Declaring “(Donald Trump) has been tougher on Russia than Obama was in the past eight years combined,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders achieves ‘maximum gaslight’ status, qualifying herself for a position in the Joseph Goebbels’ Propaganda Hall of Fame

Maybe I’m just imagining it, but I’m getting the sense, watching video of today’s White House press briefing, that we’ve finally crossed some kind of line. It’s like it’s collectively started to dawn on members of the White House Press Corps that, if the kids in Parkland can stand up and push back, them, maybe, as full grown adults, they might be able to do the same thing. Again, it may just be wishful thinking on my part, but when I watch exchanges like this one between White House Spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Jon Karl of ABC News, I start to feel something approximating hope.

Huckabee, for what it’s worth, was really going for broke today, doing her best to rewrite history and cast Trump as a president who has stood up to Vladimir Putin at every opportunity, fighting to protect the sanctity of our electoral system. “(Donald Trump) has been tougher on Russia than Obama was in the past eight years combined,” she told the assembled reporters, dodging followup questions about why, if that’s the case, Obama enacted sanctions against Russia for their election meddling, while Trump still refuses to do so.

To hear Sanders tell it, Trump has never denied that the Russians meddled in the election. He’s only pushed back, according to Sanders, against the idea that his campaign colluded with the Russians, and the suggestion that the Kremlin’s meddling may have played a role in his victory. “It’s very clear that Russia meddled in the election,” Sanders said. “It’s also very clear that it didn’t have an impact on the election, and it’s also very clear that the Trump campaign didn’t collude with the Russians in any ways for this process to take place.” The facts, however, tell a very different story… one of Donald Trump not only denying Russian interference, but actually taking Russia’s side over his own intelligence agencies.

Speaking of which, who can forget that time Trump told us that he’d asked Putin point-blank if the Russians had meddled in our election, received a “no” in response, and decided to take the former KGB spy at his word? [“He said he didn’t meddle. He said he didn’t meddle. I asked him again. You can only ask so many times,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he flew from Da Nang to Hanoi last November. “Every time he sees me, he says, ‘I didn’t do that,'” Trump said. “And I believe, I really believe, that when he tells me that, he means it.”] And how about that time, back in December of 2016, when Trump told Time, “I don’t believe they interfered. That became a laughing point, not a talking point, a laughing point.

In spite of these examples, though, and all of the other instances we know of in which the President questioned Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election, Sanders would have us believe Donald Trump when he tells us, as he did two days ago, “I never said Russia did not meddle in the election.”

Everything they say is a lie… an attempt on their part to make it successfully through just one more news cycle, and out of prison. And we need to encourage our journalists not to just begrudgingly accept these lies, but to actively push back. We need to reestablish the ‘rule of truth’ is this nation. Without that, we have nothing.

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Motivated by student pressure, Trump agrees to make good on his promise to ban “bump stocks”

Well, round one appears to have gone to the kids of Parkland

The White House announced this afternoon that, at long last, Donald Trump would be making good on his promise to ban so-called “bump stocks” and other devices used to convert semiautomatic firearms into fully automatic ones. This, as you’ll recall, was something that the President had agreed to do after 58 people were killed in Las Vegas this past October, but quickly lost interest in once the initial public outrage had died down. Today, though, with another 17 people dead, and facing the prospect of what will likely be a contentious “listening session” with Parkland students tomorrow and yet another enormous march on D.C., Trump apparently felt as though he had to do something quickly. So, today, we chalk up one small victory for this new movement that, one hopes, will only grow over the coming weeks. [Of course, he may not follow through, but Trump also just tweeted out that we need to strengthen background checks.]

As were were discussing yesterday, though, every step forward is going to be met with violent opposition from the gun lobby, their paid trolls, and the conspiracy theorists among us, who have already started suggesting that the young adults now leading the battle for common sense gun reform are actually actors being fed lines by “deep state,” anti-Trump operatives who want to take away our freedom. It’s truly terrifying stuff, and, unfortunately, it isn’t just relegated to the intellectual backwaters of InfoWars. As we saw today, there are actually Republicans working in government who are echoing these disgusting claims. Here’s an example.

And this, you can be sure, is going to get even uglier, especially if these young men and women are successful in building an effective youth movement… And, by the looks of it, that’s exactly what they’re doing… Speaking of which, here’s an image from today’s Miami Herald.

That’s right, over 1,000 students at West Boca High School walked out of their school today, and kept walking the 12 miles to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where they paid their respects to the 17 people who were murdered this past Friday. When asked why they did it, West Boca sophomore Lauren Smith said, “Most of us got zeros on quizzes today. I don’t think we should have to do that to make a change, but we do. And it’s important that we do.”

