Sunday, January 31, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-31

Ukraine stayed quiet during Trump-era pressures. Now it’s sharing some Giuliani tales.

Ten Senate Republicans propose compromise covid relief package, request meeting with Biden: Move by GOP senators led by Susan Collins comes as Democrats prepare to go forward quickly with Biden package without Republican support

Opinion: Alexei Navalny may be in jail, but he’s helping to give birth to a new Russia

Woman charged in Capitol riot said she wanted to shoot Pelosi ‘in the friggin’ brain,' FBI says

‘Be ready to fight’: FBI probe of U.S. Capitol riot finds evidence detailing coordination of an assault - "'Historically, within the right-wing extremist movements, leadership has produced rhetoric to spin up their members, increase radicalization and recruitment, and then stand back and let small cells or individual lone offenders follow through on that rhetoric with violent action,' said Thomas O’Connor, a former FBI agent who spent decades investigating domestic terrorists. 'Domestic terrorism actually developed the leaderless resistance concept, taking the potential blame away from the leadership and putting it down into small groups or individuals, and I think that is what you’re starting to see here.'"

How Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, promoter of QAnon’s baseless theories, rose with support from key Republicans

Police chief, officer under fire after bodycam video surfaces with racial slurs, explicit language: Video surfaced of comments both are seen making at a Black Lives Matter protest.


Thursday, January 28, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-28

Time to double or upgrade masks as coronavirus variants emerge, experts say: Better face coverings are needed to curb more-transmissible strains as vaccine rollout is underway, they say

What you need to know about GameStop’s stock price chaos: Here’s how ordinary investors, spurred on by a Reddit message board, took on the big Wall Street funds and sent share prices soaring for the video game retailer

Democrats consider one-week impeachment trial, censure resolution after GOP signals likely acquittal of Trump

A reporter tried to ask Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene about her false claims. The journalist was threatened with arrest.

Most nursing home workers don’t want the vaccine. Here’s what facilities are doing about it.

Coronavirus variant sweeps South Africa, exhibiting ‘terrifying’ dominance

Denmark is sequencing all coronavirus samples and has an alarming view of the U.K. variant

The Amazonian city that hatched the Brazil variant has been crushed by it - "As viruses course through a population, they inevitably mutate, although most such genetic changes are functionally insignificant. The coronavirus has spawned countless variants around the world. But P.1 — along with variants found in South Africa and Britain — is provoking particular concern.

Not only does it have a spike protein mutation that could lead to a higher infection rate, it possesses what’s called an “escape mutation.” Also found in the South Africa variant, the mutation, known as E484k, could help it evade coronavirus antibodies.

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-27

Boebert Claimed Not To Know Anti-Govt Extremists She Posed With, But Photos Show Otherwise

QAnon-Curious House Candidate Gave Her Customers Diarrhea: Lauren Boebert made her food business a centerpiece of her surprise win in the GOP primary in Colorado. But the cooking hasn’t always been a net plus. - "Authorities suspected the food had not been stored at proper temperatures. When health inspectors visited Smokehouse 1776 a couple days after the rodeo, they found it had no 'cold holding' or 'hot holding' procedures to maintain safe food temperatures prior to service. They also found that the restaurant “does not maintain temperature logs so there was no way of showing that food was kept at proper temperatures,” and reported 'bare hand contact with ready to eat foods, no handwashing station, [and] no barrier protection from insects.'"

She Resisted Getting Her Kids The Usual Vaccines. Then The Pandemic Hit

The GOP’s Marjorie Taylor Greene problem is spinning out of control

Millions earmarked for public health emergencies were used to pay for unrelated projects, says inspector general: Staff referred to agency as the ‘bank of BARDA’ and said research and development funds were regularly tapped for unrelated projects, from salaries to the removal of office furniture, the report finds

“It’s over and nothing makes sense”: QAnon believers struggle to cope with Biden inauguration: “Well I’m the official laughing stock of my family,” one QAnon follower said after Joe Biden was sworn in

Joel Embiid Is the Exception to the MVP Rule: A traditional big man hasn’t been awarded the NBA’s top honor in nearly two decades, but the Sixers center is dominating in the 3-point era with a devastating post-up game

Philadelphia let ‘college kids’ distribute vaccines. The result was a ‘disaster,’ volunteers say.

