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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."

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

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.”

 

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.

Saturday
Jun062020

The Commentariat -- June 7, 2020

Afternoon Update:

The Washington Post's live updates of protest developments Sunday are here. The Post also has live updates for events in D.C., Maryland & Virginia; a crowd of tens of thousands is expected in the District. New York Times Sunday updates are here.

Virginia. Sabrina Moreno of the Richmond Times-Dispatch: "After a day and evening of peaceful protests and marches in Richmond and its suburbs, protesters using ropes pulled down a statue honoring Confederate Gen. Williams Carter Wickham, which has stood in the park since 1891.... Monroe Park is in the heart of the Virginia Commonwealth University campus."

David Martin of CBS News: "In a heated and contentious debate in the Oval Office last Monday morning, President Trump demanded the military put 10,000 active duty troops into the streets immediately, a senior administration official told CBS News. Attorney General William Barr, Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley objected to the demand, the official said. In an attempt to satisfy Mr. Trump's demand, Esper and Milley used a call with the nation's governors later that morning to implore them to call up the National Guard in their own states, the official said.... On 'Face the Nation' Sunday, Barr disputed the characterization of the Oval Office meeting, calling it 'completely false' and denying the president demanded active-duty troops in the streets immediately, rather than having them on standby." Mrs. McC: Because Bill Barr always tells the truth.

~~~~~~~~~~~

The Washington Post's live updates of protest developments Saturday are here. The Post also has live updates for events in D.C., Maryland & Virginia; a crowd of tens of thousands is expected in the District. New York Times Saturday updates are here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)&

Damien Cave, et al., of the New York Times: "From Paris to Berlin -- as in demonstrations this past week in Japan, Sweden and Zimbabwe -- people around the world once again turned out in solidarity with Americans protesters calling for justice in the death of an African-American man, George Floyd, at the hands of the police in Minneapolis.... Tens of thousands flowed to Parliament Square in London on Saturday afternoon, shouting anti-racist slogans and carrying signs paying homage to Mr. Floyd.... The global demonstrations, continuing for a week now, were inspired by the demonstrations in the United States to call for an end to racism and police brutality in their own countries.... Large crowds gathered on Saturday in cities and towns for the 11th straight day in the United States, denouncing police brutality and seeking reforms after a long line of deaths of African-Americans like Mr. Floyd in Minneapolis, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky., and others at the hands of law enforcement. In the nation's capital, peaceful rallies took place near the White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial and other iconic locations."

Lauren Egan of NBC News: "Thousands of people gathered outside Washington, D.C., monuments and the White House on Saturday protesting the killing of George Floyd, years of unanswered calls for police reform and ... Donald Trump's use of military personnel in response to largely peaceful demonstrations.... Protesters moved fluidly through the city, marching from the White House to the Lincoln Memorial to the U.S. Capitol, and back again.... Many D.C. residents have also expressed anger over Trump's use of federal forces in the city, complaining that the presence of Humvees, Army helicopters and armed soldiers every few blocks has turned the city into a military zone." A Politico story is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: On Monday, Trump told the nation's governors, "You have to dominate, if you don't dominate you're wasting your time. They're going to run over you, you're going to look like a bunch of jerks." Who looks like a jerk now?

For you mean fake-news-lovin' critics who claim the Dear Leader isn't making America great again ~~~

~~~ Andrew Blake of the Washington Times: "President Trump broke several personal records for Twitter usage Friday with a barrage of social media activity amid crises caused by the coronavirus and killing of George Floyd. Mr. Trump's account on Twitter ... posted on the platform a total of 200 times within 24 hours, shattering his previous record of 142."

David Nakamura, et al., of the Washington Post: Since Donald Trump personally attacked her on May 30, Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel "Bowser has fought back fiercely against the president's bullying, taunting him with tweets and criticisms of her own. On Friday, she rebuked him with a defiant display of street art in which she sought to draw a clear contrast with Trump's calls for 'law and order' by demonstrating active support for peaceful protesters of the Black Lives Matter movement. Over the past 10 days -- set against the backdrop of the pitched national protests over police violence -- their once relatively temperate relationship has erupted into an ugly schism freighted with the overtones of race and power that have infused the protests, as well as city leaders' long and fruitless fight for D.C. statehood." ~~~

~~~ Maureen Dowd: "After the country was rocked to its soul by the sight of a handcuffed black man dying while being held down by a police officer as those around begged for mercy, Trump could hardly summon a shred of empathy. His only move was to grab a can of kerosene and cry 'Domination!'... He called Muriel Bowser, the poised black mayor of D.C. who wanted the federal troops out of the capital, 'incompetent' and then upgraded her to 'grossly incompetent.'... But Bowser offered the best troll on the First Troller when she had the words 'Black Lives Matter' painted in yellow in front of the White House and St. John's."

Robert Burns of the AP: "Tensions between the White House and Pentagon have stretched to near a breaking point over ... Donald Trump's threat to use military force against street protests triggered by George Floyd's death.... In recent days, and for the second time in Trump's term, it has raised a prospect of high-level resignations and the risk of lasting damage to the military’s reputation.... The nub of the problem is that Trump sees no constraint on his authority to use what he calls the 'unlimited power' of the military even against U.S. citizens if he believes it necessary. Military leaders generally ... believe that active-duty troops, trained to hunt and kill an enemy, should be used to enforce the law only in the most extreme emergency, such as an attempted actual rebellion."

** Thomas Gibbons-Neff & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: "Top Pentagon officials ordered National Guard helicopters to use what they called 'persistent presence' to disperse protests in the capital this week, according to military officials. The loosely worded order prompted a series of low-altitude maneuvers that human rights organizations quickly criticized as a show of force usually reserved for combat zones. Ryan D. McCarthy, the Army secretary and one of the officials who authorized part of the planning for the helicopters' mission Monday night, said on Friday that the Army had opened an investigation into the episode.... Military officials said that the National Guard's aggressive approach to crowd control was prompted by a pointed threat from the Pentagon: If the Guard was unable to handle the situation, then active-duty military units, such as a rapid-reaction unit of the 82nd Airborne Division, would be sent into the city.... The episode has stirred outrage among lawmakers." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: This does not look like a headline that ever would appear in a more-or-less mainstream news outlet: "Chainsaw-wielding racist gets boosted by a top presidential aide as race protests sweep the nation." I did change one word to make the headline seem more implausible: instead of "presidential," the actual headline reads "Trump." Suddenly the headline seems as real as it is. Here's the story:

~~~ Marc Caputo of Politico: On her Twitter feed, "... Trump campaign senior adviser Mercedes Schlapp ... boosted a tweet that lauded a man in Texas in a viral video as he yelled the n-word and wielded a chainsaw to chase away anti-racism demonstrators.... The video originated in McAllen, Texas, where demonstrators had gathered downtown, only to be confronted by a man with a chainsaw that he revved at them as they fled. 'Go home!' yells the man, who was arrested Friday. 'Don't let those f------ n------ out there fool you!'... After Politico reached out to her and the campaign Saturday morning, Schlapp then retweeted another account that posted a version of the video that muted the racist slur. After this story published, she removed both her retweets and issued a written apology Saturday evening.... On one hand, Schlapp favorably promoted a man spewing anti-black racism and on the other she urged black people to vote for Trump just three days prior in an online campaign discussion on race." ** More from the Intercept. Mrs. McC: As we so often say, you can't make up this stuff.

California. Dan Noyes of KGO: San Jose, California, police last week severely injured activist Derrick Sanderlin, who was trying to diffuse conflicts during a protest. "He stood a good distance away [from police], made no aggressive motions to police, yet they fired on him [with rubber bullets] several times, one round hitting him in the groin.... Video shows the officers' training their riot guns on Sanderlin." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Kansas. Chance Swaim & Michael Stavola of The Wichita Eagle: "Wichita State University and WSU Tech canceled Ivanka Trump's commencement speech without explanation Thursday in a late-night news release following a public outcry from faculty, students and alumni.... Trump will be replaced by nursing graduate Rebecca Zinabu.... Pressure was on the Wichita State administration after Jennifer Ray, associate professor of photo media, authored a scathing open letter asking the university to cancel Trump.... 'Ivanka Trump, obviously, represents her father's administration as one of his closest advisors,' Ray wrote. 'To many Americans, that administration has come to signify the worst of our country, particularly in its recent actions toward those peacefully protesting against racist police brutality.'" --s ~~~

     ~~~ Womp Womp. Guardian: "Ivanka Trump has hit out at 'cancel culture and viewpoint discrimination' after plans for her to give a virtual commencement speech to students in Kansas were canceled amid criticism of Donald Trump's response to anti-police brutality protests in the wake of the killing of George Floyd...The move clearly angered Ivanka Trump[.]" --safari: She'll never get her father's fascist stench off of her.

New York. Nicole Acevedo of NBC News: "Two Buffalo officers who were suspended without pay after a video showed police shoving a 75-year-old man to the ground at a George Floyd protest on Thursday night, were charged with second-degree assault, according to the Erie County District Attorney's Office. A large crowd of police officers and firefighters stood in front of Buffalo City Court to show support for the officers as they both attended a virtual arraignment on Saturday. Officers Robert McCabe, 32, and Aaron Torgalski, 39, pleaded not guilty to the charges of second-degree assault and will be released on his own recognizance, according to NBC affiliate WGRZ in Buffalo." Mrs. McC: Apparently Buffalo cops & firefighters really don't get it. Both forces need attitude tests. & Test administrators should come equipped with thick books of pink slips. (Also linked yesterday.)

