been a great way to create some space.

But they didn’t stick to that story, and Trump is out there even today singing the praises of Manafort in a way that should qualify as jury tampering. Now we are supposed to believe that Manafort is a good man who is being railroaded.

I can’t get past this turnaround. The special counsel has a record of Manafort offering Derispaska private briefings on the inside workings of Trump’s campaign and openly wondering if he can use his position to satisfy his enormous debt. Trump should be completely outraged. Trump’s supporters should be braying for blood.

But they are not. They are defending Manafort and arguing that all the charges are old, trumped up, and have nothing to do with Russian collusion. They could have blamed almost everything on Manafort and instead they’re turning him into a martyr.

This behavior makes absolutely no sense if Manafort was a rogue operator. Apparently, he wasn’t a rogue operator. Either that, or he simply knows too much for them to risk him becoming a cooperating witness.

Lewandowski said that Trump was outraged to learn he had a crook running his campaign. Somewhere along the way, he forgot to stay outraged.

Professional Women Are Coming for the GOP

The political condition of the Republican Party is not static. Their position has deteriorated steadily over the last year. At this point, one out of six Republican seats in the House of Representatives is going uncontested by the incumbent and, according to Dave Wasserman of the Cook Political Report, the pool of vulnerable GOP-held districts has nearly doubled over the last eight months.

Wasserman explains this trend in a fairly easy to understand way. The first point he makes is one I’ve been making off and on myself, which is that Trump’s strongest supporters have never liked House Republicans (or Senators, for that matter) and that they therefore cannot be counted on to show up to vote for them.

“They believed in Trump fervently, but they’ve never liked congressional Republicans at all. In fact, Trump gained ground by running against them in 2016. So why are they going to turn out this year for congressional Republicans?”

There’s a lot of overlap between these voters and the voters who made up the Tea Party surge of 2010. They aren’t matching Democratic enthusiasm this time around.

The second explanation Wasserman offers is one that is observable to even the most casually engaged voter.

“The most telling number in the most recent NBC/WSJ poll is that Trump’s approval rating among women with college degrees was 26 percent. That’s absolutely awful and the intensity of that group is extraordinary. They’re already the most likely demographic to turn out to vote in midterms. But never have they been this fervently anti-Republican.”

“Yes, it’s about how upset suburban professional women are, with regard to family separations at the border and Trump’s temperament and behavior.”

I think it’s severely inadequate to attribute this hostility from college-educated women to distaste for child kidnapping at the border and Trump’s personality and behavior. What distinguishes college-educated women is that their very existence as independent, professional women is now threatened. If Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed to the Supreme Court, there will be a conservative majority to overturn Roe v. Wade for the first time. Women’s reproductive health will come under assault not just from Republican legislators. Restrictions on access to contraceptives can be expected to be upheld in the courts. Women will find it harder to find relief for workplace harassment, discrimination and unequal treatment. Title IX protections will be eviscerated.

For a long time it has been difficult to convince people that this is where Republican majorities would eventually lead, but it’s safe to say that college-educated women have collectively awoken to how far advanced the threat has become, and they’ve snapped into an appropriately urgent state of political resistance.

There is such a wide array of danger signs. Professional women understand that a career depends on the ability to delay and control childbirth.  The same can be said for true independence which grants real free choice in decisions on marriage or sexual partnership. Basic protections against sexual discrimination and especially sexual assault are key factors in women’s ability to safely navigate and succeed in both academia and the workplace.  It was appalling enough to see Trump get elected despite all the credible allegations of assault (and worse) leveled against him, but to see those values begin to translate into actual policy is a challenge to the very idea of the modern woman.

It’s safe to say that almost every professional woman could recognize and take umbrage at the spectacle of an unqualified man getting a promotion to the presidency over a woman who had checked all the boxes and clearly deserved the job.  That alone was a mobilizing event.  But it’s the prospect that the very prerequisites to a professional life are under threat that has really set this cohort in motion. By some estimates, seventy percent of the people involved in local resistance groups are women, and women make up the majority of these groups’ leadership positions. There are a record number of women running for office this year, despite the fact that it’s not a record on the Republican side.

Despite all the signs that professional and college-educated women are coming for the Republicans this November, the Trump supporters have been conditioned to disbelieve the evidence. Here’s Jonathan Swan reporting on this phenomenon:

“One of those [GOP] strategists told me he’s detecting something interesting — and concerning — from focus groups of Trump voters.”

Said the strategist: “We’ve seen it in focus groups, with Republican base voters, where you’ll come up with a hypothetical that the Democrats win, and people are like, ‘That’s not going to happen, that’s stupid.’ … They’re like, ‘Oh, to hell with this crap, we were told Trump wasn’t going to win. It’s bullshit.’”

Based on experience, they’d be justified if their skepticism was based on nothing more than polling data, but there is plenty more evidence than that to indicate a major boost in turnout from college-educated women. They feel like they are under assault because they are under assault. This isn’t voting from a position of privilege. That’s in the past.

