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Pravda Is Dangerous

Everyone knows that, except that an increasing number of people have forgotten. For the purpose of this piece, I’m using the word “Pravda” to refer to all fake news designed to push an agenda. For example, Fox “News” is republican Pravda. Breitbart is far right wing whackadoodle Pravda.

If you’re reading this, you know who all the right wing propagandists are so this piece is about left wing Pravda. It’s growing, and it’s making me sad. I see more and more fake “news” becoming increasingly popular on social media.

If you follow me on Facebook or Twitter, you may have realized that I never post anything from (for example) Share Blue. Why? Because they’re not journalists. Share Blue was created by the democratic establishment to push their agenda. So when you read an article on their site, you should know that they don’t exist to inform. They exist advance the DNC’s agenda.

I only share articles from credible, journalistic sources but as with everything, there are some caveats. Before I get to that, let me spell out what a “credible, journalistic source” is. It’s basically any long established newspaper in the world. Your local paper is a credible, journalistic source. They all publish news stories from the AP or Reuters and they also have opinion pieces from either syndicated columnists or local writers. Newspapers are good because the “news” section is separate from the “opinion” section so it’s harder to confuse the two than it is online. That’s not to say that credible journalistic outfits can’t have a bias. They absolutely can, which is why I read multiple different sources. A journalistic outfit’s bias usually manifests not in how they report, but what they report. The Guardian is an excellent left leaning newspaper in the UK. They’re left leaning not because they twist the news to push a lefty agenda. They’re left leaning because they tend to select stories to report on from a liberal perspective. That does not mean that the stories they publish aren’t well sourced and demonstrably accurate. They are a very reliable left leaning source.

I do share articles from credible aggregators. An example of a credible aggregator is Raw Story. Raw Story only aggregates stories that demonstrate that left is best! They do not peddle bullshit stories that are full of distortions and lies, and they always either link to, or disclose the original source of their stories.

I do occasionally share links from credible blogs that I trust because I have been reading those bloggers for years and they have a good track record of good analysis. More often than not, I will share a news story that was the basis for an interesting blog that I read. Examples of blogs that I rely on to inform myself are Empty Wheel, Digby,  David Dayen (who writes for dozens of different publications), and Driftglass (for perspective).

I absolutely stay from left wing garbage sites, some of which I’m going to list because I see them everywhere and they annoy the fuck out of me. If I see another retweet or link to the Krassenstein grifters, I’m going to scream. Please click on that link. These guys are shady as fuck. They went from profiting from some pretty heinous grifting to suddenly being “resistance leaders”. They are grifters, and I have no use for the hyperbolic bullshit that they peddle. If Trump is about to be indicted by Mueller, I’m going to wait for The Washington Post to tell me. I don’t need to get it from two shady characters who call themselves “Hill Reporters” even though they’re nowhere near the hill, not affiliated The Hill (that fine establishment mouthpiece), and they’re not fucking reporters.

Another one I despise is the click baity (and frequently wrong) Palmer Report. This guy specializes in peddling (or furthering) total bullshit about the Russia investigation. All you have to do, is look at 1 weeks worth of stories from a year or more ago to find how wrong his “news” is. But people keep sharing his crap with no regard to his track record. Credible left leaning outlets are starting to call this guy out for his bullshit. Marcy Wheeler (empthwheel) is doing some really in-depth analysis on the Russia investigation, stitching together empirical facts to tell us what’s happening and she’s got 149,000 followers on Twitter. Palmer, who appears to have no regard for the truth because that won’t get him the clicks, has 249,000 followers. WHY?

Dctribune.org is pretty new (it was just registered in Ontario, CA 4 months ago), but it’s already getting social media traction. Most of their stories are 100% baseless but they’re anti-Trump so they get shared.

Here’s what I don’t get about these sites: Trump is doing so much fakakta shit every single day, what use does anyone have for the manufactured crap? How is it possible for liberals to be on the right side of history, and still have the taint of Pravda on them?

It’s maddening, and you all need to stop it. You’re making me unnecessarily bitchy about stupid bullshit I don’t have time for.

I figured out the formula for getting millions of readers and social media followers years ago, but I don’t want to run a stupid meme factory or peddle hyperbolic headlines for clicks. If I post a tweet that says, “Melania feels bullied. I don’t care, do you” I can get thousands of retweets. But if I post an article about the fuckery in Wisconsin, 3 people will be bothered to share that link.

It’s fucking pathetic and you can’t look down at Fox News viewers if you’re peddling the same kind of crap.

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Cult Of Personality

If you are reading this, your mind immediately went to Trump and his supporters when you read the title. And yes, Trump supporters are suffering from advanced stage Cult Of Personality Disorder (or COPD) but so is just about everyone else, and it must stop. You will never, ever form rational opinions or be able to truly protect your own self interests as long as you’re susceptible to being COPDed.

Why is this on my mind? Well, it’s always on my mind but a large volume of the tweets I’ve been seeing on Twitter for the past couple of days have really highlighted the problem for me.

A couple of days ago, TMZ reported that Michael Avenatti was arrested for felony domestic violence on his ex-wife. Now I didn’t know what to think, except that I did notice that the story was light on details and that I needed more to form an opinion. We knew that Avenatti was arrested, that he bonded out, and that he vehemently denied the allegations (who wouldn’t?). Yesterday, his ex-wife came out and said that she wasn’t involved in the incident and that he had never abused her. We also found out that he wasn’t charged with a felony. So some of the story is starting to fall apart, but he was arrested so something happened. Whether that something is just an allegation or an actual crime, we don’t know. People were really fucking quick to decide that he was either being set up, or a wife beating maniac. None of those people had any more information than I did. They were all projecting the opinions they had already formed about Avenatti on this situation to create a reality that would comport with the narrative they’d already established about him.

I have to confess that it was easy for me to have no opinion on the reporting, and to want to wait for more evidence because I’m conflicted about Avenatti as it is. I freaking loved watching him throw around Trump and Michael Cohen around like rag dolls when he first entered the public sphere. He’s clearly very intelligent, and an extremely skilled attorney. And then he started to do that whole, “I’m thinking about running for president” and “the next democratic nominee needs to be a white male” crap and I realized that he’s a time bomb ticking away, destined to blow up. He’s really fucking arrogant, and entirely too cocksure about his righteousness not to implode. So I didn’t feel any sore of irrational emotional attachment to Avenatti one way or another to come to a premature conclusion about what actually happened. I’ve said this a million times, but I’m not prone to see public figures in that way.

That said, I’m still slightly susceptible to being COPDed. Slightly. When news came out about Eric Schneiderman’s history of violence with women, I was sorely disappointed. I didn’t want it to be true, but I was still in the wait-for-the-facts camp. They did come out, and I was very saddened by what I learned about him. He was one of the best AGs New York ever had. But I accepted the truth and wholeheartedly embraced the calls for his resignation.

Michael Avenatti is not your daddy. He’s also not your abusive step dad. There’s no fucking reason in the world not to wait and see what we learn. And you can all wait a few weeks for your gratification or disappointment. There’s no reason to form an opinion now. Doing so, just makes you a child. And is makes you no better than a Trump supporter.

The same thing is happening with Nancy Pelosi. Before the election, it wasn’t acceptable to criticize her because “we need to stay united until the election”. This is not the right time to talk about another speaker of the house. Now that the election is over, this same twits have made her out to be the only savior of the democratic party. She is our great leader, and she is the only person who can do this job. And if you don’t agree, it’s because of misogyny. Well, some of us want a different speaker, and we’re not misogynists. We actually have excellent reasons for wanting someone whose priorities better align with the wishes of the constituents.

When Democrats took the house in 2008, did you know anyone who didn’t want investigations into the fuckery of the George W Bush administration? I mean, those motherfuckers took us into war by lying to us. They outed a CIA agent, and did a myriad of other things that expanded the scope of executive power far beyond what the constitution lays out. Republicans gave Bush the power to essentially declare war without congressional approval, for fuck’s sake. That had to be reined in to save our democracy. But no, Nancy didn’t want to look back because anything that happened in the past isn’t a crime, and we can only look ahead. Well guess what? The path ahead was exponentially more terrifying because you didn’t want to look back. President Obama enjoyed the powers that the previous administration gave him, and he didn’t always use them wisely. That’s a different discussion. My point is that she made a huge mistake that irreparably fucked our democracy.