Texas. Naomi Andu, et al., of the Texas Tribune: "On Friday morning, Texas' top Republican officials, including Gov. Greg Abbott, had condemned four GOP [county] chairs for proliferating conspiracy theories on Facebook. The posts, from chairs of some of the largest counties in Texas, suggested George Floyd's death was staged to erode black support for ... Donald Trump. Meanwhile, a fifth chairperson, Harris County GOP chair-elect Keith Nielsen, announced Saturday he will not take office as planned after coming under fire for posting a Martin Luther King Jr. quote -- 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere' -- on a background with a banana. On Friday afternoon, The Texas Tribune identified similar posts from seven more GOP chairs across the state. Some of these posts suggested people who have been protesting Floyd's death across the state and the country were being paid by Jewish billionaire George Soros -- an oft-used anti-Semitic trope. GOP county chairs are elected leaders of the Republican Party who help oversee local elections and head up county-level meetings and events." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: As ignorant & bigoted as these unsocial media posts were, the county chairs still did not -- as far as we know -- promote video of a chainsaw-wielding maniac running after protesters & yelling "fucking n-----s!" as did Trump's top aide & former White House communications honcho Mercedes Schlapp.


"Petty & Preposterous." Karen DeYoung
of the Washington Post: "President Trump has signed off on a plan to permanently withdraw up to one-third of about 34,500 U.S. troops currently based in Germany, bringing the total down to no more than 25,000, according to U.S. officials. Implementation of the plan is being turned over to the Defense Department, a senior administration official said.... As of late Friday, Germany had not been officially informed of the withdrawal order.... The fact that Germany was given no 'heads up' that Trump had signed off on the withdrawal 'speaks for itself,' said one senior European official, and is unlikely to improve the generally low state of 'the transatlantic environment.'... As word of the plan became public, Sen. Jack Reed (R.I.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, called Trump's order 'petty and preposterous.' 'It's another favor to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and another leadership failure by this Administration that further strains relations with our allies,' Reed said in a statement...."

Edward Helmore of the Guardian: "Food insecurity, underscored by government figures that 40% of lowest-paid workers are now idled, has led to calls for a profound adaptation or wholesale reform of the food system, if a sustained crisis is to be avoided.... At the same time, pressure [to] adapt is revealing cracks in the system: farmers have reported that crops and herds may have to be destroyed if processing and distribution doesn't pick up.... Some states have recorded record spikes in hunting licence applications, a reversal of recent trends, and in Vermont, fishing license sales are up more than 50%. How much of this can be ascribed to people with time on their hands, and how much to need is still hard to discern. What is clear is some trends, including the smallholding organic farm movement, coupled with greater awareness of food justice and food insecurity, are coalescing under Covid-19." --s

Presidential Race

John Naughton in the Guardian: "[T]he thinking goes, if we all hold our nerve, the nightmare will end on 20 January 2021, when Trump has to hand over power to his victorious opponent.... At which point my mind goes back to this time in 2016...; how could Nate Silver and co have got it so wrong? The answer is simple: nobody, including opinion pollsters, knew about the Trump campaign's astonishing mastery of social media, especially Facebook. Trump may not have known much about that at the time -- he really only understood Twitter -- but Brad Parscale and his team sure knew how to make use of Facebook's micro-targeting machine. And they did.... What it all comes down to is this: only one man -- Mark Zuckerberg -- now stands between Joe Biden and the US presidency." --s


Julie Brown
of The Miami Herald: "The Palm Beach judge [Krista Marx] who has thus far refused to release grand jury records in the Jeffrey Epstein case has both professional and family ties to three of the politicians who have a stake in keeping those records secret, the Miami Herald has learned...[:] State Attorney Dave Aronberg, who has been sued by the Palm Beach Post to release the grand jury records; Sheriff Ric Bradshaw, whose department's favored treatment of Epstein while he was in the Palm Beach County jail is part of an ongoing state criminal investigation; and ex-State Attorney Barry Krischer, part of the same investigation in connection with his decision not to prosecute Epstein on child-sex charges.... The original handling of the Epstein case a decade ago stands as a flagrant example of the corrosive effects of power, wealth and privilege on the criminal justice system." --s

News Lede

Weather Channel: "Tropical Storm Cristobal is now moving inland over southeastern Louisiana, but threats of flooding rainfall, storm-surge flooding, tornadoes and gusty winds will continue along the Gulf Coast into Monday. Cristobal is also expected to spread heavy rain and gusty winds through the lower Mississippi Valley and upper Midwest early this week. The National Hurricane Center said Cristobal made landfall along the coast of southeastern Louisiana between the mouth of the Mississippi River and Grand Isle at 5 p.m. CDT Sunday evening. Maximum sustained winds at the time were estimated near 50 mph. Bands of heavier rain are affecting areas from southeastern Louisiana into southern Mississippi, southern Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. Rainfall rates of 3 to 6 inches per hour Sunday morning triggered significant flash flooding in parts of downtown Jacksonville, Florida, trapping cars.... Cristobal is tracking north-northwestward with a forward speed of 10 mph as it moves inland over southeastern Louisiana." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Although you never know. If Trump has a Sharpie in the bunker, he may tell us that storm is headed for Wyoming.

Friday
Jun052020

The Commentariat -- June 6, 2020

And the men who were boys when I was a boy
Fought on the beach with me.
~~~

Afternoon Update:

The Washington Post's live updates of protest developments Saturday are here. The Post also has live updates for events in D.C., Maryland & Virginia; a crowd of tens of thousands is expected in the District. New York Times Saturday updates are here.

** Thomas Gibbons-Neff & Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: "Top Pentagon officials ordered National Guard helicopters to use what they called 'persistent presence' to disperse protests in the capital this week, according to military officials. The loosely worded order prompted a series of low-altitude maneuvers that human rights organizations quickly criticized as a show of force usually reserved for combat zones. Ryan D. McCarthy, the Army secretary and one of the officials who authorized part of the planning for the helicopters' mission Monday night, said on Friday that the Army had opened an investigation into the episode.... Military officials said that the National Guard's aggressive approach to crowd control was prompted by a pointed threat from the Pentagon: If the Guard was unable to handle the situation, then active-duty military units, such as a rapid-reaction unit of the 82nd Airborne Division, would be sent into the city.... The episode has stirred outrage among lawmakers."

Nicole Acevedo of NBC News: "Two Buffalo officers who were suspended without pay after a video showed police shoving a 75-year-old man to the ground at a George Floyd protest on Thursday night, were charged with second-degree assault, according to the Erie County District Attorney's Office. A large crowd of police officers and firefighters stood in front of Buffalo City Court to show support for the officers as they both attended a virtual arraignment on Saturday. Officers Robert McCabe, 32, and Aaron Torgalski, 39, pleaded not guilty to the charges of second-degree assault and will be released on his own recognizance, according to NBC affiliate WGRZ in Buffalo." Mrs. McC: Apparently Buffalo cops & firefighters really don't get it. Both forces need attitude tests. & Test administrators should come equipped with thick books of pink slips.

Dan Noyes of KGO: San Jose, California, police last week severely injured activist Derrick Sanderlin, who was trying to diffuse conflicts during a protest. "He stood a good distance away [from police], made no aggressive motions to police, yet they fired on him [with rubber bullets] several times, one round hitting him in the groin.... Video shows the officers' training their riot guns on Sanderlin."

~~~~~~~~~~

The Washington Post's live updates of protest developments Friday are here. (Also linked yesterday.) New York Times Friday updates are here.

Will the Real Donald Trump Please Stand Up? Yes, And It Didn't Take Long. Josh Feldman Donald Trump retweeted a video of [Mrs. McC: wild wingers] Glenn Beck and Candace Owens discussing George Floyd, in which Owens said the fact that Floyd is being made a martyr 'sickens' her.'" As Abby Phillip of CNN points out in one of the tweets Feldman cites, Owens is not exactly a White House pariah: "Pence invited Owens for a conversation on Floyd's death yesterday -- the day of his memorial service in Minneapolis." In another tweet cited, S.V. Dáte of the HuffPost concludes, "It appears the president has moved on to the next phase of the George Floyd messaging."

Yesterday, I asked the president to check his rhetoric at the door and to lead us with courage and compassion through this difficult time. Sadly, but unsurprisingly, he continues to prove himself incapable of doing so. What Maine people heard today was more of the same incendiary rhetoric and insults he uses to try to divide us and to stoke tension and fear. What Maine people heard today was largely devoid of fact and absent of reality. What Maine people saw today was a rambling, confusing, thinly veiled political rally. -- Gov. Janet Mills (D), in a statement following Trump's visit to the state ~~~

~~~ Another Trump Campaign Stop You Financed. Jill Colvin & Patrick Whittle of the AP: "... Donald Trump on Friday laced into Maine's Democratic governor for not moving quickly enough to reopen the state's economy and urged his supporters to help him win the rest of the state in November if they want to see the country rebound from the coronavirus shutdown. Referring to Maine's electoral votes, Trump said: 'Get that other half to go with Trump.' He spoke in the small town of Guilford, home to Puritan Medical Products, one of only two major companies producing a special type of swab needed to ramp up coronavirus testing.... His visit to Puritan had the feel of a campaign rally.... At stops in Guilford and Bangor, Trump used his first visit to the state as president to lob jabs at Gov. Janet Mills for not reopening businesses more quickly. Trump won just one of Maine's four electoral votes in 2016.... In Bangor, Trump compared Mills to a 'dictator' and said she was preventing her state from reaping money from Maine's busy summer tourist season. 'She's going to destroy your state,' he said.... Trump did not reference [George] Floyd or the protests during his stops in the state.... In Maine, the nation's whitest state, there have been multiple days of demonstrations." ~~~

~~~ John Switze & Michael Collins of USA Today: "... Donald Trump traveled to Maine Friday to tour a facility that makes medical swabs used for coronavirus testing, but the swabs manufactured in the background during his visit will ultimately be thrown in the trash, the company said. Puritan Medical Products said it will have to discard the swabs.... It is not clear why the swabs will be scrapped, or how many. The company described its manufacturing plans for Friday as 'limited' -- but the disruption comes as public health officials in Maine and other states have complained that a shortage of swabs has hampered their ability to massively scale up coronavirus testing. Workers in white lab coats, hair nets and plastic booties worked at machines making swabs while the president walked through the room. Trump, who did not wear a mask for the visit, stopped at one point to talk with some of the workers." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: You don't have to be an expert lab manager to know why the Trump Swabs were tossed. The MOOM contaminated them. In fairness, he contaminates everything. ~~~

     ~~~ Earlier. Manu Raju & Ted Barrett of CNN: "... Donald Trump has a full Friday in Maine, but the senior Republican senator who has yet to publicly say if she'll back his reelection bid won't be there. 'Sen. [Susan] Collins will be in Washington Friday and has several federal, and non-federal, events on her schedule," according to campaign spokesman Kevin Kelley. 'She actually just visited Puritan Medical Products in just last month and she is proud of the work they are doing to combat COVID-19.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Also Earlier. Portland (Maine) Press Herald Editors: "President Trump: We're sorry that you decided to come to Maine, but since you are here, could you do us a favor? Resign. You have never been a good president, but today your shortcomings are unleashing historic levels of suffering on the American people.... Bringing the nation together in times of distress is a big part of the job when you are head of state. You can't do it, so you should resign. As head of government, you have unmatched power to direct resources to relieve suffering. You can't or won't do that, either, so you should resign. And in your mistreatment of lawful protesters and abuse of religious symbols, you have violated your oath to protect and defend the Constitution, so you should resign." The Press Herald is the biggest newspaper in Maine.