What Six Trump Voters Learned: Some of the 45th president’s supporters—both former and diehard—on the lessons they took from the past four years.

A Veteran Cop Was Caught on Video Plowing His Patrol Car Into a Crowd: “He just ran like three people over,” a bystander says in one of several videos of the incident.

Marjorie Taylor Greene Believes in Frazzledrip, QAnon’s Wildest Conspiracy Theory: Greene has repeatedly tried to distance herself from QAnon, but she has never disowned the conspiracy movement.

Cutting off stimulus checks to Americans earning over $75,000 could be wise, new data suggests: Biden is debating another round of $1,400 stimulus payments. Some in Congress have urged the president to target aid to lower-income families only.

 Why You Should Still Wear A Mask And Avoid Crowds After Getting The COVID-19 Vaccine - "Can I spread the virus to others even if I'm fully vaccinated? This is an important question, but scientists studying the shots' effectiveness don't have an answer yet. And for public health experts, that lack of knowledge means you should act like the answer is yes."

Anti-Trump Republican Adam Kinzinger accepts his fate, whatever it is

Alaska official who defended Nazi license plates is removed from state discrimination board

“We See the D.C. Reporters Parachuting In When They Do Their Story”: For a longtime local reporter in Arizona, Trump’s collapse in the state was several narratives finally colliding.

Monday, January 25, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-25

After Capitol riot, police chiefs work to root out officers with ties to extremist groups - "'A brand new cadet, first week in the academy, openly bragged that they were part of the Aryan Brotherhood. Another cadet notified us. That is how emboldened some of these folks are right now,' Acevedo, who is police chief at the Houston Police Department, said. 'Needless to say, this cadet is no longer with us. We are looking to see what we failed to check before he entered the academy.'"

The rivers run through it, and Jon Tester wants them protected for Montana

The Biden administration’s Saudi problem

Mitch McConnell’s latest sabotage effort is a scam. He already showed us how.

Dominion voting machine firm sues Giuliani for more than $1.3 billion

Fall is prime tree planting season, but what about next spring’s cicada eruption?

Cicadas Are the Next Plague That Will Keep You Indoors: Brood X is coming this spring.

Tom Brady vs. Patrick Mahomes Is Super Bowl Mythology in the Making: The greatest quarterback of all time is set to face off with the greatest quarterback on the planet. The result could echo throughout NFL history.

Transgender ban lifted. Tubman on the $20. It’s a hard time for conservatives.

Why the right’s machine of opposition is in for some tough times

The Nazification of the Republican Party - "If Republicans can’t permanently dominate this country with a demographically shrinking number of angry white people, they proved they are ready to blow it up, figuratively and literally. Now they want us to rush to forgiveness and reconciliation, and ignore that truth and accountability come first in the achievement of healing."

Friday, January 22, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-22

“THE PRESIDENT THREW US UNDER THE BUS”: EMBEDDING WITH PENTAGON LEADERSHIP IN TRUMP’S CHAOTIC LAST WEEK: Throughout the final, frenzied days of the Trump administration, a reporter rode shotgun with the outgoing acting defense secretary, Christopher Miller, the man who, under the distracted eye of his commander in chief, became America’s de facto guardian. - "Sitting on his couch at the end of a surreal week, he finally took off the gloves. His target? The Defense Department itself, the largest organization in the world—and one he has served in various ways since he was 18. 'This fucking place is rotten. It’s rotten.' Miller’s gravest concern, he said, involved a bedrock principle of American democracy: civilian control of the military. 'When the system is weighted towards the Joint Staff and the geographic combatant commanders against civilian control, you know, we’ve got to rethink this.' He expressed a belief that by 'idolizing and fetishizing' the top brass, members of Congress had ignored an erosion over time in the chain of command. 

