Saturday, August 1, 2020

We're at War with Two Invisible Enemies

For tens of millions of Americans, hard times arrived this Friday. 

Here we go again?
Depression Bread Line
by George Segal,
FDR Museum, Washington, DC.

The supplemental $600 a week income boost for the unemployed expired at midnight. In general, that cuts unemployment benefits by more than half, to a payout of a few hundred dollars a week.

Also expired as of last week is a moratorium on evictions, which has kept a roof over the heads of some 43 million cash-strapped people. 
The hardest-hit Americans will be those who were poor to begin with. "Any cutback ... will hit the very segment of the population that spends virtually every penny of income," states Oxford Economics economist Bob Schwartz, who is quoted in a CBS article listed below. 

"The United States is at war," wrote three business-school professors in TheHill.com. The war is with COVID-19, they say, but they urge the government to "....R
eassess our strategy for fighting the economic war." Their ideas: Find a way to buy or back up failing consumer loans; provide direct assistance to people in need; and keep people in their jobs indirectly with a refundable corporate tax credit and wage subsidy of up to $2,500 per employee per month. 

Unemployment has risen with startling speed, especially in states that rely on tourism. 
We don't know officially, but the rates have approached the Great Depression's, which peaked at 25 percent. That's where Nevada is today, according to US News & World Report. 
Thanks to the Senate's delays in starting up a new COVID-19 relief bill, any further prospect of government assistance is in limbo.

The White House offered a late-night, too-little-too-late deal to extend the $600-a-week benefits for ONE (1) additional week, but Congressional leaders slapped it down. They thought that Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader, would then ignore all further efforts to pass a new relief bill. 

Still, even if a bill passed on Monday -- and it won't, because the Senate is in recess -- the country's unemployed will see a two- to four-week delay in any further benefit payouts.

It's historical deja vu. Remember how Republicans handled the Great Depression? After the stock market crashed in 1929, Herbert Hoover let Americans tough it out until he left office, while desperate people built tent camps in Central Park and elsewhere. Hoover was okay with spending his time playing golf. (Remind you of anyone?)

After four years of misery, Americans elected Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his New Deal. The plan's point man, Harry Hopkins, famously told Congressional conservatives, "People don't eat in the long run. They eat every day." 

This year, relief bills have kept the unemployed afloat -- until today. What will they eat tomorrow? How many will have to sleep under bridges with the long-term homeless? 

Be glad it's only a couple of months till the election. 


Is it worthwhile to go into further debt to combat this crisis? What do you think of the three professors' ideas in The Hill? What will the economy look like in November? 

Photo: Library of Congress
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/eviction-moratorium-expired-coronavirus/?fbclid=IwAR2fIVg08S6m7t-OSOnhYX06EraeHQJm_LCGVJ-VZJCNrZB_lS-n7AsGwnU
 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/senate-democrats-reject-white-house-unemployment-benefit-short-term-extension-600-dollar-cares-act/

https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/510059-congress-must-open-a-second-front-in-our-economic-war-on-covid-19?fbclid=IwAR1fP3EQDNySL5YZrJqmI3NPwKJPW0q_Q_ha7DbqCEwq5yBMTn4XH4-IIw4

Friday, July 31, 2020

President Trump Unites the Nation

COVID-19 cases have surged across the country this week. Since the Pandemic started, more than 151,000 Americans have died. New unemployment claims also rose last week, the 19th week of a million or more new claims.

Trump forgot to check the
Constitution. Sad! 
 
The country and Donald Trump knew all that on Thursday morning.

Then, at 8:30 am, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that gross domestic product had tanked in the second quarter of the year. Fallen by 32.9% annualized. It was a low below the low we know -- a record-setting, utterly abysmal pratfall into a fearsomely deep pit.

Naturally, the stock market fell, because it's the kind of thing that makes Wall Streeters run around in circles with their hands in the air, screaming.

I don't know what goes through your mind at a time like this, but we know what went through Donald Trump's: "This is BAD NEWS for my reelection campaign!"

Sixteen minutes after the DOLS's announcement, the President tweeted one of his own: "With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 30, 2020

Thereby confirming that, yes, Donald Trump's educational years were spent in clown school.

