Nov 16, 2023

George

George Santos announces he won't run for re-election in '24, following a unanimous vote of the House Ethics Committee, slamming him for conduct unbecoming.


Considering some of the weird shit we've seen coming from the GOP side in the House, Santos must be just short of Beelzebub his own bad self.

What chaps my ass is that the Press Poodles seem to be giving the political considerations top billing, while putting the ethical &/or legal aspects in the second chorus.


So Let's Talk, Dammit

Every few days, there's a mass shooting here in USAmerica Inc, and every time there's a big one (ie: more than 6 or 7 dead) we get the same bullshit arguments.
  • It's the guns
  • It's not the guns, it's the mental health
  • It's guns in the hands of people who aren't mentally healthy
  • Think of the families - they need our thoughts and prayers
  • Fuck your thoughts and prayers - we need sensible laws
  • It's too soon - don't politicize it
  • and on and on and on
But then the next one comes along, and we forget about the last one and start the Never-Ending Cycle Of Bullshit all over again.


Every day, 327 people are shot in the United States. Among those:
  • 117 people are shot and killed
  • 210 survive gunshot injuries
  • 90 are intentionally shot by someone else and survive
  • 46 are murdered
  • 67 die from gun suicide
  • 10 survive an attempted gun suicide
  • 1 is killed unintentionally
  • 90 are shot unintentionally and survive
  • 2 are killed by legal intervention*
  • 4 are shot by legal intervention and survive
  • 1 died but the intent was unknown
  • 12 are shot and survive but the intent was unknown
327 x 365 = 119,355 gunshot casualties per year.
Every
Fucking
   Year

I think I get the need to be sympathetic to people who don't want pictures of their dead babies splashed all over the media.

And I think it's important to consider the numbing effect that repeated exposure to horrifically graphic images can have on us. But I can't stop thinking that we have to have some Emmett Till moments (mentioned in the WaPo piece below).

Changing the law is an OK start, but the one thing the ammosexuals are right about is that we have to make changes in a culture that propagates gun violence. We're in the middle of this mess because too many people don't think new laws are necessary, and so new laws will be discounted, or ignored altogether.

The relatives of the slaughtered need to start insisting that the world actually bear witness to what happens as a result of venal politicians and their stupidly gullible voters refusing to do one goddamned thing to stop the madness.

Cuz this is 9 kinds of fucked up right here.



As mass shootings multiplied, the horrific human cost was concealed

States reeling from gun violence made graphic imagery confidential — part of a charged debate over privacy and public awareness


After a burst of gun violence claimed 13 lives at Columbine High School in 1999, a difficult question confronted a Colorado judge: whether to order the release of autopsies sought by local media under the state’s public records law.

The judge, Jose D.L. Márquez, decided to keep the graphic reports hidden, ruling that the rampage was an “extraordinary event” that lawmakers could not have anticipated when they wrote the law. As evidence, he cited the “unique factor” of the community’s trauma, illustrated by an outpouring of grief and a presidential visit.

A quarter-century after Columbine, then the deadliest mass shooting ever visited on a high school, the reactions highlighted by the judge — including public memorials and visits from politicians — are no longer signs of an extraordinary event. They’re routine grief rites.

But as gun violence has grown more common, state lawmakers have increasingly restricted access to government records documenting its destructive impact, such as photos and videos showing mutilated bodies and audio recordings capturing children’s cries.

Some states have crafted new exemptions to public records laws specifically shielding depictions of victims. In Connecticut and Florida, bipartisan majorities curtailed access to government records after school shootings in Newtown in 2012 and Parkland in 2018, respectively. Other states, including Colorado, have wielded existing exemptions, for privacy or law enforcement activity, to withhold similar records.

Lawmakers behind the restrictions point to myriad reasons for cloaking crime scene evidence, above all sensitivity to survivors and the families of victims. There’s also concern about interfering with law enforcement investigations or court proceedings and inspiring copycat killers. In the balancing act between privacy and public access, the rise of social media has weighed heavily against access, say people involved in the debates, because of the permanence of digital platforms and their possible manipulation by bad actors.

Even when gruesome images may be available, news organizations have often declined to seek or publish them out of deference to families and fear of public backlash. That approach differs from the media’s handling of casualties overseas — a contrast on display in recent weeks, as explicit footage of violence in Israel and Gaza has appeared in news broadcasts and other media.