“But she passed the ACA, and that makes her a goddess!” She did. I’ll give her that. She fought for a better bill than what Obama and his then Chief Of Staff was willing to fight for. But precisely no one in America was clamoring for the ACA. In fact, the majority of Americans wanted (and still do) single payer (or Medicare for all). In poll after poll, Americans want either the option of buying into Medicare or straight up Medicare for all. But Nancy took that off the table before negotiations even began. So we ended up with a fakakta version of Switzerland’s (the second most expensive in the world, after the US) health care system except where the Swiss cap “administrative” costs for insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, and medical device companies at 5%, we went with a much more generous 20%. Twenty percent. Administrative costs are all of the costs that aren’t directly spent on delivering health care. They include marketing, profits, and lavish executive salaries. Medicare’s administrative costs are 4%. And unlike in Switzerland, the ACA didn’t cap profits for medical device companies or big pharma. In fact, it extended the time that drug companies can keep their drugs (which we subsidize the development of) under patent for 50% longer than they could before.

The ACA was a fakakta plan that was better than the shit show we had before. And with precisely the same number of republican votes, we could have gotten Medicare for all. At the very least, if democrats had opened negotiations with Medicare for all, we could have gotten something more robust than the ACA. But Nancy couldn’t do that because she had to protect the corporate donors.

She is very good at being Speaker. She knows how to whip votes, and she never brings a vote to the floor that she isn’t going to win. That makes her exponentially more competent than Chuck Schumer, who couldn’t even keep his caucus in line when it came to appointing a rapey, beer loving boofer to the Supreme Court. But her agenda does not support my self interests so I don’t support her.

I don’t have to make her the devil or an angel to have my opinion. She’s both very competent in the job of speaker, and very bad for me in that position. So I would be willing on taking a chance at someone who might not be as good at the job, but whose agenda doesn’t include bullshit like pay-go, which hurts me personally.

In making decisions like an adult, you have to look at all of the evidence before you (or wait for it all to come in) and then weigh the pros and cons. You do not delete the cons and overstate the pros (or vice versa) to make it easier on yourself. When that is your practice, you’re most definitely going to fall into the cult of personality disorder trap and it doesn’t matter where on the political spectrum you fall.

You can’t accuse Trumpistas of doing exactly what you’re doing.

FDR committed one of the most abhorrent atrocities in US history when he interned the Japanese and he single handedly created the middle class in America by being a traitor to his class. You have to acknowledge both of these things when deciding how you feel about him as a president. I have my thoughts, and I’m happy to have an intellectually honest discussion about him and a myriad of different people and topics.

I’m just despondent over the fact that Americans aren’t capable of this anymore. I know it’s not easy not to fall for a cult of personality, but we have to try harder.

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Kavanaugh Isn’t Going To Make It

I’m going to keep this post short and sweet. It’s unlikely at this point, that Brett Kavanaugh is going to be confirmed to the Supreme Court. Very unlikely. Not impossible, but very unlikely.

But he isn’t going to make it for all the wrong reasons.

The very fact that a political operative would even get a confirmation hearing for the highest court in the land, has already burned down any semblance of integrity in our system of checks and balances. That what Brett Kavanaugh is: a political operative. He’s not an arbiter of justice. He does not interpret the laws. He has spent his entire career focused on doing what needs to be done in order for republicans to win. Full stop.

The thin veneer that we used to cling onto between partisan and jurist is gone. This asshole actively participated in the actual witch hunt against Bill Clinton, enabled every fucked up thing that George W Bush ever did, and perjured himself three times in regard to stolen materials that he used in order to win for his team. That’s not even getting into all of his other perjury. That repeated perjury demonstrates that he has no regard for the law.

Am I delighted that history of sexual assault is going to prevent him from a lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court? Of course. But he never should have gotten a hearing. And frankly, I don’t know why the discussion is still whether he should be confirmed or not. The discussion should be around whether to start impeachment proceedings against him for the seat that he currently holds.

That’s what everyone should be talking about right now.

Republicans are acting like this is a criminal proceeding, and that Kavanaugh’s life is going to “be ruined” if he doesn’t get a lifetime appointment to the highest court in the land. Much to my dismay, this is a job interview, not a criminal prosecution.

If republicans are going to be hyperbolic about democrats taking it easy on this piece of shit, then I say that the resistance should rise up and give these assholes what they’re afraid of.

As an aside, I’d like to address all of the people who are screaming about how suspicious these “last minute” allegations are. There is no last minute. Confirmation hearings for Supreme Court justices don’t have a set amount of time in which they must be completed. They can go on for years of that’s what senators want to do. So this “deadline” is completely artificial, and has clearly been set to truncate the confirmation process of a very shady nominee. The fact that we’re starting to learn some of the reasons for why republicans are trying to rush this through doesn’t make any of this “last minute” and you shouldn’t accept that premise with anyone you’re debating about this.

Kavanaugh’s implosion does make in unlikely that the senate will confirm a nominee before the election, which means that we have to fight like hell to take back the senate. Flipping it isn’t likely, but it’s doable. For the purists out there, this means supporting less than liberal candidates because they’re still more influenceable than their republican opponents.

Here’s the summary I posted to Facebook last week:

  • Jacky Rosen is leading by 2 points in Nevada. She needs money to win this!
  • Claire McCaskill is in a tie. We need to keep this seat, even though she’s not an ideal candidate.
  • John Tester is barely leading in his race. We need to keep this seat, even though he’s not an ideal candidate.
  • Joe Donnelly is only down two pints in Indiana. He needs money to win this!
  • Kyrsten Sinema is up three points in freaking Arizona! She needs money to win this!
  • Bill Nelson is only up by one point in Florida. We needs to keep this seat, even though he’s not an ideal candidate.
  • Phil Bredesen is only down three points in TN. This one is the least likely on my list, but still totally winnable. He people to volunteer to phone bank (you can do this from any state).
  • Beto rocks, and he totally has a shot at this seat. He needs money and phone bankers to keep up the momentum.
  • Heidi Heitkamp is in trouble. We need to keep that seat. She needs money! She’s not ideal, but we have much more influence over her than we would over her opponent.

Notice how I didn’t try and sell you a bill of goods about how awesome each of these candidates are? Well, that’s because I’m not a liar for political expedience. You can trust that when I’m enthusiastic about a candidate, it’s because I truly believe that they will represent our self interests. You can also trust me when I tell you that the time for ideological purity is in the primaries. I’m a yuuuuuugggge advocate for ideological purity, when it’s logical to have those thresholds in place. That time has passed. The general election is time for pragmatism and protecting your own self interest.

So to recap:

  • Primaries = promoting your own self interest.
  • General election = protecting your own self interest.
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Blogs Vs Journalism

I recently posted the followig thread on Twitter:

Here’s the deal, #Resisters and #FBRparty people: There are a lot of fake accounts joining our ranks. But that’s okay if you REALLY know what to look for. They’re not going to turn one day and start posting pro #MAGA crap and filling your feed with that. They’re going to flood your feed with fake stories that look GOOD to you. Stories about Roger Stone’s assistant flipping, for example. You need to FACT CHECK before you retweet. Don’t retweet because you LIKE a post. dctribune.org is BOGUS!
Retweet because you KNOW it’s true. If you can’t confirm a story on a credible JOURNALISTIC (i.e.newspapers) outlet, it’s not real. If you found it on Share Blue, or Palmer told you, FACT CHECK!  If it BASICALLY looks like CNN or CBS, FACT CHECK. If it’s a site you’ve never heard of w/ words like “tribune” or “times”, FACT CHECK! Reading fake pro #maga BS isn’t going to hurt us. Sharing bogus stories will. FACT CHECK!
If you see an account repeatedly posting crap, DON’T block. Expose them. Follow their bogus stories around Twitter and nullify them. In the meantime, FOLLOW back and unite.
If you’re not on Twitter, FBR is Follow Back Resist and people have been using that hashtag to connect with other resisters. At some point bots and other opportunists very predictably seized on the opportunity to get in on the game so genuine resisters started blocking and outing the fakers. That’s what I was doing too, until I started seeing a story from dctribune.org being retweeted a lot. And not by bots. Since I always fact check stories from sites I’m unfamiliar with, I checked the story I was seeing and I couldn’t verify it anywhere. A few days later, another story from the same outlet was getting a lot of retweets. One of those retweets was from a former Obama strategist. Since I already knew this site, it took me less than two minutes to debunk this second story. Two obviously fake, seemingly left wing stories sounded off alarm bells so I did a WHOIS search on the domain. It had been registered two months ago (July 2018) by an anonymous registrant in Ontario, Canada.