“I think it’s a joke, I guess,” said Senator John Cornyn of Texas. “I don’t know how else to interpret it.”

Mirthless Mitch McConnell wasn't amused. “Never in the history of the country, through wars, depressions and the Civil War, have we ever not had a federally scheduled election on time, and we’ll find a way to do that again this Nov. 3,” the Senate majority leader said.

In a case of the chicken v. the egg, near-identical words emerged from Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., chairwoman of the committee that has jurisdiction over elections. "Americans have voted during the Civil War, in the midst of the Great Depression, in the shadow of World Wars, and in the wake of terrorist attacks," she said in a statement. "Americans will stand united to vote this November." Who quoted whom? Inquiring minds want to know!

In the driest response to date, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi responded by tweeting the relevant lines of the Constitution:

Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution states:
“The Congress may determine the Time of choosing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States.” https://t.co/NIaa7mQVnn— Nancy Pelosi (@SpeakerPelosi) July 30, 2020

In short, Donald Trump has united both parties in a single tweet.

The upshot? There are 97 days till the election, with Biden surfing what looks like an upcoming blue wave. At least that much is good news.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, Swaggering Texas Republican, Tests Positive for COVID-19

July 30, 2020

From the Schadenfreude Files


Remember Louie Gohmert, that right-wing congressman whose supporters, aka deplorables, roughed up a rival's supporters at a rally on Sunday?

Gohmert: We don't need no stink' masks


Remember how Gohmert complained repeatedly at yesterday's House Judiciary hearing, after a witness against Attorney General William Barr went over his time limit? Gohmert tapped loudly on his desk while the witness concluded.

Wednesday, Gohmert tested positive for COVID-19.

Later, Gohmert blamed his virus on being required to wear a mask during the hearings. By moving the mark around his face, Gohmert said, "...I'm bound to put some virus on the mask that I sucked in, that's most likely what happened."

Gohmert had the test because he was due to fly to Texas with Donald Trump on Air Force One on Wednesday. Instead, the mask-averse tough guy began a 10-day quarantine.

Now AG Barr has to be tested too, because Gohmert had a short-distance chat yesterday morning with Barr before the hearing.

There's no word yet on whether testing will be required for House Judiciary Committee members and staffers, witnesses, onlookers, and journalists who were also in the room.


Photo:  "Louie Gohmert - Caricature" by DonkeyHotey is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/…/texas-lawmaker-louie-goh…

https://www.usatoday.com/…/rep-gohmert-attribut…/5536431002/

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

AG Barr is Combative, Opaque and Cynical in House Hearing

July 29, 2020

The House Judiciary Committee hearing on questionable actions by the Department of Justice got volatile in a hurry this morning.

AG Barr gave Democrats the runaround during Tuesday's House hearings on the DOJ
The first witness, a former assistant attorney general, called Attorney General Bill Barr “the greatest threat in my lifetime to our rule of law." He then went over his five-minute time limit, prompting loud and repeated complaints from Representative Louie Gohmert. Gohmert is the congressman whose supporters in Tyler, TX roughed up his rival's supporters on Sunday.

Thwarted, Gohmert then tried to drown out the witness by tapping loudly on his desk.

Several witnesses later, it was Barr's turn to answer questions.

It was political theatre at its lowest, with House members interrupting Barr and Barr interrupting them -- and occasionally making sarcastic remarks.

Democrats brought out examples of Barr's seeming to do the President's bidding.

About dropping charges about Michael Flynn, the decision that led four prosecutors to resign? The FBI investigation had been so problematic, Barr said, that he didn't believe the facts supported the charges.

About Roger Stone's short sentence? “I agree the president's friends don’t deserve special breaks," Barr said, but they didn't deserve harsher treatment either. "Sometimes that is a different decision to make.”

At one point, Rep Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) showed a Trump memo threatening to "activate" Barr as if Barr was a tool in Trump's hands. Barr managed not to respond.

Jayapal asked Barr why he sent Federal troops to quell left-leaning protests but did not react against right-wing protesters.

