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02 Mar 19:55

Famed whistleblower delivers grim posthumous warning we cannot ignore

by Norman Solomon


When Daniel Ellsberg died in 2023, the world lost a unique voice of sanity. Five decades earlier, as a “national security” insider, he had released the top-secret Pentagon Papers to expose the official lies behind the ongoing Vietnam War. From then on, he never stopped writing, speaking and protesting for peace, while explaining how the madness of nuclear weapons could destroy us all.

Now, Ellsberg’s voice is back via a compelling new book. Truth and Consequence, being published this week, provides readers with his innermost thoughts, scrawled and typed over a 50-year period. The result is access to intimate candor and visionary wisdom from a truly great whistleblower.

“My father is dead now,” Michael Ellsberg writes in the book’s introduction, but “I for one care a great deal that he consented to allow us to compile this eclectic corpus of his important thoughts and musings.” Michael worked with his father’s longtime assistant Jan R. Thomas to sift through and curate the huge quantity of private writing.

The book’s subtitle — offering reflections on “catastrophe, civil resistance, and hope” — could hardly be more timely.

Now, the barbaric war on Iran is enabled by remaining silent and just following orders.

At the center of Truth and Consequence are the tensions between conscience and deference to authority.

“Don’t delegate conscience,” Daniel Ellsberg wrote.

“Most people conform and accept,” he noted. “A minority protest, withdraw. A tiny minority resist, take risks.”

“The temptation is strong to obey powerful men passively and unquestioningly,” Ellsberg observed in 1971, the year he turned himself in for giving the Pentagon Papers to the press and faced the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison.

He instantly became a pariah among colleagues who’d been his friends at the RAND Corporation, a think tank serving the U.S. war machine. He’d been working there as a strategic analyst before and after a stint at the Defense Department.

“After I released the papers,” he vividly remembered, “some people were afraid to write to me … to shake hands with me … to receive a phone call from me.” Three years later, his takeaway was: “Accept the risks of freedom and commitment, instead of the risks of obedience and conformity.”

Ellsberg came to see grim downsides of society’s upper crust. He had graduated from Harvard and went on to get his PhD there. But in 1976 he wrote: “The function of an education at an elite university is to learn inattention and passivity, to learn to disconnect your daily work from the moral values of your family upbringing — sharing, love, trust, mutual dependence — and be part of maintaining a system of inequality, privilege, unnecessary suffering, war, and risk of extinction.”

The next year he wrote: “I have fallen out of love with the State and its Establishment, and I have regained a hopeful affection in the democratic ideal, process, and people who are untouched by power — those outside the base of the existing pyramid of obstruction, power, and privilege.”

And: “Most human-caused destruction, suffering, death, and enslavement (i.e., ‘evil’) is performed by men, at the direction of men. These are typically ‘normal,’ competent, personally agreeable and compassionate men who perform their acts in obedience to lawful orders – or, less often, in obedience to unlawful orders.”

Daniel Ellsberg Daniel Ellsberg in 2002. Picture: Christopher Michel/Wiki Commons.

1982: “Massacre is made doable by a chain of command that continually invokes habit, obedience, and career, as well as by leaders’ geographical and bureaucratic distance from the killing.”

Ellsberg had extensive firsthand experience in helping to fine-tune preparations for inflicting radioactive Armageddon, especially during the Kennedy presidency. Later, it was a role that haunted him.

“In this era of the potentially imminent extinction of most of life on Earth, there is now a moral dimension to every aspect of how one spends one’s life,” he wrote in 1977. “The foundation of all morality is that we must now live with awareness of the mortality of our species and the vulnerability of the Earth and all life.”

1985: “The future is not some place we are going to. The future is what we are creating every day. If we continue to prepare and plan for thermonuclear war, that is what we are going to get.”

By the time Ellsberg suddenly found himself vilified and beloved for releasing the Pentagon Papers in 1971, he was a devotee of civil disobedience. “Use of a radical, novel, powerful, and possibly illegal tactic of nonviolence,” he wrote that year, “is a form of useful work that is perfectly suited to illustrate the evil being combated.”

And he added: “I have never before shrunk from violence — from imagining it, planning it, preparing for it. I have wanted, and I have gained, the respect of violent men. Now I want the respect of gentle women, gentle men, and children.”

1984: “Nonviolent resistance has a special power to raise the question ‘What can I do to change this situation?’ I have felt that power in my own life.”

1985: “One way of calling attention to a danger or an illegal practice is to take an action of obstruction, or symbolic obstruction, that will lead to your being in court. Once there, in the context of your defense you can raise issues of illegality, criminality, constitutionality, and danger.”

1986: “Nonviolent civil disobedience does not eliminate moral dilemmas, costs, consequences, and lesser evils. However, it does inspire a search for new ways of behaving, seeing, feeling, and being.”

1990: “Ask yourself, ‘Where is the environment where I can be showing moral courage now? My work? My family? My community?’ Find the strength and the moral courage to do what is right, without knowing what the effects may be.”

Ellsberg’s activism took him to jail many more times after he summed up his protest activities this way in 2006: “I have been arrested in non-violent civil disobedience actions close to 70 times, probably 50 focused on nuclear weapons: e.g. at the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons Production facility, the Nevada Test Site, Livermore Nuclear Weapons Design Facility, and the vicinity of ground zero at both the Nevada Test Site and the Vandenberg Missile Test Site. Other arrests have been for protests against U.S. interventions.”

Thirty-five years ago, at the time of the Gulf War, Daniel Ellsberg wrote in his journal: “There is a time when silence is a lie, when silence is complicity, and when silence betrays our troops, our country, and ourselves. We owe it to our troops, as well as to other potential victims of this war, to speak the truth about ourselves: what we believe, what we reject, and what we want.”

06 Sep 23:33

Clips of the week: Alex Jones loses it, and Fox News can’t spin this trash

by Walter Einenkel

The right-wing world is in disarray, as defending President Donald Trump’s unpopular policies—which continue to disappoint Americans—is getting harder and harder, and Democrats are applying more and more pressure. 

And it’s all on video!

Democrat mocks GOP's Biden fixation with hilarious takedown

Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado tore into Republicans on the House floor on Wednesday for focusing more on whining about President Joe Biden than on passing legislation that could improve Americans’ lives.

Alex Jones loses his sh-t after infamous lackey breaks up with him

Pro-Trump conspiracy theorist Alex Jones lashed out against former Infowars host Owen Shroyer this week, describing him as a “backstabber” and a “snake.” Shroyer, who recently left Jones’ Infowars network, alleges that he felt pressure to soft-pedal criticism of Trump.

Not even Fox News can spin Trump’s biggest grift yet

The hosts of Fox Business had a hard time squaring the propaganda circle this week, discussing a Wall Street Journal report about the Trump family’s new World Liberty Financial crypto scheme—which is now their most valuable asset, outpacing all of their property interests.

Guess what the White House is doing now to bury Epstein secrets

GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky told reporters that a billionaire “in Epstein’s black book” is bankrolling ads against him, joining Trump’s pressure campaign against Republicans pushing for the release of the Epstein files.

Pritzker has fiery response to Trump’s planned Chicago invasion

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker held a press conference on Tuesday to respond to Trump’s seemingly imminent invasion of Chicago.

Former NFL star kicks off campaign to sack MAGA

Being carried out of a city council meeting by police officers isn’t your typical political campaign launch, but for former NFL star Chris Kluwe, it was the play that officially kicked off his career in politics. Kluwe spoke to Daily Kos exclusively about his run for office and what he hopes to do for the people in California’s 72nd district.

Watch RFK Jr. lose it when senator calls him out for 'making things up’

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appeared before a Senate committee Thursday to answer for the ongoing upheaval at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

When Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire demanded evidence for his decision to remove the CDC’s recommendation that healthy children and pregnant women receive the COVID-19 vaccine, things got heated.

Another week, another ceaseless attack on U.S. democracy from Republicans. But they’re starting to feel the pressure, and it's only going to intensify.

For more video content, check out Daily Kos on YouTube.

11 Jul 19:18

'Livid' FBI pick may not return to job over 'disgust' with Pam Bondi: Trump ally

by Travis Gettys


A right-wing influencer who has the ear of president Donald Trump claims to have inside information about alleged turmoil at the FBI's highest levels.

