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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
Aug132025

The Conversation -- August 13, 2025

Europeans Try to Knock Some Sense into TrumpVictor Goury-Laffont of Politico: “... Donald Trump agreed with European leaders that Ukraine must be part of any discussions about territorial concessions to end the war with Russia, Emmanuel Macron said. The French president was speaking after an hour-long meeting between Trump, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders ahead of the U.S. president’s meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. 'Territorial questions that fall under Ukraine’s authority cannot be negotiated and will only be negotiated by the President of Ukraine,' Macron said, adding that Trump had 'expressed' the same.” A Washington Post story is here. ~~~

~~~ Marie: BTW, I've heard Donnie Dimento say twice that he's "going to Russia," not to Alaska. ~~~

~~~ From today's New York Times liveblog: “President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine and European leaders on Wednesday urged ... [Donald] Trump not to unilaterally strike a peace deal with Russia to end the war it began with a full-scale invasion more than three years ago. The video call came two days before Mr. Trump is set to meet President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Alaska. Speaking in Berlin, Mr. Zelensky and Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany said the leaders had agreed on a strategy for Friday’s meeting, and that Mr. Trump had agreed to prioritize security guarantees for Ukraine.” ~~~

~~~ Also from the Narcissist News liveblog. Trump is to announce Kennedy Center honors this morning. “In his post on Tuesday hyping the new honorees, he wrote: 'GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS.' How much of a 'whoops' that actually was remains to be seen.” ~~~

     ~~~ Update. The Washington Post lists Trump's honorees. The Hill has the list here.

Bill Kristol in the Bulwark: “... Contemptible men occupy the highest offices in our land.... Last Friday, an American who believed the lies spread by [Robert F.] Kennedy [Jr.] and others ... fired some five hundred shots at the CDC complex [in Atlanta].... White killed a DeKalb County police officer who rushed to the scene, David Rose. After waiting eighteen hours, Kennedy tepidly condemned this attack on his department. On Monday, he paid a brief and perfunctory condolence visit to the CDC. He immediately followed this visit by giving an interview in which he chose once again to reiterate his view that 'the public health agencies have not been honest.'... [Donald] Trump has said not a word about this attack on federal public servants. Nor has he offered condolences or praise for Officer RoseRose was 33 years old. He was married with two children, and his wife is expecting their third child. He had served in Afghanistan as a Marine, and graduated from the [police] academy in March.... For their whole lives, Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. have run away not merely from danger (recall Trump’s bone spurs) but from responsibility and accountability. They have gotten away with contemptible behavior. They occupy high public office after living sordid lives of wealth and privilege. They have paid no price for their irresponsibility and cowardice. The contrast with David Rose..., who lived far too short a life of courage and public service, is striking.”

Eva Corlett of the Guardian: “A New Zealand woman who is being held at a US immigration centre with her six-year-old son after they were detained crossing the Canada-US border, is being wrongly 'treated like a criminal', according to her friend and advocate. Sarah Shaw, 33, a New Zealander who has lived in Washington state for just over three years, dropped her two eldest children to Vancouver airport on 24 July, so they could take a direct flight back to New Zealand for a holiday with their grandparents. When Shaw attempted to re-enter the US, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) detained her and her youngest son, in what was a 'terrifying' ordeal, said Victoria Besancon, Shaw’s friend.... 'Sarah thought she was being kidnapped,' she said. 'They didn’t really explain anything to her at first, they just kind of quietly took her and her son and immediately put them in like an unmarked white van.'... Shaw is on what is known as a 'combo card' visa – an employment visa, which she obtained through her employment at a maximum security juvenile facility, and an I-360 visa, which can grant immigration status to domestic violence survivors. Shaw had recently received a letter confirming her visa renewal, not realising that the I-360 element of her visa was still pending approval.”

Guardian: “California governor Gavin Newsom says the state will draw new electoral maps after Donald Trump 'missed'  a deadline on Tuesday night in an ongoing redistricting battle between Democratic and Republican states. 'DONALD “TACO” TRUMP, AS MANY CALL HIM, “MISSED” THE DEADLINE!!!”, Newsom’s office wrote on social media. “CALIFORNIA WILL NOW DRAW NEW, MORE 'BEAUTIFUL MAPS,” THEY WILL BE HISTORIC AS THEY WILL END THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY (DEMS TAKE BACK THE HOUSE!)'.” Thanks to Julie from Massachusetts for the link. ~~~

~~~ BUT. Hannah Knowles of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump’s push to redraw the congressional map has fueled a redistricting arms race, with blue and red states rushing to counter each other. But it’s an uneven fight. Republicans appear to hold the advantage in the nationwide scramble, according to strategists and nonpartisan analysts, with more opportunities to shift the lines in their favor ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Democrats have vowed to 'fight fire with fire' since the GOP moved to add five red seats in Texas, but they face many barriers. Republicans are eyeing ways to add a dozen or more red House districts across Texas, Florida, Missouri, Ohio and Indiana, despite some legal hurdles and reservations from local Republicans. Democrats are looking to retaliate with five more blue seats in California, and they are exploring other options, including in Maryland and Illinois. They control fewer states than Republicans, however, and they have already maximized their power in others. In some cases, they would have to work around independent commissions set up to prevent gerrymandering.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Marie: As of early this morning, it remains impossible to post comments on Reality Chex. Squarespace is outright refusing to fix this bug. A supposed tech support person (or an AI bot) had the gall to tell me he/it can't "reproduce" the problem. That is, Squarespace is asserting it does not have a technician intelligent enough to try to post a comment. BTW, I checked to see if other Squarespace users have had similar experiences. The answer is yes. On one rating service, Squarespace received one star out of five -- which is to say, Squarespace could not get a worse rating. ~~~

     ~~~ I'm not sure where I'm going next, but I'm about done here. Keep checking back though, as I'll let you know what, if anything, is next -- as soon as I figure it out.


Tyler Pager & Devlin Barrett
of the New York Times: “National Guard troops began to deploy in Washington on Tuesday evening as ... [Donald] Trump’s plan to use the federal government to crack down on crime in the city started taking shape. About a dozen members of the National Guard appeared in five military vehicles near the Washington Monument as the sun set, a stark juxtaposition to a peaceful evening scene of people jogging by with headphones and walking their dogs. An Army official said troops were continuing to gather at the D.C. Armory and were expected to deploy around national monuments, and near a U.S. Park Police facility in the Anacostia neighborhood of southeast Washington.... Troops snapp[ed] photos of themselves with visitors. They left roughly two hours after they arrived....

