The Ledes

Thursday, July 3, 2025

CNBC: “Job growth proved better than expected in June, as the labor market showed surprising resilience and likely taking a July interest rate cut off the table. Nonfarm payrolls increased a seasonally adjusted 147,000 for the month, higher than the estimate for 110,000 and just above the upwardly revised 144,000 in May, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday. April’s tally also saw a small upward revision, now at 158,000 following an 11,000 increase.... Though the jobless rates fell [to 4.1%], it was due largely to a decrease in those working or looking for jobs.”

Washington Post: “A warehouse storing fireworks in Northern California exploded on Tuesday, leaving seven people missing and two injured as explosions continued into Wednesday evening, officials said. Dramatic video footage captured by KCRA 3 News, a Sacramento broadcaster, showed smoke pouring from the building’s roof before a massive explosion created a fireball that seemed to engulf much of the warehouse, accompanied by an echoing boom. Hundreds of fireworks appeared to be going off and were sparkling within the smoke. Photos of the aftermath showed multiple destroyed buildings and a large area covered in gray ash.” ~~~

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INAUGURATION 2029

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.”

No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land. -- Magna Carta ~~~

~~~ New York Times: “Bought for $27.50 after World War II, the faint, water stained manuscript in the library of Harvard Law School had attracted relatively little attention since it arrived there in 1946. That is about to change. Two British academics, one of whom happened on the manuscript by chance, have discovered that it is an original 1300 version — not a copy, as long thought — of Magna Carta, the medieval document that helped establish some of the world’s most cherished liberties. It is one of just seven such documents from that date still in existence.... A 710-year-old version of Magna Carta was sold in 2007 for $21.3 million.... First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England — or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore. He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry’s son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300.”

NPR lists all of the 2025 Pulitzer Prize winners. Poynter lists the prizes awarded in journalism as well as the finalists in these categories.

 

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
Nov252015

The Commentariat -- Nov. 26, 2015

Internal links removed.

Nearly four centuries after the Mayflower set sail, the world is still full of pilgrims -- men and women who want nothing more than the chance for a safer, better future for themselves and their families, What makes America America is that we offer that chance. -- President Obama

White House: "In this week's address, the President wished everyone a happy Thanksgiving, and reflected on America's history of welcoming men and women seeking a safer, better future for themselves and their families":


Afternoon Update:

Capitalism Is Awesome, Ctd. Linda Johnson of the AP: "After weeks of criticism from patients, doctors and other drugmakers for hiking a life-saving medicine to more than 50 times its former price, Turing Pharmaceuticals is reneging on its pledge to cut the $750-per-pill price. Instead, the small biotech company is reducing what it charges hospitals, by up to 50 percent, for its parasitic infection treatment Daraprim. Most patients' co-payments will be capped at $10 or less a month. But insurers will be stuck with the bulk of the $750 tab. That drives up future treatment and insurance costs."

*****

** Harold Meyerson of the Washington Post: "Thanksgiving is our holiday of refugee commemoration.... For today's Republicans -- including [Donald] Trump's rival candidates afraid to call him out for what he is -- celebrating Thanksgiving is an act of high hypocrisy.... To find Trump's antecedents, you have to go back to the Southern segregationist demagogues who whooped up their crowds by affirming the rightness and necessity not merely of their racism but of racist violence as well.... Trump, the Republicans' Southern Strategy -- pioneered by Barry Goldwater and perfected by strong> Ronald Reagan -- has hit bottom.... Trump's distinctive contribution to this decades-long process has been the rawness of his racism, the thuggish tone of his speech and the huge growth of anti-minority police powers that he has championed." Thanks to Janice for the link.

The First Thanksgiving:

... Francis Wilkinson of Bloomberg: "Thanksgiving is a political holiday. It honors and mythologizes the comity -- based on a formal treaty -- between two peoples who needed what the other had to offer at a particular point in time. Delighted not to be starving, the Puritans of what is now Massachusetts feasted for three days in 1621, and entertained the local Wampanoags as their guests.... What brought them together was not shared identity but shared interests: Trade. Protection from common enemies. Mutually valued exchanges of technology and skills."

Just Another Brooklyn Thanksgiving:

Thanks, Adele:

"As God Is My Witness, I Thought Turkeys Could Fly":

... The turkey drop was actually a real incident. It was at a shopping center in Atlanta; I think it was Broadview Plaza, which no longer exists. It was a Thanksgiving promotion. We thought that we could throw these live turkeys out into the crowd for their Thanksgiving dinners. All of us, naïve and uneducated, thought that turkeys could fly. Of course, they went just fuckin' splat. -- Clarke Brown of WQZI Atlanta (CW: You may want to read the linked group interview, conducted in 2012.)

President Obama pardons two turkeys. Unlike WKRP station manager Arthur Carlson (and real-person Clarke Brown), Obama is aware turkeys can't fly:

As you may have heard, for months there has been a fierce competition between a bunch of turkeys trying to win their way into the White House. -- President Obama, at the turkey-pardoning ceremony, clearly alluding to a different flock of turkeys

The First Family serves Thanksgiving dinner (Wednesday) at Friendship Place, a Washington, D.C., organization that helps homeless people:

Hiroko Tabuchi & Nelson Schwartz of the New York Times: "In 1939, the nation's largest retailers sent Franklin D. Roosevelt an urgent plea. Thanksgiving fell on the last day of November that year, giving merchants too few days before Christmas to unleash the season's sales.... Wouldn't Mr. Roosevelt consider moving the day up by a week? The president's acquiescence to retailers helped cement the pre-eminence of the post-Thanksgiving sales rush, now known as Black Friday.... Seven decades later, Black Friday has lost its distinctive edge.... The relentless race for holiday dollars has blunted the day's oomph, as stores offer deep discounts weeks before Thanksgiving and year-round deals in stores and online are breeding sales fatigue.... The history of Black Friday tracks the history of modern American retailing, and of personal consumption in the United States, which makes up a bigger part of the economy than in almost any other industrialized country."

Real News

Peter Baker of the New York Times: "President Obama reassured Americans on Wednesday that there was no known terrorist plot against the United States at the moment and urged them to go about their Thanksgiving holiday weekend activities without undue fear":

Rod Nordland of the New York Times: "The top American commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John F. Campbell, said Wednesday that several service members had been suspended from duty after an internal military investigation of the American airstrike on a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz last month. Calling the airstrike a 'tragic mistake,' General Campbell read a statement announcing the findings of the investigation, which he said concluded that 'avoidable human error' was to blame, compounded by technical, mechanical and procedural failures. He said that another contributing factor was that the Special Forces members in Kunduz had been fighting continuously for days and were fatigued."

Cindy Boren of the Washington Post: "Frank Gifford, the Hall of Fame NFL player turned broadcaster, was suffering from 'the debilitating effects of head trauma' from playing football when he died last summer at the age of 84, his family said in a statement Wednesday afternoon.... 'While Frank passed away from natural causes..., our suspicions that he was suffering from the debilitating effects of head trauma were confirmed when a team of pathologists recently diagnosed his condition as that of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) -- a progressive degenerative brain disease.' [his family said.]"

The Palinization of the GOP. Martin Longman of the Washington Monthly: "... something broke on the right when they were forced to spend September and October of 2008 pretending that it would be okay if Sarah Palin were elected vice-president. The only way to maintain that stance was to jettison all the normal standards we have for holding such a high office. But it also entailed simply insisting that the truth doesn't matter. And so, now..., it's gotten to the point that Republicans have realized that they can say anything they want and just blame media bias if anyone calls them on their lies. Palin basically invented this is a survival strategy after she fell on her face in her first big interview with Katie Couric. It's now more than a survival strategy. It's the Republican Party's modus operandi."

Linda Greenhouse: The Supreme Court will take up two cases this year where sex & religion collide (CW: as they so often do). Greenhouse cites a 1989 opinion by John Paul Stevens: "Our jurisprudence ... has consistently required a secular basis for valid legislation." Greenhouse: "... what the Supreme Court may or may not grasp is that it has on its hands something deeper yet: a struggle over modernity, a battle for the secular state in which women can make their choices and design what Justice Ginsburg calls their life course, free of obstacles erected by those who would impose their religious views on others and who find in recent Supreme Court decisions encouragement that this time they might get their way."

In today's commentary, Marvin S. puts his finger on the real motivation behind the GOP's overweaned "fear of terrorism."

