DINO Mite

Sen. Joe Manchin ("D"-WV) attended Donald Trump’s signing Tuesday of his executive order on energy, designed to unwind former President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. Manchin said in a statement that "the Clean Power Plan failed to balance economic and environmental interests.”

Beto v. Ted: Anglo with Mexican name to challenge Cuban-American with Anglo name

Former punk rocker and moderate Democratic Rep. Beto O’Rourke of El Paso will announce on Friday that he’ll challenge Senator from Hell Ted Cruz in 2018, according to the Houston Chronicle. Democratic establishment favorite Rep. Joaquin Castro of San Antonio is among other Texas Democrats mulling a run (if you're keeping score at home, Castro was 123rd in the liberal rankings in 2013; O'Rourke ranked 54th).

About that referendum?

We were just kidding.

In November, citizens around the U.S. said they wanted minimum-wage hikes, higher taxes, and criminal-justice reform. Now their elected officials are trying to roll those changes back. “This isn’t how democracy works,” said Justine Sarver, executive director of the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, a nonprofit that works with progressive ballot campaigns. “You don’t get to pick and choose when you like a process and when you don't.”

The rest of the story:
The Legislators Working to Thwart the Will of Voters by David A. Graham (The Atlantic)

I care, you care, we all care for Obamacare

Except for two Democratic members of the House.

The House Budget Committee yesterday approved 19-17 a motion to send GOP legislation to repeal and replace the 2010 health care law to the full House w/o the support of three Republicans: Reps. Mark Sanford, Dave Brat and Gary Palmer, all Freedom Caucus members. Two Democrats, NY Rep. John Faso and MN Rep. Jason Lewis, voted to move the bill out of committee. Without the Democratic votes, the bill would have failed in committee.

Democratic voters in the NY-19 and MN-02 congressional districts may want to start looking at primary challengers.

quote unquote: Jimmy Breslin


"Rage is the only quality which has kept me, or anybody I have ever studied, writing columns for newspapers” -- Jimmy Breslin

The People Polled

From FOX poll released yesterday:

"I'm going to read you the names of several individuals, groups, and items. Please tell me whether you have a generally favorable or unfavorable opinion of each one."
Favorable:
Bernie Sanders 61%
Planned Parenthood 57%
The 2010 health care law, also known as Obamacare 50%
Mike Pence 47%
Donald Trump 44%
Elizabeth Warren 39%
Paul Ryan 37%
Nancy Pelosi 33%
Sanctuary cities 33%
WikiLeaks 31%
Chuck Schumer 26%
Mitch McConnell 20%
The Freedom Caucus 19%

Trump does not represent America.

"Americans disagree with President Donald Trump's immigration priorities, according to a new CNN/ORC poll, with nearly two-thirds of Americans saying they'd like to see a path to legal status for undocumented immigrants rather than deportations.

"Trump has made tough border security and strict enforcement of US immigration laws a focal point of his campaign and presidency -- using some of his first executive orders to pave the way for far more deportations and detentions as well as ordering the construction of a Southern border wall.

"But a CNN/ORC poll released Friday finds that the public is actually moving in the opposite direction since Trump has won election." -- CNN 2017-03-17

Raising a brown boy in the time of Donald J. Trump

Sikh-American civil rights advocate Valarie Kaur's plea to her country.

Least Shocking Headline of the Day:

As Rebels Move Out of Colombia Drug Trade,
Corporations Look to Move In
-- NewYork Times 2017-03-10

Liberation: The Real "Long War"


Nina Vatolina: Fascism – The most evil enemy of women, 1941.

"No," he explained.

"Dr. Carson feels he has no government experience, he's never run a federal agency. The last thing he would want to do was take a position that could cripple the presidency." -- Carson adviser Armstrong Williams, The Hill, 11/15/16.

"Ben Carson Is Confirmed as HUD Secretary" -- New York Times, 3/2/17.

Priorities

"The City Council feels a need for speed when it comes to substantially shortening the runway at Santa Monica Airport." -- Today's paper.

This is the same city council that, in 30 years and counting, has not been able to deliver a commissioned stop sign to Main Street between Hill and Ashland.

And where are those promised parklets, by the way?

What did Donald Trump know, and when did he know it?