Bogus.

That’s when I realized what a lot of these fake FBR accounts were actually going to do. They are going to flood the internet with Breitbart style bullshit tailor made for resistors, thereby discrediting the movement and furthering the “both sides” narrative that many republicans who have run out of ways to defend their party are currently touting.

This is a much smarter strategy than turning around one day and flooding resistors’ feeds with pro Trump bullshit.

So I’ve been sharing this information on Twitter and that thread gets a few retweets a day. But I want to expand on what I was trying to say in that thread of five tweets, because it was a lot more than just “fact check”.

I think that one of the biggest problems that has contributed to our inability to tell the difference between fake stories and real ones started very nobly (at least on the left). In about 2004, the left wing blogosphere exploded with smart, politically engaged people who were appalled by what George W Bush was doing. Back then, those blogs were largely read by other hyper-engaged people who were also appalled by what was going on. This was great for the fact based community since the main stream media mostly dared not speak truth to power.

Many of the bloggers from that era were smart, insightful, and had a gift for catching what most others missed. Marcy Wheeler, Digby, Driftglass, and Nate Silver are a few who I’m still an avid reader of. I like them for various different reasons. Marcy Wheeler has established herself to be an expert researcher on national security issues and she’s my go-to for analysis on the Mueller investigation. Digby and Driftglass are people who make me think about things that I may not have considered, and you all know why Nate Silver is on the list.

My point is that I’m a big fan of and advocate for blogs. They are a great way to help you think about the news that you’ve read in a way that maybe didn’t occur to you. But I don’t confuse blogs with journalism, and I don’t replace my consumption of journalistic articles with blogs. A blogger isn’t going out and speaking with sources, double checking the information that those sources has provided, and breaking well sourced news. Bloggers don’t have any standards for journalistic integrity and verification.

The best blogs with a history of established credibility share their perspectives about the facts presented to them by credible news sources. The worst make shit up for a small audience who enjoy consuming a steady diet of shit (a la Bteitbart). So when you’re reading a really worthwhile blog (obviously the way you’re doing right now), know that you’re getting perspective content. I link to every source I rely on to give you my perspective but you should read my page, fully cognizant of the fact that you’re reading a perspective piece.

You should not confuse this site with The Guardian, Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, McClatchy or any of the other journalistic outfits I rely on to formulate my opinions.

I really believe that the conflation of perspective media with journalism has played a big part in confusing people so much that they can’t tell the difference between fake news and real news. When a top level democratic strategist is retweeting total bullshit, that tells me that no one is immune.

Here are a few of the things I do to keep myself in check:
  • I DO NOT block out people who I don’t agree with on everything. I often get people on my Facebook or Twitter pages who want to let me know that they “like my stuff”, but this is just unacceptable so “I’m unfollowing you”. Good. You’re too stupid to follow me and if your opinions are so fragile that they can’t handle exposure to differing opinions, you won’t be contributing anything valuable to my page anyway.
  • I follow a significant (maybe half) percentage of people who post things I don’t agree with. Not crazy bullshit like Pizzagate but (for example) Hillary supporters who still bash Bernie on a regular basis. Why? First, because I’m very confident in my decision to support Bernie in the primaries. I made a well researched, reasoned and unemotional decision based on my own self interest. Nothing that anyone who made a different decision has to say is going to make me melt or hurt my fee fees. Secondly, maybe we can have a discussion and have a meeting of the minds on some things. Or not. My point is that if you can’t talk to people who are on a different part of the spectrum on the left, you literally can’t talk to anyone. Lastly, you can’t earnestly say that you’re making reasoned decisions if you’re distilling what you’re consuming down to only that which supports those decisions.
  • I earnestly believe that the entire spectrum of legitimate governing approaches exists only on what we used to call the left at this point. The “right” has no governing principals left, and are purely a vehicle for propaganda and divisiveness in order to distract people from realizing that they have no governing principals or ideas left. So the self identified left is the whole spectrum now, ranging from neoliberals on the right to democratic socialists on the left. I am decidedly a democratic socialist. For every piece I read that comes from my beloved democratic socialist perspective, I read one from a neoliberal (or democratic establishment type). You have to challenge yourself, if for no other reason, than to more finely tune your perspective. Sometimes I rethink things, and sometimes I end up with the tools to better craft an argument for my perspective. Absolutely nothing happens when you only read what you like.
  • There is no one I agree with more than about 80%. If you find yourself agreeing with a website or TV commentator 100% of the time, you’ve turned off your brain and abandoned critical thinking entirely. You have to think about what you’re hearing or reading critically. If you don’t, you’re not being informed: you’re being programmed and you should immediately stop it! Think. Question the premise you’re being given, and most of all: fact check.

This comment always gets me a lot of push back and unfollows, but I’m going to repeat it. I used to be a very big fan of Rachel Maddow’s. She’s brilliant, and she used to have an excellent show (actually, she had several iterations) on Air America. I was super excited when she landed the MSNBC gig. That show is completely different than her shows on Air America. Almost immediately, I noticed that there were a lot of topics that she wouldn’t touch on the MSNBC show. Most of those topics are related to the advertisers on MSNBC. That was actually okay for me, and I completely expected it. I was getting all of that news from other sources, so I didn’t need her for that at all.

One night when the presidential primaries were going on, she had Andra Mitchell on to discuss an accusation that Bernie had made against Hillary. He claimed that she was illegally funneling money into her campaign through state parties. Now, I knew that he lied when he said it was illegal. It wasn’t. So I had no problem with Maddow doing a segment in which she called out my candidate for a lie. And that’s what she and Andra Mitchell did for six minutes. They called him a liar and then cut to commercial. There was no context whatsoever given to the story. His claim that she was funneling money through state parties was 100% accurate. Apparently, Maddow didn’t feel the need to get into how and why that was possible. Just as I knew Bernie was lying, I knew the answer to how and why this funneling of campaign money is legal. In 2014, the Supreme Court issued a terrible decision that greatly expanded the ability of the 1% to buy our politicians. Before the decision in McCutcheon V FEC, there were limits on the aggregate contributions that a person could make in political contributions. In other words, contributors had to adhere to the individual caps on donations to politicians ($2,700 to a congressional candidate) and state political parties (this varies from state to state, but it’s usually around $1,000) but they also had to adhere to an aggregate cap of all of their contributions of $117,000. That means that all of their contributions to candidates and parties added up couldn’t exceed 117k. McCutcheon got rid of that aggregate cap so now, individual donors could contribute the maximum to every state party entity and every congressional politician if they wanted to. That’s how George Clooney was able to throw a $350k a plate fundraiser for Hillary. That 350k was going to be essentially be laundered through state democratic parties and then funneled back to her campaign. So while this practice is legal, knowing how and why it’s illegal would make anyone’s blood boil, regardless of party affiliation. In the case of the democrats, they called these giant washing machines “Victory funds”. Every candidate running in the primary had a “victory fund” opened for them by the national party. Maddow didn’t feel the need to explain any of this. She and Mitchell just stuck to “It’s legal” and for good measure, they mentioned that Bernie also had a “victory fund” that he wasn’t using.

So instead of informing her viewers, and explaining why Bernie’s lie was now a lie, she implied that Bernie was part of the not-corruption. That story had my blood boiling because it was cheap propaganda intended to slam Bernie and prop up Hillary.

