192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
Brand X
 
  5  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 04:11 am
https://scontent-iad3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/93654214_10158068043116341_5038600179897335808_n.jpg?_nc_cat=103&_nc_sid=110474&_nc_ohc=ttcbAKSNdk4AX87nklv&_nc_ht=scontent-iad3-1.xx&oh=80a519c4782a124bb0e758fcd4eb23ab&oe=5EBE9B53
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  7  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 04:24 am
@blatham,
Ha...I asked yesterday if these maggots were armed, and yes (of course) some of them were:

Armed protesters demand an end to Michigan's coronavirus lockdown orders

As far as Trump possibly losing his job in November, it's really sort of disgusting that the only thing that breaks 'Murica's infatuation with this clown is a full scale depression with 15% of the population losing their jobs, domestic violence on the rise, countless businesses never to reopen, and the continued exploitation of the laboring class who risk their lives to keep the rest of us from starving in the dark.

https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fi.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2F6ZEkbWaBBwo%2Fhqdefault.jpg&f=1&nofb=1
snood
 
  8  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 04:56 am
Four Americans tragically die in Benghazi.

GOP: WE DEMAND JUSTICE! OMG! THIS IS A TRAVESTY! OBAMA DID IT AND HILLARY ATE THEIR SOULS! INVESTIGATE FOREVER! WE CARE!!

Over 32,000 Americans tragically die from COVID-19 due to criminal negligence.

GOP: People die every day.
blatham
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 05:19 am
@hightor,
The Michigan crowd featured the typical fat, bearded, pickup truck drivin' old dipshits with machine guns and Confederate flags. In another locale, the Proud Boys were out and blocking a road ambulances needed open to get to the hospital.

And to your final graph, I really have trouble marshaling language that duplicates my disgust with a culture that deems itself Christian and pro-life and behaves 180 degrees opposite of that.

0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  5  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 05:20 am
@snood,
You got it, snood.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 05:47 am
Just wish to say how saddened I am by this callous disregard for an honest man's liberty
Quote:
Judge Denies Roger Stone’s Bid for a New Trial

The judge rejected the defense’s argument of juror bias in a politically fraught case in which President Trump publicly attacked his friend’s conviction.
NYT
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  2  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 06:03 am
@MontereyJack,
It's even worse than you know.

Quote:
As of September 30, 2015, 183 illicit cross-border tunnels have been discovered in the United States since Fiscal Year 1990.


Source at Wikipedia

Here, I'll do the math for our conservative members--that's one new tunnel every two months over the last 30 years.
blatham
 
  2  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 06:19 am
@Setanta,
Could just be Morlock infrastructure.
blatham
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 06:38 am
Trump’s denial of his coronavirus failings will be “one of the biggest propaganda battles in American history”

Americans are scared and confused about how to respond to the coronavirus pandemic. That’s only going to get worse, journalism critic Jay Rosen explains...

The Trump-era information gap

Peter Kafka
There’s a giant gap in the way the American public perceives or has perceived the pandemic. That split is both across political divides and across news consumption divides. Are you surprised in any way to see what we’re seeing today?

Jay Rosen
No.

Peter Kafka
We have talked about this sort of gap for several years. But did you imagine that this would manifest in a literal life-and-death crisis like this?

Jay Rosen
No, I never imagined a crisis like this. I did, like lots of other people, worry about what would happen in a truly serious event, combined with the Trump presidency. But I was thinking a war, a terrorist attack, a natural disaster of epic proportion, something like that.

But something like this, which affects everyone and is invisible and takes both science and imagination to understand — which I think is a very interesting point for us to discuss — I never conceived of something like this.

Peter Kafka
There have been many failures. I think one of them, for a lot of people — and I include myself here — is a failure of imagination, a failure to see this coming, even though people have literally made books and movies about this for years.

Jay Rosen
This possibility was talked about a lot. And warnings for the virus began early, and so there was plenty of information that it was going to become important.

But what I meant by imagination is something additional to that, which is: In order to understand what is happening now, in order to be informed, you need not only good information, reliable information, but you need imagination to see what it is.