She reminded Barr that protester "swarmed" the Michigan state capitol, carrying guns, displaying swastikas, Confederate flags, and a dark-haired doll, meant to represent the governor, with a noose around its neck, and called for the Governor to be lynched, shot, and beheaded.

Barr said he hadn't heard about the incident.

Barr's repeated interruptions seemed to be attempts to keep Jayapal from speaking. The exchange between the two got so heated that Jayapal at one point said she was starting to lose her temper.

Ultimately, Barr responded to almost every assertion by the House by disputing well-documented facts, saying he didn't remember, giving the incident a different spin, or all three. It was a performance of breathtaking cynicism.

Do you think the hearing will lead to any action on the part of the House? Is it even possible to get a usable response from someone who will not even agree on the facts of a well-documented incident? In what other ways can Democrats try to change Barr’s behavior or to remove Barr from his post? "William Barr - Caricature" by DonkeyHotey is licensed under CC BY 2.0



https://thehill.com/homenews/house/509465-democrats-blister-barr-during-tense-hearing?fbclid=IwAR0w3bClupK2ojo-7qk9QS7UtlGvaUe6GwIalPpS0EwzWxwSRn159RRcKxI
https://www.cnn.com/videos/politics/2020/07/28/pramila-jayapal-bill-barr-lafayette-park-vpx.cnn
https://news.yahoo.com/house-barr-hearing-gohmert-tapping-interrupt-video-181642446.html

The Threat of Violence No Longer Hides in the Shadows

July 28, 2020


Partisan violence erupted in Tyler, Texas on Sunday, as counterprotesters carrying guns, Confederate flags, and bullhorns flooded a rally organized by a Democratic candidate for Congress. Cattle rancher Hank Gilbert is making a long-shot bid in a deep-red district, a district that Republican Louie Gohmert has held for eight terms.

Left, a counterprotester with White tattooed on one arm and "Pride" on the other.
Right, Gilbert's campaign manager, post-rally. 
Gilbert's rally was for supporters demon-strating against the Federal crackdown in Portland. The invaders, more numerous than the Gilbert supporters, arrived en-masse from a nearby "Blue Lives Matter" event that was scheduled in haste in response to Gilbert's rally. The counterprotesters wore MAGA hats and carried Trump-Pence signs. Many had White Pride tattoos. They used bullhorns to drown out Gilbert's speakers.

Video clips show Gohmert supporters shouting and pushing Gilbert's campaign manager into a wall that appears to be a marble monument. Another Gilbert supporter was punched in the 
Hank Gilbert, Democratic candidate 
breast, and another was choked in a one-hand hold and also pushed against the monument. Other, less consequential skirmishes broke out elsewhere in the crowd as well.

"The Tyler police were idly driving around the square in their patrol cars and waving at the counterprotesters," Gilbert said. As of late afternoon Monday, no charges have been filed. Gilbert has asked the FBI to look into the incident.

Asked for a comment, Gohmert responded with Trump-style verve. “I have no firsthand knowledge of what went on, 
Rep. Louie Gohmert. Trump 
calls him a "warrior."


because I was not there, did not organize it, didn’t know about it until it was taking place, and I was going to catch a plane back to Washington," he said.

He continued, "But what came to my mind is the violence Democrat leaders paid to create at Trump campaign events in 2016, followed by Democrats then claiming Donald Trump incited violence...There are Democrats and Marxists doing the same thing this year as well.”

Were you expecting something like this to happen? Are you expecting more such incidents? Have you been involved in protests that led to violence among the attendees? What would you do if it happened to you?




Photos from Hank Gilbert for Congress Facebook page and Gohmert for Congress website. 

Monday, July 27, 2020

Trump Invades Portland, Tear-Gasses Moms

July 22, 2020



Here was a crowd of protesters numbering almost a thousand. Over there were Trump's "federal" troops -- a de facto private police force. In the middle, a line of moms in yellow T shirts with their hands in the air, singing. They were tear gassed, along with dads who came with them.

The same night, the same federal thugs had no problem beating up a shambling bear of a middle-aged Navy vet who was there merely to talk to them -- to remind the veterans among them of their oath. Christopher David stood there and let them beat him and injure his hand severely until a faceful of pepper-spray forced him to walk away.

