The Breakfast Club (Que Sera)

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.

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This Day in History

Martin Luther King Jr. gives speech before assasination; Bruno Richard Hauptmann electrocuted for kidnap and murder of Charles Lindbergh’s son; President Harry Truman signs Marshall plan; Jesse James shot to death; Pony Express begins service; Actor Marlon Brando born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

A man can fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.

John Burroughs

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A Timeline Of Perfectly Normal Events And Behavior

No need to look into this any further.

Cody’s Showdy

What we already know is in the Mueller Report because it’s in the Public Domain and has been admitted to by the principals.

Nothing to see here.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from> around the news medium 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: Republican Health Care Lying Syndrome

Even Trump supporters don’t believe the party’s promises.

There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and Republican claims about health care.

O.K., it’s not news that politicians make misleading claims, some more than others. According to a running tally kept by Daniel Dale of The Toronto Star, as of Monday morning, Donald Trump had said 4,682 false things as president.

But G.O.P. health care claims are special, in several ways. First, they’re outright, clearly intentional lies — not dubious assertions or misstatements that could be attributed to ignorance or misunderstanding. Second, they’re repetitive: Rather than making a wide variety of false claims, Republicans keep telling the same few lies, over and over. Third, they keep doing this even though the public long ago stopped believing anything they say on the subject.

This syndrome demands an explanation, and I’ll get there eventually. Before I do, however, let’s document the things that make G.O.P. health care lies unique.

Laurence H. Tribe: Congress must investigate Trump. But it must also be strategic about it

Rarely have the demands of constitutional democracy and the rule of law been in greater tension with the imperatives of progressive politics. Fidelity to the constitution and the primacy of law over naked power call for a determined effort by Congress to unearth the full truth about Donald Trump’s actions leading up to the election, and since assuming office.

Congress has a duty to look into the president’s offenses in seizing the White House and whether, having arrived at the pinnacle of power, he obstructed efforts to uncover the details of his corrupt ascent and to disclose the many facets of his interference with investigations into those details.

At the same time, one would have to be politically blind not to see that the vast majority of voters care far less about those matters than about kitchen table issues like health care and economic opportunity for this generation and the next. People have become all but immune even to undeniable evidence that Donald Trump is guided not by our national interest but by his own greed for power and by the leverage that hostile foreign nations are able to exert over his decisions. Ironically abetted by the daily barrage of frightening revelations about their leader, Americans have become so eager to move on that they have little patience left for seemingly abstract matters of legal principle and democratic legitimacy.

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Trump’s Fictional Wealth

As everyone knows by now, and what every New Yorker has known since the 80’s, Donald Trump is a con artist who lie and cheat even when he is winning. Most bankers and contractors eventually learned the hard way, losing millions along the way. Donald probably only ran for president because he saw it as a good scam to make money off of. Because of his unexpected win thanks to the Russians and some very stupid people in three states, all his cons are now catching up to him.

When Donald Trump wanted to make a good impression — on a lender, a business partner, or a journalist — he sometimes sent them official-looking documents called “Statements of Financial Condition.”

These documents sometimes ran up to 20 pages. They were full of numbers, laying out Trump’s properties, debts and multibillion-dollar net worth.

But, for someone trying to get a true picture of Trump’s net worth, the documents were deeply flawed. Some simply omitted properties that carried big debts. Some assets were overvalued. And some key numbers were wrong.

For instance, Trump’s financial statement for 2011 said he had 55 home lots to sell at his golf course in Southern California. Those lots would sell for $3 million or more, the statement said.

But Trump had only 31 lots zoned and ready for sale at the course, according to city records. He claimed credit for 24 lots — and at least $72 million in future revenue — he didn’t have.

He also claimed his Virginia vineyard had 2,000 acres, when it really has about 1,200. He said Trump Tower has 68 stories. It has 58.

Now, investigators on Capitol Hill and in New York are homing in on these unusual documents in an apparent attempt to determine whether Trump’s familiar habit of bragging about his wealth ever crossed a line into fraud.

