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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.

Tuesday
Jul082025

The Conversation -- July 8, 2025

Abbie VanSickle of the New York Times: “The Trump administration can move forward with plans to slash the federal work force and dismantle federal agencies, the Supreme Court announced on Tuesday. The decision could result in job losses for tens of thousands of employees at agencies including the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, State and Treasury. The order, which lifted a lower court's ruling that had blocked mass layoffs, was unsigned and did not include a vote count. That is typical in such emergency applications. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote a public dissent. The case represents a key test of the extent of ... [Donald] Trump's power to reorganize the government without input from Congress. The justices' order is technically only temporary, guiding how the administration can proceed while the challenge to Mr. Trump's plans continues. But in practice, it means he is free to pursue his restructuring plans, even if judges later determine that they exceed presidential power. In a two-paragraph order, the justices wrote that they had concluded that 'the government is likely to succeed on its argument' that [Mr.] Trump's executive order announcing plans to downsize the government was legal. The justices added that they had not expressed a view on the legality of specific layoffs or reorganizations by the Trump administration.

"In a 15-page dissent, Justice Jackson sharply criticized the court's decision, calling it 'not only truly unfortunate but also hubristic and senseless' and arguing that it undercut the authority of trial court judges. 'It is not this court's role to swoop in and second-guess a lower court's factual findings,' Justice Jackson wrote, echoing her dissent last month in the case limiting the power of lower-court judges to block administration policies nationwide." See commentary by Ken. W. & Akhilleus below.

Tom Nichols of the Atlantic: "Who's running America's foreign and defense policies? It's not the president, at least not on most issues. Trump's interest in foreign policy, as with so many other topics, is capricious and episodic at best. He flits away from losing issues, leaving them to others.... It's not Marco Rubio -- ... he seems to have little power in this White House. It's not [Pete] Hegseth, who can't seem to ... deliver a real briefing that isn't just a fawning performance for Trump.... The principals are either incompetent or detached from most of the policy making, and so decisions are being made at lower levels without much guidance from above.... Ironically, allowing various lower offices to fill the policy void empowers the unknown appointees whom MAGA world claims to hate in other administrations.... No one in Trump's administration has any incentive to fix this, because serious changes would be admissions of failure.... Less than a year into his second term, it's clear that the goals of Trump's 2024 run for the presidency were, in order of importance, to keep Trump out of prison, to exact revenge on Trump's enemies, and to allow Trump and his allies to enrich themselves by every possible means." Thank you to laura h. for this gift link. MB: The Atlantic was having trouble loading the page Tuesday afternoon, but after about 10 minutes, I was able to get it. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: In a real presidential administration, the top people get briefings, they meet with the president and discuss options, some push their own agendas and points-of-view, the president considers their input & directs them on what to do. According to Nichols, that usual deliberative process isn't happening. Trump's lack of engagement and his Cabinet members' lack of status are letting the "deep state" make most of the foreign policy decisions. Until something causes Trump to take notice. At any time, Trump can blow up deep-state plans and policies, as he did Monday when he reversed the recently-announced Pentagon decision to pause weapons deliveries to Ukraine. So chaos reigns. Trump's deep state cannot manage his brain-farts, and Little Marco & Drunk Pete are afraid to do so. We have a blustery, big-stick, occasional foreign "policy" that makes no sense except insofar as it may satisfy the short-term personal advantage of Donald Trump.

Contributor Ken W. is confused. He was certain Marco Rubio was AI-generated. Then comes this: ~~~

     ~~~ John Hudson & Hannah Natanson of the Washington Post: "An impostor pretending to be Secretary of State Marco Rubio contacted foreign ministers, a U.S. governor and a member of Congress by sending them voice and text messages that mimic Rubio's voice and writing style using artificial intelligence-powered software, according to a senior U.S. official and a State Department cable obtained by The Washington Post.... Using both text messaging and the encrypted messaging app Signal, which the Trump administration uses extensively, the impostor 'contacted at least five non-Department individuals, including three foreign ministers, a U.S. governor, and a U.S. member of Congress,' said the cable, dated July 3.... The State Department responded that it would 'carry out a thorough investigation and continue to implement safeguards to prevent this from happening in the future.'... 'This is precisely why you shouldn't use Signal or other insecure channels for official government business,' ... said Hany Farid... [of] the University of California at Berkeley." MB: If the person responsible for this hoax has created a Little Marco who is more humane and decent than our current Secretary of State, then I'm all for it; give him/her a medal, not a felony indictment for impersonating a federal official.

~~~~~~~~~~

Ana Swanson & Tony Romm of the New York Times: Donald "Trump revived his trade war threat with more than a dozen countries on Monday, telling them that they would face steep tariffs on their exports as of Aug. 1 unless they agreed to trade deals by then. The president targeted two of America's closest foreign allies, Japan and South Korea, as well as Malaysia, Indonesia and South Africa. Mr. Trump also officially extended the timeline for dozens of other countries to agree to deals with the United States or face tariffs, signing an executive order on Monday afternoon delaying the stiff levies that were supposed to snap back on July 9. Markets dropped as investors assessed the prospect of more trade conflict with some of America's closest allies and largest trading partners. The S&P 500 ended Monday down 0.8 percent. Other major indexes also fell." The AP's report is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Gosh, that's funny. It was just Sunday that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was arguing that August 1 was not a new arbitrary deadline. Now it seems it is. Of course these tariffs are not taxes on Japan and South Korea, as Trump repeatedly claims. They are taxes on American consumers who pay them in the form of higher costs of both products made in other countries and in U.S.-made products that are similar to products made in other countries. When Trump boasts about the supposed big increases in federal revenue coming from the tariffs, those increases in U.S. Treasury revenue are coming directly from American importers/retailers and indirectly from consumers.

The New York Times' live updates of developments in the Texas flooding catastrophe are here: "At least 84 of those killed in the floods were in Kerr County. The other 20 were from nearby counties: Seven in Travis County, six in Kendall County, four in Burnet County, two in Williamson County and one in Tom Green County.... Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, called for an investigation into the administration's efforts to shrink the National Weather Service.... Former Weather Service officials said that staffing shortages had left gaps in communication with the local authorities about flash flood warnings.Officials in Kerr County, where most of the deaths occurred, said residents had previously resisted the expense of a flood warning system. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick [R] of Texas called for sirens to be installed by next summer. Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, said there would be a 'careful examination of what happened' to limit future deaths from flash flooding."

Shawn McCreesh of the New York Times: "Unlike his predecessors, Mr. Trump has not hesitated to lean into partisanship during moments of major natural disasters.... When a hurricane hit North Carolina last year..., [Mr.] Trump claimed without evidence that the Biden administration was avoiding helping residents in Republican areas. When wildfires burned through Los Angeles earlier this year, Mr. Trump excoriated local and state Democrats for the calamity, making false assertions about water use policy. But after a catastrophic flood that tore through Texas last week, leaving at least 100 dead, Mr. Trump cautioned against casting blame. 'This is a hundred-year catastrophe, and it's just so horrible to watch,' the president told reporters Sunday as he left his Bedminster golf course.... He appeared close to pointing the finger at former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. before stopping short: 'That was really the Biden setup. That was not our setup. But I wouldn’t blame Biden for it either.'... The extent of the federal response on the ground remains unclear, however. Mr. Trump has repeatedly proclaimed his intention to disband the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which coordinates the federal response to natural disasters, calling it inefficient and bungling." ~~~