"'We’re in a crisis mode,' Cohen had told me earlier. He said he and others had discovered that the Joint Chiefs were creating their own 'security compartments' containing operational planning details 'for the express purpose of hiding key information from career civilian and political leaders in the Pentagon'—up to and including the secretary of Defense. Talk about a deep state. 'That means that policymakers were basing their decisions on partial information. It’s very dangerous and irresponsible, and that’s something I’ve actually highlighted in my conversations with [Biden’s] transition team.' I’ll admit it sounded loopy. To me it had all the elements of a Trump fever dream: The military and intelligence establishment was somehow scheming against the renegades. That is, until two other senior national security officials—with Miller and company—confirmed Cohen’s assertion."

Episode 5: The secret CIA plan

Want to understand the GOP’s problem? Look at its newly elected extremists. - "The most ambitious Republicans, even those who are themselves quite smart and well-educated, see their path to success as pandering to the dumbest and most deluded people in their party. Witness Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas (Princeton, Harvard Law) and Josh Hawley of Missouri (Stanford, Yale Law), who made themselves leaders of the effort to overturn the presidential election, promoting what they absolutely, positively know are lies about widespread fraud. 

"But wait, you may say, aren’t there equivalents on the Democratic side? Don’t they have their own extremists? There’s a profound difference, which is that the people in Congress who are far to the left — especially those who get the most attention — spend more time thinking about policy in a given week than the likes of Cawthorn and Boebert have in their entire lives. 

"Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y), for instance, is a social media star, but she also has a lengthy policy agenda, including workers’ rights and the Green New Deal. Rep. Katie Porter (Calif.) has gone viral with videos in which she wields her whiteboard against hapless corporate executives in hearings, but those are confrontations in which she uses her deep understanding of economics and finance to show — with math! — how profiteering hurts consumers and workers.

...

"There are some Republican members of Congress who care a great deal about policy and would love to become media stars by showing off their creative ideas for trade agreements or tax reform. But that’s not going to get you on Fox News, because their voters don’t really care."

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-13

Lindsey Graham had a lock on most ludicrous senator — until Josh Hawley pounced

Lawmakers gave groups ‘reconnaissance’ tours of the Capitol one day before riots, Democratic congresswoman says

Four years ago, I wondered if the media could handle Trump. Now we know.

Female scientists focus on a secret weapon to fight climate change: Moms: A new group of parent scientists is launching Science Moms, a $10 million educational campaign to engage other mothers

Women of the would-be insurrection

A Black officer faced down a mostly White mob at the Capitol. Meet Eugene Goodman.

Rep. Watson Coleman: I’m 75. I had cancer. I got covid-19 because my GOP colleagues dismiss facts.

Two Virginia police officers, man in ‘Camp Auschwitz’ sweatshirt arrested in Capitol riot

Long‐term trends indicate that invasive plants are pervasive and increasing in eastern national parks

QAnon reshaped Trump’s party and radicalized believers. The Capitol siege may just be the start.: The online conspiracy theory, which depicts Trump as a messianic warrior battling ‘deep state’ Satanists, has helped fuel a real-world militant extremism that could haunt the Biden era: It’s ‘a threat to our democracy, and we’re not nearly done’

Lying to Your Base Is Not Only Wrong, It’s Bad Politics: The move to reject the electoral votes was not the first time that Ted Cruz launched an impossible effort that ended up hurting the GOP.

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-12

Conservatives crying ‘Orwell’ are downright Orwellian - "Such appropriation of the language of condemnation is an old trick. But the violent assault on Congress has fired the furnace of conservative rhetoric to record temperatures. After months of openly poisoning the body politic with lies that sent a mob crashing into the Capitol, right-wing politicians are deeply alarmed about . . . their ability to continue openly poisoning the body politic with lies. 

"Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) recently tweeted, 'Big Tech’s PURGE, censorship & abuse of power is absurd & profoundly dangerous. If you agree w/ Tech’s current biases (Iran, good; Trump, bad), ask yourself, what happens when you disagree? Why should a handful of Silicon Valley billionaires have a monopoly on political speech?'

