The Breakfast Club (No More Kings)

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

Italy’s dictator Benito Mussolini killed; Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein born; Muhammad Ali refuses military induction during the Vietnam War; The first space tourist; ‘Tonight Show’ host Jay Leno born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

The one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.

Harper Lee

Continue reading

Maybe I’m Finally Purged

It’s a source of satisfaction to me that outside of dK (twice, under my own handle, not everyone can say that) and Open Left (not so open and not so left) I’ve never been booted from a web site (well, one other and it’s complicated and a story for another day) though there are plenty that have closed while I have continued writing.

Since April 1st, 2005 as a matter of fact, mostly daily.

I must admit I feel in control of my own destiny at this point, The Stars Hollow Gazette and DocuDharma are not so expensive to maintain and I’m not planning on banning myself no matter how obnoxious I am, though I could get really bored and just stop.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hah, fooled yah.

Anyway at one point I was interested in the mechanics of Perl based blogs and I signed up for a bunch of them including Booman Tribune, MyDD, and RedState. If you poke around you can find traces of my presence, all as ek hornbeck because I never bothered trying to conceal myself beyond that caution which is pretty mandatory on the Intertubz (pick a handle and stick with it, never, ever give out your real name or address or those of close relatives and associates). I decided they were all kind of stupid for a variety of reasons and after I had made my observations I mostly dropped all of them except RedState.

Not because I agreed with it mind you but they are persistent marketers and not a month goes by that I don’t get an invite for a costly chance to be educated by luminaries like Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity, and Steve Bannon (some are even on cruises which strikes me as a very special kind of Hell- being locked up beyond swimming distance of land as a captive audience for incoherent liars among thousands of lunatic cult members salivating to be indoctrinated and eating the same meal 3 days in a row, once as dinner, leftovers as lunch, and scraps at breakfast, off a Norovirus and Legionella infested buffet. There is simply not enough Bottom Shelf Booze to make that tolerable.).

On the other hand most of the interactions I had on RedState were very polite. I never disguised who I was, but I never confronted people either. If I missed Erick Son of Erick it was by luck. I interacted with most of the Moderators who decided I was harmless, mostly, and we talked about topics of mutual interest.

Shortly after I joined there was a spasm on dK to see who could get thrown off RedState the fastest. As I recall BarbInMD won, but she went out of her way to be an asshole which was not out of character for her on dK either.

While I have been tempted at times to see if my old password still works or even go through the recovery process (the email definitely works) I have so far restrained myself because I have little to say to them or they to me. I think Democrats are conservative (even Bernie).

Still, I am tempted some times.

‘Mass firing’ at conservative site RedState
by Brian Stelter, CNN
April 27, 2018

Bloggers were locked out of their accounts — some just temporarily, while the cuts were made, and others permanently.

Erick Erickson, the site’s longtime editor who left in 2015, tweeted about what he called the “mass firing” on Friday morning.

“Very sad to see, but not really surprising given Salem’s direction,” he wrote. “And, finally, after all these years, they’ve turned off my account.”

Multiple sources told CNNMoney that they believed conservative critics of President Trump were the writers targeted for removal.

“Insufficiently partisan” was the phrase one writer used in a RedState group chat.

“They fired everybody who was insufficiently supportive of Trump,” one of the sources who spoke with CNNMoney said, adding, “how do you define being ‘sufficiently supportive’ of Trump?”

RedState, a 13-year-old blog that was founded by Erick Erickson, is one of several sites in Townhall Media’s portfolio. Townhall, in turn, is owned by Salem Media Group, a conservative media company that also operates radio stations and publishes books.

Salem has previously been scrutinized for its treatment of radio hosts who weren’t toeing a pro-Trump line during the presidential campaign.

A source with ties to RedState said bloggers had been “wondering if this was going to happen at RedState,” meaning “anyone who wasn’t a big fan of Trump would be dumped.”

If I went in with some kind of Kardashian/Kanye “redemption” story I’d probably be on Tucker or the Ingraham Angle tonight, but regular readers know I write for myself.

Accept no substitutes.

Without Comment

Because, really, what can you say?

Faux and Fiends

Avenatti on MSNBC

Trevor

Stephen

Seth

Bonus Chris Hayes on Seth

Oh, except this.

Wow! Alright! Fantastic!

Cartnoon

Some News

Wait, here it comes now.

Tucker Carlson

Sean Hannity

Voting

The Breakfast Club (Three)

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

President and Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant born; Explorer Ferdinand Magellan killed; U.S. Marines attack North Africa during the First Barbary War; Ailing baseball star Babe Ruth honored.