Wes Enzinna, in the New York Times Magazine, on the Kurdish quasi-state of Rojava, in which "women had been championed as leaders, defense of the environment enshrined in law and radical direct democracy enacted in the streets." Thanks to Victoria D. for the link.

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Clueless Press Corps Stars in Futile Search for Clue. Citations (from Sunday's "Meet the Press") & identifiers by Driftglass:

There's no consequence for them to say anything that they want to. They can make things up, they can go out and say flat out untruths and nobody's challenging them.... -- Helene Cooper, actual, grown-up professional American journalist

... And Donald Trump says that he saw in Jersey City thousands of people cheering when the Twin Trade Towers came down, it's completely wrong. It did not happen. He did not see it. But who's there to challenge him on that? -- Tom Brokaw, famous teevee person, dean of NBC network news and, ironically, the revered, rose-colored-glasses chronicler of America's battle against fascism during World War II

Who, yes, who? If only there were some kind of job where the workers were tasked with confronting the lying liars, then telling all the rest of us the lying liars were lying. -- Constant Weader

P. S. Leave us not forget these gems:

We all sit there because we know the first time we bark, it's the last time we do the show.... All the sudden nobody will come on your show. -- Chuck Todd, "Meet the Press" star, explaining why the media don't challenge politicians' lies, November 2014. Chuck goes on to suggest that political satirists are responsible for "creating a more cynical public citizen."

What I always love is people say, 'Well, it's you folks' fault in the media.' No, it's the President of the United States' fault for not selling it. -- Chuck Todd, then-NBC White House correspondent, explaining why the media are not responsible to call out Republican lies about ObamaCare, September 2013

Matt Taiibi of Rolling Stone: "America is now too dumb for TV news. It's our fault. We in the media have spent decades turning the news into a consumer business that's basically indistinguishable from selling cheeseburgers or video games.... What we call right-wing and liberal media in this country are really just two different strategies of the same kind of nihilistic lizard-brain sensationalism. The ideal CNN story is a baby down a well, while the ideal Fox story is probably a baby thrown down a well by a Muslim terrorist or an ACORN activist.... What this 9/11 celebrations story shows is that American news audiences have had their fantasies stroked for so long that they can't even remember stuff that happened not that long ago."

Presidential Race

New York Times Editors: "Senator Bernie Sanders released his immigration plan on Tuesday.... Since the immigration reform bill was killed, in 2013, the party that killed it -- the Republicans -- has dragged the immigration debate to grotesque depths that go well beyond the usual nativist bigotry.... Mr. Sanders ... starts with the right premise: that immigrants should be welcomed and assimilated.... His proposals seek to uphold American values, bolster the rule of law, bolster the economy and protect and honor families.... Mr. Sanders's immigration plan is ... reality-based, moderate, practical and hopeful." ...

... Sanders' immigration plan is here. As the Times editors write, every citizen should read it. ...

** Katharine Seelye of the New York Times: "As Mayor, Bernie Sanders Was More Pragmatist Than Socialist."

Paul Krugman: With many GOP leaders espousing ridiculous conspiracy theories, "how are base voters supposed to know that Trump's claims that the media suppressed films of Muslims cheering on 9/11 mark him as crazy, while all the other conspiracy theories on the right are OK?... Sorry, guys, you created this monster, and now he's coming for you." ...

Possible Photoshop, by Driftglass.Let the National Witch Hunt Begin. Mark Hensch of the Hill: "... Donald Trump said late Tuesday that everyday Americans should monitor their neighbors for questionable behavior. 'The real greatest resource is all of you, because you have all those eyes and you see what's happening,' he told listeners in Myrtle Beach, S.C. 'People move into a house a block down the road, you know who's going in,' Trump continued. 'You can see and you report them to the local police. You're pretty smart, right?' he asked his audience. 'We know if there's something going on, report them. Most likely you'll be wrong, but that's OK.'" ...

"The New Colussus" -- Emma Lazarus

"Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

"The Newer Colussus" -- Donald Trump, for the Republican Party

"Turn in your tired, your poor,
You may be wrong, but that's okay.
They're wretched refuse, that's for sure.
Turn in the neighbors down the way,
Lift up your lamp to peek inside their door!"

... Greg Sargent: "Trump and his campaign are actively charging the liberal media with covering up evidence that American Muslims did in fact celebrate the 9/11 attacks in great numbers." ...

... In that context, Donald Trump mocks a New York Times reporter's physical disability. CW: There is no low where Trump won't go. The Guardian has video. ...

     ... The Politico story, by Ben Schreckinger, is here. ...

... MJ Lee of CNN: "Conservative warnings about Donald Trump have grown increasingly somber. At first he was just an entertainer; then he became a worrisome distraction, and soon, there was fear that he would permanently scar the reputation of the Republican Party. But it was after Trump started calling for stronger surveillance of Muslim-Americans ... that a handful of conservatives ventured to call Trump's rhetoric something much more dangerous: fascism.... Conservative Iowa radio host Steve Deace ... [tweeted] last week: 'If Obama proposed the same religion registry as Trump every conservative in the country would call it what it is -- creeping fascism.'... Historians say they see other characteristics of fascism in Trump in addition to his propensity for racial and ethnic stereotyping. Among them: nativist undertones, attempts to control the media; and even condoning violence against his critics." ...

... CW: Bearing in mind that Trump's penthouse is four miles from the site of the World Trade Center, see Ophelia M.'s comment in yesterday's thread. If you still believe Trump saw with his own eyes people jumping from the World Trade Towers on 9/11, you'll have to conclude that Ophelia is, like, Mrs. Magoo. We all have horrible memories of that day & its aftermath, but Trump, like many people, exaggerates his own "participation" in this terrible event. ...

... Paul Campos in Lawyers, Guns & Money: "For a generation now, America has been bombarded by the message that the market is the proper measure of all things, and that pretty much everything ought to be sold to the highest bidder. The result is the disgusting spectacle of Trump campaign, which probably started out as a shameless publicity stunt, but is now getting such great ratings that there's a non-trivial chance he could become president of the United States." ...

... Matea Gold & Robert Costa of the Washington Post: "Plan A for GOP donors: Wait for Trump to fall. (There is no Plan B.)... The absence of a big-money response to Trump is especially striking, given the mounting anxiety among GOP leaders about his lasting dominance in the race and his accumulation of incendiary statements." ...

... Driftglass: "It turns out that however often the donor and brain caste of the GOP meet in quiet rooms and strategize about assembling an acceptable Establishment Candidate out of snips from old Jerry Ford speeches and dollops of Ronald Reagan's hair dye and Third Way/No Labels Both Siderist soft-core pornspeak, it turns out the Base of their party doesn't really give a shit about their schemes anymore.... The Base wants torch-lit rallies full of spellbinding speeches about their surpassing awesomeness and moral superiority. They want to make a bonfire of the Enlightenment and dance around the flames, armed to the teeth, braying about Freedumb and Murrica. And EstaBushment Fix It Man Jeb! ain't that guy."

In essence, if we are ever ordered by a government authority to personally violate and sin -- violate God's law and sin -- if we're ordered to stop preaching the Gospel, if we're ordered to perform a same-sex marriage as someone presiding over it, we are called to ignore that. So when those two come into conflict, God's rules always win. -- Marco Rubio, in a Christian Broadcasting Network interview, vowing to violate the Constitution & the law, if God says so

Marco should become a professional conscientious objector, not POTUS. He cannot agree to the terms of his oath of office. It is notable that he has taken similar oaths more than once. -- Constant Weader

Looks as if the end of Carly Fiorina's campaign is in sight. The New York Times just dumped a pile of research in the form of a story.

Beyond the Beltway

Jesse Wegman of the New York Times: "Gov. Steven L. Beshear [D] of Kentucky did a good thing on Tuesday when he issued an executive order making about 140,000 residents of his state with a nonviolent felony conviction immediately eligible to register to vote.... Nationwide, nearly six million Americans are unable to take part in the defining feature of a democracy. Naturally, the effects of these laws are as racially discriminatory as the criminal justice system from which they spring. In Kentucky, an estimated one in five African-Americans is barred from voting."

Richard Perez-Pena of the New York Times: "Pennsylvania lawmakers took a significant step Wednesday toward removing from office the state attorney general, Kathleen G. Kane, who faces criminal charges. And Ms. Kane vowed a wide-ranging investigation into embarrassing emails from state officials, raising the stakes in a drama that has transfixed the state government for months. A bipartisan special committee of the State Senate found 'a sufficient basis for the Senate to move forward' with hearings on whether to force out Ms. Kane, a Democrat, because her law license has been suspended, limiting her ability to do her job."