"There is nothing 'profoundly dangerous' about limiting the ability of co-conspirators to plot attacks against government ceremonies, officials and buildings. Cruz, who pretends to be an expert on constitutional law, knows that private companies making editorial judgments and enforcing their terms of service are not practicing 'censorship.' And he neatly elides the inconvenient fact that no one in this country enjoys 'a monopoly on political speech.' Indeed, a U.K.-based billionaire controls Fox News, America’s most successful cable news network and a gushing fount of incendiary disinformation."

‘War for the soul’: Capitol riot elevates GOP power struggle between pro-Trump conspiracy theorists and party establishment

No. 3 House Republican Liz Cheney to Vote to Impeach Trump

The Nationalist’s Delusion: Trump’s supporters backed a time-honored American political tradition, disavowing racism while promising to enact a broad agenda of discrimination. - "During the final few weeks of the campaign, I asked dozens of Trump supporters about their candidate’s remarks regarding Muslims and people of color. I wanted to understand how these average Republicans—those who would never read the neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer or go to a Klan rally at a Confederate statue—had nevertheless embraced someone who demonized religious and ethnic minorities. What I found was that Trump embodied his supporters’ most profound beliefs—combining an insistence that discriminatory policies were necessary with vehement denials that his policies would discriminate and absolute outrage that the question would even be asked.

...

"The frequent postelection media expeditions to Trump country to see whether the fever has broken, or whether Trump’s most ardent supporters have changed their minds, are a direct outgrowth of this mistake. These supporters will not change their minds, because this is what they always wanted: a president who embodies the rage they feel toward those they hate and fear, while reassuring them that that rage is nothing to be ashamed of.

...

"For centuries, capital’s most potent wedge against labor in America has been the belief that it is better to be poor than to be equal to niggers.

...

"Overall, poor and working-class Americans did not support Trump; it was white Americans on all levels of the income spectrum who secured his victory. Clinton was only competitive with Trump among white people making more than $100,000, but the fact that their shares of the vote was nearly identical drives the point home: Economic suffering alone does not explain the rise of Trump. Nor does the Calamity Thesis explain why comparably situated black Americans, who are considerably more vulnerable than their white counterparts, remained so immune to Trump’s appeal. The answer cannot be that black Americans were suffering less than the white working class or the poor, but that Trump’s solutions did not appeal to people of color because they were premised on a national vision that excluded them as full citizens.

"When you look at Trump’s strength among white Americans of all income categories, but his weakness among Americans struggling with poverty, the story of Trump looks less like a story of working-class revolt than a story of white backlash. And the stories of struggling white Trump supporters look less like the whole truth than a convenient narrative—one that obscures the racist nature of that backlash, instead casting it as a rebellion against an unfeeling establishment that somehow includes working-class and poor people who happen not to be white.

"The nature of racism in America means that when the rich exploit everyone else, there is always an easier and more vulnerable target to punish. The Irish immigrants who in 1863 ignited a pogrom against black Americans in New York City to protest the draft resented a policy that offered the rich the chance to buy their way out; their response was nevertheless to purge black people from the city for a generation.

...

"Even before trump, the Republican Party was moving toward an exclusivist nationalism that defined American identity in racial and religious terms, despite some efforts from its leadership to steer it in another direction. George W. Bush signed the 2006 reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act, attempted to bring Latino voters into the party, and spoke in defense of American Muslims’ place in the national fabric. These efforts led to caustic backlashes from the Republican rank and file, who defeated his 2006 immigration-reform legislation, which might have shifted the demographics of the Republican Party for a generation or more. In the aftermath of their 2012 loss, Republican leaders tried again, only to meet with the same anti-immigrant backlash—one that would find an avatar in the person of the next Republican president."

Republicans begin to join impeachment push

Backlash to riot at Capitol hobbles Trump’s business as banks, partners flee the brand

Monday, January 11, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-11

Talk-radio owner orders conservative hosts to temper election fraud rhetoric

These Black Capitol Police Officers Describe Fighting Off "Racist-Ass Terrorists": Two Black officers told BuzzFeed News that their chief and other upper management left them totally unprepared and were nowhere to be found on the day.

Trump scrambles to find new social network after Twitter ban, as White House prepares to blast big tech

Twitter, Amazon, Facebook face fallout from taking action against Trump and his supporters: Twitter and Facebook banned Trump, while Amazon cut off a pro-Trump website.

