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INAUGURATION 2029

Marie: I don't know why this video came up on my YouTube recommendations, but it did. I watched it on a large-ish teevee, and I found it fascinating. ~~~

 

Hubris. One would think that a married man smart enough to start up and operate his own tech company was also smart enough to know that you don't take your girlfriend to a public concert where the equipment includes a jumbotron -- unless you want to get caught on the big camera with your arms around said girlfriend. Ah, but for Andy Bryon, CEO of A company called Astronomer, and also maybe his wife, Wednesday was a night that will live in infamy. New York Times link. ~~~

Commencement ceremonies are joyous occasions, and Steve Carell made sure that was true this past weekend (mid-June) at Northwestern's commencement:

~~~ Carell's entire commencement speech was hilarious. The audio and video here isn't great, but I laughed till I cried.

CNN did a live telecast Saturday night (June 7) of the Broadway play "Good Night, and Good Luck," written by George Clooney and Grant Heslov, about legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow's effort to hold to account Sen. Joe McCarthy, "the junior senator from Wisconsin." Clooney plays Murrow. Here's Murrow himself with his famous take on McCarthy & McCarthyism, brief remarks that especially resonate today: ~~~

     ~~~ This article lists ways you still can watch the play. 

New York Times: “The New York Times Company has agreed to license its editorial content to Amazon for use in the tech giant’s artificial intelligence platforms, the company said on Thursday. The multiyear agreement 'will bring Times editorial content to a variety of Amazon customer experiences,' the news organization said in a statement. Besides news articles, the agreement encompasses material from NYT Cooking, The Times’s food and recipe site, and The Athletic, which focuses on sports. This is The Times’s first licensing arrangement with a focus on generative A.I. technology. In 2023, The Times sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, for copyright infringement, accusing the tech companies of using millions of articles published by The Times to train automated chatbots without any kind of compensation. OpenAI and Microsoft have rejected those accusations.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I have no idea what this means for "the Amazon customer experience." Does it mean that if I don't have a NYT subscription but do have Amazon Prime I can read NYT content? And where, exactly, would I find that content? I don't know. I don't know.

Washington Post reporters asked three AI image generators what a beautiful woman looks like. "The Post found that they steer users toward a startlingly narrow vision of attractiveness. Prompted to show a 'beautiful woman,' all three tools generated thin women, without exception.... Her body looks like Barbie — slim hips, impossible waist, round breasts.... Just 2 percent of the images showed visible signs of aging. More than a third of the images had medium skin tones. But only nine percent had dark skin tones. Asked to show 'normal women,' the tools produced images that remained overwhelmingly thin.... However bias originates, The Post’s analysis found that popular image tools struggle to render realistic images of women outside the Western ideal." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The reporters seem to think they are calling out the AI programs for being unrealistic. But there's a lot about the "beautiful women" images they miss. I find these omissions remarkably sexist. For one thing, the reporters seem to think AI is a magical "thing" that self-generates. It isn't. It's programmed. It's programmed by boys, many of them incels who have little or no experience or insights beyond comic books and Internet porn of how to gauge female "beauty." As a result, the AI-generated women look like cartoons; that is, a lot like an air-brushed photo of Kristi Noem: globs of every kind of dark eye makeup, Scandinavian nose, Botox lips, slathered-on skin concealer/toner/etc. makeup, long dark hair and the aforementioned impossible Barbie body shape, including huge, round plastic breasts. 

New York Times: “George Clooney’s Broadway debut, 'Good Night, and Good Luck,' has been one of the sensations of the 2024-25 theater season, breaking box office records and drawing packed houses of audiences eager to see the popular movie star in a timely drama about the importance of an independent press. Now the play will become much more widely available: CNN is planning a live broadcast of the penultimate performance, on June 7 at 7 p.m. Eastern. The performance will be preceded and followed by coverage of, and discussion about, the show and the state of journalism.”

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Constant Comments

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.

Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts. — Anonymous

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolvesEdward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns

I have a Bluesky account now. The URL is https://bsky.app/profile/marie-burns.bsky.social . When Reality Chex goes down, check my Bluesky page for whatever info I am able to report on the status of Reality Chex. If you can't access the URL, I found that I could Google Bluesky and ask for Marie Burns. Google will include links to accounts for people whose names are, at least in part, Maria Burns, so you'll have to tell Google you looking only for Marie.

Wednesday
Jul232025

The Conversation -- July 23, 2025

News from the Pedo FilesTMAkhilleus. We knew something like this was going to drop: ~~~

 Sadie Gurman, et al., of the Wall Street Journal: “When Justice Department officials reviewed what Attorney General Pam Bondi called a 'truckload' of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein earlier this year, they discovered that Donald Trump’s name appeared multiple times.... In May, Bondi and her deputy informed the president at a meeting in the White House that his name was in the Epstein files, the officials said.... Trump said last week in response to a journalist’s question that Bondi hadn’t told him that his name was in the files.... Many other high-profile figures were also named, Trump was told. Being mentioned in the records isn’t a sign of wrongdoing. The officials said it was a routine briefing that covered a number of topics and that Trump’s appearance in the documents wasn’t the focus.... They also told Trump that senior Justice Department officials didn’t plan to release any more documents related to the investigation of the convicted sex offender because the material contained child pornography and victims’ personal information, the officials said.... The meeting set the stage for the high-profile review to come to an end.... The administration didn’t publicly announce the decision until weeks later on July 7, when the Justice Department posted a memo on its website.” This appears to be a gift link, courtesy of Scott Lemieux. ~~~

     ~~~ Scott Lemieux in LG&$: “The pretext for not releasing the files is obviously silly — Christ knows Pam Bondi knows how to release redacted information, and nobody thinks that you should release photos of children or identify the victims without their consent.... The other important part if this story is Rupert Murdoch is responding to Trump’s lawsuit with a nice hearty 'fuck you.'” ~~

Jeremy Roebuck of the Washington Post: “A federal judge on Wednesday rejected the Justice Department’s request to unseal grand jury transcripts from investigations of deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in Florida, a setback for the Trump administration amid growing calls for transparency from the president’s base.... In a 12-page opinion Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Robin L. Rosenberg said she could not legally do so under court rules governing the secrecy of those federal proceedings in Florida.... The Justice Department is pursuing separate requests to release grand jury transcripts related to Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell in Manhattan, where both were charged with sex trafficking and other crimes.” MB: “Setback,” my ass. Trump doesn't want the transcripts released.

Kathryn Wilkens of Mediaite: “Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard listed off a series of Hillary Clinton conspiracy theories Tuesday — as part of her briefing appearance to discuss newly-declassified documents targeting the Obama administration. During Tuesday’s White House press briefing, Gabbard proceeded to list off a series of bizarre claims about the former Secretary of State. 'There were high-level DNC emails that detailed evidence of Hillary’s “psychoemotional problems, uncontrolled fits of anger, aggression, and cheerfulness,” and that then-Secretary Clinton was allegedly on a daily regimen of heavy tranquilizers,' said Gabbard.” Thanks to RAS for the link.

Reuters, republished by CNBC: “A group representing General Motors, Ford  and Chrysler-parent Stellantis  on Tuesday raised concerns about a trade deal that could cut tariffs on auto imports from Japan to 15% while leaving tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico at 25%. Matt Blunt, who heads the American Automotive Policy Council that represents the Detroit Three automakers, said they were still reviewing the agreement but 'any deal that charges a lower tariff for Japanese imports with virtually no U.S. content than the tariff imposed on North American built vehicles with high U.S. content is a bad deal for U.S. industry and U.S. auto workers.' Trump has threatened to hike tariffs on Mexico to 30% and Canada to 35% on August 1.”

Julian Barnes of the New York Times: “Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, released new documents on Wednesday that she said undermined the conclusion of intelligence agencies during the Obama administration that Russia favored the election of Donald J. Trump in 2016. Ms. Gabbard released a declassified version of a report from the House Intelligence Committee, originally drafted in 2017, when Republicans led the committee. The report took issue with the conclusion reached in December 2016 that President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had favored Mr. Trump.... On Wednesday, she said in a social media post that Mr. Trump had ordered the declassification of the report and that the information showed the 'most egregious weaponization and politicization of intelligence in American history.'... The House report found that most of the judgments made by the intelligence community in 2016 were sound. But it argued that the work was rushed, as a recent tradecraft analysis by the C.I.A. also found.... The findings were at odds with a bipartisan series of Senate reports that later affirmed the work of the C.I.A. and the other intelligence agencies on the 2016 assessment.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: For me, any "report" by House Republicans is filler for a burn bag.

~~~~~~~~~~

Marie: In case you miss the forest for the trees in today's links, today's Trumpy news reports seem to me to be particularly racist: Trump's attack on President Obama (preceded by his post of a degrading fake video of Obama being captured & cuffed, then behind bars); the administration's "investigations" of George Mason University's supposed discriminatory policies & its first Black president; the mistreatment of immigrants -- most of them racial minorities -- in New York, Florida & El Salvador; the National Park Service's possibly removing park signs that elevate minorities to comply with a Trump order.  