Breakfast Tunes

” rel=”noopener” target=”_blank”>Bob Dorough (December 12, 1923 – April 23, 2018)

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

It is justice, not charity, that is wanting in the world.

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

Continue reading

About 14 Hours

I haven’t forgotten you, any more than Larry Wilmore.

Second Episode

Yeah, you’re finished

That’s Right

Bill Cosby Found Guilty of Sexual Assault After Years of Accusations
By GRAHAM BOWLEY and JON HURDLE, The New York Times
APRIL 26, 2018

On the second day of its deliberations at the Montgomery County Courthouse in this town northwest of Philadelphia, the jury returned to convict Mr. Cosby of three counts of aggravated indecent assault against Andrea Constand, at the time a Temple University employee he had mentored.

The three counts — penetration with lack of consent, penetration while unconscious and penetration after administering an intoxicant — are felonies, each punishable by up to 10 years in state prison, though the sentences could be served concurrently.

It was the second time a jury had considered Mr. Cosby’s fate. His first trial last summer ended with a deadlocked jury after six days of deliberations.

The Montgomery County district attorney, Kevin R. Steele, asked that Mr. Cosby’s $1 million bail be revoked, suggesting he had been convicted of a serious crime, owned a plane and could flee, prompting an angry outburst from Mr. Cosby, who shouted, “He doesn’t have a plane, you asshole.”

“Enough of that,” said Judge O’Neill, who said he did not view Mr. Cosby as a flight risk and could be released on bail, but he would have to surrender his passport and remain in his nearby home.

In recent years, Mr. Cosby, 80, had admitted to decades of philandering, and to giving quaaludes to women as part of an effort to have sex, smashing the image he had built as a moralizing public figure and the upstanding paterfamilias in the wildly popular 1980s and ’90s sitcom “The Cosby Show.” He did not testify in his own defense, avoiding a grilling about those admissions, but he and his lawyers have insisted that his encounter with Ms. Constand was part of a consensual affair, not an assault.

Look, I’m a guy. I like to think I’m a fairly typical one, no better or worse than most. I know that drugging someone into unconsciousness so you can masturbate into their body is a bad thing, little removed from necrophilia (not from personal experience, some things you either get or you don’t).

This makes me sad for the victims and angry that now I have to deal with the fact that people will justifiably ask themselves, “Is he a Cosby?” when the default assumption should be that I treat everyone with dignity and respect.

Unless you’re an asshole, then I’ll insult you in ways you can barely comprehend, idiot.

Personal Space

I don’t always talk about my mental health issues (though they provide a constant context I feel it’s only fair you should be aware of), nor do I wish you to have the impression I’m some kind of OCD germophobe (met one of those in Group Therapy, whole 9 yards, tissue on doorknobs which is actually a good idea, multiple showers, constant cleaning), but I do have concerns about “personal space” which you’d probably never notice as I’ve mostly trained myself out of them.

It was part of developing my skills as a politician, some people desire a level of physical contact I’m not comfortable with and while I’m out of practice now there was a time when you could hardly see me cringe.

Not always. I remember one encounter where a female prospective constituent snuck up behind me and ruffled my hair.

“Gee, most guys dig that.”

“You, ah, caught me by surprise.”

Surprise had nothing to do with it.

Anyway I’ve never been the kind to do the elbow grab handshake, look deeply into your eyes, and say “ek hornbeck, damn glad to meet you.” In fact I think it’s kind of a waste, if you have that level of insincere stagecraft in you, to use it indiscriminately as a joke. The moment I observed that behavior in a potential rival for capo di tutti I knew they were not at all serious and I would crush them like a bug. Which I did.

I think that’s why I find Trump’s encounter with Macron both creepy and amusing. I get that Europeans are a lot less hung up about certain things than us Puritans but a straight handshake, back clap (always twice, no more), and air kiss on both cheeks should have been plenty.

Not Ezra Klein’s Lie Journal

This is my pillow fort Preet!

Greta Garbo is famous for the line “I want to be alone” and spent many years living in New York City, supposedly as a recluse but in fact as just a normal person which is a thing the City is very good for. As an actor it’s very comforting to have a place where you don’t have to be on stage.

Now, don’t misunderstand me. I do not hold your frivolity against you. As basic material, you may not be bad; but you are the unfortunate product of a doomed culture. I feel very sorry for you.

Cartnoon

Kellyanne




The Breakfast Club (Everybody Knows)

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

The Chernobyl nuclear accident; John Wilkes Booth, President Lincoln’s assassin, killed; Guernica bombed in the Spanish Civil War; Vermont enacts same-sex civil unions; TV star Lucille Ball dies.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

Anyone who isn’t confused really doesn’t understand the situation.