In the United States, some family members of victims of mass shootings have become outspoken opponents of publishing images that include bodies.

“I wish her pictures alive moved people as much as people think her picture dead would.”

Nelba Márquez-Greene, whose 6-year-old daughter, Ana Grace, was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, said asking families to disclose pictures of slain children puts an unfair burden on people who are already carrying the enormous weight of grief — particularly, she added, when she sees little evidence that such pictures change people’s minds.

“Why is that my job? We don’t ask rape victims to do this,” said Márquez-Greene, who recently took on a new position as activist in residence at the Yale School of Public Health focused on designing programs to help survivors of gun violence. “I wish her pictures alive moved people as much as people think her picture dead would.”

But the recurring nightmare of mass shootings has prompted others to advocate for releasing and publicizing photographs and autopsy information. They argue that withholding such material has deprived the public of an accurate understanding of the destructive force of weapons including the AR-15, a firearm originally designed for combat that’s now the weapon of choice for many mass killers. Concealing records that depict victims also makes off-limits a whole range of other visuals, including scenes of chaos and unrest left by the gunfire.

Patricia Oliver, whose 17-year-old son, Joaquin Oliver, was killed outside his creative writing class at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, said mere descriptions of that terror have failed to mobilize enough people or focus the public debate on the astonishing power of the gun used to kill her son. She said more graphic material could help.

“Sometimes human beings don’t understand with words,” she said. “If what’s necessary is to show people pieces of Joaquin’s skull everywhere, I’m willing to do that.”

The dilemmas of depicting mass shootings

For media outlets making sense of the spate of mass shootings since Columbine, impassioned appeals for privacy by some families have carried weight.

When the Denver Post mobilized to cover the 2012 massacre at a midnight showing of the superhero movie “The Dark Knight Rises,” the newspaper elected not to seek wide-ranging public records from the crime scene in suburban Aurora. Gregory Moore, the editor at the time of the Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage, said his staff’s approach was informed by past tragedies: “We were probably overly sensitized to victims and their grief here having gone through Columbine.”

“It’s part of our DNA not to traumatize victims and families in this community,” he said.

But the “landscape has changed” in the decade since Aurora, Moore said, and he now believes news organization must do more to “help people understand how out of control this situation is and what the devastation is from having these weapons of war on the streets.”

As part of The Washington Post’s reporting on the AR-15’s role in American life, Post journalists sought crime scene photographs, autopsy reports and court records in an effort to understand how the weapon transforms ordinary scenes — such as classrooms, concerts, shopping centers — and how it maims the human body.

In some cases, authorities released imagery from crime scenes, such as photos of guns, gloves and a gas mask; in others, they denied requests for such records. Government agencies that refused to provide documents most often cited exemptions to public records laws that allow them to withhold information related to law enforcement investigations. Agencies also invoked exemptions covering personal privacy.

After Texas authorities refused records requests related to the 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Post journalists independently obtained a trove of evidence compiled by state and federal police, including extremely graphic photos and videos taken moments after police entered the classrooms where 19 students and two teachers had been killed.

Brett Cross and Nikki Cross, guardians of Uvalde shooting victim Uziyah “Uzi” Garcia, embrace this past July outside the Texas Capitol as they view footage of children lost to gun violence as part of the Parkland High School Bus Tour. (Austin American-Statesman/AP)
The families of some Uvalde victims have pushed for disclosure of such evidence. Brett Cross, the legal guardian of murdered 10-year-old Uziyah “Uzi” Garcia, said the reason is that families like his were left in the dark by law enforcement, whose response to the shooting quickly came under criticism.

Cross said crime scene footage is urgent evidence that belongs to the public. Still, he said, parents are entitled to their qualms. “The world needs to see the terrible things these weapons do, but at the end of the day, these are still our babies,” he said.

Two groups that regularly see gunshot victims up close, law enforcement officers and health-care professionals, aren’t in lockstep about public disclosure. Law enforcement is often against it. But the medical community is of a mixed mind, said Joseph Sakran, a trauma surgeon at Johns Hopkins who serves as board chair and chief medical officer for the nonprofit group Brady, which advocates for gun control.

