The Ledes

Thursday, July 17, 2025

New York Times: “Connie Francis, who dominated the pop charts in the late 1950s and early ’60s with sobbing ballads like 'Who’s Sorry Now' and 'Don’t Break the Heart That Loves You,' as well as up-tempo soft-rock tunes like 'Stupid Cupid,' 'Lipstick on Your Collar,' and 'Vacation,' died on Wednesday. She was 87.” 

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INAUGURATION 2029

Commencement ceremonies are joyous occasions, and Steve Carell made sure that was true this past weekend (mid-June) at Northwestern's commencement:

~~~ Carell's entire commencement speech was hilarious. The audio and video here isn't great, but I laughed till I cried.

CNN did a live telecast Saturday night (June 7) of the Broadway play "Good Night, and Good Luck," written by George Clooney and Grant Heslov, about legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow's effort to hold to account Sen. Joe McCarthy, "the junior senator from Wisconsin." Clooney plays Murrow. Here's Murrow himself with his famous take on McCarthy & McCarthyism, brief remarks that especially resonate today: ~~~

     ~~~ This article lists ways you still can watch the play. 

New York Times: “The New York Times Company has agreed to license its editorial content to Amazon for use in the tech giant’s artificial intelligence platforms, the company said on Thursday. The multiyear agreement 'will bring Times editorial content to a variety of Amazon customer experiences,' the news organization said in a statement. Besides news articles, the agreement encompasses material from NYT Cooking, The Times’s food and recipe site, and The Athletic, which focuses on sports. This is The Times’s first licensing arrangement with a focus on generative A.I. technology. In 2023, The Times sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, for copyright infringement, accusing the tech companies of using millions of articles published by The Times to train automated chatbots without any kind of compensation. OpenAI and Microsoft have rejected those accusations.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I have no idea what this means for "the Amazon customer experience." Does it mean that if I don't have a NYT subscription but do have Amazon Prime I can read NYT content? And where, exactly, would I find that content? I don't know. I don't know.

Washington Post reporters asked three AI image generators what a beautiful woman looks like. "The Post found that they steer users toward a startlingly narrow vision of attractiveness. Prompted to show a 'beautiful woman,' all three tools generated thin women, without exception.... Her body looks like Barbie — slim hips, impossible waist, round breasts.... Just 2 percent of the images showed visible signs of aging. More than a third of the images had medium skin tones. But only nine percent had dark skin tones. Asked to show 'normal women,' the tools produced images that remained overwhelmingly thin.... However bias originates, The Post’s analysis found that popular image tools struggle to render realistic images of women outside the Western ideal." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The reporters seem to think they are calling out the AI programs for being unrealistic. But there's a lot about the "beautiful women" images they miss. I find these omissions remarkably sexist. For one thing, the reporters seem to think AI is a magical "thing" that self-generates. It isn't. It's programmed. It's programmed by boys, many of them incels who have little or no experience or insights beyond comic books and Internet porn of how to gauge female "beauty." As a result, the AI-generated women look like cartoons; that is, a lot like an air-brushed photo of Kristi Noem: globs of every kind of dark eye makeup, Scandinavian nose, Botox lips, slathered-on skin concealer/toner/etc. makeup, long dark hair and the aforementioned impossible Barbie body shape, including huge, round plastic breasts. 

New York Times: “George Clooney’s Broadway debut, 'Good Night, and Good Luck,' has been one of the sensations of the 2024-25 theater season, breaking box office records and drawing packed houses of audiences eager to see the popular movie star in a timely drama about the importance of an independent press. Now the play will become much more widely available: CNN is planning a live broadcast of the penultimate performance, on June 7 at 7 p.m. Eastern. The performance will be preceded and followed by coverage of, and discussion about, the show and the state of journalism.”

No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land. -- Magna Carta ~~~

~~~ New York Times: “Bought for $27.50 after World War II, the faint, water stained manuscript in the library of Harvard Law School had attracted relatively little attention since it arrived there in 1946. That is about to change. Two British academics, one of whom happened on the manuscript by chance, have discovered that it is an original 1300 version — not a copy, as long thought — of Magna Carta, the medieval document that helped establish some of the world’s most cherished liberties. It is one of just seven such documents from that date still in existence.... A 710-year-old version of Magna Carta was sold in 2007 for $21.3 million.... First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England — or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore. He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry’s son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300.”

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

 

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.

Friday
Oct042024

The Conversation -- October 4, 2024

Sam Levine of the Guardian: "The US homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, has warned that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) does not have enough funding to make it through the rest of this hurricane season.... The warning on Thursday underscored how the federal government is being stretched thin as top Republicans have signaled they won't give it more funding.... Donald Trump and other Republicans have seized on the shortfall to criticize [President] Biden and Kamala Harris for spending money assisting migrants.... 'They stole the Fema money just like they stole it from a bank so they could give it to their illegal immigrants that they want to have vote for them this season,' Trump said in a speech in Michigan on Thursday.... Also, on the campaign trail in Michigan on Thursday, Trump said of Helene victims: 'They're dying, and they're getting no help from our federal government because their money has been spent on people that should not be in our country.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Justine McDaniel of the Washington Post: "... Donald Trump will appear Friday in Georgia, one of the states hardest-hit by Hurricane Helene, after spending the week falsely telling voters that the U.S. government is unable to fund the disaster response -- claims the White House slammed in a memo as 'poison.' Without naming Trump, the Biden administration on Friday said Republicans are spreading 'bald-faced lies' about the hurricane response and are 'using Hurricane Helene to lie and divide us.'"

Kevin Dolak of the Hollywood Reporter, republished by Yahoo! News: "In an Instagram post uploaded on Thursday, Bruce Springsteen announced to his fans ... his pick this election cycle.... 'Friends, fans and the press have asked me who I'm supporting in this most important of elections,' Springsteen said.... 'And with full knowledge that my opinions are no more or less important than those of any of my fellow citizens. Here's my answer: I'm supporting Kamala Harris for president and Tim Walz for vice president, and opposing Donald Trump and J.D. Vance.... Donald Trump is the most dangerous candidate for president in my lifetime.... His disdain for the sanctity of our Constitution, the sanctity of democracy, the sanctity of the rule of law and the sanctity of the peaceful transfer of power should disqualify him from the office of president ever again. He doesn't understand the meaning of this country, its history, or what it means to be deeply American,' he added." ~~~

Marie: Tommy Christopher of Mediaite has a take different from Steve M.'s & mine on Melania's stance on abortion rights. Let's hope Christopher's theory is right: "Former First Lady Melania Trump delivered a humiliating repudiation of ... Donald Trump's stated anti-abortion stance in a stunning new video that's a political gift to Vice President Kamala Harris. Trump has been trying to walk a line between bragging about overturning Roe v. Wade and trying to reassure voters he won't sign a national abortion ban -- while refusing to actually say he would veto one....* In an excerpt [of Melania's memoir] obtained by The Guardian, she ... [wrote,] 'It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding their preference of having children, based on their own convictions, free from any intervention or pressure from the government. Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to determine what she does with her own body? A woman's fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes.'"

     * Trump did finally say he would veto an federal abortion ban. MB: And you know how good his word is.

Marie: Akhilleus & I are not the only conspiracy theories who have turned our suspicious eyes on Bibi. And we're in very good company: ~~~

     ~~~ Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) says he's worried Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may be trying to influence the U.S. presidential election by showing little interest in striking a peace deal with Hamas and instead escalating the threat of a broader war in the Middle East by aggressively confronting Hezbollah in Lebanon. Murphy acknowledged that the prospect of peace in Gaza before Election Day does not seem likely and that Netanyahu appears to have an eye on domestic U.S. politics as he wages a bombing campaign deep into Lebanon targeting Hezbollah. 'I certainly worry that Prime Minister Netanyahu is watching the American election as he makes decisions about his military campaigns in the north and in Gaza,' Murphy told CNN's Erin Burnett."

There are conspiracy theories and then there are conspiracy theories: ~~~

     ~~~ Charlie Nash of Mediaite: "After the Hurricane Helene death toll rose to over 200, Rep. Majorie Taylor Greene wrote in a social media post, 'Yes they can control the weather. It's ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can't be done.' Greene also posted a map of the areas most affected by the hurricane overlaid with an electoral map by political party. 'This is a map of hurricane affected areas with an overlay of electoral map by political party shows how hurricane devastation could affect the election,' she warned." MB: Not clear who "they" are, but I have a feeling one of them is the Wicked Witch of the West, Kamala Harris. And yes, the good folks of Georgia will almost certainly be sending the loony Miss Margie back to Congress to be making the laws what govern us all.

