The Ledes

Friday, September 6, 2024

CNBC: “The U.S. economy created slightly fewer jobs than expected in August, reflecting a slowing labor market while also clearing the way for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates later this month. Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 142,000 during the month, down from 89,000 in July and below the 161,000 consensus forecast from Dow Jones, according to a report Friday from the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.”

New York Times: “Colin Gray, the father of the 14-year-old accused of killing two teachers and two students at his Georgia high school, was arrested and charged on Thursday with second-degree murder in connection with the state’s deadliest school shooting, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said. In addition to two counts of second-degree murder, Mr. Gray, 54, was also charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter and eight counts of cruelty to children, according to a statement. At a news conference on Thursday night, Chris Hosey, the G.B.I. director, said the charges were 'directly connected with the actions of his son and allowing him to possess a weapon.'” At 5:30 am ET, this is the pinned item in a liveblog. ~~~

     ~~~ CNN's report is here.

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The Ledes

Thursday, September 5, 2024

CNBC: “Private sector payrolls grew at the weakest pace in more than 3½ years in August, providing yet another sign of a deteriorating labor market, according to ADP. Companies hired just 99,000 workers for the month, less than the downwardly revised 111,000 in July and below the Dow Jones consensus forecast for 140,000. August was the weakest month for job growth since January 2021, according to data from the payrolls processing firm. 'The job market’s downward drift brought us to slower-than-normal hiring after two years of outsized growth,' ADP’s chief economist, Nela Richardson, said. The report corroborates multiple data points recently that show hiring has slowed considerably from its blistering pace following the Covid outbreak in early 2020.”