Some who tend to the bodies of shooting victims see the potential for what Sakran called “an Emmett Till moment,” referring to the way in which the public funeral for the 14-year-old Black boy lynched in 1955 — and his mother’s insistence on an open casket — created moral outrage that helped propel the civil rights movement.


“My personal belief is that images could be profound and could make a difference in swaying public understanding of the crisis we’re facing and perhaps even lead to demonstrable change,” Sakran said. But no doctor, he added, would force that on a family.

Paul Slovic, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon who has studied the effects of visual imagery on human behavior, said graphic images can change attitudes, but only in particular circumstances. He drew a parallel to the 2015 photo of a Syrian child lying facedown on a Turkish beach, which brought attention to the war in Syria and caused a surge in humanitarian donations.

“An image, if it catches attention, creates a window of opportunity where people are alert to a problem,” Slovic said. “But if images are repeated over and over again, we become numb to them.”

After shootings, lawmakers restrict access to public records

In communities that have experienced some of the nation’s most traumatic mass shootings, governments have responded by adopting new restrictions on access to public records.

Six months after a gunman killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown in 2012, the legislature amended the Connecticut Freedom of Information Act to exempt from disclosure photos and videos “depicting the victim of a homicide” if the records “could reasonably be expected” to infringe on personal privacy.

Momentum for the legislation built after publication of a blog post by Michael Moore, the filmmaker who created the 2002 documentary “Bowling for Columbine,” predicting that someone in Newtown would leak crime scene photos to awaken public outrage. Moore wrote that “when the American people see what bullets from an assault rifle fired at close range do to a little child’s body … every sane American will demand action.”

The prediction set off alarm among families of victims — and an aggressive response by lawmakers “who were shocked and appalled by this suggestion that sensitive images would be disseminated,” said Colleen M. Murphy, executive director of the Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission, a state agency that enforces public records rules.

Murphy, who opposed the changes, was among those tapped for a task force set up by the 2013 legislation to make recommendations about the balance between “victim privacy” and “the public’s right to know.”

At the task force’s request, the General Assembly conducted a 50-state survey of public records laws and found that eight other states had rules specifically restricting the release of crime scene photos: California, Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and Texas. A law in Texas, written by a Democrat and passed around the same time as the Connecticut measure, restricted photos of victims “in a state of dismemberment, decapitation, or similar mutilation or that depicts the deceased person’s genitalia.”

The review also found that 26 states specifically limited the release of autopsy reports and 16 limited the release of 911 tapes.

A Post analysis of state records laws found that all 50 states and D.C. allow police departments to withhold materials they consider part of ongoing investigations. Many also have broad carve-outs for personal privacy.

A year after the Newtown shooting, reports released by the Connecticut State Police included about 1,500 photos taken by a crime scene investigator. Most were redacted in accordance with the new law, obscured by large black rectangles. Those that weren’t redacted showed firearms, door handles and caution tape. None showed humans.

Connecticut State Police completely redacted this Sandy Hook Elementary School crime scene photograph before it was released publicly and also redacted a caption that describes its contents. The portion of the caption that is not redacted shows it is a photograph of a bathroom where bodies of children were found huddled together.
The full images have never been publicly released, even as conspiracy theorists seized on the shooting with claims that the murders had been faked, turning Newtown into a grim landmark in America’s break with reality.

Some argue that photographic evidence of victims would undercut such claims, while others say that gruesome images would only encourage extremists.

Jeff Covello, the Connecticut State Police sergeant who supervised the Newtown crime scene, brought then-Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to the scene and showed him the unredacted images. He said he believes only some people should see such visuals.

“Who exactly is on that list is not for me to decide,” he said. “Families should have some say — exactly how much I don’t know.”

Deciding what to conceal in the ‘Sunshine State’

Ever since Fred Guttenberg’s 14-year-old daughter, Jaime, was killed in the Parkland shooting in 2018, he has been a gun-control advocate — stumping for political candidates, yelling out in protest during the 2020 State of the Union and petitioning the government to investigate a firearms manufacturer.

He used to think depictions of the damage from powerful rifles could change minds. When he met with Sen. Ted Cruz in the fall of 2019, Guttenberg said, he showed the Texas Republican photos of his daughter’s lifeless body. “It didn’t change a thing,” he said.