And, meanwhile, on the other side of the looking glass, the old, white folks at Fox News are once again talking about the possibility of arming teachers.

Posted in Civil Liberties, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 27 Comments

The new, young, and hopefully-more-effective face of American gun reform

Quite a bit has happened over the past few days, since we first learned of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida that left 17 people dead. While it doesn’t look as though the 19 year old killer had connections to a white nationalist hate group, as was first reported, it would seem that he learned marksmanship at the school, thanks at least in part to a $10,000 grant from the NRA. [For what it’s wroth, he’s also known to have worn one of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” hats.] And, of course, as we discussed yesterday, we’ve gotten a little more insight into the character of our President, who first took the opportunity to blame the shooter’s “neighbors and classmates”, and then went on to use the shooting for his own purposes, suggesting that the FBI should stop investigating him, and focus instead on stopping the next mass shooting from happening. [“They are spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign – there is no collusion. Get back to the basics and make us all proud!”, Trump tweeted.] But, most importantly, we’ve learned that we have capable young leaders emerging at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that aren’t going to accept the status quo as dictated by by the NRA and its enablers in Congress, who offer “thoughts and prayers” while telling us that more guns is the only solution. [The facts, by the way, tell us that gun control actually does lead to fewer murders, which is why the NRA got Congress to ban federal research into gun violence.] Here, for those of you who have yet to hear the voices of these young men and women in Florida, who just days ago lost so many of their friends and teachers, are a few representative quotes.

Senior Emma Gonzalez: “We are going to be the difference… Maybe the adults have got used to saying, ‘It is what it is,’ but if us students have learned anything, it’s that if you don’t study, you will fail. And, in this case, if you actively do nothing, people continually end up dead… We are going to be the kids you read about in textbooks. Not because we’re going to be another statistic about mass shooting in America, but because… we are going to be the last mass shooting… They say that tougher gun laws do not decrease gun violence. We call BS!”

Junior Alfonso Calderon: “This time it’s going to be different because for once, instead of grieving, we got straight to the point… We’re not asking to repeal the second amendment, we’re asking for common sense, like more intensive background checks. It’s always a troubled young man, in our case somebody who’s been expelled, reported to police 39 times, and he’s still able to buy a weapon of war without anybody flinching. It’s just not viable any more.”

Junior Cameron Kasky: “You’re either with us or against us. We are losing our lives while the adults are playing around.”

Junior David Hogg: “If you can’t get elected without taking money from child murderers (a.k.a. the NRA), why are you running?”

Freshman Christine Yared: We can’t let innocent people’s deaths be in vain. We need to work together beyond political parties to make sure this never happens again. We need tougher gun laws.

If a person is not old enough to be able to rent a car or buy a beer, then he should not be able to legally purchase a weapon of mass destruction. This could have been prevented. If the killer had been properly treated for his mental illness, maybe this would not have happened. If there were proper background checks, then those who should not have guns would not have them.

We need to vote for those who are for stricter laws and kick out those who won’t take action. We need to expose the truth about gun violence and the corruption around guns. Please.

It’s devastating that this happened on Valentine’s Day, a day that’s supposed to be about love. Take this as a sign to hug your loved ones and be sure to tell them you love them every day because you never know when it will be their last.

If you have any heart, or care about anyone or anything, you need to be an advocate for change. Don’t let any more children suffer like we have. Don’t continue this cycle. This may not seem relevant to you. But next time it could be your family, your friends, your neighbors. Next time, it could be you.

I’m sure you’ve already seen it, but, just in case you missed it, here’s video of Emma Gonzalez.

So, as Trump was apparently seeking the input of his wealthy golf buddies at Mar-a-Lago, these young people, with the help of their supporters, didn’t waste any time fighting back, organizing, and calling for school walk-outs and marches across the United States. While both events are still evolving, it looks as though the #NationalSchoolWalkout will be for 17 minutes beginning at 10:00 AM on March 14, 2018, and the March for our Lives march on Washington will be on the 24th.

I’m a bit jaded, having watched over the past several decades as the Republicans have allowed the NRA to dictate policy while avoiding all responsibility for the ever-climbing death toll, but I’m actually hopeful that something positive may come of this. As we know, there are, in spite of what the Republicans have told us, a number of immediate actions which can be taken to curb gun violence, from the banning of assault weapons, to the expansion of background checks, all of which have majority support across the United States. The problem in the past has been that we haven’t been able to hold the attention of the American people, who, even after horrendous events, like the recent mass shooting in Las Vegas that left 58 dead, eventually come to accept the fact nothing will change, and move on. In this case, though, the students of Parkland aren’t giving us that option. They aren’t allowing us to just move on. They’re dominating news cycles, and they’re planing events over the course of the next month that will culminate with a march on Washington. This isn’t just going to go away. They’re not going to let it.