David Jackson & John Fritze of USA Today: "... Donald Trump, besieged by protesters and the coronavirus pandemic, used an event Friday to tout the nation's latest jobs numbers and to predict the U.S. economy is beginning to rebound from the coronavirus pandemic. 'It's affirmation of all the work we've been doing,' Trump said. Trump also touched on the protesters that have gathered outside the White House for days following the death of George Floyd.... Trump castigated governors that he said had not called in the National Guard to address riots and looting in some cities. 'Don't be proud. Get the job done,' Trump said, speaking directly to the nation's governors and echoing remarks he made to them in a phone call last week. 'You have to dominate the streets.' Trump referred to Floyd, saying that 'hopefully' he was 'looking down right now' and thinking 'this is a great thing that's happening for our country.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Reality Chek. Trump, You Idiot. Ben Popken of NBC News: "As the nationwide shutdowns gradually lift and economic activity returns, the latest employment figures show that while the virus is colorblind, its effects are anything but indiscriminate. Black unemployment rose to 16.8 percent in the monthly employment snapshot released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While that number is slightly up from 16.7 last month, white unemployment came in at 12.4 percent, down from 14.9 percent.... Coronavirus job losses have exacerbated the racial unemployment gap." Emphasis added. Read on for the reasons for the gap. ~~~

~~~ Adam Edelman of NBC News: "Joe Biden blasted ... Donald Trump for remarking Friday that 'this is a great day for' George Floyd ... while touting positive economic data. Speaking in Dover, Del., the apparent Democratic presidential nominee ripped into Trump for 'speaking of a man who was brutally killed by an act of needless violence' and accused the president of failing to curb a 'larger tide of injustice that has metastasized on' his watch.... In his remarks Friday, Biden responded, 'George Floyd's last words, "I can't breathe. I can't breathe," they've echoed all across this nation, quite frankly around the world. For the president to try to put any other words in the mouth of George Floyd I frankly think is despicable.'" ~~~

~~~ From the Guardian's live protest updates for Friday: 11:26 am: "Trump's comment moments ago about this being a 'great day' for George Floyd is already sparking outrage among the president's critics.... The liberal organization CAP Action said the president's comment was 'despicable'[.]" 11:35 am: "Trump has just concluded his nearly hour-long 'press conference' at the White House without taking any questions from the reporters there. This is the second consecutive time that the president has called a 'press conference' only to make a statement, which reporters argued defied the definition of a press conference." ~~~

11:42: "DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has just announced that the section of 16th Street NW in front of the White House has been renamed 'Black Lives Matter Plaza.'... A crowd cheered as a city employee installed a sign reading 'Black Lives Matter Plz' on a street light." Mrs. McC: Not only that, Bowser covered the street from side to side in front of the White House with huge yellow-painted letters spelling out "Black Lives Matter." According to Brian Williams of MSNBC, the street painting is "visible from space." Take that, Donald Trump. Update: Here's a Washington Post story. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Trump Repeats Racial Slur While Touting His Supposed Economic Boost to Minorities. Kimmy Yam of NBC News: "Speaking at the White House, Trump addressed the May jobs report that was released this week, claiming that a strong economy is the 'greatest thing that can happen for race relations.... When we had our tremendous numbers ... just prior to the China plague that floated in, we had numbers, the best in history, for African American, for Hispanic American, for Asian American, and for everybody,' he said. The re-emergence of the phrase elicited criticism across social media, from many who pointed out that terms like the 'China plague' or the 'China virus' -- which experts have warned could put Asian Americans in harm's way -- run counter to ideas of racial equality...."

Ken Belson of the New York Times: "The protracted debate in the N.F.L. over players protesting racial injustice during the national anthem reignited with force on Friday as President Trump rekindled his war with the league over the issue and the league's commissioner, Roger Goodell, issued his strongest support yet for the players seeking to fight racism and police brutality." ~~~

~~~ Gwen Aviles of NBC News: "... Donald Trump reiterated his stance that NFL players should not kneel in protest during the national anthem in a tweet supporting New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees' recent comments about protests. Brees drew criticism Wednesday after he told Yahoo! Finance that he did not agree with 'disrespecting the flag' by kneeling during the national anthem. After fierce criticism, Brees apologized for his comments in an Instagram post Thursday, saying he would do better.... 'I am a big fan of Drew Brees. I think he's truly one of the greatest quarterbacks, but he should not have taken back his original stance on honoring our magnificent American Flag,' Trump wrote.... On Friday, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell apologized to players for not listening to their concerns regarding racism sooner." Mrs. McC: Trump is so stupid he still can't comprehend that kneeling in protest against injustice honors the flag & what it symbolizes. ~~~

Wowza! Chloe Melas of CNN: "NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Friday the league should have listened to players earlier about racism concerns in a response to NFL players calling on the league to condemn racism and support its black players. Goodell posted a video to the NFL's social media on Friday in response to the video 'Stronger Together,' which features several of the league's most famous players asking the league to take a strong stance in the wake of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis. 'We the National Football League, condemn racism and the systematic oppression of black people,' Goodell said. 'We, the National Football League, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest,' Goodell said.Goodell noted that it has been a difficult time for the country, in particular black Americans, and offered his condolences to the families of Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and 'all the families who have endured police brutality.'" A Washington Post story is here.

Not My Fault: Barr. Michael Balsamo of the AP: "Attorney General William Barr says law enforcement officers were already moving to push back protesters from a park in front of the White House when he arrived there Monday evening, and he says he did not give a command to disperse the crowd, though he supported the decision.... Barr said it was a Park Police tactical commander -- an official he never spoke to -- who gave the order for the law enforcement agencies to move in and clear the protesters. 'I'm not involved in giving tactical commands like that,' he said. 'I was frustrated and I was also worried that as the crowd grew, it was going to be harder and harder to do. So my attitude was get it done, but I didn't say, "Go do it."' Barr insisted there was no connection between the heavy-handed crackdown on the protesters and Trump's walk soon after to St. John's Church.... Administration officials have spent much of the week trying to explain how the situation escalated and why smoke bombs, pepper balls and police on horseback were needed to clear the largely peaceful crowd. Earlier in the week, White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters it was Barr who made the decision to push back the security perimeter outside the White House on Monday morning."

When Pentagon "Leaders" Are Chickens. Rebecca Kheel of the Hill: "Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley have refused to testify before the House Armed Services Committee on the military's role in responding to nationwide protests against police violence and racial injustice, a House aide said Friday. 'Staff was advised that [Department of Defense] leadership has refused to testify next week as requested,' the aide said. 'In addition, an informal briefing with the secretary of the Army was cancelled for today.' In a statement Friday evening, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith (D-Wash.) and the 30 other Democratic committee members called Esper and Milley's decision not to testify 'unacceptable.' 'We insist that they appear before our committee,' the statement said. 'Our military leaders are sworn to be accountable to the people of this country, and Congress is constitutionally responsible for oversight. They must appear and testify on these crucial matters in order to meet that responsibility.'"

Jana Winter in Yahoo! News: "A leaked Trump administration document details the federal law enforcement and military personnel squaring off against protesters in Washington, D.C., including a 1,300-strong force currently deployed to the south side of the White House.... The show of force outside the White House is a task force operation that includes U.S. Secret Service, National Guard, Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Park Police, according to the internal Department of Homeland Security report, dated June 4. They aren't the only ones in town: Border Patrol, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Transportation Security Administration, National Guard, Coast Guard, Federal Protective Service and more have been called in, says the document.... Thousands more -- from at least a dozen federal agencies or divisions -- have been deployed across the capital region and to cities big and small across the U.S. where peaceful protests have been held or are expected.... Elite SWAT teams from the Border Patrol and sniper-trained units from ICE have also descended upon Washington. TSA's air marshals arrived too, and three of the agency's 'VIPR teams'...helicopters, drones and other mobile surveillance or tactical resources ... have been called into Washington, New York and other cities.[.]" --s

Zoë Richards of TPM: "Ohio Republican Gov. Mike DeWine said a member of the state's National Guard was suspended and removed from a mission to quell disturbance at racial justice protests in Washington, D.C., after the FBI discovered comments the guardsman had posted online supporting white supremacist ideology prior to his assignment." --s

Eighty-nine Former Defense Officials in a Washington Post op-ed: "President Trump ... has gone so far as to make a shocking promise: to send active-duty members of the U.S. military to 'dominate' protesters in cities throughout the country -- with or without the consent of local mayors or state governors.... While several past presidents have called on our armed services to provide additional aid to law enforcement in times of national crisis -- among them Ulysses S. Grant, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson -- these presidents used the military to protect the rights of Americans, not to violate them.... We are alarmed at how the president is betraying this oath [to support & defend the Constitution] by threatening to order members of the U.S. military to violate the rights of their fellow Americans." The op-ed includes the names of the signers, headed by former Secretaries of Defense Leon E. Panetta, Chuck Hagel, Ashton B. Carter & William S. Cohen. Mrs. McC: All appointed by Democratic presidents, Hagel & Cohen are Republicans.

Kelly Lambastes Trump. Sarah Westwood of CNN: "Former White House chief of staff John Kelly said Friday he agrees with former Secretary of Defense Gen. Jim Mattis' stark warning this week that ... Donald Trump is 'the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people' as nationwide protests have intensified over the death of George Floyd.... 'There is a concern, I think an awful big concern, that the partisanship has gotten out of hand, the tribal thing has gotten out of hand,' Kelly said. 'He's quite a man, Jim Mattis, and for him to do that tells you where he is relative to the concern he has for our country.'... 'I think we need to look harder at who we elect,' Kelly said on Friday. 'I think we should look at people that are running for office and put them through the filter: What is their character like? What are their ethics?'" Mrs. McC: Weirdly, Kelly made these remarks in an interview/reunion with Anthony Scaramucci, whom Kelly fired. (Also linked yesterday.)

Paul Sonne, et al., of the Washington Post: "The Pentagon has told National Guardsmen deployed to the nation's capital not to use firearms or ammunition, and has issued orders to send home active-duty troops that the Trump administration amassed outside the city in recent days, a sign of de-escalation in the federal response to protests in the city. Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper made the decision to disarm the guard without consulting the White House, after President Trump ordered a militarized show of force on the streets of Washington to quell demonstrations that were punctured by an episode of looting Sunday, two senior administration officials said. Trump had encouraged the National Guard to be armed. Initially, a small group of guardsmen deployed in the city had been carrying guns while standing outside monuments, but the bulk of the forces, such as those working with federal park police at Lafayette Square in front of the White House, didn't carry firearms out of caution."

Ryan Reilly of the Huffington Post: "Federal agents on Friday morning released boxes of cloth masks that Black Lives Matter organizers mailed to cities across the county to help reduce the spread of COVID-19 during nationwide demonstrations against police brutality. Four boxes of the masks were shipped to Washington, St. Louis, New York City and Minneapolis on Wednesday afternoon, and were supposed to arrive in each city by Thursday. But until Friday morning, the boxes of 500 masks apiece that read 'stop killing Black people' and 'defund police' never left Oakland, California, because they were seized by the government. Federal agents with the U.S. Postal Inspection Service were involved with the seizure." This is an update to a story linked yesterday.

Georgia. Dakin Andone, et al., of CNN: "A video posted by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution shows a police officer body slamming a woman on the first night of protests in Atlanta, according to the woman's attorney. The woman, identified as Amber Jackson, suffered a broken clavicle and cannot work as a dental hygienist because of the injury, her lawyer Mawuli Davis said in a news release. The video, taken on May 29 by the AJC, shows a woman pull away from an officer who then grabs her from behind and slams her to the ground. The camera shifts so the impact occurs just out of frame. A woman is heard screaming in the background. The video then cuts to show the officer lifting the woman, now handcuffed, by her arm.... May 29 was the first night of protests in the Atlanta area sparked by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. That night, several businesses were looted. There were no curfews in place at that time. At a news conference Friday, Davis said Jackson received a citation for disorderly conduct."

Illinois. Heather Cherone of WTTW Chicago News: "Chicago officers struck Chicago Police Board President Ghian Foreman five times on his legs with their batons during a protest on Sunday in Hyde Park that turned violent, Foreman told WTTW News. Foreman filed a complaint with the Citizens Office of Police Accountability alleging that he was struck by at least one officer.... Foreman's complaint, which identifies the officer Foreman said struck him, is one of 344 complaints of police misconduct filed with COPA between midnight May 29 and 7 a.m. Friday, Eaddy said.... Foreman said he had two bruises on his legs where he was struck while protesting police brutality on 47th Street, not far from his Hyde Park home.... Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she urged Foreman to file a complaint after she learned of the incident Sunday afternoon."

Minnesota. Liz Navratil of Minneapolis Star Tribune: "The Minneapolis Police Department will ban officers from using chokeholds and neck restraints and strengthen the requirements for officers to intervene if a colleague is using excessive force under a new deal negotiated between the city and the state. The tentative agreement -- which still requires a judge's approval -- also seeks to give the public more access to officers' disciplinary decisions and to limit the number of supervisors who can authorize the use of tear gas, rubber projectiles and other similar tactics to disperse demonstrators." ~~~