“[White House press secretary Karoline] Leavitt boasted that a federal task force, which includes some local officers, made 23 arrests on Monday evening in connection with a range of crimes. Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, said in a post on X Tuesday evening that the F.B.I. had participated in 10 arrests in “the first big push” of Mr. Trump’s crackdown. In Washington, a city of roughly 700,000 people, the Metropolitan Police Department makes an average of 68 arrests a day, officials said. Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, and Pamela A. Smith, her police chief, met Tuesday morning with Attorney General Pam Bondi and other administration officials.” ~~~

~~~ Luke Broadwater of the New York Times: “On Jan. 6, 2021, a pro-Trump mob committed a month’s worth of crime in the span of about three hours.... But ... [Donald] Trump’s handling of the most lawless day in recent Washington history stands in sharp contrast to his announcement on Monday that he needed to use the full force of the federal government to crack down on 'violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals' in the nation’s capital. After a prominent member of the Department of Government Efficiency, known ... [as] 'Big Balls,' was assaulted this month, the president took federal control of Washington’s police force and mobilized National Guard troops.... Mr. Trump described 'roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people.'... 'If we want to look at marauding mobs, look at Jan. 6,' said Mary McCord, the director of the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and ... a former federal prosecutor. 'If you want to look at criminal mobs, we had a criminal mob and he called them peaceful protesters.'... [Mr. Trump] has selected a passionate defender of Jan. 6 rioters to run the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington, and his [Justice Department] even hired a former F.B.I. agent who was charged with encouraging the mob to kill police officers.”

Annals of “Journalism,” Ha Ha Ha. Michael Grynbaum of the New York Times: “Right-wing media has embraced Mr. Trump’s crackdown in Washington, dismissing Democrats’ concerns about creeping authoritarianism and any exaggerations about the level of crime in the nation’s capital.... MAGA influencers like Charlie Kirk have called for a 'full military occupation' of other major cities. [Pete Hegseth's and Jeanine] Pirro’s return to [their] old network home [Monday evening] was a small illustration of Fox News’s feedback loop with the second Trump administration, which, like its predecessors in both parties, regularly cites media coverage that validates and amplifies its policy goals. The network has numerous ties to this administration, which includes more than two dozen Fox alumni as members.”


⭐The Big Grifter. 
 Katie Hawkinson of the Independent: "... Donald Trump and his family may have made billions off his two presidencies, a new report claims. The New Yorker reports that Trump and his family have pocketed an estimated $3.4 billion thanks to his two terms as president. Its tally includes profits from cryptocurrencies, the president’s MAGA-branded merchandise and his Mar-a-Lago estate. The outlet estimated that, thanks to Trump’s two presidencies, the family has made $2.37 billion from cryptocurrency; $339.6 million from financial ventures; $270.8 million from hospitality; $116 million from media; and $277.7 million across other sources, including his private jet, legal fees and merchandise."

Adam Goldman, et al., of the New York Times: “Investigators have uncovered evidence that Russia is at least partly responsible for a recent hack of the computer system that manages federal court documents, including highly sensitive records with information that could reveal sources and people charged with national security crimes, according to several people briefed on the breach. It is not clear what entity is responsible, whether an arm of Russian intelligence might be behind the intrusion or if other countries were also involved, which some of the people familiar with the matter described as a yearslong effort to infiltrate the system.... The disclosure comes as ... [Donald] Trump is expected to meet with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir V. Putin, in Alaska on Friday....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Pardon my whacked-out conspiracy theorizing, but I'll just note that Donald Trump hates U.S. courts as much as he hated Hillary Clinton in 2016. The reporters seem to imply that the hacking could cause embarrassment at the upcoming Alaska meeting. I'm thinking, by contrast, that "Russia, if you're listening ..." could have figured into this hack, too. So high-fives all around. Just sayin'.

Marie: It's hard to exaggerate how stupid Trump is and how wrong he is about nearly every policy decision he makes. Garrett Graff points out one of the administration's greatest failings, if not the greatest. ~~~ 

~~~⭐Garrett Graff in a New York Times op-ed: “The 80th anniversary last week of the atomic bombings that helped end World War II came ... [at a time] the administration is turning its back on a history of being powered and renewed by the innovation and vision of immigrants. What America may find is that we have squandered the greatest gift of the Manhattan Project — which, in the end, wasn’t the bomb but a new way of looking at how science and government can work together.... That the push [for the bomb] came from refugees from fascist Europe was not a coincidence.... [The Europeans had seen at home how science could serve the military.] Out of [the Manhattan Project] grew a tradition of government-supported science, technology and education efforts. Those fields became a source of national strength and arguably the primary driver of American economic hegemony and prosperity in the eight decades since.... Today, just as China’s own research and development efforts take off, the Trump administration has been erasing this legacy.... In addition, there is the administration’s war on immigration and its hostility to foreign researchers and students coming to the United States....” ~~~

~~~ Trump isn't merely anti-science. He hates the liberal arts at least as much. ~~~

Graham Bowley, et al., of the New York Times: “The Trump administration said on Tuesday that it would begin a wide-ranging review of current and planned exhibitions at the Smithsonian Institution, scouring wall text, websites and social media 'to assess tone, historical framing and alignment with American ideals.' White House officials announced the review in a letter sent to Lonnie G. Bunch III, the secretary of the Smithsonian. Museums will be required to adjust any content that the administration finds problematic within 120 days, the letter said, 'replacing divisive or ideologically driven language with unifying, historically accurate and constructive descriptions.' The review ... is the latest attempt by ... [Donald] Trump to try to impose his will on the Smithsonian, which has traditionally operated as an independent institution that regards itself outside the purview of the executive branch.... In its letter, the White House says its review 'aims to ensure alignment with the president’s directive to celebrate American exceptionalism, remove divisive or partisan narratives and restore confidence in our shared cultural institutions.'” An AP story is here. ~~~

~~~ What? You don't infusing the Smithsonian with fake history & the Kennedy Center with "Cats" is anti-intellectual enough? Well, how about this? ~~~

~~~ David Fahrenthold of the New York Times: Donald “Trump is moving ahead with plans to hold an Ultimate Fighting Championship event on the White House grounds next July 4, the U.F.C.’s chief executive, Dana White, told CBS on Tuesday. 'It is definitely going to happen,' Mr. White said on 'CBS Mornings.' A White House official who asked not to be named to discuss plans that were still in their early stages confirmed that the event was expected to happen on July 4.” The CBS News story is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Perhaps Trump is hosting a wrestling match in the White House as a fake show of his fake solidarity with what he imagines we ordinary people enjoy. But I think he just doesn't know any better. ~~~

~~~ Anne Brinigin & Roxanne Roberts of the Washington Post: “Initial renderings [of Trump's planned White House ballroom] bear all the hallmarks of [his] opulent, Louis XIV-inspired aesthetic, which has always borrowed heavily from the baroque: very dramatic, very embellished, with lots of gold and gilded elements. Trump has called it 'a great legacy project.'... It resembles the ballrooms Trump constructed at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, and his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida. (Both ballrooms were Trump-designed additions to homes with grand entertaining spaces.)... Majestic spaces are where the political and social elite — kings, aristocrats, tycoons — have traditionally asserted and cemented their power.... For these nouveau dynasties [of the Gilded Age], the ballroom was the place 'by which society cemented its values,' ... said Robert Wellington, author of the forthcoming book 'Versailles Mirrored....'... Such a grand space as the ballroom also reinforces Trump’s narrative of a new Gilded Age, as well as its tensions: his promise of making America great again, wrapped in a Versailles veneer.”