General Michael Flynn's traitorous actions are part of a GOP tradition stretching back at least as far as the Nixon-Kissinger "signals" to North Vietnam and Reagan's Iran-Contra-temps, itself organized by the National Security Council.

Reading List:
Michael Flynn, Trump's national security adviser, resigns over Russia lies by Yochi Dreazen (Vox) The fall of Michael Flynn: A timeline 8y Glenn Kessler (Washington Post). Michael Flynn Is Out - Will Trump Be Next? by Mike Ludwig (Truthout)
The Missing Pieces of the Flynn Story (New York Times editorial).
Trump Campaign Aides Had Repeated Contacts With Russian Intelligence by Michael S. Schmidt, Mark Mazzetti and Matt Apuzzo (New York Times).
Michael Flynn's White House Tenure: It's Funny 'Cause It's Treason by Stephen Colbert (YouTube).

Not The Onion: AZ introduces DIY executions.

As states have faced challenges to carrying out executions by lethal injection, various work-arounds and alternatives have been proposed, including the return of electric chairs and firing squads. Arizona may have come up with the most original concept yet: an invitation for lawyers to help kill their own clients.

The rest of the story:
Arizona's execution protocol invites death row inmates'lawyers to provide drugs to kill their own clients – a suggestion attorneys describe as ludicrous: Arizona unveils new death penalty plan - bring your own lethal injection drugs by Tom Dart (The Guardian)

AR-15: The Gun Behind So Many Mass Shootings

From the It's-All-About-Me Desk:

After exploring the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam for about an hour, Justin Bieber felt it necessary to set down his thoughts about the experience. "Truly inspiring to be able to come here," he wrote in the museum's "special guest" book. "Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a belieber."

"What did Trump know, and when did he know it?"

A fellow can dream, can't he?

quote unquote: Albert Einstein





"Whoever is careless with the truth in small matters cannot be trusted with important matters.” ― Albert Einstein

Carpe diem

Democrats are moving quickly to harness grass-roots anger over Donald Trump's first weeks in office in hopes of reclaiming the House majority in next year’s midterms. As of this week, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is hiring full-time operatives to do political organizing work in 20 key GOP-held districts, including that of Rep. Ed Royce of Fullerton, in what is an unusually early investment in House races that won't have declared candidates for months. New Mexico Rep. Ben Ray Luján is heading up the effort. Senate Democrats should do the same in every state with a contest next year.

Crowded CA 34

Gov. Jerry Brown has called a special election June 6 and a primary April 4 to replace Xavier Becerra in the 34th Congressional district. The Progressive Caucus member's departure after 24 years in the House creates an unexpected opening in the heavily Democratic district that includes downtown Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, Chinatown and Highland Park.

At least a dozen people have expressed interest in running. Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez raised $300,000 in December for the race. According to the L.A. Times,ormer LA City Council staffer Sara Hernandez attracted the second largest amount, $200,000; followed by former Obama administration aide Alejandra Campoverdi with $106,000 and Arturo Carmona, most recently the deputy political
director for Latino outreach for the Bernie Sanders campaign and executive director of Presente.org, with $93,000.

Gomez has the endorsement of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the largest public employee union in the nation; at the time he was elected to the state assembly, he was political director for the United Nurses Association of California. Other candidates in the race also have backgrounds in organized labor: Wendy Carrillo is a former journalist and local labor activist and Raymond Meza is an organizer for the Service Employees International Union Local 721, which was central in the "Fight for $15" campaign to increase the minimum wage.

Jimmy Gomez is far and away the front runner, but if Arturo Carmona gains the endorsement of the Sanders organization and is able to raise a commensurate amount of dough, at least the campaign will be more interesting to watch.

Every race for Congress counts now, and this is an opportunity to preserve progressive numbers in the federal legislature.

Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez racks up endorsements from Latino elected officials in fight for Becerra's congressional eat. (L.A. Times)

Arturo for Congress

Poor Mike Pence.

He was promised that he'd be the real president.

How mortifying to be forced to defer to President Bannon.

That's what makes him an expert.

According to the AP, Trump's voter fraud expert, Gregg Phillips, whose unsubstantiated claim that the election was marred by 3 million illegal votes was tweeted by the president, was listed on the rolls in Alabama, Texas and Mississippi, according to voting records and election officials in those states.

