Cartnoon

Mercy Dogs of the Great War

Dogs have accompanied men into war probably for most of human history, but WWI was the first war where they were used in an official and broad capacity to find the wounded. Mercy dogs, also known as casualty dogs, or ambulance dogs, served on all sides of WWI, and saved thousands of lives. It is history that deserves to be remembered.

TMC for ek hornbeck

The Breakfast Club (Challenges)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

President George W. Bush warns terrorists still threaten United States; bomb rocks an abortion clinic in Birmingham; “The Raven” is first published; Ty Cobb named hall of famer; Oprah Winfrey is born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

Cicely Tyson (December 19, 1924 – January 28, 2021)

Challenges make you discover things about yourself that you never really knew.

Cicely Tyson

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Would You Let Mike Pence Stay On Your Couch?

If the Pence family shows up at your door, are you letting him crash

Returning To Norms: Biden Rips Putin In Tough Phone Call, Immediately Releases Details

President Biden is busy cleaning up his predecessor’s messes, among them this country’s relationship with Russia, and Stephen was caught off guard by the new administration’s return to norms around transparency in foreign policy.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

Keeping Up with Corona: International Edition

Mutated COVID strains pop up around the world, new lockdowns prompt violent protests in the Netherlands, Israel distributes vaccine doses with the help of people’s phones, and a vaccine from the Chinese company Sinovac is found to be ineffective.

Reddit’s GameStop Stock Boost & MLB’s Hall of Fame Drought

Redditors boost the stock price of GameStop to insane numbers, the pandemic possibly creates a baby bust, and the Baseball Hall of Fame inducts no new players this year.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Republicans Try to Dismiss Trump’s Second Impeachment Trial: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at Republicans admitting they will do everything possible to sabotage the Democrats’ agenda while moving quickly to quash the impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Happy 50th Birthday Guillermo!

Guillermo celebrated his 50th birthday today with love from around the globe, we take a look back at the first time he ever appeared on the show, and Jimmy talks about the annual doomsday clock, Dr. Fauci being the highest paid employee in the U.S. Government, a new anal swab COVID test being introduced in China, Joe Biden raising awareness for those reluctant to get the vaccine, Mike Pence’s awkward living situation, Ted Cruz wanting to “move on” from the events at the Capitol, and since Guillermo has given so many shots to so many of Hollywood’s biggest names throughout the years, we got some of his favorites together for a star-studded 50 shot salute in honor of his 50th birthday!

The Late Late Show with James Corden

Can We Do a Monologue Without Mentioning You-Know-Who?

James Corden kicks off the show with the intention of not mentioning the former President of the United States by name for the first time in a while, so James looks some headlines about President Joe Biden, including his sweep of executive action and purchasing more COVID-19 vaccines to administer to Americans.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Eugene Robinson: Thanks to Biden, the U.S. has gotten back into the fight against climate change

The Biden administration can’t stop global warming alone. But leadership matters.

The world’s richest and most powerful country is back in the fight against climate change. That is hugely important news for everyone already on the planet, and for our grandchildren yet to come.

The executive orders President Biden signed Wednesday will not, by themselves, solve the climate crisis. The high-powered White House team he put in charge of climate policy — led by Climate Coordinator Gina McCarthy and Climate Envoy John F. Kerry, the first people to hold these new roles — has no magic wand to make greenhouse gases go away. But we now have a better chance of avoiding worst-case environmental ruin, and we have a better chance of seeing the U.S. economy thrive in the inevitable shift toward clean energy. [..]

Biden promises a return to sanity. One of his first official acts last week was to rejoin the Paris climate agreement, which sets voluntary targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. On Wednesday, he signed executive orders designed to make climate an “essential element” of foreign policy and national security. Among a host of other measures, Biden has declared a moratorium on new oil and natural gas leases on federal lands, ordered federal agencies to procure electricity from renewable sources and decreed that the government will buy a fleet of zero-emission vehicles.

None of that will begin to solve the global climate crisis — but the leadership it represents will help more than skeptics realize.

Karen Tumulty: The GOP struck a bad bargain. That’s how it got stuck with Marjorie Taylor Greene.

The Republicans’ unwillingness to confront extremist forces within their party is not only unseemly but dangerous.

Donald Trump has departed Washington, but he has left behind a new set of rules for Republicans. One of them is that words and deeds, no matter how reckless or disconnected from the truth, carry no consequences.