David Edwards of the Raw Story: "Convicted child sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell has reportedly been cleared to leave prison on work release.... [Documents viewed by podcast host Allison Gill] ... showed that Maxwell's custody level was set to 'OUT,' allowing her to leave the prison to work." ~~~

~~~ James Zirin, a former SDNY prosecutor, in a Hill opinion piece in which he examines the DOJ's recent arrangements with Ghislaine Maxwell: “You may ask whether Trump approved the transfer [of Maxwell to a very low-security 'club fed']. You can bet on it. This Justice Department doesn’t make a move without Trump’s thumb on the scale.”

Paul Krugman: “Let me call this Arendt’s Law: Totalitarian and wannabe totalitarian regimes only hire incompetent hacks. So when Trump nominated E.J. Antoni, the current chief economist at Heritage, to head the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it seemed safe to assume that he would be [an incompetent hack].... Menzie Chinn of the University of Wisconsin, who actually is a Highly Respected Economist and whose blog Econbrowser has been influential for many years, has been on Antoni’s case for a while. And sure enough, Arendt’s Law remains undefeated.... I’ve argued since before Trump took office that this administration would eventually get around to cooking the economic books. But I didn’t expect it right away.... One should never underestimate the audacity of hacks. On Monday Antoni went on Fox Business and suggested that the BLS should stop issuing monthly jobs reports until the 'problems' at the agency are fixed.... Incidentally..., the BLS is legally required to issue monthly employment reports. So Antoni’s proposal, aside from being a transparently corrupt attempt to hide bad news, would be flatly illegal.” ~~~

     ~~~ Halina Bennet on Slow Boring: “Dr. Antoni has criticized BLS data and praised Trump’s policies, calling on the Department of Government Efficiency last November to 'take a chainsaw to the BLS.... Jason Furman, Harvard economist and chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers during the Obama administration, called Antoni 'completely unqualified.' Former Heritage Foundation economist Jessica Riedl, who is now at the Manhattan Institute, said of Antoni, 'the articles and tweets I’ve seen him publish are probably the most error-filled of any think tank economist right now.'... Economist Brian Albrecht pulled together [a] thread of instances when Antoni misinterpreted or mischaracterized economic statistics.... Antoni’s nomination now moves to the Republican-controlled Senate, where confirmation is expected.” ~~~

     ~~~ Dominic Pino of the (right-wing) National Review: Donald "Trump has nominated an unqualified economist to take over one of America’s most important statistical agencies.... What Trump would like is a BLS that is biased in his favor. The latest proof of that is his nominee to be the next commissioner, E. J. Antoni.... [Antoni] has demonstrated time and again that he does not understand economic statistics. Whether that is due to willful misinterpretation or ignorance on Antoni’s part is open for debate. But the pattern is undeniable." Pino cites numerous examples of Antoni screw-ups.

     ~~~ Paul Campos in LG&$: "This is all way worse than the first time around when [Trump] didn’t think he would win, and lots of old style country club GOP money men rallied round the banner of The Business of America is Business, and managed to secure positions near the faux gold throne. This time it’s nothing but lunatics and grifters, and grifting lunatics."

DOGE's purpose was definitely not to reduce waste, fraud & abuse: ~~~

More Gross Hackery. Jessie Blaeser of Politico: “The Trump administration’s claim that it is saving billions of dollars through DOGE-related cuts to federal contracts is drastically exaggerated, according to a new Politico analysis of public data and federal spending records. Through July, DOGE said it has saved taxpayers $52.8 billion by canceling contracts, but of the $32.7 billion in actual claimed contract savings that Politico could verify, DOGE’s savings over that period were closer to $1.4 billion.... Not a single one of those 1.4 billion dollars will lower the federal deficit unless Congress steps in. Instead, the money has been returned to agencies mandated by law to spend it.... Even so..., Donald Trump claimed hundreds of billions of dollars had already been used to reduce the federal deficit.... DOGE’s savings calculations are based on faulty math. The group uses the maximum spending possible under each contract as its baseline — meaning all money an agency could spend in future fiscal years. That amount can far exceed what the government has actually committed to pay out.”

Alanna Richer & Maria Verza of the AP: “Mexico sent 26 high-ranking cartel figures to the United States Tuesday in the latest major deal with the Trump administration as American authorities ratchet up pressure on criminal networks smuggling drugs across the border.... It’s the second time in months that Mexico has expelled cartel figures accused of narcotics smuggling, murder and other crimes amid mounting pressure from the Trump administration to curb the flow of drugs onto American streets.... The cartel figures were put on planes to the U.S. after the Justice Department agreed not to seek the death penalty against any of the defendants or against any cartel leaders and members sent to the U.S. in February.”

Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff of the Washington Post: “The Justice Department on Tuesday found that George Washington University was 'deliberately indifferent to antisemitic discrimination' on its campus, the latest allegation from the Trump administration over a college’s response to discrimination against Jewish students and faculty. In a letter to GWU President Ellen Granberg, Harmeet K. Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, said that the Justice Department would deploy 'enforcement' measures against the school unless a voluntary resolution is reached. She requested a response by Aug. 22.”

Mark Berman of the Washington Post: “A divided appeals court panel on Tuesday said the Trump administration’s U.S. DOGE Service can access sensitive data held by federal agencies, rejecting concerns that the move runs afoul of privacy law. In a 2-1 decision, a panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit concluded that plaintiffs in the case, a group that includes labor unions and individual people receiving government benefits, had failed to show they could prevail in their legal challenge. The plaintiffs had asked courts to keep DOGE representatives from accessing personal information held by the Treasury Department, Office of Personnel Management and Education Department, saying that this action violated federal privacy law. Judge Julius N. Richardson, joined by Judge G. Steven Agee, wrote that the plaintiffs in the case 'have struggled to show' they suffered harm in the case.... Richardson was nominated to the bench by ... Donald Trump...; Agee was nominated by President George W. Bush.... In a dissent, Judge Robert B. King..., who was nominated by President Bill Clinton, said he would have kept the lower court [injunction] in place.”

Erica Orden & Kyle Cheney of Politico: “A federal judge ordered the Trump administration Tuesday to improve the conditions for ICE detainees in Manhattan after a lawsuit filed by a Peruvian immigrant complained of cramped and unsanitary holding cells. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ordered officials by Aug. 26 to provide more spacious accommodations that are equipped with a bedding mat for each detainee held overnight, have hygiene supplies and are cleaned 'thoroughly' at least three times a day. Kaplan, a Clinton appointee, also ordered officials to allow detainees private phone calls with their lawyers within 24 hours of being detained and to give them a printed notice of their rights within one hour of being placed in a holding room.... Kaplan indicated at a hearing Tuesday that his short-term restraining order would be followed quickly by consideration of the detainees’ motion for a longer-term injunction and the certification of a class action that would provide more sweeping protections for those detained by ICE.”

Tobi Raji of the Washington Post: “A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld a 2021 Arkansas law banning gender-affirming care for minors, ruling that parents 'do not have unlimited authority to make medical decisions for their children.' The St. Louis-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit ruled 8-2 that the Save Adolescents From Experimentation Act does not discriminate against transgender people or violate the rights of medical professionals — rejecting a closely watched challenge to the nation’s first-of-its-kind ban on gender transition treatment for transgender youth.”

If every time you pick up a newspaper, you get the sense you are falling, falling back in time -- it's not your imagination: ~~~

~~~ Supremes Appear Ready to Give GOP a Tremendous Boost. Rick Hasen of Election Law Blog: The Supreme Court has fast-tracked its potential demolition of Section 2 of Voting Rights Act by setting oral argument for October 15 in a Louisiana case, possibly in time to affect the 2026 midterm elections. (This is a paraphrase of Hasen's headline.)

Patrick Marley of the Washington Post: “Texas Republicans said Tuesday that they would kick off a second special legislative session Friday to redraw the state’s congressional maps in favor of the GOP, putting pressure on absent Democrats to quickly return to the state or commit to remaining away for another month.” ~~~

~~~ Tom Abrahams of ABC13 Houston: "ABC13 has confirmed with multiple sources that House Democrats will return to Texas. Eyewitness News has not confirmed the date, but we do know that Democrats believe they've accomplished their mission by killing the first special session and by raising national awareness about the mid-decade redistricting effort.... After our initial reporting online and on television, a spokesperson for the Texas Democratic Caucus sent the following statement to ABC News: 'Members are still assessing their strategies going forward and are in a private meeting to make decisions about future plans currently,' he wrote." ~~~

~~~ Bill Barrow & Nadia Lathan of the AP: “Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton ratcheted up ... Donald Trump’s congressional redistricting fight by calling Tuesday for progressive activist Beto O’Rourke to be put 'behind bars' for helping Democrats who have managed to block the GOP’s gerrymandering efforts with an extended walkout.... O’Rourke denied any wrongdoing and called the attorney general a 'corrupt, lying thug.'”

Tuesday
Aug122025

The Conversation -- August 12, 2025

Marie: Don't bother to try to comment. I logged out and tried. I got the message my comment had "taken," but it had not. I complained about this to Squarespace yesterday after Ken W. told me he couldn't post comments. Response from Squarespace? Crickets. I'm about to try again.

