Monday, November 30, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-30

These brutal police dog attacks were captured on video. Now some cities are curtailing K-9 use.

What it’s like to teach children about the election, and its results, in deep-red Trump country

Farming on Mars will be a lot harder than ‘The Martian’ made it seem

Trump lashes out as former top DHS official reasserts that election was ‘secure’

No game days. No bars. The pandemic is forcing some men to realize they need deeper friendships.

How Democrats should wage war on coming GOP obstructionism - "So when Republicans start talking about deficits, it should be greeted with derision, contempt and outrage — not over their hypocrisy, but because of what they’re trying to do to the country. Every Republican who says a word about deficits should be hit with 'Why are you trying to undermine the economy? Why don’t you want people to have jobs? How many Americans’ livelihoods are you willing to destroy just to knock down Biden’s approval ratings a few points? Is this what you were elected to do? How dare you?'"

J.D. Vance, the False Prophet of Blue America: The bestselling author of "Hillbilly Elegy" has emerged as the liberal media's favorite white trash–splainer. But he is offering all the wrong lessons.

In neighboring Georgia counties, election revealed a growing divide that mirrors the nation: President-elect Joe Biden won Newton County, Ga., by 11 points. President Trump won neighboring Jasper by 53.

Metro Proposes Cutting Weekend Trains, Closing 19 Stations And Slashing Bus Service

Indifferent Justice, Part I: The Perfect Victim

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-29

Iran’s political establishment faces a serious test of will. So will Joe Biden. - "We know that, following his loss in the U.S. election, President Trump asked his advisers to offer options for strikes on Iranian military installations. The intelligence community and top military advisers oppose the idea. But Secretary of State Mike Pompeo — America’s top 'diplomat' — shares with his boss the attitude that expertise doesn’t matter nearly as much as finding people to agree with you."

For Trump advocate Sidney Powell, a playbook steeped in conspiracy theories - At the Nov. 19 news conference, before a national television audience, she asserted that “communist money,” the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez and a manipulated computer algorithm were all connected in a secret plot that had altered potentially millions of ballots and stolen the election from Trump.

Powell did not stop there. In an interview two days later with the conservative outlet Newsmax, she said she had been given evidence — which she said she could not disclose — that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican and an ally of the president, had taken bribes and conspired to orchestrate Trump’s defeat. Nationwide, she estimated that “thousands” of local elections officials knowingly helped carry out the master scheme to tamper with ballots. In fact, Powell claimed, if anyone bothered to look, they’d probably find that U.S. elections had been rigged for decades.

America needs an epic narrative right now. Painters are working on it.

Iran’s president blames Israel for killing nuclear scientist and vows to respond at the ‘right time’

Marco Rubio is already suiting up for the politics of destruction

Why they fight: The Democrats are a big-tent party. The GOP isn’t. That explains everything. - "In the short term, Democrats clearly have a coalition-management challenge: Big-tent politics requires a lot of work and leads to inevitable bickering. But over the long run, Republicans are confronting decline, not only because the Democrats' diversity better reflects the country, both now and in the future, but also because the GOP's coalition is aging. Among Trump's voters, 65 percent were 45 or older; only 56 percent of Biden's were — and Biden captured voters under 30 by a better than 3-to-2 margin. In fact, the only thing that has saved Republicans in presidential elections over the past three decades is an electoral college that privileges White and conservative voters. The GOP has won the popular vote in only one of the past eight elections. Republicans took heart in their gains among Latinos, but the Hispanic vote was nonetheless key to Biden's success in Arizona and Nevada — and to the Democrats' ongoing advantage in California, New Mexico and elsewhere.

"Still, 2020 did not bring about the larger-scale realignment that the Democrats hoped for (and that was mistakenly forecast by many polls). To nurture that possibility, Biden and the Democrats must find their inner Job, with a little help from Machiavelli. For starters, each camp within the party can acknowledge the truth of what their internal rivals say. The left is right that it provides a lot of energy, especially among young voters and in the urban areas that turned out big for Biden. But the moderates are right that, to win power, the party needs middle-of-the-road voters, particularly from swing districts. This may produce more cautious officeholders, but they are essential to building a congressional majority. 