~~~ There's one thing you can count on when Texans experience a natural disaster: ~~~

~~~ Ted Cruz Will Go on Vacation Somewhere Else in the World. Rhian Lubin of the Independent: "Texas Senator Ted Cruz was overseas again when devastating floods struck his home state, but this time he promptly got on a flight home, his team claimed. Cruz was in Greece visiting the Parthenon in the capital city of Athens this weekend as disaster hit in Texas, reminiscent of when he went to Cancun, Mexico, in 2021 during one of the worst winter storms in the state's recent history.... Cruz's vacation was first reported by The Daily Beast after an anonymous eyewitness told the outlet they spotted him at the Parthenon around 6 p.m. local time/11 a.m. ET Saturday. '20 kids dead in Texas and you take a vacation?' the eyewitness claimed they asked the senator, who 'sort of grunted and walked on.'... According to The Daily Beast, Cruz arrived in Greece on July 3. On July 2, the Texas Division of Emergency Management announced it was activating state emergency response 'in anticipation of increased threats of flooding in parts of West and Central Texas.'..." MB: To be clear, Theodoros Cruzophopoulos went to Greece after the state first sent out emergency flooding notifications, and he took his family to visit the Parthenon after many reports of the devastation caused by the flooding aired. That is, if Ted wanted to see some ruins, he could find them way closer to home -- specifically, along the banks of the Guadelupe River. ~~~

     ~~~ Update: According to the NYT liveblog, linked above, Cruz did not return 'to respond in person for the first 72 hours of the disaster.'

Luke Broadwater & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: Donald "Trump said on Monday that the United States would send more weapons to Ukraine to help it fend off Russia's invasion, arguing that Moscow's recent assault on Ukrainian cities left him with little choice. Mr. Trump's comments appeared to signal a reversal from the president after his administration paused some arms transfers to the country just last week, raising fears that the United States was retrenching its support. Instead, Mr. Trump said on Monday that he had grown unhappy with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who has frustrated Mr. Trump's hopes to broker a cease-fire.... After [speaking by phone with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday], Mr. Trump spoke positively about supplying additional support to Ukraine, telling reporters on Air Force One that 'we've been helping them, and we'll continue to help them.'" The AP's report is here. ~~~

~~~ Tim Zadorozhnyy of the Kyiv Independent: "... Donald Trump told President Volodymyr Zelensky during a phone call on July 4 that he was not responsible for the suspension of U.S. arms shipments to Ukraine, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on July 7, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter. The suspension of aid, which includes Patriot air defense missiles and precision-guided munitions, has drawn criticism from Kyiv amid an intensifying Russian aerial campaign that has killed and injured hundreds of civilians in recent weeks. According to WSJ, Trump told the Ukrainian president that he had ordered a review of Pentagon munitions stockpiles following last month's U.S. strikes on Iran's nuclear sites, but he did not direct the military to halt weapons deliveries. NBC News reported on July 4 that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth unilaterally halted the shipment to Ukraine on July 2, despite internal Pentagon assessments showing the aid would not compromise U.S. military readiness." ~~~

     ~~~ Gordon Lubold, et al. of NBC News (July 4): "The Defense Department held up a shipment of U.S. weapons for Ukraine this week over what officials said were concerns about its low stockpiles. But an analysis by senior military officers found that the aid package would not jeopardize the American military's own ammunition supplies, according to three U.S. officials. The move to halt the weapons shipment blindsided the State Department, members of Congress, officials in Kyiv and European allies, according to multiple sources.... Suspending the shipment of military aid to Ukraine was a unilateral step by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, according to three congressional aides and a former U.S. official.... It was the third time Hegseth on his own has stopped shipments of aid to Ukraine, the sources said. In the two previous cases, in February and in May, his actions were reversed days later."

Luke Broadwater & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: Donald "Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confronted several high-stakes issues when they met for dinner on Monday night, including the long-term future of Gaza and the prospect of Israel normalizing relations with its Persian Gulf neighbors. But first, they indulged in some self-congratulation. The two celebrated the U.S. airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, and Mr. Netanyahu used the occasion to further ingratiate himself to the American president by telling Mr. Trump he had nominated him for a Nobel Peace Prize. 'He's forging peace, as we speak, in one country in the region after another,' Mr. Netanyahu said, lavishing praise on Mr. Trump, who has long made known his desire for a Nobel Prize. Mr. Trump, for his part, compared his decision to authorize airstrikes on Iran to President Harry S. Truman's decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan during World War II." The Guardian's story is here. ~~~

~~~ Manchild and the Promised Land Visitor. Tom Boggioni of the Raw Story: "In light of Donald Trump's contentious Oval Office meetings with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and South African leader Cyril Ramaphosa, foreign leaders and diplomats are looking for a roadmap for how to deal with Donald Trump when they meet with him privately and before the cameras.... [A CNN] report notes, 'There are signs ahead of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's planned White House visit Monday that even he is looking to avoid any chance of a fight, despite his close relationship with Trump.... According to Gérard Araud, who served as France's ambassador during Trump's first presidency the first rule is, 'You never contradict Trump publicly, because he will lose face and that's something that he can't accept....You should first be profusely grateful. You should really compliment the president. There is a sort of North Korean side in the White House. And you should let Trump really talk and talk.'... [Araud suggested] visitors treat Trump like 'a whimsical and unpredictable child.'..."

The documents filed with the court today show that the administration has not been honest with the court or the American people. -- Skye Perryman of Democracy Forward ~~~

~~~ Who's in Charge? Alan Feuer of the New York Times: "For the past several months, the Trump administration has insisted in court that it has no control over the nearly 140 Venezuelan immigrants it deported to a prison in El Salvador this spring.... Both in filings and at hearings, Trump officials have asserted that because the men are being held by jailers in El Salvador, the Salvadoran government has control over their fate. The administration has repeatedly made that claim to argue that it has no real authority to bring the immigrants back... [to the U.S]. On Monday, however, lawyers for the Venezuelan men produced a document indicating that the government of El Salvador recently told the United Nations that it, in fact, bears no legal responsibility for the men. The document, written in response to a U.N. inquiry examining some of the deportations, also claimed that the Salvadoran government was merely doing the United States" bidding when it accepted the men into its prison system.

"'The actions of the state of El Salvador have been limited to the implementation of a bilateral cooperation mechanism with another state, through which it has facilitated the use of the Salvadoran prison infrastructure for the custody of persons detained within the scope of the justice system and law enforcement of that other state,' the document said. 'In this context... the jurisdiction and legal responsibility for these persons lie exclusively with the competent foreign authorities, by virtue of international agreements signed and in accordance with the principles of sovereignty and international cooperation in criminal matters.' The document was included in a new court filing submitted to Judge James E. Boasberg, who has been hearing a long-running legal case brought by the Venezuelan men in Federal District Court in Washington." MB: I don't think Judge Boasberg will be amused. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Lee Gelert of the ACLU said on MSNBC that the Trump administration appears to have been holding the El Salvador document for three months without turning it over to the court or to the defendants' lawyers despite the discovery requests of defendants' attorneys.