Julie Fancher & Avi Selk of the Dallas Morning News: "The organizer of a recent armed anti-Muslim protest at an Irving mosque published the names and addresses of dozens of Muslims and 'Muslim sympathizers' online Wednesday. David Wright III copied an Irving city document that included the personal information of people who signed up to speak before the City Council voted in March to support a state bill aimed at blocking Muslim influence. Wright, who organized Saturday's armed protest against the 'Islamization of America' outside the Irving Islamic Center, posted on Facebook the name and address of every Muslim and Muslim sympathizer that stood up for .. Sharia tribunals in Irving.'... Shortly before Wright posted the list online, he wrote on Facebook: '...We like to have guns designed to kill people that pose a threat in a very efficient manner.'" CW: In the accompanying photo three of the six "protesters" are wearing masks. ...

... Yo, Marco. You want a "clash of civilizations"? Go to Irving, Texas, where it's in full view. Here is a photo of a member of Wright's group stalking a Muslim woman this past Sunday. No cops around, I guess, because this is a town where the idiotic mayor & council endorsed a proposal for a state law barring (nonexistent) Sharia courts of law. Would you fear for your life if you were this woman? I would. Apparently masked gunmen menacing women is all nice & legal in Texas. Via Raw Story:

The Assholes of Irvine are not the only ones troubled by people wearing exotic outfits. We turn now to Lowndes County, Georgia:

Juanita Jean sez, "I think this is the deal: You can be wildly racist or you can spell. Apparently you cannot do both." ...

... CW: That's one way of looking at it, Juanita Jean, but I think the Georgia Concerned Citizens are right -- if we assume the Muslin Invasion is where all the KKK freaks turn up of an evening in their specially-tailored white sheets. Maybe it will turn out that all of our outrage has been over a yuuuuge Emily Litella sort of misunderstanding -- perhaps the GOP is not a national hate organization but a vast support group for oddballs with a peculiar cotton phobia. Maybe we should be helping them out by supporting flax farm subsidies & public sheep-grazing lands.

AFP: "Multiple arrests were made overnight in Chicago and New York during protests over police shootings of two black males."

** American "Justice," Ctd. Curtis Black of the Chicago Reporter on "how Chicago tried to cover up a police execution. It was just about a year ago that a city whistleblower came to journalist Jamie Kalven and attorney Craig Futterman out of concern that Laquan McDonald's shooting a few weeks earlier 'wasn't being vigorously investigated,' as Kalven recalls. The source told them 'that there was a video and that it was horrific,' he said. Without that whistleblower -- and without that video -- it's highly unlikely that Chicago Police officer Jason Van Dyke would be facing first-degree murder charges today.'" ...

... Paul Campos: Chicago Mayor Rahm "Emanuel's attempt to cover up the city's cover up by turning a story of systemic legal and political corruption into a banal tale of one trigger-happy cop is just a continuation of an ongoing crime." ...

... David Graham of the Atlantic: The Chicago protests are about more than just one vicious killer-cop. And Mayor Rahm Emanuel doesn't get it. (CW: Or doesn't care.)

... Chris Thompson of Gawker contrasts the police version of the killing of McDonald (all lies) & civilian accounts of the McDonald's murder (consistent with forensic & videotape evidence). ...

... Bradford Richardson of the Hill: "President Obama was 'deeply disturbed' by the footage showing the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, he said Wednesday evening." Here's President Obama's full statement on his Facebook account.

Peter Holley of the Washington Post interviews a man named Tim Foley who leads an armed vigilante group that patrols the U.S.-Mexican border looking for ISIS terrorists & drug-runners. Foley is a bitter out-of-work former construction foreman who says he has given up on the American dream. "His goal, he noted, is to eventually buy a dude ranch where military veterans with PTSD can heal their minds by patrolling the border, getting outside and enjoying the company of people they can relate to." CW: That sounds safe. There are many ways to volunteer ones services to make the U.S. a safer, more hospitable nation. Suiting up in camo, guns & ammo & going hunting for terrorists & drug mules is not one of them.

More News from Georgia's Finest: Y'all (well, some of y'all) Come on Down. Thanks to Unwashed for the link:

... Lindsey Bever of the Washington Post: "Harris County Sheriff Mike Jolley put up the sign because, he said, over the years he has seen 'the silent majority' grow even 'more silent.'" CW: Would that "silent majority" include, say, folks at Donald Trump rallies, reproductive-rights foes & Christianist "religious freeedom" champions? Yeah, they're all cowering in their hovels, afraid to speak their minds lest Obama's politically-correct enforcers whisk them away & cart them off to re-education camps where they implant a liberal chip in everybody's brain.

Way Beyond

Andrew Roth of the Washington Post: "Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Thursday called for tough sanctions against Turkey that could bite into more than $30 billion in trade ties between the two countries, as police here began seizing Turkish products and deporting Turkish businessmen."

News Ledes

Guardian: "Sex abuse allegations against priests at St John's Abbey in Minnesota were revealed in stark detail on Tuesday with the release of confidential documents concerning five priests accused of child sex abuse."

Reuters: "A 23-year-old Indiana man has pleaded guilty to breaking into a medical museum and stealing preserved human brains that he then sold online. David Charles, of Indianapolis, pleaded guilty to six charges including receiving stolen property and burglary in a Marion county court. Magistrate Amy Barbar sentenced him to one year of home detention and two years of probation, county prosecutor spokesman Anthony Deer said."

Tuesday
Nov242015

The Commentariat -- Nov. 25, 2015

Internal links & defunct video removed.

Hugh Naylor & Andrew Roth of the Washington Post: "NATO faced being thrust into a new Middle Eastern crisis on Tuesday after warplanes from member state Turkey shot down a Russian jet that Turkish officials said had violated their country's airspace on the border with Syria. The incident marked a serious escalation in the Syrian conflict that is likely to further strain relations between Russia and the NATO alliance.... Russia's Defense Ministry said one of at least two pilots probably died during the incident, and a marine also was killed by apparent Syrian insurgent fire during a helicopter rescue operation to retrieve the downed airmen.... Turkey called for an emergency NATO session to discuss the incident but has not invoked alliance provisions that would involve other members in its defense." ...

(CW P.S. If you can't access WashPo (or other) stories because you're not a subscriber, open Reality Chex in a private window. That will allow you to link to up to ten stories (or whatever the site's free-access limit is). If you hit the limit, close the private window & open a new one. That puts your count back at zero. I don't know if the WashPo will work around this system, but it works for now.)

... Andrew Roth, et al.: "The Kremlin sharpened its accusations Wednesday in the wake of Turkey's downing of a Russian warplane, as Moscow's top diplomat called the incident a 'planned provocation' that has dealt a major blow to already fragile relations with NATO. But Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also tamped down speculation of a military response by Russia after the jet broke apart in flames along the Turkish-Syrian border. 'We're not going to war against Turkey,' he said after talks with his Turkish counterpart." ...

... Jordan Fabian of the Hill: "President Obama and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed on the need to reduce tensions after Turkish jets shot down a Russian warplane flying near the country's border with Syria, the White House said Tuesday. Obama voiced support "for Turkey's right to defend its sovereignty" during a phone call with Erdogan, according to a White House statement." ...

... Daniel Drezner of the Washington Post: "The immediate reactions by Turkey and Russia suggest the potential for escalation [after Turkey downed a Russian jet].... So will this business get out of control? Obviously, it could -- but I don't believe it will.... Russia and Turkey are sufficiently interdependent that a serious heightening of tensions would severely impair both countries.... As strategically reckless as Vladimir Putin has been, I suspect he would not want to escalate this conflict. Doing so would involve NATO...." ...

... ** Max Fisher of Vox: "This is not the start of World War III. And I say that as someone who has voiced real concern about other ways in which Russia and the US could be dragged into an unintended escalation to war. But those conditions are not present here.... The stakes are just too low. The things at issue here are Russia's bombing of anti-Assad rebels in Syria, the sanctity of Turkish airspace, and the life of one (or possibly two) Russian pilot.... Because the Syria-Turkish border is so far from Russia or from central Europe, there is just zero risk that either side could misperceive this as the start of something bigger.... Neither Russia nor NATO could possibly believe that the other side is about to launch an invasion." ...

... Joshua Keating of Slate: "Whatever post-Paris unity there might have been in the fractious coalition of nations fighting ISIS in Syria crashed and burned on the Syria-Turkey border on Tuesday as Turkish F-16s shot down a Russian SU-24 fighter.... After Tuesday, Russia is unlikely to build on cooperation with NATO forces in Syria.... All in all, this was a good day for the Assad regime and for ISIS." ...

