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Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

Marie: Sorry, my countdown clock was unreliable; then it became completely unreliable. I can't keep up with it. Maybe I'll try another one later.

 

Public Service Announcement

Zoë Schlanger in the Atlantic: "Throw out your black plastic spatula. In a world of plastic consumer goods, avoiding the material entirely requires the fervor of a religious conversion. But getting rid of black plastic kitchen utensils is a low-stakes move, and worth it. Cooking with any plastic is a dubious enterprise, because heat encourages potentially harmful plastic compounds to migrate out of the polymers and potentially into the food. But, as Andrew Turner, a biochemist at the University of Plymouth recently told me, black plastic is particularly crucial to avoid." This is a gift link from laura h.

Mashable: "Following the 2024 presidential election results and [Elon] Musk's support for ... Donald Trump, users have been deactivating en masse. And this time, it appears most everyone has settled on one particular X alternative: Bluesky.... Bluesky has gained more than 100,000 new sign ups per day since the U.S. election on Nov. 5. It now has over 15 million users. It's enjoyed a prolonged stay on the very top of Apple's App Store charts as well. Ready to join? Here's how to get started on Bluesky[.]"

Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

Wherein Michael McIntyre explains how Americans adapted English to their needs. With examples:

Beat the Buzzer. Some amazing young athletes:

     ~~~ Here's the WashPo story (March 23).

Back when the Washington Post had an owner/publisher who dared to stand up to a president:

Prime video is carrying the documentary. If you watch it, I suggest watching the Spielberg film "The Post" afterwards. There is currently a free copy (type "the post full movie" in the YouTube search box) on YouTube (or you can rent it on YouTube, on Prime & [I think] on Hulu). Near the end, Daniel Ellsberg (played by Matthew Rhys), says "I was struck in fact by the way President Johnson's reaction to these revelations was [that they were] 'close to treason,' because it reflected to me the sense that what was damaging to the reputation of a particular administration or a particular individual was in itself treason, which is very close to saying, 'I am the state.'" Sound familiar?

Out with the Black. In with the White. New York Times: “Lester Holt, the veteran NBC newscaster and anchor of the 'NBC Nightly News' over the last decade, announced on Monday that he will step down from the flagship evening newscast in the coming months. Mr. Holt told colleagues that he would remain at NBC, expanding his duties at 'Dateline,' where he serves as the show’s anchor.... He said that he would continue anchoring the evening news until 'the start of summer.' The network did not immediately name a successor.” ~~~

~~~ New York Times: “MSNBC said on Monday that Jen Psaki, the former White House press secretary who has become one of the most prominent hosts at the network, would anchor a nightly weekday show in prime time. Ms. Psaki, 46, will host a show at 9 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, replacing Alex Wagner, a longtime political journalist who has anchored that hour since 2022, according to a memo to staff from Rebecca Kutler, MSNBC’s president. Ms. Wagner will remain at MSNBC as an on-air correspondent. Rachel Maddow, MSNBC’s biggest star, has been anchoring the 9 p.m. hour on weeknights for the early days of ... [Donald] Trump’s administration but will return to hosting one night a week at the end of April.”

New York Times: “Joy Reid’s evening news show on MSNBC is being canceled, part of a far-reaching programming overhaul orchestrated by Rebecca Kutler, the network’s new president, two people familiar with the changes said. The final episode of Ms. Reid’s 7 p.m. show, 'The ReidOut,' is planned for sometime this week, according to the people, who were not authorized to speak publicly. The show, which features in-depth interviews with politicians and other newsmakers, has been a fixture of MSNBC’s lineup for the past five years. MSNBC is planning to replace Ms. Reid’s program with a show led by a trio of anchors: Symone Sanders Townsend, a political commentator and former Democratic strategist; Michael Steele, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee; and Alicia Menendez, the TV journalist, the people said. They currently co-host 'The Weekend,' which airs Saturday and Sunday mornings.” MB: In case you've never seen “The Weekend,” let me assure you it's pretty awful. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: "Joy Reid is leaving MSNBC, the network’s new president announced in a memo to staff on Monday, marking an end to the political analyst and anchor’s prime time news show."

Y! Entertainment: "Meanwhile, [Alex] Wagner will also be removed from her 9 pm weeknight slot. Wagner has already been working as a correspondent after Rachel Maddow took over hosting duties during ... Trump’s first 100 days in office. It’s now expected that Wagner will not return as host, but is expected to stay on as a contributor. Jen Psaki, President Biden’s former White House press secretary, is a likely replacement for Wagner, though a decision has not been finalized." MB: In fairness to Psaki, she is really too boring to watch. On the other hand, she is White. ~~~

     ~~~ RAS: "So MSNBC is getting rid of both of their minority evening hosts. Both women of color who are not afraid to call out the truth. Outspoken minorities don't have a long shelf life in the world of our corporate news media."

 

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.

Monday
Aug242020

The Commentariat -- August 25, 2020

Afternoon Update:

The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Tuesday are here. The Washington Post's live updates Tuesday are here.

Hahn Apologizes. Laurie McGinley, et al., of the Washington Post: At a White House briefing Sunday, with a maskless Donald Trump breathing down his neck, FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn claimed that 35 percent of coronavirus patient "were saved by the injection of antibody-rich plasma from people who had survived the disease.... But the 35-out-of-100 claim wasn't accurate, scientists said Monday.... [Experts were horrified by what was a false claim.] On Monday night, Hahn in a tweet acknowledged he had misspoken during the news briefing about the findings of the convalescent plasma study. 'I have been criticized for remarks I made Sunday night about the benefits of convalescent plasma. The criticism is entirely justified,' Hahn wrote. 'What I should have said better is that the data show a relative risk reduction not an absolute risk reduction.'... Essentially, the Trump administration figures had compared one group of patients who got a certain kind of plasma with a group who got a different concentration at a different point in the disease, thus showing the relative difference between those groups. It was not a measure of what happens when some patients get plasma and some don't -- the kind of research necessary to send a signal of whether a treatment is truly helping." The AP's story is here. Related story linked below.

Ben Gittleson, et al., of ABC News: "... Donald Trump said on Tuesday he will nominate Chad Wolf to be the permanent Secretary of Homeland Security. Wolf has been acting secretary since November and his tenure has been controversial, most recently in his role carrying out Trump's orders to use federal agents to respond to violent protests in Portland, Oregon.... Two weeks ago, a government watchdog agency found that Wolf and his acting deputy, Ken Cuccinelli, were named to their current roles illegally, in violation of the Vacancies Reform Act, in part because they had not faced Senate confirmation. In response to a letter from DHS which called the ruling 'baseless and baffling,' the Government Accountability Office reaffirmed its decision that the two top DHS officials were serving illegally. Democrats had demanded they resign, and on a call with reporters Tuesday, Senate Minority leader Chuck Schumer blasted the decision to nominate Wolf."

Falwell Flipflops. Again. Sarah Bailey, et al., of the Washington Post: "Jerry Falwell, Jr. confirmed Tuesday that he has resigned as president of Liberty University, after agreeing to step down Monday in the wake of scandals involving personal conduct, and then reversing course."

Here's a story I missed: Melanie Zanona of Politico (August 21): "The House Ethics Committee formally admonished Rep. Matt Gaetz for a threatening tweet about ... Donald Trump's former lawyer and fixer -- the lightest form of punishment that the panel can take. While the 10-member panel determined that the Florida Republican's 'actions did not reflect creditably upon the House of Representatives,' the committee also concluded in its report that he 'did not violate witness tampering and obstruction of Congress laws' and declined to issue more severe sanctions against the Florida Republican.... The case stems from an incident on February 2019, when on the eve of Michael Cohen's testimony before Congress, Gaetz vowed to release embarrassing information about allegations of Cohen's infidelity. The tweet sparked immediate backlash on Capitol Hill, with Democrats accusing Gaetz of witness tampering. 'Do your wife & father-in-law know about your girlfriends? Maybe tonight would be a good time for that chat,' Gaetz wrote. 'I wonder if she'll remain faithful to you in prison. She's about to learn a lot.'"

Michael Nienaber & Joseph Nasr of Reuters: "German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday called on Russia to investigate the suspected poisoning of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny and hold the perpetrators accountable after doctors found indications of a toxic substance in his body.... 'In light of the prominent role played by Mr. Navalny in the political opposition in Russia, the authorities there are now urgently called upon to investigate this crime to the last detail - and do so in full transparency,' Merkel said in a joint statement with Foreign Minister Heiko Maas." Mrs. McC: Gee, no word from Donald Trump.

"Diplomats Aghast." Josh Lederman, et al., of NBC News: "Diplomats who are barred by law from mixing work and politics say they're appalled by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's decision to address the Republican National Convention on Tuesday, breaking with long-standing traditions aimed at isolating American's foreign policy from partisan battles at home. It would be problematic enough, current and former U.S. diplomats said, if Pompeo were simply showing up at the convention to speak. But Pompeo's decision to use a stop in Jerusalem during an official overseas trip as the site for his recorded speech to fellow Republicans raises even more troubling questions about the message it sends to other countries and whether U.S. taxpayers are footing the bill, they said.... Pompeo's speech in service of ... Donald Trump's re-election appears to violate the spirit, if not the letter, of three legal memos issued by the State Department's legal adviser. One of the legal memos, intended to guide political appointees, says explicitly in bold letters that 'Senate-confirmed Presidential appointees may not even attend a political party convention.'" Mrs. McC: But will Mike speak from the Temple Mount?

Bob Brigham of the Raw Story: The mean people on Twitter are suggesting that Donnie Junior was coked up when he gave his convention speech. Brigham cites many opinionators. I like that "scientific analysis," where a Tweeter tested the color of Junior's eyes against a color chart & finds that the "whitest" spot in the whites of his eyes was actually a deep rosy pink.

~~~~~~~~~~

Presidential Race. Etc.