Alan Feuer & Minho Kim of the New York Times: "The Justice Department said on Monday that Trump officials would immediately begin the process of expelling Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia from the country again if he is released from custody next week on charges filed after his wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March. That plan, laid out by a Justice Department lawyer at a hearing in Federal District Court in Maryland, directly contradicted a statement by the White House last month describing the possibility that the administration might re-deport Mr. Abrego Garcia as 'fake news.' At the hearing, Judge Paula Xinis, who is overseeing the original civil case emerging from the wrongful deportation, expressed frustration at the government's shifting statements about its plans to handle Mr. Abrego Garcia. The statements in court by the Justice Department lawyer, Jonathan Guynn, further muddied an already unclear picture of Mr. Abrego Garcia's future after the administration abruptly returned him to the United States last month to face criminal charges. At one point, Judge Xinis compared getting certain answers out of the government to 'nailing Jell-O to a wall.' At another point, she described the 'complete chaos' that had arisen from Mr. Abrego Garcia's being 'caught' between his civil case in Maryland and his criminal case in Federal District Court in Nashville.... Much of the confusion has stemmed from ambiguous and contradictory statements from the Trump administration and from what appears to be dueling views from the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security about how to handle the case." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Abrego Garcia's case is arguably the most high-profile deportation case the Trump administration has "managed" to date in what is supposed to be Trump's "signature" issue and a grave "national emergency." Given all that, one would think that the administration would take extra effort to appear professional, prudent and unified. Instead, they have taken on the serious matter of the future of this young man and his family as if they were all hoping to be the leads in a Three Stooges film. KKKirsti has even got the studio's wardrobe mistress to provide her with a complete set of costumes for her audition.

Devlin Barrett & Matthew Goldstein of the New York Times: "For months, Attorney General Pam Bondi promised the release of documents on the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein that could reveal damaging details, drumming up anticipation over the files, long a source of speculation and conspiracy theories. But on Monday, a memo by the Justice Department undercut her own statements, pouring cold water on baseless claims. It amounted to a catalog of conclusions that affirmed those reached years earlier by investigators, including that Mr. Epstein killed himself while in a Manhattan cell awaiting trial. 'This systematic review revealed no incriminating "client list,"' the memo said. 'There was also no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions. We did not uncover evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties.' 'No further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted,' the memo continued, adding that the work of the Justice Department and the F.B.I. on the records had been thorough.... In February, asked on Fox News about the so-called client list, Ms. Bondi replied, 'It's sitting on my desk right now to review.'" Emphasis added. You might think Pam Blondie is a liar. ~~~

     ~~~ Joe Patrice of Above the Law: "One of two things happened here. Either the Attorney General is currently engaged in covering up a damning client list that would expound upon allegations of the the pedophile sex trafficker's ties to at least some key Trump donors.... Or there never was a client list and Bondi was just bald-faced lying for attention when she explicitly said that it was on her desk.... The former would be a criminal conspiracy run from the highest halls of government. The latter is that the Attorney General exhibits a level of weaponized stupidity that should disqualify her from managing a Chipotle.... The Justice Department is fully untethered from any professional crime-fighting standards.... Epstein was a monster. And the AG treated it as a carnival act." ~~~

     ~~~ Matt Gertz of Media Matters: "... Donald Trump appointed conspiracy-obsessed MAGA media favorites to the highest levels of federal law enforcement, and now those figures are coming under fire from the right-wing fever swamp for failing to confirm their bullshit.... While the Epstein saga is a bit of a sideshow in the grand scheme of things, what it highlights about the underlying dynamics of the MAGA movement is deeply unsettling. It demonstrates that the Trump administration is in hock to some of the most deranged conspiracy theorists imaginable, treating them as among its closest allies and devoting substantial resources to their care and feeding.... One ironic aspect of the Epstein saga is that while MAGA influencers were apparently certain that the Trump administration was going to implicate a wave of prominent individuals in Epstein's sex crimes and, perhaps, his death, there are few figures as prominent with ties as close to Epstein as Trump himself."

Apparently, someone left the cake out in the rain. I don't think that Trump can take it: ~~~

~~~ Tara Copp, et al., of the AP: "Federal officers and National Guard troops fanned out around a mostly empty Los Angeles park in a largely immigrant neighborhood on foot, horseback and military vehicles on Monday for about an hour before abruptly leaving, an operation that local officials said seemed designed to sow fear. The Department of Homeland Security wouldn't say whether anyone had been arrested during the brief operation at MacArthur Park. Federal officials did not respond to requests for comment about why the park was targeted or why the raid ended abruptly.... 'What I saw in the park today looked like a city under siege, under armed occupation,' said Mayor Karen Bass, who showed up at the park alongside activists. She said there were children attending a day camp in the park who were quickly ushered inside to avoid seeing the troops." The New York Times story is here.

A New Record for Trump-RFKJ's HHS: Lena Sun of the Washington Post: "The United States has reached its highest annual measles case tally in 33 years, hitting at least 1,277 confirmed cases across 38 states and the District of Columbia. The milestone marks a public health reversal in defeating a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable disease as the anti-vaccine movement gains strength.... Authorities said at least 155 people have been hospitalized and three people have died of measles-related complications this year." (Also linked yesterday.)

Chris Cameron of the New York Times: "The Department of Veterans Affairs has scaled back its effort to reduce its work force by more than 80,000 people, saying on Monday that it intended to cut nearly 30,000 jobs by the end of September instead. The department effectively abandoned its previous plan to fire tens of thousands of workers as part of ... [Donald] Trump's wide-reaching plan to slash the federal bureaucracy. The new target, outlined in a department news release, would slash a work force that numbered 484,000 earlier this year to about 455,000. Nearly 17,000 employees have already left. Instead of firing workers, the rest of the cuts would be made by offering early retirement or severance payments, along with what the department described as 'normal attrition' -- the small percentage of employees who quit or move to other jobs every year."

Hiroko Tabuchi of the New York Times: "The Trump administration has withdrawn its plan to rewrite a ban on the last type of asbestos still used in the United States. The Biden-era ban was a victory for health advocates who had long fought to prohibit the carcinogenic mineral in all its forms. Last month the Trump administration said it planned to reconsider the asbestos ban, which would have delayed its implementation by several years. But late Monday, it withdrew that filing.... The filing is part of a court case brought by the industry challenging the restrictions. Chrysotile asbestos, known as 'white asbestos,' is banned in more than 50 countries for its link to lung cancer and mesothelioma, a cancer that forms in the linings of internal organs. White asbestos, however, has been imported for use in the United States for roofing materials, textiles and cement. It is also used in gaskets, clutches, brake pads and other automotive parts, as well as in chlorine manufacturing.... The about-face came after a public outcry over plans to reconsider Biden-era restrictions on the carcinogenic material."

David Fahrenthold of the New York Times: "The I.R.S. said on Monday that churches and other houses of worship can endorse political candidates to their congregations, carving out an exemption in a decades-old ban on political activity by tax-exempt nonprofits. The agency made that statement in a court filing intended to settle a lawsuit filed by two Texas churches and an association of Christian broadcasters. The plaintiffs that sued the I.R.S. had previously asked a federal court in Texas to create an even broader exemption -- to rule that all nonprofits, religious and secular, were free to endorse candidates to their members. That would have erased a bedrock idea of American nonprofit law: that tax-exempt groups cannot be used as tools of any campaign. Instead, the I.R.S. agreed to a narrower carveout -- one that experts in nonprofit law said might sharply increase politicking in churches, even though it mainly seemed to formalize what already seemed to be the agency's unspoken policy." The AP's report is here.

Katie Benner of the New York Times: "Planned Parenthood won a temporary injunction on Monday that allows its clinics to continue to receive Medicaid funding for services that are unrelated to abortion. The organization sued the Trump administration earlier on Monday over a new law that essentially bars Planned Parenthood clinics from receiving federal Medicaid payments, claiming that the legislation is an unconstitutional attack on Planned Parenthood's national organization and its locally run health care clinics. The lawsuit, which was filed in Federal District Court in Massachusetts, challenges part of the new domestic policy bill that ... [Donald] Trump signed on Friday. Judge Indira Talwani issued the temporary injunction...." A CBS News story is here.

The other day, Akhilleus pointed out that Trump's megabill will finance enough new secret ICE agents to comprise a private army reporting to Trump. Jason Zengerle has another idea: ~~~

~~~ Jason Zengerle of the New York Times Magazine in the New York Times on "the Ruthless Ambition of Stephen Miller": "Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, who reportedly accompanied Mr. Miller on his visit to ICE headquarters, seems to defer to him. 'It's really Stephen running D.H.S.,' a Trump adviser said. The attorney general, Pam Bondi, is so focused on preparing for and appearing on Fox News that she has essentially ceded control of the Department of Justice to Mr. Miller, making him, according to the conservative legal scholar Edward Whelan, 'the de facto attorney general.' And in a White House where the chief of staff, Susie Wiles, is not well versed or terribly interested in policy..., another Trump adviser said ... Mr. Miller is typically the final word.... With the passage of the big policy bill, ICE will have an even bigger budget to execute Mr. Miller's vision and, in effect, serve as his own private army." The link appears to be a gift link. (Also linked yesterday.)