MAGA activist Laura Loomer, who traveled with the president during his 2024 campaign and has met with him at the White House, said Friday morning that FBI Director Kash Patel and deputy director Dan Bongino were furious over Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case, and she said Bongino was considering resigning in protest.

"[Patel and Bongino] are LIVID with [Bondi] over her DOJ Memo and the lack of transparency from her office regarding the Jeffery Epstein files," Loomer posted, tagging each official. "Source tells me Dan Bongino is taking the day off today from his job as Deputy Director of the FBI, and there’s now speculation on whether or not he will return to his job at the @FBI over his disgust with Blondi’s lack of transparency and handling of the Epstein files."

Loomer's reporting was confirmed about two hours later by Axios, which added that administration officials made clear he still was on the job.

"Two sources familiar with Bongino's position say he was increasingly displeased with Bondi's handling of the Epstein case because she had publicly overpromised and underdelivered disclosures about an Epstein 'client list' that apparently never existed," Axios reported.

The Department of Justice and FBI released a memo earlier this week stating that no evidence had been found that the notorious sex trafficker had kept a "client list," which Bondi claimed to have had sitting on her desk, and both Patel and Bongino, along with Vice President JD Vance, helped feed lurid conspiracy theories about who might be listed.

"Pam Blondi has brought total embarrassment to President Trump, @JDVance, @dbongino and @Kash_Patel," Loomer posted. "She has also LIED to the American people. I’m told Kash and Bongino are furious with Blondi and the blowback she has caused them with her lack of transparency. Kash Patel and Dan Bongino should call for Blondi’s public resignation today to save themselves and to also push for full transparency into the Epstein files. This is an issue the American people care deeply about."

Loomer claims credit for the president pushing out Gen. Timothy Haugh, who had been head of the National Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command, along with his civilian NSA deputy Wendy Noble back in April after meeting with Trump at the White House, and she urged him to dismiss his attorney general.

"Someone needs to be fired for this. Giving Blondi courtesy to resign is more than she deserves," Loomer posted. "Trump should just FIRE her."

Deputy attorney general Todd Blanche tweeted a statement about an hour after Loomer's post disputing there was any tension between DOJ and FBI leadership.

"I worked closely with @FBIDirectorKash and @FBIDDBongino on the joint FBI and DOJ memo regarding the Epstein Files," Blanche posted. "All of us signed off on the contents of the memo and the conclusions stated in the memo. The suggestion by anyone that there was any daylight between the FBI and DOJ leadership on this memo’s composition and release is patently false."

Loomer's post raised eyebrows on social media.

"If the president who used to hang out with Jeffrey Epstein fires the attorney general who didn't prosecute him in Florida over her handling of files about the case we're going to need some congressional hearings about this," posted Matthew Gertz, a senior fellow at Media Matters.

09 May 04:44

'MAGA Maoism': Trump slammed as US copies China’s deadliest dictator

by Jennifer Bowers Bahney


President Donald Trump's attempt to reshape America is being referred to as "MAGA Maoism" by critics who see him making the same mistakes as Mao Zedong did during China's Cultural Revolution, according to a new article in The Atlantic.

The article quotes Georgetown University professor and China expert Rush Doshi saying, “'If you take every asymmetric American advantage'—our universities, our science, our reputation for attracting the world’s smartest young people—'we’re going after each of them in a fit of cultural Maoism.'"

Doshi explained that China's Mao Zedong "oversaw a fraught and fatal attempt to industrialize the country, known as the Great Leap Forward," and "his regime was infamous for its cult of personality."

EXCLUSIVE: Breastfeeding mom of US citizen sues Kristi Noem after being grabbed by ICE

Doshi compared Mao's revolution to Trump's first 100 days in office, which were “defined by the relentless targeting of individuals and organizations for their heretical views and purges within the administration for those deemed insufficiently loyal."

The Atlantic's Derek Thompson noted that "Doshi isn’t the only one making this analogy."

Thompson mentioned a Washington Post article by writer Rotimi Adeoye that coined the term MAGA Maoism” to describe the methods of the "Trumpist right."

"Like the Chinese Cultural Revolution...the Trumpist right seems obsessed with scrubbing any vestige of progressive thought from government libraries and government-funded museums," Thompson wrote.

He added that, "Another eerie echo of Mao has been MAGA’s glorification of strong men doing strong things and its dreams of sending the liberal elites to the factories and the fields to teach them a lesson."

"By driving away talented immigrants, by targeting our most successful universities, by torching our trading alliances, by dismantling our industrial policy, by slashing our scientific funding, and by hurting America’s reputation around the world at the precise moment that we need global scale to build a secure counterpart to China’s industrial dominance, Trump has responded to the threat of China by mimicking the ghost of its past," Thompson wrote.

Read The Atlantic article here.

05 Mar 16:29

FAA employees threatened with termination if they 'impede' SpaceX takeover: report

by Brad Reed


Bloomberg is reporting that members of the Federal Aviation Administration have been threatened with termination if they act to "impede" a takeover by SpaceX, the private space exploration firm owned by billionaire Elon Musk.

According to Bloomberg's sources, SpaceX engineer Ted Malaska last month came to the FAA's headquarters in Washington D.C. and gave employees what he described as a directive from Musk himself to "immediately start work on a program to deploy thousands of the company’s Starlink satellite terminals to support the national airspace system."

Furthermore they were given 18 months to complete this task and were told that they would be reported directly to Musk should they impede progress on it.

Musk is not an elected official nor a Senate-confirmed cabinet official, and it's not clear what authority he has to fire federal employees.

ALSO READ: 'The savings aren't large': Conservatives say DOGE is just 'a distraction' for what's next

Bloomberg adds that Musk's directive to use his own company's technology to revamp the FAA conflicts with the current contract the government already has with telecom giant Verizon.

"Just days after Malaska arrived at the FAA, the fate of Verizon’s contract is up in the air as the agency considers whether to cede part of it to SpaceX," the publication writes. "The talks are fluid, and much remains unclear, including the size of any payments SpaceX could receive. Musk’s team is moving so fast that Verizon executives are still trying to understand what’s happening inside the FAA and whether it would affect their business."

There are also major concerns about conflicts of interest as it appears Musk is using his influence as a White House official to award his own companies government contracts.

06 Dec 20:03

‘Cracked under the pressure’: Alarm sounded as postal worker suicides quadruple

by Alexandria Jacobson, Investigative Reporter


Content warning: This article discusses suicide and self-harm. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis and needs emotional support, help is available 24/7 via call or text at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

Over the course of nearly 20 years, Carlos Ulloa has worked for the United States Postal Service in a range of capacities — from starting as a letter carrier to delivering parcels to driving trucks and serving as a supervisor of distribution operations.

But after two mental health episodes in the last four years due to work-related stress, Ulloa, of Belleville, N.J., transitioned to a custodial role at a national distribution center in Jersey City.

“My plans were to move up, to keep going up and not to end up as a custodian, cleaning bathrooms and floors and stuff like that,” Ulloa told Raw Story. “I was supposed to continue to grow up and stay into management after I was promoted.”

But about four years ago, Ulloa said a new plant manager “started putting me down in front of my own suit, my own employees, yelling and screaming and whistling and pointing his finger at me.” The manager would talk to him like he was “some kind of dog” and expected him to give up his weekends and work overtime — when he was already frequently late getting his grandkids to school and providing transportation for his daughter, Ulloa said.

One day Ulloa showed up to work intoxicated and ended up being reported missing after leaving the building and hiding in his attic.

“I guess I cracked under the pressure,” Ulloa said.

Postal inspectors, postal police officers and ambulance crews came to his home and took him to a hospital, where he was later put in a psychiatric ward for trying to run away, he said. Ulloa began seeing a psychiatrist every day for about five months where he said they discussed “any sadness, any problems, that we want to take our lives, alcohol, drugs.”

When Ulloa was ready to return to work, he was told that he couldn’t return to the same facility and was asked where he might want to be transferred to continue as a supervisor or potentially grow into other leadership roles.