~~~ Frederick Melo & Mara Gottfried of the St. Paul Pioneer Press: "St. Paul will revise its use-of-force guidelines as part of a nationwide push to reform policing after George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis police custody. Mayor Melvin Carter announced Friday he has signed on to the '8 Can't Wait' campaign, which has eight recommendations for reducing police violence. The campaign says St. Paul already follows six of those recommendations but has yet to explicitly ban chokeholds or state that deadly force can be used only as a last resort. By Carter's reading of city policies, St. Paul already achieves all eight goals in practice. Soon after he took office in 2018, the city made changes that emphasize de-escalation and the sanctity of human life."

New York. Neil Vigdor, et al., of the New York Times: "Prosecutors are investigating the actions of two Buffalo police officers who were suspended without pay on Thursday night after a video showed them shoving a 75-year-old protester, who was hospitalized with a head injury. The video taken by WBFO, a local radio station, shows the man, identified on Friday as Martin Gugino, approaching a group of officers during a protest stemming from the death of George Floyd. He was identified by the Western New York Peace Center, a nonprofit that named him in a Facebook post, saying he is a peace activist and a member.... On Friday, Mr. Gugino was in serious but stable condition and was alert and oriented, according to a hospital spokesman.... On Friday, John T. Evans, the president of the Buffalo police union, said all 57 officers on the Emergency Response Team, a special squad formed to respond to riots, had resigned from their posts on the team in support of the suspended officers, according to The Buffalo News. The officers remain members of the department." (This is an update of a story linked yesterday.) Mrs. McC: Fire them! ~~~

     ~~~ Maki Becker of the Buffalo News: "The mass resignation came after members of the team that responds to riots and other crowd control situations, were suspended without pay.... The resignations raise questions about how local law enforcement will be able to handle continuing protests at a time when some of the protests have turned violent and more protests are anticipated this weekend." ~~~

     ~~~ David K. Li & Jareen Imam of NBC News: "'Fifty-seven resigned in disgust because of the treatment of two of their members, who were simply executing orders,' union president John Evans told NBC affiliate WGRZ."

~~~ Ali Watkins of the New York Times: New York City police have been "kettling" protesters: encircling them "so that they have no way to exit from a park, city block or other public space, and then charge in and make arrests.... The kettling operations carried out by the police department after curfew have become among the most unsettling symbols of its use of force against peaceful protests, and have touched off a fierce backlash against Mayor Bill de Blasio and the police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea. In the past several days, New York Times journalists covering the protests have seen officers repeatedly charge at demonstrators after curfew with seemingly little provocation, shoving them onto sidewalks, striking them with batons and using other rough tactics. The escalation in the use of force in New York is part of a national trend. Across the country, local police have resorted to increasingly violent crowd control techniques to control the protests...." ~~~

     ~~~ Molly Crane-Newman of the New York Daily News: "Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance on Friday said his office will decline to prosecute marchers arrested for breaking the city's 8 p.m. curfew while out protesting the death of George Floyd -- and he commended New Yorkers for sticking up for their civil liberties. 'The prosecution of protesters charged with these low-level offenses undermines critical bonds between law enforcement and the communities we serve. Days after the killing of George Floyd, our nation and our city are at a crossroads in our continuing endeavor to confront racism and systemic injustice wherever it exists,' Vance said in a statement.... Vance's office is the first in the city to stop prosecuting protesters after a letter urging them to halt the practice was sent to all of the DAs on June 1 from state Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan), who chairs the Judiciary Committee." Mrs. McC: Each of the five boroughs has its own D.A.

Pennsylvania. Alicia Lozano of NBC News: "A Philadelphia police officer has been arrested and charged with aggravated assault after a video surfaced showing the man allegedly beating a 21-year-old Temple University student during recent protests, District Attorney Larry Krasner's office announced Friday. Police Staff Inspector Joseph Bologna, a 30-year veteran of the department, was also charged with reckless endangerment and possession of an instrument of crime. He has been removed from street duty pending an investigation, Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said. Video footage appears to show Bologna hitting the student in the head and neck with a baton. The student was knocked to the ground and another officer put his knee on him to keep the student down, the Associated Press reported."

Washington, D.C. About That Tear Gas. Carol Leonnig of the Washington Post: "Three days after the U.S. Park Police claimed that tear gas was never used on protesters outside the White House, the organization's spokesman [Sgt. Eduardo Delgado] acknowledged that the chemical agents shot into the largely peaceful crowd have similar painful effects. A spokesman for the Park Police said in an interview with Vox that his agency regretted using the term "tear gas," noting that officers threw pepper balls containing an irritant powder and chemical agents that are designed to produce tears. Their use causes people to experience difficulty breathing and burning sensations on the skin.... 'I think the term "tear gas" doesn't even matter anymore. It was a mistake on our part for using "tear gas" because we just assumed people would think CS or CN, two common forms of tear gas.'... But two hours later, after The Washington Post contacted the Park Police and the White House for comment, acting Park Police chief Gregory T. Monahan walked back that acknowledgment.... 'United States Park Police officers and other assisting law enforcement partners did not use tear gas or OC Skat Shells to close the area at Lafayette Square in response to violent protestors.'"

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Lachlan Cartwright, et al., of the Daily Beast: "The New York Times apologized to its staff on Friday in a lengthy, tense meeting in which the paper's top editors strongly suggested they will overhaul the oft-controversial and scrutinized opinion page. Earlier this week, the Times published an op-ed, headlined 'Send in the Troops,' in which Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) enthusiastically called for the deployment of American military forces to suppress the ongoing protests against police brutality. The column sparked immediate criticism from readers and many of the paper's own staffers, who publicly denounced the decision to publish it. One by one during Friday's staff meeting, the paper's top leaders apologized for the opinion piece. At one point, the paper admitted that it did 'invite' Cotton to write the column. The paper's controversial top opinion editor James Bennet issued a mea culpa, claiming he let his section be 'stampeded by the news cycle,' and confessed that the backlash had inspired him to rethink the op-ed section entirely."


The New York Times' live updates for coronavirus developments Friday are here. "The United States reported 21,614 new infections on Thursday, and while that number is below its April peak, the daily average has been rising slightly in recent days as the continued improvement in Northeast is offset by new outbreaks in the South and parts of the West. The uptick appears to represent a combination of increased testing, the coronavirus taking hold in more regions and outbreaks in localized hot spots. It comes during a convergence of two developments that health officials are watching warily: states and cities pressing ahead with plans to allow more businesses to reopen, and masses of people gathering around the country in large-scale protests against police brutality and racism."

Emily Holden of the Guardian: "The Trump administration continued to weaken core environmental protections in the US by announcing a pair of policies to cut reviews for large infrastructure projects and downplay the health benefits of rules to curb pollution. Both changes could disproportionately hurt communities of color, which are far more likely to live with pollution because of decades of environmental racism. They come after a week of nationwide protests over police killings of black Americans. The proposals could also make it easier for the government to ignore the climate crisis in making decisions." (Also linked yesterday.)

Presidential Race

** Stephen Ohlemacher & Will Weissert of the AP: "Joe Biden formally clinched the Democratic presidential nomination Friday, setting him up for a bruising challenge to ... Donald Trump that will play out against the unprecedented backdrop of a pandemic, economic collapse and civil unrest. 'It was an honor to compete alongside one of the most talented groups of candidates the Democratic party has ever fielded,' Biden said in a statement Friday night, 'and I am proud to say that we are going into this general election a united party.' The former vice president has effectively been his party's leader since his last challenger in the Democratic primary, Bernie Sanders, ended his campaign in April. But Biden pulled together the 1,991 delegates needed to become the nominee after seven states and the District of Columbia held presidential primaries Tuesday."

While Donald Trump campaigned in Maine on your dime, the conservative Lincoln Project struck another blow at the Cowardly Liar:

Thursday
Jun042020

The Commentariat -- June 5, 2020

Late Morning/Afternoon Update:

The Washington Post's live updates of protest developments Friday are here.

David Jackson & John Fritze of USA Today: "... Donald Trump, besieged by protesters and the coronavirus pandemic, used an event Friday to tout the nation's latest jobs numbers and to predict the U.S. economy is beginning to rebound from the coronavirus pandemic. 'It's affirmation of all the work we've been doing,' Trump said. Trump also touched on the protesters that have gathered outside the White House for days following the death of George Floyd.... Trump castigated governors that he said had not called in the National Guard to address riots and looting in some cities. 'Don't be proud. Get the job done,' Trump said, speaking directly to the nation's governors and echoing remarks he made to them in a phone call last week. 'You have to dominate the streets.' Trump referred to Floyd, saying that 'hopefully' he was 'looking down right now' and thinking 'this is a great thing that's happening for our country.'" ~~~