Garrett Graff: "... it's hard not to look at [Trump's megabill] and fear, most of all, how we're turbo-charging an increasingly lawless regime of immigration enforcement and adding superpowers to America's newly masked secret police.... [Here's why.]... No healthy law enforcement agency can grow quickly. And ICE is far from a healthy law enforcement agency.... When a law enforcement agency at any level grows too rapidly..., hiring standards fall, training is cut short, field training officers end up being too inexperienced to do the right training, and supervisors are too green to know how to enforce policies and procedures well.... The types of people who will be attracted to a job in the wake of Kristi Noem's special-forces cosplay, the eye-popping photo ops at El Salvador's CECOT torture gulag and the Alligator Alcatraz concentration camp are ... specifically attracted by the rough-em-up, masked secret police tactics, no-holds-barred lawlessness that ICE has pursued since January...." DHS isn't ground in rule-of-law considerations the way DOJ enforcement officers are supposed to be.... Trump and his entire administration are increasingly lawless.

Jon Stewart, who was off last week, has a full review of Trump's super-bill: ~~~

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Dan Froomkin of Press Watch: "The sad fact is that there is nothing terribly out of character about the New York Times's decision to publish a deceptive hit piece about New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, based on hacked data supplied by a noted eugenicist to whom they granted anonymity. The newsroom will go to extreme lengths to achieve its primary missions -- and one of them, most assuredly, is to take cheap shots at the left.... Consider everything that was wrong with the article. It's a long list." Froomkin runs down the list. MB: Froomkin, as usual, is excellent. Everything he covers which I already knew about is accurate, IMO. And Froomkim covers some things I didn't know about; for instance, what/who made Krugman decide he'd had enough.

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Russia. Paul Sonne of the New York Times: "Russia's transport minister was found dead from a gunshot wound, the Russian authorities said on Monday, hours after the Kremlin announced he had been relieved of his duties. Law enforcement authorities said they were investigating the death as a possible suicide. The minister, Roman V. Starovoyt, 53, served as governor of the Kursk region for nearly six years before being appointed to the transport post in May 2024. Three months after his promotion, Ukraine forces crossed into the region and seized territory that its military held until earlier this year. The monthslong occupation of Kursk was the first invasion of Russian territory since World War II and a major embarrassment to President Vladimir V. Putin. It set off domestic recriminations that in recent months have gathered steam. The Russian authorities have arrested former officials from Kursk and accused them of embezzling more than $12 million in funds ... during Mr. Starovoyt's tenure as governor." MB: Sounds like a kind of suicide that similar to the kind where Russian politicians jump out of sixth-storey windows. --58--

Monday
Jul072025

The Conversation -- July 7, 2025

The documents filed with the court today show that the administration has not been honest with the court or the American people. -- Skye Perryman of Democracy Forward ~~~

~~~ Who's in Charge? Alan Feuer of the New York Times: "For the past several months, the Trump administration has insisted in court that it has no control over the nearly 140 Venezuelan immigrants it deported to a prison in El Salvador this spring.... Both in filings and at hearings, Trump officials have asserted that because the men are being held by jailers in El Salvador, the Salvadoran government has control over their fate. The administration has repeatedly made that claim to argue that it has no real authority to bring the immigrants back... [to the U.S]. On Monday, however, lawyers for the Venezuelan men produced a document indicating that the government of El Salvador recently told the United Nations that it, in fact, bears no legal responsibility for the men. The document, written in response to a U.N. inquiry examining some of the deportations, also claimed that the Salvadoran government was merely doing the United States' bidding when it accepted the men into its prison system.

"'The actions of the state of El Salvador have been limited to the implementation of a bilateral cooperation mechanism with another state, through which it has facilitated the use of the Salvadoran prison infrastructure for the custody of persons detained within the scope of the justice system and law enforcement of that other state,' the document said. 'In this context... the jurisdiction and legal responsibility for these persons lie exclusively with the competent foreign authorities, by virtue of international agreements signed and in accordance with the principles of sovereignty and international cooperation in criminal matters.' The document was included in a new court filing submitted to Judge James E. Boasberg, who has been hearing a long-running legal case brought by the Venezuelan men in Federal District Court in Washington." MB: I don't think Judge Boasberg will be amused. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Lee Gelert of the ACLU said on MSNBC that the Trump administration appears to have been holding the El Salvador document for three months without turning it over to the court or to the defendants' lawyers despite the discovery requests of defendants' attorneys.

Alan Feuer & Minho Kim of the New York Times: "The Justice Department said on Monday that Trump officials would immediately begin the process of expelling Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia from the country again if he is released from custody next week on charges filed after his wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March. That plan, laid out by a Justice Department lawyer at a hearing in Federal District Court in Maryland, directly contradicted a statement by the White House last month describing the possibility that the administration might re-deport Mr. Abrego Garcia as 'fake news.' At the hearing, Judge Paula Xinis, who is overseeing the original civil case emerging from the wrongful deportation, expressed frustration at the government's shifting statements about its plans to handle Mr. Abrego Garcia. The statements in court by the Justice Department lawyer, Jonathan Guynn, further muddied an already unclear picture of Mr. Abrego Garcia's future after the administration abruptly returned him to the United States last month to face criminal charges. At one point, Judge Xinis compared getting certain answers out of the government to 'nailing Jell-O to a wall.' At another point, she described the 'complete chaos' that had arisen from Mr. Abrego Garcia's being 'caught' between his civil case in Maryland and his criminal case in Federal District Court in Nashville.... Much of the confusion has stemmed from ambiguous and contradictory statements from the Trump administration and from what appears to be dueling views from the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security about how to handle the case." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Abrego Garcia's case is arguably the most high-profile deportation case the Trump administration has "managed" to date in what is supposed to be Trump's "signature" issue and a grave "national emergency." Given all that, one would think that the administration would take extra care to appear professional, prudent and unified. Instead, they have taken on the serious matter of the future of this young man and his family as if they were all hoping to be the leads in a Three Stooges film. KKKirsti has even got the studio's wardrobe mistress to provide her with a complete set of costumes for her audition.

A Coup for Trump-RFKJ's HHS: Lena Sun of the Washington Post: "The United States has reached its highest annual measles case tally in 33 years, hitting at least 1,277 confirmed cases across 38 states and the District of Columbia. The milestone marks a public health reversal in defeating a highly contagious, vaccine-preventable disease as the anti-vaccine movement gains strength.... Authorities said at least 155 people have been hospitalized and three people have died of measles-related complications this year."

Yesterday, Akhilleus pointed out that Trump's megabill will finance enough new secret ICE agents to comprise a private army reporting to Trump. Jason Zengerle has another idea: ~~~

~~~ Jason Zengerle of the New York Times Magazine in the New York Times on "the Ruthless Ambition of Stephen Miller" "Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, who reportedly accompanied Mr. Miller on his visit to ICE headquarters, seems to defer to him. 'It's really Stephen running D.H.S.,' a Trump adviser said. The attorney general, Pam Bondi, is so focused on preparing for and appearing on Fox News that she has essentially ceded control of the Department of Justice to Mr. Miller, making him, according to the conservative legal scholar Edward Whelan, 'the de facto attorney general.' And in a White House where the chief of staff, Susie Wiles, is not well versed or terribly interested in policy..., another Trump adviser said ... Mr. Miller is typically the final word.... With the passage of the big policy bill, ICE will have an even bigger budget to execute Mr. Miller's vision and, in effect, serve as his own private army." The link appears to be a gift link.

