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So Trump Basically Confessed to the Ukraine Charges |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>
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Saturday, 15 February 2020 14:38 |
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Pierce writes: "Not for nothing, America, but basically, he copped to it."
President Trump. (photo: Getty Images)

So Trump Basically Confessed to the Ukraine Charges
By Charles Pierce, Esquire
15 February 20
Just in case anyone is still interested in things like presidential abuse of power.
ot for nothing, America, but basically, he copped to it.
From CNN:
The reversal came Thursday in a podcast interview Trump did with journalist Geraldo Rivera, who asked, "Was it strange to send Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine, your personal lawyer? Are you sorry you did that?" Trump responded, "No, not at all," and praised Giuliani's role as a "crime fighter."
"Here's my choice: I deal with the Comeys of the world, or I deal with Rudy," Trump said, referring to former FBI Director James Comey. Trump explained that he has "a very bad taste" of the US intelligence community, because of the Russia investigation, so he turned to Giuliani. "So when you tell me, why did I use Rudy, and one of the things about Rudy, number one, he was the best prosecutor, you know, one of the best prosecutors, and the best mayor," Trump said. "But also, other presidents had them. FDR had a lawyer who was practically, you know, was totally involved with government. Eisenhower had a lawyer. They all had lawyers." ...
Trump's past denials came in November, when the House of Representatives was investigating the President's conduct with Ukraine. Multiple US diplomats and national security officials testified that Giuliani was a central figure in the pressure campaign to secure political favors from Ukraine. Trump also mentioned Giuliani in his phone call last summer with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Ah, how wonderfully the elected fools and tools in the Congress must feel this morning. It's only a matter of time before this admission descends into the fog of, "Well, everybody knew that," in the national dialogue, and we all go back to worrying about whether Michael Bloomberg will let us sublet a bit of democracy after he buys it all up. But, even with the firings, and the frog-marches out of the White House, and the attorney general's meddling, this is the best piece of evidence we have yet of El Caudillo del Mar-a-Lago's having been "emboldened" when the fools and tools acquitted him in the Senate. Susan Collins will embark on a sternly worded letter just as soon as she can locate a quill...and, perhaps, the odd brain cell or four.
And how smoothly the confession slides into the current Republican strategy of pretending the whole party isn't in the president*'s pocket. Here's Bill Barr, pretending to be mightily distressed by how the president*'s Twitter behavior is complicating Barr's lifelong commitment to being a disinterested pursuer of truth and justice. From The Hill:
The remarks are a significant and rare public break by the attorney general from the president, following days of controversy surrounding the Department of Justice's (DOJ) decision to lessen a sentence for Trump ally Roger Stone after the president tweeted about his displeasure with the gravity of the original sentence recommendation.“I think it’s time to stop the tweeting about Department of Justice criminal cases,” Barr told ABC.
God's truth, some people actually believe that Barr has gone rogue, and that this represents some turning point in the administration*'s relationship with its lapdog DOJ. Barr is simply reminding the president* that the first rule of cover-ups is nobody talks about the cover-ups.
And here's Mitch McConnell, pretending to be mightily distressed at the president*'s Twitter behavior, also from The Hill:
"If the Attorney General says it is getting in the way of him doing his job, maybe the president should listen to the Attorney General," McConnell added, asked if he didn't like the president's tweets. Barr said during an interview with ABC News that he thought it was "time to stop tweeting" about DOJ criminal cases — a rare break with Trump.
Fools and tools, the lot of them. And they think we are, too.
Author and historian Timothy Snyder stopped by kindly Doc Maddow's shop on Thursday night to explain how easy it is for even established democracies to slide into something much darker. One of his suggestions about fighting against the momentum being encouraged from above is to be unpredictable. Don't do what they expect you to do and don't be the fools and tools they expect you to be.

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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46703"><span class="small">Meagan Day, Jacobin</span></a>
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Saturday, 15 February 2020 14:34 |
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Day writes: "Bernie Sanders’s greatest advantage is his intensely invested support base. Mainstream pundits are trying to reframe that passion as a drawback, but nurturing it is how we win."
Supporters cheer for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders during a primary night event on February 11, 2020 in Manchester, New Hampshire. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

The Passion of Bernie’s Base Is the Path to Victory
By Meagan Day, Jacobin
15 February 20
Bernie Sanders’s greatest advantage is his intensely invested support base. Mainstream pundits are trying to reframe that passion as a drawback, but nurturing it is how we win.
n Monday, just as Bernie Sanders was poised to win the New Hampshire primary, Meet the Press anchor Chuck Todd took the opportunity to complain about the candidate’s online supporters, quoting a right-wing writer who called them Bernie’s “digital brownshirt brigade.”
