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Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Jun, 2024 06:54 am
Obviously this is one of ours, but for Tory read Republican, and the daleks still seem a better option.



0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Jun, 2024 11:12 am
Blair was worst prime minister, not me, says Liz Truss

Former prime minister claims instead that three-time election winner Tony Blair was worst leader UK has ever had

Quote:
A defiant Liz Truss has insisted she was not the worst prime minister – as she handed the unwanted accolade to Tony Blair.

The 48-year-old, Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister, oversaw the disastrous mini-Budget in 2022 that sent the markets into freefall during her 49 days in office.

However, the South West Norfolk MP has claimed that three-time election winner Tony Blair was instead the worst leader the country had ever had.

In an interview with her local newspaper, Ms Truss also again refused to accept responsibility for her downfall, blaming “unelected officials” in the Bank of England and other forces for her exit from No 10.

“I campaigned in a leadership election on policies that got the support of Conservative party members, policies that in my view were the right policies. I was thwarted in delivering that,” she told the Eastern Daily Press.

https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/05/29/22/9b0e7e575b64ea459f2eb5fc80a00f5dY29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzE3MTAyNjIx-2.69452671.jpg?quality=75&width=640&auto=webp

Liz Trus went down in history as Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister when she resigned on 20 October 2022 (PA Archive)

“People criticise politicians who say something and then don’t deliver it – I would never do that. I am truthful. I believe what I am doing and I follow through on that.”

She added: “We have a problem in this country that someone elected on a mandate can’t deliver that mandate because the unelected state don’t want to deliver it. We need to change the way Britain is governed.”

Ms Truss, who has claimed her efforts to cut taxes were “sabotaged” by the “deep state”, said: “The worst prime minister in recent years is Tony Blair who created things like the Equality Act, the Human Rights Act and the Climate Change Act.”

She will be defending a majority of 26,195 at the general election but has been cited as one of the Tory figureheads at risk of losing their seats with Labour commanding a double-digit lead in most opinion polls.

Ms Truss held the seat since 2010 but faces stiff competition from independent candidate James Bagge, a former Conservative, and Toby McKenzie, Reform’s candidate.

Mr Bagge, a lawyer and ex-army officer, was among prominent local Conservatives who resigned from the party in protest at Ms Truss’s selection as its candidate for the seat by Tory HQ.

Rishi Sunak was last week urged to deselect Ms Truss after she appeared on a “far-right” platform founded by a commentator Carl Benjamin who joked about raping an MP, promoting her book, Ten Years to Save the West.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Jun, 2024 12:16 pm
@hightor,
Lis Truss is barking mad.
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Jun, 2024 09:24 pm
@izzythepush,
From wikipedia:
Quote:
When Truss was 12 she and her family spent a year in Burnaby, British Columbia, where she attended Parkcrest Elementary School whilst her father taught at Simon Fraser University.

That's when I was studying at SFU. I should have looked him up and warned him. Sorry, mate.
0 Replies
 
Region Philbis
 
  2  
Reply Tue 4 Jun, 2024 02:02 am

enjoy Colbert...



Very Happy


0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Tue 4 Jun, 2024 03:32 am
Quote:
The fallout from the New York jury’s conviction of Donald Trump on 34 felony counts last Thursday, May 30, continues. Trump’s team continues to insist that the guilty verdict will help him, but that’s nonsensical on its face: if guilty verdicts are so helpful, why has he moved heaven and earth to keep the many other cases against him from going to trial? And why are he and House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) calling for the Supreme Court to overturn the convictions?

As political consultant Stuart Stevens put it: “I worked in five presidential races and helped elect Republican governors or Senators in over half the country. I have never heard anything more transparently desperate than a party trying to spin that there is some non-MAGA pool of voters who can't wait to vote for a convicted felon.”

On Friday, Morning Consult conducted a poll to gauge how voters were reacting to the guilty verdict. It showed that 54% of registered voters approved of it, while only 34% disapproved. Perhaps worse for Trump was that 49% of Independents and 15% of Republicans thought he should end his campaign. A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 10% of registered Republican voters and 25% of Independents said that his conviction made it less likely that they would vote for him for president.

Then, on Saturday, there was what Danny Westneat of the Seattle Times called a plot twist. It turns out the state of Washington has a law on the books that prevents felons from running for office. But because a candidate has to be certified to be on a ballot before they can be challenged, the issue can’t be resolved until Trump officially becomes the Republican Party’s presidential nominee at the July convention. Westneat asked, “Republicans: You sure you want to go down this road?”

On Sunday, Trump appeared on Fox and Friends for his first interview since his conviction. The interview was heavily edited, suggesting his comments were problematic in some way, but what was there was still bad enough. He repeated his plans to fire generals who refuse to do his bidding and to deport immigrants by using local police to round them up. Notably, considering his own looming sentencing, he claimed he never said “lock her up” about Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, a claim that reporters on social media promptly shredded with video clips of him doing exactly that.