Edward R. Murrow

Continue reading

“Leave The Gun”

My father is no different than any powerful man, any man with power, like a president or senator.
Do you know how naive you sound, Michael? Presidents and senators don’t have men killed.
Oh. Who’s being naive, Kay?

The Godfather is the truest movie about politics that has ever been written.

All you needed to eat well in New York in the 1970s was roasting pan, a hot oven and mob connections
by Lucian K. Truscott IV, Salon
April 25, 2018

The first time I cooked bluefish, it was terrible. It was gray and oily and fishy smelling, and my girlfriend and I managed only a couple of bites before we threw it in the trash. I reluctantly went back to buying flounder, a comparative fortune at a dollar a pound for fillets.

Then one night I was having dinner around the corner from my loft at Rocco’s on Thompson Street, and I saw they had bluefish on the menu, so I asked the waiter if it was good, and he made one of those classic Italian waiter moves, kissing his forefinger and thumb and closing his eyes. “Magnificent,” he promised.

So I ordered the bluefish. He was right. It was light, and fragrant of herbs and lemon and wine, served with boiled new potatoes and flat beans. I couldn’t believe it was the same fish I had bought on Bleecker Street and failed so miserably at cooking, so I asked the waiter how they fixed it.

“Come with me,” he said, heading for the swinging doors into the kitchen. I followed. He introduced me to the chef, and older Italian guy in an apron with a white cloth tied around his head. They passed a few words in Italian I couldn’t understand, and the chef gave me a big grin and headed for the walk-in refrigerator. He emerged with a whole bluefish which he quickly and expertly filleted. He spoke English with a heavy accent, but I could follow him all right.

“You take the fillets like this,” he said, laying them side by side, skin side down, in a black graniteware roasting pan on which he had sprinkled a few drops of olive oil. “Oregano. Not too much,” he said, sprinkling flakes of dried oregano on both fillets. “Now lemon.” He grabbed one and grated lemon rind over both fillets. “Salt, pepper,” he added with a flourish. “Now some wine.” He grabbed a bottle and splashed white wine liberally into the pan around the fish. “You must have hot oven,” he said, opening one of his ovens and sliding the pan inside. “Four hundred . . . five hundred is better.”

I asked him to show me how he had filleted the bluefish, so he went to the fridge and brought out another and more slowly this time, demonstrated how to cut the fish along the backbone and then carefully carve the fillet, cutting against the bones. “Like so!” he said, triumphantly holding aloft one of the fillets.

By the time he had filleted the other side, he declared that the bluefish was done, and removed the pan from the oven. He lifted the fillets onto a plate, cut a couple of pats of butter and swirled them around in the roasting pan with the wine and spooned a little atop each fillet. Handing me one fork, he used another to take a bite for himself and smacked his lips. I took a bite. Like the one I had ordered for dinner, it was perfect.

Tony Dapolito was the mob’s political guy in the Village. He was a member of the local planning board, he belonged to the Village Independent Democrats, if the “guys from the neighborhood” needed something done politically, Tony was their man. In the early 1960’s, Robert Moses was flexing his muscles and threatening to build the Lower Manhattan Expressway, a freeway across Canal Street that would have built an elevated highway over Washing(ton) Square Park in the Village and wiped out most of Little Italy and Chinatown.

One night, Tony Dapolito picked up Jane Jacobs (author of “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”) and Mary Nichols, the city editor of the Village Voice, the two of whom were leading the opposition to Moses and his insane plan, and drove them to an unmarked storefront on Mulberry Street. Inside sat Carlo Gambino, the mob boss, having a cup of espresso.

Tony served espresso to Jane and Mary, and with Tony standing by, (Gambino) asked them about their opposition to the Lower Manhattan Expressway. They told him of the blocks of Thompson and Mulberry and other streets that would be wiped out, the truck exhaust it would bring to the South Village. When they were finished, Tony drove them home. A few days later, the construction unions came out in opposition to Moses’ expressway. The city government rejected Moses’ expressway in 1964, and his career laying concrete was finished.

Years later, when I was living in the loft on Houston, the neighborhood suffered a spate of daytime burglaries. Somebody was going up fire escapes when people were out of their apartments at work and taking TV’s, stereos, jewelry . . . anything he could grab. Clark Whelton, who was also a staff writer on the Voice, lived on McDougal Street, and a couple of apartments in his building had been hit, along with others on his block.

