The 17 Most Striking Moments From the Kavanaugh Hearing
Kavanaugh/Ford Hearing LIVE Kavanaugh/Ford Hearing LIVE Reaction with Cenk Uygur | TYT | 09/27/18 | 8:57:52
Raging Kav Shows Himself: Partisan warrior in Robes A good judge must be an umpire -- a neutral and impartial arbiter who favors no litigant or policy ... I don't decide cases based on personal or policy preferences," Kavanaugh said at the hearing, echoing memorable lines that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts delivered during his confirmation hearing in 2005. When asked several times to comment on particular issues of the day, Kavanaugh declined, telling senators he would not "get within three zip codes" of a political controversy, and that judges ought to be "above politics; we stay out of it." The version of Kavanaugh that appeared at Thursday's hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, where he denied allegations of sexual assault leveled against him by three women in recent weeks, however, was starkly different from his description of the role of a neutral third party. Using some of the most partisan language a Supreme Court nominee has used in the modern era, Kavanaugh angrily accused Democrats of engaging in a "calculated and orchestrated political hit" that was animated by "anger at [President Donald] Trump" over the 2016 presidential election, as well as "revenge on behalf of" Bill and Hillary Clinton. ... Read more
Trump's baseless "Chinese election meddling" charge
Brett Kavanaugh unloads on Senate Democrats: "A national disgrace" Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh on Thursday testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, following Christine Blasey Ford's hearing. One big quote: "My family and my name have been totally and permanently destroyed," Kavanaugh said in his opening remarks. "This confirmation process has become a national disgrace ... you have replaced advice and consent with search and destroy." ... Read more Brett Kavanaugh's questionable definitions of "boof" and "Devil's Triangle," explained During his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh was asked about his familiarity with the word "boof," a slang term that many have defined to mean anal sex (and others to be a kayaking technique) -- and declared that it was a reference to farting. "I don't know if it's 'buffed' or 'boofed,' how do you pronounce that?" Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) asked Kavanaugh during the hearing, intended to address sexual assault allegations brought against Kavanaugh, which Kavanaugh has denied. ... Read more The rape culture of the 1980s, explained by Sixteen Candles ...n a sworn declaration delivered through her lawyer Michael Avenatti, Julie Swetnick avowed that she witnessed Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh drug girls at high school house parties where the girls were later "gang raped." Swetnick further says that Kavanaugh was present at a party where she herself was drugged and raped, although she does not directly say that he participated in her rape. n a statement released by the White House, Kavanaugh (who has denied all three allegations against him) called Swetnick's statement "ridiculous" and "from the Twilight Zone." His denial was widely echoed by supporters to whom the idea that such terrible things could happen on a routine basis, and that no one would do anything to stop them or even avoid the parties, seems absurd. ... Read more Greatest Ultimate Jukebox Rock and Roll Hits of the '50s & '60s | 1:56:57Paul Anka - Put Your Head On My Shoulder (1963 Version) | 2:37 |
Kavanaugh Hearings: Toxic Masculinity is 'Endemic' to the Far Right | TRNN | 09/27/18 | 11:24 Despite Gut-Wrenching Testimony from Dr. Blasey Ford, GOP Moves Forward with Vote on Kavanaugh | DN | 09/28/18 | 20:00
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 28 (FULL) | 59:02
Kavanaugh Hearings: Toxic Masculinity is 'Endemic' to the Far Right | TRNN | 09/27/18 | 11:24
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Trump's 'Dissociation from Reality' at UN | TRNN | 09/28/18 | 19:52 Kavanaugh Goes On Emotional Tirade During Hearing | TYT | 09/27/18 | 12:18 Lindsey Graham Has Political MELTDOWN | TYT | 09/27/18 | 12:18 The1a.org Friday News Roundup - Domestic | 1a.org | 09/28/18 | 1hr
Friday News Roundup - International | 1a.org | 09/8/18 | 1hr
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Mark Judge
Mark Judge's Memoir About Brett Kavanaugh's High School Portrays a Culture of Aggression and Excessive Drinking ... But the wedding scene in Judge's 1997 book, titled "Wasted: Tales of a GenX Drunk," amounts to a clear acknowledgement from Judge that he engaged in drunken acts he could not remember afterward, and that those acts involved aggression toward women, if not outright violence. The wedding scene is not the only one of its sort in his book, which is out of print and extremely hard to find. Judge also wrote that about a week before the wedding, he went to his favorite bar, ordered a shot and a beer, and struck up a conversation with a woman who was there. "We bought each other several rounds of drinks, and when I looked at the clock it was after midnight," he wrote. "Then, in what seemed like an instant, it was suddenly the next morning. ... I couldn't remember a thing after I had looked at the clock. I had blacked out." When he came to, he was back in his apartment, still dressed in the clothes he wore at the bar. "I started to panic, terrified of what I could have done during the blackout," Judge wrote. "I could have done anything and not know it -- I could have murdered somebody." ... Read more
Wasted: Tales of a Genx Drunk by Mark Gauvreau Judge (1997)
Selfie videos, male sexuality and filming young women. These themes appear in the videos and writings of Mark Judge that The New York Times reviewed, revealing a partial portrait of Judge Brett Kavanaugh's high school friend. | NYT | 09/27/18 | 2:38Mark Judge, a journalist and writing teacher, attempts to give an edge to his drinking story by excitedly promoting the ideas put forth in clinical psychologist James Milam's Under The Influence: A Guide to the Myths and Realities of Alcoholism (1984). But Milam's contention that the metabolisms of alcoholics differ from those of normal drinkers is hardly news today. Consequently, Judge's bid to appeal to a young generation wary of the Twelve Steps feels forced and shallow. Still, in the time-honored tradition of A.A. he stands to help many young drunks with his account of the hard road he traveled after taking his first drink as a Catholic boy growing up in a bland, affluent community near Washington, D.C. Judge first got drunk the summer before he entered Loyola Prep, an all-boys Catholic school. Jesuit discipline and Irish Catholic family values accelerated his slide. Although Judge denies any behavioral link in his alcoholism, his inability to impress his distant, alcoholic father haunted him as he slipped out of control. By the end of high school, while volunteering at a shelter, Judge encountered Ronnie, a young recovering alcoholic who slipped him his phone number. Judge drank throughout his years at Catholic University, until he finally hit bottom and called Ronnie. Ronnie took Judge to his first A.A. meeting and introduced him to the most useful bit of advice presented here: It is one thing to get sober, he reminded Judge. It is quite another to stay that way. Amazon Commenters
Wasted: Tales of a GenX Drunk by Mark Gauvreau Judge (Wikipedia) God and Man at Georgetown Prep by Mark Gauvreau Judge (Wikipedia) Who Is Brett Kavanaugh's Friend, Mark Judge? | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC | 09/19/18 | 2:46 |
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Dr. Ford's Heartbreaking Testimony Was Not A Con Job | Stephen Colbert | 09/28/18 | 10:06 Brett Kavanaugh Screams About His Innocence | Stephen Colbert | 09/28/18 | 8:44 The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Dr. Christine Blasey Ford Testifies Against Brett Kavanaugh | The Daily Show | 09/27/18 | 12:06 Full Frontal with Samantha Bee Sam Goes Full Carrie Over Kavanaugh | Samantha Bee | 09/26/18 | 8:39 Late Night with Seth Meyers Dr. Christine Blasey Ford and Brett Kavanaugh Testify | Sth Meyers | 09/27/18 | 10:51 Jimmy Kimmel Live Jimmy Kimmel on Kavanaugh Hearing | Jimmy Kimmel | 09/27/18 | 7:31 |
09.28.2018. 14:51
Trump Repeats Lie That Women Who Accused Him Of Sexual Misconduct Were 'Paid A Lot Of Money' In a rare solo news conference with reporters after a third woman came out on Wednesday to accuse Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault, President Donald Trump repeated the lie that the women who accused the president himself of misconduct were paid to do so. "I've been accused, I've been accused. I believe it was four women, you can check with Sean Hannity, you can check with Fox, because they covered it very strongly," he said. "I was accused by four or five women who got paid a lot of money to make up stories about me. We caught them and the mainstream media refused to put it on television. They refused to even write about it. There were four women, and maybe more." Nearly two dozen women have credibly accused the president of sexual misconduct. ... Read more How consultants and pharmacy middlemen work the drug pricing system Employers hire consultants to help them manage their prescription drug costs. But industry sources say those consultants don't steer companies toward the best deals. Why it matters: Prescription drugs represent one-fifth of employers' spending on health benefits. Employers and employees alike are increasingly worried about drug prices and how those prices affect their premiums. ... Read more Trump at the UN general assemblyTrump at the UN general assembly (full speech) | BBC News | 09/26/18 | 34:50 President Trump holds press conference after UN meetings President Trump holds press conference after UN meetings in New York | ABC News | 09/26/18 | 1:35:13 Youtube Commenters
Kavanaugh/Ford Hearing LIVE Reaction with Cenk Uygur | TYT | 09/27/18 | Live |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 27 [10:12]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 27 (FULL) | 59:02
Trump's Methane Deregulation: Another Blow to Slowing Down Climate Change | TRNN | 09/21/18 | 9:06
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China's HILARIOUS Reaction To Trump | TYT | 09/26/18 | 7:54 BREAKING: Fourth Accuser Comes Out Against Kavanaugh | TYT | 09/26/18 | 7:08 The1a.org Hearing Aide: Christine Blasey Ford And Brett Kavanaugh Testify | 1a.org | 09/27/18 | 1hr
After considerable negotiations, and without an FBI investigation, Christine Blasey Ford and Brett Kavanaugh will testify in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday.
New Brett Kavanaugh Allegations Come To Light Ahead Of Dr. Ford Hearing | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 09/27/18 | 23:59The latest is that four individuals have come forward to corroborate Ford's account. She says that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when she was 15 and he was 17, covering her mouth to muffle her screams. Kavanaugh, whose confirmation to the Supreme Court of the United States hangs in the balance, has categorically denied the allegations. |
09.27.2018. 10:35
Classmates Who Endorsed Brett Kavanaugh Now Say Claims Warrant Investigation Several former classmates of Judge Brett Kavanaugh who just last month endorsed his nomination to the Supreme Court have now called for the Yale alumnus to be investigated over allegations of sexual misconduct. ... Blasey has accused Kavanaugh of pinning her to a bed and attempting to remove her clothes during a party when they were high school students in the 1980s. Ramirez alleged in an interview with The New Yorker on Sunday that Kavanaugh exposed himself and thrust his penis in her face at a party when they were students at Yale University during the 1983-84 school year. ... Read more Donald Trump Gave a Rambling, Marathon Press Conference. It Was Not Good. "This is Alex Jones level stuff from the President right now." In a bizarre and rare press conference on Wednesday, President Donald Trump defended embattled Judge Brett Kavanaugh ahead of a high-profile hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Christine Blasey Ford, one of three women who has accused Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct, will testify on Thursday about an instance in high school when Kavanaugh allegedly sexually assaulted her. During the wide-ranging press conference, Trump called the Democrats "obstructionists" and claimed they had "destroyed a man's reputation." "It's not going to change the Democrats' minds," he said. "They know it's a big, fat con job. They go into a room and I guarantee you, they laugh like hell at what they've pulled off." The focus briefly turned to Trump's past. Since 2016, more than a dozen women have accused him of sexual misconduct, harassment, or assault -- allegations Trump's White House has dismissed in the past. "When you say does it affect me in terms of my thinking with respect to Judge Kavanaugh? Absolutely. Because I've had it many times," Trump said. ... Read more Trump's welfare crackdown targets immigrants A new rule proposed by the Trump administration over the weekend would disqualify some immigrants from visas and green cards if they use -- or are likely to use -- federal safety net programs such as Medicaid, food stamps and Section 8 housing vouchers. Why it matters: There are millions of immigrants in the U.S. who use these programs, according to the Migration Policy Institute's analysis of Census data, and the group estimates that 31% of all non-citizens would be impacted if the rule is finalized. Those applying to be admitted to the the U.S. would also face increased scrutiny of their financial stability and prospects. ...