Megan Forrester of ABC News: "Days after ... Donald Trump posted an AI-generated fake video showing former President Barack Obama's arrest on his social media platform, the current president pushed conspiracy theories about Obama in the Oval Office on Tuesday, accusing him of treason without providing evidence regarding the 2016 presidential election. 'They tried to rig the election, and they got caught. And there should be very severe consequences for that,' Trump told reporters on Tuesday. A spokesperson for Obama pushed back on the Trump administration's claims, saying while they would 'not normally dignify the constant nonsense' from the White House with a response, the claims are 'outrageous enough to merit one.' 'These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction,' the statement said. Trump's comments come after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard submitted a criminal referral to the Department of Justice threatening the Obama administration." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Luke Broadwater & Julian Barnes of the New York Times: Donald “Trump, under fire over his administration’s handling of the Epstein files, escalated his distract-and-deflect strategy on Tuesday, accusing former President Barack Obama of treason and declaring, 'It’s time to go after people.'... 'The witch hunt that you should be talking about is they caught President Obama,' Mr. Trump said, referring to a report from Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, that tried to undermine the eight-year-old assessment that Russia favored his election in 2016. 'Obama was trying to lead a coup,' Mr. Trump said. 'And it was with Hillary Clinton.'... 'He started it, and [Joe] Biden was there with him, and [James] Comey was there, and [James]Clapper, the whole group was there.... He’s guilty,' he said of Mr. Obama. 'This was treason....' Mr. Trump’s extended digression, which came during a visit with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. of the Philippines, was a stark example of his campaign of retribution against an ever-growing list of enemies that has little analogue in American history.” ~~~

~~~ Tom Nichols of the Atlantic: “From his first day as a candidate, Trump has appeared animated by anger, fear, and, most of all, pettiness, a small-minded vengefulness that takes the place of actual policy making.... Trump’s second term has been a cavalcade of pettiness; his lieutenants have internalized the president’s culture of purges, retribution, and loyalty checks.... Even on matters of grave international importance, Trump governs by emotion rather than any coherent sense of policy. A few weeks ago, the president seemed to change course on the war in Ukraine.... Putin had finally done something worse than murdering thousands of Ukrainian civilians and kidnapping Ukrainian children: He had made Donald Trump look like a chump.” Thank you to laura h. for this gift link. (MB: BTW, Nichols' essay fits neatly into my Unified Theory of Trumpitydoodah.) (Also linked yesterday.) 

Andrew Kaczynski & Em Steck of CNN: “Newly uncovered archived video footage and photos reveal fresh details about Donald Trump’s past relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. Photos from 1993 confirm for the first time that Epstein attended Trump’s 1993 wedding to Marla Maples. Epstein’s attendance at the ceremony at the Plaza Hotel was not widely known until now. In addition, footage from a 1999 Victoria’s Secret fashion event in New York shows Trump and Epstein laughing and chatting together ahead of the runway event.... In a brief call with CNN on Tuesday..., Trump, asked about the wedding photos, responded, 'You’ve got to be kidding me,' before repeatedly calling CNN 'fake news' and hanging up.”

In her daily letter, Heather Cox Richardson points out a touch of irony: "Over the objections of his family, the Trump administration released [240,000 pages of] records compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) about the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.... While this document dump appears to have been announced in order to distract from the Epstein files, it seems unlikely to do so. MAGA and other Americans are interested in the Epstein files because they expect the files will show that the government has been covering up for powerful men who have been able to rape children without facing legal accountability. In contrast, the King files will likely show the government harassing a citizen to pin illegal activity on him, a different side of the same coin that suggests the government is working for rich and powerful white men."

Josh Gerstein, et al., of Politico: “The Justice Department is seeking to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell, the co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Tuesday. Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for child sex trafficking and other crimes.... The sudden decision to seek a meeting with Maxwell appears designed to appease Trump’s base. It also raises the question of whether Maxwell may try to leverage the meeting for a reduced prison sentence by telling the Justice Department what it wants to hear.... 'President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence. If Ghislaine Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DOJ will hear what she has to say,' Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement posted by Bondi.... Blanche said he anticipates meeting with Maxwell 'in the coming days.'” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Johnson Shutting Down House Early to Block Epstein Vote. Annie Karni & Michael Gold of the New York Times : “Speaker Mike Johnson announced on Tuesday that he was cutting short the week’s legislative business and sending the House home early for the summer on Wednesday to avoid having to hold votes on releasing files related to the accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.... As he wrapped up his final news conference before a summer recess that was to have begun on Friday and lasted until September, Mr. Johnson complained about [Democrats'] 'endless efforts to politicize the Epstein investigation.'” MB: Excuse me. Shutting down the house to prevent a vote in order to appease the president* whom you're supposed to be a'checkin' & a'balancin' is “playing political games.” (This is an expansion of a liveblog item by Karni, linked yesterday.) Here's a Washington Post story by Marianna Sotomayor & Kadia Goba, also linked yesterday. ~~~

     ~~~ Marcie Jones of Wonkette writes that the big break is necessary to give Pam Bondi time to finish the Trump/Epstein coverup. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Evan Hurst of Wonkette has more thoughts on Trump, Tulsi & the totally sedatious Barack. MB: Hurst writes what I think, but he writes it funnier. 

Tracey Tully & Jonah Bromwich of the New York Times: “The leadership of the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey was thrown into confusion on Tuesday as top Justice Department officials pushed back after federal judges in the state moved to appoint a new U.S. attorney. The panel of federal judges rejected Alina Habba’s bid to stay in the job as the state’s U.S. attorney. Instead, they invoked a rarely used power to select a candidate of their own, Desiree Leigh Grace, an experienced prosecutor whom Ms. Habba had named as her first assistant soon after she took over as interim U.S. attorney in March. But the attorney general, Pam Bondi, responded Tuesday evening with a social media post defending Ms. Habba and saying that the first assistant — Ms. Grace — 'has just been removed.'... The deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, also attacked the judges on social media, saying that they had colluded with New Jersey’s Democratic senators, who have opposed Ms. Habba.... Ms. Grace was sent an email Tuesday informing her that she had been fired, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The rapid sequence of events raises the prospect of yet another confrontation between the Trump administration and the federal judiciary. Ms. Grace’s firing from the office may not nullify the judges’ decision to appoint her as the New Jersey U.S. attorney, but it is unclear whether the judges will be able to enforce their appointment.” This is an updated story linked yesterday. (Also linked yesterday.) An AP report is here.

Another Trumpertantrum Outcome That Is Bad for the U.S. Aurelien Breeden of the New York Times: “The United States said Tuesday it would withdraw from UNESCO, the United Nations cultural agency, the latest move by the Trump administration to cut ties with international organizations. The decision comes just two years after the United States rejoined the organization and will take effect at the end of 2026. The withdrawal reflects ... [Donald] Trump’s deep mistrust and distaste of multilateralism and international institutions, especially those connected to the United Nations.... Repeating steps taken during his first term, Mr. Trump has already pulled the United States out of the World Health Organization and the United Nations Human Rights Council.” ~~~

     ~~~ Mara Hvistendahl of the New York Times: Donald “Trump’s decision Tuesday to withdraw the United States from the group removes a powerful check on China’s [influence campaign], in the latest example of how the White House retreat from international institutions offers an opening for China to advance its soft power.”

Ana Swanson & River Davis of the New York Times: Donald “Trump said Tuesday that he had reached a  'massive' trade deal with Japan, helping to allay fears of heightened trade tensions between the United States and one of its closest Asian allies. In a social media post Tuesday evening, the president wrote that Japan had agreed to open its country to imports of American cars, trucks, rice and other agricultural products, as well as invest $550 billion into the United States. He said that Japanese exports to the United States would be charged a tariff of 15 percent, lower than the 25 percent tariff he had threatened against the country’s products if Japan did not strike a deal. The deal will also lower the tariff the United States charges on Japanese auto exports, which are subject to a separate tariff schedule, to 15 percent, including a preexisting tariff of 2.5 percent. That will come as a relief to Japanese carmakers, which, like manufacturers in other countries, have faced an additional 25 percent tariff since April.” The CBS News report is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Paul Krugman: "There are three main things you should take away from this deal: 1. It will increase, not reduce, the U.S. trade deficit[[;] 2. It will accelerate America’s descent into crony capitalism[;] 3. U.S. consumers are still facing a major price shock[.]... Capital inflow from Japan [-- the 550BB Trump requires Japan to invest in the U.S. --] will lead to a stronger dollar than we would have had otherwise, making U.S. goods less competitive across the board.... We’re already well on the way toward an economy in which success in business depends not on how good your product is but on your political influence.... This is another step on that road.... A a 15 percent tariff is still really, really high...."

Ian Austen of the New York Times: “With less than a week left for Canada to reach a trade deal with ... [Donald] Trump or face additional tariffs, Prime Minister Mark Carney on Tuesday downplayed the possibility of a breakthrough and suggested that Canada might walk away empty handed. Mr. Carney spoke after an emergency meeting of Canada’s 10 provinces and three territories that he convened in response to Mr. Trump’s threat to impose 35 percent tariffs on Canadian exports starting on Aug. 1. Asked about the likelihood of reaching a pact by that deadline, Mr. Carney said that 'we’ll agree to a deal if there’s one on the table that is in the best interest of Canadians,' but then later added in French that 'it’s not our objective to have an agreement at any cost.'”

In Our Names. Teo Armus, et al., of the Washington Post: “Three Venezuelans, released last week from the Terrorism Confinement Center, said they were repeatedly beaten and denied access to lawyers.... In the four months they spent there, the detainees said, they were beaten repeatedly with wooden bats. [Julio] González was robbed of thousands of dollars, he said, and denied access to lawyers or a chance to call his family. Joen Suárez, 23, was taken several times to a dark room known as La Isla — or 'the island' — and beaten, kicked and insulted. Angel Blanco Marin, 22, said he was hit so hard he lost half of a molar. He asked for painkillers and medical attention but was given none for more than a month. The three men returned to their family’s homes in Venezuela this week.... 'Once again the media is falling all over themselves to defend criminal illegal gang members, Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. 'We hear far too much about gang members and criminals’ false sob stories and not enough about their victims.' The three men denied any gang affiliations. Neither the U.S. nor El Salvador has provided evidence that they are gang members.” ~~~