"Progressives are right that the quest for racial justice should not be compromised — and is, in fact, an electoral asset. (After all, 85 percent of Biden voters told the exit pollsters that the criminal justice system treats Blacks unfairly.) But moderates are right that slogans like 'Defund the police' can bring down moderate lawmakers, such as Staten Island's defeated Rep. Max Rose. Here's a rule for the future: Any slogan that requires five minutes to explain what it really means is not a good slogan."

A Geneticist’s Dilemma: A growing number of scientists believe that the cure for disease can be found in our DNA. But that poses a unique problem for some Native Americans.

An unusual snack for cows, a powerful fix for climate: Feeding them seaweed slashes the amount of methane they burp into the atmosphere

What hunting Bigfoot taught a Republican congressman about politics

China sharply ramps up trade conflict with Australia over political grievances

20 days of fantasy and failure: Inside Trump’s quest to overturn the election - "The 20 days between the election on Nov. 3 and the greenlighting of Biden’s transition exemplified some of the hallmarks of life in Trump’s White House: a government paralyzed by the president’s fragile emotional state; advisers nourishing his fables; expletive-laden feuds between factions of aides and advisers; and a pernicious blurring of truth and fantasy.

...

"A simple and clear refutation of the president came Friday from a Trump appointee, when Judge Stephanos Bibas of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit wrote a unanimous opinion rejecting the president’s request for an emergency injunction to overturn the certification of Pennsylvania’s election results. 

"'Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy,' Bibas wrote. “Charges of unfairness are serious. But calling an election unfair does not make it so. Charges require specific allegations and then proof. We have neither here.'"

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-26

Why Republican voters say there’s ‘no way in hell’ Trump lost - "The widespread rejection of the election result among Republicans reflects a new and dangerous dynamic in American politics: the normalization of false and increasingly extreme conspiracy theories among tens of millions of mainstream voters, according to government scholars, analysts and some lawmakers on both sides of the political divide. The trend has deeply troubling long-term implications for American political and civic institutions, said Paul Light, a veteran political scientist at New York University (NYU). 

"'This is dystopian,' Light said. 'America could fracture.'"

...

"Asked whether Trump might be duping his followers, he said it’s hard to fathom. 'If I’m being manipulated by Trump ... then he is the greatest con man that ever lived in America,' Caleb Fryar said. 'I think he’s the greatest patriot that ever lived.'"

Reading archive 2020-11-25

"When I became president, President Obama had a separation policy. I didn’t have it. He had it.": Donald Trump, again, falsely says Obama had family separation policy

“More suicide deaths than coronavirus death past two months.”: No, suicides have not outpaced COVID-19 deaths

NRA reports alleged misspending by current and former executives to IRS

Monday, November 23, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-23

US election 2020: Is Trump right about Dominion machines?

US can kill its own citizens without review when state secrets are involved, DOJ lawyer argues

Sidney Powell: Trump team cuts ties with lawyer who peddled bizarre fraud claims

The Bengals failed Joe Burrow, and the NFL is worse for it

Republican national security experts call on Trump to concede, begin transition

EU urges Poland, Hungary to sign up to big money budget

HUMAN AGEING REVERSED IN ‘HOLY GRAIL’ STUDY, SCIENTISTS SAY: ‘Ageing can, indeed, be targeted and reversed at the basic cellular-biological level,’ lead researcher says

Israeli prime minister makes historic visit to Saudi Arabia, intelligence official confirms

Michigan board votes to certify the state’s election results, dealing Trump another blow

Trump privately plots his next act — including a potential 2024 run

Trump’s post-presidency will be cluttered with potentially serious legal battles

Trump’s legacy may be an increasingly authoritarian Republican Party

General Motors’ parting shot at Trump bodes well for the Biden presidency

Reading archive 2020-11-22

In scathing opinion, federal judge dismisses Trump campaign lawsuit in Pennsylvania

Trump’s quest to overturn election runs into quiet resistance from local and state Republicans

Biden reaches out. The GOP slaps him in the face. - "...when politics is reduced to all slapping and no reasoning, and when the words 'take this country back' mean keeping the loser of a free election in power by manipulating the truth and the law, we have traveled a long way from the democratic tradition. Those who lack the conviction to sustain that tradition by defending rationality and the democratic rules of engagement forfeit their standing to ask the rest of us to believe that they are operating in good faith."