A Story Told by Cranks and Misfits. -- Joe Scarborough of MSNBC

Jonathan Lemire & Zeke Miller of the AP: "... Donald Trump aggressively asserted control over the Republican National Convention on Monday, overshadowing the prime-time speakers, as he made clear he wants voters to focus on him.... Republicans are not known as the party of diversity. But on Monday, the party showcased two of its stars, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina and the state's former governor, Nikki Haley, to try to tell a different story. Both argued that the president and his party had done a lot to help minorities across the nation.... Trump complained last week that Democrats 'held the darkest and angriest and gloomiest convention in American history.' But on opening night of their convention, Republicans are doing their share, spreading fear of a Biden victory on Nov. 3.... Trump made an appearance at the White House with everyday Americans, without recommended social distancing and with no one wearing a mask.... Rep. Jim Jordan, one of Trump's most bombastic backers, testified to Trump's 'intensity and his willingness to fight. But what I also appreciate is something most Americans never see -- how much he truly cares about people.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie Clearly, no one at the RNC saw the irony of having the party's most vicious attack dog, Jim Jordan, praising Trump's caring & empathetic character. ~~~

~~~ Beware the Invading Hordes! Jonathan Martin, et al., of the New York Times: "President Trump and his political allies mounted a fierce and misleading defense of his political record on the first night of the Republican convention on Monday, while unleashing a barrage of attacks on Joseph R. Biden Jr. and the Democratic Party that were unrelenting in their bleakness. Hours after Republican delegates formally nominated Mr. Trump for a second term, the president and his party made plain that they intended to engage in sweeping revisionism about Mr. Trump's management of the coronavirus pandemic, his record on race relations and much else. And they laid out a dystopian picture of what the United States would look like under a Biden administration, warning of a 'vengeful mob' that would lay waste to suburban communities and turn quiet neighborhoods into war zones. At times, the speakers and prerecorded videos appeared to be describing an alternate reality.... [Donald Junior] delivered that framed the election as a choice between 'church, work and school' and 'rioting, looting and vandalism.'... 'Rioters must not be allowed to destroy our cities,' [Junior's girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle] said, before abruptly changing her tone and smiling broadly. 'The best is to come,' she said, her voice rising to a shout.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: This might be a good time to remind you that Guilfoyle knows cities. After all, she was the wife of liberal California Gov. Gavin Newsom when he was San Francisco's mayor, though she was working in New York City for Anderson Cooper for some of that time. And, as I learned today, Guilfoyle also had a professional relationship with Kamala Harris, which Harris suggests Guilfoyle has completely misrepresented.

New York Times reporters' snark analysis of the Republican National Convention Monday night is here. It includes live video, but you can mute it. This seems like the most painless way to "watch" the convention without having to listen to it. The Times is also doing some "formal" fact-checking on the page.

Politico's live analysis is here. Seems to be a slow-loader. It's not bad. For instance, Charlie Mahtesian: "Next up is St. Louis couple who stood outside their home pointing guns at protesters during a Black Lives Matter demonstration.... The McCloskeys seem like litigious neighbors from hell."

Here's a fairly good summary of Dark Night 1 of the Trump Show:

The New York Times' live updates of Monday's Trump Show are here. The Washington Post's live updates are here. The Republicans have already held a live roll call in Charlotte, N.C., but MSNBC played it on mute (Trump just complained that CNN didn't cover the roll call at all; who knows if that's true); the audio was the House hearing on the USPS. Mrs. McC: Fortunately, I had already read a preview of the roll call, thanks to historian Kevin Kruse (linked yesterday), so I didn't miss a thing. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Robin Givhan of the Washington Post watched: "The roll call on opening day of the Republican National Convention was sleepy. Low energy. And sad.... It was technically stultifying. It was also devoid of Black people and sorely lacking in people of color.... In essence, it was White men in a room simplifying complex issues and repeatedly pledging their fealty to guns, fetuses and the importance of kneeling to pray and standing for the national anthem.... Arizona's ... delegation chairman extolled the 'miles and miles and miles of big beautiful wall.' Montana made note of there being almost five guns in every home.... It was Trumpian politics as television. And it was dismal.... [By contrast, the Democrats' roll call] was a homey and expansive view of America -- from the majesty of the Black Hills to the calamari of Rhode Island.... In the midst of the roll call..., the man himself strolled into the ballroom.... Trump talked on and on. He'd leave a topic only to circle back to it. He'd begin to wrap up with a declaration of thanks and then he'd think of something else he wanted to say."

** Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: "Republicans chose not to produce a platform for their convention, no statement of values or declaration of principle. Instead, the party has approved a resolution to 'enthusiastically support' President Trump's 'America-first agenda,' whatever that may be. And while the White House has produced a bullet-point outline of its second-term agenda, this week's convention itself has little content planned other than cultural grievance and worshipful praise for the president. As one veteran congressional aide told Politico, the only thing Republicans believe now is 'Owning the libs and pissing off the media.'... Rather than bring a new program to bear on the party, he has made the equivalent of a trade: total support for his personal and political concerns in exchange for almost total pursuit of conservative ideological interests."

Glenn Kessler, et al., of the Washington Post: "The first night of the 2020 Republican National Convention was a fire hose of false or misleading claim[s], mostly drawn from President Trump's arsenal of falsehoods. Here are 19 claims that caught our attention."

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Lloyd Grove & Justin Baragona of the Daily Beast: "When two of the major broadcast networks -- CBS and ABC -- broke into their regular programming Monday to carry live portions of ... Donald Trump's largely false musings after his official nomination, departing from their announced policy of giving only a hour of daily airtime to each party's political convention, the Biden-Harris campaign was not amused. Indeed, operatives for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were fuming Monday about a perceived lack of fairness in which the nation's major television outlets permitted Trump -- in an ominous echo of the 2016 campaign in which the former reality-TV star received an estimated $2 billion of free airtime -- to manipulate the media to his advantage.... CBS ... broadcast around 20 minutes of Trump's 53-minute venomous and lie-filled stream-of-consciousness[;...] ABC ... aired around 7 minutes of the president's rant.... While CBS offered a soupcon of fact-checking by CBS Evening News anchor Norah O'Donnell and chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett before signing off, ABC did zero fact-checking.... [A Biden campaign operative said] that the demand for parity in airtime is not the same as saying that more airtime for Trump will necessarily advantage him over Biden." ~~~

~~~ "Wrong, Misleading and Outright Lies." Michael Grynbaum of the New York Times: "Television's ability to handle a Trump-centric Republican National Convention faced an early test on Monday, when the president delivered a kickoff speech in Charlotte, N.C., that was filled with false claims about the integrity of mail-in voting and the policy positions of his Democratic opponent, Joseph R. Biden Jr.... President Trump's well-documented penchant for falsehoods presents a unique challenge, according to network executives.... As the president spoke in Charlotte on Monday shortly after delegates formally renominated him, a hodgepodge of journalistic strategies emerged. CNN took the most drastic approach, cutting away from Mr. Trump in the middle of his remarks.... Anchor John King told viewers, 'but a lot of what you just heard from the president of the United States is wrong, misleading and outright lies. Wrong, misleading and outright lies.'... MSNBC carried the entirety of Mr. Trump's speech live, opting for real-time analysis in on-screen graphics.... After Mr. Trump finished..., News anchor Chuck Todd ticked through a lengthy fact-check, noting that the speech was 'filled with so many made-up problems about mail-in voting that if we were to air just the truthful parts, we probably could only air maybe a sentence, if that much.'... Fox News carried the president's speech live, but did not offer a correction to Mr. Trump's false claims."

~~~ Dan Merica of CNN: "... Donald Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen will appear in a series of ads for the Democratic group American Bridge in the coming days, telling voters that Trump 'can't be trusted' and that they 'shouldn't believe a word he utters' during the Republican National Convention this week.... The ads ... They will begin running digitally on Monday night and on television starting Wednesday, as the convention enters its final two days."

Jim Acosta & Maegan Vazquez of CNN: "Former chairman of the Republican National Committee Michael Steele is joining the Lincoln Project, a group of Republicans working to prevent ... Donald Trump's re-election. 'Today is the day where things should matter and you need to take stock of what matters to you -- and the kind of leader you want to lead in these moments. And for me, it ain't him,' Steele, a political analyst for MSNBC said making the announcement to host Nicole Wallace on Monday afternoon."

Natasha Korecki of Politico: "A group of onetime Republican presidential appointees who served as senior ethics or Justice Department aides are endorsing Joe Biden for president, warning that Donald Trump has 'weaponized' the executive branch and is putting in peril the legitimacy of the U.S. Justice Department. 'I think a lot of us are extremely alarmed, frankly, at the threat of autocracy,' Donald B. Ayer, former deputy attorney general during the George H.W. Bush administration, said in an interview with Politico. 'He's going to be unleashed if he gets a second term. I don't know what's going to stop him.'"

Daniel Lippman of Politico: "Miles Taylor, the former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security in the Trump administration who endorsed Joe Biden last week, has started a group of current and former administration officials and other Republican leaders who want to see ... Donald Trump defeated in November. Taylor and Elizabeth Neumann, another former senior DHS official who served in the administration, have started the Republican Political Alliance for Integrity and Reform (REPAIR), which will include people who work or have worked for Trump but want to elect Biden and reform the Republican Party."


Catie Edmondson
of the New York Times: “Postmaster General Louis DeJoy told Congress on Monday that the Postal Service could be trusted to carry out the largest vote-by-mail program in American history without political bias, even as President Trump repeated baseless accusations that mail-in voting would be used by his rivals to rig the November election against him ... [and] claimed without evidence that Democrats were 'using Covid to steal the election.' Under tough questioning by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, Mr. DeJoy, a major donor to Mr. Trump and other Republicans, mounted an outraged defense of the modifications he has made at the Postal Service that have thrust the agency into a political firestorm, denying that they were motivated by partisanship. He refused to commit to reversing the changes, which he characterized as vital cost-cutting measures for a cash-strapped agency badly in need of an overhaul, and scolded Congress for failing for years to attend to the post office's financial woes."

Yo, Louie, you don't want to go before Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) if you don't know nuthin':

Nor rain, nor snow, that sleet nor hail will make our delivery. -- Louis DeJoy, trying to recite the USPS unofficial motto

Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds. -- Actual motto ~~~

~~~ The Washington Post's live updates of the DeJoy hearing are here. "In one tense exchange, Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) asked DeJoy 'what the heck are you doing,' complaining that the postmaster general had ended a 'once-proud tradition' of the Postal Service. Lynch asked, 'Will you put the machines back?' DeJoy said he would not." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Here's the rant that contributor Jeanne mentioned in yesterday's Comments, which preceded his question of DeJoy:

Molly Redden of the Huffington Post: "... Donald Trump's selection for a key Postal Service position, Robert M. Duncan, once ... steer[ed] the Republican Party while it undertook some of its most brazen voter suppression schemes. Duncan is now the chair of the Postal Service board of governors, but he previously served as general counsel and then chair of the Republican National Committee from 2002 to 2009, a time when the committee and its state counterparts oversaw an unprecedented escalation of voter disenfranchisement efforts in swing states. From 2004 to 2006, when Duncan was the committee's general counsel, party officials challenged the eligibility of at least 77,000 voters, a 2007 report by the nonpartisan group Project Vote found. As it happens, one of the party's favored tactics relied on the U.S. mail. In 2004, Republicans in Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania sent thousands of nonforwardable letters and postcards to select voters -- particularly minority voters -- and used the mail returned as undeliverable to come up with voter registration challenge lists." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

The Washington Post's live updates of conavirus developments Monday are here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Lying on a Life-and-Death Matter. Katie Thomas & Sheri Fink of the New York Times: "At a news conference on Sunday announcing the emergency approval of blood plasma for hospitalized Covid-19 patients, President Trump and two of his top health officials cited the same statistic: that the treatment had reduced deaths by 35 percent.... Dr. Stephen M. Hahn, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said 35 out of 100 Covid-19 patients' would have been saved because of the administration of plasma.' But scientists were taken aback by the way the administration framed this data, which appeared to have been calculated based on a small subgroup of hospitalized Covid-19 patients in a Mayo Clinic study.... For the first time ever, I feel like official people in communications and people at the F.D.A. grossly misrepresented data about a therapy,' said Dr. Walid Gellad..., [of] the University of Pittsburgh.... Dr. Robert Califf, who was F.D.A. commissioner under President Barack Obama, said on Twitter on Sunday that Dr. Hahn should correct his statement..., [as did] Dr. Eric Topol, a professor of molecular medicine at Scripps Research in La Jolla, Calif.... Although there have been some positive signs that [plasma] can reduce deaths in Covid-19 patients, no randomized trials have shown that it works."