~~~ Luis Ferré-Sadurní of the New York Times: “For weeks, immigrants have complained about overcrowded and unsanitary conditions inside the holding cells of the federal immigration offices in New York City, drawing scrutiny from lawmakers and denials from the Trump administration. On Tuesday, new video footage offered the first glimpse inside one of the four cells on the 10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan, where the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency has held hundreds of migrants for days at a time since ICE stepped up arrests this summer. Two videos, which were recorded by a migrant who was held there last week and sneaked in his cellphone, show more than a dozen men sprawled on the floor atop thin thermal blankets or sitting on benches built into the room’s white walls.... ICE had traditionally used the cells, which don’t have beds, to hold a small number of migrants for a few hours while they are processed and dispatched to detention centers outside the city.” The Guardian's story is here. ~~~

~~~ Richard Luscombe of the Guardian: “Migrants at a Miami immigration jail were shackled with their hands tied behind their backs and made to kneel to eat food from styrofoam plates 'like dogs', according to a report published on Monday into conditions at three overcrowded south Florida facilities. The incident at the downtown federal detention center is one of a succession of alleged abuses at jails operated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (Ice) in the state since January, chronicled by the advocacy groups Human Rights Watch, Americans for Immigrant Justice, and Sanctuary of the South from interviews with detainees. Dozens of men had been packed into a holding cell for hours, the report said, and denied lunch until about 7pm. They remained shackled with the food on chairs in front of them.” Thanks to RAS for the link. (Also linked yesterday.)

Jeff Crisp in a New York Times op-ed: “Deporting foreign nationals to countries other than their homeland has quickly become a centerpiece of the Trump administration’s immigration policy. Thousands of people have been sent to countries in the Western Hemisphere, including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico and Panama.... All told, administration officials have reached out to dozens of states to try to strike deals to accept deportees.... By deporting foreign nationals to often unstable third countries, the Trump administration is not only creating a novel class of exiles with little hope of returning to either the United States or their country of origin, but also explicitly using these vulnerable populations as bargaining chips in a wider strategy of diplomatic and geopolitical deal making. This strategy marks a significant evolution in a practice that has been gaining traction throughout the developed world.... By expanding the practice of forced relocation, Mr. Trump is using migrants as currency in a global network of geopolitical negotiation.... He is setting a dangerous precedent for other democratic countries by ignoring the moral and reputational cost of shipping desperate people into terrible conditions.”

Brianna Sacks of the Washington Post: Donald “Trump and the Federal Emergency Management Agency moved quickly to support Texas, approving [Gov.] Greg Abbott’s disaster declaration the next day. But for an event of this magnitude, past presidents have verbally approved a governor’s request within minutes, said Michael Coen, a former chief of staff in the FEMA administrator’s office. And the robust response to the flooding in Texas contrasts sharply with delays faced by other states that have sustained deadly floods and other disasters this year, FEMA staff and state disaster officials say. Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan and West Virginia had been waiting since the spring for the federal government to approve their requests for assistance, with some governors continuously pushing the White House for answers. Then, in a flurry of Truth Social posts Tuesday evening, Trump announced he had signed disaster declarations for those four states, freeing up millions of dollars in federal aid. At least six states and two Native American tribes are still waiting for the president and FEMA to approve their requests for disaster response and recovery assistance.... According to a FEMA official familiar with the declarations, the president only approved portions of the long-awaited requests....”

Making America Smoggy Again. Lisa Friedman of the New York Times: “The Trump administration has drafted a plan to repeal a fundamental scientific finding that gives the United States government its authority to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions and fight climate change, according to two people familiar with the plan. The proposed Environmental Protection Agency rule rescinds a 2009 declaration known as the 'endangerment finding,' which scientifically established that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane endanger human lives. That finding is the foundation of the federal government’s only tool to limit the climate pollution from vehicles, power plants and other industries that is dangerously heating the planet. The E.P.A. proposal, which is expected to be made public within days, also calls for rescinding limits on tailpipe emissions that were designed to encourage automakers to build and sell more electric vehicles. Those regulations, which were based on the endangerment finding, were a fundamental part of the Biden administration’s efforts to move the country away from gasoline-powered vehicles. The transportation sector is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.” MB: Even when I put on my tinfoil hat, I cannot think of any excuse for this.

Danielle Douglas-Gabriel of the Washington Post: “Without much notice, the Education Department has suspended student loan forgiveness under a long-standing repayment plan, offering no timeline for resumption and little explanation for the decision. Income-Based Repayment is one of four federal plans that tie monthly payments to earnings and family size with the promise of loan forgiveness after 20 or 25 years of payments. It is the only income-driven plan that is not affected by a court injunction and, therefore, was the only one still processing loan forgiveness, according to the department. About 2 million borrowers are enrolled in the plan.”

Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff of the Washington Post: “The Trump administration has launched its fourth investigation in as many weeks into George Mason University, the latest in an effort some at the Virginia university believe is an attempt to oust its president over diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Gregory Washington, George Mason’s first Black president, has repeatedly and publicly defended the school in recent months, rejecting allegations that the university had policies that were discriminatory. The Justice Department notified George Mason on Monday that it would investigate possible discrimination on grounds of race or national origin in the school’s admissions and student benefits policies. It comes days after the department launched a probe into the university’s hiring and promotions practices. Meanwhile, the Education Department initiated two inquiries earlier this month over similar allegations of discrimination at the Northern Virginia university.”

Maxine Joselow & Lisa Friedman of the New York Times: “At Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, the [Trump] administration will soon decide whether to take down exhibits on the brutality of slavery. And at Castillo de San Marcos National Monument in Florida, Trump officials are scrutinizing language about the imprisonment of Native Americans inside the Spanish stone fortress.... Employees of the National Park Service have flagged descriptions and displays at scores of parks and historic sites for review in connection with ... [Donald] Trump’s directive to remove or cover up materials that 'inappropriately disparage Americans.'... Employees had until last week to flag materials that could be changed or deleted, and the Trump administration said it would remove all 'inappropriate'  content by Sept. 17, according to the internal agency documents. The public also has been asked to submit potential changes. In response, a coalition of librarians, historians and others organized through the University of Minnesota has launched a campaign called 'Save Our Signs.'  It is asking the public to take photos of existing content at national parks and upload it. The group is using those images to build a public archive before any materials may be altered. So far, it has more than 800 submissions.” The link appears to be a gift link.

Alexa Robles-Gill of the New York Times: “More than 140 employees of the National Science Foundation have signed a letter denouncing what they described as efforts to undermine one of the country’s main science funding agencies. They accused the Trump administration of abruptly firing workers, withholding funds and decimating the agency’s budget. Out of fear of retaliation, all but one of the employees’ signatures are redacted. The letter, addressed on Monday to Representative Zoe Lofgren, the senior Democrat on the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, petitioned it to defend the mission of the N.S.F. and its employees.... The formal protest by N.S.F. employees followed similar ones made last month by workers from the National Institutes of Health and the Environmental Protection Agency, who criticized orders that they saw as unlawful and accused the administration of endangering public health. The E.P.A. suspended 144 of the signatories a few days after the letter was sent, a step that has been described by some as retaliation. In a news conference on Tuesday, Representative Lofgren said the letter was submitted to her office as a whistle-blower complaint. In a statement thanking the signers, she added: 'I promise to do all I can to protect you, protect your agency, and protect our scientific enterprise.'” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: “... a step that has been described by some as retaliation.” Yeah, I guess “some” would describe suspending everybody right after they sent a critical letter as “retaliation.” The letter, via House Democrats, is here. The names of signatories have been redacted; many signed anonymously.

Michaela Towfighi & Robin Pogrebin of the New York Times: “Republican lawmakers moved on Tuesday to rename the Opera House at the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts in Washington after the first lady, Melania Trump. The proposal was introduced by Republican members of the House Appropriations Committee as part of a spending bill for the Department of the Interior, environment and related agencies. The legislation would require approval from the full House. Mr. Trump, who did not attend the annual Kennedy Center Honors awards ceremony during his first term, has shown fervent interest in the performing arts center in his second, naming himself its chairman shortly after returning to office. He purged the Kennedy Center board of Biden appointees, and ousted both the center’s longtime president, Deborah F. Rutter, and its chairman, David M. Rubenstein. By tradition, the first lady serves as the honorary chair of the performing arts center. Mrs. Trump recently attended a performance of 'Les Misérables' at the center with the president.” The Independent's story is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Nathaniel Reed on X: "Buried in amendments to the Interior Dept. Gov funding bill, is a stipulation that the Kennedy Center Opera House must be renamed the 'First Lady Melania Trump Opera House' in order to receive federal funds. The Appropriations Committee adopted that amendment by a vote of 33-25." Reed includes an image of the pages of House amendments that seem to back his assertion. Via Paul Campos in LG&$. 

Gary Legum of Wonkette reveals that Rep. Jim Comer, the noble representative of Kentucky's first and best Congressional District, has figured out a way to get rid of all of Joe Biden's judicial appointments, thus repairs the ills of "the biggest scandal in the history of American politics." And you thought Comer was stupid. (Also linked yesterday.) 

Katie Robertson of the New York Times: “A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld an earlier ruling allowing the Trump administration to block The Associated Press from covering the president in certain spaces. The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said in an order that it would keep in place a June 6 decision that found that it was legal for the president to restrict access to a news organization in invite-only places like the Oval Office or Air Force One. The White House has been at loggerheads with The A.P. since February, when it began barring the outlet’s journalists from press events because it continued to use the term Gulf of Mexico in news coverage instead Gulf of America, as the president has renamed the body of water.... Tuesday’s order to continue the stay of the lower court’s ruling is a blow to The A.P., but not the end of the legal battle. The appeals court will later review the merits of the A.P.’s lawsuit itself.”

Katie Benner of the New York Times: “Most Planned Parenthood clinics are now cut off from Medicaid funding, after a court ruling. A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction on Monday night that allowed only a fraction of Planned Parenthood health centers to receive Medicaid payments for services like birth control, annual checkups and tests for sexually transmitted diseases. While the judge is open to extending the injunction to cover more clinics, for now most of them are not covered by the order.... The provision in the law applies to nonprofit health centers that provide abortions, but with a threshold that only Planned Parenthood health centers seem large enough to meet: entities that generated $800,000 or more in revenue from Medicaid payments in the 2023 fiscal year.... Judge [Indira] Talwani [of the Federal District Court in Massachusetts] ruled on Monday that affiliates like the one in Utah that do not exceed the $800,000 revenue threshold should continue to receive Medicaid funding while the lawsuit makes its way through the courts. And she said that affiliates that are in states where abortion is illegal, and thus do not provide the procedure, should continue to receive Medicaid reimbursements as well.”

Don Moynihan on Substack: "A couple of months ago, the major concern was what would happen when Trump defied the courts. A more complicated picture is now emerging. One that mixes quiet but unmistakable defiance of court decisions by the Trump administration with encouragement from the six Republican-appointed Justices who sit atop the judicial branch. This is an arguably worse scenario, since it provides a veneer of legalism.... The emerging pattern is that the Trump administration is checked by the lower courts, slow-walks compliance, and sometimes asks SCOTUS for help, which they usually provide via poorly reasoned opinions or no opinions at all.... The combination of Trump defiance and SCOTUS enabling has allowed him to move ahead with some extraordinarily damaging actions, which will be impossible to quickly or fully unwind." 

Peter Eavis of the New York Times: “American steel makers are raising prices, forcing new costs onto domestic manufacturers that make everything from cars to military tanks. The increases come on the back of President Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum. Two big American producers, Cleveland-Cliffs and Steel Dynamics, reported on Monday that they had charged more for their products in the second quarter of this year than they did in the first quarter. About a fifth of the steel sold in the United States is imported. The steel tariffs, which were raised last month to 50 percent from 25 percent, have made imports of the metal much more expensive. And as imports have declined, American producers have more power to opportunistically increase their prices, buyers said.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Jack Ewing of the New York Times: “General Motors said on Tuesday that its profit in the second quarter fell by more than a third, after ... [Donald] Trump’s tariffs cost the company more than $1 billion. G.M. was the second automaker this week to show the toll that the Trump administration’s trade policies are taking on the industry. Stellantis, the maker of Chrysler, Jeep and Ram vehicles, said on Monday that it lost 2.3 billion euros ($2.7 billion) in the first half of the year partly because of tariffs and other Republican policies. Automakers are an important pillar of the U.S. economy and the industry employs about one million manufacturing workers. Eroding profits will make it harder for them to invest in new technologies to withstand growing competition from Chinese automakers that have been expanding abroad.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Margot Amouyal & Shannon Najmabadi of the Washington Post: “The Trump administration’s tariffs are hitting companies that do business in the United States. But prices haven’t reflected them yet in many cases.... Automakers might increase prices moving forward, according to a report from the intelligence firm AlixPartners. It noted that automakers are expected to pass on 80 percent of the cost of Trump’s tariffs to consumers.... Beyond the U.S. auto industry, other companies that cited tariffs for reducing profits include oil services provider Halliburton, which said Tuesday that tariffs lowered profits by $27 million in the second quarter.... Economists and industry observers said it’s too soon for tariffs to show up in consumer prices.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'd like to remind all the brilliant businessmen tha they backed Trump while he was campaigning on a promise to impose high tariffs on imports. They backed his because they believed he would lower taxes on the rich brilliant businesspeople and their rich corporations -- which he did. But also too a tariff is a tax. Innit? I'm sure you'll figure out soon enough how to make sure consumers pump more money into your bottom line, and your profits will be right back up there. OR we'll have a Trumpomungus depression.

Marie: Looks as if we need a "Today's Capitulations" section. Here are a U.S. Olympics committee, a major corporation and a top-tier university all bending over backwards to accommodate Trump. (Trump urged Coca Cola executives to change their formula.) ~~~

Juliet Macur of the New York Times: “The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee quietly changed its eligibility rules on Monday to bar transgender women from competing in Olympic women’s sports, and now will comply with ... [Donald] Trump’s executive order on the issue, according to a post on the organization’s website. The new policy, expressed in a short, vaguely worded paragraph, is tucked under the category of 'USOPC Athlete Safety Policy' on the site, and does not include details of how the ban will work. Nor does the new policy include the word 'transgender' or the title of Mr. Trump’s executive order, 'Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,' referring to it instead as 'Executive Order 14201.'... The committee’s new policy means that the national governing bodies of sports federations in the United States now must follow the U.S.O.P.C.’s lead, according to several chief executives of sports within the Olympic movement.” The ABC News story is here.

Rachel Roubein & Caitlin Gilbert of the Washington Post: “... Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ... praised Steak ’n Shake for announcing that the fast-food chain would start offering Coca-Cola with real cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup. The soda company announced Tuesday it would roll out that version of its product in the United States this fall as an additional option for consumers. 'MAHA is winning,' Kennedy posted Saturday on X..., referring to his 'Make America Healthy Again' movement aimed at reducing chronic disease and childhood illness. But studies do not show substantial benefits in using cane sugar as a substitute for high-fructose corn syrup, some nutrition experts said.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ BUT. Emily Heil of the Washington Post said asked six Post colleagues to participate in a taste-test, and five out of six chose the Mexican cane-sugar Coke as better tasting than the U.S. corn-syrup variety. (Also linked yesterday.) 

Sharon Otterman of the New York Times: “Columbia University has expelled and suspended students who were involved in a pro-Palestinian demonstration that shut down the main campus library in May, moving more quickly to hand down punishments than it has in the past, university officials announced on Tuesday. The significant punishments, which were issued under a newly centralized disciplinary process, were an example of the tougher stance Columbia has vowed to take toward demonstrations that violate campus rules.... A person with knowledge of the matter ... said that just over 70 students had been punished. Of those, about 60 were suspended, with most suspensions to last for two years, the person said. A handful of students were expelled. Fewer than 10 protesters received probation, a lighter punishment meted out to first-time offenders and to those who cooperated when security guards asked them to identify themselves. At least one demonstrator had their degree revoked, a severe punishment given only to repeat offenders. The expulsions and suspensions come as Columbia continues to negotiate with the Trump administration for the return of more than $400 million in federal research funding.”

Tom Sullivan of Hullabaloo posts some clips of Mehdi Hasan debating 20 young fascist dumbos. So not a fair fight. MB: I watched a few clips earlier today, and these kids are scary stupid. Thank you to RAS for the link.(Also linked yesterday.) 

~~~~~~~~~~

The Royal Eric Trump Concession Stand (see Comments for Context):

Luxury on Wheels: Inside a Stunning White Baroque Tiny Home You Can Take  Anywhere


Tuesday
Jul222025

The Conversation -- July 22, 2025

Megan Forrester of ABC News: "Days after ... Donald Trump posted an AI-generated fake video showing former President Barack Obama's arrest on his social media platform, the current president pushed conspiracy theories about Obama in the Oval Office on Tuesday, accusing him of treason without providing evidence regarding the 2016 presidential election. 'They tried to rig the election, and they got caught. And there should be very severe consequences for that,' Trump told reporters on Tuesday. A spokesperson for Obama pushed back on the Trump administration's claims, saying while they would 'not normally dignify the constant nonsense' from the White House with a response, the claims are 'outrageous enough to merit one.' 'These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction,' the statement said. Trump's comments come after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard submitted a criminal referral to the Department of Justice threatening the Obama administration."