Peter Kafka
Imagination buttressed with science ...

Jay Rosen
Yeah. That’s why [Dr. Anthony] Fauci and others say if it sounds like it’s too much, it’s just enough.

But it’s an incredibly difficult thing to tell people about, because unlike a hurricane or even a war, [the virus] is completely abstract. So that’s one of the challenges that journalists faced.

Peter Kafka
Right. You can’t see it until you either have it or you’re looking at someone who has it. Even now, one of the things that strikes me — and you see this manifesting on Twitter — is that even now when there are [thousands] of people who have died, because so much of it is happening in a hospital, or in someone’s house or en route to the hospital, that you’re not seeing it.

And while there’s plenty of reporting from inside hospitals ... in terms of visuals, you’re still not seeing it. And so you end up with scenes like people on Twitter saying they’re going to the Elmhurst Hospital in Queens to see if they can see these lines with people.

Jay Rosen
That’s a whole meme now — go to your hospital and take video of nothing happening so that you can own the libs.

Confusion and doubt as a strategy
Peter Kafka
Are you tracking the percentage of people who say they are worried [or] not worried, and how that’s evolving over time and what their sources of information are? It seems like it has changed over time, in part because at various times the president has said this is a serious thing, after saying it was not a serious thing.

Jay Rosen
Yeah. And this coheres with political science findings from long ago, that public opinion does follow what political leaders and party leaders are saying.

The recognition that there’s a reality there, that this thing is happening, it’s real, it’s not a story, it’s not a fake — I think that has grown. But as that has grown, so has the attempt to escape responsibility for that.

And I think this is a really important point that I’ve been trying to make: The fight to keep Americans from understanding what happened from December to March is going to be one of the biggest propaganda battles in American history. Because so much of it is public. We have so many statements from Trump minimizing the danger. So many things are already on the record.

The Republican Party and the Trump campaign and the MAGA coalition are going to have to produce confusion and doubt on a scale that is unlike anything you’ve ever seen before. And that, of course, is going to be a huge challenge for the press.

But it’s much more than the press: I think the fight to interpret what happened in those first three months as someone else’s fault and to persuade Americans that it wasn’t Trump’s responsibility — when there are so many things on the record, like “giving myself a 10 out of 10” or “this is going to go away, it’ll just magically disappear.” All those things are going to have to be overridden somehow. And that is going to put a huge strain on the information system.


Peter Kafka
In the pre-Trump era, any politician, let alone the president, who not only said this once but downplayed the virus multiples times — made a whole series of statements that were then not rebutted but actually refuted — that would be the end of the story. Right? It’s all on tape. We know what it is. There’s no doubt about it. There’s no debate.

In the Trump era, sadly, we’ve become used to the idea that Trump can say something on live TV in front of everyone and then is actually able to make it go away, magically. And that there is a significant chunk of the population that either will never hear it or refuse to believe it or doesn’t care.

So you’re describing a fight to come. But it seems like in some ways, this won’t be a fight: Both sides will already be resigned to either believe Trump or not believe Trump. Is there any reason to believe it’s different this time?

Jay Rosen
I think that’s a little oversimplified.

The Trump base will believe anything that he believes, and there’s already polling data indicating that his core supporters trust Trump as a source of information far more than they trust the news media or any other institution. So for that group, yes.

Then, of course, there’s a large group of Trump doubters, who are also, not coincidentally, more likely to think that the mainstream media can be trusted as a source of information.

But there are people who are in neither of those camps. I wouldn’t call them centrist. I wouldn’t try to characterize their ideology. But they’re not in either one of those camps. And for those people, the key for the Trump campaign is to create confusion, not belief. And that’s what we’re going to see in the months ahead: the massive effort to create doubt and confusion about things that are overwhelmingly clear from the public record.

Peter Kafka
One side says this. The other side says that. I can’t make up my mind; I’m going to either ignore it or shrug my shoulders.

Jay Rosen
Yeah, it’s already happening. Like, [New York City Mayor] Bill de Blasio does not have a great record in himself and warning his public. He went to the gym way after it was too dangerous to do that. And so there is some responsibility there, right? Compared to Trump’s responsibility, it’s, you know, small. But it’s real.