Trump’s overarching Middle East strategy reaches a disastrous dead end - "So what does President-elect Joe Biden do with this mess? First, he will want to remember the mistakes he and Obama made on their watch — above all, wrongly judging an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal to be the key to the region, and making it a priority despite the manifest unwillingness of the current leaders on both sides. But then he ought to revive Obama’s equilibrium strategy, which allows the United States to align itself against the aggression and human rights abuses of both Iran and Saudi Arabia, while gradually making the pivot away from the Mideast the past two presidents aimed for."

Thursday, November 19, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-19

DK METCALF IS CHASING GLORY: A journey that began with a broken neck and draft-day snub might end with the next all-time great quarterback-receiver pairing.

Trump's election power play: Persuade Republican legislators to do what U.S. voters did not

Trump invites Michigan Republican leaders to meet him at White House as he escalates attempts to overturn election results

Lawsuit: Tyson managers bet money on how many workers would contract COVID-19

I lost my dad to Fox News: How a generation was captured by thrashing hysteria: Old white people are drowning in despair and rage. Here's how my father lost his mind -- thanks to his cable diet

The Brainwashing of My Dad - "As Jen Senko tries to understand the transformation of her father from a nonpolitical Democrat to an angry Republican fanatic, she uncovers the forces behind the media that changed him completely: a plan by Roger Ailes under President Richard Nixon for a media takeover by the Republicans, the 1971 Powell Memo urging business leaders to influence institutions of public opinion (especially the media, universities, and courts), the 1987 dismantling of the Fairness Doctrine under President Ronald Reagan, and the signing of the 1996 Telecommunications Act under President Bill Clinton. The documentary aims to show how the media and the nation changed, which leads to questions about who owns the airwaves, what rights listeners and watchers have, and what responsibility the government has to keep the airwaves fair, accurate, and accountable." [ed. note: a film, as yet unwatched]

In the waning days of Trump’s presidency, White House press pool reports are getting snarkier

Kenosha: How two men’s paths crossed in an encounter that has divided the nation: Kyle Rittenhouse, in a jailhouse interview, said he used stimulus money to get a gun. The first man he shot had just left a psychiatric hospital.

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-14

Forty Fort man applied for a ballot for his deceased mother, detectives allege

Charges filed in father-son voter fraud case in Chester County

Trump Made the Economy His Message. Biden Won It

Black voters delivered Democrats the presidency. Now they are caught in the middle of its internal battle.

Alito homes in on gay marriage, gun rights, religious liberty in stern speech to conservatives

Biden-voting counties equal 70% of America’s economy. What does this mean for the nation’s political-economic divide? - "To start with, the 2020’s sharpened economic divide forecasts gridlock in Congress and between the White House and Senate on the most important issues of economic policy. The problem—as we have witnessed over the past decade and are likely to continue seeing—is not only that Democrats and Republicans disagree on issues of culture, identity, and power, but that they represent radically different swaths of the economy. Democrats represent voters who overwhelmingly reside in the nation’s diverse economic centers, and thus tend to prioritize housing affordability, an improved social safety net, transportation infrastructure, and racial justice. Jobs in blue America also disproportionately rely on national R&D investment, technology leadership, and services exports. 

By contrast, Republicans represent an economic base situated in the nation’s struggling small towns and rural areas. Prosperity there remains out of reach for many, and the party sees no reason to consider the priorities and needs of the nation’s metropolitan centers. That is not a scenario for economic consensus or achievement. 

At the same time, the results from last week’s election likely underscore fundamental problems of economic alienation and estrangement. Specifically, Trump’s anti-establishment appeal suggests that a sizable portion of the country continues to feel little connection to the nation’s core economic enterprises, and chose to channel that animosity into a candidate who promised not to build up all parts of the country, but rather to vilify groups who didn’t resemble his base. 

If this pattern continues—with one party aiming to confront the challenges at top of mind for a majority of Americans, and the other continuing to stoke the hostility and indignation held by a significant minority—it will be a recipe not only for more gridlock and ineffective governance, but also for economic harm to nearly all people and places. In light of the desperate need for a broad, historic recovery from the economic damage of the COVID-19 pandemic, a continuation of the patterns we’ve seen play out over the past decade would be a particularly unsustainable situation for Americans in communities of all sizes."