... Steve M.: "I'm not the one you want to turn to for expert geopolitical analysis of all this. But I'm recalling that American conservatives regard Vladimir Putin as an omnipotent demigod, a strongman able to walk into any situation and enforce his will against lesser, weaker men.... If those shot-down aircraft were American, right-wing pundits would be proclaiming (triumphantly) that Barack Obama looks fatally weak at this moment. But they won't say it about Putin -- because love is blind."

... Juliet Eilperin & Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "President Obama called Tuesday for the West and its allies to stay united to destroy Islamic State and not allow fear of terrorism to undermine freedoms and values. After meeting with French President François Hollande at the White House, Obama declared 'total solidarity' with France, saying his planned trip next week to Paris for a climate change summit is a 'powerful rebuke' to terrorism. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

... David Ignatius of the Washington Post: "Crises bring out the best and worst in people, as has been demonstrated vividly this past week by the behavior of President Obama and GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump. Obama showed his best face in Tuesday's news conference with visiting French President François Hollande.... [Trump] appears to be inflaming the situation deliberately, to advance his presidential campaign. It's rare that we see this level of demagoguery in U.S. politics, but it's frightening. His divisive comments play so directly into the polarizing strategies of our terrorist adversaries -- who want to foment Western-Muslim hatred -- that a case can be made that he has put the country at greater risk.... It's hard to imagine that someone would put the country at greater risk for personal political benefit. But that's exactly what Trump has been doing. It's outrageous behavior, and responsible Republicans must insist that it stop." ...

... Nancy LeTourneau of the Washington Monthly sees a parallel between the leadership styles of President Obama & Martin Luther King, Jr. ...

... MEANWHILE, Dana Milbank thinks President Obama should sound more like a warmonger to motivate the nation. CW: Really, Dana? ...

... Washington Post Editors: "Bigotry has a long history in the United States, and it may come as only a mild surprise that it showed its snarling face in Fredericksburg[, Virginia,] last week, just four days after the Nov. 13 slaughter in Paris. But even mild surprise is unwarranted given the toxic rhetoric of presidential candidates and governors, mainly Republicans, who have vilified Muslims since that terrorist attack. When Donald Trump, Ben Carson and others suggest it is all right to discriminate against Muslims or Muslim refugees, the signal is widely received." ...

... Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post responds to anonymous attacks directed at her because she is Jewish. CW: Good for her. These are precisely the sort of attacks that Donald Trump & Ben Carson provoke for personal political gain. First they came for the Muslims; then they came for the Jews. ...

     ... Update: See also John Kasich's ad embedded under Presidential Race below. ...

... The Entertainer. Jamelle Bouie: "... while Trump has been explicit with his nativist, and now racist, rhetoric, he's not an innovator. If large numbers of Republicans are responsive to Trump's vitriol, it's because he echoes -- in less coded terms -- the discourse of much of right-wing media. In conservative entertainment, race panic sells.... Of course Trump would sound off on immigrant crime and disloyal Muslims and criminal blacks. He is fundamentally an entertainer, and in conservative entertainment, those are the money shots: The stories that capture attention and drive ratings." Bouie cites examples of right-wing race-baiting. ...

... Sergio Pecanha & Rebecca Lai in the New York Times: "All of the Sept. 11 attackers entered the United States using tourist, business or student visas. Since then, most of the attackers in the United States claiming or appearing to be motivated by extremist Islam were born in this country or were naturalized citizens. None were refugees." Just another fact to irritate (& be rejected by) the Super-White Republican party. ...

... Oh yeah? So what? Patricia Zengerle of Reuters: "Nearly one-third of the Republicans in the House of Representatives signed a letter calling on party leaders to ensure that a must-pass spending bill block any use of federal funding to resettle refugees from Syria and nearby countries, the bill's sponsor said on Tuesday. Seventy-four of the 246 House Republicans signed the letter, which was circulated by Republican Representative Brian Babin." ...

... digby: "So it appears that [Speaker Paul] Ryan is already being 'Boehnered' by the right wing, fueled by talk radio xenophobes who are working themselves into the same anti-immigrant frenzy over Muslims in our midst at their ongoing froth about undocumented migrant workers from Mexico and Central America. Let's see if he can deal with them any better than Boehner did. I doubt it."

Matt Apuzzo & Eric Lipton of the New York Times: "For more than a year, a rare coalition of liberal groups and libertarian-minded conservatives has joined the Obama administration in pushing for the most significant liberalization of America's criminal justice laws since the beginning of the drug war. That effort has had perhaps no ally more important than Koch Industries.... Now, as Congress works to turn those goals into legislation, that joint effort is facing its most significant test -- over a House bill that Koch Industries says would make the criminal justice system fairer, but that the Justice Department says would make it significantly harder to prosecute corporate polluters, producers of tainted food and other white-collar criminals." CW: Looks as if the Koch boyz want to be sure they can't be prosecuted for their various dodgy stunts.

Lisa Rein of the Washington Post: "A top House lawmaker’s confrontation with government researchers over a groundbreaking climate change study is provoking a national backlash from scientists, who say his campaign represents the most serious threat Congress has posed to scientific freedom. Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Tex.), chairman of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, has subpoenaed scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and demanded that they turn over internal e-mails related to their research. Their findings contradicted earlier work showing that global warming had paused, and Smith, a climate change skeptic, has accused them of altering global temperature data and rushing to publish their research in the June issue of the journal Science." CW: Calling Smith a "climate change skeptic" is like describing yourself as a "unicorn skeptic." ...

... David Roberts of Vox (Nov. 22): "Republican chair Lamar Smith has escalated his war with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists; he is now openly accusing them of scientific fraud.... The committee's top Democrat, Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Tex.) has called Smith's investigation a 'partisan witch hunt.'"

Joseph Goldstein & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: "The American airstrike that destroyed a Doctors Without Borders hospital in the Afghan city of Kunduz last month was the result of human errors, failures in procedure and technical malfunctions, according to military officials who have been briefed on the military's internal investigation." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Josh Gerstein of Politico: "The Obama administration asked the Supreme Court on Tuesday not to allow a monthlong delay that could jeopardize the justices' issuing a ruling this term on whether to lift an injunction blocking a key part of President Barack Obama's immigration legacy: his plan to offer quasi-legal status and work permits to millions more illegal immigrants. In a letter to the high court's clerk, Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. urged the court to reject a request Monday from Texas and 25 other states for a 30-day filing extension. Such extensions are routinely granted by the court, but doing so in this case would push arguments in the case from this year to next under normal procedures -- leaving a major part of Obama's immigration policy in limbo until around the time he is set to leave office."

"Fool me once..., shame on you. Fool me... You can't get fooled again!" Charles Pierce: The right conned conservative federal Judge Richard Posner once (on voter IDs). Apparently, Posner will not be had again. He ruled unconstitutional a Wisconsin law requiring abortion providers to have local hospital admitting privileges. ...

     ... More on the ruling from Becca Andrews of Mother Jones.

David Sanger & Nicole Perlroth of the New York Times: "Four months after a historic accord with Tehran to limit its atomic ambitions, American officials and private security groups say they see a surge in sophisticated computer espionage by Iran, culminating in a series of cyberattacks against State Department officials over the past month." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Hey, here's a surprise. After exhaustive research & analysis of decades of polling data, National Bureau of Economic Research scientists confirm that Southern white Republicans are & were racists. Who knew?

Juliet Eilperin: "President Obama on Tuesday awarded the nation's highest civilian honor to 17 Americans, including Hollywood stars, a prominent Republican environmentalist, two baseball legends and several civil rights pioneers":

... Juliet Eilperin & Philip Bump of the Washington Post: How President Obama's awards of the Medal of Freedom differ from President George W. Bush's.

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Kevin Drum on the media's euphemisms for Donald Trump's lies: "You can call Trump's statements lies or fabrications or even falsehoods if you insist on being delicate about it. But you can't call them questionable or controversial or salesmanlike or disputed or even faulty. The man is a serial, pathological liar. Isn't it about time for the journalistic community to work up the courage to report this with clear eyes?"