Jeff Mason of Reuters: "The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not harbor 'deep state' elements, the agency's head [Dr. Stephen Hahn] told Reuters on Monday, rejecting criticism from ... Donald Trump that staff there were trying to delay a coronavirus vaccine.... 'I have not seen anything that I would consider to be 'deep state' at the FDA,' Hahn told Reuters in an interview.... Hahn said the FDA's recent authorization of a coronavirus treatment using blood plasma from recovered patients was not made because of political pressure and emphasized that on his watch any decision on a vaccine would be based on science.... Hahn acknowledged that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious diseases expert, and Dr. Francis Collins of the National Institutes of Health had expressed concern that the data did not justify the authorization." Mrs. McC: What Hahn evidently did not acknowledge was that he got on the teevee & "grossly misrepresented" those data.

Julie Steenhuysen & Carl O'Donnell of Reuters: Anthony Fauci, "the top U.S. infectious diseases expert is warning that distributing a COVID-19 vaccine under special emergency use guidelines before it has been proved safe and effective in large trials is a bad idea that could have a chilling effect on the testing of other vaccines.... [Donald] Trump stoked concerns of politicizing the regulatory approval process with an announcement on Sunday of an emergency use authorization for plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients to treat current patients before its benefits have been assessed in randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials."

Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post: "A Florida judge Monday granted a temporary injunction against the state's order requiring school districts to reopen schools during the novel coronavirus pandemic, saying in a harshly worded decision that safety concerns had been ignored. Circuit Court Judge Charles Dodson, in a 16-page decision, granted the request in a lawsuit filed by the Florida Education Association to block the order issued by state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran on July 6 compelling schools to reopen five days a week for families who did not want their children to do all virtual learning. Districts were threatened with loss of state funding if they did not comply. Dodson said, however, that parts of the order were unconstitutional and that state officials 'have essentially ignored the requirement of school safety by requiring the statewide opening of brick-and-mortar schools to receive already allocated funding.' He also said the state had wrongly removed the right of local districts to decide for themselves on safe reopening plans." The Tampa Bay Times story is here. (Also linked yesterday.)

Nick Schwellenbach & David Szakonyi of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO): "Ukrainian billionaire Rinat Akhmetov owns four coal mining operations sprinkled across Appalachia that received loans intended to help small businesses keep workers on payroll during the pandemic. They received a total of $21 million in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, according to a statement Akhmetov's company provided to the Project On Government Oversight (POGO).... [T]he oligarch's United Coal Company and its subsidiaries had estimated sales of $1.5 billion last year.... Akhmetov ... reportedly owns two of the planet's most expensive homes and ... had a cameo in Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report last year.... The total value of the loans also exceeds the amount of civil penalties United Coal has racked up [$13.4 million for 14,030] for federal worker health and safety violations.... Unlike past Small Business Administration programs, it does not matter if PPP loan recipients are owned by a wealthy foreign national." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

The Crime Family Trump & Friends

David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "The New York attorney general is investigating President Trump's private business for allegedly misleading lenders by inflating the value of its assets, the attorney general's office said Monday in a legal filing. In the filing, signed by a deputy to Attorney General Letitia James, the attorney general's office said it is investigating Trump's use of 'Statements of Financial Condition' -- documents Trump sent to lenders, summarizing his assets and debts. The filing asks a New York state judge to compel the Trump Organization to provide information it has been withholding from investigators -- including a subpoena seeking an interview with the president's son Eric. The attorney general's office said it began investigating after Trump's former lawyer and 'fixer,' Michael Cohen, told Congress in February 2019 that Trump had used these statements to inflate his net worth to lenders. The filing said that Eric Trump had been scheduled to be interviewed in the investigation in late July, but abruptly canceled that interview. The filing says that Eric Trump is now refusing to be interviewed...." A New York Times story is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Jerry Likes to Watch. Aram Roston of Reuters: "In a claim likely to intensify the controversy surrounding one of the most influential figures in the American Christian conservative movement, a business partner of Jerry Falwell Jr has come forward to say he had a years-long sexual relationship involving Falwell's wife and the evangelical leader. Giancarlo Granda says he was 20 when he met Jerry and Becki Falwell while working as a pool attendant at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach hotel in March 2012. Starting that month and continuing into 2018, Granda told Reuters that the relationship involved him having sex with Becki Falwell while Jerry Falwell looked on.... Becki Falwell, 53, is a political figure in her own right. She served on the advisory board of the group Women for Trump...." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ ** Update. Susan Svrluga, et al., of the Washington Post: "Jerry Falwell Jr. has agreed to resign as president of Liberty University on Monday, according to a school official.... Opposition to his presidency had been growing but came to a dramatic head after two new reports about a young man Falwell and his wife befriended at a Florida pool, went into business with and who allegedly was sexually connected to the couple.... Falwell had been placed on paid leave Aug. 7 after he posted a provocative picture of himself and his wife's assistant on social media." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Great. Now Jerry & Bambi Becki have plenty of free time to go around the country campaigning for Trump. Hope Jerry will be giving the invocation at one of the episodes of this week's Trump Show. ~~~

~~~ Update Update. Maggie Severns, et al., of Politico: "Jerry Falwell Jr. says he is not resigning as president and chancellor of Liberty University, contradicting news reports announcing his departure from the Evangelical school. 'I have not resigned,' Falwell told Politico on a phone call on Monday evening. Asked how the news reports of him resigning had gotten out, he replied, 'I don't know.'... Falwell [is] one of ... Donald Trump's most prominent evangelical supporters...." ~~~

     ~~~ Update Update Update. This story has yet a New Lede: Jerry Falwell Jr. said he planned to resign Monday as president and chancellor of Liberty University only to backpedal on that decision several hours later after it had become public, according to a statement from the Christian university. Falwell 'agreed to resign as its President and from its Board of Directors but following media reports about the resignation, withdrew it,' the university said in a statement late Monday evening. The university's board of trustees was scheduled to meet on Tuesday."

~~~ Paul Campos in LG&$ righteously provides the Christian response: "Let he who has not made [a] fortune running a billion dollar non-profit boiler room cum 'Christian University' that obsessively monitors the romantic inclinations of its marks students, while recording three-ways between his wife, his wife's hot young Latin lover, and himself, cast the first stone." Mrs. McC: Thanks, Paul. Now I'm so ashamed of snickering. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)


Julie Bosman of the New York Times: "An afternoon that had begun with peaceful marches in protest of a police shooting gave way to fires, destruction and looting in Kenosha[,Wisconsin,] as a strip of businesses in a central residential neighborhood was consumed in flames early Tuesday.... Lost in the blaze, neighbors said, was a mattress store, a storefront church, a Mexican restaurant and a cellphone store. Less than a mile away, a probation and parole office was also on fire. A line of National Guard members, called to Kenosha amid rising tension over Sunday of Jacob Blake, a Black resident who was shot by a white police officer, prevented anyone from getting close as firefighters worked to douse the flames." Here's the Washington Post's story. An AP report is here.~~~

~~~ Claire Proctor of the Chicago Sun-Times: Jacob Blake's "father said there are now 'eight holes' in his son's body, and he's paralyzed from the waist down. Doctors don't yet know if the injury is permanent." ~~~