Don't mourn. Organize!

An ActBlue fundraising page for former Democratic congressional staffer Jon Ossoff’s special election bid to replace GOP Rep. Tom Price passed $420,000 this morning.

The Democrats need to contest every seat that comes up, even if there is little chance of winning this time, to build support for 2018 and 2020. And not with Blue Dogs.

Fight for every seat on the progressive platform that polls show most Americans overwhelmingly support.

Jon Ossoff for Congress.
Jon Ossoff's ActBlue page.

Who will Trump name Poet Laureate?

a) Donovan, because, you know, Bob Dylan
(and because “In love pool eyes float feathers after the struggle/The hopes burst and shot joy all through the mind/Sorrow more distant than a star/Multi colour run down over your body/Then the liquid passing all into all/Love is hot, truth is molten”)

b) Tim McGraw, because, you know, Poet Lariat
(and because "I don't know why I act the way I do/Like I ain't got a single thing to lose/Sometimes I'm my own worst enemy/I guess that's just the cowboy in me")

c) David Petraeus, because, you know, General Petraeus
(and because what do you need to know about poetry to be Laureate, anyway?)

Who Pays the Piper Calls the Tunes

If you think that Rep. Keith Ellison, the chair of the House Progressive Caucus, is going to win the DNC job in a walk, be aware that the party's neoliberals are not going to give up without a fight: e.g., Politico says former "Labor Secretary Tom Perez has raised over $825,000 in his bid to become the next chairman of the Democratic National Committee."

From the Duh! Desk:

“Privately, some leading Democratic strategists worry that" Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, "despite some forceful criticism, will lean too much toward making deals with Trump.”
"FOURTEEN  Senate Democrats joined all but one Senate Republican in confirming Rep. Mike Pompeo as the new CIA director on Monday evening, failing a crucial first test of whether Democrats would present a united front to defend human rights and civil liberties in the Trump era.

"Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., was the lone member of his party to vote against his confirmation.

"Pompeo is a far-right Kansas Republican who has in the past defended CIA officials who engaged in torture, calling them 'patriots.' Last week, he left the door open to torture by acknowledging in his written responses to the Senate Intelligence Committee that he would be open to altering a 2015 law prohibiting the government from using techniques not listed in the Army Field Manual.

"As a member of Congress, he repeatedly appeared on the radio program hosted by anti-Muslim activist Frank Gaffney, and has portrayed the war on terror as a conflict between Islam and Christianity. He has also claimed that 'Islamic leaders across America [are] potentially complicit' in terrorism because they supposedly don’t speak out against it, which is not true.

"While Pompeo’s confirmation was opposed by Human Rights Watch, it netted votes from a variety of Senate Democrats, including the caucus’ leader: Chuck Schumer of New York.

"In addition to his stances on torture and Islam, Pompeo has also come under fire for his views on surveillance. In a 2016 op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, he attacked a 2015 law that that he voted for, which ended the bulk collection on phone records by the NSA. The op-ed calls on the government to collect 'all metadata' and 'lifestyle' details on Americans.

"The CIA is prohibited by executive order from conducting electronic surveillance inside the United States. But the specific rules and policies governing CIA surveillance are secret and can be reinterpreted without public debate. Despite a push for transparency following the revelations in documents from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, the Obama administration did not declassify a secret legal opinion about the CIA’s collection of financial records. And days before President Trump took office, the Obama administration issued new rules that would allow the CIA to sift through much of the raw data the NSA collects on Americans.

"In his confirmation hearing, Pompeo tried to assure Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., that there were 'legal boundaries'" to compiling dossiers on Americans, but that the government would be 'grossly negligent' to ignore 'publicly available' information.

"On the Senate floor Monday, Wyden called Pompeo 'the wrong man for the job.'

“'On issue after issue,' Wyden said 'the congressman has taken two, three, or four positions, depending on when he says it and who he is talking to. He has done this with surveillance, with torture, with Russia, and a number of other subjects.'

"He added: 'Congressman Pompeo does not seem familiar with the broad consensus that torture, in addition to being illegal, immoral and contrary to our national values, does not work.'