Presidential Race

The Thanksgiving Poll. Tom Jensen of Public Policy Polling: "Donald Trump leads PPP's newest poll by a wide margin...on which candidate Americans think would be the most likely to say something inappropriate at the table and ruin Thanksgiving Dinner.... When it comes to which Presidential candidate people would actually like to have over for Thanksgiving Dinner Clinton wins out with 24% to 18% for Carson, 17% for Trump, 11% for Sanders, 8% for Cruz, and 6% each for Bush and Rubio.... By a 27 point margin Republicans say they disapprove of the President's executive order last year pardoning two Thanksgiving turkeys (Macaroni and Cheese) instead of the customary one." No link.

     ... CW: Last year, the New York Times story on the pardon of Macaroni & Cheese ran with the headline "An Executive Action Unlikely to Be Faulted." Obviously, the "liberal East Coast elite" paper doesn't know Republicans.

AP: "Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Tuesday that her use of the term 'illegal immigrants' was a 'poor choice of words' and she pledged not to use it anymore, responding to criticism from immigration activists. The Democratic presidential frontrunner was asked about her use of the term to describe people who are in the US illegally during a question-and-answer session on Facebook held by Telemundo. The question came from Jose Antonio Vargas, a filmmaker and journalist whose organisation, Define American, has said the terminology is offensive and asked all presidential candidates to stop using it.... During a town-hall meeting in New Hampshire earlier this month, Clinton said she voted 'numerous times when I was a senator to spend money to build a barrier to try to prevent illegal immigrants from coming in.'"

Ben Jacobs of the Guardian: "Democratic presidential contender Martin O'Malley unveiled a healthcare plan on Tuesday that emphasized strengthening Obamacare but avoided any mention of the single-payer healthcare plan championed by rival Bernie Sanders."

A Noun, a Verb & 9/11. Also, Trump Has SuperVision. Brendan O'Connor of Gawker: "On Monday, Donald Trump claimed to have watched people jump to their deaths from the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001: 'Many people jumped and I witnessed it, I watched that. I have a view -- a view in my apartment that was specifically aimed at the World Trade Center.'... Trump Tower is just over four miles away from the World Trade Center." ...

... More from Jeremy Diamond of CNN. Includes video report. ...

... Reality Is a Massive Conspiracy. Brian Tashman of Right Wing Watch: "In an interview today with Breitbart News, Donald Trump's campaign manager Corey Lewandowski defended his candidate's bogus claim that he saw on TV 'thousands and thousands' of Muslim Americans in New Jersey holding celebrations on 9/11 to applaud the attacks. No footage or reports of such an event exist, and initial press reports about small 'rooftop celebrations' were later declared to be 'unfounded.' However, Lewandowski said that reports of the (nonexistent) celebration do in fact exist and that the Trump campaign provided that material to media outlets which, according to Lewandowski, have refused to air it as part of a massive anti-Trump conspiracy." ...

... Jim Dwyer of the New York Times turns to John Farmer, then attorney general of New Jersey & later a member of senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission, to "definitively debunk" Trump's claim of Muslims dancing in New Jersey streets on 9/11/2001: "'We followed up on that report [of 9/11 celebrations] instantly because of its implications,' he [said]. 'The word came back quickly from Jersey City, later from Paterson. False report. Never happened.'" ...

... Here's Farmer in a New Jersey Star-Ledger op-ed. Thanks to Marvin S. for the link:

We in America have had fewer foreign fighters than Europe precisely because we have not isolated and stigmatized the Muslim community. To begin to do so now is a serious mistake. In the short term, it may, by playing on voters' apprehensions, be appealing politically. In the long-term, it will, by isolating an entire community, play into the hands of ISIS recruiters, who seek out the alienated and dispossessed among Muslim youth. Whatever the message, it is just plain wrong to cite thousands of Muslims dancing in Jersey City or Paterson on 9/11 as support. That simply never happened.

... Ben Schreckinger of Politico: "Welcome to the most combustible presidential campaign in recent memory. [Donald Trump's] angry rhetoric -- on subjects like undocumented Mexican immigrants, political correctness and 'thugs' in Baltimore -- has made his run a magnet for disaffected supporters and for identity politics protesters determined to steal the spotlight and disrupt his events. Trump's relish for confrontation, where other politicians would seek to minimize it, has only fueled the fire. 'Isn't a Trump rally much more exciting than these other ones?' Trump said on Wednesday as police escorted a protester yelling, 'Trump's a racist' from a rally in Worcester, Massachusetts. 'That kind of stuff only adds to the excitement.'..." ...

... Nick Gass of Politico: "The super PACs going after Donald Trump are making a 'bad, bad decision,' the candidate's special counsel and adviser [Michael Cohen] warned Tuesday morning, saying that if the reports are true, 'it changes everything.'... Trump has repeatedly held the threat of running as an independent candidate over the Republican Party throughout the course of the campaign, remarking as recently as Sunday that he would not rule out a third-party bid despite having signed the pledge and announcing it with a press conference at Trump Tower in September. 'I'm going to have to see what happens. I will see what happens. I have to be treated fairly,' he told ABC's George Stephanopoulos on 'This Week.'" ...

... Charles Pierce: "Rich (Sparkle Pants) Lowry, editor of America's oldest journal of white supremacy," the National Review, looks to history to explain Donald Trump, & discovers the Donald is the reincarnation of Andrew Jackson! "And so long as he slaughters enough Indians to make the white people feel safe. In light of recent events, I do not find this parallel encouraging, although I do give Ol' Plasterboard credit for doing it without any balls." ...

... CW: Say, couldn't we put Trump on the $20 bill & dispense with Old Hickory (as well as all this girly talk about putting a woman on a U.S. bill)? According to Trump's female employees, he's, like, a feminist leader ahead of his time, even if his means of discipline are a tad sexist (which he denies, of course).

... Caitlin Yilek of the Hill: "Jeb Bush on Tuesday criticized front-runner Donald Trump's comments about Black Lives Matter protesters and Muslim-Americans, accusing the billionaire of trying to 'create a grievous kind of culture.'... The former Florida governor slammed Trump for claiming that thousands of Muslim-Americans in New Jersey cheered as the World Trade Center fell on Sept. 11, 2001, and said the roughing up of a Black Lives Matter protestor would never happen at one of his events."

Ben Jacobs: "Without ever leading in a single poll, Ted Cruz has become the frontrunner in Iowa. The Texas senator and conservative firebrand has closed the gap on real-estate mogul Donald Trump and is now trailing Trump by only a margin of 25% to 23% in the Hawkeye State, according to a poll released on Tuesday by Quinnipiac University. But, more than that, Cruz has been notching up key endorsements in Iowa and positioning himself to win the state's first-in-the-nation caucuses on 1 February." CW: Those Iowa Republicans sure know how to pick a president: first Trump, then Carson, now Cruz. Not that their choice in 2012 -- Rick Santorum, by a nose -- wasn't excellent. ...

... Shane Goldmacher of Politico: "The political operative behind the nonprofit that just began attacking Ted Cruz in Iowa is a Marco Rubio backer who served as a co-host of a fundraiser for the Florida senator last week.... The new anti-Cruz ad hits the Texas senator for his support of the USA Freedom Act, which restricted the National Security Agency's bulk collection of phone metadata.... Rubio has attacked Cruz for the same vote." CW: Just a coincidence, I'm sure. Because it would be wrong unlawful for Marco to coordinate with a 501(c)4 nonprofit that -- coincidentally -- supports his candidacy. ...

... BUT then, that's what Marco & his friends do. Mark Murray & Leigh Ann Caldwell of NBC News: "Conservative Solutions Project, an outside group promoting Republican Marco Rubio's presidential campaign, has spent nearly $8.5 million in TV ads.... Unlike a Super PAC, Conservative Solutions Project doesn't have to disclose its donors because it exists as a tax-exempt social welfare group under section 501(c)(4) of the tax code. But it's precisely that tax-code designation that has campaign-finance watchdogs alleging the Conservative Solution Project ads are illegal -- because they are benefitting an individual presidential candidate rather than advancing the social welfare.... The website for Conservative Solutions PAC is all about Rubio's presidential campaign.... Maybe most striking of all, NBC News has obtained at least two advertising filings with the Federal Communications Commission in which Conservative Solutions Project appears to describe its advertising as being on Marco Rubio's behalf."

Julian Hattem of the Hill: "Global intelligence officials’ failure to detect this month's deadly attacks across Paris may be in part due to increased scrutiny on government spying, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) claimed on Tuesday. 'It's not a coincidence that this happened in the aftermath of restricting these programs and, remember, also demoralizing the intelligence community,' the Republican presidential contender said in a discussion at the Council on Foreign Relations.... Christie appeared to cast blame for the failure on both a global aversion to government surveillance following the 2013 leaks from government whistleblower Edward Snowden, and the Senate's controversial report last year blasting the CIA's past use of 'enhanced interrogation techniques.'" Because it upset intelligence operatives so much they couldn't do their jobs or something. CW: Maybe Christie should read the NYT report by Andrew Higgins, linked under Way Beyond below. Belgian officials knew how dangerous some of these perps were; they just didn't do anything about it. Not that Christie isn't a big expert on international affairs, which, BTW, he says he is. Because 9/11.

