Oct 032023
 

Talking Feds (in lieu of September Recap) – Special Counsel finds NO JUSTIFICATION for Trump’s FRAUGHT request

The Lincoln Project – This is the GOP

Ring of Fire – Trump Threatens To Go After Unfriendly Media Outlets If He Wins Reelection

Brent Terhune – I’m Tired Of This Woke Shit

Tiny Naked Pink Puppy Has The Biggest Glow Up

Beau – Let’s talk about Virginia, luck, and leakage….

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Oct 012023
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was brand spanking new – the world premier (which was recorded, and that’s what we heard) was within the last three months – in July, at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. The composer was Sir George Benjamin, and the title is “Picture a Day like This.” The premise is that a woman whose child dies is offered a chance at a miracle if she can find one person who is truly happy and cut a button from that person’s sleeve. I was not familiar with any of the singers, but the composer was, and wrote it specifically for their voices. There is no way of knowing at a premier whether or not an opera is going to “take off” – become part of the repertory – but still, it feels like listening to history – being present when history is made. I found it easy to listen to. It’s in a single act with seven scenes, and runs under an hour and a quarter (the program was almost an hour and a quarter but that includes all the opening summary and credits and closing credits.) It was a good day for the opera to be a short one, because later in the day I was able to watch and listen to Margaret Atwood reading her story “Patient and Impatient Griselda,” loosely based on “Patient Griselda” from the Decameron but told as it should have happened, through a narrator, an alien who looks like an octopus.  It was Zoomed thanks to Theater of War productions, as part of their new domestic violence project. So I ended up spending almost three hours chained to internet entertainment after all. (I did get my next 2 weeks of pills bottled, though.) The House also got something done – voted to delay a shutdown for a month and a half. Let’s see how fast the Senate can get it to Joe to sign.  I decided to tell “A Tale of Two Jamies” today. I’m very glad Raskin is on our side. Dimon, of course, is on no one’s side but his own.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Robert Reich – When Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, phoned me
Quote – So I want to talk about something else that’s brewing that could become an equally large problem: another banking crisis — and how powerful monied interests on Wall Street are opposing attempts to ward it off. When interest rates rise as fast as the Fed has raised them, banks have to pay more for deposits or borrowing. But what the banks earn on their loans and bonds they own hasn’t risen nearly as fast. This is causing a huge squeeze. With the shift to working from home, commercial real estate is a disaster — and another giant headache for the banks. Banks may not have enough capital on hand to weather an economic storm. The near failure of several middle-sized banks last March shows the continued frailty of the financial system.
Click through for narrative. I’m not a banker myself, but the Reich on the left makes it uncomplicated to see what’s going on. I don’t think we should be expected to bail out these jerks – AGAIN – when it can be avoided.

AlterNet – Raskin rips GOP over impeachment inquiry: ‘Flying monkeys on a mission for the wicked witch’
Quote – Congressman Raskin, a former constitutional law professor who served as the lead prosecutor for the second impeachment of Donald Trump, told the Committee, “like flying monkeys on a mission for the Wicked Witch of the West, Trump’s followers in the House now carry his messages out to the world: shut down the government, shutdown the prosecutions. But the cultmaster has another command for his followers, which brings us here today.”
Click through for details. The first rule of insulting effectively is, don’t call them whay you hate most. Call them what they hate most.” That’s no doubt why so many Democrats are picking up on calling MAGA “children” (with or without qualifying adjectives.) I doubt whether “Wicked Witch” and “Flying Monkeys” will do it – but “Cultmaster” might hit hard. The very best insults get picked up and used over and over until eventually they change meaning- “villain” today, for instance, has only a shadow of its original punch when it meant “country bumpkin” – including all the attributes that go with that stereotye: poorly dressed, poorly washed, poorly mannered, and poorly educated.

Food For Thought

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Sep 292023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Judge Chutkan DENIES Trump’s motion seeking her removal from presiding over his case DC prosecution

Thom Hartmann – The Most Anti-Union President In History Wants To Use Working Americans As Props

Farron Balanced – Marjorie Taylor Greene Drafts Resolution To Declare War On Mexico

Puppet Regime – Who the Hell was That World Leader?

Tiny Puppy Thrown Out Like Trash Can’t Stop Kissing Her New Sisters

Beau – Let’s talk about Dallas, politics, and a change….

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Sep 282023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Trump’s lawyers file foolish brief claiming Judge Chutkan can impose NO limits on Trump’s speech

The Lincoln Project – Last Week in the Republican Party – September 26, 2023

MSNBC – ‘Narcissistic, sociopath’: George Conway on why Trump’s Twitter banishment actually helped him

Ring of Fire – Newt Gingrich Blasts ‘Deranged’ Matt Gaetz For Being Stupid [let them fight]

Sweet cat is trying desperately to fit in, find a home

Beau – Let’s talk about Taylor Swift’s fans showing up….

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Sep 262023
 

Yesterday, I decided that, before the week gets crazi(er), I would feature a couple of articles on disabilities. One is discouraging, but at least the more we know about it the better we can cope. The other is a pure feel-good story (although, like health care go-fund-me stories, it would feel better if the ADA were properly enforced so that this wasn’t needed. I am fortunate in that I can deal with my mobility issues myself everywhere I need to go. But there are a lot of places I can’t go because they are toxic to me with my allergies.) Then I ran into this story (more of an anecdote, really) and thought I would share. You can’t make this stuff up (But who would want to?)

