Sep 16, 2024

Hits Keep A-Rollin'


Out of 44 staffers and cabinet members who worked for Trump, 41 have either come out in support of Harris, or have directly refused to endorse Trump.

93% of the people who used to work with you are telling the company not to rehire you.

Basically:
When the whole world is calling you an asshole, one thing you should stop to consider is that maybe you're an asshole.


Ronald Reagan's former staff back Harris-Walz ticket: "Today is a choice between integrity and demagoguery."

Seventeen former staff members of the late Republican President Ronald Reagan are endorsing the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris.

In a joint statement first obtained by CBS News, the staff members wrote that Reagan, if alive, would have supported Harris.

"President Ronald Reagan famously spoke about a 'Time for Choosing.' While he is not here to experience the current moment, we who worked for him in the White House, in the administration, in campaigns and on his personal staff, know he would join us in supporting the Harris-Walz ticket," the group writes. "The time for choosing we face today is a choice between integrity and demagoguery, and the choice must be Harris-Walz," the group added. "Our votes in this election are less about supporting the Democratic Party and more about our resounding support for democracy."

Over 230 former officials for Republican presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush have also backed Harris, in addition to campaign staffers for Republican presidential nominees John McCain and Mitt Romney. Biden received a similar amount of GOP support in his 2020 run against Trump.

Former Reagan staff backing Harris includes Ken Adelman, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and U.S. arms control director under Reagan, as well as B. Jay Cooper, the special assistant and deputy press secretary to Reagan. Adelman had endorsed former President Barack Obama's 2008 campaign, as well as President Biden's 2020 run. He backed Republican Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign, but was against Trump's 2016 run.

The list also includes Pete Souza, the chief White House photographer for both Reagan and Obama.


The group says they are looking to convince other former Reagan staffers to back the Harris-Walz ticket, calling it "the only path forward toward an America that is strong and viable for our children and grandchildren for years to come."

CBS News has reached out to the Trump campaign for reaction. Trump has gotten support from only a couple of Democratic officials who have since distanced themselves from the party, such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. who ran for president as an independent before ending his bid and endorsing Trump last month, and former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, who left the Democratic party in 2022.

In April 2021, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, launched a speaker series that featured several Republican presidential candidates who later ran against Trump in the 2024 Republican primary. The library did not invite Trump to speak and told Politico it was because he is a former president and they wanted speakers who haven't held that level of office.

Their backing of Harris follows a swath of endorsements from Republican officials, including several staffers during Trump's first term, as well as former Vice President Dick Cheney and his daughter, former Congresswoman Liz Cheney.

"We're not the only ones that are taking a stand here. You've heard it, many people who have worked for Donald Trump have said that they do not support Donald Trump coming back to the presidency. And I think that speaks volumes, because we know him," said Olivia Troye, a former adviser to Vice President Mike Pence, prior to Tuesday's debate between Harris and Trump in Philadelphia.

Troye, former Trump White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham, former Republican Congressman Adam Kinzinger and former Georgia Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan all had speaking slots at the Democratic National Convention in August.


The new endorsements arrive as the Harris campaign works to siphon support away from Trump in what remains a margin-of-error race in the battleground states, according to CBS News polling. Outside groups and the campaign have made a concerted effort to target battleground state voters who voted for former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley in the Republican primaries earlier this year.

CBS News polling of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin this month indicates that only a small number of undecided voters remains. Harris and Trump have near total support with their party's voters, though Harris has a slight edge over Trump with the sliver of moderate voters in these states who say there's still time left to make a final decision.

"The choice between truth and lies demands support for Harris-Walz. The choice between freedom and suppression of freedoms means support for Harris-Walz. The choice between serving the people and serving the few leads us to support Harris-Walz," the Reagan White House staffers wrote in the letter.

Statement from Reagan Alumni

President Ronald Reagan famously spoke about a “Time for Choosing”. While he is not here to experience the current moment, we who worked for him in the White House, in the Administration, in campaigns and on his personal staff, know he would join us in supporting the Harris-Walz ticket.

The time for choosing we face today is a choice between integrity and demagoguery, and the choice must be Harris-Walz.