Beyond the Beltway

John Eligon & Ashley Southall of the New York Times: "Two men were arrested on Tuesday in connection with the overnight shootings of five people during a Black Lives Matter protest outside a police station, the Minneapolis Police Department said. One suspect, a 23-year-old white man, was arrested in Bloomington, a suburb of Minneapolis, at about 11:20 a.m., the police said in a statement. The other, a 32-year-old Hispanic man, was arrested about 45 minutes later while in his vehicle in South Minneapolis." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... New Lede: "As the police arrested three people on Tuesday in connection with the shooting of five people during a Black Lives Matter protest outside a police precinct here, demonstrators returned to the street with renewed vigor, vowing not to cower in fear of what one organizer called 'an act of terrorism.'"

Alex Johnson of NBC News: "A few hundred protesters closed a major Chicago intersection Tuesday night after authorities released a 'disturbing' dashcam video of the moment a cop shot 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times last year." ...

... Mark Berman of the Washington Post: "A Chicago police officer has been charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of a 17-year-old last year, authorities said Tuesday. The charges were announced a day before the city plans to release a video that captured the shooting, footage that officials worry could lead to intense protests." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Update. NBC Chicago: "Chicago officials on Tuesday released 'graphic' and 'chilling' video showing an officer [Jason Van Dyke] fatally shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times. The footage has been described as something that 'will tear at the hearts of all Chicagoans.'... In the moments before the video was made public, Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy called for peace and calm." Includes video. ...

... How Could This (Alleged) Murder Have Happened? Sarah Kaplan of the Washington Post: Jason "Van Dyke, a white 14-year veteran of Chicago's police force, has been accused of misconduct 17 times before, according to data from the University of Chicago and the journalism non-profit Invisible Institute. The database, published less than a week before the announcement that Van Dyke would be prosecuted, details tens of thousands of complaints against Chicago police officers that weren't previously made public. Fewer than five percent of the allegations resulted in disciplinary actions for the officers; none of the 18 complaints against Van Dyke led to a penalty.... The allegations against Van Dyke include 10 complaints of excessive force, including two incidents where he allegedly used a firearm, causing injury. He was also accused of improper searches and making racially or ethnically biased remarks. Four of the allegations were proven factual, but Van Dyke's actions were deemed lawful and appropriate."

New York Times Editors: "Student protesters at Princeton performed a valuable public service last week when they demanded that the administration acknowledge the toxic legacy of Woodrow Wilson, who served as university president and New Jersey governor before being elected to the White House. He was an unapologetic racist whose administration rolled back the gains that African-Americans achieved just after the Civil War, purged black workers from influential jobs and transformed the government into an instrument of white supremacy.... The overwhelming weight of the evidence argues for rescinding the honor that the university bestowed decades ago on an unrepentant racist." ...

... ** Gordon Davis, in a New York Times op-ed: Woodrow Wilson was "an avowed racist. And unlike many of his predecessors and successors in the White House, he put that racism into action through public policy. Most notably, his administration oversaw the segregation of the federal government, destroying the careers of thousands of talented and accomplished black civil servants -- including John Abraham Davis, my paternal grandfather." ...

... Here's more compelling testimony from NYT readers.

Alexandra Samuels in USA Today: "Following alleged social media threats against students of color, Western Washington University, located in Bellingham, Wash., announced classes on all of Western's campuses are suspended Tuesday, effectively canceling classes through the Thanksgiving break.... A law enforcement investigation is underway."

Reuters: "Amazon on Monday agreed to pull advertisements for a new television show featuring Nazi-inspired imagery from New York City's subway system, hours after Mayor Bill de Blasio called on the company to do so. The advertisements for The Man in the High Castle completely wrap the seats, walls and ceilings of one train on the busy shuttle line that connects Times Square and Grand Central terminal.... An MTA official ... said Amazon had asked for the shuttle train advertisements, but not the posters, to be removed.... Frank Spotnitz, the show's creator and executive producer, told Entertainment Weekly he agreed with critics that the advertisements could be seen as offensive.... 'If they had asked me, I would have strongly advised them not to do it.'" (See also yesterday's Commentariat.)

Way Beyond

Worse than Washington. Andrew Higgins of the New York Times: "As Brussels remained locked down for a fourth day, facing what the authorities say is its own imminent terrorist threat, the failure to stop two brothers clearly flagged as extremists before the Paris carnage highlighted the tribal squabbles of a country that holds the unenviable distinction of going without a functioning government for 541 days. Flemish nationalists, ever eager to show that Belgium in its current form does not work, have jumped on the mess, with Karl Vanlouwe, a member of the Belgian Senate, writing in the newspaper Le Soir on Tuesday that '20 years of laxity' by the French-speaking Socialist Party had turned Brussels into a 'rear base of Islamic barbarity.'"

Eric Cunningham of the Washington Post: "A powerful explosion tore through a bus carrying elite security guards for Tunisia's president in the heart of the capital, Tunis, authorities said Tuesday, killing at least 11 people in what appeared to be the latest militant attack in the North African country." (Also linked yesterday.)

News Lede

Attention, Costco Shoppers. E. coli in the Salad Cooler. Washington Post: "Federal health officials are investigating an outbreak of deadly E. coli bacteria that has sickened 19 people in at least seven states, mostly in the west.... Preliminary evidence suggests that rotisserie chicken salad made and sold in Costco Wholesale stores in several states is the likely source of this outbreak, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."

Monday
Nov232015

The Commentariat -- Nov. 24, 2015

Internal links removed.

Afternoon Update:

Joseph Goldstein & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: "The American airstrike that destroyed a Doctors Without Borders hospital in the Afghan city of Kunduz last month was the result of human errors, failures in procedure and technical malfunctions, according to military officials who have been briefed on the military's internal investigation."

Eric Cunningham of the Washington Post: "A powerful explosion tore through a bus carrying elite security guards for Tunisia's president in the heart of the capital, Tunis, authorities said Tuesday, killing at least 11 people in what appeared to be the latest militant attack in the North African country."

John Eligon & Ashley Southall of the New York Times: "Two men were arrested on Tuesday in connection with the overnight shootings of five people during a Black Lives Matter protest outside a police station, the Minneapolis Police Department said. One suspect, a 23-year-old white man, was arrested in Bloomington, a suburb of Minneapolis, at about 11:20 a.m., the police said in a statement. The other, a 32-year-old Hispanic man, was arrested about 45 minutes later while in his vehicle in South Minneapolis." (See related stories linked under Beyond the Beltway.)

Juliet Eilperin & Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "President Obama called Tuesday for the West and its allies to stay united to destroy Islamic State and not allow fear of terrorism to undermine freedoms and values. After meeting with French President François Hollande at the White House, Obama declared 'total solidarity' with France, saying his planned trip next week to Paris for a climate change summit is a 'powerful rebuke' to terrorism.

David Sanger & Nicole Perlroth of the New York Times: "Four months after a historic accord with Tehran to limit its atomic ambitions, American officials and private security groups say they see a surge in sophisticated computer espionage by Iran, culminating in a series of cyberattacks against State Department officials over the past month."

Mark Berman of the Washington Post: "A Chicago police officer has been charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of a 17-year-old last year, authorities said Tuesday. The charges were announced a day before the city plans to release a video that captured the shooting, footage that officials worry could lead to intense protests." See link to related story under Beyond the Beltway. ...

*****

"Worldwide Travel Alert." U. S. State Department: "The State Department alerts U.S. citizens to possible risks of travel due to increased terrorist threats. Current information suggests that ISIL (aka Da’esh), al-Qa’ida, Boko Haram, and other terrorist groups continue to plan terrorist attacks in multiple regions. These attacks may employ a wide variety of tactics, using conventional and non-conventional weapons and targeting both official and private interests. This Travel Alert expires on February 24, 2016." ...

... Alan Gomez of USA Today: "The U.S. State Department issued a rare worldwide travel alert on Monday, warning American travelers about the widespread threats posed by members of the Islamic State or copycat bombers.... The alert comes as millions of Americans prepare to travel for the Thanksgiving holiday, and organizers of major events like the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade bolster their security preparations."