Friday, November 13, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-13

More than 130 Secret Service officers are said to be infected with coronavirus or quarantining in wake of Trump’s campaign travel

Elon Musk, who has cold symptoms, says his coronavirus tests are inconclusive: ‘Something extremely bogus is going on’

Passengers on first cruise in Caribbean test positive for coronavirus

Trump wasn’t wrong about China. But here’s how Biden can do a better job.

This is a massive failure of character among Republicans — with evangelicals out in front - "...U.S. politics would be better off if White evangelicals consistently applied their moral tradition to public life. Not only Christians, of course, can stand for integrity. But consider what would happen if White evangelicals insisted on supporting honest, compassionate, decent, civil, self-controlled men and women for office. The alternative is our current reality, in which evangelicals have often been a malicious and malignant influence in U.S. politics."

China strikes its worst blow yet against autonomy and rule of law in Hong Kong

The potato head of Palencia: defaced Spanish statue latest victim of botched restoration: Conservation professionals have questioned why Spain's heritage is continually handed over to those with no formal training

Alito's politically charged address draws heat: The Supreme Court justice warned that not only is freedom of belief under threat, but freedom of expression is as well.

Alito raises religious liberty concerns about Covid restrictions and same-sex marriage ruling - "Alito also reiterated what he had written in 2015, when he dissented from the court's decision to clear the way for same-sex marriage nationwide. 'I could see,' he said, where the decision would lead for those who 'cling to traditional views on marriage.' He reiterated that opponents of the ruling would risk being 'labeled as bigots and treated as such by governments, employers and schools.'

Far-right protesters, counterdemonstrators plan to gather Saturday in D.C. amid pro-Trump rallies

A war among Trump’s kids shows this family won’t let us move on

Biden finds support among Republicans as Trump scrambles to salvage his strategy to contest the election

In the United States, QAnon is struggling. The conspiracy theory is thriving abroad.

DEMOCRATIC OFFICIALS LIED ABOUT ROLE IN ALEX MORSE SMEAR, INTERNAL REPORT FINDS: A Democratic attorney urged students to leak vague allegations against Morse to Politico, the students told an internal party investigator

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-12

Louisville police, county attorney's office hide 738,000 records in Explorer sex abuse case

Evidence suggests several state Senate candidates were plants funded by dark money

GOP leaders’ embrace of Trump’s refusal to concede fits pattern of rising authoritarianism, data shows: Research by a team of international scholars shows the Republican Party’s shift away from democratic norms predates Donald Trump but has accelerated since

In poll watcher affidavits, Trump campaign offers no evidence of fraud in Detroit ballot-counting

'My friends were lied to': will coalminers stand by Trump as jobs disappear? - "Joe Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, has outlined a $2tn plan to generate millions of jobs in renewable energy, potentially providing a new path for threatened coal workers. But coalmining has deep roots in communities that many are unwilling to relinquish. 'It’s a damned joke,' said Bostic, of the West Virginia Coal Association. 'It’s an affront to a coalminer to say: 'We will take your job away for one that pays less well, and by the way, you have to pack your family up and move.''" [ed. note: FOAD, Jason]

Longest-serving Senate Republican joins call for Biden to receive briefings: Grassley says president-elect should have access to briefings as Ohio governor says Biden’s victory should be recognized

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-10

As an ex-president, Trump could disclose the secrets he learned while in office, current and former officials fear

10 things you need to know to stop a coup: While keeping people focused on a strong, robust election process is a must, we also need to prepare for a coup.

Arkansas police chief resigns after demanding ‘death’ for Democrats: ‘Leave no survivors’

Vatican’s McCarrick report says Pope John Paul II knew of misconduct allegations nearly two decades before cardinal’s removal

‘Election Day is over, and guess what?’: Tom Dean, a physician, on the dire situation in South Dakota

White House, escalating tensions, orders agencies to rebuff Biden transition team

‘What’s the downside for humoring him?’: A GOP official’s unintentionally revealing quote about the Trump era

‘My faith is shaken’: The QAnon conspiracy theory faces a post-Trump identity crisis President Trump’s defeat and the week-long disappearance of its anonymous prophet have forced supporters of the baseless movement to rethink their beliefs: ‘Have we all been conned?’

Their county was once a bellwether. Now, these Obama-Trump voters wonder what the future holds.