Read more Ken Burns Isn't Mad - The "far, far left," "far, far right" and "third- and fourth-rate academics" are all wrong about America's most famous documentary filmmaker. Just ask him. | HP | Maxwell Strachan | 09/25/18 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 26 [9:37] World Laughs at Trump as He Boasts About Himself in U.N. Address Threatening Iran, Venezuela | DN | 09/26/18 | 15:07
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 26 (FULL) | 59:02
The1a.org
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Changing Rules On Refugees | 1a.org | 09/26/18 | 1hr
Last week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the Trump administration would limit refugee resettlement admissions to 30,000 people in the coming year. This represents the lowest refugee ceiling since the 1980s and about a third less than the 45,000 admitted last year. The new policy "further cut[s] an already drastically scaled-back program that offers protection to foreigners fleeing violence and persecution," according to Julie Hirschfeld Davis at The New York Times.
Pompeo explained his decision this way, from the same article: Mr. Pompeo said refugees had to be weighed against a backlog of 800,000 asylum seekers who are awaiting a decision by immigration authorities about whether they qualify as in need of protection under United States law and will be granted status to remain. But he vastly overstated the numbers, while making a linkage between two groups of immigrants that are not the same and are processed differently. As of the end of June, the Department of Homeland Security reported just under 320,000 people who had claimed asylum -- meaning they had passed an interview conducted to verify that they met the "credible fear" threshold to be considered -- and were awaiting a decision from the department about whether they could stay. About 730,000 additional immigrants were waiting for their cases to be resolved by immigration courts, according to the Justice Department, including people who had asked for asylum after being apprehended. But that number also included people in deportation or other immigration proceedings. Those are not all "humanitarian protection cases," as Mr. Pompeo described them; some may never be granted asylum and some will be removed from the United States. |
09.27.2018. 07:19
Trump bragged about his presidency and world leaders laughed World leaders laughed Tuesday after President Donald Trump said in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly that his administration had accomplished more than any other in American history. "In less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country," Trump said near the start of a speech before the assembled world leaders, prompting audible laughter. "It's so true," Trump continued, before acknowledging the laughter. "I didn't expect that reaction, but that's okay," he said, smirking and raising his eyebrows. It's unusual for a U.S. president to draw unintentional laughs at a gathering of world leaders, and Trump has long complained that foreign governments are laughing at the U.S. for what he views as weak policies on trade and other issues. ... Read more EU, Russia and China reach payments deal to counter Trump's Iran move The U.K., Germany, France, Russia and China have agreed to establish a special payments system to circumvent U.S. sanctions on Iran stemming from President Trump's unilateral withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal, the Financial Times reports. The big picture: The payments channel would be an alternative to SWIFT, the backbone of the global financial system that allows Iran to get paid for oil, pay for its imports and finance its activities abroad. The five countries involved in the agreement remain committed to doing business with Iran, which the International Atomic Energy Agency says is still complying with the terms of the nuclear deal. President Trump, meanwhile, has threatened that anyone doing business with Iran will not be able to do business with the U.S. ... Read more
China Fills a Trump-Sized Vacuum at the U.N.
Kavanaugh Just Played 'Checkers' on Fox Three weeks ago, Judge Brett Kavanaugh offered the Senate Judiciary Committee the homilies every nominee is bound to recite: "A judge must be independent and must interpret the law, not make the law. A judge must interpret statutes as written. ... A good judge must be an umpire--a neutral and impartial arbiter who favors no litigant or policy." It was a firm recitation of the argument that courts are above the grimy business of partisan politics. By appearing with his wife on Fox News on Monday night to defend himself against accusations of sexual misconduct, Kavanaugh threw himself into what Justice Felix Frankfurter called "the political thicket." He is seeking to rally support for his confirmation in the face of polls showing him to be an increasingly unpopular choice. There was nothing subtle about the choice of venue. Fox News is not only President Donald Trump's loyal echo chamber during early morning and prime time, but it is also the network whose founder and most popular on-air personality were both fired for repeated acts of sexual misconduct. And it is the network whose former co-president, Bill Shine, now directs communication for the White House. ...
Read more
Pop Stars, Pageants & Presidents: How An Email Trumped My Life by Rob Goldstone
A post-Trump world will be like Mad MaxPop Stars, Pageants & Presidents: How an Email Trumped My Life is a firsthand account of the extraordinary life of British-born music publicist Rob Goldstone who found himself at the center of the RussiaGate investigation after an email he wrote to Donald Trump Jr. became public. From Manchester to Manhattan to Moscow, this very personal memoir takes the reader through Goldstone's early days in the North of England to his life as celebrity journalist and pop music publicist to a world of billionaires, Russian oligarchs and Donald Trump. Pop Stars, Pageants & Presidents takes a close look at what led Goldstone to write the now infamous Trump Tower email, an email that would become worldwide news and a turning point in the investigation into Russian collusion and interference in the 2016 U.S. election. A post-Trump world will be like Mad Max, says Republican strategist, Rick Wilson | ABC (Australia) | 09/05/18 | 6:32 The 2019 Congress could shatter diversity records | Axios | Alayna Treene | 09/25/18 Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, September 25 [9:19]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 04 (FULL) | 59:02
An Ex-Marine's View of the US 'Forever War' | TRNN | 09/25/18 | 12:18
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Is a New Global Financial Crisis Imminent? | TRNN | 09/23/18 | 23:32 These Trump Supporters Will Make You Facepalm | TYT | 09/25/18 | 5:56 Trump Ending The Mueller Investigation? | TYT | 09/24/18 | 5:28 Michael Avenatti: 'Credible Information' On Alleged Kavanaugh Assault | TYT | 09/24/18 | 11:08 The1a.org Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will remain in his job, at least until Thursday. | 1a.org | 09/25/18 | 1hr
The announcement came just hours after the revelation that Mr. Rosenstein was considering resigning, which set off a flurry of speculation about who would replace him at the Justice Department, where Mr. Rosenstein oversees the Russia investigation.
Trade War: "The Fruit Of A President's Folly" | 1a.org | 09/25/18 | 1hr
Ms. Sanders, in a statement, said that Mr. Rosenstein and Mr. Trump had "an extended conversation" about the reports -- including the fact that Mr. Rosenstein had discussed secretly taping the president. She said the two men will meet on Thursday when the president returns to Washington from New York, where he is attending the United Nations General Assembly. Over the weekend, Mr. Rosenstein called a White House official and said he was considering quitting, and a person close to the White House said he was resigning. On Monday morning, after again calling John F. Kelly, the White House chief of staff, to discuss the prospect of his resignation, Mr. Rosenstein headed to the White House to meet with Mr. Kelly. Were Trump to fire Rosenstein for reasons related to the Russia investigation -- for example, if he wanted to replace the deputy attorney general with someone willing to shut Mueller down--that, too, could constitute obstruction of justice, legal experts told me. With the Times story, however, Trump was handed a justification for firing that, on its face, is unrelated to Rosenstein's handling of the Mueller probe. That's despite reporting from The Washington Post that Rosenstein's comment about recording Trump was made in jest in response to McCabe's suggestion that the Justice Department investigate Trump after he dismissed Comey.
On Sunday, The Des Moines Register ran a four-page advertising supplement "paid for and prepared solely by China Daily, an official publication of the People's Republic of China."
Its message? That the trade war's impact on soybean farmers in Iowa is "the fruit of a president's folly." |
09.25.2018. 11:31
Permafrost: The Tipping Time Bomb | YaleClimateConnections | older, 02/28/13 | 6:04
Michael Moore v. Donald Trump in "Fahrenheit 11/9": New Film Warns Our Democracy Is At Risk | DN | 09/21/18 | 7:48
Michael Moore: Are We Going to Be Like the "Good Germans" Who Let Hitler Rise to Power? | DN | 09/21/18 | 17:06 Michael Moore: Democrats Made Fatal Mistake in Not Taking Trump More Seriously in 2016 | DN | 09/21/18 | 16:55
In July, 2016, Michael Moore wrote a column titled "Five Reasons Why Trump Will Win." In it, Moore wrote, "Donald J. Trump is going to win in November. This wretched, ignorant, dangerous part-time clown and full time sociopath is going to be our next president. President Trump. Go ahead and say the words, 'cause you'll be saying them for the next four years: 'PRESIDENT TRUMP.'" He went on to list the five reasons why Trump would be elected: Trump's focus on the Midwest, "The Last Stand of the Angry White Man," "The Hillary Problem," "The Depressed Sanders Vote" and what he called the "Jesse Ventura Effect" -- people voting for Trump simply to disrupt the system. We talk to Michael Moore about his predictions and how Democrats failed to take Trump more seriously.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein Expecting To Be Fired He was overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia during the 2016 election. Rosenstein's potential departure follows a report by The New York Times on Friday that in 2017, he'd suggested covertly recording the president in the White House and had discussed invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from office. Rosenstein firmly denied the allegations. The Times report echoed an anonymous op-ed published by a senior Trump administration official in the Times earlier in September that described "early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th Amendment" to "start a complex process for removing the president." ... Read more John BoltonWhat John Bolton's Past Tells Us About His Future As Trump's National Security Adviser | Vice | 04/03/18 | 6:44 Surprise medical bills could be a powerful campaign issue There is growing interest in the problem of surprise medical bills in the media and on Capitol Hill, with a bipartisan group of senators drafting legislation to crack down on the problem. But the issue has not been prominent in midterm campaigns and is not showing up in campaign ads. Why it matters: Recent analyses, including polling and a report on employers' medical claims, show that surprise bills could have as much -- or even more -- traction with the public than other health issues being featured in the midterms. In an election where health care is top-of-mind, candidates may be missing an opportunity. ...
Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 24 [9:27] John Bolton Threatens International Criminal Court Judges for Probing U.S. Torture in Afghanistan | TYT | 09/11/18 | 10:16
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 24 (FULL) | 59:02
John Bolton Tries To Prevent His Pals From Being Prosecuted For War Crimes | TYT | 09/24/18 | 7:30
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Cohen Spills The Beans To Mueller | TYT | 09/21/18 | 11:07 The1a.org A Controversial Confirmation Process Grows Ever More Complicated | 1a.org | 09/24/18 | 1hr
By now, you've heard about Christine Blasey Ford's allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. She'll testify in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday.