Colby Smith of the New York Times: “A key measure of underlying inflation rose in July as ... [Donald] Trump’s tariffs intensified price pressures across a wider range of consumer goods and services, although the overall increase was likely not significant enough to deter the Federal Reserve from lowering interest rates at its next meeting in September. The Consumer Price Index stayed steady at 2.7 percent compared to the same time last year. On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.2 percent from June. But an important gauge tracking consumer prices that strips out volatile food and energy prices accelerated more rapidly. 'Core' C.P.I., which is closely watched by the central bank, jumped 0.3 percent over the course of the month, or 3.1 percent on a year-over-year basis. That is one of the largest monthly increases so far this year and represents the fastest annual pace in five months. In June, core inflation rose 0.2 percent from the previous month, or 2.9 percent from July 2024. The July data, which was released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, provides a clear sign that businesses are more readily passing along tariff-related costs to their customers after a prolonged period in which price gains were muted.” This is the pinned item in a liveblog. The CNBC report is here. ~~~

~~~ Kevin Breuninger of CNBC: “... Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened to allow a 'major lawsuit' against Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to go forward, dramatically escalating his efforts to pressure the central bank leader to immediately lower interest rates. The president said on Truth Social that the lawsuit would relate to Powell’s management of major renovations at the Fed’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., which has become a focus of Trump’s criticism. Trump’s post, which slammed Powell as a 'loser' ... did not make clear whether such a lawsuit was in the works.... “Steve ‘Manouychin” really gave me a beauty” when he pushed this loser,' Trump wrote, appearing to blame his first-term Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for encouraging him to nominate Powell as Fed chair in 2017.”

Alex Horton & David Ovalle of the Washington Post: “The Trump administration is evaluating plans that would establish a 'Domestic Civil Disturbance Quick Reaction Force' composed of hundreds of National Guard troops tasked with rapidly deploying into American cities facing protests or other unrest, according to internal Pentagon documents reviewed by The Washington Post. The plan calls for 600 troops to be on standby at all times so they can deploy in as little as one hour, the documents say. They would be split into two groups of 300 and stationed at military bases in Alabama and Arizona, with purview of regions east and west of the Mississippi River, respectively. Cost projections outlined in the documents indicate that such a mission, if the proposal is adopted, could stretch into the hundreds of millions of dollars should military aircraft and aircrews also be required to be ready around-the-clock.”

Matt Brown of the AP: Donald Trump's “rhetoric [about Washington, D.C.,] echoed that used by conservative politicians going back decades who have denounced American cities, especially those with majority non-white populations or led by progressive politicians, as lawless or crime-ridden and in need of outside intervention.... Trump threatened to 'take over' and 'beautify' the nation’s capital on the campaign trail and claimed the district was 'a nightmare of murder and crime.' He also argued the city was “horribly run” and said his team intended 'to take it away from the mayor.'... To some, it echoes uncomfortable historical chapters when politicians used language to paint historically or predominantly Black cities and neighborhoods with racist narratives to shape public opinion and justify aggressive police action.... 'The president foreshadowed that if these heavy-handed tactics take root here, they will be rolled out to other majority-Black and Brown cities, like Chicago, Oakland and Baltimore, across the country,' said Monica Hopkins, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s D.C. chapter.”

Lauren Weber & Lena Sun of the Washington Post: “Days after the shooting [at CDC headquarters in Atlanta], the initial shock has morphed into anger for many CDC employees.... They fault ... Donald Trump for not publicly condemning the shooting, even as he invoked the assault of a former U.S. DOGE Service staffer to deploy troops in D.C. and take over its police department. They said they are fed up with how they and their work are being derided and impugned by conservatives and anti-vaccine activists, including the one who rose to lead the nation’s public health apparatus: Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.... 'There is a direct line from the vilification of CDC during Covid and the deliberate lies and mis/disinformation that continues today,' a veteran CDC official who was not on campus during the shooting said in a text message. 'Many of the sources of these lies now have a pulpit and the veneer of respectability through their positions in the administration.'... In all, 181 rounds were fired at the campus, nearly half concentrated on a building housing administrative offices and the CDC director’s office.... Broken glass littered some floors. Bullets struck 150 windows, which were built to resist bomb implosion or pressure but not ammunition....” ~~~

    ~~~ Marie: The truth is that Trump was more upset about having to see a few homeless people on the route to his golf course than he was by the murder of a CDC guard and the life-threatening endangerment of hundreds of federal public servants. 

Jeremy Pelzer of Cleveland.com: "Democrat Sherrod Brown has decided to run in 2026 for U.S. Senate, attempting a return to the office that he lost last year after a savagely fought reelection campaign, according to Ohio labor leaders Brown told of his thinking. Brown’s decision, which comes after months of speculation about his political future, gives Ohio Democrats perhaps their best hope of unseating incumbent U.S. Sen. Jon Husted, a Columbus-area Republican appointed to the job earlier this year."

Constant Méheut of the New York Times: “Russian forces are striving to shape the battlefield to their advantage before a high-stakes summit between ... [Donald] Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin, making a swift advance in eastern Ukraine after months of grinding battle. In recent days, Russia’s troops broke through a segment of Ukraine’s defensive line near the city of Pokrovsk, a longtime stronghold. They have advanced several miles into Ukrainian-held territory, threatening to outflank Ukraine’s positions.... President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said in his evening address on Monday that the Russians 'are redeploying their troops and forces in ways that suggest preparations for new offensive operations' and that they are 'not preparing for a cease-fire or an end to the war.'”

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Marie: It's hard to know what is more attractive to the most lawless president* in U.S. history: diverting attention from the Epstein scandal or releasing his little private army on people of color, but here is what Trump did yesterday: ~~~ 

~~~ Michael Birnbaum, et al., of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump announced Monday that he would place the D.C. ... police under direct federal control and deploy the National Guard to the streets of Washington to fight crime and clear the city of its homeless population, an extraordinary flex of federal power that could expose residents of the nation’s capital to unpredictable encounters with a domestically-deployed military force. The decision to deploy troops comes as the president has been slamming America’s cities as places where crime is out of control, despite two years of declines that have brought homicide levels in many major cities to their lowest levels in decades. The administration has already mobilized FBI agents in recent days in overnight shifts to help local law enforcement prevent carjackings and violent crime in the city, officials said. Because the District of Columbia is not a state, the federal government has unusually sweeping powers to intervene over the objections of its residents and leaders, giving the president an opportunity to use it as a laboratory for a militarized approach to urban crime-fighting....

“In addition to the FBI, the Secret Service and the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division have also been directed to launch special patrols in Washington, according to a White House official.... But the administration has not consulted with the D.C. police department — the chief law enforcement agency responsible for policing local crime — about how best to deploy federal resources, said a senior official....” (Also linked yesterday.) 

~~~ The New York Times liveblogged some sort of bonkers press conference Trump headed up with the usual suspects as supporting cast members. MB Update: As it often is, the liveblog is amusing what with Trump being such a dunderhead & lying SOS. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

Eric Schmitt & Helene Cooper of the New York TimesDonald “Trump’s decision to send at least 800 National Guard troops into the streets of Washington to fight crime is the latest example of how the president has used the military to advance domestic policy priorities.... Already this year, Mr. Trump has deployed some 10,000 active-duty troops to the southwest U.S. border to choke off the flow of drugs as well as migrants, and 4,700 National Guard troops and Marines to Los Angeles to help quell protests that had erupted over immigration raids and to protect the federal agents conducting them.... Mr. Trump last month secretly signed a directive to the Pentagon to begin using military force against certain Latin American drug cartels....

“The National Guard troops who will fan out across Washington starting this week will not perform law enforcement tasks, Pentagon officials said on Monday.... But like the Guard in Los Angeles, the soldiers in Washington will probably be able to detain people temporarily in certain circumstances until federal agents arrive, officials said. The soldiers will be armed and authorized to defend themselves, military officials said.” ~~~

~~~ Lindsay Whitehurst of the AP: “... Donald Trump took unprecedented steps toward federalizing Washington, D.C. on Monday, saying it’s needed to fight crime even as city leaders pointed to data showing violence is down. He took command of the police department and deployed the National Guard under laws and Constitutional powers that give the federal government more sway over the nation’s capital than other cities. Its historically majority Black population wasn’t electing its own city council and mayor until 1973, when Republican President Richard Nixon signed the Home Rule Act. The measure still left significant power to the president and Congress, though no president has exercised the police powers before.” ~~~

~~~ Chris Mirasola in a Lawfare essay: "Federal law provides the president unusually broad discretion to deploy the D.C. National Guard for law enforcement functions. Yet this statutory scheme, and the manner in which Trump is using it, erode the diminishing guarantees against military incursion into domestic affairs." Mirasola outlines the statutory basis for Trump's deployment of the military in D.C., even as he notes that the laws are "outdated and incredibly broad.... Finally, there are the especially concerning facts of this military deployment, which we must place in the context of an ever-growing impulse to deploy the military within the United States. It began eight months ago at the southern border. It spread to Los Angeles earlier this summer. And it is now arriving (returning, really) to the capital. Each time, the president has justified these military deployments under the pretext of a domestic crisis that facts do not support." ~~~