Habba-Dabba-Dumped. (BUT See Update Below.) Tracey Tully Jonah Bromwich of the New York Times: “A panel of federal judges in New Jersey on Tuesday rejected Alina Habba’s bid to stay in the job as the state’s U.S. attorney and instead invoked a rarely used power to select a candidate of their own to take over as the state’s top federal prosecutor. The judges announced that they had appointed Desiree Leigh Grace, an experienced prosecutor whom Ms. Habba named as her first assistant soon after she took over as interim U.S. attorney in March. The appointment is effective as of Tuesday or, alternately, upon the expiration of the 120 days of Ms. Habba’s term, according to an order signed by the district’s chief judge, Renée Marie Bumb. That wording reflected a lack of clarity as to when Ms. Habba’s 120-day term expires.... [Donald] Trump named her on March 24, saying her ascension to the post was 'effective immediately' — suggesting that her term expired on Tuesday. But Ms. Habba was sworn in at the White House four days later. Counting from that date, she may still have several days in her post. The deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, in a social media post, suggested as much, writing that the district court judges were 'trying to force out' Ms. Habba 'before her term expires at 11:59 p.m. Friday.'” ~~~

     ~~~ Oops! Update. “The leadership of the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey was thrown into confusion on Tuesday as top Justice Department officials pushed back after federal judges in the state moved to appoint a new U.S. attorney.... The attorney general, Pam Bondi, responded Tuesday evening with a social media post defending Ms. Habba and saying that the first assistant — Ms. Grace — ] 'has just been removed.' 'This Department of Justice does not tolerate rogue judges — especially when they threaten the President’s core Article II powers,' Ms. Bondi wrote. The deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, also attacked the judges on social media, saying that they had colluded with New Jersey’s Democratic senators, who have opposed Ms. Habba.... Ms. Grace was sent an email Tuesday informing her that she had been fired, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.”

Tom Sullivan of Hullabaloo posts some clips of Mehdi Hasan debating 20 young fascist dumbos. So not a fair fight. MB: I watched a few clips earlier today, and these kids are scary stupid. Thank you to RAS for the link.

Marie: This is one of those days that there's too much news for me to keep up with. Contributors have shared some useful links in today's and yesterday's Comments, and I urge you to check them out. (I'm so distracted, I ended two sentences in a row with prepositions. That is something up with which you should not put.) Here's one: ~~~

~~~ Tom Nichols of the Atlantic: “From his first day as a candidate, Trump has appeared animated by anger, fear, and, most of all, pettiness, a small-minded vengefulness that takes the place of actual policy making.... Trump’s second term has been a cavalcade of pettiness; his lieutenants have internalized the president’s culture of purges, retribution, and loyalty checks.... Even on matters of grave international importance, Trump governs by emotion rather than any coherent sense of policy. A few weeks ago, the president seemed to change course on the war in Ukraine.... Putin had finally done something worse than murdering thousands of Ukrainian civilians and kidnapping Ukrainian children: He had made Donald Trump look like a chump. Thank you to laura h. for this gift link. (MB: BTW, Nichols' essay fits neatly into my Unified Theory of Trumpitydoodah.) ~~~

~~~ Here's another: Richard Luscombe of the Guardian: “Migrants at a Miami immigration jail were shackled with their hands tied behind their backs and made to kneel to eat food from styrofoam plates 'like dogs', according to a report published on Monday into conditions at three overcrowded south Florida facilities. The incident at the downtown federal detention center is one of a succession of alleged abuses at jails operated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (Ice) in the state since January, chronicled by the advocacy groups Human Rights Watch, Americans for Immigrant Justice, and Sanctuary of the South from interviews with detainees. Dozens of men had been packed into a holding cell for hours, the report said, and denied lunch until about 7pm. They remained shackled with the food on chairs in front of them.” Thanks to RAS for the link. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The aim of the Trump administration then not only is to make U.S. citizens view immigrants as less than human by denigrating them with labels like "illegals" & claiming that they are murderers and rapists; it also is to treat the immigrants themselves as feral animals. The U.S. has ratified and/or signed all of the Geneva Conventiion protocols. Somebody should tell Trump.

Josh Gerstein, et al., of Politico: “The Justice Department is seeking to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell, the co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Tuesday. Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for child sex trafficking and other crimes.... The sudden decision to seek a meeting with Maxwell appears designed to appease Trump’s base. It also raises the question of whether Maxwell may try to leverage the meeting for a reduced prison sentence by telling the Justice Department what it wants to hear.... 'President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence. If Ghislaine Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DOJ will hear what she has to say,' Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement posted by Bondi.... Blanche said he anticipates meeting with Maxwell 'in the coming days.'”

“Johnson Shutting Down House Early to Block Epstein Vote.” Annie Karni of the New York Times in an item in today's “Trump News” liveblog: “Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday morning canceled votes for Thursday and sent the House home early before a planned five-week recess, telling reporters at a news conference that he was doing so in order to serve the American people by shutting down Democratic efforts to demand more votes on releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files. 'We’re done being lectured on transparency,' he said. He said that 'the Rules Committee became ground for them to do that. We’re not going to play political games with this.' The last votes are now scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, and the House will be in recess until September.” MB: Excuse me. Shutting down the house to prevent a vote in order to appease the president* whom you're supposed to be a'checkin' & a'balancin' is “playing political games.” ~~~

     ~~~ Update: Here's a full Washington Post story by Marianna Sotomayor & Kadia Goba. ~~~

     ~~~ AND Marcie Jones of Wonkette writes that the big break is necessary to give Pam Bondi time to finish the Trump/Epstein coverup

Gary Legum of Wonkette reveals that Rep. Jim Comer, the noble representative of Kentucky's first and best Congressional District, has figured out a way to get rid of all of Joe Biden's judicial appointments, thus repairs the ills of "the biggest scandal in the history of American politics." And you thought Comer was stupid.

Peter Eavis of the New York Times: “American steel makers are raising prices, forcing new costs onto domestic manufacturers that make everything from cars to military tanks. The increases come on the back of President Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum. Two big American producers, Cleveland-Cliffs and Steel Dynamics, reported on Monday that they had charged more for their products in the second quarter of this year than they did in the first quarter. About a fifth of the steel sold in the United States is imported. The steel tariffs, which were raised last month to 50 percent from 25 percent, have made imports of the metal much more expensive. And as imports have declined, American producers have more power to opportunistically increase their prices, buyers said.” ~~~

~~~ Jack Ewing of the New York Times: “General Motors said on Tuesday that its profit in the second quarter fell by more than a third, after ... [Donald] Trump’s tariffs cost the company more than $1 billion. G.M. was the second automaker this week to show the toll that the Trump administration’s trade policies are taking on the industry. Stellantis, the maker of Chrysler, Jeep and Ram vehicles, said on Monday that it lost 2.3 billion euros ($2.7 billion) in the first half of the year partly because of tariffs and other Republican policies. Automakers are an important pillar of the U.S. economy and the industry employs about one million manufacturing workers. Eroding profits will make it harder for them to invest in new technologies to withstand growing competition from Chinese automakers that have been expanding abroad.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'd like to remind all the brilliant businessmen tha they backed Trump while he was campaigning on a promise to impose high tariffs on imports. They backed his because they believed he would lower taxes on the rich brilliant businesspeople and their rich corporations -- which he did. But also too a tariff is a tax. Innit? I'm sure you'll figure out soon enough how to make sure consumers pump more money into your bottom line, and your profits will be right back up there. OR we'll have a Trumpomungus depression.

Rachel Roubein & Caitlin Gilbert of the Washington Post: “... Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ... praised Steak ’n Shake for announcing that the fast-food chain would start offering Coca-Cola with real cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup. The soda company announced Tuesday it would roll out that version of its product in the United States this fall as an additional option for consumers. 'MAHA is winning,' Kennedy posted Saturday on X..., referring to his 'Make America Healthy Again' movement aimed at reducing chronic disease and childhood illness. But studies do not show substantial benefits in using cane sugar as a substitute for high-fructose corn syrup, some nutrition experts said.” ~~~

~~~ BUT. Emily Heil of the Washington Post said asked six Post colleagues to participate in a taste-test, and five out of six chose the Mexican cane-sugar Coke as better tasting than the U.S. corn-syrup variety. 

~~~~~~~~~~

Thom Hartmann, in a Daily Kos column, asks why "Trump & the GOP are working so hard to ruin America." He offers some theories, but none of them explains all of the disasterous moves Trump, et al., have perpetrated. The list, which Hartmann admits is only partial, is still a staggering testimony to how much damage these jamokes have done in a few short months. Well worth a scan. Thanks to RAS for the link. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: BTW, after having Donald Trump invade my headspace almost daily for more than a decade, I do have a Unified Theory of Trumpism. If I have time later in the day, I'll test it against the atrocities in Hartmann's list.

Luke Broadwater of the New York TimesDonald “Trump spent the weekend posting on social media about, well, anything [but Jeffrey Epstein]. On Sunday, the president railed against Senator Adam Schiff, Democrat of California, long a prime target. He attacked Samantha Power, the former administrator of U.S.A.I.D. He posted a fake video of former President Barack Obama being arrested and a fake photo of Mr. Obama and members of his administration in prison garb. He threatened to derail a deal for a new football stadium for the Washington Commanders if the team did not take back its old name, the Redskins. Mr. Trump even at one point posted a video compilation of 25 wacky and incredible stunts, such as a fake video of a woman catching a cobra midstrike with her bare hand. 'One year ago our Country was DEAD, with almost no hope of revival,' he wrote on his Truth Social site on Sunday, the six month anniversary of his second term. 'Today the USA is the “hottest” and most respected Country anywhere in the World. Happy Anniversary!!!'” ~~~

~~~ "Trump's Forever Grudge." Zachary Basu of Axios: Donald "Trump is redirecting his fury over the Jeffrey Epstein files into one of MAGA's oldest obsessions: punishing Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and the officials involved in the 2016 Russia investigation....  In Trump's view, any documents linking him to Epstein are a 'hoax' cooked up by the same forces behind the Russia probe. To him, it's all one story — a years-long 'witch hunt' that plagued his presidency from Day 1. Seizing on new criminal referrals by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Trump on Sunday posted an AI-generated video on Truth Social showing Obama being arrested by the FBI.... Gabbard's claims of a 'years-long coup' against Trump landed exactly as intended — exhilarating a MAGA base that has grown restless over the president's attempts to move on from the Epstein case. With Gabbard referring the findings to the Justice Department, MAGA is now primed to expect prosecutions of Obama, Clinton, former FBI director James Comey, former CIA director John Brennan and other high-profile officials. But as with the Epstein files, there's a real risk of overpromising and underdelivering...." ~~~

     ~~~ David Corn of Mother Jones on Tulsi Gabbard's false claim that President Obama & members of his administration engaged in a “conspiracy to subvert President Trump’s 2016 victory and presidency”: “It’s all a fabrication.... Gabbard is engaging in blatant cherry-picking and gaslighting. And she’s being sloppy with her subterfuge. Her case is easy to debunk.... She is providing a phony and weak cover story, both for Trump and Vladimir Putin.... Ultimately, this is about rewriting history to serve Dear Leader and seeking vengeance on his behalf against those who dared investigate the Russian effort to help him reach the White House....” Corn does debunk Gabbard's weak argument & misdirection in this post. ~~~

~~~ Don't Look Here! Look Over There: Sex, Lies & (One Lone) Audiotape! Rick Rojas & Glenn Thrush of the New York Times: “More than 6,000 documents related to the 1968 assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., totaling nearly a quarter-million pages, were posted to the website of the National Archives late Monday afternoon, in what the administration hailed as a triumph of transparency. But several noted King historians said they had found little in the way of new revelations about the death of the civil rights leader in the documents, and noted that the trove does not include F.B.I. wiretap recordings of Dr. King and other materials that remain under court seal until 2027. The release on Monday, with no prior notice, came at a time when Mr. Trump and White House officials have sought to divert attention from right-wing backlash demanding the release of files related to the death of the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.... Trump administration officials have been in contact with Dr. King’s family, but it remains unclear if his relatives were given the right to request redactions of the newly released material.... 

“Dr. King had a well-documented history of extramarital relationships. Still, some experts and Dr. King’s family have expressed doubts about the veracity of some of the contents of those previously released documents, particularly when it comes to the more provocative claims about aspects of Dr. King’s romantic and sexual life. Those details, they said, could be more reflective of official efforts to undermine the civil rights leader’s reputation than of reality.”

     ~~~ Bill Barrow of the AP: “The Trump administration on Monday released records of the FBI’s surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr., despite opposition from the slain Nobel laureate’s family and the civil rights group that he led until his 1968 assassination. The digital document dump includes more than 240,000 pages of records that had been under a court-imposed seal since 1977, when the FBI first gathered the records and turned them over to the National Archives and Records Administration.... The Kings got advance access to the records and had their own teams reviewing them. Those efforts continued even as the government granted public access.” ~~~

     ~~~ The National Archives page re: the MLK records dump is here. The Archives notes that these new releases are made in compliance with "the National Archives' role in fulfilling Executive Order 14176." That would be an order Trump signed on January 23 to release records re: the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. ~~~