Julie Pace & Kathleen Hennessey of the AP: "President Barack Obama will stand in solidarity with French President Francois Hollande at the White House Tuesday, 11 days after the Paris attacks, in a visit complicated by Turkey's shoot-down of a Russian warplane." See also related stories linked under Way Beyond the Beltway.

The Good Fight. Peter Beinart of the Atlantic: "Why is [President] Obama picking a fight on an issue that, according to The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza, is a 'political winner' for the GOP? Because of the way he interprets American history.... Obama tells the story ... as America overcoming the evil within itself.... It's a theme that recurs in Obama's speeches.... He sees American history as a series of moral struggles pitting Americans seeking equal opportunity and full citizenship against Americans who defend an unjust or bigoted status quo. Obama clearly sees the current nativist, bigotry-laden, hysteria as such a struggle. He knows he may not win. But he wants future historians to know exactly where he stood. They will. And as a result, I suspect, they'll record the Syrian refugee battle among his finest hours."

Charlie Savage of the New York Times: "A federal appeals court ruled in a decision unsealed on Monday that the Justice Department could continue to conceal internal documents related to targeted killings in the fight against Al Qaeda. A Freedom of Information Act lawsuit forced the Obama administration last year to reveal a secret memo that authorized the killing of the American-born terrorist leader Anwar al-Awlaki. But the new ruling, handed down in October, makes it unlikely that the suit will yield much else in the way of public disclosures."

AP: "A lawsuit is challenging the Indiana governor's [Mike Pence (R)] decision to stop state agencies from helping resettle Syrian refugees, saying the action wrongly targets the refugees based on their nationality. The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed the federal lawsuit Monday night on behalf of Indianapolis-based nonprofit Exodus Refugee Immigration."

Manny Fernandez of the New York Times: "Planned Parenthood sued Texas officials in federal court in Austin on Monday, seeking to block the state from cutting off its Medicaid funding, the latest in a series of lawsuits it has filed against Republican-led states after the controversy over its use of fetal tissue."

Ari Melber of MSNBC: "A former investigator for the House Benghazi Committee filed a federal lawsuit against the committee Monday.... Last month, Brad Podliska, an Air Force Reserve major, alleged the Benghazi committee terminated him based on his military obligations and his refusal to advance an agenda targeting Hillary Clinton. Now, Podliska is detailing those charges in court in a new filing that alleges Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy broke the law by defaming him in their public battle over Podliska's firing."

Dennis Overbye of the New York Times: A hundred years ago tomorrow, Albert Einstein set down his theory of relativity, a rule that "transformed our understanding of space and time."

Presidential Race

Jesse Byrnes of the Hill: "Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) currently leads online polling for Time magazine's 2015 Person of the Year, with less than two weeks to go before voting ends.... The magazine's editors pick the Person of the Year, though anyone can weigh in online." CW: If you can figure out how to do it, you can vote here; you have to "authenticate" your vote by signing in with Facebook or Twitter. I think I voted for Bernie but can't be sure. My bet is that Time will pick Trump. ...

     ... Trump naturally thinks he should be the guy but says, "... there's no way they give it to me. They can't. Because, mentally, they can't. They just can't. They can't do it."

Would I approve waterboarding? You bet your ass I would ... in a heartbeat ... And I would approve more than that. Don't kid yourself, folks. It works, okay? It works. Only a stupid person would say it doesn't work.... Believe me, it works. And you know what? If it doesn't work, they deserve it anyway, for what they're doing. It works. -- Donald Trump, at a rally in Columbus, Ohio yesterday

Dylan Matthews of Vox: "The media has [sic!] no idea how to deal with Donald Trump's constant lying." Matthews runs down Trump's performance on "This Week" Sunday. In sum, "A careful viewer, paying close attention to all of Stephanopoulos's rebuttals, would come away thinking (correctly) that Trump spent the entire interview reiterating falsehoods. But a casual viewer could very well come away thinking that a) thousands of Arabs celebrated 9/11 in the streets of New Jersey, b) the Obama administration is planning on bringing in up to 250,000 Syrian refugees, most of them young men primed to be radicalized by ISIS or other terror groups, and c) it's currently illegal for people on terrorism watch lists to get guns. None of those things are [sic!] true." But media outlets keep booking him because (a) he's the GOP frontrunner, & (b) ratings. ...

... Greg Sargent: To Trump supporters, his lies don't matter: "Trump's supporters have been persuaded that he will be a 'strong leader.' Once that decision has been made, any liberal media fact-checking of Trump's statements, particularly criticisms that seem 'politically correct,' only confirm that original impression." ...

Jon Greenberg of PolitiFact: "A day after a black activist was kicked and punched by voters at a Donald Trump rally in Alabama, Trump tweeted an image packed with racially loaded and incorrect murder statistics..., including that blacks kill 81 percent of white homicide victims. Almost every number in the image is wrong. The statistics on white victims are exaggerated five-fold. The police-related deaths are off as well."

Judd Legum of Think Progress: "In an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly, Donald Trump defended tweeting a series of fabricated murder statistics designed to perpetuate racist stereotypes. 'I retweeted somebody that was supposedly an expert and it was also a radio show,' Trump said. Trump actually copy-and-pasted a tweet from @SeanSean252, an anonymous Twitter user. @SeanSean252's bio does not indicate that he is an expert in crime statistics or any other kind of expert.... The graphic actually originated from a neo-Nazi on Twitter.... 'It came from sources that are very credible, what can I tell you,' Trump [said]."

I watched in Jersey City, N.J., where thousands and thousands of people were cheering" as the World Trade Center collapsed. -- Donald Trump, November 21, in comments during a speech

Trump's recollection of events in New Jersey in the hours after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks flies in the face of all the evidence we could find. We rate this statement Pants on Fire. -- Lauren Carroll of PolitiFact

Trump ... is already demanding apologizes from all the critics and fact checkers who have been pointing out he is Completely Making Shit Up on this one. -- Hunter of Daily Kos

I want an apology. Many people have tweeted that I am right. -- Donald Trump, in a tweet

... Kevin Drum: "It's hard to figure out what this episode says about Trump. Is he delusional? Is he merely unable to admit any error?... Or is Trump consciously making stuff up to play to nativist GOP voters? As two GOP strategists working against Trump noted in a recent memo, 'Trump voters are exceedingly low-information voters. They do not read The Washington Post or Politico or even conservative blogs. They do not watch cable news rigorously.' To put it less politely, Trump voters are susceptible to his BS that reinforces their own assumptions and biases.... He routinely says crazy crap that isn't true and doubles or triples down when challenged. And sorry, fact-checkers, but so far none of this appears to register with his 'low-information' fans. This fabulist remains the Republican front-runner." ...

... Lie or False Memory? Max Ehrenfreud of the Washington Post: "Trump's assertion might not be a bald-faced lie. Psychologists suggest that people unconsciously fabricate memories all the time, and that Trump might have done the same." ...

... James Downie of the Washington Post describes Trump as the leader of "21st-century McCarthyism." ...

... "Dear Media, Stop Freaking Out About Donald Trump's Polls." Nate Silver: "Lately, pundits and punters seem bullish on Donald Trump, whose chances of winning the Republican presidential nomination recently inched above 20 percent for the first time at the betting market Betfair.... I'd still say a 20 percent chance is substantially too high.... Right now, he has 25 to 30 percent of the vote in polls among the roughly 25 percent of Americans who identify as Republican. (That's something like 6 to 8 percent of the electorate overall, or about the same share of people who think the Apollo moon landings were faked.)... If past nomination races are any guide, the vast majority of eventual Republican voters haven't made up their minds yet. ...

... Nicole Rojas of International Business Times: "Senior managers from five of the major news networks in the US have joined forces to lay out demands from Donald Trump's presidential campaign after the Republican's campaign officials threatened to 'blacklist' journalists during rallies last week. Representatives from ABC News, CBS News, CNN, Fox and NBC News met on 23 November to discuss their responses to behaviour deemed restrictive by Trump's managers including top aide Corey Lewandowski. According to The Washington Post, Lewandowski threatened to pull credentials of CNN reporter Noah Gray during Trump's campaign in Worcester, Massachusetts. Gray, who has covered Trump for months, attempted to leave the press pen when he recorded Lewandoski threatening to 'blacklist' him from future events." ...