That’s when Ulloa decided he didn't want to be in management anymore with “too much stress, too much going on.” He decided he’d be better off working as a mechanic or in maintenance.

However, the new custodial job didn’t provide the stress relief Ulloa was seeking either as he said his new supervisor bullied and harassed him, too. Last December, Ulloa told a supervisor he was considering ending his life due to work pressure.

One of Ulloa’s friends, a postal police officer who was off-duty at the time, was able to calm him down over the phone and drove to the facility to ensure Ulloa didn’t harm himself and was given medical attention. He spent another week in a psychiatric hospital.

“I used to never have a depression problem. Now, I gotta take pills for the depression problems,” said Ulloa, adding that he would like to see the Postal Service “be more supportive, maybe more aware of, especially upper management, to see their own supervisors or other managers how they treat employees.”

Ulloa isn’t the only Postal Service employee to recently deal with suicidal ideation. The latest annual report for the United States Postal Inspection Service, the law enforcement branch of the Postal Service, revealed that 201 suicides were reported in its fiscal year 2023.

That’s more than quadruple the 47 suicides reported by the Postal Inspection Service in fiscal year 2022.

And it’s more than double the national suicide rate for the general population of 14.2 deaths per 100,000 people, according to 2022 figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Postal Inspection Service qualifies all of its crime figures — from burglaries to robberies to homicides, suicides and assaults — by saying in the report, “Though not all of these reports are credible, the Inspection Service takes all reports of violent crime seriously and responds to every reported incident.”

Based on the Postal Service’s reported 635,350 total career and non-career employees in 2023, the suicide rate for postal employees would be about 31.6 per 100,000 people, if all 201 reported suicides involved Postal Service employees.

Spencer Block, a public information officer for the Postal Inspection Service's Chicago headquarters referred Raw Story to the Postal Service headquarters. Spokespeople for the Postal Service and the Postal Inspection Service did not respond to Raw Story’s multiple requests for comment. Neither responded to clarifying questions about the suicide and crime statistics reported.

The need for a volunteer emergency response team

Thirty volunteers from the National Association of Letter Carriers union formed an emergency response team in March due to “concern with the letter carriers being assaulted out there on the street, issues of substance abuse, mental health issues that we saw within our craft,” Mack Julion, assistant secretary-treasurer for the National Association of Letter Carriers, told Raw Story.

Julion, who has been a letter carrier in Chicago since 1997, said the group has seen “quite a few this year” in terms of suicides by letter carriers and has responded to such incidents and other traumatic events by visiting affected facilities where members might be upset. The program is based off of the emergency response team model from the United Steelworkers union, and volunteers received certifications from the International Critical Incident Stress Foundation, Inc..

“One traumatic incident could lead to more traumatic incidents, more trauma, if not properly dealt with,” Julion said. “It is healthy to address and deal with these traumatic situations and help people process their grief, because without that, that could lead to more trauma.”

In particular, violence against letter carriers has been an ongoing issue over the last five years, according to a Raw Story investigation that found a 543 percent increase in robberies of postal workers between 2019 and 2022.

Khalalisa Norris, a letter carrier in Chicago’s Austin neighborhood, twice experienced gun violence on the job, most recently being robbed in January 2023 at gun point for her arrow keys — the antiquated universal keys that thieves target to unlock numerous mailboxes in a given zip code.

Khalalisa Norris Khalalisa Norris, 46, was robbed at gunpoint while working as a letter carrier on Chicago's West side. Norris met with Raw Story on Feb. 19 in the nearby Chicago suburb, Oak Park, Ill. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

Norris told Raw Story in November that she still hasn’t been able to return to her full mail route out of fear after her robbery experience and that she still sees a psychiatrist for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. She said she’s been working with her union to push Congress for more safety protections for letter carriers.

While the Postal Service offers a “pretty good” Employee Assistance Program, Julion said the emergency response team was “an attempt to go beyond that.”

“When these incidents happen out at the station, EAP comes out, talks to the carriers, and a lot of carriers are kind of skeptical, if you will, because this EAP service seemed like just the arm of the Postal Service or management,” Julion said. “By us having our own people going out, talking with our people and literally getting trained to go out to deal with these situations is very helpful.”

Julion said June was a particularly busy month for the emergency response team, which has two volunteers located in each of its 15 regions. He estimated that four suicides were reported within two weeks.

One incident the team responded to this year involved an attempted suicide at a post office in Aurora, Co., where a man expressed stress about his wife potentially being deported. He was saved when an office door was broken down to stop him.

A Marine Corps veteran committed suicide after “dealing with depression and suicidal ideation for some time,” Julion said. The unadjusted rate of suicide for veterans in 2021 was 33.9 per 100,000 people, according to a 2023 annual report from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

In October 2021, a letter carrier committed a double murder-suicide at a sorting facility in Memphis, killing a supervisor and manager before killing himself, AP reported. Experts said the COVID-19 pandemic added extra stress to Postal Service employees at the time.

Frank Albergo, president of the Postal Police Officers Association, told Raw Story that postal police officers, the Postal Service’s own uniformed police force, formerly patrolled that Memphis facility before the union became embroiled in a four-year-long dispute with the Postal Service about its ability to protect letter carriers and the mail off postal property.

“We rarely patrol it anymore because we just don't have the manpower,” Albergo said. “That would have been something that we might have been able to prevent. Whether or not we could prevent it, we'll never know, but we never even had the chance. That's the problem.”

‘Doesn't surprise me’: A history of postal employee suicides

The circumstances around suicides are “complex” and don’t always involved mental illness, Erich Mische, CEO of suicide education nonprofit, Suicide Awareness Voices of Education, told Raw Story.

Julion agreed that not all of the suicides the emergency response team dealt with were “so much postal related as much as it is life, situations happening, and people not knowing how to respond or deal with them.”

Still, Julion acknowledged that Postal Service employees work in a “high-stress, high-speed workplace.”

“We often tell people the post office is like no other place that you’ve ever worked. We feel we are the best at what we do. We deliver everything, everywhere, every day. Rain, snow, sleet, hail, COVID, we deliver,” Julion said. “It’s what we do, and to have a sort of expectation like that, you can imagine the kind of pace that we work at on the inside and the kind of pressures that can be put on us to deliver, particularly if there's issues of understaffing.”

Letter carriers, particularly, often take pride in servicing the American people and don’t want to disappoint customers, which can “drive people crazy,” Julion said.

Ulloa said he certainly felt that level of pressure.

“The post office is just stressful enough, just to know that you have a time limit to get the mail out or the packages out and stuff like that,” Ulloa said. “I understand that we all push it and everything else, but they always want more with less people, and then the people won't stay because the management just doesn't grow with them.”

Before becoming a postal police officer, Albergo was a letter carrier and still has nightmares about the job due to the “stressful environment,” he told Raw Story.

“All I can tell you is I was a letter carrier for six years. I would not want to be a letter carrier now,” Albergo said.

Harassment and abuse has “always been a problem in the Postal Service,” Albergo said, noting that workplace stress and violence has been an issue for more than 30 years, according to a February 1992 joint statement signed by postal unions. The statement was released in the wake of a quadruple murder-suicide in Royal Oaks, Mich., where a terminated employee fired more than 100 shots at a post office, killing four employees before killing himself.

“We openly acknowledge that in some places or units there is an unacceptable level of stress in the workplace; that there is no excuse for and will be no tolerance of violence or any threats of violence by anyone at any level of the Postal Service; and that there is no excuse for and will be no tolerance of harassment, intimidation, threats, or bullying by anyone,” the statement read.

While Mische wasn’t familiar with the specific statistic of 201 suicides reported in the 2023 Postal Inspection Service report, he said “it doesn't surprise me.”

“Generally speaking, suicide rates with postal employees, I think that's been an issue for a long time. I think you can go as far back as the last 10 or 20 years and find stories about suicide rates in terms of occupation for postal employees and actually federal employees," Mische said.

A December 2023 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention called out that the suicide rate for male postal service clerks was 58.2 per 100,000 civilian, non-institutionalized working persons aged 16–64 in 2021.

Mische said “job stress” and “substance abuse issues” are significant factors when looking a suicide rates by job industry.