~~~ From the Guardian's live protest updates for Friday: 11:26 am: "Trump's comment moments ago about this being a 'great day' for George Floyd is already sparking outrage among the president's critics.... The liberal organization CAP Action said the president's comment was 'despicable'[.]" 11:35 am: "Trump has just concluded his nearly hour-long 'press conference' at the White House without taking any questions from the reporters there. This is the second consecutive time that the president has called a 'press conference' only to make a statement, which reporters argued defied the definition of a press conference." ~~~

11:42: "DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has just announced that the section of 16th Street NW in front of the White House has been renamed 'Black Lives Matter Plaza.'... A crowd cheered as a city employee installed a sign reading 'Black Lives Matter Plz' on a street light." Mrs. McC: Not only that, Bowser covered the street from side to side in front of the White House with huge yellow-painted letters spelling out "Black Lives Matter." Take that, Donald Trump. Update: Here's a Washington Post story.

Kelly Lambastes Trump. Sarah Westwood of CNN: "Former White House chief of staff John Kelly said Friday he agrees with former Secretary of Defense Gen. Jim Mattis' stark warning this week that ... Donald Trump is 'the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people' as nationwide protests have intensified over the death of George Floyd.... 'There is a concern, I think an awful big concern, that the partisanship has gotten out of hand, the tribal thing has gotten out of hand,' Kelly said. 'He's quite a man, Jim Mattis, and for him to do that tells you where he is relative to the concern he has for our country.'... 'I think we need to look harder at who we elect,' Kelly said on Friday. 'I think we should look at people that are running for office and put them through the filter: What is their character like? What are their ethics?'" Mrs. McC: Weirdly, Kelly made these remarks in an interview with Anthony Scaramucci, who Kelly fired.

Emily Holden of the Guardian: "The Trump administration continued to weaken core environmental protections in the US by announcing a pair of policies to cut reviews for large infrastructure projects and downplay the health benefits of rules to curb pollution. Both changes could disproportionately hurt communities of color, which are far more likely to live with pollution because of decades of environmental racism. They come after a week of nationwide protests over police killings of black Americans. The proposals could also make it easier for the government to ignore the climate crisis in making decisions."

~~~~~~~~~~

The New York Times' live updates of protest developments Friday are here.

The New York Times' live updates of protest developments Thursday are here. (Also linked yesterday.)

My Admin has done more for the Black Community than any President since Abraham Lincoln. Passed Opportunity Zones with @SenatorTimScott, guaranteed funding for HBCU's, School Choice, passed Criminal Justice Reform, lowest Black unemployment, poverty, and crime rates in history. -- Donald Trump, in a tweet, June 2, 2020

... we feel confident enough that the achievements touted by Trump do not come close to LBJ's actions -- let alone several other presidents -- that at this time we can award this claim Four Pinocchios. Trump is never one to be modest, but this kind of bragging is simply ridiculous. -- Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post, after interviewing a number of historians

Everything Is Going Very Smoothly. Eric Schmitt, et al., of the New York Times: "President Trump agreed on Thursday to begin sending home 82nd Airborne Division troops.... None of the active-duty forces ever actually deployed in Washington, instead remaining on alert outside the city while National Guard troops took up position near the White House and elsewhere around town. But they became caught up in a confrontation pitting a commander in chief intent on demonstrating strength in the face of street demonstrations versus a military command resistant to being drawn into domestic law enforcement or election year politics. Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper initially tried to send home a small portion of the 1,600 active-duty troops on Wednesday, only to have Mr. Trump order him to reverse course during an angry meeting. The president finally acquiesced on Thursday.... What appeared on Thursday to be an uneasy truce between the White House and Pentagon did not mean that the conflict was over. While Mr. Trump's advisers counseled him not to fire Mr. Esper, the president spent much of the day privately railing about the defense secretary, who along with Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, opposed the president's desire to send regular troops into the nation's cities." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: However, according to the Times report, "More than 2,000 National Guard forces remain in Washington, a number set to climb to 4,500." So this seems more like moving different divisions in & out of the D.C. area in a haphazard (and expensive) way. ~~~

~~~ Flippity-flop, Flippity-flop. Ellen Mitchell of the Hill: "Defense Secretary Mark Esper is sending hundreds of active duty soldiers who had been on standby in the Washington, D.C., area back to their home base after reversing course on such a decision the day before." Mrs. McC: So first, Esper said troops needed to "dominate the battle space" where American citizens were protesting, and he appeared in a photo-op with Trump after troops gassed peaceful protesters out of the "battle space." Second, Esper held a news conference where he said invoking the Insurrection Act, which would allow active duty forces to act in a law enforcement capacity, was unnecessary. He ordered the troops home. Third, Esper met with Trump & reversed his order to send the troops home. Fourth, Esper sent the troops back to Fort Bragg. Got that? (Fort Bragg is named, appropriately enough, after Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg, a close friend of President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis. The troops from Fort Bragg came to the D.C. area armed with bayonets to skewer Americans, though the troops were later ordered not to affix the lethal swords to their rifles, according to the AP [linked yesterday].) ~~~

~~~ Andrew Bacevich in the Nation: "Trump appears intent on forcing our men and women in uniform to choose one or the other: Do as I say, or honor the Constitution. This is both deeply unfair and profoundly dangerous. More disturbing still, neither the defense secretary nor chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff appears to grasp the predicament in which the troops are being placed. Or, if they understand it, they have chosen to become complicit in the problem. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and Gen. Mark Milley, the JCS chairman, show every sign of indulging President Trump's apparent enthusiasm for employing regulars to impose order in American cities, even if that means, in effect, waging war against American citizens.... Esper does at least have this excuse: He is a political appointee. In that sense, his supine attitude toward the president, something of a signature in the age of Trump, is hardly surprising. In contrast, senior military officers are not political appointees. They are expected to be above politics. For this reason, the outrageously unprofessional misconduct of General Milley is far more troubling." The story is subscriber-firewalled, but if you haven't clicked on more than two Nation articles this month, you're good.

Former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta told Andrea Mitchell of MSNBC that the military is trained "to fight our enemies, not to fight our American people'" Video.

Max Cohen of Politico: "Former Defense Secretary William Perry on Thursday accused ... Donald Trump of politicizing the armed forces and criticized his threats to deploy the military against American citizens. Perry, a national security expert who served in government for decades, including as Defense secretary from 1994 to 1997 under President Bill Clinton, said in a statement provided to Politico that the military 'was never intended to be used for partisan political purposes.'"

Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post: "In his most extensive comments yet on the civil unrest gripping the country, Attorney General William P. Barr defended law enforcement's aggressive, militaristic response to protests while acknowledging the' long-standing' concerns with police that were exposed by the recent death of a black man in Minnesota while in custody.... Barr also vigorously defended the ... police's move Monday to use horses and gas to push back largely peaceful protesters at Lafayette Square, just outside the White House. The episode has elicited an intense backlash against both Barr and President Trump." See also Bobby Lee's comment below, which seems to perfectly capture Barr's overall 'tude. ~~~

In the federal system, the agencies don't wear badges with their names and stuff like that. I could understand why some of these individuals simply wouldn't want to talk to people about who they are, if that in fact was the case. -- Attorney General William Barr, news conference Thursday ~~~