Presidential Race

~~~ Erica Green & Katie Rogers of the New York Times: "On Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris and former Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming [a Wisconsin native], the most prominent Republican to endorse her campaign, traveled to Ripon in central Wisconsin where meetings in 1854 helped form the Republican Party. Just a mile away from a one-room schoolhouse where those gatherings were held, the pair tore into ... Donald J. Trump for his role in igniting a riot at the Capitol, and they warned of the threat he poses to democracy should he return to power. Ms. Cheney said that, in November, putting patriotism ahead of partisanship should not merely be an aspiration -- 'it is our duty.' Her remarks ... were as much a public indictment of Mr. Trump as they were an endorsement of Ms. Harris." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The reporters are young women. I don't think they quite get what a remarkable moment this was. ~~~

~~~ AND the story that follows tells us why this extraordinary moment in U.S. presidential campaign history happened: ~~~

~~~ Jess Bidgood of the New York Times: "... [Jack Smith's motion in the election interference case] ... offered new details that paint a chilling picture of the way [Donald Trump] and current candidate seems to think about elections: as an exercise in which the vote total is entirely beside the point. In his world, adverse election results were an obstacle, not an outcome.... The filing sheds new light on the way Trump and his advisers viewed the number of votes he had won as little more than a trifling detail.... Coming at a time when his allies, including his running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, have tried to downplay Trump's efforts to hold onto power four years ago, the filing offers a glimpse of Trump's thinking that makes it difficult to imagine him accepting a loss in November.... Reading Smith's court filing now, there are striking parallels between Trump and his allies' actions in 2020 and certain steps they are taking today -- and it's something Democrats and allies of Vice President Kamala Harris are warning about as they make the case that Trump is a danger to democracy." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Say, New York Times, it's refreshing to read a straight-news story where the author does not don Both SidesTM rose-tinted glasses the minute she sits down at her computer. ~~~

     ~~~ Amy Gardner & Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post: "... Donald Trump's effort to overturn his loss four years ago and his role inciting the violent attack on the Capitol roared onto the 2024 campaign stage this week even as he continues to suggest he won't accept a defeat if it happens a second time. On Tuesday, running mate JD Vance declined to say during the vice-presidential debate that Trump lost in 2020. On Wednesday, special counsel Jack Smith filed an explosive new pleading in federal court surfacing new details about Trump's lack of concern about the Capitol riot and his push to reverse his loss even as advisers repeatedly told him Joe Biden had legitimately won. And on Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris made a campaign appearance in the battleground state of Wisconsin with Liz Cheney, the former Republican congresswoman who lost her seat largely because of her condemnation of Trump's actions inciting the riot on Jan. 6, 2021."

Maggie Astor of the New York Times: "Donald J. Trump said on Wednesday that, if elected again, he would revoke the legal status of tens of thousands of Haitian immigrants who have been the target of false accusations by the former president and his running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, over the past month. Mr. Trump's administration tried to do that during his first term, too, but courts temporarily blocked it, and President Biden's administration renewed the immigrants' status after he took office in 2021. The immigrants in question are living and working in the United States legally through the Temporary Protected Status program, which Congress created in 1990 for people from countries experiencing war, natura disasters or other crises. The Department of Homeland Security designates countries for up to 18 months at a time based on the current conditions, and the designation can be renewed indefinitely. Haiti was initially added in 2010, under President Barack Obama, after a 7.0-magnitude earthquake devastated the country. It has since experienced a major hurricane and a cholera epidemic." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Let us hope Trump's cruel announcement helps those dithering "undecideds" understand that nobody is safe when the Nastiest Turdblossom in the USA is president*, so they'd better vote for Harris.

If you scroll way down the page in this NBC News election updates liveblog, you'll find this item by Rebecca Shabad: "Trump said toward the top of his remarks at a rally in Saginaw, Michigan, that if he thought he lost the 2020 presidential election, he wouldn't be running again. 'It was a rigged election. You have to tell Kamala Harris that's why I'm doing it again. If I thought I lost, I wouldn't be doing this again. You know where I'd be? Right down on the beaches of Monte Carlo, baby, or some place having a nice life.'..." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: So, among other things, what I take that to mean is that when Trump says he won't run again if he loses next month, what he really means is that he'll keep on running till he's dead because he can never admit he lost an election.

"Sieg Heil." David Edwards of the Raw Story: "Donald Trump's campaign distributed signs with a phrase often used by white supremacists. Before Trump spoke in Saginaw, Michigan, Thursday, campaign staff could be seen handing out pre-printed signs with the words 'Reclaim America.' As CNN noted, white supremacist members of the Patriot Front recently carried a banner with the same slogan while shouting "Sieg Heil" and "Deportation saves the nation" at a rally in Nashville."

You can't only help those in need if they voted for you. It's the most basic part of being president, and this guy [Trump] knows nothing about it. -- President Biden, in a tweet Thursday ~~~

~~~ Scott Waldman & Thomas Frank of Politico's E&E News: "In the aftermath of Hurricane Helene..., Donald Trump has ... accuse[d] Democratic leaders of ignoring the needs of Republican storm victims. But a review of Trump's record by Politico's E&E News and interviews with two former Trump White House officials show that the former president was flagrantly partisan at times in response to disasters and on at least three occasions hesitated to give disaster aid to areas he considered politically hostile or ordered special treatment for pro-Trump states. Mark Harvey, who was Trump's senior director for resilience policy..., told E&E News on Wednesday that Trump initially refused to approve disaster aid for California after deadly wildfires in 2018 because of the state's Democratic leanings. But Harvey said Trump changed his mind after Harvey pulled voting results to show him that heavily damaged Orange County, California, had more Trump supporters than the entire state of Iowa." Read on. See also Akhilleus' commentary at the top of today's thread. ~~~

~~~ Paul Krugman of the New York Times: "... Trump has been trying to exploit the natural disaster [Hurricane Helene] for political gain, claiming he heard that the federal government -- Biden -- and North Carolina's Democratic governor are 'going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas.' This claim has no basis.... Trump's vision of America-as-hellscape seems to be losing its political mojo.... So it must be time to conjure a new fake source of fear and outrage. Where does the insinuation that Biden is denying aid to politically unfriendly disaster areas come from? In part it's projection: Trump was found to have done something akin to that when he was in the White House.... The key to Trump's tall tales is to tell his supporters that terrible things are happening somewhere out there...."

Emily Bazelon & Mattathias Schwartz of the New York Times: "Donald Trump says Kamala Harris should be prosecuted for the Biden administration's border policies. He wants President Biden to be prosecuted for corruption, Nancy Pelosi for her husband's stock trades and Google for its search results about Trump and Harris. His list of targets for investigation also includes state prosecutors, judges and former officials from the F.B.I. and other parts of the Justice Department. If Trump wins, he can use the Justice Department, including the F.B.I., to seek revenge against his political enemies -- even if, as in the cases above, there is little or no evidence of a crime.... We posed that question to 50 former top officials from the Justice Department and the White House Counsel's Office, along with a few retired judges and nonpartisan career D.O.J. lawyers. The former officials, evenly split between Republicans and Democrats, have served seven presidents.Most of them are freaked out about Trump's potential impact on the Justice Department...." ~~~

There is every reason to believe that Donald Trump would seek to use criminal enforcement and the F.B.I. as leverage for his personal and political ends in a second term. We don't know what will happen, but the risk is more concrete, with a higher probability, than in any election in my lifetime. -- Peter Keisler, a Federalist Society founder & Acting AG for Dubya ~~~

~~~ Emily Bazelon & Mattathias Schwartz in the New York Times Magazine: "As a candidate for president once again, Donald Trump could not be clearer about his plans to use the Justice Department to seek revenge against his enemies.... Now Trump talks about ordering prosecutions against so many people that his threats have become commonplace.... [The] safeguards [the protect the Justice Department from political interference] are all dependent on voluntary compliance.... During his presidency..., Trump tried to interfere directly [with the DOJ]...." Read on.

Sickly Old Man Running for Prez* Again. Emily Baumgaertner & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "As a presidential candidate in 2015, Donald J. Trump declined to release his medical records, instead offering a four-paragraph letter from his personal doctor proclaiming that he would be 'the healthiest person ever elected to the presidency.' In 2020, when he was hospitalized with Covid and running for re-election, Mr. Trump's doctors gave minimal information about his condition, which, it emerged later, was far more dire than their public descriptions let on. In 2024, days before becoming the official Republican presidential nominee for the third time, he was grazed by a would-be assassin's bullet, yet his campaign did not hold a briefing on his condition, release hospital records or make the emergency physicians who treated him available for interview. Now, just over a month from an election that could make Mr. Trump, 78, the oldest person ever to serve as president (82 years, 7 months and 6 days when his term would end in January 2029), he is refusing to release even the most basic information about his health." (Also linked yesterday.)