It’s been widely noted and retroactively recognized that it went unappreciated how many people felt under assault by the demographic changes in our country that Trump made the organizing principle and rationale for his campaign. This is a different election cycle, and there will be no excuse for anyone who didn’t see this particular wave coming. Trump has come to symbolize everything professional women hate, and his actual real-world influence is not symbolic at all, but entirely real. He has created a political force every bit as powerful as the Tea Party, and probably far more so.

US Foreign Policy and CIA Masters

US supplied bomb that killed 40 children on Yemen school bus | The Guardian |

The bomb dropped on a school bus in Yemen by a Saudi-led coalition warplane was sold to Riyadh by the US, according to reports based on analysis of the debris.

The 9 August attack killed 40 boys aged from six to 11 who were being taken on a school trip. Eleven adults also died and local authorities said 79 people were wounded, 56 of them children. CNN reported that the weapon used was a 227kg laser-guided bomb made by Lockheed Martin, one of many thousands sold to Saudi Arabia as part of billions of dollars of weapons exports.

Continued below the fold …

 
Yemeni children vent anger against Riyadh and Washington as they take part in a mass funeral for the 40 children killed in an air strike by the Saudi-led coalition last week. (Photo: AFP/Getti Images)

The Gulf monarchy is the biggest single customer for both the US and UK arms industries. The US also supports the coalition with refueling and intelligence.

The investigative journalism site Bellingcat identified bomb fragments, on photographs and videos taken soon after the bombing, as coming from a laser-guided version of a Mk-82 bomb called a GBU-12 Paveway II. Based on marking on a fin segment of the bomb, Bellingcat traced the bomb to a shipment of a thousand of such bombs to Saudi Arabia, approved by the state department in 2015, during the Obama administration.

A spokesperson for Lockheed Martin referred questions about the bombing to the Pentagon. The defense department has said it does not make tactical targeting decision for the Saudi-led coalition but does provide support to improve targeting.


The Obama administration offered Saudi Arabia more than $115bn in weapons in the course of its two four-year terms, more than any previous US administration, according to a report in 2016.

After the bombing of a funeral hall in October 2016, which killed 155 people, Obama halted the sale of guided munition technology to Saudi Arabia, on the grounds that improved precision would not save civilian lives if the Saudi-led coalition were not taking care to avoid hitting non-military targets. The sales were reinstated by the Trump administration’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, in March 2017.

h/t generic @EuroTrib

Transcript: NPR’s Interview With CIA Director John Brennan – Dec. 25, 2016

The Trump administration strikes back!

Republicans pushing back on the retired deep state actors in favour of their new appointees …

Big liar John Brennan is targeted as point man of the  anti-Russia brigade in Washington DC spreading innuendo and extreme accusations without evidence. Security clearance revoked!

<no tears>

Trump Meets Putin

Ex-CIA head John Brennan says Donald Trump colluded with Russia and is now desperate to hide the truth

Well, John Brendan has got many CIA goons on his side …

Hayden

Former CIA boss John Brennan Interview: ‘I recognize I have a bullseye on my chest’ | Meet The Press –  NBC News |

Meet the Press today … transcript.

Brennan: “I admire Gina Haspel and I want her to stay as head of the CIA …”

Record of John Brennan who served under Presidents George Bush and Barack Obama. Mr. John Brennan in 2005 [cached]:

    To ensure a more comprehensive accounting of terrorist incidents, we in the NCTC significantly increased the level of effort from three part-time individuals to 10 full-time analysts, and we took a number of other steps to improve quality control and database management. This increased level of effort allowed a much deeper review of far more information and, along with Iraq, are the primary reasons for the significant growth in a number of terrorist incidents being reported.

    Now, this increase in the number of incidents being reported today does not necessarily mean that there has been a growth in actual terrorist incidents. In other words, the data you will see today represent a break from previous years, and the numbers can’t be compared to previous years in any meaningful way. This point was made to congressional staffers earlier this week, but has not been accurately captured in the various press articles over the past couple of days.

    Now, second. In our scrub of last year’s data, it became increasingly clear that there were methodological problems associated with statutory language and counting rules. These criteria dated to a period of focus on state-sponsored terrorism in the early 1980s and not the transnational phenomena we confront now. I will discuss some of these methodological problems and what we’re doing to improve the process of accounting for global terrorist incidents. I would like to first turn to our charts. Using the statutory criteria found in Title 22, Section 2656-F of the U.S. Code, along with counting rules that were provided to the National Counterterrorism Center, we compiled data on 651 attacks that met the criteria for significant international terrorist incidents. Now, there are several points of note. As you can see on the left-hand side, there were over 9,000 victims of significant international terrorism last year, of which 1,907 were killed. On the right-hand side, you can see the regional breakdown of total attacks and the relative share of the 1,907 individuals killed.