Which is how the party wound up with Marjorie Taylor Greene, a dangerous loon whom the voters of Georgia’s 14th Congressional District decided to send to the U.S. House. [..]

But the predictable outcome, given the general mind-set of Republicans these days, is that such a drive would only elevate her as a martyr and bring wails of “cancel culture” from the prime-time pundits on Fox News.

She already is styling herself as a fever-swamp version of Joan of Arc. During the House debate on Trump’s impeachment — a proceeding that was nationally televised — Greene delivered her remarks while wearing a mask emblazoned with the word “CENSORED,” in protest of Twitter’s decision to suspend her for 12 hours for posting incendiary and false material about the election.

The real blame here, however, should rest with Republican leaders.

Amanda Marcotte: Forget about a GOP crack-up: Republicans rally around a defeated Trump because they understand power

Sorry, but the GOP won’t tear themselves apart — they’re too attached to power to let Trump and QAnon break them up

File it under too good to be true: The much-anticipated great Republican crack-up is not coming.

Last weekend, the Washington Post ran a story headlined, “Trump jumps into a divisive battle over the Republican Party — with a threat to start a ‘MAGA Party.'” It focused on the internal battle between the (relatively few) Republicans who are angry about Donald Trump inciting an insurrection on the Capitol and the more numerous Republicans who are gung-ho about this turn towards fascism and cannot wait to push it further. This followed earlier reporting about a “[b]itter split GOP” promising “Republicans in open warfare” and similar reporting from the New York Times promising that “bitter infighting underscores the deep divisions” in the GOP. [..]

I was skeptical, believing as I do that there are three inevitabilities in life: Death, taxes, and that Republicans are far too attached to power to demobilize.

They may believe that there’s an international cabal of blood-drinking Satanist pedophiles, but Republicans aren’t so dumb as to think that there’s anything to be gained from third parties or withholding their votes altogether. That level of self-defeating stupidity is a solidly progressive flaw. Republicans know that power means winning elections and winning elections means sticking together. That is how it always is and always shall be, or at least until they can end this whole “holding elections” business altogether.

Elizabeth Rosenthal: Yes, It Matters That People Are Jumping the Vaccine Line

When hospital administrators and politicians’ spouses get immunized before people more at risk, it undermines confidence in the system.

The Biden administration’s much-needed national strategy to end the Covid-19 pandemic includes plans to remedy the chaotic vaccination effort with “more people, more places, more supply.” The Federal Emergency Management Agency will open more vaccination sites, the government will buy more doses and more people will be immunized. Still, by all estimates the demand for vaccines will far exceed the supply for months to come.

For weeks Americans have watched those who are well connected, wealthy or crafty “jump the line” to get a vaccine, while others are stuck, endlessly waiting on hold to get an appointment, watching sign-up websites crash or loitering outside clinics in the often-futile hope of getting a shot.

To eliminate this knock-out-your-neighbor race to score a vaccine, the administration needs to find ways to build trust in the system. It will take more than “more people, more places, more supply” to end the Darwinian competition and restore confidence and order.

Michael Tomasky: Why a Trump Third Party Would Be a Boon for Democrats

We really have room for only two major parties at a time in the United States.

Former President Donald Trump reportedly wants to form a new political party. For the first time in my sentient life, I say: Proceed, Mr. Trump. As he may or may not know, what he would almost certainly accomplish is to ensure that Democrats held the White House and the House of Representatives for as long as his party existed. [..]

One should never say never on these matters. The Whigs split in the early 1850s when their internal divisions over slavery became unbridgeable, which helped lead to that decade’s multiparty mayhem. That “mayhem” led to the rise of a new two-party system and, in 1860, elected the savior of the Republic. So it has happened. Most recently, about 165 years ago. (The Bull Moose Party, by the way, fizzled out in six years.)

But Mr. Trump would basically be creating a party that would make Democratic dominance much more likely.

He probably doesn’t know all this. Or maybe he does, and still wants to do it. If the latter, it would be what the Republicans so richly deserve for embracing someone who wasn’t really one of them to begin with and who practically has shaken our democracy to its core with their acquiescence.