Media figures are puncturing Trump’s image. The verdict buried a story by The Apprentice producer Bill Pruitt, who is now free of a nondisclosure agreement, explaining how he and others created an illusion that Trump was a successful businessman and alleging that Trump used the n-word on set. On Saturday, an image circulated on social media of Trump leaving Trump Tower and waving as if to a crowd, but there was no one there.

Also on Saturday, top sports talk host Colin Cowherd pushed back on the idea that the trial was rigged, telling his listeners: “If everybody in your circle is a felon, maybe it’s not rigged. Maybe the world isn’t against you.” “Donald Trump is now a felon,” Cowherd said. “His campaign chairman was a felon. So is his deputy campaign manager, his personal lawyer, his chief strategist, his National Security Adviser, his Trade Advisor, his Foreign Policy Adviser, his campaign fixer, and his company CFO. They’re all felons. Judged by the company you keep. It’s a cabal of convicts.”

Cowherd went on: “[Trump’s] trying to sell me an America that doesn’t exist.” “Stop trying to sell me on ‘everything’s rigged, the country’s falling into the sea, the economy’s terrible,’” he continued. “The America that I live in is imperfect. But compared to the rest of the world, I think we’re doing okay.”

This morning, Robert Faturechi, Justin Elliott, and Alex Mierjeski of ProPublica reported that Trump’s businesses and campaign committees have funneled significant financial benefits to at least nine witnesses in the criminal campaigns against Trump, often at crucial moments in the legal proceedings. The pay of one campaign aide doubled; another got a $2 million severance package that barred him from cooperating with law enforcement. The daughter of one of the campaign’s top officials was hired onto the staff and is now the fourth-highest-paid employee, with a salary of $222,000. Payments to the companies of certain witnesses dramatically increased.

Faturechi, Elliott, and Mierjeski note that it is not uncommon for bosses to find themselves defendants, complicating their relationship with employees who might have witnessed alleged crimes. In such cases, lawyers advise the defendant not to provide any unusual benefits or penalties, to avoid the appearance of witness tampering.

Trump’s attorney, David Warrington, sent ProPublica a cease-and-desist letter saying that if the outlet and its reporters “continue their reckless campaign of defamation, President Trump will evaluate all legal remedies.” He demanded that ProPublica kill the article, keeping it from publication.

And then, this afternoon, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams, along with the U.S. Department of Labor and the State Department, unsealed an indictment charging Weidong Guan, also known as Bill Guan, the chief financial officer of the global news outlet The Epoch Times, with using the outlet to launder at least $67 million. The Epoch Times is affiliated with the ultraconservative Chinese anticommunist religious group Falun Gong and supports Donald Trump and other right-wing U.S. politicians with both press and cash. It was a major promoter of Dinesh D’Souza’s film 2000 Mules that claimed the 2020 presidential election was stolen. A voter depicted in that film sued for defamation, and just last week the distributor settled with the plaintiff, issued an apology, and stopped distributing the film.

The allegation that The Epoch Times is a money-laundering operation comes on top of yesterday’s story by Joseph Menn in the Washington Post, reporting that the editor of another media site that pushes disinformation from both the far right and the far left, The Grayzone, has worked for Russia’s Sputnik as well as taken money from Iranian government-owned media. One of the people who retweets Grayzone stories is Senator Mike Lee (R-UT).

In the middle of all this bad news for MAGA Republicans, it felt like desperation today when the House Oversight Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic tried to resurrect Covid conspiracy theories against Dr. Anthony Fauci. Fauci was director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) from 1984 to 2022, serving under seven presidents. President George W. Bush awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in the U.S., for his work on combating the global AIDS epidemic.

Fauci’s position as NIAID director put him at the center of U.S. attempts to grapple with Covid-19, and for his work on developing a vaccine, Trump awarded him a presidential commendation. But first QAnon and then MAGA Republicans centered him as a villain who either started or covered up the pandemic, or forced people to mask or to get vaccines they told their supporters were unnecessary or even dangerous. QAnon conspiracy theorist Ivan Raiklin and convicted January 6 rioter Brandon Fellows were seated behind Fauci today; Fellows made pouty faces when Fauci was describing the death threats he, his wife, and his daughters have endured.

Video creator and political commentator Michael McWhorter noted that Raiklin has made dramatic threats of violence against those he considers members of “the Deep State” and that he should have been nowhere near Fauci. McWhorter also noted that the two men were likely invited to the hearing and that it would be useful to know who invited them.