~~~ ** "Stop Killing Unarmed Black People." Cindy Boren of the Washington Post: "From the NFL to the NBA to MLB, athletes used social media to protest the shooting of Jacob Blake, an unarmed Black man, Sunday evening by police in Kenosha, Wis. Michael Thomas, the New Orleans Saints wide receiver who was the guiding force behind NFL players' powerful video message about George Floyd in June, summed up his feelings in five words: 'Stop killing unarmed Black people.' Blake, 29, was shot at least seven times in the back as he tried to get into a car in which his three children were seated. He underwent surgery and is in serious condition in the intensive care unit of a Milwaukee hospital. The officers were placed on administrative leave, but protests rocked the city, which was placed on a curfew that extended into Monday morning. LeBron James was one of several athletes who shared an old video of actor Denzel Washington asking, 'Is the sheep preaching hate when he says I'm not going to let a wolf eat me anymore?'" ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: When will (mostly white) cops figure out that the vast majority of Americans, no matter their race, and sick and ashamed of living in a country where police officers must be told to "stop killing unarmed Black people"? ~~~

~~~ Jacob Pramuk of CNBC: "Cops in Wisconsin 'must be held accountable' after shooting a Black man in the back in front of his young children, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said Monday.... 'This calls for an immediate, full and transparent investigation and the officers must be held accountable,' Biden said in a statement Monday. 'These shots pierce the soul of our nation. Jill and I pray for Jacob's recovery and for his children,' the former vice president continued. 'Equal justice has not been real for Black Americans and so many others. We are at an inflection point. We must dismantle systemic racism. It is the urgent task before us.'"

Jeremy White of Politico: "Former Rep. Duncan Hunter's [R-Calif.] wife, Margaret Hunter, was sentenced to eight months of home detention on Monday after assisting federal prosecutors in a corruption case against her husband. U.S. District Judge Thomas Whelan lauded Margaret Hunter's 'remarkable cooperation' in sparing her jail time despite what prosecutors call her involvement in the couple siphoning off hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign finance funds for personal use. Duncan Hunter pleaded guilty in December to violating campaign finance law and was sentenced earlier this year to 11 months in prison, although efforts to reduce prison crowding during the coronavirus pandemic has delayed the start of his prison term." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Duncan Hunter was one of the first two members of Congress to endorse Donald Trump. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.), who endorsed Trump the same day Hunter did, got a 26-month sentence for insider trading, but as with Hunter, Collins' surrender-date has been delayed because of the coronavirus.

Beyond the Beltway

California. Jenny Gross of the New York Times: "The California Supreme Court on Monday overturned the death penalty for Scott Peterson, who was found guilty in 2004 of killing his pregnant wife, Laci, in a notorious case that became fodder for the tabloids and cable news and spawned at least one made-for-TV movie. The court upheld Mr. Peterson's conviction, but it said that the trial judge had made mistakes that hindered his right to an impartial jury during sentencing.... The court said, '... before the trial began, the trial court made a series of clear and significant errors in jury selection.' The court said prosecutors could again seek the death penalty for Mr. Peterson at a new hearing. Prospective jurors whose views on capital punishment would impair their ability to follow the law could be dismissed as unqualified, the court said. But jurors could not be dismissed simply for having expressed opposition to the death penalty."

Way Beyond the Beltway

** Russia. William Glucroft & Isabelle Khurshudyan of the Washington Post: "Alexei Navalny, the prominent Russian opposition figure and Kremlin critic, was poisoned, Berlin's Charité hospital said in a statement Monday, citing clinical results. Although the exact substance that poisoned Navalny is not yet known, it is believed to be a cholinesterase inhibitor, Charité's statement said, adding that the effect of the toxin -- blocking cholinesterase, an enzyme needed for the proper functioning of the nervous system -- was confirmed several times by independent laboratories.... Navalny remains in a medically induced coma but 'there is no acute danger to his life.' He is being given atropine, a medication used to treat certain types of nerve agent and pesticide poisonings." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Brazil. Tom Phillips of the Guardian: "A gospel-singing Brazilian congresswoman [Flordelis dos Santos de Souza] has been accused of masterminding the 'barbaric' murder of her preacher husband after at least six failed or aborted attempts to kill him with poison or in staged robberies. Anderson do Carmo was 42 when he was shot dead in June 2019 as he returned to the home he shared with the church crooner-turned-politician Flordelis dos Santos de Souza.... [A]llegations of a bizarre and lurid family plot to murder the evangelical preacher emerged on Monday as police arrested five of Flordelis' children and one granddaughter for involvement in the crime.... The 59-year-old lawmaker -- who has made records for one of Brazil's top gospel labels and was elected to congress in 2018 -- could not be arrested because she enjoys parliamentary immunity.... Do Carmo's grisly murder -- he was reportedly shot more than 30 times, predominantly in the groin and thighs -- made nationwide headlines and has continued to do so since." --s (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

News Ledes

New York Times: "Gail Sheehy, a journalist who plumbed the interior lives of public figures for clues to their behavior and examined societal trends as signposts of cultural change, died on Monday at a hospital in Southampton, N.Y. She was 83."

Weather Channel: "Hurricane Laura is intensifying over the Gulf of Mexico and is forecast to become a major hurricane prior to striking the upper Texas or southwest Louisiana coasts late Wednesday or early Thursday. Life-threatening storm surge and destructive winds will batter the coast and a threat of flooding rain and strong winds will extend well inland. Residents along the upper Texas and southwest Louisiana coasts should prepare now for a hurricane strike. Follow any evacuation orders issued by local or state officials."

Sunday
Aug232020

The Commentariat -- August 24, 2020

Afternoon Update:

David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "The New York attorney general is investigating President Trump's private business for allegedly misleading lenders by inflating the value of its assets, the attorney general's office said Monday in a legal filing. In the filing, signed by a deputy to Attorney General Letitia James, the attorney general's office said it is investigating Trump's use of 'Statements of Financial Condition' -- documents Trump sent to lenders, summarizing his assets and debts. The filing asks a New York state judge to compel the Trump Organization to provide information it has been withholding from investigators -- including a subpoena seeking an interview with the president's son Eric. The attorney general's office said it began investigating after Trump's former lawyer and 'fixer,' Michael Cohen, told Congress in February 2019 that Trump had used these statements to inflate his net worth to lenders. The filing said that Eric Trump had been scheduled to be interviewed in the investigation in late July, but abruptly canceled that interview. The filing says that Eric Trump is now refusing to be interviewed...." A New York Times story is here.

Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post: "A Florida judge Monday granted a temporary injunction against the state's order requiring school districts to reopen schools during the novel coronavirus pandemic, saying in a harshly worded decision that safety concerns had been ignored. Circuit Court Judge Charles Dodson, in a 16-page decision, granted the request in a lawsuit filed by the Florida Education Association to block the order issued by state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran on July 6 compelling schools to reopen five days a week for families who did not want their children to do all virtual learning. Districts were threatened with loss of state funding if they did not comply. Dodson said, however, that parts of the order were unconstitutional and that state officials 'have essentially ignored the requirement of school safety by requiring the statewide opening of brick-and-mortar schools to receive already allocated funding.' He also said the state had wrongly removed the right of local districts to decide for themselves on safe reopening plans." The Tampa Bay Times story is here.

The New York Times' live updates of Monday's Trump Show are here. The Washington Post's live updates are here. The Republicans have already held a live rollcall in Charlotte, N.C., but MSNBC played it on mute (Trump just complained that CNN didn't cover the rollcall at all; who knows if that's true); the audio was the House hearing on the USPS. Mrs. McC: Fortunately, I had already read a preview of the rollcall, thanks to historian Kevin Kruse (linked below), so I didn't miss a thing.

The Washington Post's live updates of the DeJoy hearing are here. "In one tense exchange, Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) asked DeJoy 'what the heck are you doing,' complaining that the postmaster general had ended a 'once-proud tradition' of the Postal Service. Lynch asked, 'Will you put the machines back?' DeJoy said he would not." Here's the rant that contributor Jeanne mentions in today's Comments, which preceded his question of DeJoy:

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Molly Redden of the Huffington Post: "... Donald Trump's selection for a key Postal Service position, Robert M. Duncan, once ... steer[ed] the Republican Party while it undertook some of its most brazen voter suppression schemes. Duncan is now the chair of the Postal Service board of governors, but he previously served as general counsel and then chair of the Republican National Committee from 2002 to 2009, a time when the committee and its state counterparts oversaw an unprecedented escalation of voter disenfranchisement efforts in swing states. From 2004 to 2006, when Duncan was the committee's general counsel, party officials challenged the eligibility of at least 77,000 voters, a 2007 report by the nonpartisan group Project Vote found. As it happens, one of the party's favored tactics relied on the U.S. mail. In 2004, Republicans in Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania sent thousands of nonforwardable letters and postcards to select voters -- particularly minority voters -- and used the mail returned as undeliverable to come up with voter registration challenge lists."

The Washington Post's live updates of coronavirus developments Monday are here.

Jerry Likes to Watch. Aram Roston of Reuters: "In a claim likely to intensify the controversy surrounding one of the most influential figures in the American Christian conservative movement, a business partner of Jerry Falwell Jr has come forward to say he had a years-long sexual relationship involving Falwell's wife and the evangelical leader. Giancarlo Granda says he was 20 when he met Jerry and Becki Falwell while working as a pool attendant at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach hotel in March 2012. Starting that month and continuing into 2018, Granda told Reuters that the relationship involved him having sex with Becki Falwell while Jerry Falwell looked on.... Becki Falwell, 53, is a political figure in her own right. She served on the advisory board of the group Women for Trump...." ~~~

     ~~~ ** Update. Susan Svrluga, et al., of the Washington Post: "Jerry Falwell Jr. has agreed to resign as president of Liberty University on Monday, according to a school official.... Opposition to his presidency had been growing but came to a dramatic head after two new reports about a young man Falwell and his wife befriended at a Florida pool, went into business with and who allegedly was sexually connected to the couple.... Falwell had been placed on paid leave Aug. 7 after he posted a provocative picture of himself and his wife's assistant on social media." ~~~

~~~ Paul Campos in LG&$ righteously provides the Christian response: "Let he who has not made [a] fortune running a billion dollar non-profit boiler room cum 'Christian University' that obsessively monitors the romantic inclinations of its marks students, while recording three-ways between his wife, his wife's hot young Latin lover, and himself, cast the first stone." Mrs. McC: Thanks, Paul. Now I'm so ashamed of snickering.

** William Glucroft & Isabelle Khurshudyan of the Washington Post: “Alexei Navalny, the prominent Russian opposition figure and Kremlin critic, was poisoned, Berlin's Charité hospital said in a statement Monday, citing clinical results. Although the exact substance that poisoned Navalny is not yet known, it is believed to be a cholinesterase inhibitor, Charité's statement said, adding that the effect of the toxin -- blocking cholinesterase, an enzyme needed for the proper functioning of the nervous system -- was confirmed several times by independent laboratories.... Navalny remains in a medically induced coma but 'there is no acute danger to his life.' He is being given atropine, a medication used to treat certain types of nerve agent and pesticide poisonings."

Nick Schwellenbach & David Szakonyi of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO): "Ukrainian billionaire Rinat Akhmetov owns four coal mining operations sprinkled across Appalachia that received loans intended to help small businesses keep workers on payroll during the pandemic. They received a total of $21 million in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, according to a statement Akhmetov's company provided to the Project On Government Oversight (POGO).... [T]he oligarch's United Coal Company and its subsidiaries had estimated sales of $1.5 billion last year.... Akhmetov ... reportedly owns two of the planet's most expensive homes and ... had a cameo in ... Robert Mueller's report last year.... The total value of the loans also exceeds the amount of civil penalties United Coal has racked up [$13.4 million for 14,030] for federal worker health and safety violations.... Unlike past Small Business Administration programs, it does not matter if PPP loan recipients are owned by a wealthy foreign national." --s

Brazil. Tom Phillips of the Guardian: "A gospel-singing Brazilian congresswoman [Flordelis dos Santos de Souza] has been accused of masterminding the 'barbaric' murder of her preacher husband after at least six failed or aborted attempts to kill him with poison or in staged robberies. Anderson do Carmo was 42 when he was shot dead in June 2019 as he returned to the home he shared with the church crooner-turned-politician Flordelis dos Santos de Souza.... [A]llegations of a bizarre and lurid family plot to murder the evangelical preacher emerged on Monday as police arrested five of Flordelis' children and one granddaughter for involvement in the crime.... The 59-year-old lawmaker -- who has made records for one of Brazil's top gospel labels and was elected to congress in 2018 -- could not be arrested because she enjoys parliamentary immunity.... Do Carmo's grisly murder -- he was reportedly shot more than 30 times, predominantly in the groin and thighs -- made nationwide headlines and has continued to do so since." --s

~~~~~~~~~~

Presidential Race, Etc.

Annie Linskey of the Washington Post: "Joe Biden and Kamala D. Harris on Sunday night pushed back on accusations that they would defund police departments and increase taxes on the middle class or that the presidential nominee is facing mental decline, three narratives that Republicans have promoted and are expected to focus on as their convention begins Monday. In the Democratic duo's first joint television interview, aired Sunday night on ABC, Biden reiterated his support for increasing funding to police departments -- and noted that President Trump's budget would cut grants to local law enforcement.... The former vice president laughed as ABC anchor David Muir, noting Trump's criticisms, asked whether the 77-year old possessed the mental capacity to lead the country. 'Watch me,' he said. Biden also said he is 'absolutely' leaving open the idea of trying to serve two terms in the White House." ~~~

~~~ The Lout & the Gentlemen. Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: In the interview, Muir asks Harris about Trump's attacks on her. As Chris Lamb of the Indy Star wrote last week, "Two minutes after the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee selected U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate..., Donald Trump returned to the seventh grade. Trump called Harris 'nasty' several times and then used the words 'meanest' and 'most horrible' in his characterization of her." So I got to wondering what, if anything, candidates Obama & Biden had said about Sarah Palin after John McCain announced she was his V.P. pick in 2008. Here's the answer: John Harwood of CNBC (August 28, 2008) wrote: "In a joint statement, Obama and Biden congratulated Palin on her selection. 'It is yet another encouraging sign that old barriers are falling in our politics,' their statement said. 'While we obviously have differences over how best to lead this country forward Governor Palin is an admirable person and will add a compelling new voice to this campaign.'"