Cruz, after the meeting, said it was “productive and respectful.” The senator’s spokesman didn’t respond to a question about Guttenberg’s account.

Now, Guttenberg opposes disseminating such images. “There’s this notion that what we need to do is convince Americans what this looks like, but Americans are already convinced,” he said, citing surveys that show huge majorities favor new gun laws. “In my mind we don’t need to flood television screens and newspapers with images of bodies like my daughter’s.”

The same year as Guttenberg’s meeting with Cruz, the Florida legislature amended the state’s Sunshine Law to shield photographs, videos and audio of the “killing of a victim of mass violence” from public release.

Community members in Parkland, Fla., gather in February 2018 for a candlelight vigil in honor of the victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, one of multiple rampages that inspired lawmakers to tighten public records rules to prevent release of images and other evidence depicting victims. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post)
Barbara Petersen, the former longtime president of the state’s First Amendment Foundation, fought the bill, arguing that the exemption makes citizens and media trying to understand mass violence “dependent on what law enforcement tells us.”

“We need to see it for ourselves, as awful as it may be,” she said.

Lauren Book, a Democratic state senator in Florida, was among the members of a public safety commission who saw extensive footage of Parkland’s carnage to prepare a 2019 report on the shooting. In 2019, she voted to make confidential the very sort of crime scene evidence that she had viewed.

“It’s horrific to see a child in a classroom look like a piece of hamburger meat,” she said. “I don’t think anyone needs to see that.”

Few have. Most Americans haven’t seen the mangled human remains left by dozens of mass shootings since Parkland. So while images of her son, Joaquin, are awful, said Patricia Oliver, they reflect a reality that the country must face.

“When will people understand the damage these guns cause?” Oliver asked.

GUNS DON'T KILL PEOPLE
GUN NUTS KILL PEOPLE
WITH GUNS
BECAUSE THEY'RE FUNKIN' NUTS

Nov 15, 2023

27


I have no idea how it would work - how we'd go about putting it in motion - but it's worth considering.

Nov 14, 2023

Fight!

"He's a bully with 17 million dollars and a security detail."

"He's the type of guy that, when you were a kid, he'd throw a rock over the fence and run home and hide behind his mama's skirt." 


Stay with it to hear how the NPR lady reported it.


And then some jagoff MAGA dick in the Senate decided he wanted to go a few rounds with a witness in committee.

These idiots are not worth the bucket of piss it'd take to drown 'em.

It's Real

... and it's happening.


It's been fairly well disguised, but it's becoming very clear now.



On Climate And Stuff



How fast do you have to buy EVs and heat pumps to avoid the worst effects of climate change?

Judging by the surging sales of green technology, U.S. households appear to be on the verge of a low-carbon future. Millions of Americans are buying electric vehicles, heat pumps and induction ranges.

But those numbers belie a starkly different present. Just about 3 percent of Americans, for example, reported owning an induction stove in 2022.

That’s close to the share of the U.S. population that owned a cellphone in the late 1980s, a few years after the first models came out. It took more than two decades for wireless technology to eclipse home landlines.

Time is tighter for the climate. To meet net-zero emissions targets, and avoid the worst effects of warming, most households will need to embrace a new suite of low-carbon technologies by 2050, says the electrification nonprofit Rewiring America.

To make it happen, they’re betting on the “S-curve.”

Virtually every major technology over the past two centuries has followed the same swooping S from virtual obscurity to near-ubiquitous adoption. Economists can now predict this basic shape with surprising accuracy, though the exact nature of the curve or slope change varies by product.


Some technologies that spread across the U.S. in the early 20th century took several decades to become ubiquitous.

But more recent innovations were adopted more quickly.

Experts say green technologies such as electric cars and rooftop solar panels could follow a similar pattern of rapid adoption even if they require you to spend tens of thousands of dollars upfront.

Not all new technologies make it big: Segway, Palm personal device, 3D television. But those that start ascending this curve tend to transform societies.

How fast Americans reach that point with green technologies is up to early adopters, about 15 to 20 percent of the population. They set the stage for this exponential growth by trying products before others do.

Take the thousands of die-hards who leased the first modern electric car, the EV1, released by General Motors in 1996. It had a 74-mile range at a time when drivers had virtually nowhere to charge except their garage.