The Comeback: Men Embroiled In #MeToo Attempt Exits From Exile | 1a.org | 09/24/18 | 1hr
On Sunday night, another allegation emerged, reported by The New Yorker's Jane Mayer and Ronan Farrow. Deborah Ramirez went to Yale with Brett Kavanaugh. In her initial conversations with The New Yorker, she was reluctant to characterize Kavanaugh's role in the alleged incident with certainty. After six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney, Ramirez said that she felt confident enough of her recollections to say that she remembers Kavanaugh had exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away. Ramirez is now calling for the F.B.I. to investigate Kavanaugh's role in the incident. "I would think an F.B.I. investigation would be warranted," she said.
Several high-profile guys accused of abusive behavior, sexual harassment and assault have started to edge back into public life.
Louis C.K., accused of making female comedians watch him masturbate, recently did a couple of surprise sets at The Comedy Cellar, a famous club in Manhattan. Disgraced former NBC anchor Matt Lauer told a group of women at a restaurant, "don't worry, I'll be back on TV.". Jian Ghomeshi and John Hockenberry both published pieces in recent weeks about being accused of misconduct, in The New York Review of Books and in Harper's. Ghomeshi's, in particular, is filled with obfuscations and outright falsehoods about the violence of which he was accused. |
09.24.2018. 10:58
DIRTY DON FINALLY SMEARS BLASEY Donald Trump Goes After Kavanaugh Accuser, Asks Why She Didn't Call Cops After Alleged Assault Read moreGOP realizes tax cuts won't help them win the 2018 midterms More than 60% of voters believe the GOP tax law benefits "large corporations and rich Americans" over "middle class families," according to a new survey commissioned by the Republican National Committee that was obtained by Bloomberg News. Why it matters: Republicans just got confirmation -- from their own poll -- that what they've thought was going to be their winning issue in 2018 might not help them after all. It also confirms that Democrats' strategy of tying health care and taxes together is working. ... Read more Trump's Dirty War in Yemen Earlier this year, three United States senators, including the Vermont progressive Bernie Sanders and the Utah conservative Mike Lee, authored a resolution to force the withdrawal of U.S. forces from a foreign war. But their effort did not concern Iraq, or Afghanistan, or Syria, as a casual observer of American foreign policy might expect. They sought "to direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities in the Republic of Yemen," explaining that "since March 2015, members of the U.S. Armed Forces have been introduced into hostilities" on the side of a Saudi-led coalition against the Houthis, a Shia rebel group trying to overthrow the country's regime. ... Read more U.S. drug overdose deaths grew exponentially in 38 years | Axios | Eileen Drage O'Reilly | 09/21/18 Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 21 [8:13]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 21 (FULL) | 59:02
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard: It is Outrageous that The US is Supporting a Genocidal War in Yemen | TRNN | 09/21/18 | 15:49
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The1a.org Friday News Roundup - Domestic | 1a.org | 09/21/18 | 1hr
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Stephen Simulates Next Week's Kavanaugh/Ford Hearing | Stephen Colbert | 09/20/18 | 8:19 The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Bert and Ernie's Sexuality & Trump's Toad Penis | The Daily Show | 09/21/18 | 4:47 Late Night with Seth Meyers The "Law and Order" President on Collusion and Kavanaugh | Seth Meyers | 09/21/18 | 8:35 |
09.21.2018. 09:49
*A Year After Hurricane Maria, School Closures Make Trauma Worse For Puerto Rico's Children SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico ? When asked what she remembered about Hurricane Maria, 10-year-old Yermiletsy Quiñonez Rosado immediately began to imitate the high-pitch whistle of the storm's 155 mph winds. "We thought the wind was going take the house. We were very scared," she told HuffPost in late July, her eyes focused on a toy she was restlessly turning in her hands. But it wasn't memories of the hurricane that hit Puerto Rico last September or her family's nearly four months without power or water afterward that made Yermiletsy anxious just weeks before the start of the new school year. It was knowing she would soon begin fifth grade at a new school, Escuela Inés MarÃa Mendoza. ... GOOD article and VIDEO and LOTs of PICTURES The Last Time the Globe Warmed | PBS Eons | 12/04/17 | 10:53New data: Democrats crushing Republicans in 2018 elections Riding a surge of enthusiasm in opposition to President Trump, more Democrats turned out in the primaries for House elections than Republicans this year -- the first time that has happened since 2008. Why it matters: 2008 was the last time Democrats won a majority in the House. They lost it in 2010, when Republican primary turnout skyrocketed and Democratic turnout plummeted -- the reverse of what's happening now. ... Read more Click to zoom inA new era of U.S. -- China competition calls for new rules Even as the U.S. - China trade war escalates, the two powers are fighting a greater battle at the frontiers of technology. With its "Made in China 2025" strategy -- targeting sectors like aviation, high-speed rail, electric vehicles and agricultural machinery -- China aspires to build firms that will not only replace foreign technology and products domestically but supplant them internationally. Why it matters: In 2018 U.S. - China relations have entered a period of profound strategic drift, a pivotal moment in the transition from cooperation to competition. It's an open question whether this split will spawn a cold war or even a military confrontation -- prospects some policymakers are now considering for the first time -- but there's no doubt that a wider economic war is now upon us, to be waged over ownership of the technological innovations that will drive the 21st century. ... Read more Christine Blasey Ford against Brett Kavanaugh"It Struck Me As True" - Christine Blasey Ford Friend | All In | MSNBC | 09/19/18 | 7:40 From the Series Killing the Colorado A Wonder in Decline, The disappearing Lake Powell in pictures Remembers Arizona's Glen Canyon | NatGeo | on going | 7:24 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 20 [12:43] 'The Intercept' Report Reveals Senate Ignored Federal Court Employees Willing to Testify Against Kavanaugh | DN | 09/18/18 | 19:51
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 20 (FULL) | 59:02
*The Stages for the 2008 Financial Crisis
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De-Regulation, De-Supervision, and De-Criminalization Set the Stage for the 2008 Financial Crisis (Part 1/3) | TRNN | 09/20/18 | 12:30
Trump's Stupidity Is Driving Republicans CRAZY | TYT | 09/19/18 | 9:47
White collar criminologist Bill Black analyzes how the U.S. got into the 2008 financial crisis and what it means that we have not learnt the lessons from that crisis 10 years later, on the anniversary of the Lehman Brothers collapse.
Part 2/3 | TRNN | 09/20/18 | 13:35Part 3/3 | TRNN | 09/20/18 | 8:50 *Gary Cohn: WHAT LAWS DID I BREAK?! | TYT | 09/19/18 | 10:42 FBI, DOJ Counter Trump Demands | TYT | 09/19/18 | 6:10 Trump: FBI Is 'Cancer To The Country' | TYT | 09/19/18 | 6:30 The1a.org Artificial Intelligence At Home In Pittsburgh | 1a.org | 09/20/18 | 1hr
Once a hub of steel production, Pittsburgh is now a hotspot for another burgeoning industry: artificial intelligence.
Are LGBTQ Students Any Safer In Schools Today? | 1a.org | 09/20/18 | 1hr
It's home to Carnegie Mellon University, a trailblazer in A.I. research since the 1950s. And over the last few years, the city has caught the attention of tech giants in Silicon Valley -- and now plays host to a variety of new projects.
Activist and journalist Bil Browning describes part of his childhood this way: The bullying started as early as first grade for me, steadily getting worse as time wore on. Classmates quickly pegged me as "the gay one" and that was that. Turns out, they were right.
Like me, nine out of ten LGBTQ teens today report being bullied in school. Almost half of LGBTQ teens report being physically harassed, and another quarter have been physically assaulted. As the social outcast, I found that being alone became both a protection and its own trauma. An avid reader, I lost myself in stories of other places and people. Instead of friends, words were my companions and a toy bus, empty of tormentors, was my protector. |
09.20.2018. 12:48
*Trump's Lies Have Grown Far More Frequent -- and More Dangerous The president is accelerating a dark phenomenon called "truth decay." In recent months, the steady stream became a deluge. Although Washington Post journalists and other fact-checkers have dutifully documented President Donald Trump's now more than 5,000 misleading statements and outright lies, the American public may no longer pay much attention to the exhausting flood of misinformation. Now, a book-length study from the nonpartisan RAND Corporation warns that a growing disregard for basic facts could have dire longterm consequences for American democracy. From June through August, Trump averaged more than 15 bogus statements a day--more than triple his daily rate in 2017. Recently, he went after Google, falsely claiming the country's biggest information search tool is "rigged" to make him look bad. He sowed confusion over a key statement he made about the Russia investigation by falsely accusing NBC News of doctoring video of his famous interview with Lester Holt (which has been publicly available in full since May 2017). And in his startling rebuke of an official government-commissioned report concluding that 2,975 people in Puerto Rico died in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, Trump falsely claimed that the report was a Democratic hit job and that the toll "did not go up by much" beyond 6 to 18 deaths. ... Read more
*Truth Decay, An Initial Exploration of the Diminishing Role of Facts and Analysis in American Public Life by Jennifer Kavanagh, Michael D. Rich
Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 11/9" is a provocative and comedic look at the times in which we live. It will explore the two most important questions of the Trump Era: How the f**k did we get here, and how the f**k do we get out? | trailer | 08/09/18 | 1:58Over the past two decades, national political and civil discourse in the United States has been characterized by "Truth Decay," defined as a set of four interrelated trends: an increasing disagreement about facts and analytical interpretations of facts and data; a blurring of the line between opinion and fact; an increase in the relative volume, and resulting influence, of opinion and personal experience over fact; and lowered trust in formerly respected sources of factual information. These trends have many causes, but this report focuses on four: characteristics of human cognitive processing, such as cognitive bias; changes in the information system, including social media and the 24-hour news cycle; competing demands on the education system that diminish time spent on media literacy and critical thinking; and polarization, both political and demographic. The most damaging consequences of Truth Decay include the erosion of civil discourse, political paralysis, alienation and disengagement of individuals from political and civic institutions, and uncertainty over national policy. "Funding secured" may become the two costliest words ever tweeted Tesla has lost over $10 billion in market cap since Elon Musk's infamous -- and false -- claim, related to his efforts to take the company private. The big picture: Both Musk and Tesla are now under criminal investigation by the Department of Justice, in addition to a continuing investigation by the SEC. The real fear now, for Tesla, its shareholders and its fanboys is that the government could find some sort of accounting or management problems that have nothing to do with the take-private fiasco. ... Read more I've Got A Great, Great, Lawyer
What Are The Dangers Of Trump Declassifying Certain Russia Probe Documents? | MTP Daily | MSNBC | 09/18/18 | 6:39
I've Got A Great, Great, Lawyer | ShowTime | 03/30/18 | 2:04 Trump: "I don't have an attorney general" President Trump continued his attacks on Attorney General Jeff Sessions in an interview with The Hill, claiming that Sessions' rocky confirmation hearing scared him into needlessly recusing himself from the Russia investigation. "I don't have an Attorney General. It's very sad. ... A lot of people have asked me to [fire Sessions]. And I guess I study history, and I say I just want to leave things alone, but it was very unfair what he did." The backdrop: Trump recently criticized the Justice Department for indicting two Republican congressmen so close to the midterm elections, prompting Sessions to fire back: "While I am Attorney General, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerations." ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 19 [12:09] Ten Years Since Economic Collapse Sparked Occupy Wall Street, the Cooperative Movement Is Surging | DN | 09/18/18 | 10:34 Intercept Report Reveals Senate Ignored Federal Court Employees Willing to Testify Against Kavanaugh | DN | 09/18/18 | 19:51
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 19 (FULL) | 59:02
10 Years Since Lehman Brothers Bankruptcy - Did the Economy Really Recover? | TRNN | 09/19/18 | 17:13
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Billionaire's TONE DEAF Response To China Tariffs | TYT | 09/18/18 | 5:43 BREAKING: Citizens United Starts To Crumble | TYT | 09/18/18 | 4:05 Trump's Bizarre Russia Request | TYT | 09/18/18 | 6:42 The1a.org Kavanaugh's Testimony In The Era Of #MeToo | 1a.org | 09/19/18 | 1hr
One of the most prominent public hearings of the #MeToo era will likely happen in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday when the committee will hear the testimony of Judge Brett Kavanaugh.