Cartnoon

Full Frontal with Samantha Bee

Vaccinating America: Biden Cleans Up Trump’s Mess

It turns out that Trump’s “Operation Warp Speed” had nothing to do with a vaccine roll-out and everything to do with how quickly Trump worked to destroy America! Now it’s up to the Biden administration to get millions of Americans vaccinated.

F*ck The Pandas: Ugly Animals Deserve Your Attention Too

Being an endangered animal isn’t a competition, but it becomes one when pandas get all the attention at the expense of other, more unfortunate-looking creatures. Sam highlights animals that are more important to our ecosystem than those zoo-royalty attention hogs.

Here’s Why Giuliani Needs To Be Disbarred

Perhaps no figure in the Trump administration has seen their reputation plummet in the last 4 years as much as Rudy Giuliani. But what he’s lost in respect, he’s made up for in actions that qualify for his disbarment. David Luban and NY Rep. Mondaire Jones explain.

Space Force’s Greatest Hits

Here’s a compilation of Space Force’s most earth-shattering, totally real missions.

TMC for ek hornbeck

The Breakfast Club (Laughter)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

Space Shuttle Challenger explodes; Sir Francis Drake dies; José Martí born; Vince Lombardi is named head coach./blockquote>

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

While the laughter of joy is in full harmony with our deeper life, the laughter of amusement should be kept apart from it. The danger is too great of thus learning to look at solemn things in a spirit of mockery, and to seek in them opportunities for exercising wit.

Lewis Carroll

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

The Sunshine State Is Ready To Host The 2021 Olympics

Get ready to be amazed by the pure insanity on display in the Florida games.

As Impeachment Proceedings Begin, House Dems Must Convince 17 GOP Senators To Convict

Today, impeachment manager Rep. Jamie Raskin read aloud the single charge against the former president, kicking off impeachment proceedings in the Senate where Democrats will aim to sway at least 17 of their Republican colleagues to vote to convict the former president for inciting violence against the government of the United States.

Quarantinewhile… Butt-Crack Leggings Take Over TikTok

Quarantinewhile… Stephen checks in on the TikTok leggings trend that’s threatening to overshadow his beloved Sea Shanty trend.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

Biden’s Progressive Agenda Comes in HOT

Biden signs a series of progressive executive orders, Target drops Chaokoh Coconut Milk for using forced monkey labor, and a cat’s birthday party turned into a corona super-spreader event.

Why Is America’s Vaccine Distribution Struggling?

From wasted doses and limited appointments to wealthy people gaming the system, America’s COVID vaccine rollout has been a disaster across the board

Trump v. Fox News: The Divorce Trial of the Century

Trump and Fox were the perfect match, but the love didn’t last. Now, they’re getting divorced.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

GOP Stonewalls Biden’s Agenda; Rudy Giuliani Sued for Election Lies: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at Republicans signaling their intent to stonewall President Biden’s agenda and dismissing the need for an impeachment trial for former President Trump.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Criminals Who Stormed the Capitol are Incriminating Themselves All Over Social Media

We celebrate the 18th anniversary of our show, and Jimmy talks about the first Biden and Trump jokes he ever told on the show, federal investigators tracking down the criminals who stormed the capitol three weeks ago, an alarming new warning from Apple, the MyPillow guy Mike Lindell getting kicked off Twitter for spreading misinformation, former Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley commenting on the impeachment of Donald Trump, a new ad for Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ run for Governor of Arkansas, our Unintentional Joke of the Day starring VP Kamala Harris, the fate of Donald Trump’s Diet Coke button from the White House, and we revisit an old bit we did about Joe Biden that someone on Reddit claimed we took down as part of a conspiracy.

The Late Late Show with James Corden

Is Trump’s Diet Coke Button Here to Stay??

James Corden begins his monologue with a brave admission: he got it wrong. Last week The Late Late Show reported that President Joe Biden removed the Diet Coke button his predecessor, Donald Trump, had installed in the Oval Office; however, it appears the button is in-tact. We regret this error. After, James decides on a new way to pronounce “February” and looks at a story about a nasal spray that could block COVID-19.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Paul Krugman: Pandemic Rescue: It’s ‘And’ Not ‘Or’

Why you shouldn’t nitpick over the details.

President Biden is proposing a large relief package to deal with the continuing fallout from the coronavirus. The package is expansive, as it should be. But it is, predictably, facing demands that it be scaled back. Which, if any, of these demands have some validity?