Sister Acts. Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Days before publication of Maryanne Trump Barry's scathing assessment of her brother Donald as lying, cruel, phony, unprincipled and unprepared (see yesterday's Commentariat for link), Joe Biden's sister Valerie Biden Owens told Bill Barrow of the AP what a smart, kind, decent person Joe had always been. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

The Washington Post Sounds the Alarm

** Washington Post Editors: "President Trump will make this argument [link fixed] to the American people: Things were great until China loosed the novel coronavirus on the world. If you reelect me, I will make things great again.... But, fittingly for a president who has spoken more than 20,000 lies during his presidency, [the argument] rests on two huge falsehoods. One is that the nation, his presidency and, above all, Mr. Trump himself are innocent victims of covid-19. In fact, his own negligence, ignorance and malpractice turned what would have been a daunting challenge for any president into a national disaster. The other is that there was anything to admire in his record before the virus struck. It is true that the economic growth initiated under President Barack Obama had continued, at about the same modest rate. Mr. Trump achieved this growth by ratcheting up America's deficit and long-term debt to record levels, with a tax cut that showered benefits on the wealthy.... History will record Mr. Trump's presidency as a march of wanton, uninterrupted, tragic destruction.... And so, over the coming weeks..., we will publish a series of editorials on the damage this president has caused -- and the danger he would pose in a second term." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ ** David Nakamura of the Washington Post: "Trailing in the polls and struggling to find a message, President Trump is leveraging one of the most powerful assets he has left -- his White House office -- in service of his reelection bid, obliterating the lines between governing and campaigning and testing legal boundaries.... In recent weeks, Trump has acknowledged he was opposed to funding for the U.S. Postal Service because he does not want the money used for universal mail-in voting. He sent Homeland Security authorities to quell social justice protests in what he termed 'Democrat cities.' He signed a stream of executive orders that circumvented Congress and delivered overtly partisan speeches at official White House functions, including a 54-minute Rose Garden monologue blasting Democratic rival Joe Biden last month. Trump also has used federal resources and personnel to re-create the enthusiasm of his campaign rallies.... He invited patrons at his private golf resort in Bedminster, N.J., to attend news conferences there, with many of them heckling reporters. And he held a campaign rally in Yuma, Ariz., last week with 200 off-duty Border Patrol union members, many wearing masks emblazoned with 'TRUMP' and 'MAGA.'&" Read on. A related NBC News story is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ "Trump Has No Idea How to Run for Reelection." Ashley Parker of the Washington Post: "Typically, presidents run for reelection on the achievements of their first term.... But Trump has, from that first golden-escalator ride, campaigned, governed and wallowed in grievance, never once wavering from his outsider ethos.... Trump appears unwilling -- or unable -- to abandon his burn-it-all-down cri de coeur, even when the establishment he lambastes is run by himself and his appointees.... The decision to position himself as a permanent outsider is less strategic than pathological, say people close to the president, reflecting a man who since childhood has lusted after an elite that never truly welcomed him." (Also linked yesterday.)

Mrs. McCrabbie: Many news outlets are reporting on plans for the upcoming Big Trump Show, like this New York Times story on how two "Apprentice" producers are stage-managing the hoohah, or several reports that a whole lot of the featured speakers are either Trump or a member of the Crime Family Trump (although for some reason, Trump's sister Judge Maryanne Barry is not among them). But historian Kevin Kruse has the scoop on plans for the roll call. Here's how it starts: "ALABAMA: Roy Moore, legally standing a hundred feet outside a mall. ALASKA: Hunters lighting up caribou with AK-47s. ARIZONA: Joe Arpaio licking a taser." Many thanks to RAS for the link. Worth reading Kruse's roll call, so you won't have to watch whatever comes up on the teevee. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Donie O'Sullivan, et al., of CNN: "Twitter on Sunday slapped a label on a tweet from ... Donald Trump for 'making misleading health claims that could potentially dissuade people from participation in voting.' Trump claimed in posts on Twitter and Facebook early Sunday morning that mail drop boxes for voting 'are not Covid sanitized,' as well as a 'voter security disaster.' Hours after Trump sent the tweet, Twitter took action, saying, 'We placed a public interest notice on this Tweet for violating our Civic Integrity Policy for making misleading health claims that could potentially dissuade people from participation in voting.' Now accompanying the tweet is the full following security notice: 'This Tweet violated the Twitter Rules about civic and election integrity. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public's interest for the Tweet to remain accessible.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Fadel Allassan of Axios: "Former Republican Sen. Jeff Flake, along with more than two dozen former GOP members of Congress, signed onto a 'Republicans for Biden' effort, Fox News reports.... The group is part of the Biden campaign's strategy to appeal to moderate Republicans currently on the fence about backing President Trump. Its Monday launch was timed to coincide with the first day of the Republican National Convention."

Tim Alberta in Politico Magazine: "... Donald Trump's party is the very definition of a cult of personality. It stands for no special ideal. It possesses no organizing principle. It represents no detailed vision for governing. Filling the vacuum is a lazy, identity-based populism.... When I called one party elder, he joked that it's a good thing Republicans decided not to write a new platform for the 2020 convention -- because they have produced nothing novel since the last one was written.... The party is now defined primarily by its appetite for conflict, even when that conflict serves no obvious policy goal. The result is political anarchy.... At this week's Republican convention..., the party of rugged individualism will spend as much time whining as reveling."

Catie Edmondson & Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "Postmaster General Louis DeJoy will appear before lawmakers again on Monday, this time testifying to the House Oversight Committee, where he is expected to face much tougher questioning from lawmakers on the Democratic-run panel than he did during his Senate hearing on Friday.... Robert M. Duncan, the chairman of the Postal Service's board of governors, will also testify on Monday, the first public remarks he has given on the state of the embattled agency.... A central line of questioning on Monday is expected to focus on how the board of governors selected Mr. DeJoy, a logistics executive whose name was not on an initial list of candidates provided to the board."

** Massachusetts Congressional Race. Jeremy Peters of the New York Times: "On Aug. 7, the student newspaper at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst reported that the state chapter of the College Democrats had disinvited [Alex] Morse, a congressional candidate and former guest lecturer at the university, from its future events, claiming 'numerous incidents' of unwanted and inappropriate advances toward students.... Mr. Morse is a 31-year-old, gay, small-city mayor and a rising star in national progressive politics.... He quickly apologized to anyone he made uncomfortable..., while also acknowledging some consensual sexual relationships with college students over the years. He said none were with anyone he taught or supervised. Nevertheless, within hours after the story broke, Mr. Morse went from role model to pariah.... But then the story flipped.... Messages between some of the students that were published by The Intercept showed they had discussed how they might damage Mr. Morse's campaign, with one suggesting it might help his career prospects with Mr. Morse's opponent, Representative Richard E. Neal, the chairman of the ... Ways and Means Committee.... The Massachusetts Democratic Party acknowledged that it had provided legal advice to the College Democrats about the letter, leading Mr. Morse to accuse Mr. Neal and his allies in the state's Democratic leadership of having a hand in a homophobic plot to smear him. Mr. Neal has denied any involvement. Today, Mr. Morse is still in the race and says the allegations have only helped his campaign."

Kansas State Legislature. Marie Fazio of the New York Times: "The 19-year-old candidate for the Kansas Legislature who admitted to sending revenge porn and bullying girls online when he was in middle school plans to withdraw as the Democratic nominee, he announced on Sunday. The candidate, Aaron Coleman, said on Twitter that he had decided to withdraw from the race to 'focus on taking care of my family & surviving the COVID Great Depression.'"

The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Sunday are here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) "Trump administration officials met with congressional leaders [July 30] and told them they would probably give emergency approval to a coronavirus vaccine before the end of Phase 3 clinical trials in the United States, perhaps as early as late September, according to two people briefed on the discussion. The move would be highly unusual and would most likely prompt concerns about whether the administration is cutting corners on approvals for political purposes. The two-hour meeting involving Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin; the White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows; House Speaker Nancy Pelosi; and Senator Chuck Schumer.... The projected timeline shows the administration's hopes for a major victory against the pandemic before the election.... Senior administration officials disputed the account, saying Mr. Meadows and Mr. Mnuchin were either being misrepresented or had been misunderstood on every major point." Mrs. McC: I guess we're supposed to think that Pelosi & Schumer are dumb as rocks and Meadows & Mnuchin are reliable truth-tellers.