To add insult to injury, a few days or maybe a week later, she did a story on how the Supreme Court had just overturned Bob McDonald’s corruption conviction. She spent thirty-five minutes outraged about what this ruling did to campaign finance. The long and short of it is that the Supreme Court didn’t feel that lavish gifts from wealthy donors that preceded those wealthy donors getting lucrative state government contracts aren’t bribes unless there’s direct evidence of a quid pro quo. So if a governor receives lavish vacations and Rolexes from the CEO of (say) a private prison, and that private prison subsequently gets a lucrative contract from that governor’s state, it’s not corruption unless you have a video of a conversation in which the Rolex is given in exchange for that contract, or a contractual agreement. Like the McCutcheon , this was an outrageous ruling that would make anyone’s blood boil. She spent thirty-five minutes boiling her audiences blood, when just a few days earlier, she had no views on essentially the same story.

That’s when she became dead to me. She crossed the line from not touching her advertisers to full blown propagandist. And a year and a half after that, she fell for Trump’s gambit of “leaking” a portion of one year of his tax returns that made him look good. When you take on the role of propagandist, seeing the big picture becomes more difficult.

I pick Maddow because she’s probably the most respected commentator in the left. If you agree with her 100% of the time, or you think that her job is to inform you, you would be wrong. She is manipulating you and propagandizing you on behalf of the democratic establishment. You should find sources that don’t agree with her to expose yourself to, just so that your opinions are factually sound and not merely a product of propaganda.

The best propagandists curate a combination of verifiable facts to manipulate you with. I curate information that I feel is relevant to make my point and share my opinion. I do my best to pour over as much information as I can before forming that opinion, but no one is perfect and the hardest thing in the world to do, is to get out of your bubble. What I offer you is my opinion with curated sources to support that opinion.

You should challenge what I tell you because you shouldn’t trust that I’ve challenged myself enough.
But more important than that, is that you should be able to tell the difference between journalism and everything else. I never cite (for example) Daily Kos as a source on my social media pages or anyone else. If I read something on a blog that is true, I always post that story with a credible journalistic source.  I also stay away from fairly (or somewhat) credible left wing sources like Slate because if the story is real, I can post a link to the Washington Post. Not being able to make that distinction is, in my opinion, the single biggest contributor to the propagation of fake news in the world.

I know that fact checking can be tedious and time consuming. But I promise you that the more you do it, the faster and more efficient you will become at it. And that will give you the added bonus of being able to spot an agenda from a mile away. Share Blue’s mission is to further the cause of the democratic party. Not liberalism, not liberal candidates, not your well being, but the democratic party. That is what they’re there for and you should understand that when you post one of their articles. But the more fact checking, reading of differing opinions, and cross checking you do, the easier it will become to spot things like that. I promise. I can sniff out an agenda or bullshit, just as easily as you can all smell when spring is in the air. It eventually becomes second nature.


In the meantime, read nothing but this blog and the content I post on my social media pages, and never, ever question a single thing I tell you because there are NO facts in the world, other than the ones I present!

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Chris Steele Is Extremely Credible

I originally posted this to my Facebook page on January 11, 2018. It somehow disappeared from my timeline but I managed to retrieve it. I wanted to have it in another location that I can backup and save so I’m reposting it here.

These are my thoughts after reading Glenn Simpson’s testimony to the senate.

Here are the things that stood out to me (they’re ALL things that everyone else skipped over).

There’s no way to explain this in a short post, so stay with me.

A couple of years before Fusion GPS was hired to look into Trump, they were hired by a US law firm representing a Russian “real estate” firm called Prevezon. Prevezon was being investigated by Preet Bharara for stealing and laundering $230 million dollars. The 2 very interesting things you need to know about this, is that:
1. The money was allegedly stolen from a hedge fund called Hermitage Capitol, which is owned by an American expat named Bill Browder.
2. The money was laundered through the purchase of high end real estate in Manhattan.

Okay, so in 2014, Fusion GPS is basically working FOR a company controlled by Russian oligarchs, and created for the purpose of laundering money in the US. One of that company’s lawyers, by the way was Natalia Veselnitskaya who met with little Fredo Junior at Trump tower in June, 2016 to talk about “adoption”. Wanna know why she was in New York at that time? To deal with the Prevazon case that Preet Bharara was prosecuting. That case was settled for a comical $5.9M ($5.9M to settle a $230M crime????) that the acting (remember, they fired Preet Bharara) AG for Southern District Of Manhattan came up with almost exactly a year later. So I guess she thought she would kill two birds with one stone and since she was already in Manhattan to represent Russian oligarch clients, she would just mosey over to Trump Tower to pow wow about “adoption” (I will explain that later).

I’m assuming that at this point I’ve got your interest, and that you’re definitely going to stick with me on this?

Fast forward about a year and a half, and Fusion has now been hired by a republican to investigate Trump. Glenn Simpson’s testimony extensively and emphatically stated that they were not just looking at Trump’s Russia connections, and that they were looking at all of his business dealings.

I call bullshit. I think that Fusion collected enough information when their job was to gather information that was going to help the Russian oligarchs, that they knew exactly where to focus their investigative efforts on Trump.

You guys probably already know everything about Chris Steele’s information, so I’m not going though that again except to tell you that in July, he discovered that the Russians have compromised Donald Trump, and that they’re also meddling in our elections to discredit Hillary Clinton. Steele immediately goes to the FBI with everything he’s gathered on Trump, but hears nothing back. He goes back to them in October, when his FBI contact told him that they never got back to him because they had also collected the same evidence he had collected, and were able to corroborate what he gave them. How? They had a source inside the campaign.

Okay, now on to “adoption”. For this, we have to go back to Hermitage Capital and Bill Browder. Browder realized that $230 million dollars was missing from his hedge fund. He hired a forensic accountant in Russia to investigate. The guy he hired was Sergei Magnitsky, who found that the theft was committed by (among others) Prevezon and that there was large scale theft from the Russian state that was carried out by the Russian oligarchs and Russian officials. He was arrested and subsequently beaten to death in a Russian prison. That prompted more sanctions against Russia, which the Obama administration imposed (it’s called the Magnitsky Act). Putin’s suspension of the adoption of Russian orphans by Americans was a direct response to the Magnitsky Act. Everybody who knows anything about Russian foreign policy knows that “adoption” is code for repealing the Magnitsky Act.

Is it possible that Fredo Junior didn’t know this? It’s extremely possible, given how ignorant these hillbilly Trumps are about everything, but it doesn’t matter because “adoption” was the talking point he was given by either little Natalia or her bosses after the meeting was reported in the press. We all saw the emails that clearly spell out that the meeting was about getting dirt from Russia on Hillary.  It’s also irrelevant because the massive money laundering by Trump had already happened.

There’s one thing about the testimony that has me completely flummoxed. Glenn Simpson spent approximately 1/4 of his testimony on portraying Bill Browder as a shady money launderer. If you don’t know anything about Browder, Hermitage, Fusion, or anything else involved in this, his laser focus on Browder would still sound suspicious. Simpson clearly has a hard on for Browder. There is nothing shady about Bill Browder. I know this, because Preet Bharara was the investigator on the Prevazon case, and after he was fired, he had Browder on his podcast to tell his story. I feel pretty confident that Bharara wouldn’t have done that if he had found anything to impeach Browder’s credibility. No, the smearing of Browder is purely a Putin creation. Browder outsmarted Putin by getting all of his money back, and Putin is steaming mad about it.  There’s something big we don’t know about Simpson and his motivations in furthering Purin’s propaganda in regard to Browder. But whatever it is, it has nothing to do with what they found in regard to Trump colluding with Putin (there’s NO chance that he didn’t). But, it does make me think that there’s something very shady about Simpson.

So basically everyone involved in this is a varying degree of shady as fuck. Everyone except for Chris Steele and Bill Browder.

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Bernie’s Movement Is Dying

Nonsense.

I read a dozen stories with this headline the day after every single election, and they’re all bullshit. They’re not bullshit because I want them to be. They’re bullshit because they’re bullshit, and I’m going to show you why they’re bullshit.

First, let me start with how to spot the bullshit. If the piece you’re reading doesn’t go into which candidate had the most money, it’s bullshit. If the piece doesn’t mention that in America, 94% of all house races (82% for the senate) are won by the candidate with the most money, than the story is bullshit. By the way, this was true of 100% of presidential races since 1960, until 2016, but that one had a major caveat in the form of the billions of dollars in free advertising that Trump got from “news” shows. If the article doesn’t spell out when an endorsement comes with funding, it’s bullshit. Some organizations or people endorse by lending their name. Others like Emily’s List endorse and include an avalanche of money. That’s important information to have, since Emily’s List consistently “endorses” the least progressive candidate in every race they get involved with.