“They are a special group of people that are willing to go through the pain of an early product,” says Carolina Milanesi, president of the technology research firm Creative Strategies, “and they take pride in that.”

Then mainstream customers, roughly 60 percent of the public, only embrace the technology once it matures into familiar, established products, well after its arrival, fueling years of sustained and exponential growth.

The final stage is dominated by “laggards,” those least willing to adopt the new technology, such as flip-phone owners in the age of smartphones.

How fast will you adopt the clean technologies needed to decarbonize America’s homes and driveways?


Rewiring America modeled the S-curve that products must follow to meet the Biden administration’s zero-emissions targets by 2050.

Americans are on track to meet those goals, but reaching higher levels of adoption will require overcoming barriers such as high costs and a limited number of available models.

“We have every reason to believe electrification technologies are following the same S-shaped curve that other technologies have followed in the past,” says Cora Wyent, Rewiring America’s director of research. “We haven’t missed the boat on any of them.”

The steepness of the slope depends on how many households have already adopted the technologies, and what percentage could reasonably adopt it by mid-century. The calculations assume Americans replace these technologies roughly every 15 years.

Here’s a look at where we are and where we need to be over the next couple of decades, and the role for early adopters.

Heat pump HVAC
(space heating and cooling)

Heat pumps are no longer reliant on early adopters despite being early in the cycle, suggesting Americans are well on track to meet net-zero goals by 2050. As far as clean technologies go, it’s the one most popular among Americans so far.

U.S. households installed 4 million new heat pumps last year, about half of new sales of residential heating systems, eclipsing gas furnaces for the first time.

Since several regions of the country have been installing them for years, 16 percent of U.S. homes already use electric heat pumps for space heating.

Heat pumps, in many parts of the country, are already cheaper to install and operate than fossil-fuel-powered furnaces, saving up to about $1,000 annually over conventional furnaces, while slashing emissions by several tons per year. Layer on generous new incentives from state, local and federal programs, and many units can pay for themselves over their lifetimes.

“Heat pumps make economic sense for many U.S. consumers,” says Erich Muehlegger, a professor of economics at the University of California at Davis. “The main driver is not people who want to be the first one on the block to own a heat pump, but someone who needs to replace something and sees heat pumps as a nice opportunity.”

The biggest barrier may be awareness: In a 2020 survey, the home electrification and insulation company Sealed found half of the respondents had no idea what heat pumps were.

Electric Vehicles

Electric cars are racing up the adoption curve. The United States has already surpassed the possible “tipping point” of around 5 to 10 percent of new sales, when researchers say growth accelerates.

Though most EV owners are still early adopters, early mainstream buyers are likely to switch to EVs in the coming years as the technology gets cheaper and more convenient.

In the first half of 2023, EVs accounted for 8 percent of all passenger vehicles sold in the United States, according to BloombergNEF, a clean-energy research group.

Still, the vast majority of the more than 280 million cars on U.S. roads run on fossil fuels, and just 4 percent are electric.

A skeptical public and spotty changes in infrastructure are acting as a drag. A Washington Post-University of Maryland poll found nearly half of adults say they still prefer owning a gas-powered car or truck. Only a third or so say EVs are better for day-to-day driving.

“As the EV market pushes into higher and higher levels of adoption, it bumps into groups that are going to have to make meaningful sacrifices,” says Muehlegger. “The technological adoption of EVs is not going to occur smoothly since it’s occurring at the same time all these other pieces of the transportation network are falling into place.”

A more likely scenario may be that regional, urban markets take off early, while areas with fewer charging stations and incentives lag.

Home solar panels

Five percent of U.S. homes have solar panels on their roofs, most of them in California.

Not all roofs are suitable for solar panels, and other options such as utility and community solar exist, so Rewiring America is targeting well under full adoption — 65 percent, or 80 million homes — by mid-century.

This will be a gradual transition that won’t fully pick up speed until later this decade. But with solar panel and battery prices set to fall, and as new incentives for building owners kick in, we will probably see a massive surge in installations.

Home solar installations have risen steadily, adding a record 6.4 gigawatts in 2022, enough to power about 1 million homes, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. A 2022 January Pew Research Center survey found 39 percent of homeowners had seriously considered installing solar panels in the past year.

Cooking

Most Americans already cook with electricity. That means fewer of them need to transition into a new, cleaner cooking technology, so Rewiring America is predicting a relatively flat S-curve.