~~~ Ryan Reilly & Henry Gomez of NBC News: “The Justice Department also announced Monday it had sent a redacted report to Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, about the FBI’s handling of files related to 'former-FBI Director James Comey’s failed investigation into Hillary Clinton’s mishandling of highly classified information' during Clinton’s time as secretary of state.... In a post on X, Grassley wrote, 'Pres Trump/Pam Bondi + Kash Patel and others finally got it done' and thanked them for their dedication to transparency. The appendix to the 2018 report from the Justice Department’s inspector general involves the FBI’s handling of thumb drive devices discovered in the course of the Clinton email investigation. 'It's all a distraction, and they’ll release anything if it buys them another day or two to not talk about Epstein or to get the angry mob to talk about Epstein,' House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar of California told NBC News on Monday.” Reilly & Gomez cover several other Trumpy-generated Epstein distractions in this report. ~~~

Tommy Christopher of Mediaite: “... Donald Trump’s stunning response when he was asked if he had a sexual 'age limit' has taken on a new dimension amid the fallout from the 'Epstein Files' controversy and the latest revelations about Trump’s relationship with deceased sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein.... [In] a 2006 interview on The Howard Stern Show ... host Howard Stern and co-host Robin Quivers asked Trump about sleeping with younger women. When Quivers asks for his 'age limit,' Trump starts out by saying he doesn’t have one — but then gives a point of reference that looks not great in any light, saying he would draw a line at '12 year-olds.'... Trump: 'I don’t want to be like Congressman Foley, with, you know, 12-year-olds.'” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Even as Trump tries to recast the grotesque Epstein scandal as an element of the supposed conspiracy his political enemies have perpetrated against him, the Epstein revelations are putting Trump's own admissions into a deeper & broader picture of his own depravity. I think it was Rachel Maddow who pointed out last night that in 2006, Trump was 60 years old. So no 12-year-olds? Great.

Alex Woodward of the Independent: "The federal judge randomly assigned to oversee Donald Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal is a former federal prosecutor appointed to the bench by Barack Obama. Judge Darrin P. Gayles with the Southern District of Florida is a former U.S. attorney who was appointed by the former president in 2014. He was unanimously confirmed in the Senate by a vote of 98-0. The Howard University and George Washington University School of Law graduate became the first openly gay Black man to serve on the federal bench." ~~~

     ~~~ Déjà vu All Over Again. Kyle Cheney of Politico: “Gayles ... had another brush with a litigious Trump in 2023, when the then-former president sought to punish his onetime lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen. Trump sued Cohen in April 2023.... Six months later, Trump abandoned the lawsuit, just before Cohen’s lawyers were set to question him under oath.... Trump’s decision to file the case in southern Florida led to suspicions he was hoping to draw U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, his own appointee who helped him escape criminal charges brought by special counsel Jack Smith. But Trump’s attorney Alejandro Brito — the same lawyer who led the ill-fated Cohen suit — filed the case in the Miami division of the federal judicial district of south Florida. Cannon sits in the Fort Pierce district, making it unlikely she would have been selected under the court’s assignment process.”

The Care & Feeding of Donald Trump, White House Press Room Edition. Katie Robertson of the New York Times: “The White House said on Monday that it had barred Wall Street Journal reporters from the traveling press pool for ... [Donald] Trump’s coming trip to Scotland, attacking the publication again for its reporting on ties between the president and the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.... 'Thirteen diverse outlets will participate in the press pool to cover the President’s trip to Scotland,' Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said in a statement on Monday. 'Due to The Wall Street Journal’s fake and defamatory conduct, they will not be one of the 13 outlets on board.'” Politico's story is here.

The Care & Feeding of Donald Trump. “Give Him Space!” Annie Karni of the New York Times: “Speaker Mike Johnson said on Monday that he would not hold a House vote this summer on whether the Justice Department should release files related to the accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, retreating from his demand last week that the material must come out.... The Rules Committee, a powerful panel controlled by the speaker, had even approved a measure that would bring to the floor a resolution calling for the disclosures, though Republicans gave no timetable for voting on it. Less than a week later, the speaker reverted to his more familiar posture of deferring to the president. 'We need the administration to have the space to do what it is doing,' Mr. Johnson told reporters at the Capitol on Monday.... He added that there would be no vote on the Epstein files before the House departs on Thursday for a six-week summer break.... Mr. Johnson’s quick turnaround indicated that he intends to slow walk, or stymie, a floor vote that could potentially damage Mr. Trump.” MB: IOW, Mikey is sending the House home so they won't have to vote on a weak-tea resolution to disclose the Epstein files. ~~~

     ~~~ Meredith Hill, et al., of Politico: “That means House members will depart for August recess at the week’s end without being able to vote on [some consequential] legislation.... The House will still vote on measures that can be taken up under an expedited procedure typically reserved for noncontroversial legislation..., such as a bill that would establish new ZIP Codes for certain communities and deter China in the ongoing Taiwan conflict.”

Annals “Journalism,” Ha Ha Ha. Fox Cannot Serve Two Masters. Jeremy Barr of the Washington Post: “On Fox News, the network’s pro-Trump opinion hosts often trumpet the president’s latest attack on the mainstream media. That got a bit more complicated on Friday, when the president sued the Wall Street Journal, another part of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire.... So far, the lawsuit has only been mentioned twice on Fox..., in contrast with the widespread coverage it received elsewhere.... Between July 14 and July 20, the word 'Epstein' was used 617 times on CNN and 751 times on MSNBC, but only 160 times on Fox News, according to a Washington Post search using the media monitoring service ShadowTV.”

Devorah Blachor has created a Trump-Epstein quiz for McSweeney's. The quiz is fun, but Blachor is a tough grader who gives short shrift to what will seem like excellent answers to many an earnest right-wing conspiracy theorist. Thanks to RAS for the link.

Jess Bidgood of the New York Times: “In declaring war on The Wall Street Journal over its coverage of his yearslong friendship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein..., [Donald] Trump tapped his supporters’ distrust of his favorite foe — the news media — in an effort to put down a mutiny within his base.... It was a familiar move.... Over the past six months, Trump has ... sought to dismantle Voice of America, the federally funded news agency that provides coverage to countries with limited press freedom, and persuaded his allies in Congress to cut funding for public broadcasting.... [The Trump administration] has flexed its power over seemingly parochial matters — like when some reporters at legacy media organizations including The New York Times lost their desks at the Pentagon to friendly right-wing media outlets, or by removing The Journal from the press pool on a coming trip to Scotland — and over bigger ones, too. When Trump took office, his handpicked chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Brendan Carr, quickly revived complaints about 2024 election coverage by ABC, CBS and NBC that had been dismissed by the outgoing chair, and he said the outcome of a 'news distortion' complaint about CBS could affect his agency’s review of a merger proposed between Paramount, CBS’s parent company, and Skydance.” And so forth.

Akhilleus, at the top of today's thread, has discovered that it was so unfa-a-a-air of a social media wag to say of Trump's Oval Office decor "It's like the Dollar Tree version of Versailles." It turns out the decor is much classier: it's the Home Depot version of Versailles. At least I was right when I dubbed it "golden plastic":

Emily Yahr of the Washington Post: “On Monday night, CBS 'Late Show' host Stephen Colbert returned to TV for the first time since the stunning news last week that the network has decided to pull the plug on the historic franchise. The final episode will air in May 2026.... [See videos below of Colbert's monologue & a segment that followed.] Later, guest Sandra Oh started her interview by saying she was saddened and outraged by the show’s cancellation.... Meanwhile, Stewart had plenty to say on 'The Daily Show' Monday night....” ~~~

     ~~~ AND let there be audience participation! ~~~

     ~~~ The segment featuring Sandra Oh is here.

Jeremy Barr of the Washington Post: “Three liberal senators want to know whether there is any truth to ... Donald Trump’s claim that Paramount is actually paying him about $32 million to settle his lawsuit against the company, double what was announced by the CBS parent company.... Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts), Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) and Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) sent a letter Monday morning to the company’s chief executive, David Ellison, asking him to address Trump’s claims of a side deal.... The senators also reiterated their concern that Paramount — and its would-be owner, Skydance — could be seen to have bribed Trump to receive a go-ahead from the Federal Communications Commission to consummate its merger. The senators pressed Ellison, who was photographed in April with Trump, to reveal whether he has discussed the merger with him and whether he has agreed to 'make changes to Skydance’s content or Paramount’s or CBS’s content at the request of the Trump administration.'” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Shawn Hubler & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: “Pentagon officials will begin withdrawing 700 active-duty Marines who were sent to Los Angeles last month, the latest scaling back of the Trump administration’s contentious military deployment in Southern California. The withdrawal of the Marines follows the departure of nearly 2,000 California National Guard soldiers and a smaller contingent of about 150 specialized Guard firefighters. The troops had been dispatched to Los Angeles by President Trump starting on June 7, after protests erupted there over immigration raids. More than half will now have been ordered back to base; an 1,892-member brigade of military police remains. The Pentagon’s chief spokesman, Sean Parnell, framed the pullout as the natural closure of a successful military response that was needed to quell civil unrest in the nation’s second-largest city.... Democratic leaders in California have accused the Trump administration of provoking the protests by sending masked federal agents to carwashes and other sites to detain immigrants, and then using the subsequent public outrage over the raids as a pretext for military action. Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles has compared the deployment to an 'armed occupation,' and Gov. Gavin Newsom has condemned it as 'a solution right now in search of a problem.' Both have called for the removal of all the deployed troops.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Eileen Sullivan of the New York Times: “The Office of Personnel Management, the government’s human resources arm, has shed 10 percent of its staff and plans to shrink even more by the end of the year, the agency said on Monday. On Jan. 20..., the agency had a staff of 3,110. Hundreds are leaving through incentive programs, and some are leaving without incentives. More than 125 have been laid off. The newly confirmed director, Scott Kupor, told reporters on Monday that he expected staffing to drop to 2,000, by the end of the year. Mr. Kupor said the agency was cutting its contractors by half as well, going from about 1,200 at the beginning of the year to 600 by the end of December.” ~~~ 

     ~~~ Marie: Well of course it's easy for Trump's HR to manage with a skeleton staff. On the hiring end, they can dispense with pesky procedures like background checks -- "Oh, you appeared in a Fox 'News' focus in 2013? Great! You're hired." They've proved firing is even easier: just send out masses of Trump "You're fired!" form emails on Friday night.  

Colby Smith of the New York Times: “The Federal Reserve took additional steps on Monday to defend the renovations underway at its headquarters in Washington, as top Trump administration officials show little sign of backing down from allegations that the roughly $2.5 billion project has been mismanaged. The central bank published a virtual tour of the active construction site on Monday, including footage of asbestos caulking being removed and blast resistant windows being installed.... The Fed’s renovation has become central to the administration’s attempts to undermine and potentially oust Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the central bank. The White House has also accused the central bank of straying beyond its congressional mandated goals of fostering stable inflation and a healthy labor market, citing its work on climate-related issues, for example. On Monday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called for the Fed to conduct an 'exhaustive internal review of its non-monetary policy operations.'”