So now that you know the historical numbers, let’s look at how Our Revolution, Justice Democrats, and PCCC candidates are doing. First some quick background. The PCCC (Progressive Change Campaign Committee) has been around since 2009 so less than 10 years. Our revolution was founded in 2016, and Justice Democrats was formed last year.

They should be getting massacred in over 90% of the races they have endorsed candidates in, right? In fact, in order to honestly proclaim that Bernie’s movement is a failure, they would have do perform under that 6% baseline. So how are they doing?

Well, as it happens Five Thirty Eight took a look. Just so you know, they didn’t get into money, but I think it’s safe to say that nearly all, of not all of the candidates that these three organizations ran were outspent. If they weren’t, then it’s because they raised more money from small contribution donors than their opponents did from the DNC or (for example) Emily’s List. I promise you that none of the Our Revolution, Justice Democrats, or PCCC candidates got any outside help at all. Not even from local media.

In 2018, PCCC (who incidentally are nearly solely responsible for giving us Elizabeth Warren) endorsed (and financially supported) fifteen candidates. Of those fifteen, ten won. That’s a pretty fucking awesome 67% victory rate. That’s over ten times better than the 6% overall baseline number.

Five Thirty Eight broke out Bernie’s endorsements from Our Revolution’s. I don’t know why but I’m combining them since Bernie’s endorsements were the cashless version of Our Revolution’s endorsements that come with financial support. They put Bernie’s victory rate at 56%. I’m going to go with Our Revolution’s performance instead. In 2018, Our Revolution endorsed eighty-five candidates. Twenty-seven of those won, giving Our Revolution a 32% victory rate. That’s over five times better than the 6% overall baseline number.

I’d like to pause for a second to point out that if I was trying to bullshit you by trying to create the reality I want, instead of the one that we’re living. I would I would have used the Bernie figure of 56% and you never would have known that I manipulated you. But that’s not how I roll. Wishing doesn’t make it so, and deluding yourself doesn’t change reality. It merely disconnects you from being able to recognize it, and allows you your delusional happy thoughts for a little while longer.

Okay, now onto Justice Democrats. They endorsed (with financial support) fifty candidates in 2018. Seventeen of those candidates won (one more victory was called after the Five Thirty Eight article came out). That’s a 34% victory rate. That’s over five times better than the 6% overall baseline number.

Is Bernie’s progressive movement “dead”? Not even fucking remotely, and don’t let anyone tell you that it is. Don’t let them tell you it is because you want it to be, and don’t let them tell you it is in order to discourage you.

These articles are being written by establishment shills to discourage you from voting for anyone other than their selected candidate. They want to hang onto power, and they will do anything to that end.

I don’t know what sane person thinks that a primary in which a candidate with no money, no comb, and no tailor takes 43% of the democratic vote thinks that the establishment is in good shape. That should have been a major warning sign, but it wasn’t. The democratic establishment is doing exactly what they’ve been doing for the past thirty years, but they’ve added more propaganda to their repertoire to combat the insurgency.

The electorate in America is changing, and it’s not going to change back. So for all the die hard Hillary supporters who are rabidly anti-anything having to do with Bernie (they savage Alexandria Ocacio-Cortez more on social media more than republicans do): you are the ones who will be handing unnecessary victories to republicans because the changes you’re fighting against are inevitable. Liberals, by definition don’t move backwards. Millennials (they’re starting to turn 40 soon, btw), who have been fucked by thirty years of right wing and neoliberal policies are not suddenly going to embrace the democratic party because they suck less than republicans. That’s just not going to happen. Yes, Obama gave us the ACA but he didn’t even try for medicare for all, and Bill Clinton permanently fucked welfare. Democrats suck less. That’s the best thing you can say about them, and that’s how millennials and Gen Z (they’re 22 now) see them.

Fifty-seven percent of self identified democrats (or democratic leaners) have a favorable view of socialism. That’s ten percent higher than the percentage of democrats (or democratic leaners) who have a favorable view of capitalism. This bell isn’t going to be unrung, and it’s going to get louder as the electorate goes out with the old and in with the new. I’m sorry baby boomers, I know this is hard to hear but the changes are going to continue to happen whether you jump on board or not. You had your time, and things didn’t go well for the middle class. Maybe consider the idea that the new generations aren’t foolish (40 year old) kids? They, after all were not the ones who once called themselves proud “Reagan democrats”. Maybe you guys can listen to them? Or not, it really doesn’t matter.

Primaries are for voting your values. You should vote for the candidate who best represents your values and your economic interests. If that candidate for you is the DNC is backed candidate, then have at it. If it’s an “insurgent” progressive, than have at that too.

The general election is for falling in line, and I’m telling you that you have to fall in line in the general election because the worst democrat is going to hurt your interests less than the best republican at this point. That statement wouldn’t be true if you took the best republican from thirty years ago and put (let’s keep it real) him up against the worst democrat. But it’s true now. The republican party is a cesspool of greed, insanity, and corruption these days.

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Kirsten Gillibrand Is No Longer Taking Corporate PAC Money

She announced this yesterday, and I have lots of thoughts on this. This post is seemingly going to be all over the place, but I have a lot to say and a lot of ancillary points to make so bare with me.

Before I get to her announcement, I’d like to share my thoughts in Gillibrand. Before she ran for Hillary’s senate seat, Kirsten Gillibrand was a congresswoman from a conservative congressional district in upstate New York. During that period, she described her own congressional voting record as “one of the most conservative in the state.” She was endorsed by the NRA, who gave her a 100% rating so she was the bestest kind of ammosexual who loved to brag about the gun she kept under her bed. She was not for marriage equality, but instead supported civil unions.

Needless to say, I had no interest in voting for Annie Oakley to become our next senator. I knew that there was no chance that she wasn’t going to win, but she wasn’t going to do it with my vote. By the time she ran for that senate seat again in 2013, her voting record in the senate had won my vote.

I changed my mind, based on new facts (so much more on this later.)

I wouldn’t say that at that (or any) point, that I was an enthusiastic supporter. She’s certainly never impressed me like Bernie or Elizabeth Warren but nonetheless, she impressed me enough to get my vote. I have always had a healthy skepticism about her for a couple of reasons:

  • She’s clearly a chameleon, capable of becoming anything she needs to become.
  • She’s pretty entrenched in the democratic establishment, which always makes me wary. I’m especially wary of democratic establishment candidates from the tristate area, since we’re the epicenter of special interest political contributions.

Healthy skepticism. That’s pretty much how I look at all politicians.What does that really mean? It means that I look at every vote they cast, every statement they make, and every action they take on an individual basis, completely siloed from every previous statement, vote, and action. So when a really scummy politician like Jan Brewer takes the Medicaid expansion money in the ACA, thereby expanding access to insurance for hundreds of thousands of her constituents in Arizona, I give her credit for doing the right thing. This doesn’t mean that I’ve forgotten every loathsome thing she had done prior to that day, nor does it mean that I became a fan of hers. It simply means that my mind can process each act on its own merit, and that my brain doesn’t short circuit when it needs to hold two seemingly (but not really) contradictory facts in my head. Jan Brewer made a string of terrible decisions that hurt the people of Arizona. She disrespected the president in a disgusting and racially tinged way and she helped hundreds of thousands of Arizonians get health care. My brain is perfectly content holding all of these facts for me to rely on later.

I don’t have the compulsion to lionize or demonize politicians because politics should not be emotional. When you do anything emotionally, you make the worst decisions.

Here’s another thing I don’t care about: why Jan Brewer took that Medicaid money. I don’t care. I don’t care if she did it for craven political aspirations, or if she did it with the purest of motives. Her thought process is irrelevant to the bottom line, which is that she helped her constituents in a monumental way that day. I am not capable or attributing motivations to people without projecting my own feelings on them, and neither are you. When we start to play the motive game, it’s really nothing more than a tool that we use to avoid that whole short-circuit-of-the-brain thing that happens when you have to hold two seemingly contradictory thoughts in your head.

She did a good thing with bad motivations, so I don’t have to process a good thing since I’ve skillfully negated it and therefore saved my brain the pain of embracing nuance.