Katie Rogers of the New York Times: "Melania Trump ... said in a video on Thursday that there was 'no room for compromise' on a woman's right to 'individual freedom,' a day after a reported excerpt from her coming memoir said she supported abortion rights. Mrs. Trump's comments landed as ... Donald J. Trump and his party are trying to soften their opposition to abortion, a key issue threatening his support with female voters and his attempt to return to the White House. They were released in a promotional video for a new memoir scheduled for release on Tuesday. Her husband, who opposes federal abortion rights and has taken credit for helping overturn Roe v. Wade, did not immediately comment." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, super-duper. The first lady has no role in government, Trump & elected Republican men think of women as child-producing chattel & Melanie is hardly ever home except maybe when designing blood-red decor for the Christmas party. So I hope all you young women are feeling safe and protected now that the future First Lady in Absentia might have said she supports abortion rights. Think she's gonna rush in to the Oval & tear up the national abortion ban bill while Donald is still upstairs fixing his hair? ~~~

     ~~~ Steve M.: "Some people might think Melania Trump is going rogue, but this looks like strategy to me[.]... I don't think it's a coincidence that this was timed for just after the vice presidential debate -- J.D. Vance has been much more of an anti-abortion zealot than Donald Trump...." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

    ~~~ Oh, Look, More Strategery. Martin Pengelly of the Guardian: "Melania Trump describes in her new memoir how she made her husband ... Donald Trump drop a signature hardline immigration policy under which migrant children were separated from their parents, stoking domestic and international uproar. 'This has to stop,' the former first lady says she told her husband, 'emphasizing the trauma it was causing these families' and seeing him swiftly comply, ending the policy on 20 June 2018." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Hadas Gold & Pamela Brown of CNN: "Nearly two months ago, CNN reached out to Melania Trump's book publisher to request an interview with the former first lady ahead of her upcoming memoir. After several exchanges about a possible interview..., Skyhouse Publishing laid out strict terms for an interview and use of material from the book.... On top of that, the agreement stipulated that 'CNN shall pay a licensing fee of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000).' CNN did not sign the agreement. Days later, after a separate CNN journalist asked Skyhorse Publishing about the exorbitant interview fee, the publisher said it had sent the payment demand by mistake.... Paying a public figure for an interview, especially the spouse of a political candidate, is highly frowned upon in most newsrooms...." (Also linked yesterday.)

Smooth Operator. Michael Bender of the New York Times: "In his 90-plus minutes on the vice-presidential debate stage, [JD] Vance, 40, delivered a performance that gave Donald J. Trump's words and plans an intellectual and emotional dimension and revealed himself to be a more complicated figure than the caricature portrayed by his critics. Mr. Vance ... fleshed out his ticket's populism in a way Mr. Trump has never been willing or able to do.... But the question remains whether Mr. Vance has laid the cornerstone for a new foundation of Trumpism, or his vision is merely a mirage. In some ways, Mr. Vance has simply rolled a smooth veneer over the harshness of his party's unpopular positions without addressing the underlying policies that Americans find problematic.... Politics is indeed an art, but so is deception. And for his opponents, Mr. Vance is simply whoever his audience wants him to be." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Bender, who seems to admire JayDee's rhetorical skills, does admit that, "On Wednesday, as the campaign moved from the debate stage and back into battleground states, Mr. Vance dropped the air of respect he had shown the night before. During a pair of events in Michigan, he mocked the 'dumbest' comments he heard from ... Tim Walz.... He referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as 'an absolute disgrace,' described her as 'very insecure' and blamed her for 'division and hatred' in American politics." !!!

~~~ Austin Sarat in a Hill op-ed: "JD Vance's performance in this week's vice presidential debate was real slick.... The man who made millions as a corporate lawyer and ruthless venture capitalist used the debate to reinvent himself as a dedicated servant of the downtrodden and dispossessed.... Vance's debate performance was an elaborate ruse, whether he was talking about himself or his running mate. As the Wall Street Journal noted, 'JD Vance's Version of Trump Is Better Than the Real Thing.'... Like his fellow travelers in the con-man trade, Vance pretended to be a person he is not, selling views he does not hold, trying to persuade voters to believe something that is not true -- anything to fuel his own political ambitions. He hoped to capitalize on the well-known penchant of Americans to 'get conned again and again.'"

MEANWHILE, JayDee's not-so-smooth Democratic counterpart poses a problem: ~~~

~~~ Meredith Hill & Mia McCarthy of Politico: "Since being tapped as Kamala Harris' running mate, the folksy, plain-speaking Minnesota governor [Tim Walz] has had to explain a growing number of inaccurate statements -- and at times embellishments -- about his past. They range from comments about his military service to his visit to Hong Kong more than three decades ago to clarifying that his family didn't specifically use in vitro fertilization.... The need to continually clean up those claims could politically hurt Walz and Harris.... Walz's misstatements could contradict the image that the campaign has painted of him as an upstanding, everyday Midwest guy." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: To me the crux of the problem is that Harris is trying to present the Democratic ticket as the authentic, all-American antithesis of the perpetually-lying phonies on the GOP ticket, and her partner in this endeavor turns out to be Walter Mitty. (Except Walter had the sense not to share his fantastic heroics with the world.)

Marcy Wheeler: “John Roberts not only rewrote the Constitution to protect Donald Trump. He forced prosecutors to spend 14 pages arguing that it is not among the job duties of the President of the United States to attack Republicans who've crossed him on Twitter.... This is the all-powerful President John Roberts wants to have. Someone who can sit in his dining room siccing mobs on fellow Republicans.... The 14 pages analyzing mean Tweets follows the analysis of two rally speeches, in which prosecutors first show the January 4 Georgia speech was a campaign event, and then (among other things) lay out the similarity between that speech and Trump's January 6 one. Among the things Trump included in both speeches was an attack on the Supreme Court: '... [Georgia...]: 'I'm not happy with the Supreme Court. They are not stepping up to the plate. They're not stepping up.' Ellipse...: 'I'm not happy with the Supreme Court. They love to rule against me.'... The inclusion of Trump's attacks on them also might get these partisan hacks to think more seriously about the nearly identical exhortations Trump made on Truth Social before they decided to rewrite the Constitution in his favor." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I am convinced that John Roberts' Immunity Ruling for the Ages was his attempt to regain his "relevance." Clarence, Sam & the Three Trump Stooges were going to rule for Trump anyway, so Roberts just wanted to get back in the majority club. He did it with a splash, didn't he? (Maybe a splash of Eau de Roger Taney, oh well.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update: I see by yesterday's Comments that I was wrong to describe Trump's appointees as the Three Stooges. I should have been more respectful & referred to t hem by proper nicknames: Sleazy, Boozy & Phony, friends of Dopey & Grumpy. Thanks, Akhilleus, for setting me straight.

Everything Is Going Very Smoothly. Robert Faturechi, et al., of ProPublica: "... Donald Trump's media company has forced out executives in recent days after internal allegations that its CEO, former Rep. Devin Nunes, is mismanaging the company, according to interviews and records of communications among former employees. Several people involved with Trump Media believe the ousters are retaliation following what they describe as an anonymous 'whistleblower' complaint regarding Nunes that went to the company's board of directors. The chief operating officer and chief product officer have left the company, along with at least two lower-level staffers, according to interviews, social media posts and communications between former staffers...." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The company's response to an inquiry from ProPublica is classic Trump & completely consistent with Devin Nunes' MO. I suspect the company keeps a standard "Response to Media" at the ready. Trump's company didn't answer ProPublica's questions but it did complain that ProPublica had "utterly fabricates implications of improper and even illegal conduct that have no basis in reality. This story is the fifth consecutive piece in an increasingly absurd campaign by ProPublica, likely at the behest of political interest groups, to damage TMTG based on false and defamatory allegations and vague innuendo.... TMTG strictly adheres to all laws and applicable regulations." The original form letter looks like this: "_____________ utterly fabricates implications of improper and even illegal conduct that have no basis in reality. This story is the _____ piece in an increasingly absurd campaign by __________, likely at the behest of political interest groups, to damage TMTG based on false and defamatory allegations and vague innuendo.... TMTG strictly adheres to all laws and applicable regulations."


Danielle Douglas-Gabriel
of the Washington Post: "A federal judge will allow a temporary restraining order that prevented President Joe Biden from discharging student loan debt for more than 25 million Americans to expire Thursday, clearing the way for the administration to move forward with the plan. The decision delivers a small victory in the Biden administration's ongoing fight to alleviate federal student loan debt..." MB: The reasoning behind the order is complicated, as is what may happen next. Here's the NBC News story, which may be a tad clearer than the WashPo report, but the underlying facts are still complicated. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Oh, Wait, Kids. The Trump Team Screwed You Again. Annie Nova of CNBC: "The Biden administration's sweeping student loan forgiveness plan was temporarily blocked again Thursday by a Missouri judge, just one day after a federal judge in Georgia said he would let a restraining order against the relief expire. St-Louis-based U.S. District Judge Matthew Schelp, an appointee of ... Donald Trump, issued the latest preliminary injunction against Biden's relief plan. As a result of the order, the U.S. Department of Education is again barred from forgiving people's student loans until Schelp has a chance to rule on the case."