Kenneth Chang of the Washington Post: “A public letter from NASA employees on Monday urges leaders of the space agency not to carry out deep cuts sought by the Trump administration.... It is addressed to Sean Duffy, the secretary of transportation, whom ... [Donald] Trump appointed this month as acting NASA administrator. Cuts to NASA programs have been arbitrary and in defiance of priorities set by Congress, the NASA employees said.... Prominent scientists outside of NASA, including 20 Nobel Prize winners, also offered their names in support.... Upheaval within NASA continued on Monday, when Makenzie Lystrup, director of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., announced she was 'stepping aside' on Aug. 1.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Marianne LeVine & Derek Hawkins of the Washington Post: “The Trump administration is increasingly relying on Border Patrol agents to help carry out the president’s mass deportation plan and arrest immigrants in cities far from the nation’s southern border — a departure from the agency’s traditional role that some lawyers and advocates consider alarming.... The use of the Border Patrol in major cities such as Los Angeles is lawful under a 1946 statute establishing that the agency’s jurisdiction stretches within a 'reasonable distance' of the border. The Justice Department later set that boundary at 100 miles from any border, including coastlines — an area that today is home to about two-thirds of the country’s population. In that zone, the Border Patrol asserts that it has broad authority to search vehicles, including without probable cause or a warrant.” The link is a gift link.

Zach Montague of the New York Times: “The Trump administration’s efforts to deport foreign students who espoused pro-Palestinian views under a little-used foreign policy provision have no obvious legal parallel.... Challenges to his policies are also, by necessity, treading new ground. The academic associations that sued over the highly publicized wave of arrests in March have said the government targeted those international students in violation of the First Amendment. In court over the past two weeks, lawyers for the associations argued that the Trump administration stretched [Secretary of State Marco] Rubio’s narrow power to revoke visas and green cards in order to stifle the speech of the most vulnerable activists and chill political activity on campuses more broadly.”

Frances Vinall of the Washington Post: “The detention of two Italian nationals at 'Alligator Alcatraz,' the new immigrant detention center in Florida’s Everglades, is sparking criticism from lawmakers in Italy, who are calling on their country’s conservative government to speak out. Gaetano Mirabella Costa and Fernando Artese are being held in 'inhuman and degrading' conditions at the facility, Laura Boldrini, a lawmaker with the opposition Democratic Party, said on social media.... Angelo Bonelli of the Green Europe party said the two Italians had been 'locked in cages, without access to a lawyer, deprived of dignity, water and decent food.' Former prime minister Matteo Renzi, now a senator who leads the Italia Viva party, accused Giorgia Meloni’s government of deference to ... Donald Trump rather than acting to 'defend the rights of an Italian citizen.'... According to [DHS spokesperson Tricia] McLaughlin, Costa overstayed a B2 tourism visa for almost seven years. Artese entered the United States using the visa waiver program, which authorized a stay of about three months, but he remained in the country for about a decade, she said. DHS said they had both been arrested for alleged criminal offenses but did not immediately respond to a request for clarification on whether either had been convicted of a crime.”

Madeleine Ngo of the New York Times: “A coalition of 21 Democratic attorneys general sued the Trump administration on Monday over its attempts to restrict undocumented immigrants’ access to federal health and safety net programs. The suit, led by New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, comes after several federal agencies announced earlier this month that they would no longer allow unauthorized immigrants to benefit from more than a dozen health and education programs, including Head Start, an early education program for low-income children. Trump administration officials said the changes would ensure that federal benefits were reserved for American citizens. The states said the changes had already caused significant disruption and that providers could struggle to verify the citizenship status of all recipients.... The suit was also brought by the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin and the District of Columbia.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: If you live in any of these states, or D.C., or (sometimes) Pennsylvania, which has a Republican AG for a Democratic governor, you can feel proud of your tax contributions to fighting some of Donald Trump's cruelest actions.

Gabe Cohen of CNN, republished by Yahoo! News: "The head of FEMA’s Urban Search and Rescue branch, which runs a network of teams stationed across the country that can swiftly respond to natural disasters, resigned on MondayKen Pagurek’s departure comes less than three weeks after a delayed FEMA response to catastrophic flooding in central Texas caused by bureaucratic hurdles put in place by the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the disaster response agency. Pagurek told colleagues at FEMA that the delay was the tipping point that led to his voluntary departure after months of frustration with the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle the agency.... It took more than 72 hours after the flooding for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to authorize the deployment of FEMA’s search and rescue network."

Alan Blinder of the New York Times: “A federal judge appeared deeply skeptical on Monday of the Trump administration’s efforts to strip Harvard University of billions of dollars in research funding, suggesting the school might prevail in its legal battle against the government. Judge Allison D. Burroughs did not issue a ruling during a crucial hearing, which lasted more than two hours in her courtroom in Boston. But she did seem receptive to Harvard’s arguments, as both the school and the government sought to have the case decided in their favor without a trial. The judge unleashed a barrage of pointed questions at the lone Justice Department lawyer. She demanded to know, for instance, how the administration could reasonably tie withdrawal of medical research funding to concerns about the civil rights of Jewish people. And she appeared bothered by the administration’s hurried approach to attacking Harvard’s research funding, suggesting there were potentially  'staggering' constitutional consequences if the government could punish a university without due process.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Jacob Wendler of Politico: “... Donald Trump attacked the federal judge presiding over Harvard University’s lawsuit against his administration in a Monday afternoon social media post.... 'She is a TOTAL DISASTER, which I say even before hearing her Ruling,' Trump wrote in the post to his social media platform.... 'She has systematically taken over the various Harvard cases, and is an automatic “loss” for the People of our Country!' Trump also said he planned to appeal her decision if the judge rules against his administration. He also attacked Harvard as 'anti-Semitic, anti-Christian, and anti-America,' touting the White House’s decision to freeze several billions of dollars in grants to Harvard. Burroughs sided with Harvard last month in a separate lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s attempt to revoke the institution’s ability to sponsor international students.”

Sahil Kapur of NBC News: “... Donald Trump’s 'big, beautiful bill,' which he signed into law this month, will add $3.4 trillion to the U.S. national debt over the next decade, according to a report the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office published Monday. The report found that the law, which Republicans passed along party lines, will also 'increase by 10 million the number of people without health insurance' by 2034. The budget office scrutinized the final version of the bill after Republicans made a series of last-minute changes to cobble together the votes needed in the Senate; it passed 51-50. That revised version subsequently passed the House on a vote of 218-214.”

Glenn Thrush of the New York Times: “A federal judge in Kentucky on Monday sentenced a former Louisville police officer involved in the fatal raid of Breonna Taylor’s home to nearly three years in prison, in a sharp rebuke to the Trump administration, which had requested he serve only one day behind bars. In November, a federal jury in Kentucky convicted the former officer, Brett Hankison, of one count of violating Ms. Taylor’s civil rights by using excessive force in discharging several shots through her window during a botched drug raid in 2020. Even though none of the 10 shots he fired hit Ms. Taylor, Mr. Hankison, who is white, was the only officer to be charged for his actions during the botched operation.... 

“Last week, Harmeet K. Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, asked the judge in the case, Rebecca Grady Jennings, to sentence Mr. Hankison to a single day in prison — essentially the brief time he had served when he was charged — and three years of supervised release. The request was intended to send the message that the department planned to abandon its longstanding efforts to address racial disparities in policing — and to reorient the civil rights division to pursue ... [Donald] Trump’s culture war agenda at the expense of its founding mission of confronting race-based discrimination.” The AP's report is here.

Some Will Be Heroes. Elizabeth Williamson of the New York Times: Donald “Trump’s executive orders seeking to punish big law firms have led some of them to acquiesce to him and left others reluctant to take on pro bono cases that could put them at odds with the administration.... Instead, an army of solo practitioners, former government litigators and small law firms stepped up to volunteer their time to challenge the administration’s agenda.” 

Reid Epstein of the New York Times: “In a pair of podcast appearances over the past several days, Hunter Biden, the son of former President Joseph R. Biden Jr., appears to be trying to settle scores with Democrats he sees as having contributed to his father’s political undoing.Mr. Biden delivered a broad critique of the party last week on the debut episode of a podcast hosted by Jaime Harrison, the former Democratic National Committee chairman, arguing that Democrats lost the 2024 election because they did not remain loyal to his father. In a separate, three-hour-plus podcast released on Monday, the younger Mr. Biden named names, unleashing a profane tirade against a host of perceived enemies, including the senior Biden aide Anita Dunn; the Democratic éminences grises David Axelrod and James Carville; the Obama administration alumni who built Crooked Media, a booming liberal podcast network; the CNN host Jake Tapper; and the actor George Clooney. In a single minute-long clip, he used a version of the same expletive [MB: that would be 'fuck'] 13 times. His interviewer this time was Andrew Callaghan, a YouTuber previously known for crisscrossing America in an R.V.... Mr. Biden also claimed that his father had been given the prescription sleep aid Ambien before his fateful debate....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Excuse me for joining the right-wing conspiracy-theory circuit, but there's this: Hunter claims his father was taking Ambien to help him sleep after return from trips to Europe & California. But according to Epstein, President Biden had been at Camp David for the five days preceding the debate. So that raises the question “Just how often over the course of his presidency was Joe Biden doped up on Ambien?” If Ambien caused Biden to -- in Hunter's words -- “look like he’s a deer in the headlights” at an 8:00 pm debate, how clear-headed was he when the 3:00 am calls came? 

~~~~~~~~~~

Minnesota. Mitch Smith of the New York Times: “A Minnesota state senator who was convicted of burglary said on Monday that she would resign from the Legislature by Aug. 4. Her departure would leave the chamber with equal numbers of Democrats and Republicans until a special election can be held to fill her seat and break the tie. By stepping down, Senator Nicole Mitchell, a Democrat, is likely to avoid the possibility of being removed from office.... Ms. Mitchell was arrested in April 2024 and accused of breaking into her stepmother’s home. She maintained her innocence after her arrest, and for more than a year resisted calls by Republicans for her to resign or be expelled. Even so, she was limited to working on the periphery of the Legislature.... After a jury in Becker County convicted Ms. Mitchell on Friday of two felony charges, legislative leaders from both parties said they expected her to resign. Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, is expected to call a special election in the district, which is considered solidly Democratic.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Texas Senate Race. Patrick Svitek & Molly Hennessy-Fiske of the Washington Post: “Firebrand Texas Republican Ken Paxton’s long record of political resilience ... faces a new test after his wife filed for divorce and accused him of adultery, jolting a contentious primary for the U.S. Senate. The race, seen as one of the biggest GOP primaries of the midterms, was already dramatic, with a longtime incumbent, John Cornyn, fighting for his political life against Paxton, the state attorney general styling himself as more loyal to ... Donald Trump. Now, Cornyn and his allies are bringing up the divorce filing as he runs against Paxton, and some Paxton backers are rethinking their support.... The divorce filing, which revived allegations of infidelity against Paxton, added a new potential obstacle to a political career that has survived securities fraud charges, as well as an impeachment trial in the state Senate related to a federal investigation of whistleblower allegations of misconduct that included bribery and abuse of office.... Cornyn ... [called Paxton] an 'onion' because 'every time you peel back one layer of corruption, there’s something beneath.'”

~~~~~~~~~~

Israel/Palestine. Patrick Kingsley of the New York Times: “For a year and a half, experts have warned that Israel’s failure to plan for a power transition in Gaza would lead to anarchy, make it harder to deliver aid and stymie efforts to defeat Hamas. A sequence of shootings in Gaza over the weekend — one near Gaza’s southern border, another at its northern edge — have highlighted the accuracy of those predictions. On Saturday, Israeli soldiers opened fire on civilians near a food distribution site run by Israeli-backed private contractors. On Sunday, Israeli soldiers opened fire on civilians as crowds gathered near a convoy of food trucks sent by the United Nations toward areas controlled by Hamas.... Both aid systems are piecemeal responses to a failure by Israel to make detailed plans for a transition of power in Gaza, according to analysts and experts on aid distribution.... Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has also repeatedly decided against creating a system of transitional governance.... In particular, he has prevented the return of the Palestinian Authority, which governed the territory until Hamas seized power in 2007.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Monday
Jul212025

The Conversation -- July 21, 2025

Jeremy Barr of the Washington Post: “Three liberal senators want to know whether there is any truth to ... Donald Trump’s claim that Paramount is actually paying him about $32 million to settle his lawsuit against the company, double what was announced by the CBS parent company.... Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts), Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) and Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) sent a letter Monday morning to the company’s chief executive, David Ellison, asking him to address Trump’s claims of a side deal.... The senators also reiterated their concern that Paramount — and its would-be owner, Skydance — could be seen to have bribed Trump to receive a go-ahead from the Federal Communications Commission to consummate its merger. The senators pressed Ellison, who was photographed in April with Trump, to reveal whether he has discussed the merger with him and whether he has agreed to 'make changes to Skydance’s content or Paramount’s or CBS’s content at the request of the Trump administration.'”