That kind of fact is going to interact with on the one hand/on the other hand journalism. And they’re going to try and, of course, blow that up.

Another thing that has already started happening is people keep sending me this graphic. I don’t know who created it, but I’ll send it to you. That is all the headlines from various sources that minimized the virus, that said it’s not going to be that big of a deal — some similar things to what Trump said.

The attempt is to say that it was the “MSM” — a term I don’t use, but they do — it was the mainstream media that misled us.

Why didn’t the media do better?
Peter Kafka
I did want to ask you about that. Do you think the mainstream media — I’ll use the term — could have done a better job of raising the alarm earlier?

Jay Rosen
Probably, yes. As with other very big crises, like the 2008 economic crisis, you can go back and you can find reports that gave the appropriate warnings. But the overall tone of the coverage did not accomplish that.

I think the same thing will be true here. There are definitely reports — quite a few — that said this thing is bigger than the political system seems to be acknowledging. And then even before this particular virus arose, the possibility of a global virus like this, having this kind of effect, was very well known and discussed quite a bit.

So there is some responsibility there from the news media. But the news media of course isn’t one organism.

Peter Kafka
I’ve been thinking about this for a while. I think there are probably two different reasons that the media, broadly, was not more alarmist about this. One is a sincere desire not to be alarmist — in general, and specifically over a health crisis. If you’re telling people this is going to be terrible, and you quote people who are stocking up on food, you can have a run on markets.

Jay Rosen
I think it would be part of the reason that you didn’t see kind of a “Time out, nothing else matters. Pay attention to this.” That would be one reason.

But another way to look at it would be if the president and the White House [were] hair on fire about this, there is no doubt there would be media coverage of the same type. So that’s a factor as well.

There’s a lot of resistance to reporting on something that is a possibility.

Peter Kafka
But the other thing is that for many journalists, this reporting involved going to health experts — often the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] or the WHO [World Health Organization], or people like that — and saying, “What should we think about this?” and then reporting what they say.

Health Organization], or people like that — and saying, “What should we think about this?” and then reporting what they say.

Now we’re seeing that, in some cases, those institutions themselves were behind in sounding the alarm, being more vocal about the alarm, and some of their advice and prognostications have changed.

And it seems like that would pose a real challenge if you are a good reporter, and you go to what is supposedly a nonpartisan institution staffed with experts, and they’re saying this is our view — that it’d be very hard for you to run against that.

Jay Rosen
I agree with that. Journalism scholars say that news reporters are dependent on “authorized knowers.” This would be a very good example of that. When the authorized knowers aren’t making a big deal of something, it’s extremely difficult for journalists to do that.

“News” is a fundamental problem for the news
Peter Kafka
What do you make of the Ben Thompson argument that this is why Twitter was particularly valuable? Because you had all sorts of experts on Twitter — sometimes they weren’t sanctioned by the CDC, sometimes they were smart people in Silicon Valley — and they’ve had insight and we should have listened to them more than the CDC or the WHO at various points?

Jay Rosen
Well, if the question is the availability of information that warned us that this was coming — yes, that information was available. And you could find it in part by doing your own research. That’s true.

But the problem is not really the availability of good information that turned out to be right and important. It’s the combination of good information and public attention.

Peter Kafka
Which is kind of the job of the media. To contextualize that information and to put it out.

Jay Rosen
Yes, and to order things. This is one of the problems we have with our news system. The news tends to be, to use a colloquial expression, “one damn thing after another.” And what it’s not that good at — even though people say that front pages do this — it’s not that good at helping us organize stories in order of priority.

Like telling us what’s most important to worry about. And next most important, and maybe third or fourth. And keeping those priorities both stable, in the sense that they don’t change day to day, but also be able to evolve as big events evolve. We don’t really have anything like that. And so it tends to be one damn thing after another.

If you just think about producing today’s news, then a sense of hierarchy, a sense of relative importance, disappears from the flow of content. This is a big problem with our news system. It’s not the fault of any one journalist or any one news organization. It’s a problem with relying on news for our knowledge.