Christine Blasey Ford recently told The Washington Post that when she was 15 and they were both in high school, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh tried to sexually assault her. She said he covered her mouth with his hand to muffle her screams. At this point, it's not clear if she'll appear to testify when he does, in front of Congress. ... |
09.19.2018. 14:24
Trump orders declassification of surveillance application, release of Comey texts The move also includes an effort to reveal the details of Bruce Ohr's interviews connected to the Russia investigation. President Donald Trump moved on Monday to immediately release a tranche of former FBI Director James Comey's text messages and declassify 20 pages of a surveillance application that targeted former campaign adviser Carter Page, Trump's latest offensive against a Russia investigation that has ensnared associates and has consumed his attention for much of his presidency. The breadth of the order came as a surprise and landed amid a full-court White House effort to shore up the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh, as he defends himself against a sexual assault allegation. Trump demanded that the FBI produce 20 pages of the surveillance application -- which Republicans on Capitol Hill have suggested would help show anti-Trump bias at the highest levels of the FBI. Trump also called for the release of senior Justice Department official Bruce Ohr's notes related to the Russia probe. Ohr was a key conduit to the FBI for information provided by Christopher Steele, a former British spy who investigated Trump's relationship with Russia during the 2016 campaign and produced a dossier of damaging allegations -- which Trump has derided as false. ...
Read more
Shock report: Machines will do half our labor in less than 8 years.
Monday's hearing of a lifetime Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh was asked privately yesterday about what past girlfriends would say about his conduct, as frenzied Republican officials prepared him for an epic hearing on Monday when he will rebut charges of a drunken sexual assault during high school. What's happening: A source tells Axios the question about girlfriends was designed to help Kavanaugh's advocates show there was no pattern of conduct similar to the charge by Christine Blasey Ford, a biostatistician and research psychologist in the Bay Area who also is expected to testify Monday. ... Read more What Can We Learn From Past Presidential Leadership?What Can We Learn From Past Presidential Leadership? | Morning Joe | MSNBC | 09/18/18 | 11:49
Leadership: In Turbulent Times by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Re-writing Our Textbooks/HistoryAre leaders born or made? Where does ambition come from? How does adversity affect the growth of leadership? Does the leader make the times or do the times make the leader? In Leadership, Goodwin draws upon the four presidents she has studied most closely -- Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Lyndon B. Johnson (in civil rights) -- to show how they recognized leadership qualities within themselves and were recognized as leaders by others. By looking back to their first entries into public life, we encounter them at a time when their paths were filled with confusion, fear, and hope. Leadership tells the story of how they all collided with dramatic reversals that disrupted their lives and threatened to shatter forever their ambitions. Nonetheless, they all emerged fitted to confront the contours and dilemmas of their times. No common pattern describes the trajectory of leadership. Although set apart in background, abilities, and temperament, these men shared a fierce ambition and a deep-seated resilience that enabled them to surmount uncommon hardships. At their best, all four were guided by a sense of moral purpose. At moments of great challenge, they were able to summon their talents to enlarge the opportunities and lives of others. TX Voted To Remove Hillary Clinton And Helen Keller Out Of Textbooks | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC | 09/17/18 | 6:42 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, September 18 [10:36]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, September 18 (FULL) | 59:02
How Global Warming and Arctic Ice Melt Intensifies Hurricanes | TRNN | 09/17/18 | 13:16
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Bolton Mobilizes the Coalition of the Willing -- This Time for Syria | TRNN | 09/17/18 | 4:12 Trump Pisses Off China | TYT | 09/17/18 | 7:12 Donald Trump Jr.'s Gross Response To Kavanaugh Accuser | TYT | 09/17/18 | 13:32 The1a.org Identity Politics Unmasked | 1a.org | 09/18/18 | 1hr
Political scientist Francis Fukuyama thinks identity politics is a disease. The cure? It can come from the country.
Brett Accusation Against Kavanaugh Resonates With Anita Hill's Example | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 09/18/18 | 29:07Left-wingers may deride national identities and far right-wingers twist them to racist ends, but he argues there is hope for unifying people and giving them a broad sense of purpose. Francis Fukuyama is in favor of national identities based on creed, like the American one, rather than identities based on race or heritage. He is keen on national service and suspicious of dual citizenship. |
09.18.2018. 10:47
The Coming Financial Contagion The party seems only to be roaring ahead -- Japan's Nikkei index today closed at its highest level since February, and U.S. and European stock markets finished the week up as well. But stubborn trouble in emerging markets has some economists worrying about an eruption of financial contagion resembling past global crises. What's going on: Plunging currencies and stock markets in the emerging economies suggest a threat to the nine-and-a-half year stock market bull run, along with the global economy, with Europe especially in the line of fire, economists say. The backdrop: When economists worry about "financial contagion," they are thinking in part about 1997, when a crisis with the Thai baht set off a region-wide Asian economic crisis that, in 1998, reached Russia and sent its economy into a tailspin. The 2008-'09 financial crash was an extreme example of contagion, spreading and nearly crashing the entire global economy. ... Read more The Meltdown of Emerging Market Currencies Currencies in developing countries have fallen off a cliff. The Argentine peso has lost more than 50 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar this year, and the Turkish lira is doing almost as poorly. What's going on: Argentina and Turkey are both suffering from fiscal crises that have hammered their currencies. A worsening trade war between the United States and China could cause more pain for emerging markets, which are export-dependent. ... Read more 'Temporary Prosperity' Ignores the $20 Trillion Elephant in the RoomStockman: Today's 'Temporary Prosperity' Ignores the $20 Trillion Elephant in the Room' | David Stockman | 07/15/16 | 16:44 Wilmington cut off as flooding fears rise WILMINGTON, N.C. -- Catastrophic flooding from Florence spread across the Carolinas on Sunday, with roads to Wilmington cut off by the epic deluge and muddy river water swamping entire neighborhoods miles inland. "The risk to life is rising with the angry waters," Gov. Roy Cooper declared as the storm's death toll climbed to 17. The storm continued to crawl westward, dumping more than 30 inches (75 centimeters) of rain in spots since Friday, and fears of historic flooding grew. Tens of thousands were ordered evacuated from communities along the state's steadily rising rivers -- with the Cape Fear, Little River, Lumber, Waccamaw and Pee Dee rivers all projected to burst their banks. ... Read more South Florida Algae Crisis
South Florida Algae Crisis Special Report | WPTV | 07/18/16 | 25:30
GeoengineeringToxic Algae: Complex Sources and Solutions | ChangingSeasTV | 06/21/17 | 27:13 On Senate Floor, Rubio Discusses Lake Okeechobee Discharges, Algae Blooms | | 07/11/18 | 15:57
What in the World Are They Spraying? | | 08/05/11 | 1:37:32
"Why in the World are They Spraying?" | | 08/18/12 | 1:12:54
"If you control the food supply, you control the people" -- Henry Kissinger
GeoEngineering Watch website
What Is Geoengineering? | Oxford College, UK website
Climate engineering | Wikipedia website)
And if you control the weather, you control the food supply.
Climate engineering or climate intervention, commonly referred to as geoengineering, is the deliberate and large-scale intervention in the Earth's climate system, usually with the aim of mitigating the adverse effects of global warming. Climate engineering is an umbrella term for measures that mainly fall into two categories: greenhouse gas removal and solar radiation management. Greenhouse gas removal approaches, of which carbon dioxide removal represents the most prominent subcategory addresses the cause of global warming by removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Solar radiation management attempts to offset effects of greenhouse gases by causing the Earth to absorb less solar radiation.
The Great Culling: Our Water | | 03/22/13 | 1:32:31 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 17 [12:11] A Debate on Geoengineering: Should We Deliberately "Hack" Planet Earth to Combat Climate Change? | DN | 09/14/18 | 13:58 Click to zoom in
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 17 (FULL) | 59:02
Merchants of Death: How the Military-Industrial Complex Profits from Endless War | TRNN | 09/17/18 | 15:37
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Media Coverage of Hurricane Florence Leaves Out Crucial Information | TRNN | 09/15/18 | 11:42 Trump Just Can't Stop Lying | TYT | 09/15/18 | 2:50 Manafort Is Singing To Mueller. | TYT | 09/15/18 | 41:31 The1a.org Tech In Times Of Trouble | 1a.org | 09/17/18 | 1hr
From Wired: Catherine Edwards, an assistant professor of marine sciences at the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, is one of dozens of marine scientists who are gathering data about hurricanes with a new tool: a six-foot long underwater drone, known as a Slocum glider, which carries sensors to measure ocean heat, salinity, and density.
Bob Woodward. His Words, Your Questions. | 1a.org | 09/17/18 | 1hr
Normally, these torpedo-like gliders travel up and down the East Coast and Caribbean mapping the ocean currents that influence short-term weather, long-term climate change, and marine life. Now, these gliders are part of the scientific armada probing Hurricane Florence for data in an effort to help forecasters understand its trajectory and strength. That armada includes at least a dozen Earth-orbiting satellites, hurricane hunter aircraft, and moored ocean buoys. At a National Security Council meeting on Jan. 19, Trump disregarded the significance of the massive U.S. military presence on the Korean Peninsula, including a special intelligence operation that allows the United States to detect a North Korean missile launch in seven seconds vs. 15 minutes from Alaska, according to Woodward. Trump questioned why the government was spending resources in the region at all.
These and other reports in the book look damaging for the Trump administration. Woodward's latest work came out around the same time as the anonymous op-ed by "a senior Trump administration official" in The New York Times.