Why Texas’s overwhelmingly Latino Rio Grande Valley turned toward Trump

Trump dramatically changed the presidency. Here’s a list of the 20 most important norms he broke — and how: Biden can restore them Trump dramatically changed the presidency. Here’s a list of the 20 most important norms he broke — and how Biden can restore them.

Monday, November 9, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-09

Didn't think to do math - "The funny thing about that is: the Blue States have funded the Red states for decades (the prime source for this information since the 1980s was the libertarian think-tank The Tax Foundation who saw that no Red State was going to pay their own way after 2006 so they stopped collating the info on their web pages)."

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-05

Here's A Running List Of False And Misleading Information About The Election: Watch out for images and videos being taken out of context.

World watches with unease as drawn-out, contested election batters America’s global image

"We wanted to follow up on a live blog post that we wrote on the afternoon of Nov. 4 and that was later tweeted from the main FiveThirtyEight Twitter account.

 "   Two more batches of Pennsylvania vote were reported: -23,277 votes in Philadelphia, all for Biden -about 5,300 votes in Luzerne County, nearly 4,000 of which were for Biden *With 83% of the expected vote in, Trump’s lead in PA is now just below 6 points. https://t.co/zspxaPkzKs — FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) November 4, 2020 

"This one batch of votes in Philadelphia has been picked up by some people, including a commentator on Fox News, as possible evidence of fraud. It’s not. According to Edison Research, which aggregates vote data for ABC News and other networks (and is the source of the data in question), sometimes election officials and vote aggregators unintentionally enter vote updates one candidate at a time, rather than entering all candidates together. Other candidates’ votes are then included in a subsequent batch. That appears to be what happened here, and in the next update from Philadelphia, Trump got about double the share of votes that he was getting in the other updates from there during that stretch of time."

The Problem with Honey Bees: They’re important for agriculture, but they’re not so good for the environment

Sunday, November 1, 2020

Reading archive 2020-11-01

Biden camp cancels multiple Texas events after a "Trump Train" surrounded a campaign bus: The highway skirmish came as Democrats close ground in a state that is polling competitively in the race for president. Recent polls indicate the presidential race in Texas between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden is tight, with some national prognosticators calling it a “toss-up.”

March to Alamance polls ends with police using pepper-spray on protesters, children

Maria Bartiromo Was a Generational Icon for Financial Television. What Happened?

What Happened to Glenn Greenwald? - "At face value one wonders how Greenwald, who made such a name for himself as an opponent to the national security state, and who lives as a prominent gay journalist, married to a Socialist congressman, in Bolsonaro’s Brazil, can now spend so much time and energy effectively running cover for the American fascist right."

Battle-hymn of the Never Trumpers: Renegade Republicans represent the breadth—and the admirable best—of Joe Biden’s coalition

Trump allies, largely unconstrained by Facebook’s rules against repeated falsehoods, cement pre-election dominance: From a pro-Trump super PAC to the president’s eldest son, conservatives have blown past Facebook’s fact-checking guardrails, with few consequences.

Facebook Fired An Employee Who Collected Evidence Of Right-Wing Pages Getting Preferential Treatment: Facebook employees collected evidence showing the company is giving right-wing pages preferential treatment when it comes to misinformation. And they’re worried about how the company will handle the president’s falsehoods in an election year. - "While there are signs Facebook will stand up to Trump in cases where he violates its rules — as on Wednesday when it removed a video post from the president in which he claimed that children are 'almost immune' to COVID-19 — there are others who suggest the company is caving to critical voices on the right. In another recent Workplace post, a senior engineer collected internal evidence that showed Facebook was giving preferential treatment to prominent conservative accounts to help them remove fact-checks from their content. 

"The company responded by removing his post and restricting internal access to the information he cited. On Wednesday the engineer was fired, according to internal posts seen by BuzzFeed News.

...

"On July 22, a Facebook employee posted a message to the company’s internal misinformation policy group noting that some misinformation strikes against Breitbart had been cleared by someone at Facebook seemingly acting on the publication's behalf. 'A Breitbart escalation marked ‘urgent: end of day’ was resolved on the same day, with all misinformation strikes against Breitbart’s page and against their domain cleared without explanation,' the employee wrote."

Trailing in the polls, Trump enlists his administration and co-opts the government to bolster his reelection