... Nick Corasaniti of the New York Times: "After Donald J. Trump hosted 'Saturday Night Live' this month, several of his Republican rivals filed complaints about receiving equal airtime. So NBC has granted the campaigns of Gov. John Kasich of Ohio, Mike Huckabee, James Gilmore and Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina their specific equal-airtime requests. This does not mean that a coming 'S.N.L.' episode will be hosted by any of the candidates.... What it does entail will be the use of commercial and promotional airtime in prime time this weekend, including during 'Saturday Night Live,' when a re-run will be broadcast. Still at the negotiating table is George E. Pataki...."

Profiles in Cowardice. Dana Milbank: "Trump gets ever more base in his bigotry -- and yet, with few and intermittent exceptions, rival candidates, party leaders and GOP lawmakers decline to call him out. So he continues to rise, benefiting from tacit acceptance of his intolerance.... The longer Republican leaders take to find their anti-Trump voices, the more their quiescence becomes an endorsement." ...

... Leigh Ann Caldwell of NBC News: "... John Kasich is not holding back. He's launched an all-out offensive against fellow Republican Donald Trump. On the day that Trump is holding a rally in Kasich's state, the Ohio governor is hosting two conference calls challenging Trump and his electability. The conference calls are just one component of a larger effort over the past several days to damage the Republican front-runner's credibility among voters. Kasich is attacking Trump more fiercely than any other Republican in the field." ...

... Emily Fritter of Reuters: "Nearly a dozen big Republican donors backing different presidential candidates are coming together to help fund an advertising campaign attacking front-runner Donald Trump, who faced sharp criticism from rivals this week for his inflammatory comments about Muslims." ...

... Steve M.: What these rich donors are doing is recycling stuff that was supposed to bring down Trump when the news first hit. "This is one more reason we ought to raise taxes on the rich: because when it comes to spending money on politics, the rich have no damn sense. We need to save them from themselves." CW: What all these ad campaigns do is redistribute money from various business moguls to media moguls.

First He Saw It, Then He Didn't. Alan Rappeport of the New York Times: "... on Monday, one of Mr. Trump's chief rivals for the Republican presidential nomination said that he, too, saw American Muslims celebrate as the twin towers fell. 'I saw the film of it,' Ben Carson ... said. But later on Monday, Mr. Carson said that he was mistaken in saying that he saw Muslims cheering in New Jersey. According to ABC News he said he was thinking about protests he saw in the Middle East. Accounts of such an behavior in the United States have largely been considered folklore in the years since the attacks, and New Jersey lawmakers and officials say they cannot remember such celebrations occurring."

Jonathan Chait: "Marco Rubio opposes the legal right to abortion, even in cases of rape or incest. This extreme position would pose a significant liability in a general election. But since Rubio still has to win the nomination, he can't wriggle out of it yet. Instead he is obfuscating." He's a sneaky sniveling misogynist with Mr. Spock ears.

Jason Noble of PolitiFact: President "Obama is so unwilling to work with Senate Republicans, [Jeb] Bush alleges, that he didn't even invite one to dine at the White House until his fifth year in office.... Based on our review of visitor logs, there are a handful of instances in which Republican U.S. senators visited the White House residence between 2009 and 2012, including a 2011 dinner attended by Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell. There's also that high-profile 2010 case in which Obama invited two Republican senators to dinner -- the famous Slurpee Summit -- only to be publicly snubbed. And it's worth noting, too, that the records indicate that Obama hasn't dined privately with Democratic senators all that often either...."

Way Beyond the Beltway

Tulay Karadeniz & Maria Kiselyova of Reuters: "Turkish fighter jets shot down a Russian warplane near the Syrian border on Tuesday after repeated warnings over air space violations, but Moscow said it could prove the jet had not left Syrian air space. It was the first time a NATO member's armed forces have downed a Russian or Soviet military aircraft since the 1950s and Russian and Turkish assets fell on fears of an escalation between the former Cold War enemies. A Kremlin spokesman said it was a 'very serious incident' but that it was too early to draw conclusions." ...

... The Washington Post story, by Hugh Naylor & others, is here. "The downing underscores a scenario feared for months by the Pentagon and its partners: a potential conflict arising from overlapping air missions over Syria -- with Russia backing the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and a U.S.-led coalition conducting airstrikes the Islamic State."

Rosemary Barton of Canadian Broadcasting Corp. (CBC) News: "The [Canadian] federal government's much-anticipated Syrian refugee plan will limit those accepted into Canada to women, children and families only, CBC News has learned. Sources tell CBC News that to deal with some ongoing concerns around security, unaccompanied men seeking asylum will not be part of the program. The details of the plan will be announced Tuesday, but already Canadian officials have been working on the ground to process people."

Loveday Morris & Missy Ryan of the Washington Post: "Belgian authorities charged an additional suspect Monday in connection with this month's deadly Paris attacks, as Belgium entered the workweek with shuttered schools and offices in an effort to disrupt a suspected similar plot. The suspect, whose name was not released, was one of 21 people detained in 29 raids in the capital and the southern cities of Liege and Charleroi, a sweep that ended Monday morning."

Beyond the Beltway

Karen Zamora of the Minneapolis Star Tribune: "Police are searching for three white men who allegedly fired into a crowd protesting near the Minneapolis Police Department's 4th Precinct Monday night, wounding five people.... Miski Noor, a media contact for Black Lives Matter, said 'a group of white supremacists showed up at the protest, as they have done most nights.' One of the three counter-demonstrators wore a mask, said Dana Jaehnert, who had been at the protest site since early evening. When about a dozen protesters attempted to herd the group away from the area, Noor said, they 'opened fire on about six protesters,' hitting five of them." ...

     ... Ashley Southall of the New York Times: "The victims were taken to hospitals with injuries that were not considered life-threatening, the police said.... Ms. Noor said one of the victims was shot in the stomach and underwent surgery early Tuesday."

Don Babwin & Michael Tarm of the AP: "A white Chicago police officer who shot a black teenager 16 times was expected to be charged with murder Tuesday, just a day ahead of a deadline for the city to release a squad-car video of the shooting. Veteran officer Jason Van Dyke is expected to be indicted in the killing of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, an official close to the investigation told The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity so as not to pre-empt an announcement of the charge."

What an Excellent Ad Stunt! Erik Baard in the Gothamist: "Seats on 42nd Street subway Shuttle cars are wrapped with symbols from Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, intended to carry commuters into the alternate history of the Amazon TV series, The Man in the High Castle, in which the Axis Powers were victorious.... Evan Bernstein, the Anti-Defamation League's New York regional director, says the ads fail to provide riders with enough context to accompany the Nazi imagery." CW: Since Amazon founder Jeff Bezos likes to run his distribution factories like WWII Axis prisoner-of-war camps, maybe this ad campaign is appropriate. Still, New Yorkers should not have to view these horrid symbols on their crosstown hop.

"Them ... Niggers Gotta Learn How to Read." Good Intentions Gone Ever So Slightly Awry. David Edwards of the Raw Story: "A newly sworn in police chief in Farrel, Pennsylvania said that he planned to make a public apology on Monday after he was caught using the N-word during a book drive fundraiser. WICU reported that the email was discovered just days after Thomas Burke was sworn by the City of Farrell as the new police chief last Monday. He is scheduled to begin the job in January. 'Good morning,' the email begins. 'Please click and review. Even $1.00 will be greatly appreciated. Them [Town of] Sharon n****s gotta learn how to read.'... City of Farrell Councilwoman Stephanie Sheffield ... said that Burke explained [to her,] 'that he does use the N-word very often because that's just the way that it is here our area.'... Farrell Mayor Olive McKeithan, who is black, stood up for Burke's character."

News Ledes

New York Times: "The American economy turned in a better performance last quarter than first thought, expanding at a 2.1 percent rate, the government said on Tuesday. While well below the pace of growth recorded in the spring, it was better than the 1.5 percent rate for the third quarter that the Commerce Department reported late last month."

Houston Chronicle: "A helicopter crashed at Fort Hood on Monday, killing four crew members, U.S. Army officials said. Military officials said the UH-60 helicopter crashed sometime after 5:49 p.m. Monday in the northeast section of the central Texas Army post. Emergency crews spent several hours searching the area and later found the bodies of the four crew members."

Reuters: "A bomb exploded outside the offices of a Greek business federation in central Athens on Tuesday, badly damaging the nearby Cypriot Embassy but causing no injuries, police officials said. The blast, which police believe was carried out by domestic guerrilla groups, is the first such incident since leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras came to power in January. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.Attacks against banks, politicians and business people are not uncommon in Greece, which has a long history of political violence and has been mired in its worst economic crisis in decades."