~~~ Joyce Vance on Substack: "It’s deeply concerning that Trump’s predication for seizing control in the District — allegedly out of control crime — are a lie.... Time and again, Trump shows his willingness to grab and abuse power, and each instance makes the next more likely.... Trump declined to deploy the Guard on January 6—when doing so would have been entirely appropriate, claiming he lacked the power to do so. Yet now, he has suddenly, and without a valid reason, ordered the troops to mobilize." ~~~

~~~ Heather Cox Richardson: “Trump’s performance at the press conference ... made it clear that his mental deterioration is moving rapidly. He let Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Attorney General Pam Bondi, and FBI director Kash Patel explain the actual plan, taking the microphone himself to describe a fake world in which he plays the role of hero, solving five wars, creating a booming economy, solving the border security others couldn’t, protecting Americans from a hellscape that exists only in his rhetoric.... As [former Time editor Rick] Stengel noted, 'Throughout history, autocrats use a false pretext to impose government control over local law enforcement as a prelude to a more national takeover. That’s far more dangerous than the situation he says he is fixing.'... The administration is also consolidating power over the economy. Greg Ip of the Wall Street Journal noted today that the U.S. is marching toward a form of state capitalism in which Trump looks much like the Chinese Communist Party, exercising political control not just over government agencies but over companies themselves.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: So what has been obvious for months is this: a fascistic, ignorant old man of metastasizing mental incompetence -- backed by his administration, the Congress and the Supreme Court -- is taking control of all aspects of American life: the law, the economy, the cultural institutions, and of course all of government, including the military. ~~~

~~~ Meagan Flynn, et al., of the Washington Post: “D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) faced one of the greatest tests of her leadership in her decade-long tenure Monday as ... Donald Trump took over the D.C. police department and deployed the D.C. National Guard onto city streets — a stunning moment in the history of the city’s limited self-rule. For now, Bowser continued with the cautious approach she has taken over the past several months and said there is little the city could do to prevent Trump’s unprecedented actions. Although she disputed Trump’s characterization of D.C. as riddled with surging violence, the city will cooperate as the law requires, she said.... Fearing the kind of intervention that materialized Monday, Bowser has sought to avoid antagonizing the president with the kind of resistance that other Democratic mayors nationwide have not hesitated to display....” ~~~

     ~~~ Matt Pusatory & Amber Anderson of WUSA9 Washington, D.C.: "High level sources in the Wilson Building and the Metropolitan Police Department told WUSA9 that Mayor Muriel Bowser and Police Chief Pamela Smith were not given a heads up about Trump's plan to take over and federalize the police force. They were only preparing for an announcement on the National Guard." ~~~

~~~ Erin Cox, et al., of the Washington Post: “Even before ... Donald Trump announced Monday that he would take over D.C. policing, city residents started to feel it. Social media posts showed FBI officers on the streets over the weekend in areas known for nightlife.... Residents shared images of officers wearing Immigration and Customs Enforcement uniforms under the Key Bridge in Georgetown on Sunday. The next morning, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives posted an image of officers standing next to FBI agents and Park Police officers, alongside pictures of confiscated firearms and narcotics. Trump promised much more to come.... The Drug Enforcement Administration began sending agents to homeless campsites. The U.S. Park Police was tasked with addressing graffiti in federal parks. National Guard troops were expected to staff intersections and work in shifts of 200 starting later this week.... Trump named Terry Cole, the head of the DEA, as interim commissioner of the D.C. police. Cole told Police Chief Pamela A. Smith on Monday evening that the federal team is hoping for the Metropolitan Police Department to lead the effort....” A related NPR story is here. ~~~

~~~ Martin Weil & Emma Uber of the Washington Post: “A man was shot and killed in the District Monday hours after ... Donald Trump announced he was taking control of the D.C. police to stop crime. The killing occurred in Northwest Washington within a half-mile of two of the high-profile homicides the president cited at his news conference.” ~~~

~~~ Steve Benen of MSNBC: “... while Trump has repeatedly insisted that crime in nation’s capital is 'out of control,' in reality, crime in D.C. has dropped. Indeed, we can say this with some confidence because U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office is still promoting a press statement from earlier this year that boasts about violent crime in the city dropping to a 30-year low.... The president even appears to be creating new criminal statutes on the fly, declaring at his press conference that those who 'even think about destroying a statue or monument' in the city will 'go to jail for 10 years.' Does he have the legal authority to make such declarations? By all appearances, the president doesn't much care.... Trump also took the opportunity to share some related thoughts about how his newly deployed forces would treat criminal criminal suspects.... 'You knock the hell out of them. It’s the only language they understand,' the Republican said, adding,  'You spit and we hit — and they get hit real hard.' Trump, of course, maintained very different standards for Jan. 6 rioters, many of whom did far more than just spit on police officers during violent clashes at the Capitol....”

     ~~~ This video is pretty good, but the way Maddow started her show, leading up to the segment above, is better yet. Here's a pirated copy of the entire show, and it's worth watching the beginning. If MSNBC causes YouTube to take down the pirated video, there's likely to be another.


David Sanger
 of the New York Times: Donald “Trump set the lowest possible bar for his meeting with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Friday, declaring that 'probably in the first two minutes I’ll know exactly whether or not a deal can get done,' and insisting he was ready to walk away from the talks and let the two sides continue to fight it out. In a rambling news conference, Mr. Trump reiterated that he planned to negotiate what he called 'land swaps' and batted away the statements over the weekend by Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, that his country’s Constitution prohibited him from giving away land to an invader. In describing the meeting, Mr. Trump told reporters that 'I’m going to Russia on Friday,' and repeated a version of the same statement several minutes later. In fact, the meeting is set to take place in Alaska, which has not been part of Russia since 1867, when it was sold to the United States for $7.2 million.... Recent history suggests that Mr. Trump is inclined to accept Mr. Putin’s version of reality: This year he suggested that Ukraine was responsible for the invasion of its own territory....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Sanger doesn't say so, but Trump said the same thing yesterday, blaming President Zelensky for starting the war. I heard him while I was flipping through channels. Sanger goes on to write about how the meeting was hastily called, more evidence that a main purpose of the "summit" for Trump is to divert attention from the Epstein scandal. ~~~

     ~~~ An Independent story is here. MB: Since he already feels Alaska belongs to Russia, maybe the person whose photo is on the cover of "The Art of the Deal" will sell Seward's Folly back to Russia if Putin throws in a little multi-million-dollar sweetener for Trump.

Alan Rappeport of the New York Times: Donald “Trump signed an executive order on Monday extending a trade truce between the United States and China for another three months, continuing a reprieve from the threat of escalating tariffs and export controls, which rocked the global economy earlier this year. The extension, until Nov. 10, gives the countries more time to work out their differences and sets the stage for a potential summit between Mr. Trump and Xi Jinping, China’s leader, later this year. Mr. Trump suggested on Monday that there had been progress in the negotiations. 'They’ve been dealing quite nicely — the relationship is very good with President Xi and myself,' Mr. Trump said at the White House.” A CNBC report is here.

Tony Romm, et al., of the New York Times: Donald “Trump announced on Monday that he would nominate E.J. Antoni, an economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation, to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Mr. Trump fired the previous commissioner of the agency after it reported weak job growth. Dr. Antoni, who would need to be confirmed by the Senate, has previously criticized the bureau and questioned its methods and reports. His nomination underscored Mr. Trump’s attempts to place his own allies in control of a key repository of data about the nation’s hiring, wages and prices.” The AP's story is here.

For the Moment, Some Truth on Truth Social. Drew Harwell of the Washington Post: “An [AI] 'answer engine' on Trump’s social media site ... keeps contradicting him.... [It] says the 2020 election wasn’t stolen, tariffs aren’t boosting the stock market and Barack Obama is seen favorably.” The search engine is programmed to rely on “conservative sources” to formulate its answers, but it is still coming up with some accurate answers.

Ben Rhodes in a New York Times op-ed: “Over the decade that [Donald Trump] has dominated our politics, he has been both a cause and a symptom of the unraveling of our society.... The comparatively moderate first Trump administration ended in a catastrophically mismanaged pandemic, mass protests and a violent insurrection. The fact that he returned to power even after those calamities seemed to confirm his instinct that America has become an enterprise with a limitless margin for error, a place where individuals — like superpowers — can avoid the consequences of their actions.... The second Trump administration has fully normalized the ethos of short-termism.... To overcome [Trumpism], Democrats must mobilize people to believe in the future.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Perry Stein of the Washington Post: “A federal judge in New York denied the Justice Department’s request to release grand jury transcripts from the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein’s imprisoned associate, Ghislaine Maxwell on Monday. The ruling cited that the circumstances of the case do not merit breaking the secrecy of grand jury proceedings. The Justice Department has asked three federal judges who oversaw parts of the Epstein and Maxwell cases to release grand jury transcripts amid the public furor over the Trump administration’s decision this year not to release any more information from the Epstein files. So far the requests, two in New York and one in Florida, have not yielded the release of any transcripts. A judge in Florida has already rejected the request, and another request to a judge in New York, who is overseeing Epstein’s legal proceedings, is pending.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Marie: You wouldn't know this if you relied on the WashPo story linked above. Fortunately, there is Marcy Wheeler: ~~~