About 39 percent still rely on gas and propane stoves. Induction stoves are the leading contender to electrify them, but so far they’re only in about 3 percent of households.

It will take a while for Americans to get to the 43 percent of homes Rewiring America estimates should make the switch by 2035 to meet climate goals. To get there, the nonprofit estimates an additional 1.8 million induction stoves above the current pace of sales in the next three years to keep the technology on track. By 2032, it estimates, sales must soar five times above the current trajectory.

The S-curve for induction stoves is relatively flat since so many homes already have electric stoves. It plateaus around 43 percent of homes by 2035, ensuring almost all homes switch out gas and propane well before mid-century.


Fortunately, induction stoves are having a moment. A record number of models are being rolled out by brands from GE to Viking at lower price points, although they remain more expensive on average.

Water heating

Just 1 percent of U.S. homes have installed heat pump water heaters, which deliver hot water with ultra-efficient heat pumps, making them one of the least-common climate technologies in U.S. homes.

Even well into next decade, only a sliver of households will have one, according to Rewiring America’s estimates. To meet climate goals, then, heat pump water heater sales will have to dramatically ramp up from 2030 to 2040.

Only about 140,000 units were sold last year, less than 2 percent of total water heater sales, according to the latest Environmental Protection Agency data.

Few homes have these appliances installed. Since heat pumps are much more efficient than both electric-resistance water heaters and natural gas, they are expected to fully displace all other kinds of water-heating technology.

Sales are growing fast, roughly doubling since 2017. Early adopters have the biggest role to play here, says Wyent. “Very few people know they exist,” she says. “They have the longest way to go. That’s an exciting place for early adopters to play a role.”

The biggest reason to switch is saving money. The appliances are as much as four times more efficient than comparable gas water heaters, saving one ton of CO2 annually on average, reports the nonprofit New Buildings Institute. The appliances cost about $117 annually to operate for a family of four compared to $200 for a gas water heater or $550 for electric resistance.

Gas-fired water heaters, now around half of all water heater sales, may have already begun their terminal decline.

Are we on track?

Early adopters may be driving growth of electrification technologies, but without a concerted effort behind them — incentives, tax credits, public education and workforce training for installation — the process will move too slowly.

Economics, policy and technology are finally pushing in the same direction. The Inflation Reduction Act and state and local incentives are expected to bring down the costs of climate technologies by about 40 percent, according to an analysis by market intelligence firm Sightline Climate. When it comes to clean-energy options, people have never had better products, lower prices or more generous incentives.

“Are we on track?” asks Doyne Farmer, director of the complexity economics program at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. “We’re more on track than people realize. … The thing about exponential [growth] is it’s small, it’s small, it’s small, and then suddenly it gets very big.”

In the early 1980s, AT&T asked consultants from McKinsey to estimate how many wireless customers it might have at the turn of the century, according to a report in the Economist.

Their answer — 900,000 subscribers — turned out to be the number of new customers joining mobile phone services every three days by 2020.

Today's Keith

We're finally starting to get it.



THE MEDIA JUST FIGURED IT OUT: TRUMP IS HITLER - 11.14.23
SERIES 2 EPISODE 73: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN


A-Block (1:44) SPECIAL COMMENT:
Trump IS our Hitler. I posited this as early as 2016 and stated it in this series in September, 2022. But some bridge was crossed over the weekend, something happened that was so bad that even The Washington Post sat up and took notice. And now, suddenly, the forces of Groupthink and Conventional Wisdom and The Run On The Bank and The Fear Of Coming In Last On The New Big Beat have all aligned - and for once, for good.

Trump is Hitler. Not Hitler 1940, not Hitler 1938. But Hitler 1933? The last moment at which he could have been stopped before he unleashed the cataclysms of European destruction and the holocaust.

That's where we are with Trump. And a bevy of his quotes FINALLY broke through: calling his enemies vermin and promising to root them out and echoing Hitler's "ein Volk" speech, while at the same time his evil psychotic henchmen let one too many detail leak about plans to vet every significant military leader so he could count on the army, and his plan to build concentration camps for migrants (and oh by the way anybody who would defend them) and his attempts to get Mo Brooks to demand a new election and his reinstallation as president LAST YEAR and some kind of an overthrow of the Biden regime - all came out simultaneously.