We can discount opposition from Republican leaders who have suddenly decided, after years of enabling deficits under Trump, that federal debt is a terrible thing. We’ve seen this movie before, during the Obama years: Republicans oppose economic aid not because they believe it will fail but because they fear it might succeed, both helping Democrats’ political prospects and legitimizing an expanded role for government.

But there are also some good-faith objections to parts of the Biden proposal, coming from Democrats like Joe Manchin and progressive economic commentators like Larry Summers. What these commentators object to, mainly, are plans for broadly distributed “stimulus checks” (they aren’t checks and they aren’t stimulus, but never mind): payments of $1400 to many families.

I’m posting this note to explain why I believe that these objections are wrong. To be more precise, I’d argue that these critics are giving the right answer to the wrong question.

Amanda Marcotte: The myth of bipartisanship: Will a fully radicalized GOP finally blow up D.C.’s silliest fantasy?

Republicans voted to back Trump’s violent insurrection — there’s no use wasting time trying to compromise with them

Well, now it’s official: On Tuesday, nine out of ten Republican senators blessed Donald Trump’s efforts at sending a mob to violently overthrow democracy. Despite the very real threat to their lives posed by the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 45 out of 50 Republican senators, answering the call of the ever-showboating Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, voted against proceeding with an impeachment trial of Trump for the crime of inciting an insurrection. This, even though Republicans know Trump is guilty. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., even previously admitted that Trump “provoked” the riot that led to 5 deaths and unhinged mobs roaming the Capitol looking to murder prominent politicians like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and then-Vice President Mike Pence. [..]

Republicans’ consistent support of Trump really should be putting more of a damper on the mewlings about compromise with the GOP from centrist Democratic holdouts like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Sen. Joe Manchin. These two senators have been in the news lately because of their stated opposition to ending the filibuster. Even President Joe Biden, despite his welcome interest in forging ahead with a series of progressive executive orders, has expressed concerns about eliminating the filibuster, which gives the Republican minority veto power over any meaningful legislation.

The idea that that filibuster is some marvelous tool of bipartisanship has long been a childish fantasy. Republicans have manipulated it so they can pass their priorities — tax cuts and federal judicial appointments — with a straight majority vote, yet it magically remains in place as an insurmountable obstacle for Democratic priorities, such as ethics reform and a minimum wage hike.

Moreover, the notion that a Democratic majority can “work together” with a Republican minority is a cruel joke.

Chauncey DeVega: Trump’s horror show isn’t nearly over: The coup wasn’t defeated, only slowed down

Trump is both a symptom and a cause of America’s terrible ailment. Whether or not he returns, the disease is real

Monsters are real. One does not defeat them by hiding. They are not defeated by denying that they exist. Throwing them down the memory hole offers little if any safety. To vanquish the monsters of this world requires hard work and eternal vigilance.

Donald Trump proved himself to be one of the worst presidents in American history — if not the very worst. His “movement” was and remains a force of prodigious civic evil. To call Trump’s political cult “deplorable” is, quite honestly, to elevate it above its real standing.

Last week, Joe Biden finally became president of the United States and the Democrats, at least on paper, maintain a tenuous hold on both houses of Congress.

But despite the historical verdict of the 81 million Americans who voted for Biden and the Democrats, Trump is likely to remain a fixture in American life and politics for years to come. Trump’s followers do not understand that they were beaten in the November election, and quite likely will never accept that. The Republican Party and its voters remain in thrall to Donald Trump. Ultimately, a force that does not know it has been defeated will not stop fighting.

Greg Sargent: The hidden way Biden is attacking the future of Trumpism

As the GOP dissolves into Trumpist conspiracy-mongering, a new Biden vision takes shape.

The plight of Sen. Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, has devolved into a cautionary tale with an unmistakable moral: If you want to become the primary keeper of the flame of Trumpism, you risk getting badly burned.

Hawley hoped to become chief steward of a respectable version of Donald Trump’s “conservative populism.” But, given Trump’s hold over GOP voters, Hawley gambled that leading the former president’s effort to overturn the election in Congress would secure instant national prominence. Ever since that effort incited the insurrection, Hawley has been furiously working to erase its stain.

This tale demonstrates how Trump’s continued grip on the GOP is complicating the salvaging of a constructive agenda from the wreckage of the Trump presidency. Instead of carrying out that mission, Hawley is gaining scrutiny for his ridiculous defenses of his enabling of an unprecedented assault on our democracy grounded in QAnon-level crackpottery.