~~~ The Judge Was Not Amused. Marcy Wheeler: “Judge Paul Engelmayer has rejected Todd Blanche’s bid to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell grand jury materials .... because Blanche was lying when he insinuated there’d be anything of substantial public interest.... 'A member of the public familiar with the Maxwell trial record who reviewed the grand jury materials that the Government proposes to unseal would thus learn next to nothing new. The materials do not identify any person other than Epstein and Maxwell as having had sexual contact with a minor,' [Engelmayer wrote]. Engelmayer did consider unsealing the material for another reason: to expose the government’s attempt at diversion.... 'The one colorable argument under that doctrine for unsealing in this case, in fact, is that doing so would expose as disingenuous the Government’s public explanations for moving to unseal. A member of the public, appreciating that the Maxwell grand jury materials do not contribute anything to public knowledge, might conclude that the Government’s motion for their unsealing was aimed not at “transparency” but at diversion—aimed not at full disclosure but at the illusion of such....' He goes onto call out Blanche’s haste, sloppiness, and ignorance about the proceeding, and his inattention to the concerns of the victims.... This was a stunt. Now exposed as a stunt.” [Wheeler's emphasis.] (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: As a teevee expert said recently -- and not necessarily in relation to the Epstein scandal -- federal judges typically assumed they could rely on assertions made by federal prosecutors; judges tended to accept the DOJ's proffers more-or-less at face value. Not anymore. The Trump DOJ has the same respect for the truth that Trump himself does. ~~~

     ~~~ AND. Even the worst among us is entitled to legal representation in our system of justice, so I will not fault Bondi or Blanche or Bove for representing the deplorable Mr. Trump in various past predicaments in which he put himself. But in the course of their representation of this hot, stinking turd, surely they learned many a tidbit attesting to his hot, stinking turdiness. And still, and still. They chose to serve in his "justice" department. They chose to convert the "justice" department into a private law firm for his hot, stinking turdiness from the paragono of law enforcement it is meant to be. And in so doing, of course, they also chose to pervert the course of justice -- time and again. They chose to do numerous questionable or outright unlawful things. They chose to harm and defame many innocent and honorable people. They all chose to lie under oath in at least one instance. They chose to shame the nation they swore to serve. The "leaders" of our "justice" system are a band of hardened criminals. 

Marco Compiles False Human Rights Report for Trump. Adam Taylor, et al., of the Washington Post: “The [State D]epartment’s annual human rights reports, which are scheduled to be transmitted to Congress on Tuesday..., are expected to target the South African government for its alleged mistreatment of White Afrikaner farmers and the Brazilian government for its alleged persecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro, an ally of ... [Donald] Trump. Human rights advocates, foreign leaders and other critics of the Trump administration say its claims about both governments are exaggerated. Within the State Department, there is considerable unease, too, over how the writing of these and other country-specific human rights reports were shaped compared with past years, with some saying the process was unduly politicized.... A Trump political appointee, Samuel Samson, led the draft’s rewriting after Africa subject matter experts in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor refused to continue their involvement, citing the inclusion of false and misleading information....”

Chris Cameron of the New York Times: “A federal judge blocked the Trump administration on Monday from withholding federal funding to the National Endowment for Democracy, a nonprofit established by Congress to bolster democracy worldwide that had been paralyzed by the loss of funding earlier this year. Judge Dabney L. Friedrich of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia wrote in her 15-page ruling that the Trump administration had withheld funds from the nonprofit 'for impermissible policy reasons,' and that the endowment had suffered irreparable harm in the form of layoffs of critical staff members and suspension of several democracy-supporting initiatives.... The endowment, which has been denounced by major authoritarian powers like China and Russia, was one of several U.S.-backed human rights groups that fell victim to aggressive cuts mandated by the Department of Government Efficiency, a group led by Elon Musk that sought to slash much of the government soon after ... [Donald] Trump returned to office.”

Group Decides Trump Has Made Military Academies Racist Enough. Vimal Patel of the New York Times: “When the Supreme Court struck down race-conscious admissions at colleges in 2023, the justices said the decision did not apply to military academies because they had 'potentially distinct interests.'... Students for Fair Admissions sued shortly after to test that idea. It argued that the use of race in admissions at the academies, including the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and the United States Air Force Academy, should also be struck down. On Monday, the group dropped its case, acknowledging a significant shift in the political landscape since it had brought its lawsuit. In some of their earliest actions in office, Trump administration officials reversed diversity initiatives, including the considering of race in admissions, at the military schools.”

Madeleine Ngo & Margot Sanger-Katz of the New York Times: “The Republicans’ domestic policy legislation will most likely raise after-tax incomes of the richest Americans while its cuts to social spending will leave the poorest at a substantial disadvantage, according to an analysis released on Monday by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The report also estimated that millions of low-income Americans could lose access to federal food assistance or Medicaid under the sweeping bill that ... [Donald] Trump signed into law last month. This highly regressive pattern — both cutting the safety net for the poor and reducing taxes for the rich — has no precedent among large budget bills passed in the last 40 years. The budget office’s report was an update to an earlier analysis it had issued in June.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Colombia. Genevieve Glatsky & Julie Turkewitz of the New York Times: “Miguel Uribe, the Colombian senator and presidential hopeful who was shot in the head at a campaign event two months ago in an attack that shocked the nation, has died at 39, according to a statement posted by his wife. Mr. Uribe had spent nine weeks in the hospital after the shooting in Bogotá, undergoing multiple surgeries before succumbing to his injuries. The hospital had announced in a statement this weekend that Mr. Uribe’s condition had worsened and that he was experiencing bleeding in the brain.... Mr. Uribe’s mother, Diana Turbay, a prominent journalist and daughter of a former president, was killed in 1991, when Mr. Uribe was a child, after being kidnapped by a drug cartel. The senator’s shooting in June, captured on video, had both divided the nation over how to address violence in the country and united people of disparate political backgrounds around a shared tragedy.... It is still not clear who masterminded the assassination or why.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

 

Monday
Aug112025

The Conversation -- August 11, 2025

Ben Rhodes in a New York Times op-ed: “Over the decade that [Donald Trump] has dominated our politics, he has been both a cause and a symptom of the unraveling of our society.... The comparatively moderate first Trump administration ended in a catastrophically mismanaged pandemic, mass protests and a violent insurrection. The fact that he returned to power even after those calamities seemed to confirm his instinct that America has become an enterprise with a limitless margin for error, a place where individuals — like superpowers — can avoid the consequences of their actions.... The second Trump administration has fully normalized the ethos of short-termism.... To overcome [Trumpism], Democrats must mobilize people to believe in the future.”