"But Virginia Democratic Sen. Mark Warner, the ranking Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said on the floor that although he does 'not agree with some of the views that Congressman Pompeo' holds, he 'convinced me that he will follow the law banning torture.'

"Margaret Huang, executive director of Amnesty International USA, called the confirmation vote 'a clear sign that Congress has not done enough ‘extreme vetting’ of President Trump’s nominees’ views on human rights.'

"She continued: 'While Pompeo sailed through his confirmation hearing, his written answers to the Senate contradict his earlier testimony and could lay the groundwork for the agency to return to torture and secret detention. Torture is a war crime and a grave human rights violation.'

'The Democrats who voted to confirm Pompeo were:

Joe Donnelly of Indiana
Dianne Feinstein of California
Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire
Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota
Tim Kaine of Virginia
Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota
Joe Manchin of West Virginia
Claire McCaskill of Missouri
Jack Reed of Rhode Island
Brian Schatz of Hawaii
Chuck Schumer of New York
Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire
Mark Warner of Virginia
Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island
Angus King, the independent from Maine who caucuses with Democrats, also voted in favor of Pompeo’s confirmation."

-- Zaid Jilani & Alex Emmons on The Intercept

EPA: Enable Polluters Act

When I moved to Elay in the 70s, on "smog days" the authorities would urge you to "[s]tay inside, don't move around too much and drive as little as possible;" you couldn't walk barefoot on the beach for all the tar balls and hypodermic needles; and there was a cancer epidemic among lifeguards (from the water, not the sun). Now the ocean is mostly safe and, according to the South Coast Air Quality Management District, there have been no Stage 1 smog alerts since 2003, no Stage 2 alerts since 1988, and the last Stage 3 alert was in 1974. This is a must-watch.
7

In case you missed it.

Royce Mann: Rise Up

quote unquote: Mark Twain for 2017/01/20




"Eat a live frog first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day."

                          -- Mark Twain

Inauspicious start

Nobody wants to be at inauguration. Can't give tickets away. Scalpers taking yuge beating. As @realDonaldTrump would say: Sad.

Who's counting? ... Oh, right.

Three thousand charter buses applied for D.C. parking permits for Barack Obama’s first inauguration; 1,200 applied for the Jan. 21, 2017 Women’s March; 200 applied for Donald Trump’s inauguration (Washington Post).

Is there a generic drug for outrage fatigue?

 

"City expected to ban bunnies and spiders from performing on The Pier."

Just another of countless examples of the The City That Always Sleeps' codification of mediocrity. From banning ponies at the farmer's market to dumbing down any attempt at improving the visual landscape, the city staff can be counted on to choose conformity over diversity and vapidity over creativity every time. In the latest blow to a vibrant city life, the staff is shutting down live music at another restaurant on Main Street. Basta.
Flea Circus

Schooling Congress

As a public service, is there not an educational institution in the District of Columbia that could offer GOP House and Senate members remedial education classes in Civics, History, Basic Science and Economics 101?

Or would it set the bar sufficiently high to require that elected officials pass the naturalization test -- "What is one right or freedom from the First Amendment?" "What is the 'rule of law'?" "What are two rights of everyone living in the United States?" "Name one state that borders Canada" -- before being allowed to take the oath of office?

This test contains all 100 USCIS Naturalization test questions and answers in random order: 100 Question US Citizenship Practice Test.

Must read:

Who wins and who loses when we forget American history:
Ignorance of Things Past by Lewis H. Lapham (Harper's)

Heh Heh


DNC Offers to Help Drop the Ball by Mark Roebuck (The Hard Times).

Dialogue

Obama to Putin: You can't mess with our elections. Bad Putin.

Putin to Obama: Whatever.

The Clock is Ticking

Leonard Peltier is old, sick and innocent. If he is not pardoned by President Obama, he will die in prison.

Sure. But how many of them have an empire?

From the No Comment Desk:

Scenarios presented in Fighter Not Killer, an app that is used by militant groups, including the Islamic State, to test combatants’ knowledge of international humanitarian law. The app was created by Geneva Call, an NGO that promotes humanitarian norms in armed conflict. Zako is a character who represents an untrained recruit:


You are on patrol after a battle and come across two wounded fighters. First, Zako, with a bullet wound in the shoulder. Second, an enemy fighter, who is breathing but unconscious. Zako looks at you and says, “Kill him!” Can you kill the unconscious enemy fighter?