Manatee With ‘Trump’ Etched Into Back Sparks Federal Investigation: A marine scientist said the incident was “one of the most horrifying things I have ever seen done to a wild animal."

Study: Roundup Weed Killer Could Be Linked To Widespread Bee Deaths

From the New York Times' The Morning by David Leonhardt - If the House impeaches President Trump this week, it will still have almost no effect on how long he remains in office. His term expires nine days from now, and even the most rapid conceivable Senate trial would cover much of that time. 

But the impeachment debate is still highly consequential. The Senate has the power both to remove Trump from office and to prevent him from holding office in the future. That second power will not expire when his term ends, many constitutional scholars say. A Senate trial can happen after Jan. 20. 

And disqualifying Trump from holding office again could alter the future of American politics. 

It’s worth pausing for a moment to reflect on how radical a figure Trump is. He rejects basic foundations of American government that other presidents, from both parties, have accepted for decades. 

He has tried to reverse an election result and remain in power by persuading local officials to commit fraud. He incited a mob that attacked the Capitol — and killed a police officer — while Congress was meeting to certify the result. Afterward, Trump praised the rioters. 

This behavior was consistent with Trump’s entire presidency. He has previously rejected the legitimacy of election results and encouraged his supporters to commit violence. He has tried to undermine Americans’ confidence in the F.B.I., the C.I.A., the military, Justice Department prosecutors, federal judges, the Congressional Budget Office, government scientists, government health officials and more. He has openly used the presidency to enrich his family. 

In the simplest terms, Trump seems to believe a president should be able to do whatever he wants. He does not appear to believe in the system of the government that the Constitution prescribes — a democratic republic. 

Yet there is a significant chance he could win the presidency again, in 2024. He remains popular with many Republican voters, and the Electoral College currently gives a big advantage to Republicans. If he is not disqualified from future office, Trump could dominate the Republican Party and shape American politics for the next four years. 

If he is disqualified, it’s impossible to know what would happen, but this much is clear: A singularly popular figure who rejects the basic tenets of American democracy would no longer be eligible to lead it.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-10

Capitol siege was planned online. Trump supporters now planning the next one.: Twitter cited dangerous talk and online planning in banning Trump’s account

Amazon suspends Parler, threatening to take pro-Trump site offline indefinitely

As Trump leaves office weakened, Republicans wonder if his wounds are fatal

After coming to the Capitol’s rescue, D.C. leaders seek more autonomy under Biden

Outgoing Capitol Police chief: House, Senate security officials hamstrung efforts to call in National Guard

The F.B.I. arrests two men who had carried plastic restraints into the Capitol.

Man in 'Camp Auschwitz' sweatshirt during Capitol riot identified

Philadelphia police detective subject of Internal Affairs investigation after allegedly attending D.C. rally

Reading archive 2021-01-09

Bellingcat breaks stories that newsrooms envy — using methods newsrooms avoid

Police let most Capitol rioters walk away. But cellphone data and videos could now lead to more arrests.: Think rioters walked away scot free? Not so fast, say police with potent technology ready to name names.

She tackled a teen over a lost phone. Her bizarre apology interview was a mistake, lawyer says.

Journalists were attacked, threatened and detained during the Capitol siege

‘Find the fraud’: Trump pressured a Georgia elections investigator in a separate call legal experts say could amount to obstruction

At party retreat far from D.C. turmoil, Republicans still sing praises of Trump

Biden, who ran on unity, now leads a party furious at GOP

‘The storm is here’: Ashli Babbitt’s journey from capital ‘guardian’ to invader


Saturday, January 9, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-08

Dominion sues pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell, seeking more than $1.3 billion

I never want to hear again about Trump voters needing to 'feel heard.' They were heard when they voted. They lost. - "Sen. Ted Cruz, who scrambled to object to the electoral count after Hawley announced his own objection, warned Democrats in a Senate speech on Wednesday — before the Capitol was overtaken by 'unheard' rioters — that they needed to consider the lived experiences of election-theft-believing Americans instead of erasing their truth. 