"We're doing this in order to prevent World War III," Defense Secretary Jim Mattis told him. After Trump left the meeting, Woodward recounts, "Mattis was particularly exasperated and alarmed, telling close associates that the president acted like -- and had the understanding of -- 'a fifth- or sixth-grader.'?" |
Paul Manafort Must Have 'Blockbuster Information,' Says Former. Prosecutor | The Last Word | MSNBC | 09/14/18 | 14:10 What will Paul Manafort's cooperation mean for the Russia probe? | PBS | 09/14/18 | 4:39 How Will Undecided Senators Evaluate Allegations? | Morning Joe | MSNBC | 09/17/18 | 17:56 |
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Porn Wars: Tucker Carlson Vs. Michael Avenatti | Stephen Colbert | 09/14/18 | 5:49 Colbert Links Big Pharma's Sackler Family To America's Opioid Crisis | Stephen Colbert | 09/15/18 | 4:33
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09.17.2018. 12:29
Monarchy, tyranny, oligarchy, democracy -- these were all familiar to Aristotle more than 2,000 years ago. But the illiberal one-party state, now found all over the world -- think of China, Venezuela, Zimbabwe--was first developed by Lenin, in Russia, starting in 1917. In the political-science textbooks of the future, the Soviet Union's founder will surely be remembered not for his Marxist beliefs, but as the inventor of this enduring form of political organization. It is the model that many of the world's budding autocrats use today.
Americans Aren't Practicing Democracy Anymore Democracy is a most unnatural act. People have no innate democratic instinct; we are not born yearning to set aside our own desires in favor of the majority's. Democracy is, instead, an acquired habit. Like most habits, democratic behavior develops slowly over time, through constant repetition. For two centuries, the United States was distinguished by its mania for democracy: From early childhood, Americans learned to be citizens by creating, joining, and participating in democratic organizations. But in recent decades, Americans have fallen out of practice, or even failed to acquire the habit of democracy in the first place. The results have been catastrophic. As the procedures that once conferred legitimacy on organizations have grown alien to many Americans, contempt for democratic institutions has risen. In 2016, a presidential candidate who scorned established norms rode that contempt to the Republican nomination, drawing his core support from Americans who seldom participate in the rituals of democracy. ... Read more A Warning From Europe: The Worst Is Yet to Come Polarization. Conspiracy theories. Attacks on the free press. An obsession with loyalty. Recent events in the United States follow a pattern Europeans know all too well. On december 31, 1999, we threw a party. The guests were various: journalist friends from London and Berlin, a few diplomats based in Warsaw, two friends who flew in from New York. But most of them were Poles, friends of ours and colleagues of my husband, who was then a deputy foreign minister in the Polish government. A handful of youngish Polish journalists came too -- none then particularly famous -- along with a few civil servants and one or two members of the government. ... You could have lumped the majority of them, roughly, in the general category of what Poles call the right -- the conservatives, the anti-Communists. But at that moment in history, you might also have called most of my guests liberals -- free-market liberals, or classical liberals -- or maybe Thatcherites. Even those who might have been less definite about economics certainly believed in democracy, in the rule of law, and in a Poland that was a member of nato and on its way to joining the European Union -- an integrated part of modern Europe. In the 1990s, that was what being "on the right" meant. Read more
Given the right conditions, any society can turn against democracy. Indeed, if history is anything to go by, all societies eventually will.
Anderson Cooper to Bob Woodward: This part of book was terrifying | CNN | 09/12/18 | 12:14Hurricane Florence
Air Force plane flies into Hurricane Florence | CNN | 09/12/18 | 9:42
Jimmy Kimmels Fall Reading ListHurricane Florence could bring up to 13 feet or more of storm surge to the Carolina coast. What does that look like? | Weather Channel | 09/12/18 | 2:18 Click to zoom in |
Trump's Friends Get Rich Off Oil Boom As Industry Limits Info on Pipeline Worker Injuries & Deaths | DN | 09/13/18 | 24:54
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 14 (FULL) | 59:02
As Hurricane Florence Batters Carolinas, Media Ignores Climate Change Connection | TRNN | 09/12/18 | 14:11
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Billionaire, Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, Takes Shots At Trump | TYT | 09/12/18 | 7:11 Trump's Tax Cuts Wreaking Havoc | TYT | 09/12/18 | 15:38 Trump Denies Hurricane Death Toll | TYT | 09/13/18 | 10:21 The1a.org Friday News Roundup - Domestic | 1a.org | 09/14/18 | 1hr
From the report: Even though hundreds of children separated from their families after crossing the border have been released under court order, the overall number of detained migrant children has exploded to the highest ever recorded -- a significant counternarrative to the Trump administration's efforts to reduce the number of undocumented families coming to the United States.
[...] The huge increases, which have placed the federal shelter system near capacity, are due not to an influx of children entering the country, but a reduction in the number being released to live with families and other sponsors, the data collected by the Department of Health and Human Services suggests. Some of those who work in the migrant shelter network say the bottleneck is straining both the children and the system that cares for them.
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09.14.2018. 08:03
Why Florence is so unusual -- and so dangerous Hurricane Florence is a highly unusual storm, not just because of its intensity and size, but also the journey it's taking toward the Carolina coastline. The big picture: As this historical track map shows, few other major hurricanes have hit North Carolina -- and none has followed as bizarre a path as Florence is expected to take. ... Read more Click to zoom inTrump's "Enemy of the People" Rhetoric Is Endangering Journalists' Lives Law enforcement and security leaders detail a disturbing rise in violent threats. Ever since he campaigned for the White House, Donald Trump has attacked news outlets for negative reporting, singled out individual journalists for scorn, and turned his battle cry against "fake news"--a.k.a. reporting he dislikes--virtually into a personal brand. His hostility has only escalated with scrutiny of his presidency. Whipping up crowds as he points at the press gallery has been a set piece of his political rallies. He describes journalists as "dishonest," "corrupt," and "sick." And Trump has repeatedly echoed the language of 20th century despots, demonizing the American media as "the enemy of the people." Presidential disdain for the press is nothing new. Still, political and media experts have long worried that Trump's uniquely broad and bitter war of words wouldn't just corrode public trust in reported facts, but could also produce other dangerous effects. ... Read more Trump fires back at Dimon: He doesn't have the 'smarts' to be president President Donald Trump on Thursday morning slammed Jamie Dimon after the JPMorgan Chase CEO taunted the president by claiming he would beat him in an election because he is "smarter" than Trump. "The problem with banker Jamie Dimon running for President is that he doesn't have the aptitude or 'smarts' & is a poor public speaker & nervous mess - otherwise he is wonderful," Trump tweeted. "I've made a lot of bankers, and others, look much smarter than they are with my great economic policy!" ... Read more
What is wrong with theseguys... do they all have to show who has the bigger dick??
Trump's historic gift to media Aboard Air Force One recently, an aide was showing President Trump detailed data, complete with graphics and fine print. Usually the president prefers top lines and the big picture. This time, he was going deeper. The topic of the commander-in-chief's attention: cable news ratings, with a focus on specific shows that are booming. The big picture: Cable news is setting records, books are hot again, newspapers are racking up the digital subscriptions and an op-ed (!) is a hot gossip topic -- all because of the national obsession with "The Trump Show." ... Read more |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 13 [11:01] NC Lagoons Hold Billions of Gallons of Hog Feces. Hurricane Florence May Blast it into Waterways | DN | 09/13/18 | 15:29 Big Coal Put Toxic Coal Ash in Unlined Dirt Ponds -- Now a Hurricane is Heading Directly Toward Them | DN | 09/13/18 | 13:13
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 13 (FULL) | 59:02
Trump's Frightening FEMA Plan | TYT | 09/12/18 | 12:51
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SHOCKING New Evidence In Trump Tower Meeting Investigation | TYT | 09/12/18 | 14:19 The1a.org The Crime That Changed Mental Health Treatment | 1a.org | 09/13/18 | 1hr
Almost 20 years ago, a mentally ill man named Andrew Goldstein pushed Kendra Webdale into an oncoming train in New York City. She was killed instantly and Goldstein, who'd suffered from schizophrenia since childhood, was sent to prison.
Michael Moore: How The F*** Did This Happen? | All In | MSNBC | 09/12/18 | 13:04The crime caught national attention, reinvigorating a debate about the care of people with severe mental illnesses. That's when Kendra's Law -- named after Webdale -- was developed. It created "a statutory framework for court-ordered assisted outpatient treatment, A.O.T., to ensure that individuals with mental illness, and a history of hospitalizations or violence, participate in community-based services appropriate to their needs." A.O.T. has since been adopted in some form in 46 states. Goldstein got out of prison this month and as a condition of his release, he'll enter a mental health system that's been shaped by the crime he committed. But are these treatment reforms actually working? |
Democrats Now Have Double-Digit Leads In New Polls | Morning Joe | MSNBC | 09/13/18 | 9:44 |
The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Trump Calls His Puerto Rico Hurricane Response an "Unsung Success" | The Daily Show | 09/12/18 | 5:50 Late Night with Seth Meyers Trump Calls Puerto Rico Response "An Unappreciated Great Job" | Seth Meyers | 09/12/18 | 10:26 Full Frontal with Samantha Bee Minority Rule | Samantha Bee | 09/12/18 | 7:22 |
09.13.2018. 11:47
Hurricane Florence to cause "catastrophic" damage in Carolinas Hurricane Florence continues to churn menacingly toward the Carolina coastline -- about two days away from coming very close to landfall in North Carolina. The storm will be capable of causing extreme damage, and will deliver a deadly one-two punch of coastal impacts from storm surge flooding and high winds, along with an inland deluge that will turn farms and communities into a virtual extension of the Atlantic. The big picture: The odds that Florence will hit the brakes as it nears the coast have increased, and while this could lower the storm's peak winds at landfall, it will only mean a different set of deadly impacts. The storm surge flooding from a massive storm with an unusually large wind field and slow forward speed, along with freshwater inland flooding from a staggering amount of rain -- up to 3 feet in some areas, are the leading threats to pay attention to. ... ... The official forecast from the National Hurricane Center now calls for Hurricane Florence to make landfall as a Category 3 storm near Wilmington, North Carolina on Friday, walloping the coast with a record high storm surge. Its approach will be agonizingly slow due to the temporary buildup of a high pressure area to the storm's northwest, and this will allow the storm surge flooding to build over multiple high tide cycles. ... Read more *The ties between Hurricane Florence and climate change Hurricane Florence is a unique Atlantic hurricane, projected to stall out after hitting land and forecast to dump upwards of 2 feet of rain on several states, much like Hurricane Harvey did in Texas last year. The big picture: There are several characteristics of the changing climate that are helping to increase the risks of damage from Hurricane Florence, even though global warming is not directly causing such a storm to spin up. ... Read more New video of Hurricane Florence's massive eyewall | CNN | 09/11/18 | 10:05Why a storm surge can be the deadliest part of a hurricane | Vox | 09/09/17 | 4:00 *The Great Recession's great hangover The financial crisis and Great Recession had their roots in American homeownership. Successive presidents from both parties had encouraged more people to attain the American Dream of owning a home. As housing prices rose -- and Wall Street found ways to enable riskier loans -- Americans' wealth climbed too, hitting a peak in 2007. But then the financial crisis and Great Recession hit, devastating Wall Street and causing financial upheaval for tens of millions of Americans. Even as the worst days waned, the crisis and recession profoundly shaped the decade that followed. ... GOOD Graphics, Read more Trump's assault on Woodward riddled with contradictions The president has slammed Woodward's book as 'fiction' -- even as he rails against former aides for leaking. President Donald Trump has called journalist Bob Woodward's book on his administration a work of "fiction" and a "scam," claiming that quotes in the book are "made up" and that the author is a "liar." At the same time, sources familiar with his thinking said he is livid at his former economic adviser, Gary Cohn, and his former staff secretary, Rob Porter, for "leaking" to Woodward. It's difficult to rationally argue that the book could be both: fiction dreamed up by Woodward, and a betrayal by former top stewards of the administration, who shared with the famed journalist alarming details about how the White House functions. But it's not hard for Trump, who often spouts two opposing views intended for different audiences. And his supporters often soak up the contradictory claims just as readily as he spits them out, taking it all in stride. ... Read more Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 12 [7:23]
Climate Change Supercharges Hurricane Florence as 1.5 Million Evacuate in Carolinas & Virginia | DN | 09/11/18 | 20:32
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 12 (FULL) | 59:02
Are Warnings About Chemical Warfare in Syria Another 'Weapon of Mass Distraction'? | TRNN | 09/11/18 | 16:08
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Trump Abandons All Pretense of Being a 'Fair Broker' in the Israel-Palestinian Conflict | TRNN | 09/11/18 | 8:58 The Economy Under Trump: Business Optimism Combined with Inequality | TRNN | 09/12/18 | 12:34 Click to zoom in As Hurricanes Approach Trump Caught Taking Money From FEMA To Give To ICE | TYT | 09/11/18 | 9:09 The1a.org *The Great Recession, Ten Years Later | 1a.org | 09/12/18 | 1hr
Ten years ago, Lehman Brothers financial services filed for bankruptcy, fueling a crisis that shook confidence in Wall Street and causing the housing market to explode.