~~~ Barr Okay with Armed Secret Police Attacking Peaceful U.S. Citizens. Dan Friedman of Mother Jones: "Over the past few days, Mother Jones and other media outlets have noted the presence of armed personnel with no visible identification confronting the protests in DC that were sparked by the recent police killing of George Floyd. These officers have consistently said that they are 'with the Department of Justice' or that they are part of the 'federal government.' The Justice Department has since said these are officers are from Special Operations Control units in the Bureau of Prisons -- that is, officers trained primarily to quell prison riots.... In ... [a] press conference Thursday, [Attorney General Bill Barr] defended the use of BOP personnel and said they have 'emergency response' training -- nevermind that the officers are now confronting peaceful protesters. The attorney general did not acknowledge any problem with using officers who can't be identified to police protests." ~~~

~~~ A Walk in the Park

The president is the head of the executive branch and the chief executive of the nation and should be able to walk outside the White House, and walk across the street to visit the church. -- Attorney General William Barr, news conference Thursday ~~~

The citizens of the nation, who hold the only title in our democracy superior to that of president, should be able to march outside the White House without being gassed, pepper-sprayed and hit with flash grenades by unidentified federal prison guards. -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie

~~~ ** Josh Marshall of TPM: "Trump and Barr are patrolling DC with federal prison guards from the units trained to deal with prison riots and emergency situations in federal prisons. These appear to be at least some of the federal police who have been refusing to identify themselves on the streets of DC. Whatever you can say about these teams and the tactics they use these are not people you want doing crowd control with civilians." --s (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Molly Schwartz of Mother Jones: "With the human obstacles beaten and smoked out of his path, Trump made it to the church. He stiffly held up a Bible, announcing, 'It's a Bible,' and got his photos.... But there was one small detail that adds a delicious layer of irony to this latest Trumpian stunt. If the whole performance was in order to send a message of solidarity with his evangelical voters, their adored leader used the wrong Bible.... [T]he Bible that Trump held over his head was a Revised Standard Version (RSV).... Not only is the RSV outdated (the New Revised Standard Version, NRSV, was published in 1989 to replace it), but it's not a Bible that evangelical Christians consider authoritative. 'It would be pretty much rejected by the vast majority of evangelicals. It would be seen as a deficient translation of the Bible. A distinctly liberal one,' said Rev. Rob Schenck, an evangelical clergyman, the president of The Dietrich Bonhoeffer Institute, and the author of Costly Grace: An Evangelical Minister's Rediscovery of Faith, Hope, and Love. 'And for many, especially in the very conservative or fundamentalist wing, they might see it as not a version of the Bible at all.'" --s (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: BTW, at least two regular commentators on MSNBC accused Trump of holding the Bible upside-down. I've looked at a series of photos of Trump's show-and-tell, and I would say Trump was holding the Bible right-side-up. As contributor Ken Winkes noted the other day, Trump probably had help figuring out which end was up.

"Law Enforcement" Finds Another Way to Kill Protesters. Ryan Reilly of the Huffington Post: “Law enforcement agents have seized hundreds of cloth masks that read 'Stop killing Black people' and 'Defund police' that a Black Lives Matter-affiliated organization sent to cities around the country to protect demonstrators against the spread of COVID-19, a disease that has had a disparate impact on Black communities.... But the items never left [Oakland, Calif]. The U.S. Postal Service tracking numbers for the packages indicate they were 'Seized by Law Enforcement' and urge the mailer to 'contact the U.S. Postal Inspection Service for further information.'... It's not entirely clear what law enforcement entity seized the masks or why."

Steve Inskeep of NPR: "In rare public comments, the former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Ret. Gen. Martin Dempsey condemned Trump's threat to use military force to suppress nationwide protests as 'dangerous' and 'very troubling,' in an interview with NPR on Thursday."

Julian Borger of the Guardian: "The retired marine general who led the global coalition against Isis and commanded US forces in Afghanistan has warned that Donald Trump's actions this week could start a US 'slide into illiberalism' and the beginning of the end of 'the American experiment'. In denouncing the president for his response to the George Floyd protests, John Allen became the latest in a string of venerable military figures to have gone public over what they describe as the threat posed by Trump to the non-political nature of the armed forces, and more broadly to US democracy.... Allen, now president of the Brookings Institution, also focused his criticism on the president's threat on Monday to deploy the US military against protesters, and his use of force against a peaceful demonstration outside the White House so that he could be photographed holding a Bible in front of a church. 'The slide of the United States into illiberalism may well have begun on 1 June 2020. Remember the date. It may well signal the beginning of the end of the American experiment,' Allen wrote on the Foreign Policy website."

Max Cohen of Politico: "Former White House chief of staff John Kelly said Thursday that ... Donald Trump 'has clearly forgotten' the circumstances of former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis's departure from the administration, breaking with his former boss to side with a fellow retired Marine Corps general. In an interview with The Washington Post, Kelly contradicted Trump's claim that he had fired Mattis. Kelly called Mattis 'an honorable man' and described Trump's Twitter attack on the former Defense secretary as 'nasty.'... Trump ... [claimed on Twitter] Wednesday night ... [that] he asked for Mattis' letter of resignation and labeling the retired Marine Corps general 'the world's most overrated General.' 'The president did not fire him. He did not ask for his resignation,' Kelly, who was Trump's chief of staff when Mattis departed the administration, told the Washington Post." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Trump didn't "forget." He lied. As the NYT report by Eric Schmitt & others, linked above, reports, "Mr. Trump also again falsely insisted that he fired Mr. Mattis, who in fact resigned in protest over a plan to withdraw troops from Syria.... In fact, when Mr. Mattis stepped down in December 2018, Mr. Trump himself wrote that 'General Jim Mattis will be retiring, with distinction.' He changed his story only to maintain that he had fired Mr. Mattis after growing angry about the former defense secretary's resignation letter." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McC, Ctd.: BTW, here's another lie Trump tweeted Wednesday in his attack on Mattis: "His nickname was 'Chaos', which I didn't like, & changed to 'Mad Dog'." According to the Military Times, in a March 2019 story (written in response to one of Trump's previous claims that he had nicknamed Mattis 'Mad Dog'), "... news reports referred to Mattis by the moniker ['Mad Dog'] -- which he has publicly said he does not like -- as far back as 2004, when he was commanding general of the 1st Marine Division." Frankly, this was a Trump lie that surprised me, as I recall his introducing Mattis as "someone they call 'Mad Dog,'" or words to that effect. ~~~

     ~~~ Marty Johnson of the Hill: "President Trump Thursday evening slammed John Kelly, his former chief of staff, for defending James Mattis, his former Defense secretary, after Mattis criticized the president for his response to the nationwide protests. 'John Kelly didn't know I was going to fire James Mattis, nor did he have any knowledge of my asking for a letter of resignation,' he tweeted, saying that Kelly, who stepped down from his role as the president's chief of staff in 2018, wasn't part of Trump's 'inner-circle,' by that point."

I thought General Mattis's words were true and honest and necessary and overdue.... When I saw General Mattis's comments yesterday, I felt like perhaps we're getting to the point where we can be more honest with the concerns that we might hold internally and have the courage of our own convictions to speak up. -- Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), to reporters ~~~

~~~ Meh. Manu Raju & Ted Barrett of CNN: "Republican senators are dismissing the scathing criticism leveled against ... Donald Trump by his former defense secretary, James Mattis, the latest sign that Republicans by and large are showing unwavering support for the leader of their party during this high-stakes election year.... Leaving the floor on Thursday morning, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was silent when asked twice about Mattis' criticism, returning to his office and ignoring a reporter's questions.... 'It's Gen. Mattis' opinion, he's free to express it,' Sen. Ron Johnson, chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, told CNN.... The lone senator to break ranks: Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who is up for reelection in 2022, told CNN she agrees with the criticism and later told reporters she is 'struggling' about whether to endorse Trump in 2020. Others either defended Trump or contended they didn't want to get involved in the dispute." Thanks to Patrick for the link. ~~~

~~~ Paul Kane & John Wagner of the Washington Post: Sen. Mitt "Romney [R-Utah] initially avoided addressing the matter, but after Murkowski spoke out, he joined in criticizing Trump's recent behavior by calling Mattis's statement 'stunning and powerful.' Late Thursday, Trump lashed out at Murkowski on Twitter, promising to campaign against her in Alaska in 2022 when she faces reelection. 'Get any candidate ready, good or bad, I don't care, I'm endorsing. If you have a pulse, I'm with you!' he wrote." Mrs. McC: You can tell how Trump really has the interests of his adopted political party at heart.

White Senator Foils Three Black Senators' Anti-Lynching Bill. Not a Good Look, Li'l Randy. Burgess Everett of Politico: "The Senate's foremost contrarian, Rand Paul, clashed with Kamala Harris and Cory Booker on the Senate floor Thursday over Paul's opposition to a popular anti-lynching bill. The Senate could easily approve the House's bill to make lynching a federal crime and send it to ... Donald Trump for his signature. But the Kentucky Republican is demanding changes that he says are needed to ensure lynching charges can't be brought for minor injuries.... Paul presented a scenario in which, under the bill being considered, someone could be shoved to the floor in a bar and suffer minor injuries and be accused of lynching. He said that could lead to unfair incarcerations.... 'I object to this [Paul's] amendment. I object, I object,' Booker said. 'I object on substance, I object on the law. And for my heart and spirit and every fiber of my being, I object for my ancestors.'... The unusual confrontation played out as George Floyd's funeral service was conducted in Minneapolis...." Paul's objections will abort consideration of the bill written by Harris, Booker & Tim Scott (R-S.C.) because the bill would have to pass on a voice vote as Mitch McConnell doesn't plan to allow a roll-call vote.