    Now, a couple of points of note. Much has been made in the press about Kashmir and clearly there was, on average, an attack nearly every day in Kashmir. In fact, there were a total of 284 attacks in Kashmir that met the statutory criteria for significant terrorist incidents. Now, the total number of people killed in South Asia was about 500. In other words, the attacks were often conducted against one or two people. By contrast, there were very few attacks in Europe – it’s represented here on the blue bar, in Europe — but there was a very high death toll. This reflects the very deadly attacks in places like Madrid and Beslan, Russia, where many hundreds of people were killed in single incidents.

    As you can see in the lower left-hand corner, the methodology, chronology, and selected statistical charts are being posted and are already posted on www.tkb.org. This is the website for the Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism in Oklahoma City, and we are most appreciative of the institute for partnering with us to make the data available to the American public.

    Now, the next chart. This second chart reflects the subset of significant international attacks conducted against U.S. interests. As you can see on the left, 64 attacks, approximately 10 percent of the total number of attacks worldwide, were conducted against U.S. interests. The vast majority of these anti-U.S. attacks took place in the Middle East, where 83 percent of those attacks occurred. As you can see on the pie charts on the right-hand side of the briefing board, a far lower percentage of U.S. citizens were actually wounded or killed. Of the roughly 9,300 individuals wounded in significant international terrorist incidents, 103 were Americans. Total U.S. victims: 103. And of the more than 1,800 people killed last year in significant international terrorist incidents, 68 were Americans.

Link from diary by Larry Johnson @Booman

Mayhem in Counting Terrorism (2006)

Related reading …

Not a Fan of These Picks

    In any case, I dislike the nomination of Chuck Hagel and I don’t give a damn whether he is confirmed or not. I don’t oppose him; I just don’t like the pick. John Brennan for CIA, I oppose. I don’t think he has been held accountable for his actions during the Bush administration and I do not think the Democrats should confirm him unless and until his record gets a full vetting.

The enemy of my enemy …

I Don’t Think John Brennan is Helping

In today’s world there is far more terrorism and the War on Terror is causing deaths and suffering across vast swats of land from Africa through the Middle East into the AfPak region.

Terrorist Attacks and Deaths in 2017

    In 2017, there were 10,900 terrorist attacks around the world, which killed more than 26,400 people, including 8,075 perpetrators and 18,488 victims. The patterns described here provide a very general overview. We encourage readers to explore the Global Terrorism Database and consider contextual information for a comprehensive assessment. The year 2017 marks the third consecutive year of declining numbers of terrorist attacks and deaths worldwide, since terrorist violence peaked in 2014 at nearly 17,000 attacks and more than 45,000 total deaths.

Related reading …

Makkah Siege of 1979 – Turning Point in Saudi Arabia

Giuliani: "Truth isn’t truth." Yup.

Well…here we finally are. One of the very founders of the modern Post-Truth era is coming right out and saying what appears to be the “truth” of the matter. Of course…he is tip-toeing around the ancient “Liar paradox”.

“Everything I say is a lie.”

But this is a very effective lawyerly trick. If a jury or a culture can be convinced that there is no “truth,” then they cannot convict or blame anyone for anything that they “might” have done or not done.

Giuliani used this idea quite brilliantly in the aftermath of 9/11. There he was, shacking up with his mistress while “overseeing” the carnage and clean-up work, claiming that he was America’s mayor.

Check him out. Everything that he says is a lie. Bet on it. And everything that Trump says is a lie, too. Ditto almost every powerful politician in the U.S. and the major media as well.

The real truth?

We are now living in Post-Truth America.

Will the lies come tumbling down?

Will Humpty Trumpty finally fall to the point that all the King’s horses and all the King’s men…with Giuliani, as usual leading from the rear…won’t be able to reassemble his shell of lies again?

Let us pray.

We all know in which direction Giuliani is praying.

Down like a motherfucker!!!

Read on.


There is “evil” in this world.

Truer words were never said.

Will it win this time?

I pray not.

You?

Later…

AG

P.S. Trump recently dispoke:

Just remember, what you are seeing and what you are reading is not what’s happening.

Once again…skirting the edges of the Liar’s paradox. The problem for these people…and this approach…is that while they are lying, they are being forced to tell the truth.


And…the American people are beginning to be able see the trees for the woods.


The truth that is necessarily implicit in the lies.


That is what my recent Mehelection post and the several that I wrote under the general heading of “Go West Young Man” are really saying. The “truth” of the matter is that almost everybody in a position of political or media power is lying through their dental implants.


The old peacenik meme?


“What if the gave a war and no one showed up?”


Well…what if the held an election and no one showed up?


Of course…that’s not going to happen, because all of the Trumpinesses, other rightinesses and remaining leftinesses are still under the illusion that one or another side in this jiveass media circus is telling the truth, and that the rest of them bastids are nasty liars.


But there is really only one truth regarding this ongoing scam.


And what is that?


It’s an ongoing scam.


Duh.


And may the best liar(s) win.


Meanwhile…back at the ranch:

NEWSTRIKE!!!


MEDIASTRIKE!!!


CULTURESTRIKE!!!


VAYA!!!


Like a vaccine, the only way to protect yourself against this media dispersed sickness is to consume prophylactic doses of all of the media viruses


Be well.