The language was extreme, especially given that Bernie’s extended family was killed in the Holocaust by actual Nazis, but the theme wasn’t new: cable news pundit or other mainstream media personality compares Bernie supporters online to a dangerous mob, motivated by contempt and driven to cruelty, prevented from storming the fortress only by the bulwarks of centrism.
One reason why this theme is so popular is that the professional pundit class is genuinely startled and stung by the phenomenon of ordinary people being nasty to them online about politics, their very own area of expertise. One detects a note of injury in Chuck Todd’s lament when he says, “We’ve all been on the receiving end of the Bernie online brigade.” In fact, only three days prior Todd had faced a backlash online from Bernie supporters after defending the honor of billionaires on air. No doubt he was airing a personal grievance.
To understand why mainstream media personalities so often let slip that they feel unnerved and wounded by Bernie’s online supporters, we should register two major recent cultural changes. First, social media has altered the fundamental dynamic of political journalism and opinion. Whereas for decades having opinions about politics in public was the province of a well-paid and generally well-respected profession, it is now a pursuit undertaken by millions who lack the requisite pedigree and connections.
The “Bernie’s brigade” complaint is, at least in part, a howl of frustration from the mainstream punditry, which had grown accustomed to delivering assessments without being assessed back — or, at least, not that they could see. On social media, specifically Twitter, people not only disagree with them but mock them. Nothing is quite so threatening to the professional cognoscenti as mass irreverence. The whole point of a pundit is that people take their opinion seriously; social media threatens to expose their authority as a farce.
But this doesn’t answer the question: why Bernie supporters? This is where the second major social change comes in. At the same time that ordinary people are finding new venues to register disagreement and disapproval, class consciousness is on the rise. Crudely defined, class consciousness means awareness that you belong to a class, that your class is locked in struggle with another class, that the privileges enjoyed by the other class come at your class’s expense, and that for your class to advance it must do battle with the other class. Needless to say, it necessarily entails a degree of antagonism.
The mainstream media is owned and operated by the capitalist class and has always carried water for the wealthy. The more class consciousness rises, the more the mainstream media comes under fire for its obvious class bias. By the very nature of his campaign, Bernie Sanders’s supporters are the most class-conscious bloc in the United States. They are therefore the most likely to be critical when, for example, someone like Chuck Todd explains why billionaires are a good and necessary feature of society.
In sum, the media industry’s internal class dynamics have led it into open conflict with the new working-class movement that has coalesced around the Bernie Sanders campaign, and social media platforms have facilitated an expression of that conflict that feels personally hurtful and professionally threatening to the industry’s top personalities. That’s why they don’t like Bernie supporters. Everything else is all just ex post facto justification for lashing out at the troublesome multitude.
But we would be mistaken to chalk the whole thing up to sheer reflex. Just as the “Bernie bro” narrative was hatched inside the Hillary Clinton campaign, it’s likely that people who want to defeat Sanders and his movement have decided intentionally to hammer the related “Bernie’s online swarm” theme. That is, it’s probably not all coming from a place of panic and contempt. It’s also probably coming, at least in part, from a place of strategy.
And if that’s the case, we have to give Sanders’s opponents credit, because it is strategic. Republican strategist Karl Rove used to say that it’s best to hit your opponents not where they’re weakest, but where they’re strongest. If you want to take a candidate down, identify their biggest selling-point and muddy the waters around it. It’s decent advice.
Bernie’s biggest strength is his large and dedicated support base. He has the most “sticky support” of any candidate by a long shot: his supporters believe in his political vision and they’re not shopping around. His supporters also take his slogan “Not Me, Us” to heart. They believe they are part of a movement — that Bernie’s victory creates new opportunities to fight harder.
If Bernie wins the presidency, his core supporters don’t expect him merely to act on their behalf. Instead, quite unlike Obama’s fan base in 2008, they’ve largely internalized the idea that they’ll have to organize and fight for health care, housing, education, a secure retirement, a sustainable planet, social justice, and peace. And they believe that fight has already begun, in the form of the campaign itself. His core supporters are not pulling for a candidate; they’re trying to transform society. It’s a different dynamic than that of any other political campaign, and harder to beat.
Donald Trump gets it. On Tuesday he said, “Frankly I’d rather run against Bloomberg than Bernie Sanders, because Sanders has real followers. Whether you like him or not, whether you agree with him or not — I happen to think it’s terrible what he says. But he has followers.” Bernie would object to the characterization of his supporters as followers, but the point stands.