The statements are at the center of at least two of the inquiries that continue to follow Trump, unaffected by the end of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation. On Wednesday, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform said it had requested 10 years of these statements from Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars USA.

And earlier this month, the New York state Department of Financial Services subpoenaed records from Trump’s longtime insurer, Aon. A person familiar with that subpoena, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe an ongoing investigation, said “a key component” was questions about whether Trump had given Aon these documents in an effort to lower his insurance premiums.

Both inquiries stemmed from testimony last month by Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen, who told Congress that Trump had used these statements to inflate his wealth — and then sent them to his lenders and his insurers.

The entire article by David A. Fahrenhold and Jonathan O’Connell of The Washington Post is worth reading.

A very wealthy older woman I know who lived in Trump tower in the 90’s while her Central Park condo was being renovated got to know Trump. He tried to get her to invest in one of his scams but being a wise woman, she passed on his offer. During lunch one day, she told me she believed Trump was either broke or leveraged so badly that he had no “wiggle room” to finance his projects. Knowing about his habit of not paying contractors and cheating banks and reading this article, I believe my older friend is very correct. Trump is broke and, because he’s president (ugh), it’s all coming back to bite him.

David Fahrenthold spoke with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow about documents showing Donald Trump presenting a distorted picture of his financial holdings to make himself appear to have more wealth, and whether such lying comes with any legal liability for Trump.

Cartnoon

The Watermelon War

The Breakfast Club (Fools)

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.

 photo stress free zone_zps7hlsflkj.jpg

This Day in History

Pope John Paul II Dies at 84; President Woodrow Wilson asks Congress to declare war on Germany; Juan Ponce de Leon lands in Florida; Falkland Islands seized from Britain; Hans Christian Andersen Born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

Who is more foolish? The fool or the fool that follows it?

Alec Guinness

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NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament 2019: Regional Finals Day 2

More Spoilers!

Louisville did not turn out to be the challenge I had feared, UCLA was a much tougher opponent.

In fact, if there isn’t a fluke rising by a second tier program, it’s very hard to see anyone standing between UConn and another National Championship except Baylor.

Thus tonight’s games, except for the Baylor one, are a matter of supreme indifference. You could argue that a Stanford Team that can pull out a victory against Muffy might be a threat but for me it’s simply a question of lose now or lose later for both of them. If Baylor sticks around we’ll see them in the Finals, no earlier than that, and they gave us a 9 point drubbing on January 3rd, the same margin as Louisville’s victory. Having Mississippi State out of the mix clarifies things a good deal.

So, Go Huskies!

Results 3/30/2019

 

Seed School Record Score Seed School Record Score Region
2 Iowa 29 – 6 79 3 North Carolina State 28 – 6 61 South
1 Baylor 33 – 1 93 4 South Carolina 24 – 10 66 South
1 Notre Dame 32 – 3 87 4 Texas A&M 26 – 7 80 Midwest
2 Stanford 31 – 4 55 11 Missouri State 25 – 10 46 Midwest

Tonight’s Games

 

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
7:00 pm ESPN2 2 Iowa 29 – 6 1 Baylor 33 – 1 South
9:00 pm ESPN2 1 Notre Dame 32 – 3 2 Stanford 31 – 4 Midwest

Democrats Are Hypocrites And Idiots

There’s really no other way to characterize the Slow Walking that is coming from Pelosi, Hoyer, and other Institutional Democrats like Richard Neal.

Democrats drag their feet on Trump’s tax returns — at exactly the wrong time
By Greg Sargent, Washington Post
April 1, 2019

Democrats should, if anything, be intensifying their effort to access Trump’s tax returns right now, not dragging their feet on it.

The Center for American Progress is trying to increase the pressure on Democrats to do just that — by releasing a new memo which argues that getting the returns is a legal slam dunk, and is absolutely justifiable, or even imperative, as a matter of basic oversight and good governance.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has delegated the job of getting at Trump’s tax returns to Rep. Richard E. Neal (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. Under the law, the committee can request any individual’s tax returns, after which the Treasury Department “shall” furnish them.