But this Trump effect is also creating a big opening — one that President Biden and Democrats, intentionally or not, are already rushing to fill, with potentially lasting consequences for our politics.

Cartnoon

Veteran NBC News anchor and the network’s senior correspondent in recent years Tom Brokaw, 80, has announced his retirement after 55 years.

This is what ek hornbeck wrote about Mr. Brokaw in 2019

I’ve never been one of those that venerated Tom Brokaw as a paragon of a ‘Golden Age’, or at least a Silver or Bronze one, of “Objective Journalism”.

So much for Objective Journalism. Don’t bother to look for it here–not under any byline of mine; or anyone else I can think of. With the possible exception of things like box scores, race results, and stock market tabulations, there is no such thing as Objective Journalism. The phrase itself is a pompous contradiction in terms. – Stockton

Richard thinks he’s a drunk though it might be a side effect of the treatments for Myeloma and his admitted addiction to Ambien. I’ll try to be more charitable than that and assume he’s in full possession of his faculties.

Here’s a quote from Sunday-

And a lot of this, we don’t want to talk about. But the fact is, on the Republican side, a lot of people see the rise of an extraordinary, important, new constituent in American politics, Hispanics, who will come here and all be Democrats. Also, I hear, when I push people a little harder, “Well, I don’t know whether I want brown grandbabies.” I mean, that’s also a part of it. It’s the intermarriage that is going on and the cultures that are conflicting with each other. I also happen to believe that the Hispanics should work harder at assimilation. That’s one of the things I’ve been saying for a long time. You know, they ought not to be just codified in their communities but make sure that all their kids are learning to speak English, and that they feel comfortable in the communities. And that’s going to take outreach on both sides, frankly.

Who you going to believe? Me, or your lying eyes?

(h/t Red Painter and Heather @ Crooks an Liars)

Wow. Who knew Centerist Bothsiderism was so nakedly racist when it supports a nakedly racist Status Quo of White. Male. Privilege?

In fairness Browkaw has also been implicated in several incidents of sexual harassment which is not at all surprising given the chauvinist culture at NBC that thought Matt Lauer’s (who, by the way. has given up any hope of reviving his career and is devoting himself to Sheep Ranching in New Zealand) remote door locking ‘abuse office’ was not creepy at all. And no, I don’t think glowing testimonials from Rachel Maddow and Mrs. Greenspan absolve him.

Tom Brokaw blew it on assimilation. But we can get it right.
By Paul Waldman, Washington Post
January 28, 2019

In the midst of an ongoing debate in which the president of the United States spews out lies about immigrants and immigration on a daily basis, NBC News éminence grise Tom Brokaw decided to do some myth-spreading of his own on “Meet the Press.” After being roundly criticized, Brokaw apologized, but the fact that someone like him believed the things he said tells us a lot about some stubborn misconceptions about immigration that are worth examining.

Let’s be clear about this: The idea that Hispanics aren’t making “sure that all their kids are learning to speak English” is simply false. But we also need to interrogate what we really mean when we talk about “assimilation.”

Let’s start with the language question. Millions of people believe that the current generation of immigrants is less willing than prior generations to learn English, but it just isn’t true. As a 2015 report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine put it, “Despite popular concerns that immigrants are not learning English as quickly as earlier immigrants, the data on English proficiency indicate that today’s immigrants are actually learning English faster than their predecessors.” If anything, it’s harder for an immigrant today to get by without knowing English than it might have been for those who came a hundred years ago and slipped easily into self-contained immigrant communities.

Nevertheless, the pattern for today’s immigrants is the same as it has always been: Those who come as adults struggle to learn the language; their children are bilingual, often serving as translators for their parents; and their children’s children speak only English. That’s how it was in my family, and I’ll bet that’s how it was in yours.

But there’s an irony here. When Brokaw says Hispanics “ought not to just be codified in their communities,” it’s precisely because they aren’t staying separate from other Americans that leads people like him to worry that they aren’t assimilating.

When immigrants from Central and South America were concentrated in places like Texas, California and New York, you didn’t see nearly the panic about assimilation that you do today. It’s only when they began to move into places like the Midwest, where they hadn’t been before, that these worries grew so loud. For an older person in, say, Iowa, which had formerly been quite homogeneous, to go down the local supermarket and hear his neighbors speaking Spanish was a shock. In a way, many Americans would rather that immigrants stayed more tightly concentrated in urban ghettos, as was so often the case with previous waves of immigration, so they wouldn’t have to encounter them.