This was a difficult habit for me to break, and I must admit that I haven’t entirely broken it but I’m close. We all need to learn to break this habit because it’s poisoning our political decision making process.

If there’s any one thing I’m trying to do with this platform, it’s to get people to think more critically. It’s also an exercise in refining and improving my own critical thinking skills.

I used to love Bill Clinton because he made me feel warm and fuzzy. And then I objectively looked at his record, and his part in shaping the direction of the democratic party. I no longer love Bill Clinton (expect when I’m talking to him – the man can charm like no human on earth should be able to). I have mixed feelings about Bill Clinton, as I do about every politician. So should you.

Now back to Gillibrand. She posted this to Twitter yesterday:

If you’re a longtime follower of mine, you would know that money in politics is my central issue. It is the issue that if solved, solves the lion’s share of our other issues. If you’ve been following me for a couple of years, you would never know this because American is a giant dumpster fire at the moment and I have to dedicate all of my time to addressing the Chief Arsonist. But I digress.

The fact that she has made this move is massive. She’s obviously seriously considering a presidential run. I sincerely hope she does run, because that would make her the second candidate in modern history not to take barrel fulls of corporate money. I want this issue to appear prominently in this next presidential election.

I haven’t spent a single second thinking about her motivations because she’s doing the best thing here.

I was a strong Bernie Sanders supporter in the primaries. He’s also clearly gearing up for a presidential run. Unlike most people, I’m not automatically supporting Bernie because I got so emotionally invested in him last time around that he’s my daddy now. No, I’m going to look at the options before me and reassess. I’ve already vetted Bernie, so the good news is that I don’t need to do that again. But as an informed member of the electorate, I must vet the options I get next time around and give each person running an earnest assessment without projecting my emotions on to them.

I am enthusiastically going to consider someone that I once referred to as “the Annie Oakley of New York” for president because what she’s already done furthers my central issue. I have no compulsion to negate that progress on my core issue by attributing nefarious intentions to her. It simply doesn’t matter to me, because I’ve already won.

So my  point in this post is twofold:

I wanted to share my own evolution of thought with you, and hopefully encourage you to leave your emotions behind and think critically about political decisions you make.

I wanted to let you know what a great thing Kirsten Gillibrand is doing, and hope that you take a look at her if she does indeed run for president.

This last presidential election fell apart for two primary reasons: corruption and emotional voting. I sincerely hope we don’t all go through that again (or worse, in perpetuity).

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Shithole Countries

I haven’t posted in a long time because my day job has had me really busy, but I had an exchange yesterday on my Facebook page that prompted me to make time for this post.

The exchange came about because a Trump supporter didn’t want to comment on the article I posted about how Trump’s condos are increasingly being purchased by shell companies (and in cash), which are tell tale signs of money laundering. This commenter instead thought that it would be more convenient for him to talk about how the (legal) immgrunts are robbing him blind with their welfare and such. That didn’t turn out very convenient for him when, after he posted some erroneous (and on it’s face, suspicious) data suggesting that them rapey Mexicans are mooching the majority of that welfare money. I then produced data from several sources demonstrating that the “data” he presented was completely wrong, and selectively manipulated to make racists and xenophobes angry. It’s hard to imagine that it’s possible to find manipulated data, designed to bolster a nefarious agenda on the internet, but it is true. This particular source has a long history of not only bias, but flat out racism.

Anyway, I’m not going to get into any of the government assistance program data. Doing so would entail writing a 16 part series that needs to encompass not only laying out all forms of government assistance (but let me assure you that 86% of us are getting something), demographic consumption of said government assistance, institutional racism that keeps certain demographics from anything resembling equality of opportunity, and results (meaning, what happens to people at incremental stages of receiving public assistance). I will write that 16 part series some day when I’m retired and living in France, where I can get some of that sweet, sweet socialist healthcare (and delightful wine) in my old age.

I want to focus this post in on what I know from living and working in the three largest cities in America. Don’t worry, there will also be some very valuable data! As some of you know, I’m an HR professional. Throughout my career, my focus has largely been on talent acquisition, although I did do a good amount of consulting on benefits packages. I currently live in New York, but I’m working with a company in San Francisco. I’ve recruited engineering professionals on and off in the bay area since the mid 90s so I’ve been intimately aware of the labor market for “highly skilled” workers through a few booms and busts.

I always joke that I’ve been recruiting in the tech space, since Java was a child. It’s true. When I first started hiring Java developers, Java was fairly new and it was just a web development language. C++ developers didn’t take it seriously, and never thought that it would be usable on enterprise applications. The point is that Java was brand new, but in extremely high demand at that time (it was 1995) because that’s the language that the internet was going to grow on.

Here are some of my experiences and observations over the past two decades:

  • In 1995, the most experience with Java that anyone could have had, was around 3 years. At that time, I was offering candidates with two years of Java development experience (in the bay area) between $130k – $150k. A senior developer (five or more years of experience – some of which would had to have been in C++) would get between $150k – $160k.
  • Today, an entry level (meaning fresh out of their masters program) developer in the bay area will start at $125k. Senior level developers (five or more years of development experience) are making between $160k – $190k. That’s not much of an increase over the past twenty years. I’m going to get back to this in a minute.
  • Back then (as is the case now), there were nowhere near the number of US citizens needed to fill these positions. That’s just a fact. And anyone who claims otherwise has never been responsible for filling an engineering position in any major city (you know, where all the jobs are) in America. Americans are simply not getting computer science degrees in the numbers that we need them to. If you don’t believe me, invest $350 on a job ad on Monster, Dice, or Indeed and see who applies. You will pay to re-up that post for months, waiting for a qualified native born American to apply.
  • An interesting observation I made when I started off, was noticing that different types of engineers seemed to be concentrated in different countries. India was largely bringing us developers. Networking engineers were largely coming from China. QA engineers were mostly coming from Eastern Europe. These patterns largely held true until about five or six years ago. Those patterns still exist, although there does seem to be more diversification. We’re getting lots of developers from Russia, Ukraine, Iran, and China. Experts in Machine Learning (that wasn’t a thing twenty years ago) are mostly Chinese and Russian. Each country had their own ideas where the big money or big growth was going to be in the technology ecosystem.
  • The entrepreneurs were largely immigrants, even in the early days of the internet (Sergey Brin and Jerry Yang come to mind off the top of my head).
  • That brings me to data.  A recent Yale study found that 44 out of 87 privately held companies valued at over $1 billion had at least one immigrant founder. It estimates that each of these immigrant-founded companies created 760 jobs.

Here’s another article that says that immigrants start twenty percent of the new businesses in America. They account for thirteen percent of the population, but are creating twenty percent of the new businesses. Twenty percent of Inc’s Fortune 500 CEO list in 2014 were immigrants. From the article:

Immigrant-owned businesses pay an estimated $126 billion in wages per year, employing 1 in 10 Americans who work for private companies. In 2010, immigrant-owned businesses generated more than $775 billion in sales. If immigrant America were a stock, you’d be an idiot not to buy it.

By the way, those numbers and all of the numbers in all of the studies I’m posting don’t encompass the jobs created by first generation Americans, born to immigrants because I guess they’re old news or something?

Here’s another study that demonstrates that immigrants create jobs without lowering wages. From the study:

Each immigrant creates 1.2 local jobs for local workers, most of them going to native workers, and 62% of these jobs are in non-traded services. Immigrants appear to raise local non-tradeables sector wages and to attract native-born workers from elsewhere in the country.

And here’s yet another study from The Pew Research Center that reinforces the conclusions of the previous studies and articles, and adds that immigrants are self employed at a slightly higher percentage than native born Americans.

Okay, I can post data from a variety of credible sources all day but you get my point (also, you can find it on your own). Now back to me and my experiences.