The New York Times' live updates of developments in the Georgia school massacre are here, a horrifying ritual which we experience here in the U.S. to kick off each new School Shooting Year. “A 14-year-old student opened fire at his Georgia high school on Wednesday, killing two students and two teachers before surrendering to school resource officers, according to the authorities, who said the suspect would be charged with murder.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I heard Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) speak during a press conference. Kemp is often glorified as one of the most moderate, reasonable GOP elected public officials. When asked a question I did not hear, Kemp responded, "Now is not the time to talk about politics." As you know, this is a statement that is part of the mass shooting ritual. It translates, "Our guns-for-all policy is so untenable that I dare not express it lest I be tarred and feathered -- or worse -- by grieving families." ~~~

~~~ Washington Post: “Police identified the suspect as Colt Gray, a student who attracted the attention of federal investigators more than a year ago, when they began receiving anonymous tips about someone threatening a school shooting. The FBI referred the reports to local authorities, whose investigations led them to interview Gray and his father. The father told police that he had hunting guns in the house, but that his son did not have unsupervised access to them. Gray denied making the online threats, the FBI said, but officials still alerted area schools about him.” ~~~ 

     ~~~ Marie: I heard on CNN that the reason authorities lost track of Colt was that his family moved counties, and the local authorities who first learned of the threats apparently did not share the information with law enforcement officials in Barrow County, where Wednesday's mass school shooting occurred. If you were a parent of a child who has so alarmed law enforcement that they came around to your house to question you and the child about his plans to massacre people, wouldn't you do something?: talk to him, get the kid professional counseling, remove guns and other lethal weapons from the house, etc.

Help!

To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, but Akhilleus found this new one that he says is easy to use.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

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

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass.

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

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Wednesday
May112011

The Commentariat -- May 12

I've posted an Open Thread for comments on Off Times Square for today.

E. J. Dionne: "As you watch the lawsuits against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act work their way through the courts, consider that what you are really seeing is a great republic tying itself into as many knots as possible to avoid facing up to a challenge that every other wealthy capitalist democracy in the world has met...." Read the whole column.

William Cohan, in his last New York Times op-ed page post, urges you to stay mad at the banksters who haven't paid for their likely crimes. And won't. Government agencies -- specifically the Department of Justice -- have not held them accountable.

Meredith Atwell Baker. Some sleazy operators wear pearls. Getty image.Revolving Door. Edward Wyatt of the New York Times: "Four months after the Federal Communications Commission approved a hotly contested merger of Comcast and NBC Universal, one of the commissioners who voted for the deal said on Wednesday that she would soon join Comcast’s Washington lobbying office. Meredith Attwell Baker, a former Commerce Department official who worked on telecommunications issues in George W. Bush’s administration, announced that she would leave the F.C.C. when her term expires at the end of June. At Comcast, she will serve as senior vice president for government affairs for NBC Universal, which Comcast acquired in January.... Ms. Baker can lobby members of Congress immediately upon beginning her new job."

Connections. Pete Lattman & Azam Ahmed of the New York Times: Raj Rajaratnam's "vast Rolodex of tipsters included former business school classmates, fellow hedge fund traders and technology industry executives whose origins, like his, were from the Indian subcontinent.... Mr. Rajaratnam, a ... Sri Lankan native, sought out information that was confidential, beyond the reach of research, and illegally traded on it, a jury in Federal District Court in Manhattan found on Wednesday, convicting him on all 14 counts of securities fraud and conspiracy." Includes video which explains the case.

Cantor, Boehner, Kyl, McConnell -- Not-Ready-for-Primetime Players. Photo via the Washington Post."Amateurs." David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "... professional [negotiators] ... have learned the rules that help resolve unsolvable standoffs: Don’t lie to a man on a high ledge. Don’t box yourself in with sweeping threats. Don’t tell your adversary to 'act like an adult.' Now, they have watched the two parties bend or break those three rules. They worry that the politicians’ mistakes might only prolong their dispute — at a moment where every day of delay adds to Wall Street’s worries."

Uh oh. The Maverick jumps the corral fence again. John McCain in a Washington Post op-ed: intelligence gained as a result of torture did not lead to the killing of Osama bin Laden, but "was obtained through standard, noncoercive means.... Much of this debate [over the means used to locate bin Laden] is a definitional one: whether any or all of these methods constitute torture. I believe some of them do, especially waterboarding, which is a mock execution and thus an exquisite form of torture. As such, they are prohibited by American laws and values, and I oppose them."

Fareed Zakaria in the Washington Post: "This is a time for action, to finally push [Pakistan] toward moderation and genuine democracy.... Having come to power hoping to clip the military’s wings, Pakistan’s democratically elected government has been reduced to mouthing talking points written for it by the intelligence services.... Pakistan’s civilian government, business class and intellectuals have an ever-larger role in this struggle. They should not get distracted by empty anti-American slogans or hypernationalism. This is Pakistan's moment of truth.... The opportunity might not come again."

David Corn of Mother Jones offers up an amusing bedtime story about Newt & Callista. Bedtime is the key word here. As Corn writes, "there must be dozens (hundreds? thousands?) of stories like this one. Many will seep out, as long as Gingrich is a candidate for the highest office in the land...." CW: As I commented on the Collins-Brooks "Conversation" yesterday, "I'm definitely going with Newt in 2012" because his campaign will be so amusing -- for Democrats.

Right Wing World *

Paul Krugman: forty-two Republican Congressmen write to President Obama to ask him to get Democrats to quit "trying to use issues to win votes." The issues they don't want Dems to talk about about are ending Medicare & increasing the deficit as does the Ryan budget they all voted for. ...

     ... Steve Benen reminds us that "... the criticism of the GOP plan from Democrats and the left has been accurate.... In 2010 — just last year — many of these same freshmen managed to get elected by using wildly misleading attack ads accusing Democrats of hurting seniors and 'cutting' Medicare."

"Reading, 'Riting and Revenues." If you were wondering why public education in the U.S. is becoming a national embarrassment, Gail Collins has a few answers, and they all center around "the craze for privatization." Collins makes a dull subject irritate the hell out of you. ...

... BUT even Collins, whose examples of Republican-led legislatures' dubious efforts to privatize K-12 education are sickening, can't beat a virtual sample of what the right has in mind when it comes to an appropriate course of study for the kids in a privatized venue. As Evan McMorris-Santoro of TPM reports, popular presidential non-candidate Mike Huckabee is selling for the paltry sum of about $15 per video, what he calls "unbiased" American history lessons for the kids, produced by Learn Our History. First video? "The Reagan Revolution." Here's a preview. Look out for the scary black gang member at the top of the video whom we assume Reagan will vanquish:

What does it mean that Learn Our History is "unbiased"?

Learn Our History's products have been developed to correct the 'blame America first' attitude prevalent in today's teaching. While we recognize that America is not perfect and has never been perfect we celebrate our incredible history with a balanced account of the events that created this great nation. We don't feel bad about the great things America has achieved -- we celebrate our success!

Matt Miller of the Washington Post on "Boehner's awe-inspiring hypocrisy on the debt limit: ... How can a [Republican] party that just passed a budget blueprint with historic new levels of debt and virtually no middle-class entitlement reform in the next decade try, with a straight face, to pin the blame for a debt-limit increase on the president?"

Jed Lewison of Daily Kos finds Mitt Romney touting the individual mandate in December 2007. (RomneyCare includes an individual mandate; i.e., Massachusetts residents must purchase health insurance):

... AND, via Greg Sargent, here's Romney in 2008 explaining to voters in easy-to-understand, logical terms why the individual mandate is a good idea:

... Ya know what? He's right. But that's the Old Romney. Steve Benen translates the New Romney's position du jour: "That radical, communistic, freedom-killing health care policy you hate so intensely? Don’t worry, I only support that at the state level.” ...

... BUT Romney was for a federal mandate before he was against it, as Dave Weigel reports: "... running uphill against Ted Kennedy, Romney said he'd support the health care compromise introduced by Sen. John Chafee. That compromise included a mandate to buy health insurance, something Democrats never tired of pointing out in 2009 and 2010 when the Affordable Care Act's compromise was characterized as tyranny or socialism." ...

... OR, As The Onion put it in an April headline, "Mitt Romney Haunted by Past of Trying to Help Uninsured Sick People." The article is a spoof, but the headline is too true. ...

... Michael Shear of the New York Times: "On Thursday, Mr. Romney will make his most direct effort yet to explain why he really wants to kill sick people find a politically safe middle ground, saying in a speech that he doesn’t regret his actions as governor, while vowing that, if elected, he would begin efforts to repeal Mr. Obama’s heath care law on his first day in the Oval Office."

* Where facts never intrude.

Local News

N. C. Aizenman of the Washington Post: Florida legislators passed a drastic Medicaid "reform" bill mimicking a pilot program that was an apparent disaster. It will go into effect if the Obama Administration approves it. ...

... AND Oops! As of October 21 of this year, having sex will be illegal in Florida. However, there's a ray of hope, according to the blogger officially known as the Southern Fried Scientist, who discovered that Florida's poorly-written anti-bestiality law prohibits sex between (or among, I guess) humans:

... if you’re living in Florida on October 1, 2011 and would like to have sexual intercourse with a consenting adult, please check with your veterinarian or local livestock breeder first to make sure you abide by 'accepted animal husbandry practices, conformation judging practices, or accepted veterinary medical practices.'

News Ledes

CBS News: information from Navy SEALs helmet-cams provides more details of the operation in which Osama bin Laden was killed:

... The print story is here.

New York Times: "The Senate Ethics Committee on Thursday asked the Justice Department to reopen its investigation of former Senator John Ensign, saying it had found evidence that he had conspired to help a former aide violate a lobbying ban, had broken campaign finance laws and had obstructed an investigation into wrongdoing, which began after he admitted having had an affair with the aide’s wife." Washington Post story here.

Washington Post: "President Obama announced Thursday that he is seeking a two-year extension of Robert S. Mueller III’s term as FBI director, saying he cannot afford to lose the longtime FBI chief at a time of terrorist threats. The request for Congress to extend Mueller’s 10-year term comes as the White House had been searching for a candidate to succeed him."

Washington Post: "... the Senate Finance Committee grilled senior executives of the five biggest oil companies Thursday about whether they really need tax incentives that some Democrats on the panel said the nation can no longer afford." New York Times: "Executives of five of the largest oil companies, under heavy fire over near-record gasoline prices and their high first-quarter profits, pushed back on Thursday against calls for cuts in tax subsidies benefiting the industry."

New York Times: in a speech in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Mitt Romney tries to distinguish RomneyCare from ObamaCare, which he says should be repealed.

President Obama & Vice President Biden honored the National Association of Police Organization's top cops this afternoon.

Wall Street Journal: "Sixty-two business groups ... urged congressional leaders on Wednesday to raise the federal debt ceiling amid fears that political brinkmanship could lead to another financial crisis. The letter comes less than one week before the U.S. government is expected to hit the $14.294 trillion debt ceiling. Treasury has already taken steps to avoid defaulting on its obligations, but officials believe it will run out of maneuvers on Aug. 2." ...

... The Hill: "A bill to raise the debt limit without spending cuts attached would not get a single Republican vote in the House, the GOP’s top vote-counter [Kevin McCarthy]said Wednesday."

New York Times: "Two men who the authorities said intended to carry out a terrorist attack in New York City were arrested late Wednesday, two law enforcement officials said with knowledge of the matter. The two men had sought to purchase hand grenades and guns. They were arrested after what one law enforcement official described as a sting operation, saying that their aims appeared 'aspirational.' The identities of the men were not released but another official characterized the suspects as 'homegrown' and another said one of the young men was of Moroccan descent."

Washington Post: "The Pentagon is considering allowing the families of detainees at Guantanamo Bay to visit them, an unprecedented step to ease the isolation of inmates who in some cases have been held at the U.S. facility for close to a decade, according to congressional aides."

New York Times: "In what has emerged as one of the most brutal waves of repression since the Arab Spring began, the Syrian military shelled Homs, the country’s third-largest city from tanks on Wednesday, forcing hundreds to flee and detaining hundreds more."

Al Jazeera: "At least ten people protesting the rule of Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen's president, have been killed and 226 injured after security forces opened fire on thousands of anti-government demonstrations in several cities across the country." With video.

AP: "Though hunted and in hiding, Osama bin Laden remained the driving force behind every recent al-Qaida terror plot, U.S. officials say, citing his private journal and other documents recovered in last week's raid...."

New York Times: "Administration officials said the president was eager to use Bin Laden’s death as a way to articulate a unified theory about the popular uprisings from Tunisia to Bahrain.... The first sign of this 'reset' could come as early as next week, when Mr. Obama plans to give a speech on the Middle East in which he will seek to put Bin Laden’s death in the context of the region’s broader political transformation."

Washington Post: "Flood the farms to save the cities. That’s the trade-off staring at the Army Corps of Engineers in Louisiana this week as a historically high Mississippi River rolls south, flooding towns in Mississippi on Wednesday, prompting evacuations farther south, and threatening the heavily industrialized petrochemical corridor running from Baton Rouge to New Orleans and beyond." With video.

AP: "Retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk was convicted of thousands of counts of acting as an accessory to murder at a Nazi death camp and sentenced on Thursday to five years in prison — closing one chapter in a decades-long legal battle."