Peter Kafka
But there are hierarchies. There’s the top of the newscast. If you know how to interpret the New York Times, you know that the story on the far right is the most important even though it may be under a smaller headline than the rest of the page. That is part of the job of media, right? Packaging that and ordering it?

Jay Rosen
Yes. But that tends to be a little bit different than what I said. That’s “here’s the most important new thing that happened today.”

But some things are not new, but they are the most important thing. So some things are persistent and still the most important thing today. And when you have things like that, where actually the news of the day doesn’t change the fact that you should be worried about X, Y, and Z first — that’s where the system breaks down.

Does this get better?
Peter Kafka
I want to come back to the original idea here that I had when I was talking to you, which was: Is there anything we can do about a partisan divide and a news source divide that is now literally a life-and-death situation? Is there any practical solution to this problem today in 2020?

Jay Rosen
Well, as the reality of the virus grows and everyday life is affected and people have extremely practical questions like, “What do I do? How do I protect my family?” the news at the local level becomes extremely important because people need to know where to go, what to do.

So it’s possible that local news providers will experience kind of a rebirth of both use and trust from the many questions and crises that arise from this situation.

And a relationship with a local news provider is basic to how people develop trust in journalism and in the news media as an institution. And so if people’s connection to local news providers is strengthened by this — which does happen sometimes in civic emergencies, like hurricanes, for example — that could change things a little bit.

I don’t think it’s going to change opinion at the level of Fox versus NBC and Trump versus Jonathan Karl. It doesn’t touch that. But reestablishing trust and utility with local publics could help journalism quite a lot.

Peter Kafka
That would be great. And it would be great if we have local news outlets that are still around to perform that function.

Jay Rosen
Well, this is part of the problem. Those newsrooms are themselves impoverished. And so it makes it extremely difficult. Vox

snood
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 06:55 am
Here’s a very interesting analogy:
The curve is flattening. We should lift restrictions. = The parachute has slowed the rate of descent. I should take it off.
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  2  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 06:58 am
@blatham,
Wow . . . an H. G. Wells reference--he was, though, a truly vile excuse for a human being.
izzythepush
 
  3  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:12 am
Quote:
The White House has defended Ivanka Trump's personal trip to New Jersey last week even as federal guidelines advise Americans to remain at home.

The president's eldest daughter and her family travelled from Washington DC to the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster to celebrate Passover.

"Her travel was not commercial," the White House said. "She chose to spend a holiday in private with her family."

Both the nation's capital and New Jersey are under stay-at-home orders.

Shortly ahead of her trip, Ms Trump, who is a senior adviser to the president, had told her Twitter followers: "Those lucky enough to be in a position to stay at home, please, please do so."

Last week, Scotland's chief medical officer resigned after similar travel during the pandemic.

Dr Catherine Calderwood had apologised for taking two trips to her second home and initially said she planned to continue in the role, but quit on Sunday.

She had earlier been given a police warning for breaking the lockdown rules after photographs emerged of Dr Calderwood and her family visiting Earlsferry in Fife - more than an hour's drive from her main family home in Edinburgh.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-52317673
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:13 am
@layman,
But not higher than Chicago, LA, Houston, but oddly enough you were wrong about the murder rate in London -

"Further, using annual statistics for 2017, New York has a significantly higher homicide rate than London, with New York recording 3.4 homicides per 100,000 people whereas London recorded 1.2. More significantly, London's murder rate in 2017 is still well below the peak in 2003."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_London
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  4  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:15 am
@layman,
That a massaged conclusion to partial figures. Go for a year.

Cherry pick the statistics like that and I can "prove" your home town is the murder capital of the planet.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  5  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:16 am
Late Night Says State Protesters Are Barking Up the Wrong Flagpole

Quote:

One protester in Michigan misspelled “governor” on her sign, which Jimmy Kimmel said “showed us how important it is that we do get schools open ASAP.”

“If you’re curious what all that schmutz on the window there is,” Kimmel said, pointing to a photo of Ohioans screaming into the closed State Capitol, “that is the coronavirus. Yes, so well done.”