Neal has asked multiple House committees to each furnish a rationale rooted in governing or oversight for getting the president’s returns, with the theory being that it would place the request on firmer institutional footing and make the legal case stronger. The Trump administration will challenge the request, likely leading to a lengthy court battle.

Now, HuffPost reports reports that Neal is saying this whole process could end up meaning we don’t see Trump’s returns until after the 2020 election. Neal is claiming he has little control over this — “I can’t substitute my timetable for the federal courts,” he says — but this does not say anything about why he is not acting with more urgency.

Enter the Center for American Progress memo, which argues at length that the law is unambiguously clear. “If Congress asks for any tax returns, the [Internal Revenue Service] must provide them,” the memo says.

The idea is that, while it may be understandable for Democrats to want to build a strong institutional and legal case, this cannot become an excuse for further delay. Notably, the memo points out that while there is no precedent for seeking a president’s tax returns under this particular provision of the law, it’s because, for decades, presidents and presidential candidates voluntarily released them.

That is, until Trump blithely shredded this most basic norm of transparency — meaning that his own unprecedented contempt for this norm is what necessitates the House taking this aggressive step in response.

Along those lines, the memo further argues that doing this would represent a thoroughly legitimate and reasonable exercise of Congress’s oversight function. Among the reasons:

  • To determine whether Trump’s foreign financial dealings create conflicts of interest, or worse, whether he’s compromised by them in some way. We still do not know whether special counsel Robert S. Mueller III defined his investigation to avoid looking at Trump’s finances. Whether he did, the memo argues, Congress has its own obligation to scrutinize these questions.
  • To determine whether Trump is violating the Constitution’s emoluments clause by receiving payments from foreign governments without Congress’s consent. The memo argues that the fact the clause allows for Congress to consent to certain emoluments — or not to — itself requires getting the returns, so it can exercise its responsibility to determine whether any particular emoluments either are, or are not, deserving of congressional consent.
  • To determine whether — or to what extent — Trump and his family have profited from the huge tax-cut legislation he signed, which could be substantial. The memo argues that this information could help Congress determine whether to go along with whatever future tax policies Trump proposes, such as making certain provisions in the new tax law permanent.

Here’s the thing. The urgency of all these matters should not in any way be seen as diminished by the conclusion of the Mueller investigation. That’s because, even if no criminal charges were brought for conspiracy with Russia, the Mueller inquiry and its spinoffs have nonetheless added substantially to the broader case against Trump’s corruption.

This is a case that will continue to build, as the multiple other investigations resulting from Mueller’s work, as well as those launched by House Democrats, proceed. As Bloomberg’s Timothy L. O’Brien, who understands the depths of Trump financial murk like no one else, puts it, “reality is likely to keep intruding on everybody who has been ushering Trump-Russia coverage into the grave.”

After all, because of those investigations, we have learned that Trump carried on negotiations with Russia over a Moscow project for many months while Republican voters were picking their nominee; that he has been directly implicated in a criminal campaign finance scheme; and that Trump concealed both these things from the public. Getting Trump’s tax returns could help shed light on whether there are other such foreign dealings, and on his tax treatment of the hush-money payments, among other things.

We have also learned from Trump’s own former lawyer that he may have gamed assets for insurance- and tax-fraud purposes, and that Trump’s tax returns could contain clues to those things — not to mention clues to the extensive history of tax fraud used to inflate his inherited fortune, something we learned about from that big New York Times exposé.

Rather than getting drawn into a sad-sack debate over whether Democrats should “move on” from the Mueller investigation, it’s more natural to just keep the focus on Trump’s corruption, as a matter of basic oversight. The political ground for maintaining that focus is actually more fertile right now, because of everything we’ve learned — and continue to learn — as a result of the Mueller investigation. And getting Trump’s tax returns is central to that basic mission.

Listen up dopes! 40% of the people will never vote for you. Sucking up to Republicans and Unindicted Co-conspirator Bottomless Pinocchio will do nothing except piss off the 60% who might if you weren’t such feckless lying scumbags.

I’m totally down with AOC on this one. Heads must roll and I don’t much care how bloody it gets.