Breaking: President Trump Admin Took Millions From FEMA For ICE Detentions | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 09/11/18 | 9:35There's evidence to suggest we're in the midst of a steady recovery, but many Americans are still dealing with the fallout. According to a survey from the Transamerica Center for Retirement, nearly six out of 10 workers say they have not fully recovered from the Great Recession. Seven percent says they might never recover. Greg Ip of The Wall Street Journal shares his view on how the financial crisis has rocked the consumer ethos: The failure of Lehman Brothers exposed how cavalier the world had been toward risk. Households had bought homes they thought could never go down in price, banks had made loans they thought would never default and repackaged them into securities to make them seem riskless and governments, convinced depressions were a thing of the past, had stood by.
Since then, they have sought to ensure it never happens again. And thus, the world has retreated from risk. That retreat has reshaped institutions, regulations and attitudes, and in the process the economy: it is why economic growth has been so durable yet so muted, with less of the risk-taking that both drives booms and busts and raises long-run growth. With time, even the deepest traumas wear off, and there are signs that risk-taking is returning, though in different forms from before. What remains unclear is whether it paves the way for years more of stable, crisis-free growth, or yet another bust. |
09.12.2018. 10:14
Hellstorm: 1 Million in SC Ordered Out South Carolina Coast Ordered To Evacuate Ahead Of Hurricane Florence. One million people in eight counties have until noon Tuesday to evacuate as the state braces for the Category 4 storm. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) on Monday ordered a mandatory evacuation of the state's coastline ahead of Hurricane Florence's expected arrival on Thursday. Approximately 1 million people in eight counties have until noon on Tuesday to evacuate, the governor said. Four major roads will reverse their traffic lanes to help facilitate the mass exodus. "We're in for a real episode here," McMaster said at a press conference. "This may be inconvenient. This is a very dangerous hurricane. But we are not going to gamble with the lives of the people of South Carolina." ... Read more
Remember, during the last ice age, 10,000 years ago, when most of North America was underneath a mile of ice and snow, the average global temperature was only 4-5 degrees cooler than now!
Go deeper: Hurricane Florence is a storm threat unlike any other Hurricane Florence is a nightmare storm for the Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic. The reasons stem from the hurricane's power, size, forward speed and the longstanding vulnerability of the area it is forecast to hit. The big picture: There are no historical analogs to compare Florence to. Its forecast track is unprecedented, and its array and magnitude of threats are as well. The context: If Hurricane Florence makes landfall in North Carolina or Virginia as a Category 4 storm, it would be the strongest storm to do so that far north. ... Read more Bob Woodward New Book "FEAR" | The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Bob Woodward: Let The Silence Suck Out The Truth | Stephen Colbert | 09/11/18 | 10:07
Colbert To Bob Woodward: What Do You Fear Most? | Stephen Colbert | 09/11/18 | 4:59 Bob Woodward Responds To Denials From Mattis, Kelly | Stephen Colbert | 09/11/18 | 5:41
Fear: Trump in the White House by Bob Woodward
THE INSIDE STORY ON PRESIDENT TRUMP, AS ONLY BOB WOODWARD CAN TELL IT With authoritative reporting honed through eight presidencies from Nixon to Obama, author Bob Woodward reveals in unprecedented detail the harrowing life inside President Donald Trump's White House and precisely how he makes decisions on major foreign and domestic policies. Woodward draws from hundreds of hours of interviews with firsthand sources, meeting notes, personal diaries, files and documents. The focus is on the explosive debates and the decision-making in the Oval Office, the Situation Room, Air Force One and the White House residence.
By the numbers: U.S. has spent over $1.5 trillion on wars since 9/11 | Axios | 09/11/18 | article
24 Things Nobody Does Better Than Trump (According To Trump) | Vice | older, 11/13/17 | 1:16Sarah Sanders questioned about Woodward's book, NYT op-ed | CNN | 09/10/18 | 17:56 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, September 11 (FULL) | 59:02
Sen. Bob Graham: FBI Covered Up Role of Bandar and Saudis in 9/11 Attacks (Part 1/2) | TRNN | Replay | 38:11
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Trump Minion Has MELTDOWN During Speech | TYT | 09/10/18 | 10:27 SOURCE: Trump Is MUCH Dumber Than You Think | TYT | 09/10/18 | 13:06 Trump Concedes To Stormy Daniels | TYT | 09/10/18 | 6:21 The1a.org Family That Holds OxyContin Patent Has Another...To Wean Patients Off OxyContin | 1a.org | 09/11/18 | 1hr
The Sackler family has made billions of dollars off of a drug called OxyContin. OxyContin is a prescription pain management drug.
"FEAR" by Bob Woodward | NPR Fresh AirFrom The New Yorker: The bulk of the Sacklers' fortune has been accumulated only in recent decades, yet the source of their wealth is to most people as obscure as that of the robber barons. While the Sacklers are interviewed regularly on the subject of their generosity, they almost never speak publicly about the family business, Purdue Pharma--a privately held company, based in Stamford, Connecticut, that developed the prescription painkiller OxyContin. Upon its release, in 1995, OxyContin was hailed as a medical breakthrough, a long-lasting narcotic that could help patients suffering from moderate to severe pain. The drug became a blockbuster, and has reportedly generated some thirty-five billion dollars in revenue for Purdue.
But OxyContin is a controversial drug. Its sole active ingredient is oxycodone, a chemical cousin of heroin which is up to twice as powerful as morphine. In the past, doctors had been reluctant to prescribe strong opioids--as synthetic drugs derived from opium are known--except for acute cancer pain and end-of-life palliative care, because of a long-standing, and well-founded, fear about the addictive properties of these drugs. "Few drugs are as dangerous as the opioids," David Kessler, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, told me. Bob Woodward: 'People Need To Wake Up' To What's Happening Under Trump | NPR Fresh Air | 09/11/18 | Podcast |
09.11.2018. 10:44
California Running Out Of Firefighting Funds As Blazes Rage The state is burning up due to "climate change-driven extreme weather conditions," says Cal Fire director. s California firefighters continue the battle against raging wildfires, the state fire agency is running out of money to keep up the fight, said officials. According to Cal Fire, California has been hit with 5,491 wildfires this year, burning 1.2 million acres, and the official fire season has only just begun. The state spent $432 million through August, leaving just $11 million in its annual budget, The San Francisco Chronicle reported. On Thursday, Cal Fire director Ken Pimlott asked state legislators for an additional $234 million. ... Read more Hurricane Florence on track for direct, dangerous strike Hurricane Florence is going through an astonishingly rapid intensification process, and could hit anywhere from the Carolinas to the Mid-Atlantic by Thursday or Friday. Driving the news: Hurricane Florence will become a major Category 3 storm or stronger as early as this morning as it undergoes a period of rapid intensification that could take it to the brink of Category 5 strength by Tuesday. ... Read more Fear: Trump in the White HouseBob Woodward on "Fear" in the Trump White House | CBS Sunday Morning | 09/10/18 | 12:30
Fear: Trump in the White House by Bob Woodward
Bernstein: Trump presidency teetering with an unstable president | CNN | 09/09/18 | 12:45THE INSIDE STORY ON PRESIDENT TRUMP, AS ONLY BOB WOODWARD CAN TELL IT With authoritative reporting honed through eight presidencies from Nixon to Obama, author Bob Woodward reveals in unprecedented detail the harrowing life inside President Donald Trump's White House and precisely how he makes decisions on major foreign and domestic policies. Woodward draws from hundreds of hours of interviews with firsthand sources, meeting notes, personal diaries, files and documents. The focus is on the explosive debates and the decision-making in the Oval Office, the Situation Room, Air Force One and the White House residence. Felony Disenfranchisement Felony Disenfranchisement: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | 09/09/18 | 13:21 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 10 [10:53]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 10 (FULL) | 59:02
New 'Poison Papers' Leak: EPA Knew About Many Dangerous Toxins, But Kept Quiet | TRNN | 09/10/18 | 8:05
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A new leak in the series of documents known as the "poison papers," which were provided by whistleblower William Sanjour, show that unless regulatory bodies such as the EPA have real political backing, they will not act in the public interest. We speak to Jonathan Latham of the Bioscience Resource Project.
Will The Republican Party Survive Trump? | TYT | 09/09/18 | 11:29The1a.org Going Deep On "The Deep State" | 1a.org | 09/10/18 | 1hr
By now, you surely know about the anonymous New York Times Op-Ed. But there was a curious line that attracted a lot of attention.
President Trump Vs. Barack Obama: Who Gets Credit For The Booming Economy? | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC | 09/10/18 | 11:42On Russia, for instance, the president was reluctant to expel so many of Mr. Putin's spies as punishment for the poisoning of a former Russian spy in Britain. He complained for weeks about senior staff members letting him get boxed into further confrontation with Russia, and he expressed frustration that the United States continued to impose sanctions on the country for its malign behavior. But his national security team knew better -- such actions had to be taken, to hold Moscow accountable. This isn't the work of the so-called deep state. It's the work of the steady state. What did the author mean by the "deep state?" NPR's Mara Liasson described it as "supposedly shadowy cabal of opposition bureaucrats buried deep within the government." President Trump has called the deep state a threat to democracy. ... |
09.10.2018. 12:29
Brett Kavanaugh's Confirmation Hearings Have Been Shrouded In Secrecy Senators saw only a small fraction of the records relating to Trump's Supreme Court nominee. The public saw even fewer. From the outset of Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court confirmation hearings, Democrats have hammered home this message: The Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee are making it impossible for committee members to probe the views of President Donald Trump's nominee on the issues he will ultimately rule on by shrouding the nominee in secrecy. ... Rushing to judgment on the nominee amid this lack of transparency is wrong, Democrats argue. Kavanaugh's confirmation hearings could wait until the records are released and lawmakers have had time to examine them. ... Read more
Trumpworld sources tell Axios that officials rapidly shifted from trying to smoke out the author of the anonymous N.Y. Times op-ed, to using the guessing game to knife people they already hated -- whispering the names of rivals and enemies as potential authors.