Trump's Fake Covid-19 "Breakthrough." Sharon LaFraniere, et al., of the New York Times: "The Food and Drug Administration on Sunday gave emergency approval for expanded use of antibody-rich blood plasma to help hospitalized coronavirus patients, allowing President Trump, who has been pressuring the agency to move faster to address the pandemic, to claim progress on the eve of the Republican convention. Mr. Trump cited the approval, which had been held up by concerns among top government scientists about the data behind it, as welcome news.... At a news briefing, he described the treatment as 'a powerful therapy' made possible 'by marshaling the full power of the federal government.'... But the F.D.A. cited benefits for only some patients. And, unlike a new drug, plasma cannot be manufactured in millions of doses.... [Trump's unfounded claim] that the F.D.A.['s 'deep state'] was deliberately holding up decision-making until after the election ... exacerbated concerns among some government scientists, outside experts and Democrats that the president's political needs could undermine the integrity of the regulatory process, hurt public confidence in safety and introduce a different kind of public health risk. No randomized trials of the sort researchers consider most robust have yet shown benefit from convalescent plasma." ~~~

~~~ (Earlier.) Zachary Brennan of Politico: "The Food and Drug Administration will issue an emergency authorization for blood plasma as a coronavirus treatment..., Donald Trump is set to announce Sunday evening, according to three administration officials. The agency held off on the decision last week over concerns from government scientists that evidence for the treatment's effectiveness is thin -- prompting Trump to accuse the FDA of slow-walking the therapy to harm his re-election chances without offering any evidence to support his claim. It is not clear whether the FDA has received additional clinical trial data in the last week that would support the therapy's use.... Plasma treatment ... has not yet been proven to work against the coronavirus." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

A Patsy Runs the FDA. Sheila Kaplan of the New York Times: "... as head of the agency that will decide what treatments are approved for Covid-19 and whether a new vaccine is safe enough to be given to millions of Americans, Dr. [Stephen] Hahn may be pressured like no one else. Unlike Dr. Anthony S. Fauci or Dr. Francis S. Collins, leaders at the National Institutes of Health who have decades of experience operating under Republican and Democratic administrations, Dr. Hahn was a Washington outsider.... Last week Mr. Trump speculated that [a vaccine] could be ready by Election Day -- a timeline that is unrealistic, according to scientists, and shows the strain Dr. Hahn may be under. Many medical experts -- including members of his own staff -- worry about whether Dr. Hahn, despite his good intentions, has the fortitude and political savvy to protect the scientific integrity of the F.D.A. from the president. Critics point to a series of worrisome responses to the coronavirus epidemic under Dr. Hahn's leadership.... Dr. Hahn is not allowed to speak to the press without [a Trumpy babysitter] on the phone."

Republicans Really Don't Care. Do You? Hannah Denford & Taylor Telford of the Washington Post: "One of the most successful elements of the government's response to the coronavirus recession -- protecting people on the margins from falling into poverty -- is faltering as the safety net shrinks and federal benefits expire. Major recessions are especially fraught for low-income earners, whose finances can veer from tenuous to dire with one missed paycheck. But as the economy cratered this spring, economists and poverty experts were mildly surprised to discover that the torrent of government support that followed -- particularly the $600 a week in expanded unemployment benefits and one-time $1,200 stimulus checks -- likely lowered the overall poverty rate.... Now, data show, those gains are eroding as federal inaction deprives Americans on the financial margins of additional support. If the unemployment rate stays around 10 percent and no new stimulus is delivered, 'we can expect poverty rates to rise and climb higher than those observed in the Great Recession,' [Zach] Parolin [of Columbia University] said."

Annals of "Journalism" -- Literary Corner, Ha Ha

David Bauder of the AP: According to Brian Stelter in his book Hoax, "Several people at Fox privately expressed worry to him about the growing power of prime-time opinion hosts Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham at the expense of Fox's news operation, he said. 'There is a real resistance inside Fox News,' Stelter told The Associated Press. 'Nobody there would use that term. But there are many people there who are uncomfortable with Sean Hannity's lies and Tucker Carlson's xenophobia. It's just that they are powerless, or feel powerless, and the prime-time stars have all the power. There are Trump true believers at Fox, but there are many others who are concerned about the damage being done....'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

"Fox's Frankenstein." Margaret Sullivan of the Washington Post: "Not surprisingly, almost everyone spoke to [Brian Stelter] only on the condition of anonymity.... Still, the insider details are believable and often stunning -- like ultimate Trump loyalist Sean Hannity reportedly calling Trump 'bats--t crazy' when speaking privately. Or this, from someone identified as a Fox News star: 'Trump is like Fox's Frankenstein. They helped make him and he's out of control.' The book's depiction of the feedback loop between media company and president is undeniable.... 'Trump granted pardons because of Fox. ... He raged against migrant 'caravans' because of Fox. He accused public servants of treason because of Fox. And he got the facts wrong again and again because of mistakes and misreporting by the network,' [Stelter] writes." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

David Enrich of the New York Times: "... Fox News ... has spawned some of the defining myths of this presidency and spurred Trump to adopt positions so hard-line as to be unpalatable even to congressional Republicans.... 'Hoax,' the new book by the CNN journalist Brian Stelter..., provides a thorough and damning exploration of the incestuous relationship between Trump and his favorite channel -- and of Fox's democracy-decaying role as a White House propaganda organ masquerading as conservative journalism.... Stelter shows, for example, how spurious attacks by Fox hosts led Trump to fire cabinet secretaries and shut down the federal government. It is the type of old-school media muscle-flexing that would be impossible under a stronger president." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Trump's weakness is something I've been thinking about lately. He presents himself as an authoritarian strongman, but he's a 240-pound weakling, so beholden to Putin, Hannity, et al., that he will make foolish, embarrassing policy reversals at the first knock by a Fox "News" personality. He think firing staff makes him look strong, but -- as Stelter point out -- many of those chaotic staff shuffles are the product of Fox criticism. I hope the Biden campaign (or the Lincoln Project!) will run ads portraying Trump not just as a person with no convictions, but as someone whose lack of conviction is a product of the whims of jerks & enemies.

** All the Best People, Ctd. Career Setback for SNL's Kate McKinnon. Ashley Parker of the Washington Post: "Kellyanne Conway, a senior adviser to President Trump and one of his longest-serving aides, is leaving the White House at the end of the month. Conway, whose title is counselor to the president, was Trump's third campaign manager in 2016 and the first woman to successfully manage a presidential bid to victory. She joined the White House at the start of Trump's term and has been one of his most visible and vocal defenders. Conway informed Trump of her decision Sunday night in the Oval Office. Her husband, George T. Conway III, a conservative lawyer and outspoken critic of the president, is also stepping back from his role on the Lincoln Project, an outside group of Republicans devoted to defeating Trump in November. He will also take a hiatus from Twitter, the venue he has often used to attack the president. In a statement, Conway called her time in the Trump administration 'heady' and 'humbling,' and said she and George were making the decision based on what they think is best for their four children." A CNN story is here. ~~~

~~~ Adam Silverman of Balloon Juice, in a comment: "George and KellyAnne Conway's eldest daughter, Claudia, who is 15, went on twitter late last night and earlier today alleging that 1) her mother has been emotionally and physically abusing her for years, 2) her father is just as bad politically as her mom, except on Trump so no one should be giving him any credit, and 3) this is why she was seeking to be legally emancipated from both of her parents.... Conway [is] ... quitting because her eldest daughter ... has publicly accused her of being emotionally and physically abusive. And that this is the reason she is seeking to be legally emancipated.... George is a very, very, very good attorney. He knows exactly the jeopardy that has been created for them. As an officer of the court he's a mandatory reporter, so if there was abuse and he didn't report it, he's in almost as much trouble as KellyAnne may well be in if Claudia's allegations are substantiated. If they actually care about her and their other kids they're quitting the White House (KellyAnne) and the Lincoln Group (George) to try to get her help. If they're as transactional and psychopathic as I actually expect and believe, they're trying to figure out how to stay ahead of the authorities and how to keep Claudia from going forward with the emancipation she said she's pursuing and that would bring everything into the open. I expect someone flagged Claudia's tweets for DC's child protective services."

Erin Banco of the Daily Beast has a long piece on Jared Kushner's secret dealings with Vladimir Putin's money-man, Kirill Dmitriev, who is CEO of the "Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), one of the country's sovereign wealth funds, which is under U.S. sanctions."

Jerry, Becki, and the Pool Boy. Paul Bedard of the Washington Examiner: "Jerry Falwell Jr., suspended as president of Virginia's Christian-focused Liberty University after a string of embarrassing acts, today said that he has suffered depression caused by a former family friend who had an affair with his wife and has been threatening to expose it. In a statement exclusively to Secrets, Falwell revealed his wife Becki's affair for the first time, said it was short lived and that the two reconciled quickly. But, they claimed, her former lover has threatened them over the past several years and they are done with it hanging over their heads." Includes a long, self-serving statement by Jerry.

~~~ A New York Post story is here. "Although Falwell Jr. did not name the employee, the [Washington] Examiner identified him as [the pool boy] Giancarlo Granda.... Following the affair, the Falwells invested 1.8 million in a property deal with Granda to open up a youth hostel in Miami Beach.... Years later, Falwell Jr. claimed Granda became 'increasingly angry and aggressive,' and tried to extort the family by threatening to publicly reveal the relationship.... Granda ... denied making any threats toward the family, and told the Examiner in an email, 'The Falwell's attempt to sandbag me, and the Examiner, with a last-minute story without providing the Examiner clear evidence that this was not simply an "affair" with concocted allegations of extortion reeks desperation. The WHOLE truth will come out.'" --s

Wisconsin. Meg Jones of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "Kenosha police shot a man Sunday evening, setting off unrest in the city after a video appeared to show the officer firing several shots at close range into the man's back. The shooting victim has been identified as Jacob Blake, a Black man, by Wisconsin officials. He was in serious condition at Froedtert Hospital in Milwaukee as of early Monday morning.... Police had been called to a domestic incident ... at 5:11 p.m. where the shooting later occurred.... The Kenosha News reported that neighbors said Blake was trying to break up a fight between two women. Bystanders said he was Tased and then shot several times.... As the man opens the door [of a van] to get in, an officer grabs his shirt to hold him still, then appears to shoot him in the back at close range."

Sidney Fussell of Wired: "Earlier this month, Amazon said it had received more than 3,000 requests from police for user data [from smart devices] in the first half of this year, and complied almost 2,000 times. That was a 72 percent increase in requests from the same period in 2016, when Amazon first disclosed the data, and a 24 percent jump in the past year alone.... Google's Nest unit reported increasing police demands for data from its smart speakers through 2018. Google then stopped reporting Nest data separately, including such requests in its broader corporate transparency report, which shows increased requests for Google user data. In their terms of service, most major apps and websites include a clause warning users that companies may hand over their data if requested by the government." --s

Way Beyond the Beltway

Brazil. Tom Phillips of the Guardian: "The Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has told a journalist he would like to 'smash your face in' after being questioned over reports of a series of mystery payments into his wife's bank account [of at least 89,000 reais (about £12,000)] by a former police officer with alleged links to the Rio de Janeiro underworld.... As he stood outside the Catholic Cathedral of Brasília, Bolsonaro then branded the journalist a safado (dirtbag).... The mystery deposits were allegedly made by Fabrício Queiroz, a longtime friend of Bolsonaro who was recently arrested as part of a corruption investigation into one of the president's sons, and Queiroz's wife, Marcia Aguiar. Flávio Bolsonaro and Queiroz have denied the corruption allegations." --s

News Ledes

Weather Channel: "Tropical Storm Laura could strengthen quickly into a major hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico with a dangerous threat of storm surge along parts of the Louisiana and Texas coasts, and threats of flooding rain and strong winds extending well inland later in the week. Laura has prompted hurricane and storm surge watches for the Gulf Coast. A hurricane watch has been posted from Port Bolivar, Texas, to west of Morgan City, Louisiana. This means hurricane conditions are possible within 48 hours in the watch area. A storm surge watch has also been issued from San Luis Pass, Texas, to Ocean Springs, Mississippi. This watch, meaning life-threatening inundation of water moving ashore over land is possible within the area in 48 hours or less. The watch includes Galveston Bay, Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas and Lake Borgne for areas outside of the southeast Louisiana Hurricane and Storm Damage Risk Reduction System. Tropical storm warnings continue from parts of Cuba into the Middle and Lower Florida Keys[.]"

~~~ The New Orleans Times-Picayune has several stories linked on its front page. The Times-Picayune's live updates are here. Their coverage of the storms is free to nonsubscribers, but the links didn't seem to be working @9:30 pm ET Monday. The Washington Post has live updates here, but there's no indication the page is free to nonsubscribers.

Sunday
Aug232020

The Commentariat -- August 23, 2020

Afternoon Update:

The Washington Post Sounds the Alarm

** Washington Post Editors: "President Trump will make this argument [link fixed] to the American people: Things were great until China loosed the novel coronavirus on the world. If you reelect me, I will make things great again.... But, fittingly for a president who has spoken more than 20,000 lies during his presidency, [the argument] rests on two huge falsehoods. One is that the nation, his presidency and, above all, Mr. Trump himself are innocent victims of covid-19. In fact, his own negligence, ignorance and malpractice turned what would have been a daunting challenge for any president into a national disaster. The other is that there was anything to admire in his record before the virus struck. It is true that the economic growth initiated under President Barack Obama had continued, at about the same modest rate. Mr. Trump achieved this growth by ratcheting up America's deficit and long-term debt to record levels, with a tax cut that showered benefits on the wealthy.... History will record Mr. Trump's presidency as a march of wanton, uninterrupted, tragic destruction.... And so, over the coming weeks..., we will publish a series of editorials on the damage this president has caused -- and the danger he would pose in a second term." ~~~

~~~ ** David Nakamura of the Washington Post: "Trailing in the polls and struggling to find a message, President Trump is leveraging one of the most powerful assets he has left -- his White House office -- in service of his reelection bid, obliterating the lines between governing and campaigning and testing legal boundaries.... In recent weeks, Trump has acknowledged he was opposed to funding for the U.S. Postal Service because he does not want the money used for universal mail-in voting. He sent Homeland Security authorities to quell social justice protests in what he termed 'Democrat cities.' He signed a stream of executive orders that circumvented Congress and delivered overtly partisan speeches at official White House functions, including a 54-minute Rose Garden monologue blasting Democratic rival Joe Biden last month. Trump also has used federal resources and personnel to re-create the enthusiasm of his campaign rallies.... He invited patrons at his private golf resort in Bedminster, N.J., to attend news conferences there, with many of them heckling reporters. And he held a campaign rally in Yuma, Ariz., last week with 200 off-duty Border Patrol union members, many wearing masks emblazoned with 'TRUMP' and 'MAGA.'" Read on. A related NBC News story is here. ~~~

~~~ "Trump Has No Idea How to Run for Reelection." Ashley Parker of the Washington Post: "Typically, presidents run for reelection on the achievements of their first term.... But Trump has, from that first golden-escalator ride, campaigned, governed and wallowed in grievance, never once wavering from his outsider ethos.... Trump appears unwilling -- or unable -- to abandon his burn-it-all-down cri de coeur, even when the establishment he lambastes is run by himself and his appointees.... The decision to position himself as a permanent outsider is less strategic than pathological, say people close to the president, reflecting a man who since childhood has lusted after an elite that never truly welcomed him."