So Clark and I went to see Tony. He gave a deep sigh and said he knew about the burglaries, that it was a “local kid” who had a drug problem, but “the boys” were looking for him, and they’d find him pretty soon and get him off the streets. In the meantime, Tony told us to take a sheet of paper and write in magic marker “STAY THE FUCK OUT” and put the signature “VINNIE” underneath. Tape the paper to the window leading to the fire escape. That would do it for the time being.

This is the way it’s done. This is the way it’s always been done.

Who’s being naive Kay?

Don’t tell me you’re innocent. Because it insults my intelligence and makes me very angry.

Syria, Sanctions and Tariffs

We are aware that Donald Trump does not take advice from anyone in his cabinet or inner circle. But when it comes to sanctions, tariffs and red lines, it appears he takes his cues from Russian president Vladimir Putin, Fox & Friends and the voices in his head.

When Trump tweeted that he was going to bomb Syria after a suspected chemical attack on the town of Douma, he wasn’t warning Syrian president Bashir Assad, he was warning his pal Vlad. Why did Trump ignore the warnings of caution from his Secretary of Defense and the illegality of bombing a sovereign nation that had not attacked the US without the consent of congress? Could Trump have been watching this?

(A)mid reports that the U.S. was considering a strike against the Assad regime, in response to an alleged chemical weapons attack against civilians in Douma — Russia’s ambassador to Lebanon Alexander Zasypkin warned that “if there is a US missile attack, we … will shoot down U.S. rockets and even the sources that launched the missiles.”

The Fox & Friends morning crew took exception to this bluster, with one host arguing, “What we should be doing is telling the Russians, ‘Every Syrian military base is a target and if you’re there, it is your problem.’”

Minutes later, one of the program’s most dedicated viewers echoed that belligerent note. [..]

The White House had reached no final decision about whether to strike Syria — let alone, whether to target Russian assets within it — when the president tweeted this pledge. Over the ensuing days, Defense Secretary James Mattis implored Trump to hold off on bombing the Assad regime until its responsibility for the Douma attack could be fully verified, and Congress could be given a chance to authorize the act of war.

But the president couldn’t abide a delay. In his view, it was better to bomb Syria without a strategy or legal authorization than to invite doubts about the credibility of the threats he makes on social media.

The tweeted also gave Russia and the Syrians time to move strategic equipment, troops and personnel to safe Russian bases minimizing any damage to Syrian ground and air defenses.

Come to find out, Trump sought out and respected Moscow’s position.

(Russian Foreign Minister Sergei) Lavrov noted that despite the escalating tensions between Moscow and Washington, the U.S. made sure it didn’t harm any Russian personnel and positions during the strikes against the regime of President Bashar Assad following a suspected chemical attack on the town of Douma.

“We told them where our red lines were, including the geographical red lines,” Lavrov told Russian state television. “The results have shown that they haven’t crossed those lines.”

Moscow had warned the U.S. before the strike that it could hit back if the U.S. actions jeopardize Russian servicemen in Syria, and the allies had given Russia an advance warning to make sure no Russians were in the line of fire.

Trump was clearly respecting Putin’s red line while Putin had ignored his on the use of chemical weapons. So much for not discussing strategies when asked by the press what his intentions are. Just have Vlad ask him.

So what about those sanctions? Meh

Nikki Haley informed the United Nations that our government was preparing sanctions against Russian companies complicit in Syria’s chemical weapons program. On Monday, the White House announced that the U.N. ambassador had misspoken.

“We are considering additional sanctions on Russia and a decision will be made in the near future,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. But reporting from the New York Times and Washington Post suggests that Trump has already decided against imposing a new round of sanctions, absent a new provocation from Moscow.

And about those sanctions against major Russian companies and oligarchs: While the sanctions announced before the strike on Syria had not yet gone into affect, one of them has already been rescinded against aluminum oligarch Oleg Deripask, As of Monday

Earlier this month, the United States announced a remarkably aggressive set of sanctions against the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska and his aluminum company Rusal: The United States would freeze all assets that the metal giant had been keeping in American institutions, prohibit American firms from doing business with the Russian corporation, and slap sanctions on any foreign individual or firm that engaged in commerce with the company.

The impact of this announcement was immediate and profound. Rusal had provided 7 percent of the world’s alumina, the raw material for aluminum production. With the company ostensibly sidelined for an indefinite period of time, global aluminum prices surged to a six-year high, while Rusal’s share price plummeted by more than half. But the most damaging aspect of the move, from the Russian perspective, may have been the message that it sent — that the U.S. was prepared to destroy Russian firms in the blink of an eye, even at a cost to the global economy, if the Kremlin persisted in interfering in the internal politics of Western democracies.