You go to a café to pick up new recruits. They begin to harass and fondle the barmaid, telling her that she should do her duty to the cause. Can the men force the barmaid to have sex?

On patrol, you discover that many farm animals have died from starvation. Zako has an idea: “Let’s dump the carcasses into the stream. It flows into the enemy camp and we’ll contaminate their water supply.” Can you use the carcasses to contaminate the enemy’s water supply?

It is the end of a long, dry summer. Zako says, “Let’s burn the forest down. The enemy will either become charcoal or run right into our arms.” Can you burn down the forest?

Zako is very excited. He has discovered that the local hospital is treating wounded enemy fighters. He wants to destroy the hospital so that it can no longer assist the enemy. Can you target the hospital?

Zako approaches your checkpoint in an ambulance with a red crescent. He winks at you and says the enemy will never know what hit them. Can Zako use an ambulance with the red-crescent emblem to attack the enemy?

You have received information on the route an enemy general will take. You plan an ambush and capture the general. Your supreme commander calls you on the radio and says the general has critical information. Because of military necessity he authorizes you to torture the general, but only as much as necessary. Can you torture the general?

You are conducting a guerrilla campaign. Your commander instructs you to detonate a remote-control bomb targeting an enemy general on a road. Just as the jeep approaches, you notice a school bus full of children approaching from the opposite direction. They will pass the bomb at the same time. Can you launch the attack?

You retreat to a village where civilians are sympathetic to your struggle. The mayor offers to assemble the schoolchildren around your base as shields. Can you accept the mayor’s offer?

Point

When someone told Joseph Heller that he hadn’t written anything as good since Catch 22, he replied: “Who has?"

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump sing "Baby it's Cold Outside"

Your bureaucrats at work

"City gears up to count the homeless"
"Cyclists count (officially now) in Santa Monica" -- Local headlines.
Here's an idea. Instead of counting bicyclists and the homeless, how about making the streets safe to ride and building some shelters?

Banned video exposes the Military Industrial Complex


Unforced Error


After eight years in office, Barack Obama's greatest failure will be to leave office without delivering justice and mercy to political prisoner Leonard Peltier.


Case of Leonard Peltier (FreeLeonard.org)
Leonard Peltier, 38 years a detainee: How did we get here? (Amnesty International)

A Tax for All Seasons

So, Christmas eve:

Santa Monica's meter maids and masters -- Grinches, all -- are out in force.

Parking spaces everywhere, so it's not about "managing a scarce resource."

It's about imposing an extremely high, regressive tax.

It's about revenue.

Cover Up

Those outraged by Muslim culture might consider how recently our own modesty police roamed the land.

Who'll be AG?

Non-profit executive Sara Hernandez, a former aide to Los Angeles city councilmember Jose Huizar, on Tuesday entered the race to replace state attorney general nominee Xavier Becerra in the House, joining assemblyman Jimmy Gomez and Arturo Carmona, a former political strategist for Sen. Bernie Sanders, in the competition. Hernandez said she had raised more than $150,000 since she began fundraising last week, according to the LA Times. LA city councilmembers Gil Cedillo and David Ryu and school board member Monica Garcia are also believed to be considering runs; former assembly speaker John A. Pérez, the first to announce, has already dropped out. “The special election would probably be held no earlier than spring 2017, though the law gives the governor wide discretion in setting the schedule," says the Times.

Not The Onion:

Rick Perry, who blew up his own campaign for president, will now oversee the National Nuclear Security Administration for the winner.

Book Proposal

Why hasn't John Wiley & Sons published "The Oval Office for Dummies"? There are 239 titles in the series, but not the one we need.

"It Can't Happen Here."

Not only can it happen here, it probably will.

The same people who, out of complacency, did not resist as Barack Obama embraced and enlarged the mechanisms of oppression, will not resist, this time out of fear and despondency, as Donald Trump uses them.

No longer can Americans smugly scorn the complicity of "good Germans" in Hitler's rise. We are all good Germans now.


 
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