Now let’s talk about the idea of “assimilation.” If today’s immigrants are learning English faster than previous generations, what sort of assimilation are people after? Do we want immigrants to stop eating the food of their countries of origin? Should they stop listening to the music they knew or wearing the clothes they brought with them?

A few people might think so, but I doubt it’s all that many. Something tells me that Brokaw doesn’t stop in an Irish pub or an Italian restaurant and say to himself, “These people should really work harder at assimilation.” I’ll never forget this viral video from 2016 of a jacked-up, shirtless Trump supporter screaming at a group of pro-immigration protesters, “Get the f— out of here! Our country, motherf—-r!,” which he followed with, “Go f—ing cook my burrito, b—-!” and “Truuump! I love Trump!” Get out of here — or on second thought, make me some of your delicious Mexican food, which I so enjoy.

The idea that today’s immigrants aren’t “assimilating” has been a theme of the president’s since the beginning. In August 2016, he gave a speech in which he argued that “not everyone who seeks to join our country will be able to successfully assimilate” and proposed that prospective immigrants be given “An ideological certification to make sure that those we are admitting to our country share our values and love our people.”

Later, his chief of staff John Kelly said that many immigrants are “not people that would easily assimilate into the United States, into our modern society.” But as Politico reported, Kelly’s own grandfather, an immigrant from Italy, “never spoke a word of English and made his living peddling a fruit cart in East Boston.” Somehow that lack of assimilation didn’t prevent his grandson from rising to the highest ranks of the American military and government.

There are a number of ways to think about the “They’re not assimilating” reaction so many people have to immigrants, ranging from more to less generous. You can decide it’s simply racism or tribalism. You can decide it’s a predictable response to societal change, which can be disorienting particularly for older people. But what’s so pernicious about President Trump’s role in spreading the lie about assimilation is that he joins it to equally fictitious claims about immigrants being a source of crime and violence, encouraging people to feel not just uneasy about immigrants but also to fear and hate them.

So here’s the truth: For all the conflicts we’ve had over our history with each successive wave of immigration, it’s precisely our ability to assimilate immigrants that is one of our greatest national strengths. It’s why we’ve had so little terrorism originating in immigrant communities (our biggest domestic terrorism threat comes from right-wing white people).

Those people would prefer it American culture were frozen at a particular moment, generally around the time they were kids. Trump appealed to them in 2016 by saying that he’d build a wall and make America great again, meaning not what it is today but what you remember it being back then when life was simpler, whenever “back then” was for you.

Brokaw grew up in South Dakota and built much of his career on nostalgia for a supposedly superior past, so perhaps it’s not surprising to see him worry that the present, and the present generation of immigrants, are worse in some fundamental way than what came before. When he said what he did, another panelist, PBS correspondent Yamiche Alcindor — who grew up in multicultural Miami and is herself the daughter of immigrants — politely pushed back against “the idea that we think Americans can only speak English, as if Spanish and other languages wasn’t always part of America.”

Let’s start here- HISPANICS ARE WHITE! Just as White as any European (except for Danes and Anglo-Saxons who are extra specially White according to Ben Franklin). Second- the Spanish (and those filthy Portuguese) WERE HERE FIRST! Spanish is the majority language of America if by America you mean the 36 separate countries that make up America North, South, and Central and not our racist little corner of it we call the U.S. of A. or ‘Murika for short.

I’ll not accuse him of dementia but Racist Old White Guy Tom Brokaw should keep his festering gob shut! It’s not 2004 anymore when the sight of W in a codpiece would send a thrill up your leg and the fact his successor (who he feverishly groomed for the role) proved to be a lying liar (still works for NBC though) is no accident.

It’s simply the way NBC rolls. You would do well not to forget it.

TMC for ek hornbeck

The Breakfast Club (Secrets of Life )

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

Soviet troops liberate concentration camps; Paris peace accords are signed; Astonauts die on Apollo one;Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart born;Composer Jerome Kern born

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

One of the secrets of life is that all that is really worth the doing is what we do for others.