So now the ugliness begins, as the far right attempts to kill the movement by inferring ulterior motives on the part of these grieving students. [See just one example below.] And we cannot allow that to happen. For the sake of not only these kids, but kids everywhere, we need to help amplify the voices of these Florida students and drown out the disinformation campaigns we’re going to see over the coming weeks. This, as I’m sure I don’t need to tell you, is important.

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Trump melts down on Twitter, arguing the Mueller investigation should stop because of the murders at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida

This morning, in case you missed it, our President completely melted down on Twitter, where, among other things, he suggested that, if we really wanted to strike a blow against Russia, we’d immediately drop the investigation into their 2016 election meddling. And instead of picking up my phone and calling the office of an elected official, or donating to a swing state Democratic candidate, or something else that might have actually made a difference, I took the bait, investing an hour of my time to respond to everything that he’d written. Here, because I have nothing else worth sharing this evening, are a few examples… Again, I know it’s completely useless, but sometimes it feels good to Tweet-back, knowing that a few hundred of his followers might see it. Plus, I think it’s probably good to practice a little every week on Twitter, given that’s where today’s wars are being fought. One, after all, wouldn’t want to bring a blog post to a tweet fight.

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Mueller indicts Russian trolls, laying the groundwork for the next phase of his investigation

Earlier today, we learned that, in addition to porn star Stormy Daniels, Donald Trump was also having an affair with Playboy “Playmate of the Year” Karen McDougal back in 2006, in the months just after our First Lady, Melania Trump, gave birth to their son Barron. Furthermore, we got confirmation that McDougal, like Daniels, had also ben paid for her silence by a Trump associate. And, as if that we’re enough for a single news cycle, we also learned that Daniels is now threatening to go public with a dress covered in the President’s semen. In simpler times, the existence of the cum-soaked dress alone would have dominated headlines for a month. Today, though, it barely registered. Between yesterday’s mass shooting in Florida, and today’s indictments in the Russia investigation, no one, it seems, has time to care about good, old fashioned sex scandals, even ones involving porn stars, Playmates and soiled dresses.

I’d told myself yesterday that I was going to try to stay focused on our American gun problem for a while, and now allow my attention to be diverted elsewhere… But then the Justice Department announced that Special Counsel Robert Mueller had handed down new indictments, and my plans went out the window. Instead of studying up on the role Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi played in making it easier for Sunshine State teens to purchase automatic weapons, I started reading up on the thirteen Russian citizens and the three Russian companies who now stand accused of running “interference operations targeting the United States” in the run up to the 2016 election… While you can read the indictments in their entirety online, here’s one of my favorite parts.

So, yeah, we know now for a certainty that “the Russia thing,” as Trump called it, wasn’t a “witch hunt” at all, but a serious, coordinated attack on our electoral system, which was conducted with the intention of sowing discord in America, and keeping Hillary Clinton from the White House. We now know how the system worked, and who was involved… from Putin’s friend, the oligarch Yevgeny V. Prigozhin, who funded Russia’s Internet Research Agency troll farm, to American citizen Richard Pinedo, who supplied the fake bank account numbers and online identities that allowed the Russians to avoid initial detection. [While he wasn’t mentioned in today’s indictments by name, news was released by the Justice Department today that Pinedo had pleaded guilty on February 12, and was facing up to 15 years in prison.] Here, from the New York Times, is a short clip explaining how the Prigozhin-funded system worked.

…Facebook, Twitter and Google have all identified the Internet Research Agency as a prime source of provocative posts on divisive American issues, including race, religion, gun laws and gay rights, particularly during the 2016 presidential election. Facebook found, for example, that the agency had posted 80,000 pieces of content that reached more than 126 million Americans…

[David Axelrod: “Jill Stein received 50,700 votes in MI. Trump won by less than 12,000. She outpolled Trump’s margin in WI, as well. If Russians sought to redirect alienated HRC voters to third parties, as indictment alleges, it was a shrewd ploy.]

And here’s another interesting little tidbit. According to the Anti-Corruption Foundation, Prigozhin, in the past five years alone, has received Russian government contracts worth $3.1 billion… Oh, and Prigozhin was one of the Russian oligarchs who was hit hard by the sanctions levied during the Obama administration, which, might explain why he apparently invested so heavily in getting Donald Trump, who promised to roll back those sanctions, into office. [The Department of Justice is saying that the Russians spent $1.2 million a month on this project, which they called “The Translator Project.”]