On the Waterfront. Peter Eavis of the New York Times: "The International Longshoremen's Association agreed on Thursday to suspend a strike that closed down major ports on the East and Gulf Coasts. The move followed an improved wage offer from port employers. The strike, which the dockworkers' union began on Tuesday, threatened to weigh on the economy five weeks before national elections. Employers, represented by the United States Maritime Alliance, have offered to increase wages by 62 percent over the course of a new six-year contract, according to a person familiar with negotiations who did not want to be identified because the talks were continuing. That increase is lower than what the union had initially asked for, but much higher than the alliance's earlier offer.... The agreement came after the White House pressed both sides to reach a deal to end the strike, the union's first full-scale walkout since 1977. The wage increase is a clear victory for the I.L.A. and its combative president, Harold J. Daggett, a 78-year-old, third-generation dockworker who has led the union since 2011. President Biden, when asked about the tentative deal on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews on Thursday evening, said: 'We've been working hard on it. With the grace of God, it's going to hold.'" CNN's report is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'm surprised to learn President Biden was working on a resolution. I thought the arbitrator would have been Donald Trump, who tells us he can solve any disagreement, no matter how contentious or bellicose, in a day. I would have expected Trump to go in into a room filled with burly longshoremen, say "No overtime or you're fired," and that would be the end of it. ~~~

     ~~~ Alex Gangitano of the Hill: "President Biden on Thursday hailed the agreement made between the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) union and the U.S. Maritime Alliance (USMX) to end the port strike, arguing that collective bargaining works and is essential to the economy. 'Today's tentative agreement on a record wage and an extension of the collective bargaining process represents critical progress towards a strong contract,' Biden, who has stood behind the striking workers, said in a statement."

~~~~~~~~~~

Colorado. Mead Gruver of the AP: "A judge ripped into a Colorado county clerk for her crimes and lies before sentencing her Thursday to nine years behind bars for a data-breach scheme spawned from the rampant false claims about voting machine fraud in the 2020 presidential race. District Judge Matthew Barrett told former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters -- after earlier sparring with her for continuing to press discredited claims about rigged voting machines -- that she never took her job seriously. 'I am convinced you would do it all over again if you could. You're as defiant as any defendant this court has ever seen,' Barrett told her in handing down the sentence. 'You are no hero. You abused your position and you're a charlatan.' Jurors found Peters guilty in August for allowing a man to misuse a security card to access to the Mesa County election system and for being deceptive about that person's identity. The man was affiliated with My Pillow chief executive Mike Lindell, a prominent promoter of false claims that voting machines were manipulated to steal the election from ... Donald Trump. The discredited claims trace back to Trump himself...." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ You can hear the judge condemning Peters at the top of this video.

Tennessee. Emily Cochrane & Ben Stanley of the New York Times: "Three former Memphis police officers were found guilty on Thursday of federal witness tampering charges in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man. But all three defendants were acquitted of the more serious charge of violating his civil rights by causing his death. One officer, Demetrius Haley, was convicted on a lesser charge of violating Mr. Nichols's civil rights by causing bodily injury. The three defendants -- Mr. Haley, Tadarrius Bean and Justin Smith -- and two other former officers who pleaded guilty to their role in the violence, still face additional state charges, including second-degree murder."

~~~~~~~~~~

Israel/Palestine, et al. The Washington Post's live updates of developments Friday in Israel's wars is here: "The Israel Defense Forces escalated its offensive in Lebanon, with strikes on Thursday hitting soldiers and medics and pummeling Beirut's southern suburbs. The Israeli military also said it had carried out a separate airstrike in the West Bank targeting the regional head of Hamas in Tulkarm. That assault killed at least 18 people, according to Palestinian officials."

U.K./Mauritius. Noah Keate of Politico: "The U.K. agreed to pass sovereignty of the disputed Chagos Islands to Mauritius after decades of campaigning -- with one big caveat. U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his Mauritian counterpart Pravind Jugnauth hailed a 'seminal moment' Thursday as a political agreement was struck on the future of the islands, which have been called Britain's last African colony and are home to a crucial U.S. and U.K. military base in the Indian Ocean.... The chain of islands in the Indian Ocean includes Diego Garcia -- used by the U.S. government as a base for its navy ships and long-range bomber aircraft. Under the agreement struck Thursday, Diego Garcia itself will remain under U.K. and U.S. jurisdiction for at least the next 99 years to allow the base to keep running."

News Lede

CNBC: "The U.S. economy added far more jobs than expected in September, pointing to a vital employment picture as the unemployment rate edged lower, the Labor Department reported Friday. Nonfarm payrolls surged by 254,000 for the month, up from a revised 159,000 in August and better than the 150,000 Dow Jones consensus forecast. The unemployment rate fell to 4.1%, down 0.1 percentage point."

Thursday
Oct032024

The Conversation -- October 3, 2024

Mead Gruver of the AP: ?A judge ripped into a Colorado county clerk for her crimes and lies before sentencing her Thursday to nine years behind bars for a data-breach scheme spawned from the rampant false claims about voting machine fraud in the 2020 presidential race. District Judge Matthew Barrett told former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters -- after earlier sparring with her for continuing to press discredited claims about rigged voting machines -- that she never took her job seriously. 'I am convinced you would do it all over again if you could. You're as defiant as any defendant this court has ever seen,' Barrett told her in handing down the sentence. 'You are no hero. You abused your position and you're a charlatan.' Jurors found Peters guilty in August for allowing a man to misuse a security card to access to the Mesa County election system and for being deceptive about that person's identity. The man was affiliated with My Pillow chief executive Mike Lindell, a prominent promoter of false claims that voting machines were manipulated to steal the election from ... Donald Trump. The discredited claims trace back to Trump himself...."

Sickly Old Man Running for Prez* Again. Emily Baumgaertner & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "As a presidential candidate in 2015, Donald J. Trump declined to release his medical records, instead offering a four-paragraph letter from his personal doctor proclaiming that he would be 'the healthiest person ever elected to the presidency.' In 2020, when he was hospitalized with Covid and running for re-election, Mr. Trump's doctors gave minimal information about his condition, which, it emerged later, was far more dire than their public descriptions let on. In 2024, days before becoming the official Republican presidential nominee for the third time, he was grazed by a would-be assassin's bullet, yet his campaign did not hold a briefing on his condition, release hospital records or make the emergency physicians who treated him available for interview. Now, just over a month from an election that could make Mr. Trump, 78, the oldest person ever to serve as president (82 years, 7 months and 6 days when his term would end in January 2029), he is refusing to release even the most basic information about his health."

Maggie Astor of the New York Times: "Donald J. Trump said on Wednesday that, if elected again, he would revoke the legal status of tens of thousands of Haitian immigrants who have been the target of false accusations by the former president and his running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, over the past month. Mr. Trump's administration tried to do that during his first term, too, but courts temporarily blocked it, and President Biden's administration renewed the immigrants' status after he took office in 2021. The immigrants in question are living and working in the United States legally through the Temporary Protected Status program, which Congress created in 1990 for people from countries experiencing war, natural disasters or other crises. The Department of Homeland Security designates countries for up to 18 months at a time based on the current conditions, and the designation can be renewed indefinitely. Haiti was initially added in 2010, under President Barack Obama, after a 7.0-magnitude earthquake devastated the country. It has since experienced a major hurricane and a cholera epidemic." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Let us hope Trump's cruel announcement helps those dithering "undecideds" understand that nobody is safe when the Nastiest Turdblossom in the USA is president*, so they'd better vote for Harris.

Katie Rogers of the New York Times: "Melania Trump, the former first lady, said in a video on Thursday that there was 'no room for compromise' on a woman's right to 'individual freedom,' a day after a reported excerpt from her coming memoir said she supported abortion rights. Mrs. Trump's comments landed as ... Donald J. Trump and his party are trying to soften their opposition to abortion, a key issue threatening his support with female voters and his attempt to return to the White House. They were released in a promotional video for a new memoir scheduled for release on Tuesday. Her husband, who opposes federal abortion rights and has taken credit for helping overturn Roe v. Wade, did not immediately comment." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, super-duper. The first lady has no role in government, Trump & elected Republican men think of women as child-producing chattel & Melanie is hardly ever home except maybe when designing blood-red decor for the Christmas party. So I hope all you young women are feeling safe and protected now that the future First Lady in Absentia might have said she supports abortion rights. Think she's gonna rush in to the Oval & tear up the national abortion ban bill while Donald is still in the residence fixing his hair? I don't. ~~~

     ~~~ Steve M.: "Some people might think Melania Trump is going rogue, but this looks like strategy to me[.]... I don't think it's a coincidence that this was timed for just after the vice presidential debate -- J.D. Vance has been much more of an anti-abortion zealot than Donald Trump...." ~~~