Lewis Carroll

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert:

Dr. Fauci Is Finally Free To Do All The Shows

If ONLY he could have been in “The Queen’s Gambit.”

Senators Slow Approval Of Biden’s Rescue Plan And Show Their Hands Ahead Of Impeachment Trial

The price tag for President Biden’s pandemic rescue plan has a bipartisan group of Senators including Maine’s Angus King expressing concern, while Republican Senators like Marco Rubio have signaled they’ll vote for acquittal when the previous president’s impeachment trial begins in that chamber

Mahomes Vs. Brady: A Super Bowl Matchup For The Ages

The NFL playoffs are over, the lineup for Super Bowl LV is set, and it features a quarterback matchup fans are comparing to LeBron and Jordan facing off in the NBA Finals. The only thing more exciting than the upcoming game is the fact that Stephen Colbert will host “The Late Show: Super Bowl Edition” later that night, Sunday, February 7th, only on CBS!

Uh-Oh, Water Is Now A Commodity – Stephen Colbert’s Most Unfortunate Segment

Stephen launches his newest segment at a time when some of the world’s major problems are eclipsed by larger problems, and that’s a problem. Tonight on “Uh-Oh,” Stephen examines a troubling sign that water scarcity may be here to stay.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah:

Dems Are Horny for Impeachment While GOP Dodges Responsibility

Senator Chuck Schumer accidentally says “erection” instead of “insurrection,” GOP leaders avoid impeachment questions, and Donald Trump threatens to form his own political party.

Russian Protests, Brady’s 10th Super Bowl & Biden’s Travel Rules

Tom Brady heads to the Super Bowl (again), protests erupt across Russia in the wake of Alexei Navalny’s arrest, and the Biden administration imposes new COVID travel restrictions.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

GOP Stonewalls Biden’s Agenda; Rudy Giuliani Sued for Election Lies: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at Republicans signaling their intent to stonewall President Biden’s agenda and dismissing the need for an impeachment trial for former President Trump.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Vaccine Appointment Mess, Rudy Giuliani Gets Sued & Tom Brady Makes History

Jimmy makes his return to the studio after doing the show alone in his house for three weeks, Tom Brady is headed to his 10th Super Bowl despite being so OLD, Jimmy recounts his arduous experience trying to make vaccination appointments for his in-laws over the weekend and has ideas for how they can improve the system, Rudy Giuliani is being sued for $1.3 billion by the folks that make Dominion voting machines, Joe Biden’s dogs have officially moved into the White House, Sarah Huckabee Sanders announced her campaign for Governor of Arkansas, Jimmy’s wife Molly has a fashion dilemma, and Jimmy calls a family meeting to teach his youngest kids how to behave in the workplace.

The Late Late Show with James Corden

Rudy Giuliani Is Facing a $1.3 Billion Problem

James Corden recaps the headlines after a cold and wet weekend in Los Angeles, including Donald Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani being sued for $1.3B by Dominion Voting Systems after Giuliani’s relentless accusations against the company for its role in non-existant election rigging. And James looks at reports of more republican senators deciding it’s unlikely they vote to convict Donald Trump in his impeachment trial. And James recognizes the unusual way Burns Night is being celebrated this year.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Paul Krugman: Helping Kids Is a Very Good Idea

Republicans won’t support the Democrats’ proposal, but they should.

Some things about American politics are completely predictable, even in a time of insurrection and QAnon craziness. Anyone who has been paying attention over the past decade knew that as soon as a Democrat took the White House, Republicans would instantly do another 180-degree turn on budget deficits.

Remember, the G.O.P. went from hyperventilating about debt as an existential threat during the Obama years to complete indifference about deficits under Donald Trump. Surely nobody is surprised to see Republicans immediately revert to deficit hysteria now that Joe Biden is president.

Why are Republicans suddenly peddling debt phobia again? Their usual argument is that federal debt is a burden on future generations; I and others have spent considerable time trying to explain that this is bad economics.

But leave the economics of debt aside. Shouldn’t politicians who claim to be terribly worried about the future of America’s children support, you know, actually helping America’s children today?

That’s not a hypothetical question. Democrats are reportedly working on legislation that would offer monthly payments to most American families with children, and could, among other things, cut child poverty roughly in half.