So this is Bernie’s strong suit. If you’re using the Rove playbook, how do you transform this strength into a weakness? There are two ways: First, you can focus on an unflattering epiphenomenon. Because Bernie has the largest base of self-identified supporters, and because they generally have internet access, it’s not impossible to find examples of Bernie supporters actually behaving badly online. One tactic is to hold these up as emblematic of the entire movement. This can be accomplished by finding, for example, a handful of sexist comments and using them to demonstrate that Bernie supporters have a tendency to target women for abuse, or by claiming to have been harassed when in fact you have only been insulted.
The second way to flip the script is to cast the entire central phenomenon in a negative light. People for whom Bernie’s message resonates do not view politics as a hobby, and they are not mild-mannered. It’s possible to recast their personal passion and the mass-political character of their movement as a frightening example of Trump-like populism, or a creepy cult, or a chaotic throng, or authoritarian column. It’s possible to reframe their message of compassion and solidarity in struggle as a message of divisiveness and hate. That’s what Chuck Todd opted to do. Whether he was carrying out an intentional strategy or simply tending his wounded pride matters little: it has the Rove effect, rhetorically transforming a strong advantage into a potential drawback.
If you’ve been canvassing all weekend in the cold, if you’ve been donating hard-earned money to a campaign you believe has the potential to transform your life, if you finally feel like the country might be about to emerge from its capitalist-realist coma and you’re trying as hard as you can to contribute to the movement that’s throttling it awake, it can be demoralizing to see yourself caricatured as a bigot, a dupe, or a tyrant. That demoralization is at least part of the point.
But you have a choice. You can let them shame and demoralize you out of your enthusiasm and your belief, or you can double down because you understand their attacks mean you’re on the path to victory.
Doubling down doesn’t mean being meaner on Twitter, though in my view you have no responsibility to be nicer to pundits who defend the existence of billionaires either. It means that however you choose to engage online, you must get organized. It means you must canvass, phonebank, donate, and join an organization that embodies the highest ideals of the campaign and will be there after it’s over, win or lose.
It means you must work to take this movement all the way, with a passion and fury your opponents can hardly comprehend, much less extinguish.

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FOCUS: Bernie Sanders Can Beat Trump With His Liberal Vision for America. Primary Voters Know It. |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=53326"><span class="small">Jamie Peck, NBC News</span></a>
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Saturday, 15 February 2020 13:20 |
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Peck writes: "Do not adjust your television set: Sen. Bernie Sanders, could very well be the next president of the United States of America."
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., takes the stage during a primary night event on Feb. 11, 2020 in Manchester, Ne.H. (Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Bernie Sanders Can Beat Trump With His Liberal Vision for America. Primary Voters Know It.
By Jamie Peck, NBC News
15 February 20
Democratic primary voters aren't just eager to win the presidency. They're also eager to see a leader fight for a real progressive policy platform.
o not adjust your television set: Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., could very well be the next president of the United States of America.
According to a poll conducted by Morning Consult the day after the New Hampshire primary, the self-described democratic socialist leads the pack of candidates among Democratic primary voters nationwide, with 29 percent of potential voters saying they’d vote for him if their state’s caucus or primary were held today.
Former vice president Joe Biden, once in the lead, now trails a full 10 points behind Sanders, with billionaire former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, former McKinsey consultant-cum-South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., in third, fourth and fifth place, respectively.
n the same poll, 29 percent of Democrats thought Sanders and Biden were likely to beat Trump, a precipitous 12-point drop for Biden from the organization’s post-Iowa poll and a six-point increase for Sanders. (Bloomberg rose seven points to 25 percent, possibly on the strength of his massive ad buys).
The change in the two men's prospects is even more pronounced among black voters, who have been some of Biden’s strongest supporters; their perception of Biden as the most electable candidate fell 10 points to 21 percent, while Sanders rose nine points to 32 percent. That is especially bad for Biden considering that he’s centered much of his pitch around being the safest bet against Trump — a consideration many Democratic voters, particularly people of color, rank highly in their thinking.
But as Biden’s case for his superior electability collapses, it makes sense that voters would take a second look at Sanders, who, in addition to polling well against Trump, aligns more closely with the Democratic Party base — particularly, according to some polls, black and Hispanic voters — on key policy issues like immigration and "Medicare for All."
Are voters right to believe in Bernie? While polls can only tell us so much at this juncture, the latest one from Quinnipiac University surveying all registered voters shows him doing well in a head-to-head against Trump, beating him 51-43 percent; in the same poll, Biden bests Trump 50-43 and Bloomberg does so 51-42. Sanders, however, polls the best against Trump with independents — which makes sense, as he’s the longest-serving independent member of Congress in U.S. history.