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Linda Qiu of the New York Times: "Since retaking office..., [Donald] Trump has issued a pace-setting number of executive actions that have become a hallmark of his approach to governing.... Many reflect Mr. Trump's public messaging. Some repeat nearly verbatim inaccurate claims that have long been a feature of his campaign rallies, news conferences and interviews. Here are a few examples."

David Lynch of the Washington Post: "With only three days remaining before ... Donald Trump's self-imposed July 9 deadline, U.S. and European negotiators continue to haggle over a skeletal trade deal that would defer a resolution of their toughest commercial disputes. The prospective accord, which would spare European goods the 50 percent tariffs that Trump has threatened to impose, is one of a relative handful of deals the administration is set to finalize by Wednesday. Any European bargain might prove modest. But Trump's decision to pursue his goals by ignoring the global trading rules that American leaders helped to write marks a significant break with decades of U.S. policy. Europe and the United States for years were aligned in support of the World Trade Organization's rules-based trading system.... U.S. commitments to the WTO system remain in effect. But the president's unilateral diplomacy ignores them, analysts said." ~~~

~~~ Yes, but Trump is delaying the "deadline." Again. ~~~

     ~~~ Ari Hawkins of Politico: "Tariffs will revert back to their April 2 rates on Aug. 1 for countries that fail to nail down new trade deals with the United States, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday, just three days before the Trump administration's initial July 9 deadline for tariffs to return. Bessent told CNN's 'State of the Union' that the Trump administration would be sending out letters to 100 smaller countries 'saying that if you don't move things along, then on August 1st, you will boomerang back to your April 2nd tariff level.' The announcement effectively pushes back the tariffs that were originally set in April but had been suspended until July 9, a window the Trump administration used to pursue an ambitious round of dealmaking with other countries aimed at reaching deals to stave off the return of tariffs of between 10 and 50 percent on dozens of countries. It comes as Trump administration officials increasingly hint at difficulties in nailing down deals."

Scott Dance of the Washington Post: "Trump's efforts to freeze climate research spending and slash the government's scientific workforce have for months prompted warnings of rippling consequences in years ahead. For many climate scientists, the consequences are already here. With so much uncertainty across scientific agencies and academic research centers, even prominent scientists are hitting dead ends.... More recent administration actions have limited or even wiped access to existing climate science."

More Trump Bull. Meryl Kornfield & Hannah Natanson of the Washington Post: "Over the past four months, the Trump administration has been touting a $5 million visa to wealthy foreigners to get into the United States with lofty promises of an immediate rollout since February. Aboard Air Force One in April..., Donald Trump flashed a laminated, golden prototype to reporters and announced that it would become available 'in about less than two weeks,' while the White House launched a website in June to sign people up to join a waiting list. But in reality, any Trump gold visas are a long way off -- if they can ever be implemented at all. Trump and his aides have repeatedly exaggerated the likelihood that such a program can be implemented under current law, and have made no effort to introduce legislation to make it happen. Immigration attorneys and other legal experts say a president has no power to unilaterally create a new visa category, which would require an act of Congress."

Tyler Pager of the New York Times: Donald "Trump assailed Elon Musk on Sunday night.... 'I am saddened to watch Elon Musk go completely "off the rails," essentially becoming a TRAIN WRECK over the past five weeks,' Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social on Sunday evening. 'He even wants to start a Third Political Party, despite the fact that they have never succeeded in the United States.'"

Donald, Little Marco & Chainsaw Elon Are Killing Millions of People. Daniella Cavalcanti, et al., in the Lancet: "USAID funding has significantly contributed to the reduction in adult and child mortality across low-income and middle-income countries over the past two decades. Our estimates show that, unless the abrupt funding cuts announced and implemented in the first half of 2025 are reversed, a staggering number of avoidable deaths could occur by 2030.... Forecasting models predicted that the current steep funding cuts could result in more than 14 051 ... additional all-age deaths, including 4 537 157 ... in children younger than age 5 years, by 2030." Thanks to RAS for the link.

Ewan Palmer of the Daily Beast, republished by Yahoo! News: "Donald Trump is boasting that his settlement payout from Paramount Global could be worth more than double the agreed cash amount once 'advertising' is factored in. 'We did a deal for about $16 million plus $16 million, or maybe more than that, in advertising,' Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. 'So it's a combination of 16 plus 16 plus. So it's like $32 [million] to maybe $35 million.' The New York Post reported on July 2 that Paramount Global agreed, as part of its settlement in the president's lawsuit against CBS' 60 Minutes over an interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris, to run between $15 million and $20 million worth of pro-Trump ads across its networks once it is acquired by David Ellison's Skydance Media.... However, Paramount Global has denied that the settlement -- which has drawn fierce backlash from CBS News anchors -- included any deal involving ad buys or PSAs." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: If Trump does get free advertising on CBS as part of a settlement for a fake lawsuit, Democrats should get the same. How fake was it? Even Trump's own lawyers thought it was a joke: ~~~

~~~ David Frum of the Atlantic: "Trump's lawsuit [against CBS for editing a '60 Minutes' Kamala Harris interview] was about as meritless as a lawsuit can be.... But ... CBS belongs to a parent corporation with regulatory business before Trump-appointed agencies. Paramount is pursuing an $8 billion merger that requires approval from the Federal Communications Commission. In November 2024, then-incoming FCC Chair Brendan Carr warned that merger approval would depend on satisfying Trump's claims against CBS.... Evident from the Trump legal filing against CBS is that not even the president's own lawyers took his complaint seriously. [MB: You'll want to read these.]... What's going on here is extortion -- and it does not get any less extortionate for being laundered through Trump's hypothetical future library. A systematic pattern has emerged: shakedowns of law firms, business corporations, and media companies for the enrichment of Trump, his family, and his political allies. Every time targets yield, they create an incentive for Trump to repeat the shakedown on another victim.... Who will be the next target of an administration that governs by mafia methods?" Thanks to laura h. for this gift link. (Also linked yesterday.)

Katherine Faulders, et al., of ABC News: "A review ordered by ... Donald Trump-appointed leadership of the Justice Department and the FBI found no evidence that notorious deceased financier Jeffrey Epstein kept a 'client list' of associates whom he blackmailed or conspired with to victimize dozens of women, according to a new memo reviewed by ABC News. The department has also released hours of purported footage as part of its review, which officials say further confirms Epstein died by suicide while in custody in his jail cell in Manhattan in 2019 -- contradicting conspiracy theories long embraced or spread by allies of ... [Donald] Trump and others." MB: Of course Trump's FBI "found no evidence" of Epstein's client list. If the list exists, Trump is on it. And we can't have that.