Amanda Marcotte: Trump’s coup didn’t fail just from incompetence — credit the progressive activists who stopped him

To defeat the GOP’s assault on democracy, it’s critical for everyday voters to understand that they do have power

Last week, Donald Trump finally left the White House, after two and a half months of trying to steal the election — which culminated in Trump inciting a violent insurrection at the Capitol. Even before he sent a mob to violently interrupt the certification of Joe Biden’s win on January 6, Trump’s efforts to overturn the election were relentless to the point of being uncountable: Dozens of lawsuits (which were nearly all struck down), pressure campaigns on local election boards and state legislators, an extortion scheme against Senate Republicans, threats against state officials, demands that then-Vice President Mike Pence illegally invalidate the election, and even meetings to explore the possibility of a military coup.

In the face of all this, a narrative has shaped up: Trump’s failure to pull off a coup was largely due to his own shortcomings.

It’s a narrative that started early, with Max Boot of the Washington Post opining shortly after the election that he’s “never been more grateful for President Trump’s incompetence,” because he “can’t even organize a coup d’état properly.” It culminated in Adam Serwer of the Atlantic arguing that Trump’s “assault was most often futile, almost always buffoonish.”

To be clear, no one is saying that Trump’s efforts were inconsequential, just because he failed to steal the election. Even Ross Douthat, who was most devoted to the “incompetence” narrative, admitted in his New York Times column that it was bad that a violent mob had descended on the Capitol, killing a police officer and coming perilously close to getting their hands on the lawmakers they were threatening. As Ed Kilgore wrote last week at the New Yorker, the lesson we all learned is that there were “some moments of real peril,” and Trump got distressingly close to pulling it off at times. Still, the focus on why Trump failed is largely on his own inadequacies and bad planning — Kilgore suggests he could have succeeded with “better timing and better lawyers” — and some lucky breaks, such as the quick thinking of some Capitol police who saved lawmakers from the insurrectionists.

Michelle Goldberg: Please, Biden, Try for 2 Million Shots a Day

The administration’s vaccine plan isn’t ambitious enough.

Donald Trump’s administration overpromised on coronavirus vaccines. In November, his secretary of health and human services said there would be 40 million doses available by the end of the 2020; he was off by about a month. Trump himself promised 100 million doses in that same period. Everything he and his team said was a sales pitch, designed to foster the false impression that the pandemic they let burn out of control was on the cusp of ending.

There’s a growing consensus that Joe Biden’s administration has done the exact opposite. “Biden’s early approach to virus: Underpromise, overdeliver,” says an Associated Press headline. In December, when Biden pledged 100 million vaccine shots in 100 days, some experts thought it was a reach. But now that the United States is already vaccinating a bit more than a million people a day, that figure is far too modest.

Biden seemed to acknowledge that on Monday, telling reporters that the United States could get to 150 million shots in 100 days. Even that, however, is not enough.

Robert Reich: Don’t believe the anti-Trump hype – corporate sedition still endangers America

CEOs only acted after the Capitol attack because Democrats took power. Their political dominance must be reduced

The sudden lurch from Trump to Biden is generating vertigo all over Washington, including the so-called fourth branch of government – chief executives and their army of lobbyists.

Notwithstanding Biden’s ambitious agenda, dozens of giant corporations have said they will no longer donate to the 147 members of Congress who objected to the certification of Biden electors on the basis of Trump’s lies about widespread fraud, which rules out most Republicans on the Hill. [..]

Give me a break. For years, big corporations have been assaulting democracy with big money, drowning out the voices and needs of ordinary Americans and fueling much of the anger and cynicism that opened the door to Trump in the first place.

David Litt: Republicans will try to create an ‘ethics’ trap for Democrats. Don’t fall for it

Republicans will try to create an ‘ethics’ trap for Democrats. Don’t fall for it

A press secretary who tells the truth. An independent justice department that respects the rule of law. A president who doesn’t tweet conspiracy theories in the wee hours of the morning. After four dispiriting years and one near-death experience for American democracy, it would be comforting to conclude that nature is healing. Our political guardrails held. The Trump Era was nothing more than a temporary blip.

But such complacency would be a terrible mistake. What we’re seeing at the dawn of the Biden presidency is not the reestablishment of norms, but the establishment of double standards.

Yes, it’s commendable that the incoming Democratic administration pledges to behave responsibly, but it’s far from guaranteed that future Republican administrations will do the same. In fact, as things currently stand, it’s practically guaranteed that they won’t.

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