To say nothing of the video proffers that got Jenna Ellis and Sidney Powell their Georgia plea deals, full of previously sourced stories that will now have witness testimony about seizing voting machines and "the boss is not going to leave" and suddenly a million light bulbs have gone off around the media: TRUMP REALLY MEANS TO TAKE POWER AND NEVER GIVE IT UP.

It just might, just might not be too late. But we have to advance it, and the way you and I can do so directly is to use the words. Suspend Godwin's law and the Survivors' Law (there is only one Hitler - it's Hitler) by making sure there really IS only one Hitler. We must call Trump Hitler. We must call them Nazis. We must get President Biden to call them Nazis.

We must make people realize that stopping Trump is essential to saving freedom and democracy in this nation. Because it is. And the first group - the media - just began to wake up to it.

B-BLOCK (37:09) THE WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD:
Fox News fired a guy for reporting the truth about January 6; A Texas Trumpist is trying to get elected to congress by reenacting the Martin Luther King assassination; And the Supreme Court just instituted a Code of Ethics that a) isn't a code, and doesn't have anything to do with ethics. (43:03) IT IS NOW TWO YEARS since the death of my hospice pup Mishu and there is actually news about him. Even in death, he may have made it so that other dogs afflicted with the terrible heart malformation that claimed him, may survive.

C-BLOCK (1:02:10) THE STORY OF MISHU, Part 2

Today's Pix

click





















Nov 13, 2023

The Wolf Is At The Door

It's not coincidence.

It's not just bluff-n-bluster aimed at keeping a few of the more rabid supporters in line.

He's been kinda subtle about telling us who and what he is for years, but now he's out in the open because he knows the whole thing is slipping away and he has to be much more forceful and direct with it.

Nancy MacLean

We pay attention to things so we're less likely to be fooled.
  • We pay attention to our health so pharmaceutical ads are less deceiving
  • We pay attention to economics so we're not as likely to be deceived by "Financial Reporters" telling us about indicators - leading or trailing or Market Basket or Durable Goods or interest rates or whatever
  • We pay attention to politics so we won't be fooled so often by demagogues and dog-assed Republicans




GOP megadonor pours millions into effort to hinder Ohio abortion amendment

New campaign finance records show Illinois Republican megadonor Richard Uihlein is funding the bulk of the campaign aimed at thwarting a constitutional amendment on abortion in Ohio.

Ohio is likely the only state this year to have a measure on the ballot to enshrine abortion access into the state constitution, setting up a test case for how the issue may drive voters ahead of the 2024 presidential election. A USA TODAY Network/Suffolk University poll released this week found 58% of Ohioans support a constitutional amendment.

That support may not be enough to pass. Currently, such amendments require support from a simple majority — 50% + 1 vote. But the GOP-led state legislature set up a special election for Aug. 8 to raise the threshold to 60%. That measure is known as Ohio Issue 1.

Uihlein, an Illinois shipping supplies magnate with a history of donations to anti-abortion groups, was the top funder of Protect our Constitution, the main group supporting Issue 1. Uihlein gave $4 million to the group, the bulk of the $4.85 million raised.

Last month, a CBS News investigation found Uihlein had an outsized role in getting Issue 1 on the ballot. In April, he gave $1.1 million to a political committee pressuring Republican lawmakers to approve the August special election. Financial disclosures show a foundation controlled by Uihlein has given nearly $18 million to a Florida-based organization pushing similar changes to the constitutional amendment process in states across the country.

Uihlein didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Ohio Republicans pushing to change the rules over constitutional amendments originally billed the effort as one that would prevent outside interests from influencing the state constitution. But supporters, including Secretary of State Frank LaRose, have since acknowledged the change would make it harder for a constitutional amendment on abortion to pass.

Last year, voters in Kansas and Michigan chose to preserve abortion access in their state constitutions with just under 60% approval.

Once the August special election was approved, money began to flow in on both sides. The central group opposed to raising the threshold for passing an amendment to 60%, One Person One Vote, raised a total of $14.4 million. The Sixteen Thirty Fund gave $2.5 million to the effort, campaign finance records show. The group, based in Washington D.C., has spent millions on left-leaning causes, including the campaign against the confirmation of then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.