Well, today, as you might imagine, Donald Trump and his spokespeople are claiming that these indictments actually vindicate him, as they don’t prove collusion. In fact, the White House issued a statement with “NO COLLUSION” in all caps. The thing is, the indictment says nothing of the kind. In fact, you can see in the above scan that “co-conspirators” are mentioned. They just haven’t been named yet, with the exception of Californian Richard Pinedo, who is now said to be cooperating with Robert Mueller. But, no, Mueller did not come out today and demonstrate a connection to the Trump White House. What he did today, however, was take a significant step in that direction. He laid a solid foundation, and demonstrated how the whole thing worked, making it clear not only that the Russians did in fact meddle in our election, but that they did so to both weaken Clinton and advance the Trump campaign.

I heard someone on Fox News this evening suggest that Trump never either claimed that the Russia investigation was a hoax or attempted to slow the investigation. Here, in case any of you are inclined to believe that, are just a few data points.

1. Trump warned that Mueller’s investigation has offended Putin, and that “people will die” if it continues.

2. Trump admitted to firing FBI Director James Comey because he was pursuing, “the Russia thing.” [Trump on national television: “And, in fact, when I decided to just do it, I said to myself, I said: ‘You know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made up story, it’s an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should’ve won.’”]

3. Not only did he fire Comey for pushing the Russia investigation, but Trump actually snuck a high-level Russian delegation into the White House that same day to tell them the good news.

4. Trump repeatedly called the Russia investigation a “witch hunt,” and did everything in his power to slow it down. For example, Trump ghostwrote a letter for his son, explaining the presence of a Russian delegation at Trump Tower during the campaign as having been about adoption policy, and not the fact that they’d offered “dirt” on Hillary Clinton.

5. Trump told us that he asked Putin if the Russians meddled in our election, and he believed him when the former KGB head responded that he did not. [“He said he didn’t meddle. He said he didn’t meddle. I asked him again. You can only ask so many times,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he flew from Da Nang to Hanoi in Vietnam. Trump spoke to Putin three times on the sidelines of summit here, where the Russia meddling issue arose. “Every time he sees me, he says, ‘I didn’t do that,'” Trump said. “And I believe, I really believe, that when he tells me that, he means it.”]

6. Despite the evidence, and the fact that all but five members of Congress voted to pass sanctions against Russia for what they did during the 2016 election, Trump chose not to impose them, saying that the threat of acting on them was just as effective as actually enacting them.

7. And let’s not forget the time our president actually proposed, much to the horror of the intelligence community, that we give the Russians access to our security infrastructure, forming a “U.S.-Russia Joint Impenetrable Cybersecurity Unit.

So, no, you cannot now say that Trump has always taken this threat seriously. When our entire intelligence community told him that the Russians had meddled in our election, he called it a “with hunt.” After being told that the Dutch had actually observed the Russians as they hacked into the DNC server, he told the American people that the operation could have been conducted by a 400-pound guy somewhere. When Congress and the intelligence community demanded that the President take action to protect the integrity of our 2018 election, he did nothing. And, today, when these indictments came out, instead of pledging to hold Russia accountable, he took to Twitter and said, “It’s time we stop the outlandish partisan attacks, wild and false allegations, and far-fetched theories.” [Coming from the father of Birtherism, I found that last bit particularly funny.]

So, like I said, we now have the foundation. From this point on, it’s just a matter of understanding the coordination, and how the Russians knew where to focus their efforts… According to the indictment, we have evidence that the Russians talked quite a bit about sowing discord in “purple states.” What’s more, we know that a great deal of their ad buys were in states like Michigan, which the Democrats didn’t even consider to be in play, which would lead one to believe there was a certain level of sophistication. So, one suspects it’s possible that the next shoe to drop very well might be a link between one of these 13 Russians and someone at the conservative data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica… Speaking of which, here’s an interesting little exchange between the guys at Pod Save America and Senator Mark Warner.

As of right now, it’s true, there’s no evidence that these Russian activities changed the result of the election. And it’s doubtful that could ever be proved. But, as some people are seeing it, that’s exactly what happened. Take, for instance, former CIA Director John Brennan.

I’m hesitant to make predictions, as I know enormous cases like these can take years, but i can’t help but think that the final chapter has begun, and that things are about to speed up exponentially, as the backstabbing intensifies, and the bodies start stacking up… Have you seen the last ten minutes of The Godfather? Well, I think it’ll be pretty much like that.

Posted in Michigan, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 181 Comments

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