BBC: "The BBC's anti-disinformation team has been tracking misleading videos and conspiracy theories about the protests, which have been circulating online. So, here's what to look out for - and avoid - on your social media feeds." --s (Also linked yesterday.)

Minnesota. Dionne Searcey & Richard Pérez-Peña of the New York Times: A "memorial [to George Floyd] in Minneapolis, at turns somber and defiant, followed more than a week of upheaval around the United States prompted by the video of a white police officer kneeling for almost nine minutes on Mr. Floyd's neck as he lay face down and handcuffed on the pavement, saying 'I can't breathe.' In death, Mr. Floyd has become a symbol of police brutality. But family members remembered him as the man they knew as Perry, and people in the neighborhood called 'Big Floyd,' someone with a gift for making friends and making people feel welcome." ~~~

~~~ Erica Green & Katie Benner of the New York Times: "A longtime friend of George Floyd's who was in the passenger seat of Mr. Floyd's car during his fatal encounter with a Minneapolis police officer said on Wednesday night that Mr. Floyd tried to defuse the tensions with the police and in no way resisted arrest. 'He was, from the beginning, trying in his humblest form to show he was not resisting in no form or way,' said the friend, Maurice Lester Hall, 42, who was tracked down on Monday in Houston, arrested on outstanding warrants and interviewed by Minnesota state investigators. 'I could hear him pleading, "Please, officer, what's all this for?"' Mr. Hall said in an interview on Wednesday night with The New York Times.... Mr. Hall is a key witness in the state's investigation into the four officers who apprehended Mr. Floyd...."

Florida. Charles Rabin of The Miami Herald: "The Fort Lauderdale patrol officer who inflamed a tense demonstration on Sunday, knocking over a seated protester just before a peaceful protest against police abuse turned violent, has been reviewed by internal affairs for using force 79 times in his roughly three-and-half years on the force, according to department records.... Most notably, Steven Pohorence has drawn his firearm more than once a month on average since he was hired in October 2016, according to personnel records released by the law enforcement agency on Wednesday." --s (Also linked yesterday.)

Idaho. Vigilantes Arm with Assault Rifles Against an Internet Myth. Isaac Stanley-Becker & Tony Romm of the Washington Post: "... when early reports about potential violence surfaced ... -- claiming 'ANTIFA agitators' were storming the state this week -- scores of residents took to the streets. Armed with ­military-style assault rifles, they stood guard in places such as Coeur d'Alene, a resort town of 50,000 on a lake in northwest Idaho.... [But] local officials across the state confirmed that not a single participant was known to have defiled a home or storefront in the name of 'antifa.'... Many of the rumors about violent protests originated from dubious Facebook posts, often shared widely and rarely debunked, residents there said."

Kentucky. Patricia Mazzei of the New York Times examines the shooting death of Louisville barbecue restayrateur David McAtee by a Louisville police officer or state National Guardsman. At least initially, it appears McAtee did shoot first, after police pepper-sprayed his barbecue stand & the nearby area.

New York. From the New York Times' live updates of protest events in New York City: "As a citywide curfew fell on New York on Wednesday for a third night, large numbers of protesters flouted the requirement that they clear the streets by 8 p.m. The police responded aggressively.... In Downtown Brooklyn, officers hemmed in demonstrators on Cadman Plaza, then charged at them with seemingly little provocation.... In Manhattan's East Midtown area, officers shoved protesters onto sidewalks and arrested those who would not disperse." An officer approached a black protester Andrew Smith, who was wearing a coronavirus mask & had his hands in the air; "the officer pulled down Mr. Smith's mask and sprayed him in the face with mace.... [Gov. Andrew] Cuomo bristled when asked about the police using batons to disperse peaceful protesters, despite reporting and widely seen videos that captured just that. 'That's not a fact,' he told reporters at a briefing.... [Mayor Bill] de Blasio was met with hostility on Thursday at a memorial for George Floyd in Brooklyn, the first time he had appeared in person before protesters who have been marching in New York City's streets for a week.... The mayor and the police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea, had defended officers' aggressive actions in breaking up the Wednesday night crowds." ~~~

~~~ Neil Vigdor & Daniel Victor of the New York Times: "Two Buffalo police officers were suspended without pay on Thursday night after a video showed them shoving a 75-year-old protester, who was hospitalized with a head injury, the authorities said. The video taken by WBFO, a local radio station, shows the man approaching a group of officers during a protest.... After he stops in front of them to talk, an officer yells, 'push him back' three times; one officer pushes his arm into the man's chest, while another extends his baton toward him with both hands. The man is seen flailing backward, landing just out of range of the camera, with blood immediately leaking from his right ear. The video shows an officer leaning down to examine him, but another officer then pulls the first officer away. Several other officers are seen walking by the man, motionless on the ground, without checking on him. Mayor Byron Brown said on Thursday night that the man was in serious condition. The video, which rapidly spread across social media, added to a growing body of videos from across the nation that showed officers responding to protests against police violence with more police violence." The Buffalo police department claimed the elderly man "tripped and fell." Includes video. A Hill story is here. ~~~

~~~ George Joseph of The Gothamist: "In hours of secretly recorded telephone conversations, police officers in Mount Vernon, New York, reveal widespread corruption, brutality and other misconduct in the troubled Westchester County city just north of the Bronx. Caught on tape by a whistleblower cop [Murashea Bovell], the officers said they witnessed or took part in alarming acts of police misconduct, from framing and beating residents to collaborating with drug dealers, all as part of a culture of impunity within the department's narcotics unit." --s (Also linked yesterday.)

Washington State. Mike Baker of the New York Times: "A black man who called out 'I can't breathe' before dying in police custody in Tacoma, Wash., was killed as a result of oxygen deprivation and the physical restraint that was used on him, according to details of a medical examiner's report released on Wednesday. The Pierce County Medical Examiner's Office concluded that the death of the man, Manuel Ellis, 33, was a homicide. Investigators with the Pierce County Sheriff's Department were in the process of preparing a report about the March death, which occurred shortly after an arrest by officers from the Tacoma Police Department, said the sheriff's spokesman, Ed Troyer." (Also linked yesterday.)

Washington, D.C. Zoe Tillman of BuzzFeed News: "The DC chapter of the Black Lives Matter movement filed a lawsuit on Thursday accusing federal law enforcement officers of violating the constitutional rights of peaceful demonstrators who were forcibly cleared from a park north of the White House so ... Donald Trump could walk through for a photo op earlier this week. The lawsuit accuses officers of attacking the demonstrators without warning and using excessive force -- including deploying incendiary devices such as flashbangs, tear gas, smoke canisters, pepper balls, and rubber bullets. 'This case is about the President and Attorney General of the United States ordering the use of violence against peaceful demonstrators who were speaking out against discriminatory police brutality targeted at Black people,' the complaint, filed in federal court in Washington, DC, begins." ~~~

~~~ Nick Boykin & Nathan Baca of WUSA Washington, D.C.: "As of Thursday evening, US Park Police, Arlington Police, DC Metro Police and the Secret Service have all denied using any kind of tear gas in Lafayette Square Monday evening. But federal law enforcement did launch tear gas Monday evening outside Lafayette Park, and WUSA9 crews witnessed it.... We witnessed canisters venting out green-colored gas.... We found canisters scattered on the street.... We showed our canisters to military bomb disposal expert Brian Castner, who works with Amnesty International: 'That['s] Spede-Heat one, it's a cartridge that has a little bit of propellant in the back,' Castner said. 'It's got a bunch of tear gas upfront and you fire it from a launcher so it goes a certain distance. I believe that one is rated to about 150 yards, so it goes fairly far and its job is to spread tear gas around a crowd.'... Our crew also witnessed nothing but peaceful protester behavior, even with our unique 15-foot-high camera position." ~~~

~~~ Ali Breland of Mother Jones: "On Wednesday, Trump-authorized federal police closed off a portion of 16th Street [in Washington, D.C.,] just north of [St. John's Episcopal Church]..., which kept clergy from being able to use their house of worship. Bishop Mariann Budde, who had assailed Trump's Monday visit as a 'symbolic misuse of the most sacred texts of our tradition,' planned to hold a vigil in front of the church to show solidarity with protesters. But a new security perimeter, extending almost a quarter of a mile out from the front of the White House, blocked her access and forced her into the street." Budde then engaged protesters, who felt St. John's was getting too much attention. ~~~

     ~~~ Challenging Times. Mrs. McCrabbie: These protesters seem as confused & silly as the "Occupy" protesters who told civil-rights icon John Lewis to take a hike. But I'm confused, too. I thought Trump & Barr were the great champions of freedom of religion, at least when it came to Christians. Are we now to understand that only pro-Trump evangelical Christians may freely exercise their faith? And if so, isn't that state-sponsored religion, which the First Amendment prohibits?

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Marc Tracy, et al., of the New York Times: "Executives at The New York Times scrambled on Thursday to address the concerns of employees and readers who were angered by the newspaper's publication of an opinion essay by a United States senator [-- Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) --] calling for the federal government to send the military to suppress protests against police violence in American cities. Near the end of the day, James Bennet, the editor in charge of the opinion section, said in a meeting with staff members that he had not read the essay before it was published. Shortly afterward, The Times issued a statement saying the essay fell short of the newspaper's standards.... 'One thing above all else will restore order to our streets: an overwhelming show of force to disperse, detain and ultimately deter lawbreakers,' the senator wrote. Hundreds of staff members signed a letter protesting its publication.... The letter ... argued that Mr. Cotton's essay contained misinformation, such as the claim that the antifa movement had 'infiltrated' the protests." ~~~

~~~ Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times: "In a racist inversion, [Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.)] equates his fantasy of soldiers putting down an uprising triggered by police brutality against black people with previous presidents using the military to enforce desegregation. His argument is frequently slippery and dishonest. The claim that police officers 'bore the brunt of the violence' is hard to square with countless videos of police instigation.... Cotton notes that President George H.W. Bush sent federal troops into Los Angeles in 1992 to quell the riots that broke out after the police who beat Rodney King were acquitted. But he doesn't tell readers that Bush did so at the invitation of California's governor.... Cotton..., on Twitter called for 'no quarter for insurrectionists, anarchists, rioters, and looters.' As David French, a conservative writer who is, like Cotton, a veteran of the war in Iraq, pointed out, 'no quarter' orders -- which mean showing the enemy no mercy, even if they try to surrender -- are a war crime."