     ~~~ Oh, Look, More Strategery. Martin Pengelly of the Guardian: "Melania Trump describes in her new memoir how she made her husband ... Donald Trump drop a signature hardline immigration policy under which migrant children were separated from their parents, stoking domestic and international uproar. 'This has to stop,' the former first lady says she told her husband, 'emphasizing the trauma it was causing these families' and seeing him swiftly comply, ending the policy on 20 June 2018." ~~~

~~~ Hadas Gold & Pamela Brown of CNN: "Nearly two months ago, CNN reached out to Melania Trump's book publisher to request an interview with the former first lady ahead of her upcoming memoir. After several exchanges about a possible interview..., Skyhouse Publishing laid out strict terms for an interview and use of material from the book.... On top of that, the agreement stipulated that 'CNN shall pay a licensing fee of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000).' CNN did not sign the agreement. Days later, after a separate CNN journalist asked Skyhorse Publishing about the exorbitant interview fee, the publisher said it had sent the payment demand by mistake.... Paying a public figure for an interview, especially the spouse of a political candidate, is highly frowned upon in most newsrooms...."

Marcy Wheeler: "John Roberts not only rewrote the Constitution to protect Donald Trump. He forced prosecutors to spend 14 pages arguing that it is not among the job duties of the President of the United States to attack Republicans who've crossed him on Twitter.... This is the all-powerful President John Roberts wants to have. Someone who can sit in his dining room siccing mobs on fellow Republicans.... The 14 pages analyzing mean Tweets follows the analysis of two rally speeches, in which prosecutors first show the January 4 Georgia speech was a campaign event, and then (among other things) lay out the similarity between that speech and Trump's January 6 one. Among the things Trump included in both speeches was an attack on the Supreme Court: '... [Georgia...]: 'I'm not happy with the Supreme Court. They are not stepping up to the plate. They're not stepping up.' Ellipse...: 'I'm not happy with the Supreme Court. They love to rule against me.'... The inclusion of Trump's attacks on them also might get these partisan hacks to think more seriously about the nearly identical exhortations Trump made on Truth Social before they decided to rewrite the Constitution in his favor." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I am convinced that John Roberts' Immunity Ruling for the Ages was his attempt to regain his "relevance." Clarence, Sam & the Three Trump Stooges were going to rule for Trump anyway, so Roberts just wanted to get back in the majority club. He did it with a splash, didn't he? (Maybe a splash of Eau de Roger Taney, but oh well.)

Danielle Douglas-Gabriel of the Washington Post: "A federal judge will allow a temporary restraining order that prevented President Joe Biden from discharging student loan debt for more than 25 million Americans to expire Thursday, clearing the way for the administration to move forward with the plan. The decision delivers a small victory in the Biden administration's ongoing fight to alleviate federal student loan debt..." MB: The reasoning behind the order is complicated, as is what may happen next; you'll just have to read these article. Here's the NBC News story, which may be a tad clearer than the WashPo report, but the underlying facts are still complicated.

~~~~~~~~~~

Presidential Race

We are here for the long haul. -- Kamala Harris, in Augusta, Georgia, Wednesday ~~~

Erica Green of the New York Times: "Vice President Kamala Harris surveyed damage from Hurricane Helene on Wednesday in Georgia, promising residents that the federal government was rushing to help with the recovery.... Standing in front of a house covered in fallen trees in the Meadowbrook neighborhood of Augusta, Ga., Ms. Harris announced that the federal government would cover 100 percent of the costs of debris removal and other emergency protective measures for three months to help the state recover. She described how much of the community did not have power, with many lacking access to water, and how she had met one woman who lost her husband. She called the damage 'extraordinary' and the loss of life 'particularly devastating.' Ms. Harris also met with local officials and received a briefing on recovery efforts, during which she praised emergency responders who were working even amid their own personal struggles...." ~~~

~~~ Chris Megerian, et al., of the AP: "Vice President Kamala Harris handed out meals, embraced a shaken family and surveyed Hurricane Helene's 'extraordinary' path of destruction through Georgia on Wednesday as she left the campaign trail to pledge federal help and personally take in scenes of toppled trees, damaged homes and lives upended. She visited Augusta, where power lines stretched along the sidewalk and utility poles lay cracked and broken.... Harris and President Joe Biden, who visited the Carolinas on Wednesday, were seeking to demonstrate commitment and competence in helping devastated communities after Republican ... Donald Trump's false claims about their administration's response.... Harris also toured a Red Cross relief center and received a briefing from local officials, praising those working to 'meet the needs of people who must be seen and must be heard.'"

Shane Goldmacher & Reid Epstein of the New York Times: "Vice President Kamala Harris has cast herself as a candidate of the future, but she has been yanked back by the problems of the present as the Middle East lurches toward a wider war, a longshoremen's strike threatens to undermine the country's economy and Americans across the Southeast struggle to recover from a deadly hurricane.... The rare moment of turbulence for Ms. Harris interrupts what has been mostly smooth sailing in her two months as the Democratic presidential nominee. It also captures a conundrum of the vice presidency, a prestigious if mostly ceremonial posting.... The overlapping developments just as the calendar turned to October were a reminder that while Ms. Harris has framed her candidacy as a fresh start for the nation, she very much is part of the administration still in charge."

Marin Scotten of Salon ties Trump's cancelling a traditional "60 Minutes" interview to "an especially scattered and hard to follow" press conference Trump gave in Milwaukee Tuesday. "Several of his remarks were unintelligible, including a claim that Democrats want to 'keep Black and Hispanic children trapped in family government.'"

Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: "Half an hour into Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate, JD Vance lodged a whiny protest. 'Margaret,' he said to moderator Margaret Brennan of CBS News, 'the rules were that you guys weren't going to fact-check!' It was a lie on top of another lie, supplemented by a pair of other lies, in support of an even bigger lie. There was no 'rule' against fact-checking. And Vance had just told a whopper. He had alleged that, in Springfield, Ohio, 'you've got schools that are overwhelmed, you've got hospitals that are overwhelmed, you have got housing that is totally unaffordable because we brought in millions of illegal immigrants.'... The senator said Harris 'became the appointed border czar.' She received no such appointment.... There is no 'open border.'..., and the thousands of Haitian migrants ... have legal status.... He said 'over $100 billion' of Iranian assets were unfrozen 'thanks to the Kamala Harris administration.'... Kamala Harris isn't the president.... On health care, he served up the howler of the night when he said that Trump 'saved' the 'collapsing' Affordable Care Act.... In reality, of course, Trump tried his best to kill Obamacare.... Vance capped the night by saying that Trump 'peacefully' surrendered power four years ago." (Also linked yesterday.)

JayDee, Junior Scapegoater. Rachel Siegel of the Washington Post: "Throughout Tuesday's vice-presidential debate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) blamed soaring housing costs on a spike in immigration over the past few years -- promising that a crackdown on illegal immigration and 'kicking out illegal immigrants who are competing for those homes' would help affordability.... That claim has been debunked by economists and housing experts, who say that other forces have played a much bigger role in driving up prices and that illegal immigration is not a top reason prices are high. Immigration may be helping to keep rents elevated in some areas, though. Foreign-born workers also make up roughly a third of the construction workforce, a crucial part of the push to build millions of new homes and fix years-long shortages. That means the strict immigration crackdown Vance and ... Donald Trump are proposing could send prices even higher." ~~~

     ~~~ Junior Scapegoater, Ctd. Jasmine Garsd of NPR highlights some more ills that during the debate JayDee blamed on immigrants, such as claiming they lowered U.S. citizens' wages. "Most labor economists disagree with the claim that immigrants depress native-born worker wages.... He falsely claimed guns are smuggled into the U.S. over the border with Mexico (in fact, it's the other way around).... Both candidates spoke about fentanyl as related to immigration, which remains a pervasive myth: Fentanyl is overwhelmingly brought into the U.S. by people crossing legally, through ports of entry. The street supply of fentanyl is also drying up."

Philip Bump of the Washington Post elaborates on a point both Zack Beauchamp of Vox & Will Saletan of the Bulwark made in posts linked here yesterday: that Trump & "his allies are making it clear, repeatedly, that the only outcome they will accept without hesitation is one where he is the victor." Marie: And I am here to remind you that none of this would be an issue if we had direct election of presidents because the difference between the number of votes cast for Harris & for Trump is likely to be in the millions.

Alan Feuer & Charlie Savage of the New York Times: "In a sprawling legal brief partly unseale on Wednesday, the special counsel, Jack Smith, laid out his case for why ... Donald J. Trump is not immune from prosecution on federal charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election. The redacted brief, made public by Judge Tanya S. Chutkan of the Federal District Court in Washington, adds new details to the already extensive public record of how Mr. Trump lost the race but attempted nonetheless to cling to power." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ "So What?" Spencer Hsu of the Washington Post: "The much-anticipated 165-page filing from special counsel Jack Smith offers a searing portrayal of Trump just a month before the 2024 election. It describes in more extensive detail than before how many people -- including Vice President Mike Pence, party and state leaders, his own campaign officials, his own campaign lawyers, and others -- told Trump there was no proof the election was stolen, and how Trump nonetheless waged a campaign to overturn the result. Prosecutors reconstructed behind-the-scenes interactions, including one in which an aide rushed to the dining room to share with Trump, who had been watching the events on TV and tweeting, that action was being taken to ensure the safety of Pence, who was in the Capitol building. 'The defendant looked at him and said only, the filing alleges." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Katelyn Polantz, et al., of CNN: "The 165-page document comes from Smith"s office and is the fullest accounting yet of evidence in the election subversion case against Trump. Throughout the document, Smith argues that the actions Trump took to overturn the election were in his private capacity -- as a candidate -- rather than in his official capacity, as a president.... The filing weaves together what prominent witnesses told a federal grand jury and the FBI about Trump, along with other never-before-disclosed evidence investigators gathered about the former president's actions leading up to and on January 6, 2021." (Also linked yesterday.)

When the defendant lost the 2020 presidential election, he resorted to crimes to try to stay in office. -- Motion for Immunity Determinations, p. 3

Under the Constitution, the Executive Branch has no constitutionally assigned role in the state-electoral process. To the contrary, the constitutional framework excludes the President from that process to protect against electoral abuses. -- Motion, p. 111 ~~~

     ⭐ ~~~ The motion is here. (Via CNN.) (Also linked yesterday.) MB: I found this CBS News copy of the motion to be more easily searchable. ~~~

     ~~~ Melissa Quinn & Robert Legare of CBS News have a "key takeaways" report here. It summarizes a good deal of detail that appears in the motion. ~~~

     ~~~ "So What," "Make Them Riot," "It Doesn't Matter if You Won or Lost the Election." Aaron Blake of the Washington Post analyzes the impact of some of the evidence which the motion newly makes public. Dan Friedman of Mother Jones also has a good summary of the new evidence in the motion and its significance. ~~~

     ~~~ Rachel Maddow said on-air that even though she knew much of the detail laid out in the motion, Smith's narrative put it together for her in a way that others had not. (Without citing chapter & verse), she gave as an example of this passage on p. 81: "The defendant issued the incendiary Tweet about Pence despite knowing -- as he would later admit in an interview in 2023 -- that his supporters 'listen to [him] like no one else.' One minute later, at 2:25 p.m., the Secret Service was forced to evacuate Pence to a secure location." You don't need to be a genius to suspect cause-and-effect here. ~~~

     ~~~ "Accessories After the Fact." Scott Lemieux in LG&$: "It's infuriating to be reminded in such detail about the behavior that the Republicans on the Supreme Court sought to immunize, particularly since any 'opinion for the ages' horseshit notwithstanding the opinion was clearly tailored to provide the broadest possible immunity for specifically for Trump's attempt to violently steal the election. John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Sam Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett are all full in knowing accessories after the fact to the Plot Against America." Lemieux republishes a portion of Rick Hasen's firewalled Slate essay, noting that "Hasen observes that Jack Smith's brief is as much an indictment of John Roberts and the Dred Scott of the 21st century as it is of Trump."

Marie: Speaking of "searing portraits" of Trump, RAS shares this one. It is not a portrait that will come as a surprise to you, but it is a second-hand account that puts meat on the bones of many an article we've linked about Trump's stiffing contractors.

Marie: Two days ago, I linked to a New York Times story that reported, "In his remarks, the former president repeatedly said that he had come bearing gifts to help the disaster response: semitrailer trucks filled with relief supplies and a tanker of gas, distributed by the evangelical Christian humanitarian aid group Samaritan's Purse. Still, as he underlined his contributions to the storm response...." So just maybe that left you with the impression that Trump had at least dug into his campaign coffers, if not his personal piggy bank, to bring along rolls of paper towels to lob at desperate residents. In fact, Trump, his campaign and some right-wing media outfits also left that impression, if they didn't say so unequivocally. BUT NO. According to J.D. Wolf of MeidasTouch Network (a partisan liberal site), it appears that Franklin Graham's outfit Samaritan's Purse was wholly responsible for buying, packing, delivering & distributing the truckloads of relief supplies.

digby -- with help from Chris Hayes (I got a virus-warning message on the link to Hayes' article); Rick Perlstein, writing in the American Prospect, & psychologist Julie Hotard, writing on X -- examines the mindset of the "undecided voter." They are not, as journalists repeatedly tell us, dithering over whether they like Trump's healthcare plan (oops! he doesn't have one quite yet) or Harris's reproductive rights policies. Nope, the "undecided voter" is trying to decide between falling into the fascist fantasy that Trump will protect them and ... reality. ~~~

     ~~~ And Paul Campos, in LG&$, highlights this coda to Perlstein's essay: "I certainly don't disagree that Trump is becoming more cognitively impaired and out of touch with reality. But might not these impairments render him a better fascist seducer, as his invitations to infantile regression become ever more primal, ever more basic, ever more pure?" Campos: "This is disturbingly plausible. In other words, Trump's decompensation is allowing him, either consciously or semi-consciously or even unconsciously, to deliver the uncut version of the ideological meth he;s been selling for nine and a half years now." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I disagree with the original premise though I go along with the idea that Trump's own infantalism may be exceptionally appealing to the infantile undecided voters. Still, I think every voter -- including the vast majority of us "decided voters" -- is looking for a protector. Most of us are realistic, many to the point of cynacism, about just how much protection we'll actually get. But what divvies us into right and left camps is the question of just what the dangers are -- that is, what we need protection from. As JayDee amply demonstrated, people on the right seem to think they need protection from immigrants, for instance. Or from overreaching government that would take away their guns and make them wear protective gear in certain situations. Or from taxes. Those of us on the left want protection from overreaching government, too, but the difference is where the government is doing its overreach: into the doctor's office? Into our bedrooms? Onto the streets where we're peacefully protesting? Into our libraries? We also want protection from the natural & periodic vicissitudes: hunger, unaffordable shelter, illness, old age. We want protection from bad actors -- like gunslingers and crooks -- as well as from physical dangers -- and inhospitable surroundings -- like crappy bridges & roads, not to mention climate-change-induced catastrophic weather events.


Zach Montague & Jacey Fortin
of the New York Times: "President Biden on Wednesday took an aerial tour of the devastation from Hurricane Helene and ordered the Pentagon to deploy up to 1,000 active-duty troops to assist with aid efforts as rescue workers continued dangerous rescue missions in remote mountain communities. Mr. Biden's visit to the Carolinas came as the death toll from the storm rose to more than 17 people on Wednesday, making Helene the deadliest hurricane to strike the mainland United States since Katrina, which caused nearly 1,400 deaths in 2005, according to statistics from the National Hurricane Center." (Also linked yesterday.)