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Max Tani of Semafor: The New York Times published its story about New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's Columbia U. admissions application because the paper didn't want to be scooped by a right-wing "journalist." "The piece also seemed to divide staff, and reignited years-old internal tensions between some younger, more left-leaning members of staff and management. 'People are really upset,' one Times journalist told Semafor. In a series of posts on Bluesky, Times columnist Jamelle Bouie said, 'i think you should tell readers if your source is a nazi.' On Friday, he deleted his posts, saying they violated the Times' social media guidelines. Bouie also deleted subsequent posts on Sunday that also seemed to express frustration at the Times' decision to publish the story, and shared a post that said 'NYT & many of its elite white readers are still obsessed with race-conscious college admissions.' The paper would not comment on whether it had compelled Bouie to delete the posts."

The U.S.A., Where You Can Get Away with Murder. German Lopez of the New York Times: "In the United States, people often get away with murder. The clearance rate -- the share of cases that result in an arrest or are otherwise solved -- was 58 percent in 2023, the latest year for which F.B.I. data is available. And that figure is inflated because it includes murders from previous years that police solved in 2023. In other words, a murderer's chance of getting caught within a year essentially comes down to a coin flip. For other crimes, clearance rates are even lower. Only 8 percent of car thefts result in an arrest. Compared with its peers, America overall does an unusually poor job of solving killings. The murder clearance rates of other rich nations, including Australia, Britain and Germany, hover in the 70s, 80s and even 90s. Several issues, including a lack of resources, the sheer volume of cases and a distrust of the police, have converged to make the jobs of American detectives much more difficult.... The lack of legal accountability emboldens criminals, leading to more crime and violence." The link appears to be a gift link.

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Texas. The New York Times liveblog of developments in the Texas floods is here:. From the pinned item at 4:45 am ET: "Rescuers rushed on Sunday to find more survivors of devastating floods that killed at least 81 in Central Texas, as dramatic tales emerged of those who experienced the disaster and endured the agonizing wait for news of loved ones.... Dozens more people -- at least 41 -- are still missing, and rescuers, volunteers and family members braved renewed downpours to search for them on Sunday, navigating fields of debris with helicopters, drones, boats, golf carts and horses.... On Sunday, some parts of Central Texas saw heavy rain, but the areas already hit the hardest, including Kerr County, appeared to avoid more devastation." An AP story is here. ~~~

~~~ Brianna Sacks, et al., of the Washington Post: "The deluge that killed nearly 80 people along fast-surging Texas rivers early Friday struck a region that has grappled with deadly floods before. This swath of Central Texas is the most flash-flood prone region in the country.... And yet, the magnitude of the disaster exposed gaps in its ability to warn people, including a delayed flood risk alert from Kerr County and stalled development of a flood monitoring system.... [FEMA's] Integrated Public Alert & Warning System shows that the county did not send its first Amber Alert-style push until Sunday [i.e., two days after the flooding began].... When the precipitation intensified in the early morning hours Friday, many people failed to receive or respond to flood warnings at riverside campsites and cabins that were known to be in the floodplain." ~~~

~~~ Terri Langford & Carlos Ramos of the Texas Tribune: "A GOP state lawmaker who represents Kerr County says he likely would vote differently now on House Bill 13, which would have established a grant program for counties to build new emergency communication infrastructure.... The bill failed in the Texas Senate, prompting newfound questions about whether lawmakers should have done more to help rural, cash-strapped counties stave off the deadly effects of future natural disasters." ~~~

~~~ Catherine Bouris of the Daily Beast, republished by Yahoo! News: "Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has defended the Trump administration from suggestions that the delayed warning residents received during the flash floods in Texas this week was insufficient. Speaking at a press conference alongside Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Saturday, Noem was asked by a reporter whether the fact that he and many others did not receive warnings from the National Weather Service until 7 a.m. was a 'fundamental failure of the federal government's responsibility to keep people safe.' Noem argued that the technology was 'ancient' and that the Trump administration is working to upgrade it.... Noem ... seemingly shift[ed] the blame onto previous administrations that failed to upgrade the technology. Trump was previously president from 2017 to 2021.... In addition to the [spending] cuts detailed in Trump's tax bill, the Department of Government Efficiency cut hundreds of jobs at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Weather Service earlier this year. --44--

Sunday
Jul062025

The Conversation -- July 6, 2025

January 19, 2009. It is up to us to get back to the joy of that day: ~~~

     ~~~ From that day forward, Republicans have been cunning and ruthless and spectacularly successful in their anti-democracy, anti-U.S. movement. They have relentlessly opposed the "inalienable" rights to "the preservation of life, & liberty, & the pursuit of happiness." They are gladly killing us, depriving us of our liberties and of our means to pursue not just happiness but ordinary life. One reason we might be able to get back on course is that their ends and their means to those ends have been so vicious that many traditional Republicans have turned against their old party. A case in point: George W. Bush's speechwriter: ~~~

~~~ David Frum of the Atlantic: "Trump's lawsuit [against CBS for editing a '60 Minutes' Kamala Harris interview] was about as meritless as a lawsuit can be.... But ... CBS belongs to a parent corporation with regulatory business before Trump-appointed agencies. Paramount is pursuing an $8 billion merger that requires approval from the Federal Communications Commission. In November 2024, then-incoming FCC Chair Brendan Carr warned that merger approval would depend on satisfying Trump's claims against CBS.... Evident from the Trump legal filing against CBS is that not even the president's own lawyers took his complaint seriously. [MB: You'll want to read these.]... What's going on here is extortion -- and it does not get any less extortionate for being laundered through Trump's hypothetical future library. A systematic pattern has emerged: shakedowns of law firms, business corporations, and media companies for the enrichment of Trump, his family, and his political allies. Every time targets yield, they create an incentive for Trump to repeat the shakedown on another victim.... Who will be the next target of an administration that governs by mafia methods?" Thanks to laura h. for this gift link.

Marie: These ladies are always picking on Donald because he's cruel, ignorant and demented. Here they are getting after him for a demented "answer" he gave to a reporter during his Alligator Alcatraz visit last week. I think RAS may have mentioned this response a couple of days ago; this isn't the first time I've heard it. But it's worth repeating, in case you missed it: ~~~

     ~~~ BTW, I started this video at 6:47 minutes in. The women get after Trump, Noem, Miller & MAGA members of Congress earlier. The segment that begins at 3:45 minutes in is pretty good, too.

Marie: At the top of today's Comments, Akhilleus shares a theory about Trump's megabill. I had not fully figured this out for myself, but given Trump's history, Akhilleus's supposition sounds not just plausible but probable.