"'I would urge to both sides perhaps a bit less certitude, and a bit more recognition that we are gathered at a time when democracy is in crisis,' he said, like a killer who murders his parents and then demands sympathy because he's an orphan. 'Recent polling shows that 39% of Americans believe the election that just occurred, 'was rigged.' You may not agree with that assessment. But it is nonetheless a reality for nearly half the country.'

"No, it's not a damn reality. It's a lie, and it's a lie that people believe because politicians like Cruz have for months made irresponsible statements and pushed conspiracy theories. Just because a group of people bought those lies does not make them into a reality. The right's embrace of relativism and politics-as-therapy is pathetic. What happened to 'facts don't care about your feelings'?"

GOP senator: Trump was 'delighted' with Capitol attack

U.S. Capitol Police officer dies after engaging rioters

As Josh Hawley loses a book deal over the Capitol riots, his GOP mentor says backing him was ‘the worst mistake I ever made’

Laptop stolen from Pelosi's office during storming of U.S. Capitol, says aide

Trump Officials Rush to Keep Him From Sparking Another Conflict—at Home or Abroad: Trump is increasingly unhinged. Top national-security officials are trying to keep the whole world from paying the price.

Internet detectives are identifying scores of pro-Trump rioters at the Capitol. Some have already been fired.

Believe what you saw. With all this country’s white grievance, it was inevitable.

Trump Insurrectionists Lodge At D.C. Airbnbs — Much To Washingtonians’ Distress

The pro-Trump media world peddled the lies that fueled the Capitol mob. Fox News led the way.

Bleeding Capitol cop screams for help as he is crushed against a metal door by MAGA mob that stormed police lines and bludgeoned officers with stolen shields

Georgia woman trampled to death in Capitol riot was obsessed with pro-Trump conspiracies

As riot raged at Capitol, Trump tried to call senators to overturn election

Dejected Trump supporters leave Washington, create new theories for Capitol violence: While thousands gathered Wednesday in support of the president, overwhelming and infiltrating the chambers of Congress, only dozens of die-hards returned Thursday.

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-07

Meet the Americans who believe Trump's election fraud lies

Apologists For Trump’s Mob Have Tried To Falsely Blame The Coup Attempt On Antifa: Right-wing figures have spread baseless claims that antifa was behind Wednesday’s violent insurrection at the Capitol.

QAnon Believers Were Part Of Mob That Stormed The Capitol: The collective delusion finally reached the level of violence it always threatened.

'Not all Trump supporters’: Conservative media tries to shift blame, cast doubt on identities of Capitol invaders: Pundits on the right condemned the violence but many maintained that “Trump supporters don’t do these things.”

Man who posed at Pelosi desk said in Facebook post that he is prepared for violent death

Assault on democracy: Sen. Josh Hawley has blood on his hands in Capitol coup attempt

A harrowing photo shows a Trump supporter carrying a Confederate flag inside the US Capitol, flanked by portraits of Civil War-era figures

Video Shows Newly Elected W.Va. Lawmaker Among Mob That Stormed The U.S. Capitol

4 Dead, Police Injured, Dozens Arrested After Siege At The U.S. Capitol

Some among America's military allies believe Trump deliberately attempted a coup and may have had help from federal law-enforcement officials

Capitol breach prompts urgent questions about security failures

He organized a bus of Trump supporters from Pa. for ‘the first day of the rest of our lives.’ He died in Washington.

Trump’s remarks before Capitol riot may be investigated, says acting U.S. attorney in D.C.

FBI, Homeland Security Intelligence Unit Didn’t Issue a Risk Assessment for Pro-Trump Protests

Boise man who stormed U.S. Capitol building: 'I got caught up in the moment'

‘Sit down!’ ‘No, you sit down!’ Democrat’s speech nearly triggers fistfight on House floor

Capital Police waving people in past the gates ?

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-06

Biden plans to nominate Merrick Garland as his attorney general

Woman Shot Dead as Mob Overran Capitol ID’ed as Air Force Vet: The woman, identified by her husband as Ashli Babbitt, is said to have tweeted that “the storm is here” ahead of the violent breach of the Capitol Building.