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The U.S. jobs machine still chugging along The U.S. economy added 201,000 jobs in August and the unemployment rate held at 3.9%. Wage growth accelerated to 2.9%. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast 191,000 new jobs and the unemployment rate falling to 3.8%. Bottom line: The U.S. economy's longest-ever streak of job growth continues. Former Obama administration economist Jason Furman said on Twitter it's "remarkable" job growth has remained so strong for so long. ...
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Jerry Dias: We blew it on NAFTA | Financial Post | older | 8:12
Canadian economy can't survive well without a US deal: Wilbur Ross | FoxNews | 08/28/18 | 8:23 Trump Is the Symptom, Not the Disease in Michael Moore's Terrifying 'Fahrenheit 11/9' "Fahrenheit 11/9? takes an unflinching look at how Donald Trump rose to power and what we can do about it Michael Moore's new film "Fahrenheit 11/9" begins in Philadelphia on November 7, 2016 -- election eve. Images flash of euphoric Hillary Clinton supporters, expecting to see their candidate formally declared President. Then we see clips of various politicians and celebrities, who all smugly claim that Donald Trump is never going to win. It's a brilliant open to a cautionary tale. Rather than start with a focus on Trump, Moore opens by focusing on a deluded public who couldn't see what was coming. Moore has always been a master at offering audiences documentaries that are provocative, insightful, revelatory and witty. But that's never been all there is to it. Moore's movies are not simply intellectual endeavors. This has been true since his first film "Roger and Me" (1989), which exposed the economic impact of GM's decision to close plants in Michigan. And it remained true with films like "Bowling for Columbine" (2002), which went after the NRA and won Moore an Academy Award. Then he released "Fahrenheit 9/11" (2004), which broke box office records and offered a sharp, critical view of the George W. Bush administration's War on Terror in the wake of the attacks of 9/11/2001. ... Read more Michael Moore's FAHRENHEIT 11/9 (Official Trailer - In Theaters 9/21) | 2:00 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 07 [11:20] No, You Are Not Part of the Resistance: A Response to Trump Official Who Penned Anonymous NYT Op-Ed | DN | 09/06/18 | 4:15
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Friday, September 07 (FULL) | 59:02
Cory Booker Loses It On Chuck Grassley | TYT | 09/06/18 | 12:26
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The1a.org Friday News Roundup -- Domestic | 1a.org | 09/07/18 | 1hr
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09.07.2018. 09:58
Anonymous Op-Ed in New York Times Causes a Stir Online and in the White House In a highly unusual move that reverberated inside the West Wing and across the media spectrum, The New York Times on Wednesday published an Op-Ed article by an unnamed administration official that called President Trump "erratic" and described a "quiet resistance" of cabinet members who had whispered about taking steps to remove him from office. It is exceedingly rare for The Times to grant anonymity to a writer on its Op-Ed pages, and the paper could cite only a handful of previous cases. But James Dao, the paper's Op-Ed editor, said in an interview that the material in the essay was important enough to the public interest to merit an exception. ... Read more
The root of the problem is the president's amorality. Anyone who works with him knows he is not moored to any discernible first principles that guide his decision making.
I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration I work for the president but like-minded colleagues and I have vowed to thwart parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations. President Trump is facing a test to his presidency unlike any faced by a modern American leader. It's not just that the special counsel looms large. Or that the country is bitterly divided over Mr. Trump's leadership. Or even that his party might well lose the House to an opposition hellbent on his downfall. The dilemma -- which he does not fully grasp -- is that many of the senior officials in his own administration are working diligently from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations. I would know. I am one of them. ... Read more Elizabeth Warren's Anti-Corruption Act
Elizabeth Warren's Anti-Corruption Act | 09/05/18 | 2:05
Elizabeth Warren's Anti-Corruption Act website Bernie Sanders introduces "Stop BEZOS Act" Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced a bill dubbed the "Stop Bad Employers by Zeroing Out Subsidies Act" or "Stop BEZOS Act" in the Senate Wednesday. The big picture: The bill would make big companies that employ huge numbers of workers at low wages -- like Amazon and Walmart -- pay the government for the federal assistance their workers receive. ... Read more Colin Kaepernick Nike Commercial
Colin Kaepernick Nike Commercial | 09/05/18 | 2:05
What believing in Colin Kaepernick means for Nike | PBS | 09/04/18 | 9:23 The impact of Nike's Colin Kaepernick "Just Do It" ad | CBS | 09/04/18 | 8:05 In Woodward's book, Trump erupts over Mueller On the day after Robert Mueller was named special counsel, Bob Woodward writes in "Fear," President Trump "erupted into uncontrollable anger, visibly agitated to a degree that no one in his inner circle had witnessed before." What happened: "He watched a two-hour block of Fox News, and then most of the two-hour long blocks of MSNBC and CNN that he had TiVo'd. ... He raged at the coverage. ... 'Everybody's trying to get me ... It's unfair. Now everybody's saying I'm going to be impeached ... They're going to spend years digging through my whole life and finances.'" ... Read more China's Waste Ban Is Causing A Trash Crisis In The U.S. | Vice | 08/31/18 | 5:46 |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 06 [10:19]
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Thursday, September 06 (FULL) | 59:02
Book Alleges Trump is Compromised by Russian MafiaSupreme Court Nominee Brett Kavanaugh: To Deepen the 'Imperial Presidency' | TRNN | 09/06/18 | 13:20
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The Truth Behind The Nike Colin Kaepernick Ad | TYT | 09/04/18 | 6:37 New Book Exposes Trump Idiocy | TYT | 09/04/18 | 21:53 The1a.org 'A Senior Administration Official' | 1a.org | 09/06/18 | 1hr
Yesterday, The New York Times published a stunning op-ed, which said that that there were "early whispers" by president's cabinet about invoking the 25th Amendment, which would start the process of removing the president, among other newsmaking items.
Big Tech Goes To Washington...Again | 1a.org | 09/06/18 | 1hr
Although he was elected as a Republican, the president shows little affinity for ideals long espoused by conservatives: free minds, free markets and free people. At best, he has invoked these ideals in scripted settings. At worst, he has attacked them outright.
But one of the most shocking parts? The letter was attributed to "a senior official in the Trump administration whose identity is known to us and whose job would be jeopardized by its disclosure."In addition to his mass-marketing of the notion that the press is the "enemy of the people," President Trump's impulses are generally anti-trade and anti-democratic. Don't get me wrong. There are bright spots that the near-ceaseless negative coverage of the administration fails to capture: effective deregulation, historic tax reform, a more robust military and more. But these successes have come despite -- not because of -- the president's leadership style, which is impetuous, adversarial, petty and ineffective.
On Wednesday, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey testified at back-to-back House and Senate hearings. The two execs faced questioning over disinformation, privacy, censorship, and election interference on their platforms.
Trump WH Rocked By Scathing Anonymous Attack From Trump Official | The Beat With Ari Melber | MSNBC | 09/05/18 | 12:31Ahead of the hearings, Sandberg released her opening remarks to Congress. You can read her testimony in full here, courtesy of CNBC. ...
An unprecedented decision by The New York Times, to publish an anonymous op-ed by a senior official within the Trump administration has rocked the Trump White House. The scathing editorial alleges that there is a secret resistance within the administration that has "vowed to do what they can to preserve" Democratic institutions and to thwart "Trump's more misguided impulses until he is out of office". Former Executive Editor of The New York Times tells Ari Melber he is "confident" that The Times has "done the right thing" and adds that the newspaper would not "have gambled" on the editorial otherwise.
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09.06.2018. 11:04
*To Predict Effects Of Global Warming, Scientists Looked Back 20,000 Years As the climate warms, drought is killing large numbers of trees in California. Scientists are looking to the past to try to understand how the ecosystems of today may be changing. A warming world could eventually make some of our most familiar ecosystems -- deciduous forests, grasslands, Arctic tundra -- unrecognizable. That's the conclusion of a team of more than 40 scientists who took a novel approach to predicting the effects of how human-caused global warming will alter ecosystems. They looked about 20,000 years back in time. So his team did some "paleo-ecology." They looked at fossil pollen and vegetation for a period from about 20,000 years ago to about 10,000 years ago. It was a time when a naturally warming Earth began to melt the great ice sheets that covered much of the northern hemisphere. Over that time, Earth's average temperature increased by about 7 to 12 degrees Fahrenheit.... ... What the researchers found from the paleo-record was evidence that ecosystems changed radically as temperatures rose. In Jackson's neighborhood in Arizona, for example, it's now desert -- various species of cactus and shrubs mostly. Fifteen thousand years ago, though, "what we'd see there instead is juniper and piñon woodland, and evergreen woodland utterly different from the vegetation we'd find here (now)." ... Read more
The Earth's average global temperature was only 4 degrees cooler during the last ice age.
Older videos, but even more relevants!!
Why 2 degrees Celsius is climate change's magic number | PBS | older, 12/02/15 | 7:28*The Last Hours of Humanity - Warming the World to Extinction | Thom Hartmann | older, 10/09/2013 | 12:18 Furious Trump trapped by hundreds of Woodward tapes President Trump is livid at the betrayal and stunning allegations in Bob Woodward's forthcoming "Fear," but limited in his ability to fight back because most of the interviews were caught on hundreds of hours of tape, officials tell Axios. The big picture: The book, out Tuesday from Simon & Schuster, re-creates -- verbatim -- page after page of private conversations with him. The 420-page portrait is all the more damaging because many of the scenes concern foreign policy and national security -- truly heavy stuff. ... Read more
Fear: Trump in the White House by Bob Woodward
Steve Bannon on how the strategy that elected Trump is going global | ABC | 09/03/18 | 37:26With authoritative reporting honed through eight presidencies from Nixon to Obama, author Bob Woodward reveals in unprecedented detail the harrowing life inside President Donald Trump's White House and precisely how he makes decisions on major foreign and domestic policies. Woodward draws from hundreds of hours of interviews with firsthand sources, meeting notes, personal diaries, files and documents. The focus is on the explosive debates and the decision-making in the Oval Office, the Situation Room, Air Force One and the White House residence. Fear is the most intimate portrait of a sitting president ever published during the president's first years in office. Kindle $14.99
Amazon hits $1 trillion market cap
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Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Wednesday, September 05 [9:10] "What Are They Hiding?": Kavanaugh Confirmation Hearings Begin Despite Suppression of 100K Documents | DN | 09/05/18 | 26:33
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 05 (FULL) | 59:02
Trump's Twitter Temper Tantrum | TYT | 09/04/18 | 9:38
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The1a.org Kavanaugh Hearing Proceeds As Democrats' Objections Are Overruled | 1a.org | 09/05/18 | 1hr
Many court observers do think that Kavanaugh's nomination is a slam dunk. Supporters point to his sterling conservative credentials. He has the backing of The Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation. Other surprising voices have also emerged in support of Kavanaugh, like Lisa Blatt, a self-described "liberal feminist lawyer."