Marie: You wouldn't know this if you relied on the WashPo story linked below re: release of grand jury transcripts in the Ghislaine Maxwell case. Fortunate, there is Marcy Wheeler: ~~~

~~~ The Judge Was Not Amused. Marcy Wheeler: “Judge Paul Engelmayer has rejected Todd Blanche’s bid to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell grand jury materials .... because Blanche was lying when he insinuated there’d be anything of substantial public interest.... 'A member of the public familiar with the Maxwell trial record who reviewed the grand jury materials that the Government proposes to unseal would thus learn next to nothing new. The materials do not identify any person other than Epstein and Maxwell as having had sexual contact with a minor,' [Engelmayer wrote]. Engelmayer did consider unsealing the material for another reason: to expose the government’s attempt at diversion.... 'The one colorable argument under that doctrine for unsealing in this case, in fact, is that doing so would expose as disingenuous the Government’s public explanations for moving to unseal. A member of the public, appreciating that the Maxwell grand jury materials do not contribute anything to public knowledge, might conclude that the Government’s motion for their unsealing was aimed not at “transparency” but at diversion—aimed not at full disclosure but at the illusion of such....' He goes onto call out Blanche’s haste, sloppiness, and ignorance about the proceeding, and his inattention to the concerns of the victims.” [Wheeler's emphasis.] ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: As a teevee expert said recently -- and not necessarily in relation to the Epstein scandal -- federal judges typically assumed they could rely on assertions made by federal prosecutors; judges tended to accept the DOJ's proffers more-or-less at face value. Not anymore. The Trump DOJ has the same respect for the truth that Trump himself does.

Michael Birnbaum, et al., of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump announced Monday that he would place the D.C. ... police under direct federal control and deploy the National Guard to the streets of Washington to fight crime and clear the city of its homeless population, an extraordinary flex of federal power that could expose residents of the nation’s capital to unpredictable encounters with a domestically-deployed military force. The decision to deploy troops comes as the president has been slamming America’s cities as places where crime is out of control, despite two years of declines that have brought homicide levels in many major cities to their lowest levels in decades. The administration has already mobilized FBI agents in recent days in overnight shifts to help local law enforcement prevent carjackings and violent crime in the city, officials said. Because the District of Columbia is not a state, the federal government has unusually sweeping powers to intervene over the objections of its residents and leaders, giving the president an opportunity to use it as a laboratory for a militarized approach to urban crime-fighting....

“In addition to the FBI, the Secret Service and the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division have also been directed to launch special patrols in Washington, according to a White House official.... But the administration has not consulted with the D.C. police department — the chief law enforcement agency responsible for policing local crime — about how best to deploy federal resources, said a senior official....”

~~~ The New York Times is liveblogging some sort of press conference thing Trump is heading up with the usual suspects as supporting cast members. MB Update: As it often is, the liveblog is amusing what with Trump being such a dunderhead & lying SOS.

Perry Stein of the Washington Post: “A federal judge in New York denied the Justice Department’s request to release grand jury transcripts from the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein’s imprisoned associate, Ghislaine Maxwell on Monday. The ruling cited that the circumstances of the case do not merit breaking the secrecy of grand jury proceedings. The Justice Department has asked three federal judges who oversaw parts of the Epstein and Maxwell cases to release grand jury transcripts amid the public furor over the Trump administration’s decision this year not to release any more information from the Epstein files. So far the requests, two in New York and one in Florida, have not yielded the release of any transcripts. A judge in Florida has already rejected the request, and another request to a judge in New York, who is overseeing Epstein’s legal proceedings, is pending.”

Colombia. Genevieve Glatsky & Julie Turkewitz of the New York Times: “Miguel Uribe, the Colombian senator and presidential hopeful who was shot in the head at a campaign event two months ago in an attack that shocked the nation, has died at 39, according to a statement posted by his wife. Mr. Uribe had spent nine weeks in the hospital after the shooting in Bogotá, undergoing multiple surgeries before succumbing to his injuries. The hospital had announced in a statement this weekend that Mr. Uribe’s condition had worsened and that he was experiencing bleeding in the brain.... Mr. Uribe’s mother, Diana Turbay, a prominent journalist and daughter of a former president, was killed in 1991, when Mr. Uribe was a child, after being kidnapped by a drug cartel. The senator’s shooting in June, captured on video, had both divided the nation over how to address violence in the country and united people of disparate political backgrounds around a shared tragedy.... It is still not clear who masterminded the assassination or why.”

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TrumpenGestapo. Devlin Barrett of the New York Times: “The Trump administration plans to temporarily reassign 120 F.B.I. agents in Washington to nighttime patrol duties as part of ... [Donald] Trump’s crackdown on the city’s street crime.... Mr. Trump has said that crime in Washington is spiraling out of control. While statistics show that violent crime in the city hit a 30-year low last year and is down another 26 percent so far this year, youth crime has been a persistent problem for city officials.... The bureau’s agents are investigators not trained in patrol-focused policing.” ~~~

~~~ Perry Steinet al., of the Washington Post: “Trump on Sunday compared forthcoming action against D.C. crime to his administration’s aggressive crackdown against illegal immigration at the southern border, saying that he plans to 'immediately clear out the city’s homeless population and take swift action against crime.' 'Be prepared! There will be no “MR. NICE GUY.” We want our Capital BACK,' Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social social media platform.'... In recent days, the administration has authorized up to 120 agents, largely from the FBI’s Washington Field Office, to work overnight shifts for at least one week alongside D.C. police and other federal law enforcement officers in the nation’s capital....” The AP report is here.

     ~~~ Marie: Since the FBI doesn't have uniforms, I'll assume that these agents will be wearing plainclothes on their "temporary" assignments. That is, they'll essentially be secret police. Since they don't know how to do the job, they're almost certain to violate people's rights -- and to put themselves in harm's way. Plus, some may inadvertently endanger the real police officers they're working with. All to satisfy one of Trump's prejudices. ~~~

~~~ Robert Mackey of the Guardian puts his finger on what's really going on here: Trump orders homeless he passed en route to golf course to leave Washington DC.... 'The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY,' Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform Sunday morning, shortly after being driven from the White House to his golf club in Virginia. 'We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital.' The post was illustrated with four photographs, all apparently taken from the president’s motorcade along the route from the White House to his golf course. Two of the images showed a total of 10 tents pitched on the grass along a highway on-ramp just over a mile from the White House. The third image showed a single person sleeping on the steps of the American Institute of Pharmacy Building on Constitution Avenue. The fourth image showed the line of vehicles that whisk Trump to his golf course passing a small amount of roadside litter on the E Street Expressway, near the Kennedy Center.... Earlier this week, Trump ordered a surge of federal officers from a variety of agencies to increase patrols in Washington DC, pointing to the assault on a young federal worker [-- MB: that would be Big Balls --] who came to Washington to work with Elon Musk as evidence that the city’s police force was failing to combat violent crime. Washington DC police, however, had stopped the assault Trump focused attention on, and arrested two 15-year-old suspects at the scene.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: IOW, Trump doesn't like the homeless messing up his "view." I'd guess this is yet another indicator that Trump can't handle the truth; the truth here being that homelessness is partly a failure of government. Sending the unhoused "FAR from the Capital" solves only one problem: the king's displeasure at the "unsightliness" of his realm. ~~~

~~~ AND it may be about to get worse: ~~~