There is a line of civility that few governments will cross in public. Tear gassing peaceful protestors used to be one of them. Beating nonviolent protesters did too. Both defy our Constitutional right to peaceably assemble. 

The Denver police used flashbangs and tear gas for crowd control at a George Floyd
protest on May 30, 2020. Federal troops used similar tactics on the ""wall of moms."



  We've seen it from local police forces since George Floyd died of suffocation under a policeman's knee. According to ProPublica.org, some 40 cities have vowed to make changes in how police perform their jobs.

But that was not in response to the overly forceful treatment of protesters who have merely made the police nervous. That remains an obvious problem. ProPublica outlines several recent incidents.

The Civil Rights movement made progress, in part, because of outrage, particularly from the violence caught on film and broadcast across America. The outrage of brutality by Alabama troopers, clubbing peaceful protestors, including John Lewis, at the Edmond Pettus Bridge.

They were fighting Jim Crow. Today, we're fighting for freedoms we thought we already had, rights guaranteed in the Constitution. The time for outrage against federal overreach is now.

Are there better, more peaceful ways to manage large groups of protesters? Do you see any clear-cut line between what can be allowed and what should never be? What will you do?

The Worst of Times for a Presidential Election


7/25/2020 


The hanging-chad debacle of 2000 already messed up one presidential election. Now it looks as if it's ready to ruin another. If it does, the country will face a crisis like no other.

Audry as a wee lass.
Since then, election officials in at least 14 states have turned to paperless, electronic voting systems that have proven imperfect. Pratfall-making, even. In the 2020 primaries, problems with Iowa Democrats' mobile voting app made Florida's 2000 problems look quaint. California, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Georgia all had voting nightmares. With a few exceptions, the voting problems differ from one system to another, so that November 3 threatens to create individual "Little Shops of Horrors" across the country. Election day could see a thousand Audreys bloom.*

When the polls close, we could face a truly scary situation. Remember the aftermath of the butterfly ballots? While Democrats hesitated, Republican political fixer Jim Baker bused in angry young men from other states. Their task was to intimidate haggard vote-counters in precinct offices who were eyeballing individual paper ballots to figure out what voters' intentions had been. With surly protesters filling precinct lobbies (and worse), some election officials simply gave up and called the votes for George W. Bush. 

And remember, all that was in ONE county in Florida -- not 14 states whose election systems are still vulnerable to incursions from Russian and Chinese hackers. Add to that the voting by mail, which relies on the Postal System, whose new head, a Trump donor, declares that he plans to slow down deliveries. Around a third of poll workers, who typically volunteer year after year, are too old and vulnerable to COVID-19 to serve in this pandemic, and because there are fewer volunteers, there will be fewer places to vote. Even then,  those manning the polls may include more inexperienced newcomers.

Little Audrey, all growed up and hungry for blood.
This year, we have a uniquely divided electorate and a uniquely corrupt president who hints frequently that he "may or may not" accept the election results. Many of the nation's loudest gun owners and right wingnuts are in Trump's camp, and his base has become ever more resistant to hearing information that they find disagreeable. These are the folks who think COVID-19 is a hoax and wearing masks is an assault on their freedom. Meanwhile, foreign hackers have focused on undermining Americans' faith in the electoral system and in each other. An inconclusive vote could lead to ... nothing good.

“My biggest concern for the fall election is an election administrator’s job," Washington’s Republican secretary of state told author Graff. "[It] is to convince the losers that they lost.” 

Does the upcoming election scare you? What would you do if Trump disputes the election results? Would you believe the result if Trump won?



*Little Shop of Horrors was a Broadway show and film that centered on a blood-drinking, meat-eating plant (like a Venus flytrap) named Audrey. (Spoiler alert!) Yes, it ate people.

Photo, young Audrey: Ahem. The origin of this photo is lost in the mists of time.
Photo, grown-up Audrey: https://www.moviefone.com/2016/12/17/little-shop-of-horrors-facts/

 

8/28/21 Once Again, the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally is a COVID19 Super-Spreader

In 2020, the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally was linked to 649 COVID19 cases in 29 states, a CDC study said. In 2021, the rally did much the same t...