Mrs. McCrabbie: Many news outlets are reporting on plans for the upcoming Trump convention, like this New York Times story on how two "Apprentice" producers are stage-managing the hoohah, or several reports that a whole lot of the featured speakers are either Trump or a member of the Crime Family Trump (although for some reason, Trump's sister Judge Maryanne Barry is not among them). But historian Kevin Kruse has the scoop on plans for the roll call. Here's how it starts: "ALABAMA: Roy Moore, legally standing a hundred feet outside a mall. ALASKA: Hunters lighting up caribou with AK-47s. ARIZONA: Joe Arpaio licking a taser." Many thanks to RAS for the link. Worth reading Kruse's roll call, so you won't have to watch whatever comes up on the teevee.

Trump's Fake Covid-19 "Breakthrough." Zachary Brennan of Politico: "The Food and Drug Administration will issue an emergency authorization for blood plasma as a coronavirus treatment..., Donald Trump is set to announce Sunday evening, according to three administration officials. The agency held off on the decision last week over concerns from government scientists that evidence for the treatment's effectiveness is thin — prompting Trump to accuse the FDA of slow-walking the therapy to harm his re-election chances without offering any evidence to support his claim. It is not clear whether the FDA has received additional clinical trial data in the last week that would support the therapy's use.... Plasma treatment ... has not yet been proven to work against the coronavirus."

Donie O'Sullivan, et al., of CNN: "Twitter on Sunday slapped a label on a tweet from ... Donald Trump for 'making misleading health claims that could potentially dissuade people from participation in voting.' Trump claimed in posts on Twitter and Facebook early Sunday morning that mail drop boxes for voting 'are not Covid sanitized,' as well as a 'voter security disaster.' Hours after Trump sent the tweet, Twitter took action, saying, 'We placed a public interest notice on this Tweet for violating our Civic Integrity Policy for making misleading health claims that could potentially dissuade people from participation in voting.' Now accompanying the tweet is the full following security notice: 'This Tweet violated the Twitter Rules about civic and election integrity. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public's interest for the Tweet to remain accessible.'"

Sister Acts. Mrs. McCrabbie: BTW, days before publication of Maryanne Trump Barry's scathing assessment of her brother Donald as lying, cruel, phony, unprincipled and unprepared, Joe Biden's sister Valerie Biden Owens told Bill Barrow of the AP what a smart, kind, decent person Joe had always been.

David Bauder of the AP: According to Brian Stelter in his book Hoax, "Several people at Fox privately expressed worry to him about the growing power of prime-time opinion hosts Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham at the expense of Fox's news operation, he said. 'There is a real resistance inside Fox News,' Stelter told The Associated Press. 'Nobody there would use that term. But there are many people there who are uncomfortable with Sean Hannity's lies and Tucker Carlson's xenophobia. It's just that they are powerless, or feel powerless, and the prime-time stars have all the power. There are Trump true believers at Fox, but there are many others who are concerned about the damage being done....'" ~~~

~~~ "Fox's Frankenstein." Margaret Sullivan of the Washington Post: "Not surprisingly, almost everyone spoke to [Brian Stelter] only on the condition of anonymity.... Still, the insider details are believable and often stunning -- like ultimate Trump loyalist Sean Hannity reportedly calling Trump 'bats--t crazy' when speaking privately. Or this, from someone identified as a Fox News star: 'Trump is like Fox's Frankenstein. They helped make him and he's out of control.' The book's depiction of the feedback loop between media company and president is undeniable.... 'Trump granted pardons because of Fox.... He raged against migrant 'caravans' because of Fox. He accused public servants of treason because of Fox. And he got the facts wrong again and again because of mistakes and misreporting by the network,' [Stelter] writes." ~~~

~~~ David Enrich of the New York Times: "... Fox News ... has spawned some of the defining myths of this presidency and spurred Trump to adopt positions so hard-line as to be unpalatable even to congressional Republicans.... 'Hoax,' the new book by the CNN journalist Brian Stelter..., provides a thorough and damning exploration of the incestuous relationship between Trump and his favorite channel -- and of Fox's democracy-decaying role as a White House propaganda organ masquerading as conservative journalism.... Stelter shows, for example, how spurious attacks by Fox hosts led Trump to fire cabinet secretaries and shut down the federal government. It is the type of old-school media muscle-flexing that would be impossible under a stronger president." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Trump's weakness is something I've been thinking about lately. He presents himself as an authoritarian strongman, but he's a 240-pound weakling, so beholden to Putin, Hannity, et al., that he will make foolish, embarrassing policy reversals at the first knock by a Fox "News" personality. He think firing staff makes him look strong, but -- as Stelter point out -- many of those chaotic staff shuffles are the product of Fox criticism. I hope the Biden campaign (or the Lincoln Project!) will run ads portraying Trump not just as a person with no convictions, but as someone whose lack of conviction is a product of the whims of jerks & enemies.

The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Sunday are here.

~~~~~~~~~~~

Presidential Race, Etc.

John Walton of the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star: State "Sen. John McCollister of Omaha said Friday he's joining a number of fellow Republicans in deciding to formally endorse Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden in his bid to unseat ... Donald Trump. Biden would be 'a real president,' McCollister said, 'not the disaster' that occupies the White House today." (Also linked yesterday.)

Meghan Roos of Newsweek: "Vermont Governor Phil Scott said Friday that he has decided he will not vote for ... Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election. Scott, a Republican, has been a vocal critic of Trump for years and said previously that he did not vote for Trump in the 2016 presidential election, according to the Associated Press.... 'I have not decided at this point whether to cast a vote for former Vice President Biden,' Scott said. 'But it's something that I would consider. I just haven't made that decision at this point.' Earlier this year, Scott said that he believed Trump 'shouldn't be in office,' according to the Associated Press.... 'I believe that the president abused his powers,' Scott said when asked about the impeachment inquiry during a news conference in February." (Also linked yesterday.)

Today's Trumpy Distraction. Colleen Long of the AP: "TRUMP: 'The Democrats took the word GOD out of the Pledge of Allegiance at the Democrat National Convention. At first I thought they made a mistake, but it wasn't. It was done on purpose. Remember Evangelical Christians, and ALL, this is where they are coming from-it's done. Vote Nov 3!' -- tweet Saturday. THE FACTS: That's a misleading accusation. The central programming of the convention featured the entire pledge, complete with 'under God.'... 'Under God' was in each rendering. The convention also devoted a segment to showcasing Biden's religious faith. During two caucuses before the evening conventions started, the Muslim Delegates and Al lies Assembly and the LGBTQ Caucus meeting, both Tuesday, left out 'under God,' from the pledge. The party's series of caucus meetings was livestreamed but not part of the prime-time convention broadcast." Mrs. McC: Do you think Trump was watching livestreams of the Muslim & LGBTQ caucuses? Anyhow, it's encouraging to know that Trump, renowned Man of God, is protecting us from Heathen Joe and the Devilcrats. (Also linked yesterday.)

Jonathan Lemire of the AP: "The White House Rose Garden has been spruced up in time for its moment in the campaign spotlight. First lady Melania Trump will deliver her Republican National Convention speech Tuesday night from the garden.... The three weeks of work on the garden, which was done in the spirit of its original 1962 design, were showcased to reporters on Saturday. White House officials said the renovations were paid for by private donations. They declined to reveal the cost of the work. The location of the first lady's speech will be just one of the ways that the Republican National Convention will break with political norms. Federal rules prohibit the White House from being the setting for expressly political events.... Donald Trump will deliver his speech Thursday night from the White House's South Lawn, where a stage was being constructed over the weekend." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs McCrabbie: No need to listen, especially if you heard or read Michelle Obama's remarks at the Democratic convention. As Akhilleus pointed out a few days ago, Melanie lifts all her best material from Michelle.

Rachel Bade & Donna Cassata of the Washington Post: "The House voted Saturday on legislation to provide $25 billion to the U.S. Postal Service and explicitly prohibit any operational changes amid widespread Democratic fears that the Trump administration is trying to disenfranchise millions of Americans casting mail ballots this November. The 257-to-150 vote was largely along party lines as Republicans accused Democrats of manufacturing 'baseless conspiracy theories' about delays in postal deliveries to undermine President Trump's reelection bid. The Republican-led Senate is unlikely to act on the legislation, which the White House has threatened to veto. Shortly before the vote, Trump tweeted: 'Vote NO to the Pelosi/Schumer money wasting HOAX which is taking place now.' Twenty-six Republicans broke ranks with Trump and the GOP leadership and joined Democrats in backing the bill. ~~~