Committee member Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), who has skipped seven of the last ten hearings and who has expressed sympathy for QAnon in the past, attacked Fauci by saying he should be prosecuted: “You know what this committee should be doing? We should be writing a criminal referral because you should be prosecuted for crimes against humanity,” she said. “You belong in prison, Dr. Fauci.” For all the nastiness, the hearing turned up nothing.

Later, Greene told Manu Raju of CNN that Speaker Johnson should shut down the government over the Trump verdict and prosecutions. “We're literally a banana republic. So what does it matter funding the government? The American people don't give a sh*t.”

While MAGA Republicans are insisting that a Manhattan jury’s conviction of Trump means that President Joe Biden has weaponized the Department of Justice and that they must take revenge, the trial of Biden’s son Hunter on federal gun charges, brought by a Trump-appointed U.S. attorney whom Biden kept on, started today. Former top Justice Department prosecutor Andrew Weissmann noted that Biden is “living the rule of law…in the most personal way. He is not telling DOJ to stand down…. He is not pardoning his son…. He is living what it means to have a rule of law in this country…. If you want to know if he believes it, you can actually see what is happening with his own son.”

hcr
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Tue 4 Jun, 2024 11:37 am
Heard at today at Jim Jordan lynch party for AG Garland:

Rep Swalwell: Before anyone on the other side saddles up and gets on their high legal horses, I would just like the remind the committee that the chairman is 754 days into his own subpoena defiance,
Frank Apisa
 
  3  
Reply Tue 4 Jun, 2024 12:01 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:

Heard at today at Jim Jordan lynch party for AG Garland:

Rep Swalwell: Before anyone on the other side saddles up and gets on their high legal horses, I would just like the remind the committee that the chairman is 754 days into his own subpoena defiance,


Whoa. Great retort, Swalwell.

I love it.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 01:29 am
Frog face Farage has done a U turn and will be standing as an MP in Clacton.

He's already had a milkshake thrown at him, the fascist ****.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 03:44 am
I don'tknow if anyone is interested, but Charles' face goes on banknotes today, although it will probably be a few months before we start seeing them.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 03:53 am
Trump Threatens To Sue ProPublica For Reporting On Payouts To Witnesses In His Various Cases

Quote:
ProPublica has quite a scoop of a story, highlighting how various witnesses and potential witnesses in the long list of lawsuits Donald Trump is facing, suddenly, coincidentally, seem to be getting large payouts from Trump, his companies, and his campaign.

• The benefits have flowed from Trump’s businesses and campaign committees, according to a ProPublica analysis of public disclosures, court records and securities filings. One campaign aide had his average monthly pay double, from $26,000 to $53,500. Another employee got a $2 million severance package barring him from voluntarily cooperating with law enforcement. And one of the campaign’s top officials had her daughter hired onto the campaign staff, where she is now the fourth-highest-paid employee.

These pay increases and other benefits often came at delicate moments in the legal proceedings against Trump. One aide who was given a plum position on the board of Trump’s social media company, for example, got the seat after he was subpoenaed but before he testified.

ProPublica isn’t one to publish stuff without having the receipts, and the reporting here seems pretty solid. They’re not directly accusing Trump of witness interference or bribery, but they are noting (accurately) that it all certainly looks pretty damn sketchy.

But, what’s more interesting, and relevant to Techdirt’s usual beat, is this:

Trump’s attorney, David Warrington, sent ProPublica a cease-and-desist letter demanding this article not be published. The letter warned that if the outlet and its reporters “continue their reckless campaign of defamation, President Trump will evaluate all legal remedies.”

So, first of all, Warrington presents himself on his own bio as the “lawyer to the Liberty Movement,” which is pretty ******* rich for someone threatening to sue a news org for doing journalism his client doesn’t like:
Image

No offense, but if you’re threatening SLAPP suits to silence people doing inconvenient reporting, you’re not a part of any “liberty movement”.

Of course, Trump has filed a bunch of defamation lawsuits over critical reporting in the past few years, and they’ve not gone well to date. If he followed through on this threat, it seems quite unlikely to succeed in court again, but that’s never been the point.

Trump appears to be a classic SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) filer. He sues news orgs not because he has a legitimate legal claim, but because he wants to waste time and money for anyone reporting critically on him. This is done to (1) punish those who have done that kind of reporting and (2) to scare off others from doing more such reporting.

The very first anti-SLAPP laws came about in response to property developers filing bogus SLAPP suits against people protesting development plans. So it’s perhaps not surprising that Trump, who comes from the property development world, has no problem filing SLAPP suit after SLAPP suit.