“Any organization, whether it's a federal government agency, the Postal Service, or it's a construction company, whatever agency or company, public or private, that conversation about suicide and suicide prevention’s got to start at the top with the leadership of any organization saying we are going to make this a priority addressing the issue of suicide,” Mische said.

Leadership needs to be open about the issue of suicides in the workforce despite decades of stigma, which “has cost more lives in our society than had we spent the last several decades being open and honest about the difficult circumstances surrounding suicide,” Mische said.

Institutions that want to provide support to employees struggling with suicidal ideation or related issues should present a message to employees saying, “We're going to make making resources available to help those who may be dealing with suicidal ideation, and get them the help they need. And then, as an organization, we're going to continue to support that individual until they get to a place where they feel as though they are stable," Mische said.

The National Association of Letter Carriers’ president was unavailable for an interview. The American Postal Workers Union did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

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Content warning: This article discusses suicide and self-harm. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis and needs emotional support, help is available 24/7 via call or text at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

23 Oct 20:21

Watch Obama take down Trump—and rap—at raucous Harris rally in Detroit

by Oliver Willis

Former President Barack Obama delivered a full-throated takedown of Donald Trump while rallying in support of Vice President Kamala Harris in Detroit, Michigan, on Tuesday night. Obama was introduced at the event by iconic Detroit native rapper Eminem.

Michigan’s 15 electoral votes are critical to the election’s outcome and Obama’s visit on Harris’ behalf comes just days after Trump insulted the city, where a majority of the residents are Black.

Obama remarked that he often speaks to people about Trump, and they have remarked that the Republican presidential nominee is “kind of goofy” but that they remember better economic conditions during his presidency.

“And I say, yeah it was good because it was my economy,” Obama said. “I spent eight years cleaning up the mess that the Republicans left me.”

Obama said Republicans “didn’t want to lift a finger” to help cities like Detroit recover, while his administration worked to rescue the U.S. auto industry, which employs thousands in Michigan.

Obama added, “All [Trump] did was give a tax cut to people who didn’t need one, drove up the deficit in the process, now he wants to do it again. Do not fall for that okey doke, don’t be bamboozled.”

When Obama took office in January 2009, the U.S. and the world were in the middle of the Great Recession, which began under former President George W. Bush. Democrats pursued economic stimulus via the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, but the legislation faced unified Republican opposition in the House and only three Senate Republicans backed the bill.

By the time Obama left office in 2017, 11.6 million jobs had been added to the economy on his watch. Despite inheriting an economic recovery from Obama, the economy lost 2.7 million jobs under Trump—the only president in recent history with a net job loss. Under the Biden-Harris administration, the economy has added over 15 million jobs.

Obama also criticized Trump for lying about election results and spreading election conspiracy theories, pointing out that his rhetoric has incited threats and violence against election workers. Obama noted that Trump has similarly promoted false conspiracy theories about the federal response to hurricanes in the south, leading to threats of violence against FEMA first responders.

“If you had a family member who acted like that, you might still love them, but you wouldn’t put them in charge of anything,” Obama said.

The former president also had some fun at the event and remarked that he was “feeling some kind of way following Eminem,” and launched into an Obamafied version of the hit song “Lose Yourself.”

Watch Obama’s speech in full here:

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09 Sep 23:35

From stirring to cringey: Memorable moments from past presidential debates

by Associated Press

It could be a well-rehearsed zinger, a too-loud sigh — or a full performance befuddled enough to shockingly end a sitting president's reelection bid.

Notable moments from past presidential debates demonstrate how the candidates’ words and body language can make them look especially relatable or hopelessly out-of-touch — showcasing if a candidate is at the top of their policy game or out to sea. Will past be prologue when Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump debate in Philadelphia on Tuesday?

“Being live television events, without a script, without any way of knowing how they are going to evolve — anything can happen,” said Alan Schroeder, author of “Presidential Debates: 50 years of High-Risk TV.”

Here’s a look at some highs, lows and curveballs from presidential debates past.

Biden blows it

Though it's still fresh in the nation's mind, the June debate in Atlanta pitting President Joe Biden against Trump may go down as the most impactful political faceoff in history.

Biden, 81, shuffled onto the stage, frequently cleared his throat, said $15 when he meant that his administration helped cut the price of insulin to $35 per month on his first answer and inexplicably gave Trump an early chance to pounce on the chaotic 2021 withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan. It got even worse for the president 12 minutes in, when Biden appeared lose his train of thought entirely.

“The, uh — excuse me, with the COVID, um, dealing with, everything we had to do with, uh ... if ... Look ...” Biden stammered before concluding ”we finally beat Medicare." He meant that his administration had successfully taken on “big pharma,” some of the nation's top prescription drug companies.

Biden at first blamed having a cold, then suggested he'd overprepared. Later, he pointed to jetlag after pre-debate travel overseas.

In the frantic hours immediately after the debate, a Biden campaign spokesperson said, “ Of course, he's not dropping out.” That was correct until 28 days later, when the president did just that, bowing out and endorsing Harris on July 21.

The age question

Biden was asked in Atlanta about his age and got into an argument with Trump over golf. It was the opposite of knowing a sensitive question was coming and still making the answer sound spontaneous — a feat President Ronald Reagan pulled off while landing a line for the ages during 1984's second presidential debate.

President Ronald Reagan, left, and his Democratic challenger Walter Mondale, shake hands before debating in Kansas City, Missouri, on Oct. 22, 1984.

Reagan was 73 and facing 56-year-old Democratic challenger Walter Mondale. In the first debate, Reagan struggled to remember facts and occasionally looked confused. An adviser suggested afterward that aides “filled his head with so many facts and figures that he lost his spontaneity.”

So Reagan’s team took a more hands-off approach toward the second debate. When Reagan got a question about his mental and physical stamina that he had to know was coming, he was ready enough to make the response feel unplanned.

Asked whether his age might hinder his handling of major challenges, Raegan responded, “Not at all,” before smoothly continuing: “I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent’s youth and inexperience.” The audience, and even Mondale, cracked up.

Then, capitalizing on years of Hollywood-honed comedic training, the president took a sip of water, giving the crowd more time to laugh. Finally, he grinned and left little doubt that he’d rehearsed, adding, “It was Seneca, or it was Cicero, I don’t know which, that said, ‘If it was not for the elders correcting the mistakes of the young, there would be no state.’”

Years later, Mondale conceded, "That was really the end of my campaign that night.”

Reagan is further remembered for using a light touch to neutralize criticisms from Democratic President Jimmy Carter in a 1980 debate. When Carter accused him of wanting to cut Medicare, Reagan scolded, “There you go again.”

The line worked so well that he turned it into something of a trademark rejoinder going forward.

Gaffes galore

In 1976, Republican President Gerald Ford had a notable moment in a debate against Carter — and not in a good way. The president declared that there is “no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and there never will be under a Ford administration.”

Jimmy Carter, left, and Gerald Ford, right, shake hands before the third presidential debate, Oct. 22, 1976, in Williamsburg, Virginia.

With Moscow controlling much of that part of the world, the surprised moderator asked if he’d understood correctly. Ford stood by his answer, then spent days on the campaign trail trying to explain it away. He lost that November.

Another awkward moment came in 2012, when Republican nominee Mitt Romney got a debate question about gender pay equality and recalled soliciting women’s groups' help to find qualified female applicants for state posts: “They brought us whole binders full of women.”

Aaron Kall, director of the University of Michigan's debate program, said key lines affect not just who a debate's perceived winner is but also fundraising and media coverage for days, or even weeks, afterward.

“The closer the election, the more zingers and important debate lines can matter,” Kall said.

Not all slips have a devastating impact, though.

Then-Sen. Barack Obama, in a 2008 Democratic presidential primary debate, dismissively told Hillary Clinton, “You’re likable enough, Hillary.” That drew backlash, but Obama recovered.

The same couldn’t be said for the short-lived 2012 Republican primary White House bid of then-Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Despite repeated attempts and excruciatingly long pauses, Perry could not remember the third of the three federal agencies he’d promised to shutter if elected.

Finally, he sheepishly muttered, “Oops.”

The Energy Department, which he later ran during the Trump administration, is what slipped his mind.