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It's All Yours, King Donald. Naftali Bendavid of the Washington Post: "In a striking dynamic of the Trump era, analysts say, the judicial and legislative branches have been steadily transferring many of their powers to the executive -- or at least acquiescing in the transfers. That has shaken up a system that depends on the three branches of government jostling sharply as each jealously guards its own prerogatives, many critics contend.... But the country has become so divided, some scholars say, that leaders of the three branches are often more loyal to their parties than to their institutions." ~~~

~~~ Perhaps only a woman of color to have the guts to stand up to Trump & enablers: ~~~

~~~ Justin Jouvenal of the Washington Post: "... Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson ... [has] for months plainly criticized the opinions of her conservative colleagues, trading the staid legalese typical of justices' decisions for impassioned arguments against what she has described as their acquiescence to ... Donald Trump. She returned to that theme again in the final case, ripping the court for limiting nationwide injunctions. 'The majority's ruling ... is ... profoundly dangerous, since it gives the Executive the go-ahead to sometimes wield the kind of unchecked, arbitrary power the Founders crafted our Constitution to eradicate,' Jackson wrote.... [Jackson] wrote more dissents this term than any other justice.... Again and again, Jackson accused the conservative bloc of weighing cases in a rushed, reckless and partisan fashion that undermined the high court's mission to be an arbiter of fair and impartial justice -- delivering results for Trump.... Her role is particularly notable because she is the court's most junior justice. Jackson, who was nominated by President Joe Biden, is the first Black woman to serve on the high court." ~~~

~~~ Oh, look, here's Trump blithely breaking a law imposed by Congress & upheld by the Supremes. Is John Thune skaking his fists? Is John Roberts stomping his feet? Nope and Nope. ~~~

~~~ Chris Cameron of the New York Times: Donald "Trump late Friday said that the United States 'pretty much has a deal' for an American company to acquire the U.S. branch of TikTok, adding that he intended to restart talks next week with China to approve the deal. 'We're going to start Monday or Tuesday talking to China,' Mr. Trump told reporters traveling on Air Force One on Friday night as it headed to Bedminster, N.J. 'We think we probably have to get it approved by China Not definitely, but probably.' He added, 'I think the deal is good for China, and it's good for us. It's money, it's a lot of money.'... Mr. Trump has declined to enforce the law banning the app, which was passed by large bipartisan majorities and unanimously upheld by the Supreme Court." MB: Great. Trump, as you know, is a very effective talker. See Putin, Russia/Ukraine war; Netanyahu, Israel/Palestine war. But who knows? Maybe Trump really did bully a U.S. company into buying TikTok. So Constitutional failure, but some kind of Trumpian "deal."

"It's All Fake." Daniel Desrochers & Megan Messerly of Politico (July 4): "The White House has little to show as ... Donald Trump's self-imposed deadline to reach trade deals with dozens of countries arrives in four days. Trump bragged he would rapidly secure dozens of trade deals, but his administration has claimed just three -- and the details are thin.... None of it bothers Trump. 'We can do whatever we want,' the president said last week about Tuesday's deadline for countries to reach deals -- or face punishing new tariffs. 'We could extend it, we could make it shorter. I'd like to make it shorter.'... The president's long-standing affinity for imposing tariffs is clashing with his reputation as a canny dealmaker. Foreign officials, trade experts, lawmakers and even some White House allies have expressed a nihilistic view of the July deadline, questioning whether a deal with the Trump administration means anything at all given the president's penchant for using tariffs as leverage to get his way.... '... It's all fake. There's no deadline. It's a self-imposed landmark in this theatrical show, and that's where we are,' [said a person close to the White House]."

Mattathias Schwartz & Hamed Aleaziz of the New York Times: "A flight carrying eight men who had been held for weeks on a U.S. military base in Djibouti landed in South Sudan just before midnight Friday, officials said, bringing an end to a six-week legal battle that was resolved by an emergency intervention by the Supreme Court.... The 13-year-old country is on the brink of a civil war; the State Department has warned against travel there because of the risk of 'crime, kidnapping and armed conflict.'... The eight men had been shackled for weeks inside an air-conditioned shipping container on a U.S. military base in Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa. Before coming to the United States, the men came from Vietnam, Mexico, Laos, Cuba and Myanmar. Just one is from South Sudan, a violence-plagued country. All had been convicted of serious crimes in the United States, though many had either finished or were about to finish serving their sentences." The CBS News story is here. The AP's report is here. MB: We are now officially, from the top down, an uncivilized third-world country.

Corky Siemaszko of NBC News: "A 6-year-old Honduran boy with leukemia whose arrest sparked a public outcry after he, his mother and sister were seized by ICE agents and sent to a Texas detention cente is back in Los Angeles, one of the family's lawyers said Friday. The family, which had been held for a month in the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas, was released [without a court order] on Wednesday by Immigration and Customs Enforcement after a lawsuit was filed on their behalf in San Antonio federal court.... Their release 'demonstrates the power we have when we fight back against harmful, un-American policies,' attorney Kate Gibson Kumar of the Texas Civil Rights Project, which also represented the family, said on the group's Facebook page. 'The practice of courthouse arrests is a blatant disregard for those lawfully seeking safety through the government's own processes, and an even bigger disregard for our Constitution and the protections it provides, including Due Process,' wrote Gibson Kumar.... The family entered the U.S. legally on Oct. 26 when they applied for asylum with the now-defunct CBP One app and were given parole status."

Mark Berman & Jeremy Roebuck of the Washington Post: "The Justice Department's pledge to prioritize stripping citizenship from naturalized U.S. citizens in more cases is fueling apprehension, with some immigration experts and attorneys calling the directive from a department leader ominous and a threat to due process.... In a memo last month, Brett A. Shumate, who leads the Justice Department's Civil Division, said it would now 'prioritize and maximally pursue' court cases aimed at taking citizenship away from people accused of wrongdoing.... Denaturalization cases historically have most often been deployed against people accused of hiding their past ties to war crimes, terrorist groups and human rights violations while applying for citizenship, according to experts and data on cases brought by the government. Many of the most prominent cases, for instance, involved people who hid their connections to the Nazis when applying for U.S. citizenship.... According to the Migration Policy Institute, in 2022 there were more than 24 million naturalized citizens living in the United States.... 'This fits into very hostile attitudes towards people who are foreign-born in the U.S.,' said Jean Reisz, who teaches law at the University of Southern California...."

Hearts of Darkness: Jeopardizing the Most Vulnerable. Lauren Gurley of the Washington Post (July 2): "The U.S. Labor Department announced plans this week to slash more than 60 regulations -- including eliminating overtime and minimum wage protections for home health care workers and union organizing rights for migrant farmworkers.... The administration ... has plans to rescind an Obama-era rule that granted minimum wage and overtime pay to millions of in-home care workers. The Trump administration said in its proposed rulemaking that current regulations 'might discourage essential companionship services by making these services more expensive.'... The agency also plans to revoke a Biden-era regulation protecting union organizing for seasonal farmworkers who are in the United States through the H-2A visa program." MB: So it might be more expensive to pay workers $7.25/hour??? Home healthcare workers and migrant farm laborers have exactly no power to fight the federal government to ensure fair wages and working conditions. None nada zero. So, please, let's make sure they're further exploited.