~~~ "Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.), chairwoman of the House Oversight panel, released internal U.S. Postal Service documents Saturday that show steeper declines in on-time deliveries than lawmakers had previously been told about. The drop in service standards since early July is across all categories of mail, including priority mail, periodicals, marketing and first class, the documents show." The Hill's story is here. (Also linked yesterday.) An AP story is here. ~~~

~~~ Maloney's statement is here. Includes links to supporting data.

Daniel Cassady of Forbes: "Postal workers in Washington State have reinstalled high-speed mail sorting machines -- dismantled after controversial orders from the U.S. Postal Service -- despite USPS orders not to put machines back in use.... 40 percent of the high-speed mail sorting machines in the Seattle-Tacoma area were disconnected or dismantled since the changes went into effect, according to NPR, with workers in the Tacoma, Washington sorting plant saying eight of their 18 machines that sort and postmark letters were disconnected and pushed into a corner. Sorting machines in Wenatchee, Washington were also reconnected, against the orders of the Postal Service's head of maintenance, Kevin Couch. Only two facilities, Seattle-Tacoma and one in Dallas, seem to be ignoring the Postal Service's directive to leave decommissioned sorting machines out of use." Thanks to Ken W. for the link.

Odious DeJoy. Lisa Rein, et al., of the Washington Post: Louis "DeJoy's short tenure leading the Postal Service has quickly engulfed an apolitical corner of the government first led by Benjamin Franklin in a controversy that's fueling alarm over the reliability of vital services and the integrity of voting in November. People familiar with his rocky 69 days in the job say DeJoy came into office not adequately focused on the two biggest challenges facing the post office -- the pandemic and the upcoming election. Instead, he absorbed himself with making long-term changes that Republicans have long sought to run the money-losing agency more like a business, while also addressing one of President Trump's obsessions: what the Postal Service charges Amazon for the 'last mile' delivery of packages.... [DeJoy] moved quickly to cut costs, targeting overtime that had exploded during the pandemic as postal workers fell ill and quarantined, while continuing the removal of blue mailboxes and dismantling mail-sortin machines that had begun before his tenure."

Ken Vogel, et al., of the New York Times: "In early February, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin invited two Republican members of the Postal Service's board of governors to his office to update him on ... the search for a new postmaster general. Mr. Mnuchin had made clear before the meeting that he wanted the governors to find someone who would push through the kind of cost-cutting and price increases that President Trump had publicly called for and that Treasury had recommended in a December 2018 report as a way to stem years of multibillion-dollar losses.... Since 1970, the Postal Service had been an independent agency, walled off from political influence.... The postal chief is picked by a board of governors, with seats reserved for members of both parties, who are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate for seven-year terms. Now, not only was the Trump administration ... involving itself in the process for selecting the next postmaster general, but the two Democratic governors who were then serving on the board were not invited to the Treasury meeting.... In interviews, documents and congressional testimony, Mr. Mnuchin emerges as a key player in selecting the board members who hired the Trump megadonor now leading the Postal Service and in pushing the agenda that he has pursued." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ At the top of today's Comments, Akhilleus outlines Trump's business plan for the Postal Service.

Arizona Senate Race. Hungry for Martha. Ronald Hanson of the Arizona Republic: "Sen. Martha McSally jokingly suggested to supporters to 'fast a meal' and use the savings to donate to her campaign, but the move drew guffaws on Friday from the left, who cast it as a sign of fundraising desperation. McSally, R-Ariz., made the pitch at a campaign event in northern Arizona that made plain a financial reality that has dogged her throughout her race against Democrat Mark Kelly: McSally is way behind in campaign money and is trailing in the polls.... The comment drew instant ridicule and bewilderment on social media." (Also linked yesterday.)

Connecticut House Race. Mark Pazniokas of the Connecticut Mirror (Aug. 18): "A recount Tuesday flipped the results of the Republican primary in Connecticut's 2nd Congressional District, giving Justin Anderson an 81-vote victory over Thomas Gilmer, the party-endorsed candidate arrested last week on domestic violence charges. The results spare the party an awkward debate over how to fill the vacancy expected had Gilmer won a primary roiled by news that broke as voters went to polls a week ago: Gilmer had been arrested the previous night, and he intended to decline the nomination if victorious. Anderson, whose only previous elective experience was winning a spot on the Planning and Zoning Commission in East Haddam, began the day as the loser by fewer than 20 votes. It ended with him the official winner by less than one-half of a percentage point, 9,483 to 9,402[.]" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ This Is Perfect. Cassandra Basler of Connecticut Public Radio: "A high-powered Manhattan lawyer with ties to ... Donald Trump tried to keep abuse allegations against Connecticut Republican congressional candidate Tom Gilmer from getting out. Gilmer stopped his campaign for Connecticut's eastern shoreline congressional district after he was arrested on domestic violence charges. Marc Kasowitz represented Gilmer and used to be ... Donald Trump's personal lawyer, according to the New York Times." (Also linked yesterday.)

The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Saturday are here. The Washington Post's live updates for Saturday are here. (Also linked yesterday.) The Washington Post's live updates for Saturday are here: "Novel coronavirus infections are trending upward across the Midwest, raising concerns that those states are struggling to contain their outbreaks even as the nation's total daily caseload continues to decline. Seven-day averages for new cases rose over the past week in the Dakotas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Oklahoma and Wyoming, according to tracking by The Washington Post."

Famous Snake-Oil Salesman to Announce Breakthrough Treatment. Kyle Balluck of the Hill: "President Trump< will announce a 'major therapeutic breakthrough' on the novel coronavirus at a news conference Sunday evening, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany tweeted..., adding that Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Dr. Stephen Hahn, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, would attend the event."

Trump's War on Science, Ctd. Orion Rummler of Axios: "President Trump on Saturday baselessly accused the Food and Drug Administration -- which he likened to the 'deep state, or whoever' -- of making it harder for drug companies to distribute coronavirus treatments and vaccines.... Trump's tweet comes on the heels of a policy change by the Department of Health and Human Services to block the FDA's ability to regulate lab-developed tests, including for the coronavirus -- which has public health experts worried that unreliable COVID-19 tests could go to market." (Also linked yesterday.)

Georgia teachers are poppin':

Donald is cruel.... You can't trust him. -- Maryanne Trump Barry, Donald Trump's sister ~~~

~~~ ** Caught on Tape. Michael Kranish of the Washington Post: "In response to a question from The Washington Post about how she knew the president paid someone to take the SATs, Mary Trump revealed that she had surreptitiously taped 15 hours of face-to-face conversations with [Donald Trump's sister, Maryanne Trump] Barry, in 2018 and 2019.... Barry was serving as a federal judge when ... children were being separated from their parents and put in cramped quarters.... 'All he wants to do is appeal to his base,' Barry said [of Donald]. 'He has no principles. None. None. And his base, I mean my God, if you were a religious person, you want to help people. Not do this.' Barry, 83, was aghast at how her 74-year-old brother operated as president. 'His goddamned tweet and lying, oh my God,' she said. 'I'm talking too freely, but you know. The change of stories. The lack of preparation. The lying. Holy shit.'... At one point Barry said to her niece, 'It's the phoniness of it all. It's the phoniness and this cruelty. Donald is cruel.'..." The article includes audio clips. Politico has a summary story here.

Trump Deputlized Notorious Bigot Lou Dobbs. Mary Papenfuss of the Huffington Post (Aug. 21 -- reposted in Yahoo! News): "... Donald Trump told officials from the Department of Homeland Security to get their marching orders by listening to Fox Business host Lou Dobbs 'every night,' former DHS chief of staff [Mrs. McC: and Trump appointee] Miles Taylor told Anderson Cooper on Friday. Dobbs, an effusive supporter of Trump, was basically the 'shadow chief of staff' for the department, Taylor said in the CNN interview. 'The president would call us and ... he would say, "Why the hell didn't you watch Lou Dobbs last night? You need to listen to Lou. What Lou says is what I want to do,"' Taylor said. 'So if Lou Dobbs peddled a conspiracy theory ... or made an erroneous claim about what should be done ... at the border ... the president wanted us to be tuning in every night,' he added.... Taylor served in the Department of Homeland Security from 2017 to 2019, including as chief of staff to former Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen. He has blasted the Trump administration and is endorsing DemocratJoe Biden for president."

Martin Pengelly of the Guardian: "The attorney general, William Barr, told Rupert Murdoch to 'muzzle' Andrew Napolitano, a prominent Fox News personality who became a critic of Donald Trump, according to ... Hoax: Donald Trump, Fox News and the Dangerous Distortion of Truth, by CNN media reporter Brian Stelter.... 'The criminal behavior to which Trump has admitted,' Napolitano wrote, in a column dated 3 October, 'is much more grave than anything alleged or unearthed by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, and much of what Mueller revealed was impeachable.' Citing an unnamed source, Stelter writes that Trump 'was so incensed by the judge's TV broadcasts that he had implored Barr to send Rupert a message in person ... about "muzzling the judge"'" ~~~

~~~ Storytime: Rachel Maddow reads excerpts from Brian Stelter's new book Hoax. Maddow's interview of Stelter is here. Thanks to PD Pepe for the heads-up. (Also linked yesterday.)


This Week in Washington, D.C. Marissa Lang
of the Washington Post: "Hours after the thick smoke of President Trump's fireworks show dissipates from the Mall, a crowd of thousands is expected to march Friday to the Lincoln Memorial for a civil rights protest calling on the nation to fulfill unkept promises of racial justice and equality. The march -- on the 57th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s seminal 'I Have a Dream' speech -- will conclude a week of large-scale events in the nation's capital.... Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) has doubled down on instructions to out-of-state visitors: Wear a mask, keep your distance and, if you're traveling from one of the 29 states deemed a hot spot, quarantine for two weeks upon arrival.... Some [protesters] found a possible loophole in the mayor's order: Demonstrators ... said they intend to stay in Maryland or Virginia and only travel into the District for the protest. Any visit less than 24 hours is considered 'essential travel,' according to the mayor's office, and would sidestep the quarantine requirement. Bowser's order also exempts those two neighboring states."

Oregon. Katie Shepherd of the Washington Post: "On Saturday afternoon, a large crowd of more than 100 far-right activists, including Proud Boys and armed militia members, descended on Portland, Ore., staging a 'Back the Blue' rally in front of the Justice Center that houses the downtown police precinct. Hundreds of antifa and Black Lives Matter protesters gathered to oppose the far-right crowd. People in the far-right crowd came armed with paintball guns, metal rods, aluminum bats, fireworks, pepper spray, rifles and handguns. Some people in the opposing left-leaning crowd brought rocks, fireworks and bottles filled with chemical solutions. Both crowds sported shields and helmets.... As the brawls unfolded, Portland police officers remained at a distance ... even as people beat others with sticks, and at least two right-wing activists brandished handguns.... Police said they did not stop the violence ... because too few officers were available to respond and they deemed it too dangerous to intervene." A New York Times story is here.

Tennessee. Stephanie Mencimer of Mother Jones: "On Friday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (R) signed a controversial bill that enhances penalties for certain crimes related to political protests and makes it a felony to illegally camp on state property. In Tennessee, a felony conviction automatically revokes an individual's right to vote. The law also increases penalties for assaulting a first responder, obstructing emergency vehicles, and rioting. The bill follows two months of anti-racism protests in Nashville, during which activists have camped outside the state capitol building in an effort to secure a meeting with Lee. According to the Associated Press, state legislators claimed the law was needed after some protesters set fire to a courthouse in May. But civil libertarians were quick to criticize the measure as detrimental to free speech and criminal justice reform in a state that already uses felon disenfranchisement laws to bar large numbers of Black residents from voting." (Also linked yesterday.)

News Ledes

Weather Channel: "It's likely that [Tropical Storms] Marco and Laura will make rare back-to-back landfalls in the mainland United States over the next few days.... Tropical Storm Marco will be the first part of the one-two punch for the Gulf Coast. This system is likely to make landfall along the Louisiana Gulf Coast on Monday as a strong tropical storm or hurricane.... Tropical Storm Laura is forecast to reach the Gulf of Mexico early this week, where significant intensification into a hurricane is expected. The area with the highest chance of seeing a hurricane strike from Laura by midweek is along parts of the northern and western Gulf Coast, but this forecast is still uncertain."

Guardian: "Firefighters made progress against three massive and destructive wildfires in California during a calm overnight, but they were preparing Sunday for high winds and thunderstorms that could spark new blazes and further spread the existing fires."