~~~ Michael Pegram & Thayma Sanchez of NBC Washington & the AP: "... Donald Trump is considering deploying up to 1,000 National Guard troops to D.C. and could make the announcement as early as Monday, one defense official and two U.S. officials confirmed on Sunday night.... The number of National Guard members to be assigned is still in flux, officials said, and most of the troops will likely be pulled from the D.C. National Guard. The officials clarified that the decision is not final and no orders have been signed.... The news comes a day after Trump posted on Truth Social that the White House will make an announcement Monday about the plan to combat crime in D.C. 'It has become one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the World. It will soon be one of the safest!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter,' Trump said [in a social media post].... White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told NewsNation's Kellie Meyer that D.C. was 'more violent than Baghdad,' NBC News reported.... D.C.'s mayor [Muriel Bowserpushed back in an interview with MSNBC on Sunday, saying that comparing the city 'to a war-torn country is hyperbolic and false.'" ~~~

~~~ ⭐Steve Vladeck on Substack: Congress may have the constitutional power to return [Washington, D.C.] to true federal control, but the President can’t do it all by himself.... Later today..., [Donald] Trump is apparently holding a press conference at which he is going to unveil his plan to 'federalize' D.C. in response to completely inflated (if not entirely bogus) claims about violent crime in the nation’s capital.... [With passage of the Home Rule Act of 1973,] most of the real control of day-to-day life for Washingtonians [has belonged] to the democratically accountable local government.... [DC's National] Guard is commanded not by the Mayor..., but by the President. Most significantly, the Home Rule Act gives the President the power to take control of the D.C. Police 'whenever [he] determines that special conditions of an emergency nature exist which require the use of the Metropolitan Police force for federal purposes.' The authority is limited to no more than 30 days (it’s limited to 48 hours unless the President sends a special notification to the Chair and Ranking Members of the relevant congressional committees explaining why he needs the authority for longer ).... [Still,]  neither the Constitution nor any Act of Congress authorizes the President to 'federalize' D.C. in general, even if, decidedly unlike what is true at this moment, there were a good reason for doing so.” Quite an interesting essay on the history of the relationship between the District & the federal government. Vladeck is a D.C. resident.

Luke Broadwater of the New York TimesAs President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia gets ready to meet with ... [Donald] Trump on Friday in Alaska, Vice President JD Vance said on Sunday that the U.S. is working to set up a meeting that also includes President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. Mr. Vance said on Fox News’s 'Sunday Morning Futures' that he did not think it would be a good idea for Mr. Putin and Mr. Zelensky to meet before Mr. Trump’s meeting with Mr. Putin on Friday. But he suggested the three leaders could meet and that the U.S. wants to schedule such a meeting.... Mr. Vance said the White House is working on 'scheduling and things like that around when these three leaders could sit down and discuss an end to this conflict.'... Mr. Trump plans to meet with Mr. Putin in Alaska without the Ukrainians there, barring any last-minute invitation.” ~~~

     ~~~ MarieScheduling and things like that?” JayDee doesn't seem to have a rudimentary knowledge of what he's talking about. Scheduling is not the main issue. ~~~

~~~ Marc Santora of the New York Times: “... Ukraine’s sidelined leaders warned that the Kremlin would try to 'deceive America' as Mr. Trump pushed to end the war. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, is determined to demonstrate that his country is not the obstacle to peace by emphasizing Kyiv’s willingness to accept an unconditional cease-fire, an idea that Russia has rejected. He has cautioned that Mr. Putin will try to drive a wedge between the United States, Ukraine and its European allies by putting forth demands that the Kremlin knows Ukraine cannot accept and then portraying Mr. Zelensky as the barrier to a deal.... European leaders and diplomats joined Kyiv in trying to frame the upcoming discussions in Alaska as a 'test'  for Russia, which has shown little sign that it is willing to pull back in its pummeling of Ukraine. 'On Friday, it is important to see how serious Putin is, and the only one who can do that is President Trump,' the NATO secretary-general, Mark Rutte, told CBS News on Sunday. In their public comments, Ukrainian and European officials ... have been careful in choosing their words, hoping not to offend Mr. Trump while at the same time attempting to shift the conversation back to the need for a complete cease-fire.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Yup. When Rutte says Trump is the only one who can gauge Putin's sincerity, he's not exaclty wrong because Trump will be the only other guy in the room (except for Putin's people). But it's pretty easy to "deceive" a person who wants to be deceived, and Trump is ever-ready to give it all up for Putin. 

Tripp Mickle of the New York Times: “Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices are expected to pay the United States 15 percent of the money they take in from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, as part of a highly unusual financial agreement with the Trump administration.... On Wednesday, Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, met with ... [Donald] Trump at the White House and agreed to give the federal government its 15 percent cut, essentially making the federal government a partner in Nvidia’s business in China, said the people familiar with the deal. The Commerce Department began granting licenses for A.I. chip sales two days later, these people said.... There are few precedents for the Commerce Department agreeing to grant licenses for exports in exchange for a share of revenue. But the unorthodox payments are consistent with Mr. Trump’s increasingly interventionist role in international business deals involving American companies.” An Axios item is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'll be damned if I see how taking a cut of a company's sales of its product is encouraging U.S. manufacturing. It seems to me AI chips could be made in many countries, and adding this extra burden, in perpetuity, is a disincentive to build product in the U.S. 

Paul Krugman writes a useful -- and amusing -- post on "the political economy of incompetence." It's clear this principle can be -- and has been -- applied across the board. Look at all the people who gain from Trump's incompetence, for instance. But Krugman concentrates on wholly incompetent economist Stephen Moore who put on an error-ridden dog-and-pony show with Trump last week. Also, Trump called Krugman a "Deranged BUM" last night, which Krugman is proudly adding to his CV. 

Alexandra Marquez of NBC News: “Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker slammed ... Donald Trump as a 'cheater' and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott as a 'joke' days after welcoming Texas Democrats who fled their state in protest of GOP-led redistricting efforts. 'Governor Abbott is the joke,' Pritzker, a Democrat, told NBC News’ 'Meet the Press' in an interview that aired Sunday in response to Abbott calling Illinois’ congressional map a 'joke.' 'He's the one who is attempting mid-decade here — at a time when, frankly, all of us are concerned about the future of democracy. He's literally helping whittle it away and licking the boots of his leader, Donald Trump,' Pritzker added.... He went on to say, 'This is — it's cheating. Donald Trump is a cheater. He cheats on his wives, he cheats at golf, and now he's trying to cheat the American people out of their votes.'”

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Israel/Palestine, et al. Ephrat Livni of the New York Times: “An Israeli strike near a hospital in Gaza City on Sunday night killed four Al Jazeera journalists, the network said, and Gazan health officials reported at least one additional fatality. The Israeli military confirmed that it had conducted a strike targeting one of the men killed, whom it accused of being a Hamas fighter posing as a reporter, an allegation that he and the network had rejected. The Government Media Office in Gaza, which is run by Hamas, said in a statement that a strike on a 'journalists’ tent near Al-Shifa Hospital' killed two reporters — Anas al-Sharif and Mohammed Qraiqeh — and three photographers — Ibrahim Zaher, Moamen Aliwa and Mohammed Noufal — and called the attack 'deliberate and premeditated.'” The Al Jazeera story is here.

Victoria Kim of the New York Times: “Australia said it would recognize Palestine statehood during the United Nations General Assembly’s annual session in September — echoing similar announcements by France, Britain and Canada, and adding to international pressure on Israel to bring the war in Gaza to a negotiated end. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of Australia said on Monday that the move was 'part of a coordinated global effort building momentum for a two-state solution.' He said Australia’s recognition would be 'predicated' on 'detailed and significant' commitments he had received from the Palestinian Authority’s leader, Mahmoud Abbas, to demilitarize, hold general elections and ensure that Hamas plays no role in a future Palestinian state.” The Australian Broadcasting Network story is here.

Joe Stanley-Smith of Politico: “Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday poured scorn on plans by some European countries to recognize the state of Palestine. France and the United Kingdom, along with Canada, announced in recent weeks plans to formally recognize Palestine, while Norway, Spain and Ireland formally recognized Palestine in 2024. Netanyahu dismissed the idea as a 'canard' during a press conference in which he doubled down on his controversial plan to take over the whole of Gaza.” MB: You know, Bibi, a lot of people take a much different view of what constitutes “shameful” -- causing children to starve, for instance. Murdering journalists, for another.

Isabel Kershner & Aaron Boxerman of the New York Times: “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel defended on Sunday his government’s plan to launch a renewed offensive against Hamas in parts of Gaza, following a wave of international condemnation from traditional allies and critics at home. The Israeli military was preparing to expand its campaign to central Gaza as well as Gaza City, Mr. Netanyahu told reporters at a news conference in Jerusalem. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have sought shelter in those areas, hoping they would be safer. Mr. Netanyahu’s proposal has drawn fierce criticism from the families of Israeli hostages, who fear their loved ones will be killed in the Israeli assault. The country’s leaders also overruled the objections of Israeli military leaders, who had raised concerns over the exhaustion among their soldiers.” The link appears to be a gift link. It's worth reading on to see some of the reactions to Netanyahu's plans.

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