“THEY’RE BEING TOLD TO STAY AWAY FROM TRUMP”: AFTER A DAY OF VIOLENCE AND 25TH AMENDMENT CHATTER, TRUMP’S ALLIES ARE JUMPING SHIP: White House Counsel Pat Cipollone is reportedly warning West Wing staffers to avoid Trump for legal reasons, and even Stephen Miller thought Wednesday was atrocious. Will Mike Pence bring out the big guns?

Trump, Hawley and Cruz will each wear the scarlet ‘S’ of a seditionist

Capitol Police inability to secure seat of U.S. government raises serious questions: The force said last week it had a comprehensive plan to keep Congress safe

Trump supporters heckle Romney, chanting ‘traitor’ on flight to D.C.

Kid glove treatment of pro-Trump mob contrasts with strong-arm police tactics against Black Lives Matter, activists say

Reading archive 2021-01-05

GOP senators remove Lt. Gov. Fetterman from running first day of new session

Pharmacist Accused of Tampering With Vaccine Was Conspiracy Theorist, Police Say: The police say a Wisconsin pharmacist believed the Moderna vaccine would harm people and tried to sabotage the effort to vaccinate frontline workers.

Pro-Trump forums erupt with violent threats ahead of Wednesday’s rally against the 2020 election: Posters respond to Trump’s prediction of “wild" day with discussion of potential bloodshed and advice on sneaking guns into D.C.

Trump supporters protesting the election begin demonstrating in D.C.

Monday, January 4, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-04

Failures of Leadership in a Populist Age - "To knowingly pretend a lie is true is, simply put, to lie. Doing that carefully enough to let you claim you’re only raising questions only makes it even clearer that you know you’re lying. Lying to people is no way to speak for them or represent them. It is a way of showing contempt for them, and of using them rather than being useful to them. This is what too many Republican politicians have chosen to do in the wake of the election. They have decided to feign anger at a problem that cannot be solved because it does not exist, and this cannot help but make them less capable of taking up real problems on behalf of their voters. And in any case, it makes them cynical liars."

It’s Time to Speak for America: The Republican party and the conservative movement must now choose: Trump or America.

Worse Than Treason: No amount of rationalizing can change the fact that the majority of the Republican Party is advocating for the overthrow of an American election. - "The only shame in Trump world lies in admitting defeat. And so Trump doubled down, as anyone who had watched him for more than 10 minutes knew he would. And then he tripled, quadrupled, quintupled down. And just as they have done for the past four years, elected Republicans tried to convince themselves that if they supported this outrage, it would be the last time they would be required to surrender their dignity; that this betrayal of the Constitution would be the last treachery demanded of them. That if they complied one more time, they would be allowed to go back to their privileged lives far from the districts they claim to represent—places few of them really want to live after tasting life in the Emerald City."

...

"People of goodwill across the United States want some sort of road map to oppose this cold-blooded attack on the Constitution, but none exists. As James Madison warned us, without a virtuous people, no system of checks and balances will work. The Republicans have gone from being a party that touted virtue to being the most squalid and grubby expression of institutionalized self-interest in the modern history of the American republic."

Sen. Josh Hawley pretends his lack of a real Missouri address is an elitist attack

Georgia elections board member calls for probe into Trump’s call seeking to pressure Raffensperger

Cleta Mitchell, a key figure in president’s phone call, was an early backer of Trump’s election fraud claims

Friday, January 1, 2021

Reading archive 2021-01-01

No fraud: Georgia audit confirms authenticity of absentee ballots

Here’s Why Distribution of the Vaccine Is Taking Longer Than Expected: Health officials and hospitals are struggling with a lack of resources. Holiday staffing and saving doses for nursing homes are also contributing to delays. - "And critically, public health experts say, federal officials have left many of the details of the final stage of the vaccine distribution process, such as scheduling and staffing, to overstretched local health officials and hospitals.

...

"'We’ve taken the people with the least amount of resources and capacity and asked them to do the hardest part of the vaccination — which is actually getting the vaccines administered into people’s arms,' said Dr. Ashish Jha, the dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health."