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

The 19th – Nearly half of women with disabilities report experiencing sexual harassment or assault at work, poll finds
Quote – The number [of women with disabilities], 48 percent, compares to 32 percent of women without disabilities who reported experiencing sexual assault or harassment at work…. SurveyMonkey did not reach enough nonbinary people with disabilities to break out in this poll. However, the poll did find elevated rates of sexual harassment and assault in the workplace for disabled men: 23 percent of disabled men reported experiencing sexual harassment or abuse in the workplace, compared with 11 percent of non-disabled men.
Click through for details. This is a poll which the 19th ran itself, using Survey Monkey, and that could affect its application to society in general. However, if one realizes that sexual assault is less about sex than it is about power, and that the disabled are more vulnerable to predators than the abled, it does make sense.

Wonkette (via Substack) – BeyHive Rises In Formation, Helps Disabled Fan See Beyoncé Concert
Quote – Jon Hetherington from Oregon has been a fan of Beyoncé since her Destiny’s Child years and was looking forward to finally seeing her in concert at her Renaissance World Tour in Seattle. However, on his Instagram a couple weeks ago, he’d expressed concerns after a difficult experience when he’d seen Janelle Monáe. Hetherington has cerebral palsy and uses an electric wheelchair. The accessible transportation service he’d used apparently claimed 9:30 p.m. was just too late to take him home and he was almost stranded for the night. “I’m tired of not having the access most people in my life do,” Hetherington posted on his liberatedbygaga account. “I’m tired of having to fit ableist standards because society wasn’t built to include people like me.”
Click through for full story. While this is both heartwarming, and also revealing of the kind of people who become fans of Beyoncé, it doesn’t actually address the difficulty which mobility presents to so many disaabled people that it’s the kind of disability we think of first. (Nor does it address the issues of people whose disabilities are not mobility related.)

Food For Thought

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Sep 232023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Jim Jordan, who criminally defied a congressional subpoena, is now chairman of judiciary committee?

The Lincoln Project – Trump’s Instincts

MSNBC – Simply couldn’t be part of it’: Fmr. prosecutor breaks silence on quitting Trump-Russia probe

Farron Balanced – 2 Librarians Fired After Republicans Mistake Autism Symbol For Pride Display

Mystery dog kept showing up at nursing home. So naturally they did this.

Beau – Let’s talk about McCarthy math….

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Sep 222023
 

Yesterday, I learned, because Talking Points Memo had an opinion I felt was both too accurate and too scary not to share, that TPM is also on Substack – along with Heather Cox Richardson, Joyce Vance, Robert Reich, Robert Hubbell, Mary Trump, Margaret Atwood, and Wonkette, to name only a few.  I predict that more and more of our best minds will be migrating to Substack, and this is why: “Since we transferred our shit over to substack, we’ve had a twenty-percent increase in paid subscribers. I haven’t cried about payroll ONCE, particularly since three (? math!) months later, I still have two months worth of payroll in the bank. When’s the last time I had two months of payroll in the bank? Oh, it’s been a long, long time.” That’s from one of Wonkette’s latest newsletters. I realize that scrolling and clicking to continue can be annoying. But I don’t want to quit sharing what I consider to be the best. So first, I promise you, I will never use paywalled content from Substack – I can’t see any of that myself, not being a paying subscriber to any of those I subscribe to. And second, if anyone really has difficulty accessing Substack artcles, let me know – with an email address. There are ways I can send Substack articles to you directly.

Cartoon – 22 block

Short Takes –

Crooks and Liars – It’s Time For A ‘Rural New Deal’
Quote – While “gerrymandering is a huge problem,” polarization is also an issue, as “rural voters are increasingly trending more to the right, and urban voters more to the left,” the Fix Our House report says. Members of Congress elected in uncompetitive districts fear primaries, so they focus on their voting base and refrain from working with “the enemy.” RUBI director Anthony Flaccavento said Tuesday that “the extreme political divide in our country robs rural communities of the resources and opportunities they need, while making it nearly impossible to address the biggest problems we face as a nation.”
Click through for article. Remember the New Deal? Remember the CCC? Maybe not from experience, but possibly from history, including oral history from parents. But thePeace Corps? That you may remember. The RND is being proposed at the same time as Joe’s and Kamala’s ACC (American Climate Corps). I think both are needed. Because it’s not just the economy which needs to be rebuilt from the bottom up and the middle out. Faith in Democracy needs the same makeover.

Talking Points Memo – House GOP Launders Disinformation Through Its Public Hearings – No Good Solutions To This Problem
Quote – Instead, the committee hearings give members the chance to inject the worst of the conspiracizing and crazy talk directly into the public record and into widespread media coverage – and the media still acts as if its powerless to stop participating in it. I could share with you the inane questions that Garland faced, where his face would contort with confusion over what whack-a-doodle premise was framing the question. Or Buttigieg’s exasperation with having to unpack all the lies and presumptions built into the questions he faced about EVs or his personal travel. But to do so would be to further mainline the disinformation. You get it.
Click through for full explanation of the problem (TPM is on Substack.) This is a big reason we need both of the programs in the first short take – and more. What these – people – are doing is poisoning the well. It reminds me of the incident in Willa Cather’s “Song of the Lark” – a tramp infected with typhoid is forced to leave town. He does – by jumping into the town well. He drowns, of course, but his act avenges his own death many times over. Many people wiser than I are saying the GOP is committing suicide with its irrational ideas and behavior. But if it is, it is also taking much of the nation down with it. Somehow we must address that.

Food For Thought

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Sep 212023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Trump’s long-time executive assistant, Molly Michael, directly incriminates Trump on documents

The Lincoln Project – Last Week in the Republican Party – September 19, 2023

Farron Balanced – Trump Hires Rookie Lawyer Who Immediately Gets Humiliated By Judge

Patrick Fitzgerald – The Big Rock Candy Mountains

This Woman Swears She Won’t Adopt Her Blind Foster Puppy

Beau – Let’s talk about Seattle and low value….

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