~~~~~~~~~~

Israel/Palestine, et al.

The Washington Post's live updates of developments Thursday in Israel's wars are here: "An Israeli airstrike in Beirut's Bachoura neighborhood killed six people and injured seven others, Lebanon's Health Ministry said. It was the second and deadliest airstrike inside the capital since Israel's conflict with Hezbollah began. The late-night strike hit the office of the Islamic Health Authority, a health services institution run by Hezbollah, and paramedics were among the casualties, an IHA spokesperson said. The Israel Defense Forces said it conducted a 'precise strike' in Beirut. In southern Lebanon, Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants engaged in what appeared to be their first direct ground confrontations." ~~~

     ~~~ The New York Times' live updates for Thursday are here.

Yasmeen Abutaleb, et al., of the Washington Post: "The White House is working to limit the Israeli response to the barrage of ballistic missiles that Iran fired into the country Tuesday, as some U.S. officials worry the Middle East could be edging closer to the all-out war that President Joe Biden has sought to prevent for nearly a year.

Tuesday
Oct012024

The Conversation -- October 2, 2024

Alan Feuer & Charlie Savage of the New York Times: :In a sprawling legal brief partly unsealed on Wednesday, the special counsel, Jack Smith, laid out his case for why ... Donald J. Trump is not immune from prosecution on federal charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election. The redacted brief, made public by Judge Tanya S. Chutkan of the Federal District Court in Washington, adds new details to the already extensive public record of how Mr. Trump lost the race but attempted nonetheless to cling to power." ~~~

     ~~~ Spencer Hsu of the Washington Post: "The filing described what the then-president told key figures in his orbit, including vice president Mike Pence, attorney Rudy Giuliani and senior White House and Republican Party officials, though it shielded some of their names, and how some in his orbit told him his claims of having won the election were false. It also detailed what Trump was doing on Jan. 6, as his supporters stormed the Capitol.... This is a developing story...." ~~~

     ~~~ Katelyn Polantz, et al., of CNN: "The 165-page document comes from Smith's office and is the fullest accounting yet of evidence in the election subversion case against Trump. Throughout the document, Smith argues that the actions Trump took to overturn the election were in his private capacity - as a candidate -- rather than in his official capacity, as a president.... The filing weaves together what prominent witnesses told a federal grand jury and the FBI about Trump, along with other never-before-disclosed evidence investigators gathered about the former president's actions leading up to and on January 6, 2021."

When the defendant lost the 2020 presidential election, he resorted to crimes to try to stay in office. -- Motion for Immunity Determinations, p. 3 ~~~

     ⭐~~~ The motion is here. (Via CNN.)

Zach Montague & Jacey Fortin of the New York Times: "President Biden on Wednesday took an aerial tour of the devastation from Hurricane Helene and ordered the Pentagon to deploy up to 1,000 active-duty troops to assist with aid efforts as rescue workers continued dangerous rescue missions in remote mountain communities. Mr. Biden's visit to the Carolinas came as the death toll from the storm rose to more than 175 people on Wednesday, making Helene the deadliest hurricane to strike the mainland United States since Katrina, which caused nearly 1,400 deaths in 2005, according to statistics from the National Hurricane Center."

Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: "Half an hour into Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate, JD Vance lodged a whiny protest. 'Margaret,' he said to moderator Margaret Brennan of CBS News, 'the rules were that you guys weren't going to fact-check!' It was a lie on top of another lie, supplemented by a pair of other lies, in support of an even bigger lie. There was no 'rule' against fact-checking. And Vance had just told a whopper. He had alleged that, in Springfield, Ohio, 'you've got schools that are overwhelmed, you've got hospitals that are overwhelmed, you have got housing that is totally unaffordable because we brought in millions of illegal immigrants.'... The senator said Harris 'became the appointed border czar.' She received no such appointment.... There is no 'open border.'..., and the thousands of Haitian migrants ... have legal status.... He said 'over $100 billion' of Iranian assets were unfrozen 'thanks to the Kamala Harris administration.'... Kamala Harris isn't the president.... On health care, he served up the howler of the night when he said that Trump 'saved' the 'collapsing' Affordable Care Act.... In reality, of course, Trump tried his best to kill Obamacare.... Vance capped the night by saying that Trump 'peacefully' surrendered power four years ago."

~~~~~~~~~~

Presidential Race

Monica Alba of NBC News: "Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign is launching a new digital ad Tuesday slamming the Republican vice presidential nominee, Sen. JD Vance, as 'extremist' and a 'danger to our democracy.' The spot argues Vance, R-Ohio, 'could be a heartbeat away' from the presidency if Donald Trump wins in November, the first time the Democratic ticket has gone after the former president's age in paid media since she became the Democratic nominee, according to a Harris official." ~~~

New York Times reporters liveblogged the vice-presidential debate, which aired on CBS & elsewhere, beginning at 9:00 pm ET Tuesday. The pinned entry: ~~~

Senator JD Vance of Ohio and Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota spent most of their only debate aiming not at each other but at their running mates, relitigating the last two administrations and eight years as each promised his ticket would deliver a new direction for the nation. It was a substantive and mostly civil debate between two Midwestern men that laid bare the policy chasm between the two parties on immigration, abortion and foreign policy. But no issue made clearer the size and stakes of the country's current political divide than the final topic of the night, when Mr. Vance refused to concede that ... Donald J. Trump had lost the 2020 election.... Mr. Vance looked polished throughout. Mr. Walz spoke haltingly, especially at the start, taking a series of verbal stutter-steps before getting to his point.... Here are seven takeaways from the debate[.]"

Slick JayDee. Ashley Parker & Caroline Kitchener of the Washington Post: "... [JD] Vance ... used Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate ... to try to reintroduce a smoother, more affable version of himself to the nation.... He also used the prime-time slot to repackage MAGA for the political middle -- offering a softer, more moderate, and often misleading version of Trump's polarizing vision and policy prescriptions. In fact, Vance spewed falsehoods and exaggerations on a host of Trump's core policy positions, ranging from immigration to health care to the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.... Trump has repeatedly taken credit for the fall of Roe v. Wade. And Vance ran for Senate in 2022 on a platform that promised to 'end abortion,' saying he would like the procedure to be 'illegal nationally.'... But on Tuesday night, Vance referenced an anonymous friend in an abusive relationship who told him how grateful she was that she had been able to have an abortion, seeming to imply -- but not quite saying -- that he supported her decision to terminate her pregnancy. 'I know she's watching tonight and I love you,' he said, staring directly into the camera, before acknowledging that most Americans feel differently than he does about the issue -- and pledging to earn their trust.... During the debate, [Trump] pledged on Truth Social to veto a national abortion ban 00 after refusing to make that same promise in his own debate with Vice President Kamala Harris last month. Abortion was hardly the only issue on which Vance offered a gauzy -- and at times distorted -- portrait of the Trump-Vance platform."

Video of the debate, via NBC News, is here. The full transcript of the debate, via CBS News, is here.

Matt Flegenheimer of the New York Times: "For some 90 minutes, [JD] Vance ... had largely tailored his debate-night message to a mass audience, avoiding most detours into conservative fever swamps, as if determined to deliver a rolling rebuttal to Democrats' longstanding suggestion that he was 'weird' and out of step. But when the debate turned, near its final frames, to the subject of the 2020 election, Mr. Vance ... said of Mr. Trump, 'he said that on January the 6th, the protesters ought to protest peacefully. And on January the 20th, what happened? Joe Biden became the president. Donald Trump left the White House.'... Mr. Vance pivoted jarringly to the subject of censorship. Mr. Walz glanced up at the camera, silent, like a television character breaking the fourth wall. 'Well, I've enjoyed tonight's debate,' Mr. Walz began when it was his turn again, assessing an evening that was sometimes wobbly for him. He was about to enjoy it more." Here's the exchange:

     ~~~ The Last Should Be First. Zack Beauchamp of Vox: "Ultimately, every issue discussed earlier [Tuesday] night comes in second to the fundamental question of whether America's democratic institutions deserve to endure. On that question, Vance truly is radical, and his exposure as such was the only truly important moment of the night.... Vance has been enthusiastic [in support of Trump's lies about the 2020 election]. He has, among other things, fundraised for January 6 rioters and said he would have illegally thrown the 2020 election result to Congress had he been in Mike Pence's position at the time. But what's most distinctive about Vance is the degree to which he has paired 2020 conspiracy theories with a coterie of other anti-democratic positions and ideologies.... Anti-democratic radicalism has been central to Vance's political identity since he began running for Senate in Ohio.... Despite democracy being at the core of the difference between the two candidates onstage..., it was treated as an afterthought. In doing so, the moderators created an illusion of normalcy: allowing the two candidates to civilly discuss issues like housing and the deficit in a basically standard-politician manner, when in fact they disagree on an existential question about the nature of American government itself." ~~~

     ~~~ Will Saletan of the Bulwark: "... there was only one question on which the vice presidency -- the job for which these two men are competing -- really matters. That question was whether they would certify the results of the next presidential election. And on that subject, Vance gave a non-answer that instantly disqualifies him: He refused to acknowledge that Donald Trump lost the 2020 election. Certification of elections was a central factor in Vance's audition to become Trump's running mate.... As Thomas Joscelyn has pointed out in The Bulwark, Vance stood out [among the contenders] in one respect: He was the one who signaled most clearly that he was willing to push constitutional boundaries to do Trump's bidding.... Vance was given an opportunity to dispel concerns that he would use the vice presidency to overturn another election. He declined that opportunity.... When democracy is in peril, he will bow to Trump, not to the people or the Constitution."

Jimmy Kimmel analyzes the debate & adds some color: ~~~

Melanie Mason of Politico: "... There was no decisive winner in the first-and-only vice presidential debate of the 2024 election. Asked who won Tuesday's debate, voters were split 50-50 over whether it was JD Vance or Tim Walz, according to a Politico/Focaldata snap poll of likely voters conducted just after the two faced off in a studio in New York City."

Aaron Pellish, et al., of CNN: "Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said on Tuesday he 'misspoke' when he previously said he'd visited Hong Kong in the spring of 1989 during protests in China's Tiananmen Square but insisted he 'was in Hong Kong and China' during the pro-democracy protests. His comments during Tuesday night's vice presidential debate followed the unearthing of reports that contradict previous claims he made about his travel to China, including a claim that the Democratic vice presidential nominee was in Hong Kong preparing for a teaching position in 1989 during the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests that ended in hundreds of protesters killed by the Chinese government.... Walz regularly organized and chaperoned trips to China during his time as a teacher prior to entering politics." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Walz's nonresponse-response to the moderator's question was just awful, IMO. He had to know this question was coming, so why he wouldn't directly answer, until pressed, is beyond me. ~~~

     ~~~ Here is a transcript of the Minnesota Public Radio Broadcast that raised the issue if Walz's misstatements about his experiences in China.

Aaron Rupar & Noah Berlatsky of Public Notice: "Across two campaign events in Wisconsin on Tuesday..., [Donald Trump] reiterated a truth that is much more important than who won the debate: namely, that he's morally and intellectually unfit for office. Both Trump events were packed with outrageous defamations and lies.... Vance's slick lying and election denialism is even more ominous given the possibility that he may end up as the country's leader in a second, nightmarish, Trump term." The writers run down a litany of weird. shocking Trump rants. In one, he accused Kamala Harris of murder.

Michael Gold of the New York Times: "In unfocused remarks that frequently veered into tangents..., Donald J. Trump responded on Tuesday to Iran's launching a missile attack against Israel by insisting that the world was nearing global devastation, criticizing President Biden's leadership and falling back on his frequent hypothetical that he would have prevented the crisis in the Middle East had he won in 2020.... Mr. Trump..., during a speech in Waunakee, Wis..., did not provide any details of how he might quell the war in Gaza or otherwise address the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran that has heightened tensions throughout the region. He falsely claimed Iran went broke under sanctions that were imposed while he was president....

"But Mr. Trump's remarks about Iran's attack against Israel were characterized more by his digressions than by his response to world events. As he insisted that he would restore global stability and criticized 'a nonexistent president and a nonexistent vice president,' Mr. Trump departed from his prepared remarks in order to criticize San Francisco, attack Vice President Kamala Harris's response to Hurricane Helene, stoke fears around immigration, blast the prisoner swap deal with Russia that freed Brittney Griner, repeat his false claims of widespread election fraud and relitigate whether the 1987 film 'Full Metal Jacket' should have won Academy Awards." ~~~

~~~ Marie: Hmm. Unless Kamala Harris weighs in with a specific, detailed analysis of the artistic merits & cultural impact of "Full Metal Jacket," I don't think she has my vote.