Getting personal

Another damaging moment opened a 1988 presidential debate, when Democrat Michael Dukakis was pressed about his opposition to capital punishment in a question that evoked his wife.

“If Kitty Dukakis were raped and murdered, would you favor an irrevocable death penalty for the killer?” CNN anchor Bernard Shaw asked. Dukakis showed little emotion, responding, “I don’t see any evidence that it’s a deterrent.”

Dukakis later said he wished he’d said that his wife “is the most precious thing, she and my family, that I have in this world.”

That year’s vice presidential debate featured one of the best-remembered, pre-planned one-liners.

When Republican Dan Quayle compared himself to John F. Kennedy while debating Lloyd Bentsen, the Democrat was ready. He’d studied Quayle’s campaigning and seen him invoke Kennedy in the past.

“Senator, I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy,” Bentsen began slowly and deliberately, drawing out the moment. “Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy.”

President George H.W. Bush looks at his watch during the 1992 presidential campaign debate with other candidates, Independent Ross Perot, top, and Democrat Bill Clinton, not shown, at the University of Richmond, Virginia, Oct. 15, 1992.

The audience erupted in applause and laughter. Quayle was left to stare straight ahead.

Wordless blunders

Quayle and George H.W. Bush still easily won the 1988 election. But they lost in 1992 after then-President Bush was caught on camera looking at his watch while Democrat Bill Clinton talked to an audience member during a town hall debate. Some thought it made Bush look bored and aloof.

In another instance of a nonverbal debate miscue, then-Democratic Vice President Al Gore was criticized for a subpar opening 2000 debate performance with Republican George W. Bush in which he repeatedly and very audibly sighed.

During their second, town hall-style debate, Gore moved so close to Bush while the Republican answered one question that Bush finally looked over and offered a confident nod, drawing laughter from the audience.

A similar moment occurred in 2016, as Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton faced the audience to answer questions during a debate with Trump. Trump moved in close behind her, narrowed his eyes and glowered.

Clinton later wrote of the incident: “He was literally breathing down my neck. My skin crawled.”

That didn't stop Trump from claiming the presidency a few weeks later.

Campaign Action

13 May 22:12

In rural Texas, ERs are facing a growing mental health crisis

by Texas Tribune

The mental health workforce shortage is more acute in rural areas, adding to rising patient loads in hospital ERs.

By Liza Kalinina, The Texas Tribune

For 24/7 mental health support in English or Spanish, call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s free help line at 800-662-4357. You can also reach a trained crisis counselor through the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988.

Across Texas, rural hospitals face a shortage of mental health care providers, with over 60% of rural counties designated as provider shortage areas by the Health Resources and Service Administration.

At the same time, the number of people experiencing mental health crises has increased, and these patients are often forced to seek care in the emergency room of rural hospitals, where they face long waits for treatment and use resources that are needed by patients with critical conditions.

Terry Scoggin, CEO of the Titus Regional Medical Center (TRMC), says his and other rural hospital ERs are the primary place where mental health patients are taken despite the fact that ER doctors are not trained to treat mental health conditions.

"The emergency department is a very hectic, chaotic, life-and-death area. It's not the best environment for a mental health person or person with drug overdose," Scoggin said.

Emergency rooms are a last resort for rural mental health

Situated in rural northeastern Texas, near the Arkansas border, Titus County has one psychiatrist and four licensed clinical social workers to serve 33,000 people in Titus and the surrounding counties. Accounting for population, that’s about two-thirds fewer providers than are present in the rest of the state, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Titus’ mental health providers also care for patients in surrounding counties that have even fewer resources.

"We have one psychiatrist in the five counties that we support. So that gives you an idea of the lack of opportunities," said Scoggin.

Without preventative care, people experiencing mental health crises in rural counties like Titus end up in the ER. Some are brought there after a public disruption. Others are brought by relatives.

Once in the ER, patients can spend days or even weeks waiting to be screened by a local mental health authority before they can be discharged or transferred. For patients at the Titus hospital, where there’s no psychiatrist on staff, that’s the Mount Pleasant Mental Health Clinic, which serves four counties and struggles to keep up with patient screenings.

In Titus, patients with mental health needs would typically be transferred to Terrell State Hospital, but the waits there are long, too.

"Terrell stays full. That is just the way it is, that's not us, that's Terrell," said Rachelle Sills, director of the Mount Pleasant Mental Health Clinic. According to Sills, her team calls Terrell every day when they’re trying to transfer a patient, sometimes waiting as long as 14 days for an opening.

Kathy Griffis is the vice president of clinical operations and chief nursing officer at Titus Regional Medical Center. She worries for patients with mental health conditions—but also for her staff, who sometimes deal with violent patients during extended stays in the ER.

Brittany Bacak, a licensed clinical social worker, said that the isolation mental health patients experience while waiting in the ER can exacerbate their symptoms, leading to violence toward staff.

''When you put a client in a room, and you tell them that they have to stay in that room and they can't leave that room for multiple days, people get agitated, right?" said Bacak, a lecturer at the School of Social Work at Texas State University who spent eight years working in Texas emergency rooms in both rural and urban hospitals in Bastrop, San Marcos, and Austin prior to teaching.

Telehealth in ERs could reduce violence and get patients more timely care

Concerned with the long waits experienced by mental health patients in rural ERs and the associated danger to staff, Griffis worked with colleagues at Baylor University Medical Center and St. Luke’s Health in Lake Jackson to explore the use telehealth to help ER doctors treat mental health patients who end up in their department.

A year later, the state legislature allocated $7.4 million over two years to fund telepsychiatry consultations for rural hospitals, based on the work of Griffis and her colleagues.

A pilot program was launched in March in Titus and Knox counties. Texas Tech psychiatrists contracted by Texas Health and Human Services are available to rural hospitals seven days a week, 10 hours a day, enabling ER physicians to start treating mental health patients in the ER within the first 24 hours.

"Now we can at least get a diagnosis, a prescription, and possibly a discharge back into society and not a discharge to another hospital," said Scoggin.

Sills, at the Mount Pleasant Mental Health Clinic, welcomes the program because it will reduce workload and help move patients to a more appropriate care setting in less time.

"We are such a high-crisis, high-volume clinic here that I think the local psychiatrists (through telemedicine) will really help the ER in maybe moving some of those people faster, whatever that means, getting them to another place or being able to advise them," Sills said.

Griffis hopes to demonstrate the program’s efficacy and secure future funding, but the challenges of providing mental health care in rural areas extend beyond the ER. Due to provider shortages, accessing ongoing mental health care in rural communities is a challenge, even for those with private health insurance.

"I think we've got to relook at the infrastructure in our community for mental health,” Scoggins said.

Tracking URL: https://www.texastribune.org/2024/05/07/texas-mental-health-hospitals-er/
Campaign Action

23 Jan 21:26

Law firm used by Hunter Biden paid $70K from Bob Menendez's legal fund: report

by Sky Palma


As Democrats increasingly distanced themselves from disgraced Senator Bob Menendez, Democratic "super lawyer" Marc Elias was paid almost $50,000 from Menendez's legal fund, The Washington Free Beacon reported.

The fund belonging to Menendez, who has been charged with bribery and illegal foreign lobbying, received $195,000 in contributions between October 1 through December 31 — he was charged in September.

Winston & Strawn, a prestigious law firm that also represents Hunter Biden, was paid $70,000 from Menendez's fund. Schertler & Onorato, a firm representing Menendez’s wife, Nadine Arslanian, was paid $128,000.

Also read: 'Y'all want to coronate Trump': Feisty Nikki Haley hits back at Fox & Friends

Elias represented Menendez during a 2007 investigation into a lobbyist the New Jersey senator was connected to. He also represented Menendez in 2015 when he was charged with doing favors for Democratic donor Salomon Melgen.

"Many longtime Menendez supporters contributed to his legal defense, filings show," the Free Beacon's report stated.

"New Jersey lawyer Donald Scarinci and Spanish-language media mogul Raúl Alarcón gave $10,000 each to Menendez, the maximum contribution allowed. Murray Kushner, the estranged uncle of Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, also contributed $10,000 to Menendez."

Read the full report over at The Washington Free Beacon.