“The real problem is you can’t make Americans do anything. We just won’t. If you tell us to do something, we won’t do it. We only exist because someone tried to make us pay extra for tea once.” — JIMMY KIMMEL

“I’m sure that convinced the legislators. [imitating legislator] You know, the medical data doesn’t back up an early reopen, but I heard some sound policy ideas from Lady Flag Screamer and Guy in a ‘Purge’ Mask.” — STEPHEN COLBERT

“Angry Trump supporters were also at Michigan's State Capitol, where they blocked traffic and honked their horns in a protest called ‘Operation Gridlock.’ Who are you gridlocking? There’s nobody else out there. Blocking empty streets is like streaking in your shower — it doesn’t count!” — STEPHEN COLBERT

“The event had the feel of a free-floating Trump rally. Protesters carried Trump flags, MAGA signs, even Confederate flags — because nothing says ‘Never surrender’ like a Confederate flag.” — STEPHEN COLBERT
izzythepush
 
  2  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:17 am
Brief excerpt of a much longer article, considerably more at link.

Quote:
How did the biggest cluster in the US emerge in a corner of South Dakota? Infections spread like wildfire through a pork factory and questions remain about what the company did to protect staff.

By 15 April, when Smithfield finally closed under pressure from the South Dakota governor's office, the plant had become the number one hotspot in the US, with a cluster of 644 confirmed cases among Smithfield employees and people who contracted it from them. In total, Smithfield-related infections account for 55% of the caseload in the state, which is far outpacing its far more populous Midwestern neighbour states in cases per capita. According to the New York Times, the Smithfield Foods case numbers have surpassed the USS Theodore Roosevelt naval ship and the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois.

Those figures were released one day after the first Smithfield employee died in hospital.

"He got that virus there. He was very healthy before," his wife, Angelita, told the BBC in Spanish. "My husband will not be the only one to die."

The Smithfield pork plant, located in a Republican-led state that is one of five in the US that has not issued any kind of shelter-in-place order, has become a microcosm illustrating the socioeconomic disparities laid bare by the global pandemic. While many white-collar workers around the country are sheltering in place and working from home, food industry workers like the employees at Smithfield are deemed "essential" and must remain on the front lines.

"These jobs for essential workers are lower paying than the average job across America, in some cases by significant margins. So home health aides, cashiers - absolutely essential, on the front lines, have to physically report to work," said Adie Tomer, a fellow at the Brookings Institute. "They are more predominantly African American or Hispanic than the overall working populations."

The workforce at Smithfield is made up largely of immigrants and refugees from places like Myanmar, Ethiopia, Nepal, Congo and El Salvador. There are 80 different languages spoken in the plant. Estimates of the mean hourly wage range from $14-16 an hour. Those hours are long, the work is gruelling, and standing on a production line often means being less than a foot away from your co-workers on either side.

The BBC spoke to half a dozen current and former Smithfield employees who say that while they were afraid to continue going to work, deciding between employment and their health has been an impossible choice.

"I have a lot of bills. My baby's coming soon - I have to work," said one 25-year-old employee whose wife is eight months pregnant. "If I get a positive, I'm really worried I can't save my wife."


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-52311877
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:25 am
@Setanta,
My ability to separate the art and the artist is quite robust. It's not absolute, mind you. I simply would not now be able to attend to the film oeuvre of Stormy Daniels. The people she allowed between her legs! What ghastly taste.

Boy, it's long ago now but The Time Machine might have been my introduction to the science fiction genre. I actually think of the film version quite often, particularly it's portrayal of future automobiles. This still catches my attention - the latest version of West World, for example, and I'm tossed back to viewing the original Time Machine movie where they just got the next year's models from Chevrolet or Cadillac that viewers wouldn't see for several months.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  0  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:29 am
@hightor,
Thanks. I needed that.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 07:59 am
I think the Trump campaign should insert this into his re-election campaign. It's right on brand.

0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Fri 17 Apr, 2020 11:23 am
@snood,
Quote:

Over 32,000 Americans tragically die from COVID-19 due to criminal negligence.

Criminal negligence on China's part, not Trump.
 

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