Fortunately for Moscow, it now appears that the sanctions against Rusal may never actually take effect. On Monday, the Treasury Department extended the sanctions’ “wind down” period — a window in which U.S. and foreign entities could complete their unfinished business with Rusal without facing any penalty — by six months, while expressing openness to lifting the sanctions entirely. [..]

The administration’s official position is that the sanctions will still go into effect eventually, if Oleg Deripaska does not divest and relinquish control of the firm. But Treasury’s actions suggest that it is eager to avoid inconveniencing Rusal’s business partners, and thus, that some mutually agreeable arrangement will likely be reached between the U.S. and the company before the wind-down period is through. Or so markets seem to believe: Shortly after Mnuchin’s announcement Monday, global aluminum prices nose-dived.

You remember Depreska, he of the money laundering, extortion, and, on at least one occasion, murder. You know, the guy Trump’s campaign manager Paul Manafort (reportedly) offered the oligarch private briefings on the 2016 presidential race shortly after Donald Trump secured the Republican nomination. That guy.

The sanctions against Rusal were a two edged sword according to Leonid Bershidsky at Bloomberg View but, as a whole, mostly a failure:

The softening of U.S. sanctions against Russian aluminum producer Rusal sends at least two important signals to investors and to official Moscow. One is that the Trump administration has little understanding of the impact of its moves before it makes them. The other is that it doesn’t want to impose sanctions that will do a lot of collateral damage outside Russia. [..]

But the U.S. unwillingness to inflict damage on its “partners and allies,” whose interests Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin mentioned as the reason for his retreat on Rusal, sends an unmistakable message to Russian companies and the Russian state: spreading operations internationally is an effective way to discourage sanctions. That’s good to know for both strategic and tactical purposes. [..]

I remain convinced that Deripaska was chosen because his company deals in aluminum — the target of Trump’s import tariffs, which are meant to revive domestic production. The opportunity to kill two birds with one stone — punish Russia and get a major foreign player off the U.S. aluminum market — must have looked too good to pass up. But no one in the Treasury Department appeared to have considered the consequences for the global aluminum market, where Rusal was included in international value chains. Aluminum prices jumped (which can only be bad for U.S. buyers), Australian-British Rio Tinto was forced to search frantically for new buyers for its alumina (a raw material for aluminum production), and a Rusal plant in Ireland was threatened with closure, creating the potential for job losses and an alumina shortage throughout Europe. These problems, reported to Treasury, appeared to soften Mnuchin’s heart. “The U.S. government is not targeting the hardworking people who depend on Rusal and its subsidiaries,” his department quoted him as saying. The U.S. government’s problem, Mnuchin said, was limited to Deripaska himself.

The tariffs that Trump imposed on steel and aluminum imports were all his own dong in his promised trade war with China but, again, he didn’t consider the consequences on our allies or businesses, jobs and the working class here in the US.

During Trump’s discussions with French President Emmanuel Macron, one the major topics, besides the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris Climate accords, was Trump’s trade policy and tariffs, especially on aluminum and new steel

Macron acknowledged the global trade problems that have been created by an oversupply of steel and aluminum — but most of that glut is a product of China, not France.

Trump promised no immediate relief from the tariffs. He complained that even though two-way trade between the U.S. and France is relatively balanced, the European Union imposes too many barriers to U.S. exports. Last year, the U.S had a $14 billion trade deficit with France and a $102 billion trade deficit with the E.U.

By Tuesday afternoon, the Dow suffered as much as a 550-point drop.

The Dow Jones industrial average slipped more than 2 percent — 550 points — at its low in trading Tuesday as a key U.S. government bond yield hit 3 percent for the first time in more than four years and after a seemingly innocuous comment from a Caterpillar executive.

Traders have been worried that the rising yield of long-term government bonds may mean higher rates for consumers and companies and a period of falling stock prices.

The Dow clawed back some ground in the final minutes of trading and closed the day down 1.7 percent, or 424 points.

The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index and the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite also showed sharp losses, dropping 1.3 percent and 1.7 percent respectively.

Oil prices, which had recently hit highs not seen since late 2014, pulled back slightly.

Maybe it was this comment from a Caterpillar executive:

Caterpillar Chief Financial Officer Brad Halverson said the company’s first-quarter profit “will be the high-water mark for the year” because of expected increases in investment later in 2018.

“The comment that the first quarter represented a high-water mark for the company spooked industrials as well as the overall market,” Clemons said. “Today is just a ripple effect.”

Trump’s ignorance, arrogance and stupidity have its consequences. Unfortunately, we are the ones that are going to the price for it.

Cartnoon

Anna Akana

Your brain on dick

Be gentle

How to

Load more