The xenophobe from yesterday who inspired this post, made the assertion (naturally sans data) that the legal foreign workers are suppressing wages. That would appear to be bolstered by the wage numbers I shared above. But those numbers don’t tell a story. They’re just single data points. Immigrants categorically do not lower wages in “highly skilled” (meaning a degree is required) professions. Not exactly. What I left out of the wages I shared above, is what happened between 1995 and today. In both 1995 and today, we’re damned near the top of the employment market so the wages I shared are as good as it gets. Now, right after an economic bubble bursts, those wages go down for the same jobs. So an entry level developer will start at $90k – $100k instead of $125k. A senior engineer’s salary will drop to $150k – $160k for the same job because there aren’t thousands of startups or large, VC funded enterprises competing for the talent. So in 2001, Google will lower the wage for a senior engineer from $190k to 160k and they will collude with Apple and Amazon (among others) to make sure that $160k salary sticks. They will squeeze out the engineers making the 1999 salary of $190k (and that guy’s next job will pay $160 because he doesn’t have a choice). That’s why the wages for even professionals with graduate degrees aren’t going up. It’s not the immgrunts fault, it’s the never ending greed of corporate America and unless you know that Hadoop isn’t a Disney character, no one is taking your job or suppressing your wages.

Do I think that undocumented immigrants are lowering wages for unskilled workers. No, I’m not buying that, although I’m open to reviewing any credible evidence you might want to offer. Here’s that happened in Georgia when they cracked down on eye-legal immgrunts. Even with a high unemployment rate, and the possibility of earning $20 an hour, Americans don’t want to work in the fields. The same thing happened in Arizona, Arkansas, and South Carolina. Some of those farmers were offering the $20 an hour salary, and a 401k. This was still no bueno for unemployed native born Americans.

We do not have a manufacturing based economy. We have a consumption based economy, so we need as many consumers earning as much as they can to keep chugging along.

So to summarize, we have legal immigrants creating jobs and filling jobs that we don’t have the native born work force to fill. We have undocumented immigrants doing jobs that Americans simply won’t do. Are there jobs somewhere in the middle that are being adversely affected by immigrants? Perhaps, but I frankly can’t think of any, and my expertise really isn’t at the lower range of the wage spectrum.

So the xenophobe from yesterday kept asking me if I wanted to do something about immigration. I do. I want to incrementally increase it every year, with a review on ROI every ten years. The bottom line is that this is a country of immigrants, and if it hopes to survive, it needs to embrace its roots. Two hundred and fifty years of immigration has made America a place where very smart or very hard working (or very smart and very hard working) people from other countries want to come.

I say, that no immigrant comes from a shithole too big to deny entry to this country.

With that, I will leave you with Chinedu Echeruo. He came to the US from that shithole, Nigeria and rather than go back to his “hut” founded HopStop which he subsequently sold to Apple (which came to be because of a confluence of events that started with a refugee from Syria coming to America) for $1 billion dollars.

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Nobody’s Fault

There aren’t many things I dislike more than litigating the last presidential election. Actually, that’s a lie – I hate watching other people relitigate the last presidential election more (much more). I hate it because the “analysis” that everyone presents somehow manages to make every decision they made from the primaries to election day the correct decisions, therefore everyone else fucked up. I presented my thoughts on what went wrong shortly after the election. There were plenty of mistakes made all the way around, and very few people made all of the right decisions.

The pie of blame in this last election has hundreds of slices. I have always maintained that the largest single slice belongs to Hillary. She was the candidate, so to blame anyone else is absurd and childish. She made so many mistakes like focusing on Trump instead of middle class and poor Americans, not going to Wisconsin, not trying to get the forty-three percent of Bernie’s primary voters, but instead focusing in on the mythical moderate republican voter. And the emails. That was the biggest fuck up of all. Decades of being attacked put her in a position of having the lowest trustworthy numbers of the vast majority of politicians in America, and she thought that setting up a private email server next to the Cuisinart in the kitchen was going to help with that? And what the fuck was anyone thinking when they voted for her in the primary anyway? That is was going to be fine? It was never going to be fine, and you were all giant hypocrites for voting for her after being outraged when Bush did the same thing. I can go on and on and on, but I won’t because either you saw what I saw, or you didn’t want to and never will want to.

So why am I writing this post now? Because Hillary’s new book appears to do a lot of finger pointing. The early peeks at the book seem focused in Bernie, but I’m sure she also points at misogyny, Russia, my cats, and a slew of other things that aren’t her for why she lost the election.

I have a lot to say in this post, so bare with me. But let me start with the ways she blames Bernie. Here’s a quote from the book that really steams my beans:

“That’s what it was like in policy debates with Bernie. We would promise a bold infrastructure investment plan or an ambitious new apprenticeship program for young people, and then Bernie would announce basically the same thing, but bigger. On issue after issue, it was like he kept promising four-minute abs, or even no-minutes abs. Magic abs!”

Magic abs? You mean like the magic abs they have in Europe where everyone has medical coverage? Magic like that? Or magic like in Finland, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Slovenia, and France where their magic abs get to go to college without that mound of debt that our flabby stomachs get to enjoy? I’m sorry Hillary, but it is not unrealistic to want the things that our own lying eyes can see are working in other parts of the world.

This right here, is why democrats have been getting pummeled in election after election for the past ten years. Democrats had been losing their base long before Bernie ever announced that he was running for president. Neither Bernie nor his magic abs is responsible for losing over 900 seats across the country over the past ten years. If democrats aren’t going to fight for the things that are going to improve our lives, they can’t expect blind loyalty to the party. I’m not on “team democrat”. I’m on Team Bitchy, and I will always vote my own self interest. My self interests in the primaries lied with Bernie and his platform. In the general, my self interest was in stopping Trump and supporting Hillary.

Ross Perot taught republicans, who are already predisposed to authoritarianism, that they have to follow their leader no matter what. They will never split their vote again. Liberals have no such predisposition to protecting Daddy at all cost. If Daddy is abusive, liberals will not show up to support him (or her). So when democrats refer to commonplace programs that are working in the rest of the developed world as “magic abs”, they can expect the trend of the past ten years to continue. And before you scream gerrymandering! at me, remember that you have to win certain seats before you can ensure that your party can’t ever lose those seats again. Republicans did that.

Now onto the next thing that Hillary said that I think is complete bullshit that only hurts democrats in the long run:

“Bernie isn’t a Democrat. That’s not a smear, that’s what he says. He didn’t get into the race to make sure a Democrat won the White House, he got in to disrupt the Democratic Party.”

You’re goddamned straight he did. If by “disrupt”, you mean “bring the party back to it’s former platform of representing the working people”, then you are correct. I have said this thousands of times over the past couple of years, but let me go ahead and say it again: when a seventy year old man with no money, no comb, and no tailor comes in and takes forty-three percent of your primary voters, you’d better pay attention to what he’s saying. Ignore his message at your peril. The “he’s not a democrat” argument is ridiculous, and demonstrates that you have no idea what’s happening in this country. Half of Gen X, and all of the millennials have no regard for the team mentality argument she’s making here. Politics is not sports. You don’t pick a team and stick with them no matter how many times they shit on you. Politics is about your own health and well being. I am laser focused on my own needs, and I will not blindly follow anyone who isn’t interested in protecting my self interest.

 

“I’m with her”. That pretty much told you most of what you need to know about the current version of the democratic party. It wasn’t “She’s with you” or “She’s for you”. No. It was “I’m with her”. That’s pretty much what the democratic party establishment is sticking with. That and “Trump is terrible”. That’s the extent of the platform.

There was one other thing she said that made me laugh at her cluelessness:

“That’s what it was like in policy debates with Bernie. We would promise a bold infrastructure investment plan or an ambitious new apprenticeship program for young people, and then Bernie would announce basically the same thing, but bigger.”
She served in the senate with Bernie, so she should have a better understanding of where he’s coming from than I do but she’s so wrapped up in her own victimhood, that it’s made her stupid.
Please watch this video all the way through:

Now tell me if you can find any daylight between his presidential platform and his agenda from nineteen freaking ninety. Bernie didn’t go bigger to outdo you. Bernie thinks big, and he always has. Wanna know who else thinks big? Republicans. They have taken this country so far right that Reagan couldn’t run on his own record in a republican primary. The amnesty for eye-legals alone would be a nonstarter. So while democrats are going for incremental changes, republicans are going for the gold and they’re getting it.

There is no more consistent politician in the world. He’s been talking about the same issues for forty years. The country just finally caught up with him. Notice how I said the country, and not liberals or democrats? Voters on both sides of the aisle are increasingly feeling more populist, and Trump knew it. He was making preposterous promises and assuring us that unicorns and rainbows were going to come shooting out of his ass to take care of everyone who has been suffering for far too long. She in the meantime, was focused on telling you how horrible he is.