Here are the most recent updates from the New York Times liveblog (July 5, updated July 6) on the Texas flooding: "The search for those who were swept away by devastating floods in Central Texas grew increasingly desperate as the death toll jumped to 52 on Saturday night and the likelihood of finding more survivors appeared to diminish. In Kerr County, where waterways gorged by thunderstorms tore through a Christian girls' camp, trapped families inside trailer homes and swept people into the currents, the authorities said that some two dozen campers remained unaccounted for, and that there was "no cap" to the broader tally of the missing.... Gov. Greg Abbott ... said late Saturday that the girls' camp and an adjacent river had been 'horrendously ravaged in ways unlike I've seen in any natural disaster,' and that rushing waters had reached the tops of cabins." ~~~

~~~ Josh Hinkle & David Barer of KXAN Austin: "State and local officials are calling out federal forecasters amid deadly flooding in the Texas Hill Country over the extended Fourth of July weekend. The criticism comes, as funding cuts and staff shortages plague the National Weather Service and other emergency management agencies nationwide. Texas Department of Emergency Management Chief Nim Kidd told reporters Friday original forecasts from the National Weather Service predicted 4 to 8 inches of rain in that area, 'but the amount of rain that fell in this specific location was never in any of those forecasts.'... The area actually received a much more significant amount of rain that night, with NWS observed totals exceeding 10 inches just west of Kerrville, near where dozens were killed or remain missing -- including several children at a summer camp." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Christopher Flavelle of the New York Times: "Crucial positions at the local offices of the National Weather Service were unfilled as severe rainfall inundated parts of Central Texas on Friday morning, prompting some experts to question whether staffing shortages made it harder for the forecasting agency to coordinate with local emergency managers as floodwaters rose. Texas officials appeared to blame the Weather Service for issuing forecasts on Wednesday that underestimated how much rain was coming. But former Weather Service officials said the forecasts were as good as could be expected, given the enormous levels of rainfall and the storm's unusually abrupt escalation. The staffing shortages suggested a separate problem, those former officials said -- the loss of experienced people who would typically have helped communicate with local authorities in the hours after flash flood warnings were issued overnight. The shortages are among the factors likely to be scrutinized as the death toll climbs from the floods. Separate questions have emerged about the preparedness of local communities, including Kerr County's apparent lack of a local flood warning system. The county, roughly 50 miles northwest of San Antonio, is where many of the deaths occurred." Read on. This is a gift link. ~~~

     ~~~ A Texas Tribune story is here. It provides a ticktock of when National Weather Service warnings were issued. It seems to put more responsibility on local officials than on the NWS: "Asked Saturday afternoon what kind of procedures the county had to warn the summer camps along the river about flooding emergencies, [Kerrville City Manager Dalton] Rice said that each camp is private. This situation happened very fast, he said, so 'there wasn't a lot of time in this case as far as warnings.'" Here's an AP story. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: This is what to expect when "conservatives" govern. They start with the premise that all government is bad and that they should not pay for necessary services. So besides the staff shortages brought on by Chainsaw Elon & Trump's plan to wind down FEMA to useless, there's this from the Times story: "In an interview, Rob Kelly, the Kerr County judge and its most senior elected official, said the county did not have a warning system because such systems are expensive, and local residents are resistant to new spending." Gen. Russel L. Honoré, Retired, -- who led the military's response to Hurricane Katrina -- spoke on CNN yesterday. He said the Guadelupe River had a history of flooding. (See also this page.) So it isn't as if authorities had no idea that an effective warning system and evacuation plan were essential to the safety of vulnerable communities along the river and its tributaries. Still, the locals thought it was smart to vote for folks who would "keep taxes down" and for Trump (Kerr County: 77% Trump, 22% Harris, so +55), who prefers to spend tax dollars on his birthday parade, UFC fights on the White House lawn and deporting the grandma who hand-makes tortillas at the factory lunch truck than on emergency preparedness. Oh, did I mention that Starlink, Texas, home of the deposed DOGE king, is right nearby -- just 20 miles ESE of Austin? Starlink announced it is providing emergency Starlink mini kits to search & rescue teams, as in "horse bolted, close barn door."

Erin Doherty of CNBC: "Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., announced his official resignation from Congress on Friday, a move that was expected but one that could, at least for now, shrink Republicans' already narrow majority in the House.... With his resignation, Republicans are down to a 219-212 majority in the House, at least until his seat in the solidly red district is filled. His resignation will be effective July 20, Fox News reports from a letter Green sent to House Republican leadership."

No More Jewish Space Lasers! No More Chemtrails! Ashleigh Fields of the Hill: "Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said Saturday she plans to introduce a bill aimed at tackling 'weather modification.' 'I am introducing a bill that prohibits the injection, release, or dispersion of chemicals or substances into the atmosphere for the express purpose of altering weather, temperature, climate, or sunlight intensity. It will be a felony offense,' she wrote in a Saturday post on X.... The Georgia lawmaker said the legislation would resemble Florida's Senate Bill 56, which was signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in late June.... Greene made headlines last year when she suggested Democrats were able to 'control the weather' in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, prompting then-President Biden to condemn what he called 'irresponsible' and 'beyond ridiculous' falsehoods."

Charlie Nash of Mediaite: "Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-WI) claimed on Thursday that a post celebrating that '18 million kids just lost school meals' and 17 million people 'lost health care' was made in error. After the Trump-backed 'Big Beautiful Bill'passed both the House and Senate, one social media user protested, '17 million people just lost health care. 18 million kids just lost school meals. 3 million Americans just lost food assistance.' Van Orden responded to the post, 'YES!'" MB: In error, my ass. Thanks to RAS for the link; RAS reminds us that Van Orden claimed recently that he and his GOP colleagues are super-responsible representatives of the people: "After a journalist suggested that ... Donald Trump was the deciding factor in Van Orden's decision to vote in favor of the ... bill, the congressman protested, 'No, no, no..., the president of the United States didn't give us an assignment. We're not a bunch of little bitches around here. I'm a member of Congress that represent almost 800,000 Wisconsinites. Is that clear?'" Yes. And that representation means reveling in depriving millions of those constituents and their children of adequate food and health care. (Also linked yesterday.)

In this BlueSky post, Judd Legum makes a list of major U.S. corporations that publicly endorsed Trump's killer megabill. MB: Thanks to RAS for the link. The only one of the companies I consistently use is Comcast (Xfinity), and I'm about to cut the cord. I hope they ask why; I'll tell them because they support a Trump bill that makes poor people poorer and sicker. (Also linked yesterday.)

Theodore Schleifer of the New York Times: "Elon Musk, the world's wealthiest person and the country's biggest political donor, said on Saturday that he would create a new political party, an enormous and challenging undertaking that would test the billionaire's newfound influence on American politics. 'When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy,' Mr. Musk wrote on X, his social media website, on Saturday. 'Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.' Mr. Musk ... had not filed paperwork as of Saturday evening for the new party, though he added in a separate post that the America Party would be active in elections 'next year.' No immediate signs suggested that Mr. Musk was working to establish his party quickly. Any new entity would be required to be disclosed to the Federal Election Commission. Mr. Musk has spoken with friends in recent days about his plan for a political party and what it would take to accomplish it, according to a person briefed on those conversations. The discussions have been more conceptual than pragmatic, the person said." A Politico story is here. MB: The good news, if Elon ever gets past "conceptual,&" is that his little party is more likely to siphon votes from Republican candidates than from Democrats.~~~

~~~ Maegan Vazquez of the Washington Post offers six reasons that it will be so difficult to start a meaningful third party. And she doesn't really address what an uncompromising dickhead Musk is.

~~~~~~~~~~

Hello, Mister, Hello, Missus. Here I Am at Camp DeSantis. ~~~

~~~ Florida. Ron DeSantis' "Alligator Alcatraz." Lori Rozsa & Rachel Hatzipanagos of the Washington Post: "The hastily constructed detention camp in the Everglades that began processing immigrant detainees late this week has already flooded once, may not meet hurricane codes and is not officially approved or funded by the federal government. Experts say detainees and staff will face far more common hazards than the swampland terrors gleefully envisioned by state and national Republicans to discourage escapes. Mosquitoes and hurricanes are more likely to harm the expected 3,000-plus detainees and 100-member staff than are alligators and Burmese pythons.... The detention camp, named Alligator Alcatraz by state officials, has been enthusiastically endorsed by ... Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem. Trump visited Tuesday, saying the camp soon will have 'some of the most menacing migrants, some of the most vicious people on the planet.'

"The facility, which includes large tents over cells erected with chain-link fencing, portable showers and portable toilets, was put together in eight days. State lawmakers who have spoken about it say that work was done secretly, after they had ended their annual legislative session. A group of Democratic representatives tried to tour Thursday but were denied entry -- 'despite clear statutory authority' allowing them to inspect prisons and detention facilities, they said in a joint statement. 'This is a blatant abuse of power and an attempt to conceal human rights violations from the public eye.'" --57--