Pondering the Punidts

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from> around the news medium 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

Robert Reich: Corporations are endangering Americans. Trump doesn’t care

From Boeing to Monsanto and beyond: this week has revealed the tip of the iceberg of regulatory neglect

Why didn’t Boeing do it right? Why isn’t Facebook protecting user passwords? Why is Phillip Morris allowed to promote vaping? Why hasn’t Wells Fargo reformed itself? Why hasn’t Monsanto (now owned by Bayer) recalled its Roundup weedkiller?

Answer: corporate greed coupled with inept and corrupt regulators.

These are just a few of the examples in the news these days of corporate harms inflicted on innocent people.

To be sure, some began before the Trump administration. But Trump and his appointees have unambiguously signaled to corporations they can now do as they please. [..]

Big money has had an inhibiting effect on regulators in several previous administrations. What’s unique under Trump is the blatancy of it all, and the shameless willingness of Trump appointees to turn a blind eye to corporate wrongdoing.

Trump and his Republican enablers in Congress yell “socialism!” at proposals for better balancing private greed with the common good. Yet unless a better balance is achieved, capitalism as we know it is in deep trouble.

Walter Dellinger: How the Mueller report can still threaten Trump’s legitimacy

counsel Robert S. Mueller III would reveal devastating information. But those who vested Mueller’s Russia inquiry with their hopes may yet be proven right.

All we can do right now is speculate about a report that only a few people have seen, at least until the redacted version comes out in April. But even based on what little we know — Attorney General William P. Barr’s summary, the indictments and court filings that came from Mueller’s team — it’s premature to write off its 400-page findings . Mueller’s office may have properly drafted a detailed and damning account of Trump’s obstruction of justice and simply cast it as a set of facts, a road map for the analysts who must decide what to do about it: members of Congress.

If Mueller believed it was inappropriate to pronounce on the president’s guilt — after all, the Justice Department has a long-standing policy against indicting a sitting president — he could still be following the example of Leon Jaworski, the Watergate independent counsel who decided against indicting President Richard Nixon, but instead submitted to Congress an extensive accounting of all the facts surrounding his efforts to shut down the investigation. Jaworski’s testimony skipped all the adjectives and adverbs. It simply told the story and allowed the branch of government tasked with oversight to do the rest.

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That’s Entertainment

I kind of lost touch with Professional Wrestling about the time Terry Bollea started doing “C” Action Movies (he’s really awful, worse even than Rod Toombs), but there was a time when I was into it. It’s a big deal in Stamford where you can drive down I 95 (to the musical accompaniment of Welcome to the Machine) and see tower after tower of FIRE (Finance, Insurance, Real Estate) firms, almost like a real skyline, relieved only by the squat (by comparison) but huge outline of WWE World Headquarters.

I also used to watch Days of Our Lives or DOOL as it is affectionately known. It’s basically the same thing, a Soap Opera only with violence and mayhem.

And it’s realer than you might think. That’s real blood and they really do get injured quite frequently. I’ll describe it as improvised Fight Choreography where the general outlines are known to the participants but the details are spur of the moment.

Of course Steroids are rampant and the performers shamelessly exploited.

I have tuned in from time to time. I can smell what the Rock is cooking and I’m somewhat familiar with the Stephanie/Triple H storyline. Mick Foley is amazing and also an idiot. I even saw Unidicted Co-conspirator Bottomless Pinocchio back in the day when he was simply a fraudulent Developer and Tax Cheat.

It is, as one would imagine, ripe with Racism and Radical Republicanism and that as much as anything else has led me to choose other amusement options, the last time I thought about it I was watching Jumanji (which I did of course to see Amy Pond, same reason I like Guardians of the Galaxy).

But John Oliver loves it!

Cartnoon

Johnny Appleseed

The Breakfast Club (Taxation)

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.

 photo stress free zone_zps7hlsflkj.jpg

This Day in History

Slobodan Milosevic arrested; American forces invade Okinawa; Nazi Germany begins persecuting Jews; Soul singer Marvin Gaye is shot to death by his father.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

America is a land of taxation that was founded to avoid taxation.

Laurence J. Peter

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