23 Jan 00:41

'What a clown': Morning Joe shreds Elise Stefanik for defending Trump's confusion

by Travis Gettys


MSNBC's Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski trashed Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) for downplaying Donald Trump's confused babbling.

The former president repeatedly mixed up GOP rival Nikki Haley with former House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) in a campaign speech, and the "Morning Joe" co-hosts shamed Stefanik for insisting that Trump had not "lost a step" and was, in fact, mentally sharper than ever.

"I can't tell you how disappointed I feel every time I see her talk," Brzezinski said.

READ MORE: Alina Habba is persona non grata at her Pennsylvania law school

"What a clown, what a clown," Scarborough added. "What a clown, he confuses Barack Obama. He thinks he is running against Barack Obama, Elise, and you know it, and if you say anything otherwise, you're lying through your teeth. He confused Nikki Haley with Nancy Pelosi on Jan. 6. If you say anything else, you're lying through your teeth. For what? He's not going to pick you as vice president. Give up the ghost, Elise Stefanik."

Watch the video below or at this link.

- YouTube youtu.be

28 Sep 18:49

What would a government shutdown mean for me? SNAP, Social Security and travel impacts, explained

by rss@dailykos.com (Associated Press)

With gridlock persisting in Washington, a government shutdown is looking more and more likely ahead of Saturday night's deadline.

As the Senate marches ahead with a bipartisan approach aimed at keeping the government open, spending measures are still struggling to pass the Republican-controlled House. If a shutdown arrives, millions of federal employees will be furloughed and many others — including those working in the military and the Transportation Security Administration — will be forced to work without pay until it ends.

A handful of federal programs that people nationwide rely on everyday could also be disrupted — from dwindling funds for food assistance to potential delays in customer service for recipients of Medicare and Social Security. The ripple effects would come down to how long a shutdown lasts and the varying contingency plans in place at impacted agencies.

“Collectively, hundreds of millions of Americans, a majority of the population, are receiving some kind of benefits from the government,” said Forrest V. Morgeson III, an associate professor at Michigan State University’s Broad College of Business. He noted a potential shutdown could bring significant financial uncertainty and economic implications down the road.

Here's what you need to know.

30 Aug 21:31

Massive brawls force LA mall to make minor shoppers wear contact info round necks: report

by Sky Palma


After several brawls broke out in a Southern California mall, a rule has been implemented for minors requiring them to wear lanyards that contain their name and a parent's contact information, ABC 7 reported.

The rule goes into effect every day at 5pm.

Video posted to social media showed hundreds of teens and young adults running around the Del Amo Fashion Center in Torrance, participating in violence and assaults.

It took several hours for cops to disperse the crowds. Police say there may have been as many as 1,000 people involved in the melee.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

There were reports of gunfire but no serious injuries were reported.

"It was just everybody just running, going to the movie theater," said witness Connor Swan. "Everybody was just jumping on top of people. It was just chaos."

Watch the video below or at this link:

Moreno Valley Mall to require ID tags for minors www.youtube.com

23 Aug 14:30

Lauri Carleton's Killer Was A 'Pro-Life Christian'

by Conover Kennard

A 27-year-old man has been identified as the suspect who murdered Laura 'Lauri' Ann Carleton because she had a rainbow Pride flag outside her store. Before the murder, Travis Ikeguchi, the suspect, was posting anti-LGBT+ content on social media.

His social media profile reads, “There is only one way to the path of salvation and to have eternal life and that is through Jesus Christ. And yes, the path is narrow.”

The Independent reports:

The shooter, identified as Travis Ikeguchi, killed 66-year-old Laura Ann Carleton at her clothing store "Mag Pi" at Hook Creek Road in Cedar Glen after he made "several disparaging remarks about a rainbow flag that stood outside the store," authorities in San Bernardino County said.

Carleton's flags had been torn down before, and she always responded by putting up a bigger one.

The mother-of-nine and a "true LGBTQ+ ally" was pronounced dead on the spot.

Ikeguchi fled the crime scene on foot but was intercepted by deputies a mile from the store on Friday. The suspect opened fire with an unregistered Smith & Wesson 9mm semi-automatic pistol, striking multiple squad cars, sheriff Shannon Dicus told reporters.

The deputies returned fire and shot Ikeguchi, who died at the scene, the sheriff added.

read more

30 May 19:31

Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: Republicans in disarray, Turkey's future, and the eternal war

by rss@dailykos.com (Chitown Kev)

We begin with Jennifer Scholtes of POLITICO and the efforts of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to corral House support for his tentative agreement with President Joe Biden to raise the debt limit and Republican Rep. Chip Roy of Texas’ efforts to block the agreement from even coming to the House floor for a vote.

With a passage vote set for Wednesday, a few Republicans have suggested using the Rules Committee to block the 99-page package from making it to the floor. And Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) further hinted at that strategy Monday afternoon.

The Texas Republican said on Twitter that an “explicit” agreement was made during private negotiations in January to elect McCarthy to the speakership: No bill could get to the floor without “unanimous” Republican support on the Rules Committee, on which Roy serves.

Any holdups like a delay in teeing up House floor debate would cost leaders precious time in clearing the bill through both chambers before the expected deadline for maxing out the nation’s borrowing authority. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s latest forecast pegs that X-date as June 5, now just a week away.

Republicans working to rally support for the bill are already casting doubt on Roy’s claim of a secret promise.

24 Apr 17:08

Ex-officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor hired as a deputy

by rss@dailykos.com (Associated Press stories chosen by Daily Kos staff)

The former Louisville police officer who fatally shot Breonna Taylor has a new job in law enforcement in a county northeast of the city.

The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday confirmed the hiring of Myles Cosgrove, who was fired from the Louisville Metro Police Department in January 2021 for violating use-of-force procedures and failing to use a body camera during the raid on Taylor’s apartment, WHAS-TV reported.

Taylor, a Black woman, was killed March 13, 2020, by police executing a narcotics search warrant. None of the three white officers who fired into Taylor’s home were charged by a grand jury in her death.

Robert Miller, chief deputy in Carroll County, pointed to that fact in reference to Cosgrove’s hiring.

A protest in Carroll County was planned Monday in response to his hiring.

Investigators said that Cosgrove fired 16 rounds into the apartment after the front door was breached and that Taylor’s boyfriend fired a shot at them. Federal ballistics experts said they believe the shot that killed Taylor came from Cosgrove.

In November, the Kentucky Law Enforcement Council voted not to revoke Cosgrove’s state peace officer certification. That meant he could apply for other law enforcement jobs in the state.

23 Mar 18:32

Kevin McCarthy to meet with Ashli Babbitt's mother

by Brad Reed


NBC News' Ryan Reilly is now reporting that House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) is set to meet on Thursday afternoon with Micki Witthoeft, the mother of the late Capitol rioter Ashli Babbitt.

Reilly notes that there had initially been plans to have McCarthy meet with other advocates for January 6 defendants, but he is now only meeting with Witthoeft.

McCarthy earlier this year earned the ire of former President Donald Trump when he said that the Capitol police officer who killed Babbitt was "doing his job" in protecting Congress from the Trump-incited rioters who had violently stormed into Congress and had chanted for the hanging of Vice President Mike Pence.

A top aide for McCarthy met with Witthoeft earlier this year, but this week would mark the first time that the House Speaker has personally met with her.

WATCH: The View's audience erupts after Whoopi Goldberg asks a simple question about Ron DeSantis

Ashli Babbitt was trying to break into House chamber on January 6, 2021 when lawmakers were still being evacuated. As she was crawling through a shattered window adjacent to a door that police had barricaded to prevent rioters from reaching members of Congress, Capitol Police Lieutenant Michael Byrd shot her after warning her and other rioters to get back.

A Capitol Police investigation of the incident cleared Byrd of any wrongdoing.

09 Feb 20:22

One Minute and Nineteen Seconds of the Most Amazing Solo Guitar Ever: "La Vie en Rose," Joshua Meader

by Charles Johnson
My arrangement of the beautiful song La Vie En Rose. TABs and full breakdown of this arrangement on my Patreon: patreon.com My Instagram: instagram.com
20 Dec 20:24

Revealed: Key election conspiracy theory originated with programmer his own attorney suspects is a 'con man'

by Travis Gettys


Some of the wildest claims about the 2020 presidential election can be traced back to a computer programmer with a history of perjury and fraud.