GOP Carries Brett Kavanaugh Weight To Protect Legally Precarious Trump | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 09/05/18 | 13:33Writing for Politico, Blatt says: I have argued 35 cases before the Supreme Court, more than any other woman. I worked in the Solicitor General's Office for 13 years during the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations. Because I am a liberal Democrat and feminist, I expect my friends on the left will criticize me for speaking up for Kavanaugh. But we all benefit from having smart, qualified and engaged judges on our highest court, regardless of the administration that nominates them. But everyone will focus on Kavanaugh's attitudes toward executive power, gun control, health care, and especially abortion -- although Senator Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Kavanaugh told her he believes Roe v. Wade is "settled precedent." |
09.05.2018. 11:56
Here's What Experts Would Ask Brett Kavanaugh At His SCOTUS Confirmation Hearing tt Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump's nominee to fill Justice Anthony Kennedy's seat on the Supreme Court, faces a likely contentious confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee starting Tuesday. We asked dozens of lawyers, activists and other experts what they would ask Kavanaugh, who currently sits on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, if they had the chance. Below is a running selection of their questions, categorized by topic and edited for clarity.
A lot of good information!
... Read more 200 Actors, Scientists Band Together To Demand Climate Change Action Stars Bradley Cooper, Jude Law, Patti Smith, Ethan Hawke and Juliette Binoche signed the open letter. Two hundred actors, musicians, artists and scientists have banded together to issue a fervent plea to world leaders to act "firmly and immediately" to address climate change. Without prompt and courageous political action, the famous group warned in an open letter published Monday in the French daily Le Monde, "global catastrophe" will be imminent. "It is time to get serious," the letter's signatories declared, according to a France24 translation. "The sixth mass extinction is taking place at unprecedented speed. But it is not too late to avert the worst." ... Read more The middle class gets almost half of U.S. safety-net payments Why it matters: As wages have remained stagnant, more people can't afford middle-class basics, and income inequality grows, the middle class is increasingly relying on the federal safety net, according to the new report by Brookings Institutions' Future of the Middle Class Initiative. "It is a mistake, now, to think of welfare as something just for the poor," Richard Reeves, the report's author tells Axios. The trend is most clearly seen in the second and middle income quintiles, where the average household income was $31,087 and $54,041 in 2014, according to the Tax Policy Center. ...
Read more David Stockman on U.S.-Mexico Trade Deal: 'Great Big PR Stunt,' 'NAFTA Was Never a Problem' | Bloomberg | 08/27/18 | 8:05 Click to zoom in |
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Monday, September 04 [13:58] Four Days in Occupied Western Sahara -- A Rare Look Inside Africa's Last Colony | DN | 08/31/18 | 59:05
Democracy Now! U.S. and World News Headlines for Tuesday, September 04 (FULL) | 59:02
Trump's Safe Space Invaded | TYT | 09/03/18 | 5:03
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Trump and Kim Jong Un Breakup! | TYT | 09/03/18 | 7:39 The1a.org Can Anyone Fix A Rigged Economy? | 1a.org | 09/04/18 | 1hr
A key component of political stump speeches is summed up in this longstanding idea: "The economy is rigged." Two new books have indicted the super-wealthy as a source of major societal ills -- even when they mean well.
The1a.orgAnand Giridharadas is a former columnist for The New York Times, and Steve Hilton is the host of Fox News' "The Next Revolution." Hilton's new book, "Positive Populism," is all about increasing immigration, universal basic income and universal basic health care -- which often directly contradicts other anchors on his network. And Giriharadas' new book, "Winners Take All," is about why he thinks philanthropy is actually bad for democracy. He gave a speech at the Aspen Institute that directly challenged the institution. Click Here To Kill Everybody | 1a.org | 09/04/18 | 1hr
When he wrote for New York Magazine, he described it this way: Your modern refrigerator is a computer that keeps things cold. Your oven, similarly, is a computer that makes things hot. An ATM is a computer with money inside. Your car is no longer a mechanical device with some computers inside; it's a computer with four wheels and an engine. Actually, it's a distributed system of over 100 computers with four wheels and an engine. And, of course, your phones became full-power general-purpose computers in 2007, when the iPhone was introduced.
Robert Mueller Gets Another Guilty Plea Flip Following Foreign Money | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC | 08/31/18 | 25:29We wear computers: fitness trackers and computer-enabled medical devices -- and, of course, we carry our smartphones everywhere. Our homes have smart thermostats, smart appliances, smart door locks, even smart light bulbs. At work, many of those same smart devices are networked together with CCTV cameras, sensors that detect customer movements, and everything else. Cities are starting to embed smart sensors in roads, streetlights, and sidewalk squares, also smart energy grids and smart transportation networks. A nuclear power plant is really just a computer that produces electricity, and -- like everything else we've just listed -- it's on the internet. The internet is no longer a web that we connect to. Instead, it's a computerized, networked, and interconnected world that we live in. This is the future, and what we're calling the Internet of Things. |
09.05.2018. 11:56
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Lindsey Graham
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said the quiet part aloud on why he’s still so close to former President Donald Trump: because we can use him for our goals. "President Trump has gotten people who wouldn't give me or Romney or anybody else the time of day. They believe he is on their side," the senator told the America First Agenda Summit crowd on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
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Environment
The term "climate change" is often used to refer specifically to anthropogenic climate change (also known as global warming). Anthropogenic climate change is caused by human activity, as opposed to changes in climate that may have resulted as part of Earth's natural processes.
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AI - Artificial Intelligence
AIArtificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence demonstrated by machines, as opposed to the natural intelligence displayed by animals including humans. AI research has been defined as the field of study of intelligent agents, which refers to any system that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of achieving its goals.
The term "artificial intelligence" had previously been used to describe machines that mimic and display "human" cognitive skills that are associated with the human mind, such as "learning" and "problem-solving". This definition has since been rejected by major AI researchers who now describe AI in terms of rationality and acting rationally, which does not limit how intelligence can be articulated.
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Quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, quantum field theory, quantum technology, and quantum information science.
Classical physics, the collection of theories that existed before the advent of quantum mechanics, describes many aspects of nature at an ordinary (macroscopic) scale, but is not sufficient for describing them at small (atomic and subatomic) scales. Most theories in classical physics can be derived from quantum mechanics as an approximation valid at large (macroscopic) scale.
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Wall Street and Banksters
Wall Street is an eight-block-long street running roughly northwest to southeast from Broadway to South Street, at the East River, in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. Over time, the term has become a metonym for the financial markets of the United States as a whole, the American financial services industry (even if financial firms are not physically located there), or New York-based financial interests.
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Intelligence Agencies/Deep State?
An intelligence agency is a government agency responsible for the collection, analysis, and exploitation of information in support of law enforcement, national security, military, and foreign policy objectives. Means of information gathering are both overt and covert and may include espionage, communication interception, cryptanalysis,.
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Daniel Ellsberg
Daniel Ellsberg and Paul Jay explore Ellsberg's latest book, The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner. In the introduction to the book, Ellsberg writes: "No policies in human history have more deserved to be recognized as immoral or insane. The story of how this calamitous predicament came about and how and why it has persisted over a half a century is a chronicle of human madness".
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Nukes
Nuclear weapons have come a long way and come in all types of different sizes. Some are relatively small while others are enormous, so big they boggle the mind at what they can be capable of, i.e. the Soviet 'Tsar Bomba' is/was 3,000 times greater than the Hiroshima bomb.
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Rana Foroohar
Ms. Foroohar says financialization delivers stagnant wages, inequality and economic crisis; the Financial Times columnist and author of "Makers and Takers" says the financial sector represents only 7 percent of the U.S. economy, but takes around 25 percent of all corporate profit while creating only 4 percent of all jobs.
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The Untold History of the United States by Oliver Stone & Petere Kuznick | 2014 | 10 Episodes
Oliver Stone and American University historian Peter J. Kuznick began working on the project in 2008. Stone, Kuznick and British screenwriter Matt Graham cowrote the script. It covers "the reasons behind the Cold War with the Soviet Union, U.S. President Harry Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, and changes in America's global role since the fall of Communism." Stone is the director and narrator of all ten episodes.
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Kuznick Interviews
Historian Peter Kuznick says Eisenhower called for decreased militarization, then Dulles reversed the policy; the Soviets tried to end the cold war after the death of Stalin; crazy schemes involving nuclear weapons and the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba put the world of the eve of destruction - with host Paul Jay
The Untold History of the United States by Kuznick, Peter.mobi | Book | 6.99 MB
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China Valley of Tunnels
A report written by a Georgetown University team led by Phillip Karber conducted a three-year study to map out China’s complex tunnel system, which stretches 5,000 km (3,000 miles). The report determined that the stated Chinese nuclear arsenal is understated and as many as 3,000 nuclear warheads may be stored in the underground tunnel network.
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911
On September 11, 2001, 19 terrorists attacked the Unites States. They hijacked four airplanes in mid-flight. The terrorists flew two of the planes into two skyscrapers at the World Trade Center in New York City. The impact caused the buildings to catch fire and collapse. Another plane destroyed part of the Pentagon (the U.S. military headquarters) in Arlington, Virginia. The fourth plane crashed in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Officials believe that the terrorists on that plane intended to destroy either the White House or the U.S. Capitol. Passengers on the plane fought the terrorists and prevented them from reaching their goal. In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed in the 9/11 attacks.
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The Vietnam War
Ken Burns and Lynn Novick's ten-part, 18-hour documentary series, THE VIETNAM WAR, tells the epic story of one of the most consequential, divisive, and controversial events in American history as it has never before been told on film. Visceral and immersive, the series explores the human dimensions of the war through revelatory testimony of nearly 80 witnesses from all sides--Americans who fought in the war and others who opposed it, as well as combatants and civilians from North and South Vietnam. Ten years in the making, the series includes rarely seen and digitally re-mastered archival footage from sources around the globe, photographs taken by some of the most celebrated photojournalists of the 20th Century, historic television broadcasts, evocative home movies, and secret audio recordings from inside the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations.
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Trump's Mashups
Donald Trump talks a lot, but what is he actually saying? VICE News' "Trump Talk" mashup series tries to answer that. And, we're happy to say, it was just nominated for two Webby Awards. Now you can watch all the nominated videos.
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Trump's Sexcapades.
Jessica Leeds (1980s)
Kristin Anderson (1990s)
E. Jean Carroll (1995 or 1996)
Lisa Boyne (1996)
Cathy Heller (1997)
Temple Taggart McDowell (1997)
Karena Virginia (1998)
Mindy McGillivray (2003)
Jennifer Murphy (2005)
Rachel Crooks (2005)
Natasha Stoynoff (2005)
Juliet Huddy (2005 or 2006)
Jessica Drake (2006)
Ninni Laaksonen (2006)
Cassandra Searles (2013)
Allegations of pageant dressing room visits(1997)
Mariah Billado,
Victoria Hughes,
and three other Miss Teen USA contestants
Bridget Sullivan (2000)
Tasha Dixon (2001)
Unnamed contestants (2001)
Samantha Holvey (2006)
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Trump's Speeches | Rallys
Donald Trump talks a lot, but what is he actually saying? Watch Trump at some of his rallys and see what you think.
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