The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Thursday are here. "The coronavirus pandemic is ebbing in some of the countries that were hit hard early on, but the number of new cases is growing faster than ever worldwide, with more than 100,000 reported each day. Twice as many countries have reported a rise in new cases over the past two weeks as have reported declines, according to a New York Times database. On May 30, more new cases were reported in a single day worldwide than ever before: 134,064. The increase has been driven by emerging hot spots in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Over all, there have been more than 6.3 million reported cases worldwide and more than 380,000 known deaths." (Also linked yesterday.)

Jeff Cox of CNBC: "Employment stunningly rose by 2.5 million in May and the jobless rate declined to 13.3% according to data Friday from the Labor Department that was far better than economists had been expecting and indicated that an economic turnaround could be close at hand. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been expecting payrolls to drop by 8.333 million and the unemployment rate to rise to 19.5% from April's 14.7%. The May gain was by far the biggest one-month jobs gain in U.S. history since at least 1939." According to a CNBC banner, Dow futures jumped 650 points on the better-than-expected jobs report.

Jeff Cox of CNBC: "Filings for unemployment insurance claims totaled 1.877 million last week in a sign that the worst is over for the coronavirus-related jobs crisis but that the level of unemployment remains stubbornly high. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for 1.775 million new claims. The Labor Department's total nevertheless represented a decline from the previous week's upwardly revised total of 2.126 million. Filings under the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program totaled 623,073. This was the first time the government's weekly jobless claims report came under 2 million since the week ended March 14." (Also linked yesterday.)

A Boost for Doctor Trump. Andrew Joseph of STAT News: "The Lancet, one of the world's top medical journals, on Thursday retracted an influential study that raised alarms about the safety of the experimental Covid-19 treatments chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine amid scrutiny of the data underlying the paper. Just over an hour later, the New England Journal of Medicine retracted a separate study, focused on blood pressure medications in Covid-19, that relied on data from the same company. The retractions came at the request of the authors of the studies, published last month, who were not directly involved with the data collection and sources, the journals said.... Meanwhile, on Wednesday, researchers reported the results of the first gold-standard clinical trial of hydroxycholoroquine in Covid-19, concluding that it did not prevent infections any better than placebo." Mrs. McC: The retraction does not mean that hydroxychloroquine is safe; it means we have no idea.

Rick Gladstone of the New York Times: "Iran has freed Michael R. White, a Navy veteran held in that country for nearly two years, and he was on his way home, his mother announced on Thursday in the United States.... The release of Mr. White, 48, a cancer patient who had been infected with the coronavirus while incarcerated in Iran, came a day after an Iranian scientist held in the United States was returned to Iran. American officials had insisted the two cases were not linked. But Iranian officials had suggested last month that once the scientist, Sirous Asgari, was back in Iran, they would look favorably at permitting Mr. White to go home." (Also linked yesterday.)


Ilya Zhegulev of Reuters: "An audit of thousands of old case files by Ukrainian prosecutors found no evidence of wrongdoing on the part of Hunter Biden, the former prosecutor general, who had launched the audit, told Reuters. Ruslan Ryaboshapka was in the spotlight last year as the man who would decide whether to launch an investigation into former vice president Joe Biden and his son Hunter, in what became a key issue in the impeachment of ... Donald Trump. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy described Ryaboshapka as '100 percent my person' on a call in July 2019 in which Trump asked Zelenskiy to investigate Biden, the man who became his main rival in the 2020 presidential race.... Ryaboshapka was fired in March after lawmakers accused him of not moving quickly enough in prosecuting cases. Ryaboshapka said he was axed because he had started bringing real reform to the prosecution service for the first time in a way that threatened the interests of corrupt politicians."

John Wagner of the Washington Post: "President Trump strongly hinted Thursday at a pardon of friend and longtime political adviser Roger Stone, who has been ordered to report to prison later this month. Trump said Stone was the 'victim of a corrupt and illegal Witch Hunt' and should 'sleep well at night.'Trump made the comments on Twitter in response to a tweet by conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who complained that Stone would be serving more time in prison than '99% of these rioters destroying America,' a reference to violent protests in the wake of the death in police custody of Minneapolis man George Floyd." A Politico story is here. (Also linked yesterday.)

Brett Samuels of The Hill: "The White House announced in a release that Trump would appoint Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie to serve among the commissioners who select the annual Presidential Scholars." --s ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Who knew something as oppresive as fascism could be funny? (Well, okay, Mel Brooks. Charlie Chaplin thought so, too, but he changed his mind.) Appointing Lewandowski & Bossie to choose scholars is appointing Dumb & Dumber or Beavis & Butthead to name the smartest, best-informed people in the nation. It is conventional standards turned completely upside-down.

Jordain Carney of The Hill: "Steven Linick, the ousted State Department inspector general, told lawmakers that he was investigating Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for allegations of misusing government resources and that he had discussed the probe with other State Department officials.... In addition to a potential misuse of funds by Pompeo and his wife, Linick was also investigating a Saudi arms sale. Linick, according to Democrats, told lawmakers that [Under Secretary of State for Management Brian] Bulatao and Marik String, the acting State Department legal advisor, said that the watchdog's office should not pursue the investigation.... 'Mr. Linick also testified that Under Secretary Bulatao -- a longtime friend of Secretary Pompeo -- attempted to "bully" the Inspector General on several occasions.'" --s

Elections 2020

Sean Sullivan of the Washington Post: "... Joe Biden said Thursday that about '10 to 15 percent' of people are 'just not very good people,' but they account for a small minority in a country that is overwhelmingly virtuous.... His comments came in a virtual town hall with young Americans that was hosted by his campaign and joined by the actor Don Cheadle. The former vice president fielded questions from several young African Americans. The discussion addressed issues of race and police violence." A Hill story is here.

Tennessee. AP: "Tennessee must give all of its 4.1 million registered voters the option to cast ballots by mail during the coronavirus pandemic, a judge ruled Thursday. Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle ruled that the state's limits on absentee voting during the pandemic constitute 'an unreasonable burden on the fundamental right to vote guaranteed by the Tennessee Constitution.' The decision upends a determination by Republican Secretary of State Tre Hargett's office that fear of catching or unwittingly spreading the virus at the polls wouldn't qualify someone to vote by mail." Mrs. McC: Chancellor Lyle's ruling seems like the most sensible & fundamental reasoning for requiring mail-in ballots: the right to vote.

BUT Texas. Marina Pitofsky of the Hill: "A federal appeals court ruled Thursday that Texans cannot request mail-in ballots out of fear of contracting the coronavirus in the upcoming 2020 elections. The ruling by the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals blocks an injunction from a federal judge last month that would have allowed Texas voters to request mail-in ballots based over fears of becoming infected with COVID-19 if they cast their ballot in person. Judge Jerry Smith on Thursday wrote for a unanimous panel of three judges 'The spread of the virus has not given 'unelected federal judges' a roving commission to rewrite state election codes.'"

Beyond the Beltway

Georgia. Minyvonne Burke of NBC News: "The white Georgia man accused of killing an unarmed black man, Ahmaud Arbery, used a racial slur after the fatal shooting, according to another suspect's account to an investigator. The allegation was revealed as the prosecution presented its case at a preliminary hearing on Thursday morning for defendants Gregory McMichael, 64, his son Travis McMichael, 34, and their neighbor >William 'Roddie' Bryan, 50.... Special agent Richard Dial with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said during the hearing that Bryan said during a May 13 interview that he heard Travis McMichael say, 'f---ing n-word' after Arbery had been shot. The defense noted that Bryan had been interviewed before May 13 and had not mentioned that Travis McMichael used a racial slur." ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Cleve Wootson, et al., of the Washington Post: "A judge in Glynn County, Ga., ruled Thursday that three white men accused of killing a black jogger in Georgia in February will stand trial for murder, after a day-long hearing that revealed the shooter allegedly uttered the words 'f---ing n-----' as the victim lay dying in the road."

Way Beyond

Update. Australia. Calla Wahlquist of the Guardian: "The head of Rio Tinto's iron ore division [Chris Salisbury] said he has 'taken accountability' for the destruction of a 46,000-year-old Aboriginal heritage site but refused to give a direct answer when asked if the company knew traditional owners did not want the rock shelter destroyed, saying: 'clearly, there was a misunderstanding'.... Traditional owners ... said the loss was 'soul destroying'.... 'We can't keep looking backwards,' Salisbury told interviewer Hamish Macdonald. 'We want to repair our relationship with traditional owners.'... Th[e] review, which is being conducted with oversight from the Rio Tinto board, will not be released publicly." -s

Hong Kong/China. Javier Hernández, et al., of the New York Times: "Chanting slogans like 'Liberate Hong Kong,' thousands of people in Hong Kong flouted a police ban on Thursday as they gathered to memorialize the Tiananmen Square massacre, a striking display of defiance against Beijing's tightening grip on the territory.... On Thursday, in a move opposition politicians said would inhibit free speech, Hong Kong's legislature, which is dominated by pro-Beijing lawmakers, passed a law that would criminalize disrespect for China's national anthem and make it punishable by up to three years in prison."

U.K. Capitalism is Awesome, Ctd. Emma Howard, et al. of the Guardian: "British-based banks and finance houses have provided more than $2bn (£1.5bn) in financial backing in recent years to Brazilian beef companies which have been linked to Amazon deforestation. according to new research. Thousands of hectares of Amazon are being felled every year to graze cattle and provide meat for world markets. As well as providing financial backing for Minerva, Brazil's second largest beef exporter, and Marfrig, its second largest meat processing company, UK-based financial institutions held tens of millions of dollars worth of shares in JBS, the world's largest meat company." --s