But, this is yet another reason why we need a federal anti-SLAPP law and strong anti-SLAPP laws in every state. These laws need to quickly toss such cases out of court and require the plaintiff to pay the legal fees of the defendant. Donald Trump continues to be exhibit A for why such laws are needed.

techdirt
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 04:04 am
@izzythepush,
https://i.imgur.com/sASZvbQ.jpg
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 09:30 am
@hightor,
Bravo
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 10:40 am
@blatham,
That picturehasbeen doing the rounds over here.
It's good because it's just before Farage realises what's happening and he still has his smug grin.
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 11:10 am
One may not like the guy, but the act of throwing that milkshake was a CLASSLESS act on the part of that woman. She should be ashamed of herself, but I somehow doubt she has the ethical standards necessary for shame.

Applaud it if you will, but it sucks.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 11:51 am
Remote Amazon tribe finally connects to internet — only to wind up hooked on porn, social media

A reclusive tribe in the Amazon finally got hooked up to the internet — only to be torn apart by social media and porn addiction.

Quote:
A reclusive tribe in the Amazon finally got hooked up to the internet, thanks to Elon Musk — only to be torn apart by social media and pornography addiction, elders complain.

Brazil’s 2000-member Marubo tribe has been left bitterly divided by the arrival of the Tesla founder’s Starlink service nine months ago, which connected the remote rainforest community along the Ituí River to the web for the first time.

“When it arrived, everyone was happy,” Tsainama Marubo, 73, told The New York Times. “But now, things have gotten worse. Young people have gotten lazy because of the internet, they’re learning the ways of the white people.”

The Marubo are a chaste tribe, who even frown upon kissing in public — but Alfredo Marubo (all Marubo use the same last name) said he is anxious that the arrival of the service, which delivers super-fast internet to far-flung corners of the planet and has been billed as a game-changer by Mr Musk, could up-end standards of decorum.

Alfredo said many young Marubo men have been sharing porn videos in group chats and he has already observed more “aggressive sexual behaviour” in some of them.

“We’re worried young people are going to want to try it,” he said of the kinky sex acts they’ve suddenly been exposed to on screen. “Everyone is so connected that sometimes they don’t even talk to their own family.”

Starlink works by connecting antennas to 6000 low-orbiting satellites. The necessary antennas were donated to the tribe by American entrepreneur Allyson Reneau.

Initially, the internet was heralded as a positive for the remote tribe who were able to quickly contact authorities for help with emergencies, including potentially deadly snake bites.

“It’s already saved lives,” Enoque Marubo, 40, stated.

Members are also able to share educational resources with other Amazonian tribes and connect with friends and family who now live elsewhere.

It has also opened up a world of possibilities for young Marubo, some of whom have been unable to conceptualise what lays beyond their immediate surrounds.

One teen told The Times that she now dreams of travelling of the world, while another says she aspires to become a dentist in São Paulo.

However, Enoque also complained of the significant downsides.

“It changed the routine so much that it was detrimental,” he stated. “In the village, if you don’t hunt, fish and plant, you don’t eat.”

“Some young people maintain our traditions,” TamaSay Marubo, 42, added. “Others just want to spend the whole afternoon on their phones.”

Tribespeople became so addicted that Marubo leaders, fearing that history and culture — which is passed down orally — could be lost forever, they have now limited access to the internet for two hours each morning, five hours each evening, and all day Sunday.

But parents still worry the damage may already be done.

Another father, Kâipa Marubo, said he’s anxious about his children playing violent first-person shooter games.

“I’m worried that they’re suddenly going to want to mimic them,” he stated.

Meanwhile, others say that they’ve fallen victim to internet scams given that they lack digital literacy, while many youngsters are chatting with strangers on social media.

Flora Dutra, a Brazilian activist who works with indigenous tribes, was instrumental in helping connect the Marubo to the internet.

She believes anxieties about the internet are inflated, and asserts that most tribespeople “wanted and deserved” access to the world wide web.

Still, some officials in Brazil have criticised the rollout to the remote communities, saying special cultures and customs could now be lost forever.

“This is called ethnocentrism,” Ms Dutra said of such critiques. “The white man thinking they know what’s best.”

source






0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 02:34 pm
Meanwhile, Biden has authorized US weapons to be used by Ukraine—and further authorized their use deep into Russian territory.

Putin warns him against this latest provocation, says there will be a price for this, calls the US a Russian ‘enemy’ for the first time, and says he will begin sharing weapons with enemies of the US.

That Biden diplomacy. Brilliant.
Avenues to avoid global conflagration shrink precipitously.

Biden did this intentionally.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 03:44 pm
@Lash,
Putin has been making those threats from the off.

He is as big a threat as Hitler was in the 1930s.

Trump is his puppet.
Lash
 
  0  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 06:03 pm
@izzythepush,
You certainly have the state narrative down well—of course, after 8 years of the non-stop droning, even a Brit could remember it.
blatham
 
  0  
Reply Wed 5 Jun, 2024 06:41 pm
@izzythepush,
Please ignore the troll, Izzy.
0 Replies
 
 

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