The choice between truth and lies demands support for Harris-Walz.

The choice between freedom and suppression of freedoms means support for Harris-Walz.

The choice between serving the people and serving the few leads us to support Harris-Walz.

We join our friends and colleagues from the George W. Bush White House, his Administration, and his campaigns, and those from the McCain and Romney campaigns in supporting Vice President Harris and Governor Walz.

Our votes in this election are less about supporting the Democratic Party and more about our resounding support for democracy. It’s our hope that this letter will signal to other Republicans and former Republicans that supporting the Democratic ticket this year is the only path forward toward an America that is strong and viable for our children and grandchildren for years to come.
  • Ken Adelman - US Ambassador to the UN & US Arms Control Director, Ronald Reagan Administration
  • Carol Adelman - USAID Assistant Administrator
  • Elizabeth Board - Deputy Assistant to the President for Communications, Director Media Relations Office, RonaldReagan
  • John E. Bowman - Assistant General Counsel for Banking and Finance, Department of the Treasury (Reagan and George H.W. Bush)
  • Gahl Burt - White House Social Secretary, Ronald Reagan White House
  •  B. Jay Cooper - Deputy Assistant to the President, Ronald Reagan; Deputy White House Press Secretary, George H.W. Bush
  • Paul O’Neill - Advance Office, Ronald Reagan White House
  • Ashley Parker Snider - Trip Coordinator White House Advance, Ronald Reagan; Office of Public Affairs Department of Housing and Urban Development, George H.W. Bush Administration
  • Elizabeth Penniman - Research Assistant, Presidential Speech Writing, Ronald Reagan White House; Policy Analyst, National Security Council, Ronald Reagan Administration; Deputy Director, Presidential Transition, Ronald Reagan; Director of Communications, US Surgeon General, George H.W. Bush Administration; Speechwriter, McCain for President 2008 Wing Pepper Press Advance, Ronald Reagan White House
  • Charles Sethness - Assistant Treasury Secretary for Domestic Finance
  • Kathleen Shanahan - Staff Assistant, National Security Council, Ronald Reagan Administration; Special Assistant toVice President Bush, Ronald Reagan White House; Chief of Staff to Vice President Cheney, George W. Bush Administration
  • Nancy Sinnott Dwight - Campaign Director, NRCC (1979-1981); Executive Director, NRCC (1981-1983); RNC Delegate for George W. Bush and Mitt Romney
  • Pete Souza - Official White House Photographer, Ronald Reagan White House
  • W. Grey Terry - Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Director, Advance Office, Ronald Reagan WhiteHouseRobert Thompson

Sep 15, 2024

The Trump Way

"Improve your morale or the beatings will continue."

Go to California, and shit-talk the whole place - and then:
  • Tell the auto workers you're going to ship their jobs to Michigan
  • Threaten FEMA money for wildfires if the governor doesn't kiss Trump's ass
  • etc
This is typical of how "conservatives" have been trying to do things for a very long time.
  • Kick people until they fall down
  • Once people are down, tell them it's their own fault, and kick them some more
  • If they're still down after a generation or two, kick them harder

Forward


When this authoritarian fever passes - and it will - and assholes like Trump fade away - and he will - I hope always to remember how bad it's made me feel, thinking of the hatred, and the bigotry, and the plain old shitty attitude this whole thing exposed in so many of the people I had loved and admired before all of this blew up.

Today's Belle

Sick to fucking death of GOP fuckery.


Today's Quote


No one is more arrogant toward women - more aggressive or scornful - than the man who is anxious about his virility.
--Simone de Beauvoir

A Song

Project 2025 meets Schoolhouse Rock


Project 2025

A list of shitty things Trump plans to do if elected in 2024.


Sep 14, 2024

50+ Years Ago




The suit against Trump University was settled for about $25,000,000.

Trump has a criminal pedigree that's pretty amazing, and don't forget:

In 1973, Trump and his daddy owned about 35,000 residential rental units.

Three-Five-Comma--Zero-Zero-Zero

8 of those 35,000 units were rented to black families.

Not eight thousand. Not eight hundred. Eight. As in 8.

0.023%

This case was settled a few years later for an unknown amount.