Shawn Hubler & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: “Pentagon officials will begin withdrawing 700 active-duty Marines who were sent to Los Angeles last month, the latest scaling back of the Trump administration’s contentious military deployment in Southern California. The withdrawal of the Marines follows the departure of nearly 2,000 California National Guard soldiers and a smaller contingent of about 150 specialized Guard firefighters. The troops had been dispatched to Los Angeles by President Trump starting on June 7, after protests erupted there over immigration raids. More than half will now have been ordered back to base; an 1,892-member brigade of military police remains. The Pentagon’s chief spokesman, Sean Parnell, framed the pullout as the natural closure of a successful military response that was needed to quell civil unrest in the nation’s second-largest city.... Democratic leaders in California have accused the Trump administration of provoking the protests by sending masked federal agents to carwashes and other sites to detain immigrants, and then using the subsequent public outrage over the raids as a pretext for military action. Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles has compared the deployment to an 'armed occupation,' and Gov. Gavin Newsom has condemned it as 'a solution right now in search of a problem.' Both have called for the removal of all the deployed troops.”

Kenneth Chang of the Washington Post: “A public letter from NASA employees on Monday urges leaders of the space agency not to carry out deep cuts sought by the Trump administration.... It is addressed to Sean Duffy, the secretary of transportation, whom ... [Donald] Trump appointed this month as acting NASA administrator. Cuts to NASA programs have been arbitrary and in defiance of priorities set by Congress, the NASA employees said.... Prominent scientists outside of NASA, including 20 Nobel Prize winners, also offered their names in support.... Upheaval within NASA continued on Monday, when Makenzie Lystrup, director of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., announced she was 'stepping aside' on Aug. 1.”

Alan Blinder of the New York Times: “A federal judge appeared deeply skeptical on Monday of the Trump administration’s efforts to strip Harvard University of billions of dollars in research funding, suggesting the school might prevail in its legal battle against the government. Judge Allison D. Burroughs did not issue a ruling during a crucial hearing, which lasted more than two hours in her courtroom in Boston. But she did seem receptive to Harvard’s arguments, as both the school and the government sought to have the case decided in their favor without a trial. The judge unleashed a barrage of pointed questions at the lone Justice Department lawyer. She demanded to know, for instance, how the administration could reasonably tie withdrawal of medical research funding to concerns about the civil rights of Jewish people. And she appeared bothered by the administration’s hurried approach to attacking Harvard’s research funding, suggesting there were potentially  'staggering' constitutional consequences if the government could punish a university without due process.”

Mitch Smith of the New York Times: “A Minnesota state senator who was convicted of burglary said on Monday that she would resign from the Legislature by Aug. 4. Her departure would leave the chamber with equal numbers of Democrats and Republicans until a special election can be held to fill her seat and break the tie. By stepping down, Senator Nicole Mitchell, a Democrat, is likely to avoid the possibility of being removed from office.... Ms. Mitchell was arrested in April 2024 and accused of breaking into her stepmother’s home. She maintained her innocence after her arrest, and for more than a year resisted calls by Republicans for her to resign or be expelled. Even so, she was limited to working on the periphery of the Legislature.... After a jury in Becker County convicted Ms. Mitchell on Friday of two felony charges, legislative leaders from both parties said they expected her to resign. Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, is expected to call a special election in the district, which is considered solidly Democratic.”

Patrick Kingsley of the New York Times: “For a year and a half, experts have warned that Israel’s failure to plan for a power transition in Gaza would lead to anarchy, make it harder to deliver aid and stymie efforts to defeat Hamas. A sequence of shootings in Gaza over the weekend — one near Gaza’s southern border, another at its northern edge — have highlighted the accuracy of those predictions. On Saturday, Israeli soldiers opened fire on civilians near a food distribution site run by Israeli-backed private contractors. On Sunday, Israeli soldiers opened fire on civilians as crowds gathered near a convoy of food trucks sent by the United Nations toward areas controlled by Hamas.... Both aid systems are piecemeal responses to a failure by Israel to make detailed plans for a transition of power in Gaza, according to analysts and experts on aid distribution.... Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has also repeatedly decided against creating a system of transitional governance.... In particular, he has prevented the return of the Palestinian Authority, which governed the territory until Hamas seized power in 2007.”

~~~~~~~~~~

“Trump: Making America Alone Again.” Margaret MacMillan in Foreign Affairs: “... it’s hard to think of a case in which the leader of a major alliance has so casually and brutally cast aside allies that, for the most part, have been dependable.... The striking lack of historical precedents for such behavior does not suggest a clever Machiavellian policy to enhance American power; rather, it shows a United States acting against its own interests in bewildering fashion, undermining one of the key sources of that power. And this comes at a time when American global leadership and economic and technological dominance are already under growing pressure from China and other major rivals.... Alliances are hard work: their management requires patience, forbearance, skill, and ... repeated tending.... Publicly chastising allies on their supposed faults, as Vice President JD Vance did with the Europeans at the Munich Security Conference in February, barking out orders and insults on social media, as the president does almost daily ... only stores up resentments and makes future personal relations more difficult.” ~~~

~~~ Trump: Making Europe Great Again. Jeanna Smialek of the New York Times: Donald “Trump’s pledge to 'Make America Great Again' ... is bringing Europeans together again. The European Union was in bad shape at the start of the first Trump administration. Public trust in the bloc was at a historic low, Britain had just voted to leave, and the European economy was struggling to recover from the global financial crisis, which had set off a series of debt-related meltdowns across the continent. But things slowly started to improve from around 2016. In recent months, sentiment around the European Union has picked up further. Trust ratings are approaching a two-decade high. E.U. leaders are striking trade deals with fast-growing economies like Indonesia, standing up a defense plan that has garnered partnerships with nations including Canada, and even Britain recently struck a deal to reset relations.” And Putin is helping, too!

There is a world of global trade that is being built excluding the U.S. -- Sebastian Breteau, a retail business auditor ~~~ 

~~~ David Lynch of the Washington Post: “Major U.S. corporations and trading partners are scrambling to adapt to a new global economy, even as ... Donald Trump mulls the imposition of historic tariffs in less than two weeks.... Stung by Trump’s unpredictable demands, close U.S. allies including those in Europe are trying to develop alternative trade links that skirt the U.S. market.... Taxes on U.S. imports will likely stay much higher than they have been for several decades. And the American role in the global economy is undergoing a profound change, with consequences for the rest of the world.... At this early date, the tangible gains [from Trump's economic regimen] have been muted. Spending on new factories, which soared under the Biden administration, has fallen in five of the past six months, according to the Census Bureau. Manufacturing employment also is down slightly....”

Ben Bernanke & Janet Yellen in a New York Times op-ed: “As former chairs of the Federal Reserve, we know from our experiences and our reading of history that the ability of the central bank to act independently is essential for its effective stewardship of the economy. Recent attempts to compromise that independence, including the president’s demands for a radical reduction in interest rates and his threats to fire its chair, Jerome Powell, if the Fed does not comply, risk lasting and serious economic harm. They undermine not only Mr. Powell but also all future chairs and, indeed, the credibility of the central bank itself.”

Frank Kendall, former Secretary of the Air Force, in a New York Times op-ed: “Fear is the universal tool of authoritarians.... [Donald] Trump does not accept dissent and is using fear to try to suppress it.... The fear in the Pentagon today is palpable.... Both the targeted removals of senior military leaders and the mass firings of members of our federal civil service that are taking place are unprecedented and clearly designed to eliminate dissent, replace professionals with political loyalists and create a climate of fear.... The administration has threatened prosecutions against former government officials and private citizens. It has threatened companies with the loss of government contracts and threatened nonprofit organizations across the country with cuts to funding. This climate of menace and apprehension extends to companies’ willingness to employ or associate with those who criticize Mr. Trump or his administration. I am one of those people.... Mr. Trump’s use of fear as a weapon has been most pronounced with undocumented immigrants and communities of immigrants more broadly.”

Mike Baker & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: In 1996, Maria Farmer complained to New York police and to the F.B.I. about being assaulted by Jeffrey Epstein & Ghislaine Maxwell. She repeated her complaints -- which included one involving her sister when the sister was a teenager -- in 2006. She described one incident in which Mr. Trump intimidated her and “hovered over her,” but did not assault her after Mr. Epstein told him, “No, no. She’s not here for you.” “In interviews this week about what she told the authorities, Ms. Farmer said she had no evidence of criminal wrongdoing by Mr. Epstein’s associates. But she said she was alarmed by what she saw as Mr. Epstein’s pattern of pursuing girls and young women while building friendships with prominent people, including [Donald] Trump and President Bill Clinton.... The story of Ms. Farmer’s efforts to call law enforcement attention to Mr. Epstein and his circle shows how the case files could contain material that is embarrassing or politically problematic to Mr. Trump, even if it is largely extraneous to Mr. Epstein’s crimes and was never fully investigated or corroborated.” The link is a gift link. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Benjamin Wittes of Lawfare on the colossal stupidity of suing the Wall Street Journal for publishing a story the plaintiff knows to be true. “Trump’s conduct throughout the recent flare-up over the Epstein case is so bizarre that I can only understand it as reflecting fear on his part — panic, really — that something is going to come out. Ironically, there’s no surer way to make certain that it does than to sue a newspaper over a document the president knows to be real.” MB: Wittes claims in his essay that Trump dropped his frivolous lawsuit against the Des Moines Register. That's misleading. As the Washington Post reported (July 1), “Lawyers for ... Donald Trump on Monday filed a motion to drop his federal lawsuit against longtime Iowa pollster J. Ann Selzer and the Des Moines Register newspaper, and refiled the suit in an Iowa state court.”

Here is Donald Trump's latest attempt to divert attention from his Epstein debacle, this one abusing the power of his office and aiming directly at his bro base: ~~~

Trump Insists D.C. Team Revert to Racist Name. Daniel Trotta of Reuters: "...  Donald Trump threatened on Sunday to interfere with a deal to build a new football stadium in Washington, D.C., unless the local NFL team, now known as the Commanders, changes its name back to Redskins. The American football team dropped the name Redskins in 2020 after decades of criticism that it was a racial slur with links to the U.S. genocide of the Indigenous population.... 'I may put a restriction on them that if they don’t change the name back to the original "Washington Redskins," and get rid of the ridiculous moniker, "Washington Commanders," I won’t make a deal for them to build a Stadium in Washington,' Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform." Trump also wants the Cleveland Guardians to change their name back to "Cleveland Indians." The New York Times story is here. ~~~

~~~ More distraction, arguably also steeped in racism: ~~~

~~~ Joe Sommerlad of the Independent: “Donald Trump has posted a bizarre AI video of former president Barack Obama being arrested and thrown in jail. Trump ... posted the TikTok clip on his Truth Social platform on Sunday in which the Democrat is seen declaring in a rally speech that 'no one is above the law.' He is then seen being handcuffed by law enforcement during an Oval Office sitdown with a grinning Trump, created using real footage of the two men meeting at the White House in November 2016.... The Democrat is then led away and subsequently seen wearing an orange jumpsuit in a federal prison.... Trump appears to have been responding to comments made by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who ... accused Obama of orchestrating a 'years-long coup' to keep Trump from the White House.... The president posted about Gabbard’s claim 17 times over the weekend, drawing accusations that he was attempting to shift the national conversation away from his past relationship with [Jeffrey] Epstein....” ~~~

~~~ BUT. In Trump's version of events, he doesn't need an Epstein distraction, because the "Epstein Hoax" is making him even more popular. ~~~

~~~ Joe DePaulo of Mediaite: “... Donald Trump is boasting that his poll numbers have gone up 'significantly' amid what he’s calling the 'Jeffrey Epstein Hoax.' In a post to Truth Social on Sunday, the president crowed about his latest approval ratings and them chalked up to the Epstein story — despite polls showing widespread disapproval of his administration’s handling of the probe. 'My Poll Numbers within the Republican Party, and MAGA, have gone up, significantly, since the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax was exposed by the Radical Left Democrats and, just plain “troublemakers,”' Trump wrote. 'They have hit 90%, 92%, 93%, and 95%, in various polls, and are all Republican Party records. The General Election numbers are my highest, EVER! People like Strong Borders, and all of the many other things I have done. GOD BLESS AMERICA. MAGA!' Trump’s claims were largely backed up by CNN data guru Harry Enten on Thursday — although Enten’s dive into the Republican numbers shows Trump might have inflated them just a tad.... However..., Trump’s numbers with broader electorate are as low as they have been at any point in his second term.” ~~~

~~~ MAGA Reverts to Form. Erica Green of the New York Times: “... when The Wall Street Journal published a story detailing a decades-old letter with a lewd drawing that Mr. Trump allegedly sent Mr. Epstein..., Mr. Trump turned one of the most fractious moments for his base into one of the most unifying by tapping into other MAGA grievances: the deep mistrust of mainstream media, the disdain for Rupert Murdoch and the belief that the president had been unfairly persecuted by his political foes. Almost immediately, many of those who had been critical of the administration’s handling of the Epstein case cheered the president on as he vehemently denied the claims, sued The Journal and ordered his attorney general to seek the release of more information.”