Hindsight is supposed to be 20/20. That is not what’s happening anymore. No one seems to be learning any lessons from what happened in 2016. Hillary voters can’t see that they made a horrible mistake in supporting her during the primaries, and they don’t seem at all concerned with the hypocrisy of assuming that the private email server was no big deal. Hillary doesn’t seem interested in exploring why it is that Bernie took such a giant chunk of the primary vote away from her. She just wants to blame him for being mean to her and “enabling” Trump’s “crooked Hillary” narrative. Never mind the fact that she spent the better part of 2008 calling Obama a child (remember the infamous 3 am call commercial?) The Bernie or busters can’t accept any of the responsibility for setting their votes on fire, rather than sucking it up and voting for Hillary to save the republic.

So to summarize: no one is to blame for Trump. So I guess that must mean that he won because he’s just all sorts of awesome.

People, we all need to start reflecting. There is nothing to be learned if everyone digs in and insists that they didn’t make any mistakes. My Twitter feed is full of people bashing Bernie and Kamala Harris because I guess they think that a two year election cycle is too short, and prefer to instead start the whole nightmare of presidential elections on the day after election day. Stupid.

Bernie Sanders is the most popular politician in America, and he’s a liberal. Why the hell would self described liberals be tearing him down? And when Kamala Harris (or any democratic establishment member) embraces single payer health insurance, why would you bash her for that? If you’re on team Bernie, this is a win for you. Just fucking embrace it. Bernie didn’t get into the 2016 race to become president. He got into it to influence Hillary and pull her to the left. He didn’t start running in earnest until February. Wanna know how I could tell? He didn’t have a single field office in South Carolina at the time that the Iowa caucus happened. So take the win, Bernie supporters. He’s managed to move democratic presidential contenders into much more liberal positions than we could have even dreamed of two years ago.

I’m not remotely interested in the 2020 election at this point in time, and neither should anyone else. I’m not hopeful about 2020 or even 2018. Nothing that I’m seeing or reading gives me any reason to hope because no one did anything wrong so therefore, there are no lessons to be learned. Democrats aren’t going to develop a platform beyond “Trump sucks”, Hillary supporters will continue to vote for the least popular candidate in the primary, and Bernie or busters will enable the next W or Trump.

Swell.

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Jason Chaffetz Is Destroying The Last Shred Of Democracy

I bet you thought that Trump was responsible for this, but it’s actually Chaffetz. Let me walk you through my thought process. I read this story yesterday, concerning the war that our intelligence community has declared on Trump. I’m not sure that we needed a formal declaration, since they had just finished taking down Michael Flynn. The war was pretty clearly underway, and probably just getting started. Thus my despair for the state of our democracy continues to grow.

Let me start with a recap of the events that we’re all familiar with at this point: it all started last summer when we learned that the Russians hacked the DNC as part of their efforts to influence our elections. This happened in conjunction with Putin’s army of internet trolls pushing out pro-Trump propaganda. At the time, we had no real evidence that Trump was working with Putin on any of this, but we did have plenty of reasons to suspect that was the case.

Let’s start with Paul Manafort, who had to resign as Trump’s campaign chairman back in August because we found out that he was lobbying for a foreign government, without having formally registered as a lobbyist for that foreign government (as he’s legally obligated to do). That foreign government was of course, Russia. Manafort got a giant pile of cash from Ukranian Prime Minister (and Putin puppet) Viktor Yanukovych.

So that was weird.

A month later, one of Trump’s foreign policy advisors (Carter Page) had to leave the campaign because we learned that he was talking to senior Russian officials about lifting the Obama sanctions on Russia.

So that was weird.

Actually at that point, it had gone way beyond weird when you combined those two resignations with Trump’s effusive and persistent praise for Putin. And yet, Trump supporters and die hard Bernie-or-busters soldiered on with their denial of the kremlin connections and all played their parts in giving Trump (and Putin) the White House.

And then we had the pee-tape leak, which was information gathered by a well respected former MI6 operative who was hired by republicans to gather everything he could find on Trump. Do I know for sure that there’s a pee-tape? I don’t. Do I believe there’s a pee-tape? I believe it’s possible, but I’m waiting for the actual tape to appear on Youtube. The only thing I’m certain about is that if it exists, I will end up on my computer. I do strongly suspect that Putin is blackmailing Trump with something. Nothing else explains all of this.

And then we get to Flynn last week. He was the third person close to Trump who had to resign over improper (and very likely seditious) conversations with Russian officials.

Now, I know that it’s easy to get caught up in the scandals. I did. But when I  took a step back and reflected on the events, I realized that our intelligence agencies are basically running the country right now, and that’s terrifying. They are responsible for all of the information that we know about Trump and Putin, and they let us know by leaking to the press for the better part of a year.

That’s not how this is all supposed to work. When I start thinking about what we don’t know, I become flat out terrified for this country. I don’t know if the intelligence community briefed the Obama administration on what they knew last summer. I don’t know if Loretta Lynch was given the opportunity to investigate. I don’t know if the DOJ knew the full extent of all of this. If they did know, why didn’t they gear up to prosecute? Was the house oversight committee briefed? I don’t know what the fuck happened while Obama was still in office.

I do know that the FBI have been battling themselves in an internal civil war where the NY bureau went rogue in doing their best to put Trump in the white house, which has left the DC bureau steaming mad. I do know that the intelligence leaks that have been coming from the FBI are coming from the DC bureau. I don’t know if the CIA and the NSA are also leaking, or if this is all coming out of the FBI.

I do know that all three agencies have a lot more information than what they’ve leaked so far. It would be completely inconceivable to assume otherwise. Remember the story about Trump turning off the recording during his call with Putin a couple of weeks ago? Well, I’m pretty certain that our intelligence agencies, Germany’s intelligence agencies, the UK’s intelligence agencies, and every other intelligence agency in the world didn’t stop their recordings.

Here’s what I know beyond a reasonable doubt: there is no chain of command left for the intelligence communities to follow with this information. We do know that they did went to the Justice Department with the information they had on Flynn back in January. That’s how it’s supposed to work. Our intelligence agencies don’t have the power to prosecute anybody. The intelligence agencies investigate things and then bring the results of their investigation to the Justice Department. The Attorney General then decides if a prosecution is warranted. Our current Attorney General is Jeff Sessions, who was appointed by Trump. That doesn’t seem like a viable route for the intelligence community to take if they want to expose treason on the part of the president and his staff.

There is another avenue. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform can investigate. Unfortunately, the head of that committee is a republican tool, who has announced that he’s not willing to do his fucking job. Now, Jason Chaffetz is not the sharpest tool in the shed. He’s a lot like a lobotomized bulldog who bypasses any thinking and goes straight to attacking  democrats, just because he can.

That half-wit bulldog is the only hope we have of salvaging the small slivers of democracy we have left. I want to believe that if he decides to earnestly investigate Trump’s relationship with Putin, the intelligence community wouldn’t have to leak like a sieve to the press. We can’t keep going down this dangerous road, where random spies and analysts are basically running the country with raw intelligence information that hasn’t been vetted and reviewed. I know that it’s tempting to be grateful for these leaks right now but trust me, this is not going to turn out well for any of us if we embrace this as the new normal.

I am unfortunately convinced that Chaffetz is entirely too dimwitted to realize that what he’s doing isn’t actually protecting his beloved party, but rather blowing up our democracy. Trump is going down either way. I just don’t see how he can turn any of this around for himself.

So why do I put our fate in Chaffetz’s hands rather than in Jeff Sessions? Because Chaffetz needs to win an election in less than two years. We have some leverage on him. Sessions isn’t directly accountable to a single American Citizen, since he sits in an appointed position.

Chaffetz’s offices in both DC and Provo need to be surrounded by thousands of concerned citizens every single day until he relents. I know that this isn’t likely to work, since Chaffetz has historically demonstrated a complete and utter lack of concern for public opinion, but we have to do something. Our democracy is literally falling apart before our very eyes, and anyone who isn’t in full blown panic mode about this doesn’t fully understand what the big picture looks like.

 

 

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