Dennis Montgomery, a software developer and former intelligence contractor, told a tale of dark forces hacking into voting systems across the country to deprive Donald Trump of a second presidential term, and his unsupported claims were published on the right-wing American Report website as a whistleblower expose, reported Reuters.

Montgomery told the website's Mary Fanning that he had built a supercomputer years ago called Hammer, which was used for surveillance, and software called Scorecard that could manipulate election results, and he claimed someone had hijacked those systems to install Joe Biden as president.

Fanning told Reuters that Montgomery had approached her shortly before the November 2020 election with his claims, which were quickly picked up by Trump ally Sidney Powell, who mentioned the conspiracy theory on Fox News, and others -- and the tales eventually laid blame for the alleged hack on agents of Venezuela and China, among others.

IN OTHER NEWS: 'Stop lying': Marjorie Taylor Greene unloads new screed attacking 'friends' Boebert and Gaetz

The origins of the story have long been forgotten, and many Trump supporters have never even heard of Hammer and Scorecard, but the conspiracy theory has endured as an article of faith among election denialists, although many of the details have been changed since Montgomery's first telling.

“It has all the hallmarks of the classic conspiracy theory because it throws in the CIA,” said Krebs, Christopher Krebs, then the Trump administration’s top cybersecurity expert. “It was a trope that became part of the zeitgeist even without the name Hammer and Scorecard.”

The 69-year-old Montgomery sold a tranche of the alleged evidence last year to MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who calls the programmer the "smartest man I've ever met."

“I own it,” Lindell told supporters in August, after buying the data. “The machines are going to be gone!” he yelled, to uproarious applause. “We’re going to get our country back!”

Montgomery and his attorney Chris Kachouroff declined to answer detailed questions from Reuters, but the lawyer offered conflicting views on the strength of the evidence.

“Dennis has too much information for this to be made up,” Kachouroff said. “Does he have my complete confidence? No. Dennis is either the single greatest con artist this country has ever produced, or he’s telling the truth.”

21 Sep 23:16

Meanwhile, In Floriduh…

by tengrain
Texas Bexar County sheriff Javier Salazar has opened a criminal investigation of Floriduh Goblin, er, Governor Ron DeSantis and his inhumane stunt in which he and his toadies and minions kidnapped 50 Venezuelan asylum seekers from Texas to Floriduh, and then … Continue reading →
30 Aug 19:21

'Do you choose violence, chaos, cruelty, conspiracy:' Ex-Republicans sound the alarm on stopping Trumpism in November

by Sarah K. Burris


Lincoln Project co-founder Rick Wilson appeared on MSNBC's "Deadline White House" with Nicolle Wallace Monday to talk about the group's latest ad that highlights the ways in which the Republican Party was once opposed to so-called "big government" and the "nanny state" legislating the personal behaviors of Americans.

Wallace, who served in George W. Bush's White House, has abandoned the GOP since Trump took over the GOP. Wilson similarly did the same, forming the super PAC with a group of so-called "Never Trumpers," who continue to support moderate candidates.

In their latest ad, however, the group takes off after the GOP, saying that many Republicans might believe that because they don't support Donald Trump they aren't as bad as he is. The ad argues that if Republicans vote for people like Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott they're just as bad as Donald Trump.

"That may not be what you think you represent, but if you vote Republican, it is," the voiceover says in the ad.

\u201cBig government, invasion of privacy, keeping help from American veterans. The modern GOP is anything but patriotic.\u201d
— The Lincoln Project (@The Lincoln Project) 1661806802

WATCH: Morning Joe serves notice to Trump supporters what will happen to them if they riot over an arrest

"Versions of that ad will run in targeted races, including in Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Wisconsin where Trump-backed candidates are so, so extreme, so outside of where the mainstream of American voters are in their states, they have imperiled their party's chances of success in November," Wallace explained.

Wallace had little sympathy for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), who has been preparing GOP donors and officials for an election that doesn't work out the way they'd anticipated.

"But Mitch McConnell stinks," she said flatly, noting that it was the McConnells of the world who let it happen. "I mean, he's the one that refused to vote to get rid of Donald Trump when he was impeached for a second time."

Wilson recalled McConnell strategist Josh Holmes saying, "we could have a permanent governing majority if we can just fool these rubes into voting for Mitch's candidates. We're just humoring Trump by not saying that he lost the election in 2020."

READ MORE: Trump demands to be declared 'rightful winner' of 2020 election in new attack on FBI

He explained that all of the Republicans have made a bet, but now they can't control the monster they created.

"The reason we did this ad was to show voters that there is a choice this year," said Wilson. "And Donald Trump is making it into a choice. Do you choose violence, chaos, cruelty, conspiracy? Or do you choose a country that can work? Do you choose a small 'd' democratic system? And we are seeing Mitch McConnell as one of the chief enablers of Donald Trump, and he's paying a terrible price. They've incinerated $150 million of corporate donor money trying to elect guys like Blake Masters and Dr. Oz and JD Vance. It is what I think is probably the greatest expenditure of money for the greatest failure of a political strategy in history."

Wallace noted reporting saying that Biden can't change the election to being a referendum on his presidency, but he has Trump as an ally in bringing down the GOP. Even as Trump is facing off against the Justice Department, he's claiming that it's election interference, despite not even being on the ballot or declaring he's running in 2024.

"This is possibly a worst-case scenario for Republicans," said former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL). "They thought they were cruising to a historic midterm election. Biden's numbers were down and they wanted this election to be about Joe Biden. But now we're in a post-Dobbs America and an America where Donald Trump has now inserted himself into the political dialogue. Two terrible dynamics for Republicans. And then they're burdened by a number of really bad candidates."

RELATED: This key affidavit detail indicates the DOJ has one source very close to Trump

He predicted that Democrats could be able to pull off defying history in November.

"It's going to take something very special, and we saw it in Joe Biden last Thursday in Rockville, Maryland," Jolly explained. "Just as the Lincoln Project is laying down the fear, if you will, of what's on the line, Joe Biden and Democrats need to invite Independents and those mainstream Republicans into the coalition. Joe Biden, on Thursday, said, now is the time for Democrats, Independents and mainstream Republicans to come together. Do not take that coalition for granted. It was there in '18 and '20 to stop Trumpism, but it wasn't necessarily there to really buoy Democrats. You need that this cycle. So, invite that coalition in. Joe Biden made a pivot last Thursday that was a remarkable one, and one that could carry them through November very successfully."

You're just as bad for the Trumpers if you vote for Republicans www.youtube.com



02 Aug 19:51

Morning Digest: Will Trump's last-minute endorsements move the needle in Missouri or Michigan?

by rss@dailykos.com (Daily Kos Elections)

The Daily Kos Elections Morning Digest is compiled by David Nir, Jeff Singer, Stephen Wolf, Daniel Donner, and Cara Zelaya, with additional contributions from David Jarman, Steve Singiser, James Lambert, David Beard, and Arjun Jaikumar.

Subscribe to The Downballot, our weekly podcast

Leading Off

Primary Preview: Schmitt's Creek: Eye. Roll. Donald Trump must've thought he was being very clever when, on Monday afternoon—the day before Missouri's primary—he announced "that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement!" We're honestly so annoyed right now that we have to explain this, because, you see, one of the leading candidates for Senate is state Attorney General Eric Schmitt while another … sigh … is former Gov. Eric Greitens. And Trump really hates the third top contender, Rep. Vicky Hartzler, reportedly because she refused to "disavow her condemnation of his behavior on Jan. 6" on a phone call seeking his endorsement last month, according to political analyst Jeff Smith. So, ERIC, get it? Gawd.

09 Jul 18:37

Why Mike Pence exploded at Trump — and 5 other stunning details from a new report on their final days

by Meaghan Ellis, AlterNet


It's no secret that former President Donald Trump's last days in office were a political rollercoaster. Some of the chaos happened in plain sight, especially before he was kicked off Twitter. But despite his Twitter obsession, there were still things that occurred behind closed doors that are just coming to light. A new report published by The Wall Street Journal on Thursday sheds light on the unceasing chaos that ensued as the clock ticked down to 0 on Trump's presidency. The author Michael C. Bender offered a detailed depiction of what went on behind the scenes of the Trump administration.