On substantive matters, Donald Trump is the worst excuse for a president in U.S. history. He is cruel, corrupt, crass, ignorant and dictatorial. On unimportant matters, he is the saddest excuse for a president in U.S. history. ~~~

     ~~~ Gilding the Oval. Matt Stopera of BuzzFeed, published by the Huffington Post: "Donald Trump has completely transformed the Oval Office into his own gaudy, gold fantasy land.... 'It's like the Dollar Tree version of Versailles,' one person joked." Do click on the link. Stopera has posted quite a few photos, pointing out all the new golden plastic. 

Constitutional Failure. Justin Jouvenal of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump and his appointees have been accused of flouting courts in a third of the more than 160 lawsuits against the administration in which a judge has issued a substantive ruling, a Washington Post analysis has found, suggesting widespread noncompliance with America’s legal system. Plaintiffs say Justice Department lawyers and the agencies they represent are snubbing rulings, providing false information, failing to turn over evidence, quietly working around court orders and inventing pretexts to carry out actions that have been blocked. Judges appointed by presidents of both parties have often agreed. None have taken punitive action to try to force compliance, however, allowing the administration’s defiance of orders to go on for weeks or even months in some instances. Outside legal analysts say courts typically are slow to begin contempt proceedings for noncompliance, especially while their rulings are under appeal.  Judges also are likely to be concerned, analysts say, that the U.S. Marshals Service — whose director is appointed by the president — might not serve subpoenas or take recalcitrant government officials into custody if ordered to by the courts.”

A Journalist in Trump's Purgatory. George Chidi of the Guardian: “Prosecutors dropped the last remaining charges against Atlanta-area journalist Mario Guevara last week after he was arrested while livestreaming a protest in June. But the influential Salvadorian reporter remains penned up in a south Georgia detention center, fending off a deportation case, jail house extortionists and despair, people familiar with his situation told the Guardian. Donald Trump’s administration has been extreme in unprecedented ways to undocumented immigrants. But Guevara’s treatment is a special case. Shuttled between five jail cells in Georgia since his arrest while covering the 'No Kings Day' protests, the 20-plus-years veteran journalist’s sin was to document the undocumented and the way Trump’s agents have been hunting them down. Today, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, he’s the only reporter in the United States sleeping in a prison cell for doing his job.... Guevara is arguably the most-watched journalist covering Ice operations in the United States, a story that the English-language media had largely been missing, [Jerry] Gonzales [of GALEO Latino Community Development Fund] said.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

The president is the most maligned and attacked political figure in the history of American politics..., but he’s also the most resilient. And you see at the same time, his approval ratings are skyrocketing. CNN had a story, I think, a day or two ago. He was at 90 percent approval rating. There’s never been a president that high. -- Speaker Mike Johnson, lying on CNBC last week ~~~

~~~ Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: “Overall, according to the Strength in Numbers presidential approval average, 42.6 percent of Americans approve of the president’s performance while 53.5 percent disapprove, for a net negative of -10.9 points, a low for his second term so far.... The House speaker’s assertion that Trump was at a '90 percent approval rating' is the kind of falsehood you might hear from authoritarian state media. It is a servile display of allegiance as much as it is an attempt to mislead viewers. It’s Johnson telling Trump he is his man.... To tell such egregious lies for the approval of some higher authority is to prostrate yourself — to show ... your lack of self-respect. This becomes all the more egregious when one considers that Mike Johnson, as speaker of the House of Representatives, is more an equal to the president, in the American constitutional order, than he is a subordinate. He should have the dignity, at least, to act as a peer and not a supplicant.”

     ~~~ MB Note/Update: The CNN poll, as Joe DePaulo of Mediaite notes in the story linked above, was a poll of self-identified Republicans. According to Gallup's most recent polling, only 28 percent of Americans say they are Republicans. So that's (nearly) 90 percent of about 28 percent of Americans, Mikey. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The Speaker has not only a duty to demonstrate that he leads a co-equal branch of the federal government, he also has an obligation to stand up for -- to speak for -- the men and women of the House of Representatives. The House is the body that by law and in fact most directly represents the people in this "government of the people." By subordinating himself to the president*, by grovelling to him, Johnson demeans every member of the House, and by extension, every American citizen whom they represent. Johnson's paradox is that he is so determined to keep his job that he has opted not to do it. 

 The Climate Has Changed, and We Have Not. Sarah Kaplan, et al., of the Washington Post: “From last year’s disaster in Asheville to this month’s catastrophic floods in Central Texas, the world has entered a new era of rainfall supercharged by climate change, rendering existing response plans inadequate.... The Post compared the response to Helene in western North Carolina with that of Florida’s Gulf Coast, where the storm hit first.... The fact that many North Carolinians remained in harm’s way ... resulted from a cascade of decisions all stemming from the mistaken assumption that hurricanes are mainly a coastal threat.... As Helene bore down on the Gulf Coast, years of investment and experience equipped officials there to take decisive action, issuing mandatory evacuation orders.... But most counties in western North Carolina ... lack the most basic tool: flood evacuation plans.... Though the National Weather Service correctly predicted that the flooding would be deadly, the warnings from local authorities were not forceful or specific enough to sway residents....”

 Julien Berman of the Washington Post: “In the early 20th century, regardless of your family’s income, you could be fairly confident that enrolling in college would provide a solid bump to your wages a few years down the line. And back then, the returns were the same for both rich and poor students. That’s no longer the case. Wealthy college-goers now earn a premium nearly three times larger than the one earned by low-income students, according to economists Zachary Bleemer and Sarah Quincy.... For low-income students, those returns are half as large as they once were. In other words, higher education has become regressive, widening class divisions by delivering far greater returns to wealthy students than to their low-income peers. The primary reason for the shift: a decades-long policy failure that funneled poor students away from four-year research universities and into two-year community colleges and for-profit institutions.”

Marie: I'm not a fan of James Carville's nor of the "Democrats in disarray" theme song he likes to sing. But I do think in his New York Times op-ed, Carville hits many of the right notes.

Alex Horton of the Washington Post: “A passenger jet landing in North Dakota performed a 'go-around' to avoid colliding with an Air Force B-52, according to the commercial pilot’s comments posted to social media and the airline involved in the incident. SkyWest Flight 3788, acting as a Delta connection between Minneapolis to Minot, North Dakota, was cleared by the tower for landing on Friday, the airline said in a statement. But the pilot 'performed a go-around when another aircraft became visible in their flight path,' said SkyWest, which is investigating the incident. Air Force officials did not provide details of the incident, but they did say that a hulking B-52 bomber was performing a flyover at the North Dakota State Fair, which took place in Minot, home to a commercial airport and an Air Force base.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Israel/Palestine. Aaron Boxerman, et al., of the New York Times: “Israeli forces killed and wounded dozens of Palestinians on Sunday in the northern Gaza Strip, after crowds gathered near a crossing from Israel to try to seize aid from United Nations trucks entering the enclave, according to the Gaza health ministry and health workers. The episode was the latest in a string of deadly shootings as hunger and desperation have gripped Palestinians in Gaza during Israel’s nearly two-year campaign against Hamas. The latest attack took place near the Zikim crossing between the Gaza Strip and Israel. More than 60 people were killed while seeking aid in northern Gaza on Sunday, according to the health ministry and Mohammad Abu Salmiya, the director of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.... At least 32 people were killed on Saturday after Israeli soldiers began shooting near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation site in southern Gaza, according to the Gaza health ministry.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Wafaa Shurafa, et al., of the AP: “Gaza saw its deadliest day yet for aid-seekers in over 21 months of war as at least 85 Palestinians were killed while trying to reach food on Sunday, the territory’s Health Ministry said. There was new alarm as Israel’s military issued evacuation orders for parts of central Gaza, one of the few areas where it has rarely operated with ground troops and where many international organizations trying to distribute aid are located.”

Japan. Martin Fackler, et al., of the New York Times: “Japan’s long-governing Liberal Democratic Party suffered a defeat in parliamentary elections on Sunday that saw new right-wing populist groups make gains, heralding what could be a tectonic shift in what has been one of the world’s most stable democracies. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba vowed to stay on after his Liberal Democrats and their coalition partner lost 19 of their 66 seats that were up for re-election, depriving them of control of the less powerful Upper House. But he is facing calls to step down after the setback left the Liberal Democrats, who have led Japan for all but five of the last 70 years, a minority party in both chambers of the Diet, the country’s Parliament. Mr. Ishiba and his party failed to convince enough voters that they could resolve a host of challenges that included rising prices of staples like rice, tariff talks with the United States and the growing burden that supporting Japan’s aging population has placed on working-age people.”

Ukraine/Russia War. Andrew Kramer of the New York Times: “Russia overnight Sunday to Monday fired the latest in a series of huge missile and exploding drone barrages in Ukraine that have steadily escalated in recent months even as cease-fire talks began in the spring. At least one person was killed and several were injured in Kyiv, the capital.... In Kyiv, the engines of Russian exploding drones flying over the city were heard nearly continuously from after midnight until first light, interspersed with dozens of explosions. The authorities reported fires in four neighborhoods and one fatality.... While Kyiv has long been a target of Russian aerial assaults, recent attacks have also targeted western Ukrainian cities that until recently were havens from the worst violence of the war. Western Ukraine is also a center of military logistics for funneling Western weapons to Ukraine’s Army. The mayor of Ivano-Frankivsk, a city near the borders with Romania, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland, reported the most intensive strikes of the war early Monday, with missiles and exploding drones.”

~~~ Constant Méheut of the New York Times: “Ukraine has been ramping up domestic arms production significantly, unable to rely as heavily as it once did on an increasingly uncertain supply of weapons from its allies.... [Donald] Trump’s inconsistent support for Ukraine has called into question the continued backing of the United States, Kyiv’s biggest arms supplier.... Rather than pleading primarily for arms, as it did early in the war, Ukraine is increasingly asking for the money to build its own weapons.... Now, it produces about 40 percent of the weapons used at the front, according to President Volodymyr Zelensky, and it is looking to increase that amount sharply. The most striking example of this growing self-reliance is the use of drones, now omnipresent on the battlefield and produced almost entirely in Ukraine. 'This does not bring peace of mind, but it does provide greater moral confidence that we will not be left empty-handed,' Mr. Zelensky said in February of Ukraine’s booming defense industry.”

News Ledes

New York Times: “William L. Clay, who became the first African-American elected to the House of Representatives from Missouri, co-founded the Congressional Black Caucus and forcefully promoted the interests of poor people in St. Louis and beyond in his 32 years on Capitol Hill, died on Thursday in Adelphi, Md. He was 94.” 

New York Times: “Malcolm-Jamal Warner, the actor who rose to fame as a teenager playing Theo Huxtable on 'The Cosby Show' in the mid-1980s, died in Costa Rica on Sunday. He was 54. Warner drowned while swimming at a beach on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica, The Associated Press reported, citing the country’s Judicial Investigation Department.”