So earlier Tuesday we learned this: ~~~

Libby Cathey of CBS News: "In a move intended to troll ... Donald Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, ahead of the first and only vice presidential debate of 2024, the Democratic National Committee on Monday night is digitally projecting various phrases... onto Trump Tower in New York City. [Some of] the DNC's projections are ... aimed at the former president for saying he won't again debate Vice President Kamala Harris.... 'Trump is a chicken!' says [a] message...." ~~~

~~~ Now we hear this: ~~~

     ~~~ Michael Grynbaum of the New York Times: "CBS News said on Tuesday that ... Donald J. Trump had declined to participate in an interview with '60 Minutes' that would have been broadcast during a prime-time election special next week. The election special, a quadrennial tradition for the program, will move ahead on Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern, and feature interviews with Vice President Kamala Harris and ... Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota. In a statement, the network said Mr. Trump had initially accepted an invitation to be interviewed by one of the show's correspondents, Scott Pelley. But on Tuesday, CBS was told that Mr. Trump's campaign 'has decided not to participate.'" Emphasis added. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Apparently the campaign has been paying attention to the sort of nonresponsive responses Trump gave in the interviews Jon Stewart highlighted in the clips embedded here yesterday afternoon. Trump's staff knows he's out of it, and they're trying to hide him away.

Michael Gold of the New York Times: "... Donald J. Trump swings wildly from topic to topic at his rallies, veering from tariffs to immigration policy to the problems with electric vehicles. But he tends to return to the same apocalyptic message. 'You won't have a country anymore,' Mr. Trump said at a rally in Las Vegas last month.... It is a forecast Mr. Trump has made repeatedly over the last year in speeches and interviews and on social media.... Although he has long used fear as a tool to stir up his conservative base and sway undecided voters, Mr. Trump has taken his doomsday prophesying to a new extreme, increasing both its frequency and scope. He regularly predicts that if he loses to Vice President Kamala Harris in November, America will be ruined. World War III will break out, most likely prompting a global nuclear catastrophe. There will no longer be an America. Israel will cease to exist. Murderous immigrant gangs will overrun cities, small towns, the state of Colorado and the entire country. Factories will shutter. Farmers will lose their farms. The United States will face an economic 'blood bath.'"

Steve Benen of MSNBC: "When it comes to hurricanes, Donald Trump's record is an embarrassment. Indeed, some of the low points of the Republican's failed presidency were directly related to his bizarre reactions to brutal storms: From 'Sharpiegate' to 'big water,' from his odd unfamiliarity with Category 5 hurricanes to lobbing paper towels as if he were having fun shooting free throws, the GOP candidate's background is tough to defend.... But that doesn't mean his record can't get worse... [After make numerous false accusations against President Biden's & Vice President Harris's responses to Hurricane Helene,] when NBC News asked the Republican to substantiate his aid-related conspiracy theories, he walked away.... What kind of would-be leader lies about a deadly natural disaster?"


Katie Robertson
of the New York Times: "Olivia Nuzzi, the star political writer for New York magazine who was placed on leave after she disclosed her personal relationship with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has accused her former fiancé of a campaign of harassment and blackmail, according to court filings. In a complaint filed in Superior Court of the District of Columbia, Ms. Nuzzi accused the former fiancé, Ryan Lizza, a top political reporter at Politico, of hacking her devices and stealing a device to surveil her and collect materials to pressure her back into a relationship with him. She accused Mr. Lizza of bringing 'damaging information' to the attention of her employer and of distributing materials to the media that she said she believed to be doctored. She also claimed in the complaint that Mr. Lizza had threatened her with violence to coerce her into assuming his financial responsibility in a joint book contract, and 'explicitly threatened to make public personal information about me to destroy my life, career and reputation -- a threat he has since carried out.'... Mr. Lizza said the allegations ... were not true."~~~

     ~~~ Katelyn Polantz of CNN: "On Tuesday night, Politico said Lizza was taking a leave of absence from the publication while it conducts an investigation into the matter." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: This is not the first time Ryan Lizza has found himself in trouble because of a relationship with a woman gone awry. In 2017, the New Yorker fired him because of allegations he had sexually harassed a woman. According to Lizza's Wikipedia entry, the New Yorker said "he engaged in 'improper sexual conduct.' Lizza called The New Yorker's characterization a 'terrible mistake' that had been 'made hastily and without a full investigation of the relevant facts.' His alleged victim['s] ... attorney ... said, '[I]n no way did Mr. Lizza's misconduct constitute a "respectful relationship" as he has now tried to characterize it.'"

Anne Branigin & Herb Scribner of the Washington Post: "A team of lawyers announced Tuesday that it would be filing more than 100 sexual assault lawsuits against Sean Combs, a massive legal action that appears to have few if any precedents in the #MeToo era. The lawsuits would exponentially increase the number of sexual abuse accusations against the embattled music producer, commonly known by his stage name Diddy."

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Florida. Jiselle Lee of the Washington Post: "A former congressional candidate in Florida has been charged after allegedly threatening to send 'the Russian mafia' after his opponent. William Robert Braddock III, 41, was charged Thursday in federal court with threatening now-Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R). Braddock and Luna were rivals during the 2021 Republican primary election for Florida's 13th Congressional District, which includes the Tampa area." During a phone call with a friend of Luna's, Erin Olszewski, Braddock also threatened to have Olszewski killed if she support Luna's candidacy.

Georgia. Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post: "... the opinion [striking down Georgia's six-week abortion ban] by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, is worth paying attention to even if it is destined to be overturned. It offers one of the most compelling and straightforward defenses of the right to abortion that I have encountered in decades of writing about this issue.... As a legal matter, 'Women are not some piece of collectively owned community property the disposition of which is decided by majority vote,' McBurney wrote. 'Forcing a woman to carry an unwanted, not-yet-viable fetus to term violates her constitutional rights to liberty and privacy, even taking into consideration whatever bundle of rights the not-yet-viable fetus may have.' As a practical matter, McBurney was even clearer about the implications of requiring women to 'serve as human incubators for the five months leading up to viability.'" McBurney wrote,

It is not for a legislator, a judge, or a Commander from The Handmaid's Tale to tell these women what to do with their bodies during this period when the fetus cannot survive outside the womb any more so than society could -- or should.... When someone other than the pregnant woman is able to sustain the fetus, then -- and only then -- should those other voices have a say in the discussion about the decisions the pregnant woman makes concerning her body and what is growing within it. (Also linked yesterday.)

See also the New York Times report on McBurney's ruling linked under "Georgia" yesterday as well as Akhilleus's commentary in yesterday's thread. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Now compare McBurney's reasoned opinion with that of Donald Trump, who after repeatedly bragging about overturning Roe, realized the Alito-led decision was extremely unpopular. Trump then considered a 16-week national abortion ban because, "It's even. It's four months." (It isn't. On average, 16 weeks is 3.68 months. Sixteen weeks is four months only if you count only Februarys that are not in leap years.)

Georgia. Travis Gettys of the Raw Story: "Tens of thousands of Georgia voters updated their registration after Kamala Harris took over the Democratic campaign from president Joe Biden. Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger had removed thousands of voter registrations for a variety of reasons, but 40,000 voters have already updated their registration ahead of the Oct. 7 deadline -- and about a fourth of those did so on the day Harris rallied in Atlanta, according to an Atlanta Journal-Constitution analysis of the voter roll." (Also linked yesterday.)

Kentucky. David Chen & Kendra Sanchez of the New York Times: "Video of the fatal shooting of a judge in Kentucky was played in court on Tuesday, as prosecutors presented evidence of their case against the ex-sheriff charged with carrying out the killing on Sept. 19. In the footage, a man is seen opening fire on the judge, Kevin Mullins, who is pictured in his robes, sitting in his chambers in the Letcher County Courthouse in Whitesburg. When the judge tumbles out of his chair, the gunman walks around the desk and fires additional shots.... Prosecutors say that Shawn Stines, who had been the Letcher County sheriff for several years, was the shooter.... He pleaded not guilty last week during a virtual arraignment.... After his arrest, Mr. Stines, who is known as Mickey, announced through his lawyers that he was retiring, at age 43, 'to allow for a successor to continue to protect his beloved constituents while he addresses the legal process ahead of him.'"

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Israel/Palestine, et al. The New York Times' live updates of developments Wednesday in Israel's wars are here: "Israel has vowed to retaliate after Iran fired waves of ballistic missiles at it on Tuesday evening, putting the region on edge for fear of an all-out war between the longtime adversaries. Israeli officials said the missiles had mostly been intercepted by air defenses and with the help of Western allies. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that Iran had 'made a big mistake tonight -- and it will pay for it,' leaving neighboring countries and international observers on alert for Israel's potential response." ~~~

     ~~~ The Washington Post's live updates for Wednesday are here.

Vatican. They Don't Need to Discuss Much. Elisabetta Povoledo of the New York Times: "... when bishops and lay people convene Wednesday at the Vatican to talk about its future, one of the most contentious -- whether women can be ordained as deacons -- has already been taken off the agenda.... For many Catholics who are demanding a more egalitarian church, the synod -- as meetings of bishops are known -- was seen as an opening to address major issues considered taboo until recently, including the question of female deacons, the requirement that priests be celibate and the place of L.G.B.T.Q. people in the church."