  1. Most of those around Trump actually believed he would eventually concede and do the right thing: Vice President Mike Pence and Republican National Committee (RNC) chairwoman Ronna McDaniel believed time would eventually give Trump the space he needed to process the devastating loss, Bender reported. Even his daughter Ivanka, who presumably knows her father better than others in his orbit, also thought he would come around and maybe invite Biden to the White House. That never happened, of course, and even now Trump insists he really won the election.
  2. Losing allies: During Trump's last days, his camaraderie with former U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr also came to a screeching halt. At one point, he even offered the job to former National Intelligence Director, John Ratcliffe. Although it was Ratcliffe's dream job, he already knew the high consequences of taking the position at such a critical and controversial time during Trump's presidency.
  3. Bill Barr's breaking point: When Barr decided he'd had enough Trump's desperation to overturn the presidential election had escalated. In fact, it was so severe that the former president was "personally phoning U.S. attorneys—against Justice Department protocol—urging them to focus on election fraud."
  4. Even U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was concerned: Although Pompeo was a devout supporter of Trump, Bender notes that even he "conveyed concern to others that Mr. Trump might be more willing to engage in an international conflict to strengthen his political argument for remaining in office."
  5. Once upon a time, Vice President Mike Pence exploded: When Trump expressed disdain over Pence's committee hiring his advisor, Corey Lewandowski, as he claimed it was a sign of disloyalty, Pence reportedly had enough of Trump's antics and exploded. Bender wrote, "Mr. Pence lost it. Mr. Kushner had asked him to hire Mr. Lewandowski, and he had discussed the plan with Mr. Trump over lunch. Mr. Pence picked up the article and threw it back at Mr. Trump. He leaned toward the president and pointed a finger a few inches from his chest. "We walked you through every detail of this," Mr. Pence snarled. "We did this for you—as a favor. And this is how you respond? You need to get your facts straight."
  6. All bark and no bite? After facing the reality of losing the election, Trump asked numerous aides if he should run again. According to the report, some encouraged him but few actually believed he would go through with another presidential run. In fact, the publication also explained, "His advisers have pushed him to carefully cultivate his political power and delay deciding whether to run again in 2024 until after the midterms."
11 Dec 01:22

IG investigating Mike Pompeo to leave job ‘earlier than I anticipated’: report

by Matthew Chapman
On Thursday, The Washington Post reported that the inspector general of the State Department is leaving his position on Friday — shortly after a spokesman for Secretary of State Mike Pompeo attacked an investigation he had been conducting into official trips the secretary took with his wife. “Inspector General Matthew Klimow told colleagues that he […]
28 Jul 22:46

White House Chief Of Staff Pushes False Narrative On Vote-By-Mail Fraud

by Heather

Despite the fact that he claimed he agreed George Stephanopoulos' assertion that there is "no compelling evidence that mail-in ballots are tied to widespread voter fraud," that's exactly the narrative White House chief of staff Mark Meadows was trying to push on ABC's This Week.

As the Brennan Center for Justice has reported, mail-in ballots "are essential for holding a safe election amid Covid-19" and what security concerns there are can easily be addressed:

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17 Jun 15:19

New disturbing video shows New Mexico Trump supporter Steven Baca shooting anti-racist protester

by Arun Gupta
Warning: The story that follows contains links to extremely violent imagery.  A new video has surfaced that shows Trump supporter Steven Baca shooting an anti-racist protester, Scott Williams, during a fight in Albuquerque, New Mexico on June 15. The event that ended in near-fatal violence began with a few hundred protesters attempting to remove a […]
04 Jun 20:03

Biden’s Lead over Trump Grows in North Carolina, Suggesting N.C. is in Play for Democrats

by Alan Ryland
Presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s lead over President Donald Trump has grown in North Carolina, a state increasingly in play for Democrats during this year’s general election. According to the latest survey from the left-leaning firm Public Policy Polling (PPP), Biden has a 4-point lead over Trump 49 percent to 45 percent, the biggest lead …

Continue reading "Biden’s Lead over Trump Grows in North Carolina, Suggesting N.C. is in Play for Democrats"

25 Mar 07:41

‘It’s time for a national lockdown’: NYT calls for Trump to push a ‘two-week shelter-in-place order’

by Bob Brigham
With President Donald Trump pushing for society to re-open, The New York Times is urging him to do the exact opposite. “President Trump needs to call for a two-week shelter-in-place order, now, as part of a coherent national strategy for the coronavirus to protect Americans and their livelihoods,” the newspaper wrote in an editorial published […]
29 Jan 23:39

Pie Priestess Nicole Rucker Makes Her Grand Central Market Pop-Up Permanent

by Mona Holmes
Grand Central Market in Downtown Los Angeles Grand Central Market | Mike Baker

Plus, vegan dim in Long Beach, an addition to the Robertson Lane project, and a BOLO pop-up this weekend

In December, Nicole Rucker setup a pie-filled pop-up called Fat & Flour in Grand Central Market. Fat & Flour is no longer temporary, as Rucker announced it will become a permanent part of the Downtown bazaar this year. Rucker took to Instagram to share how she was asked to join Grand Central Market a year ago, a while still rooted at the now shuttered Fiona. Rucker signed a lease this week and will start building her ideal kitchen, but until then is stationed at the former security stand Wednesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m.

In other news:

Lucifer’s Pizza opens today in Studio City. Since 2008, owner Adam Borich established his pizza spots all over the Southland, first in Los Feliz, along with one one in West Hollywood, and another Sunset in Hollywood.

Lucifer’s Pizza in Studio City Courtesy of Lucifer’s Pizza
Lucifer’s Pizza

—Over on Marvel.com, The Runaways super hero cast shared their favorite Los Angeles spots. Actors Angel Parker and Ryan Sands favor Simply Wholesome, while cast mate Virginia Gardner is a fan of Jones Hollywood, Mama Shelter, Izaka-Ya on Third Street in WeHo.

—The Long Beach Post reports that vegan dim sum is headed to the Hangar at Long Beach Exchange called Morning Nights. The owners of the Kroft — also located at the Hangar — expect a May or June opening.

—The Robertson Lane development is well underway in West Hollywood. But the developer asked the West Hollywood Planning Commission’s Design Review Subcommittee to add an eye-catching feature to the planned hotel complex and nightclub, called The Birdcage. This new structure would add a 14,302 square foot food hall with a second floor terrace. Click on over to Urbanize LA for a glimpse.

—Smorgasburg’s longstanding Hong Kong sandwich maker BOLO will pop-up in Echo Park this weekend at Hey Hey. They’ll sell the signature fried chicken sandwiches with Hong Kong toasted buttered buns, garlic fries, and milk tea from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. tonight and Saturday until sold out. Details on Eventbrite.

23 Sep 21:20

Republicans Continue To Pretend Trump Didn't Do What He Admitted

by Susie Madrak

Joe Scarborough talked about Republican non-response to Trump's attempt to extort the president of Ukraine.

" 'That would be very troubling,'" he said, quoting a tweet from Mitt Romney.

"The Wall Street Journal reported even before that tweet that it happened eight times. and Donald Trump admitted that he did it. and yet they decide to live in this Never Never Land."

"And, you know, history, there's no once upon a time, there's not going to be a happily ever after. But there can be actual moments where we face facts. Eleanor Roosevelt said that's the test of a great government, a great society is can you, in fact, face facts, however uncomfortable they are?" historian Jon Meacham said.

"And what I think is the great story of our time, honestly, is the extent to which 40%, 45% of the country, many of them Republicans, have suspended their critical capacities, have suspended their essential, dare I say it, patriotic instincts to follow this particular leader because of the will to power. So the party of Eisenhower, Reagan, Bush are comfortable with a president who conspires, whoever -- colludes, whatever word you want to use."

(Except for Iran-Contra, of course. Republicans were quite comfortable with that and still won't admit it happened. But whatever. He's on a roll.)

"No Republican complained when he told George Stephanopoulos that he would work, that he would collude with foreign powers to try to get dirt on his rival," Scarborough said.

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