Case: United States v. Fred C. Trump, Donald Trump, and Trump Management, Inc.

1:73-01529 | U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York

Filed Date: Oct. 15, 1973
Closed Date: June 10, 1977

Case Summary

This case was brought against Fred and Donald Trump, and their real estate company, in 1973 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York.

In October 1973, the Justice Department filed this civil rights case in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (federal court in Brooklyn) against Fred Trump, Donald Trump, and their real estate company. The complaint alleged that the firm had committed systemic violations of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 in their many complexes--39 buildings, between them containing over 14,000 apartments. The allegations included evidence from black and white "testers" who had sought to rent apartments; the white testers were told of vacancies; the black testers were not, or were steered to apartment complexes with a higher proportion of racial minorities. The complaint also alleged that Trump employees had placed codes next to housing applicant names to indicate if they were black.

The Trumps retained Roy Cohn, former aide to Senator Joseph McCarthy, to defend them; they counter-claimed against the government, seeking $100 million in damages for defamation.

The case was assigned to District Judge Edward R. Neaher. He dismissed the counterclaim and allowed the Fair Housing Act suit to proceed.

After two years, the matter settled with a consent decree, signed June 10, 1975. It included the ordinary disclaimer of liability (the settlement was “in no way an admission” of a violation), but prohibited the Trumps from "discriminating against any person in the terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental of a dwelling." In addition to a general injunction against discrimination, the decree prohibits specific discriminatory practices, such as lying about the availability of apartments or interfering with individuals' enjoyment of their housing rights through threats or coercion. Fred and Donald Trump were ordered to "thoroughly acquaint themselves personally on a detailed basis" with the Fair Housing Act. The agreement also required the Trumps to place ads informing minorities they had an equal opportunity to seek housing at their properties. According to a contemporary article in the New York Times, Trump Management was required to furnish the New York Urban League with a weekly list of all apartment vacancies, for two years; the League would get three days to provide qualified applicants for every fifth vacancy in Trump buildings where fewer than 10 percent of the tenants were black.

The Justice Department called the decree “one of the most far-reaching ever negotiated.” Newspaper headlines echoed that assessment. The New York Amsterdam News, for example, titled its article “Minorities win housing suit,” and told readers that “qualified Blacks and Puerto Ricans now have the opportunity to rent apartments owned by Trump Management.”

In his autobiography, Donald Trump took a different view: “In the end the government couldn’t prove its case, and we ended up making a minor settlement without admitting any guilt.”

For more information, see Michael Kranish and Robert O'Harrow Jr. Inside the government’s racial bias case against Donald Trump’s company, and how he fought it (Washington Post, Jan. 23, 2016).

In 2017, the FBI released records of its investigation into the Trumps and their real estate company in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. The documents included many pages of interviews with the company's then-current and former employees, interviews with residents of Trump properties, and people who had applied to Trump properties. The majority of interviewees were not aware of any discrimination occurring, but several contributed to the conclusion that the company was discriminating on the basis of race.

One interviewee, a black prospective tenant, noted that, in person, a leasing manager showed her several available apartments but later called her to tell her that she could not have an apartment in that complex "as they discriminated against blacks." He then asked her not to make any trouble as he needed the job.

Another interviewee, an employee of the company for two weeks, indicated that in his time at the company he fielded an inquiry from a black applicant who he judged to be an acceptable tenant but was told by another individual at the company that "they're blacks and that's that." He also indicated that he believed others working at the rental office used a code on the top of the front page of rental applications to "distinguish blacks from whites."

Also in the documents were records from the New York State Division of Human Rights and the NYC Human Rights Commission complaints and hearings about discrimination at Trump properties. The complaints were mooted when the company offered the complaining parties apartments in their properties. A 1968 hearing of the NYC Human Rights Commission, however, found that discrimination had occurred at a Trump property. The commission ordered the company to cease and desist from their discriminatory practices, pay damages to the complainant, and inform a fair housing organization whenever apartments at the property became available.

Today's IG


Overheard


When the guy offering you salvation
threatens you with unbearable suffering
if you decline his offer - that's not salvation.
That's extortion.