And, he beat a Republican incumbent when he ran for the House in 1990, and won his 2006 Senate race by flipping a seat that had been occupied by Republicans for 144 years. Whether he could do the same at the national level when Americans' votes have to be filtered through the insanity of the electoral college and all sorts of voter suppression is unclear, but at the very least, Sanders’ detractors have little evidence that he’s "not electable" in places that tend to prefer more conservative representation.
Even Donald Trump has seemed impressed: In an apparent recorded conversation released by Lev Parnas’ legal team, the president said that he believes Hillary Clinton would’ve been “tougher” to beat in 2016 had she chosen Sanders as her running mate: “He's the only one I didn't want her to pick.”
Sanders’ supporters believe his decades-long record of fighting for social and economic justice and criticizing the corrupt political establishment will turn out people in the general election who don’t habitually vote — a group that skews young, poor and non-white.
And, while non-voters skew slightly more conservative than voting Democrats on social issues, they not only support single-payer healthcare at higher rates, but 51 percent also want “a Democrat who will fundamentally change America.” Does that sound like anyone you know?
To his energetic and activated base, Sanders is that rare candidate who combines bold, progressive ideas with an actual path to electoral victory. (No offense, former Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio.) We've listened for decades as party leaders have said that they would love to fight for things like single-payer healthcare, tuition-free public college and criminal justice reform, if only those things weren’t political suicide. It took Sanders' insurgent 2016 candidacy to drag the party and the conversation to the left, and now he’s back with an even more ambitious program.
The social forces that propelled Sanders to the national stage in 2016 after years as an obscure voice for progress seemed to surprise even him — and even more so than last time, he’s running to win, not just to start a conversation.
Of course, his candidacy would never have taken off the way it did in 2016 or again in 2020 if grassroots movements like Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter hadn't empowered regular, working class people to talk about our political-economic system's failure to deliver on their promises for all but a lucky few. And, more recently, the nationwide wave of teachers’ strikes both fed into, and was fed by, the movement behind Sanders.
As he’s fond of reminding people, Sanders understands that real change comes from the bottom up, not the top down. So 2020 is not just about electing Bernie Sanders; it's about shifting the balance of power away from the "millionaires and billionaires" and toward the people who do the lion's share of the work on which our society runs. And, win or lose, that fight — which involves many interlocking problems — will continue.
With the slogan “Not me. Us,” Sanders acknowledges he’s part of something larger than himself: A movement for social justice and economic democracy to counter the threat of right-wing authoritarianism. So don't think about it as voting for him; think about it as voting for all of us.

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I Know Firsthand Why Unions Should Endorse Bernie |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=53324"><span class="small">Andrew Tripp, In These Times</span></a>
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Saturday, 15 February 2020 09:42 |
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Tripp writes: "One late summer evening in 2000, my home phone rang in Moretown, Vermont. 'Can you please hold for Congressman Sanders?' the voice on the line asked."
I’ve seen Bernie Sanders stand with Vermont workers for 20 years. It’s time for unions to back him. (photo: Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

I Know Firsthand Why Unions Should Endorse Bernie
By Andrew Tripp, In These Times
15 February 20
ne late summer evening in 2000, my home phone rang in Moretown, Vermont. “Can you please hold for Congressman Sanders?” the voice on the line asked.
At the time, I had been doing what union organizers do when they’re not knocking on doors, going to shift change or running meetings: I was calling workers. In this case, the workers were from a local nursing home, Berlin Health & Rehabilitation, and I was reminding them to show up at the action they’d planned for the next morning. The care providers had organized a “march on the boss,” where a group of workers would go unannounced to meet with their administrator to present her with union authorization cards signed by a vast majority of their colleagues.
Under the National Labor Relations Act, the New Deal-era bill that governs how workers can form a union in this country, this action alone should have been sufficient for the 120 workers to have their union recognized. In the real world of toothless U.S. labor law, however, in which the NLRA has been watered down and reinterpreted so as to dramatically favor bosses, the employer, a Canadian multinational real estate firm, informed the workers via the local administrator that “they couldn’t meet and would need to talk to their attorneys”—in this case, a notorious $600 per hour union-busting law firm. The workers were prepared for this likelihood and were naturally fearful, but were determined to go ahead.
This group of largely working-class women from rural Vermont was rightly worried they’d be fired. While such a move would have technically been illegal, it was nevertheless a distinct possibility, with the employer knowing full well that they would be unlikely to face punishment. And even if they did, it would be a small price to pay for having crushed the workers' organizing drive. Firing workers who dared organize a union was—and is—standard practice in the United States.
The workers had asked then-Rep. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to attend their action the next day. I was new to Vermont but had organized unions all over the country for much of the previous decade, and I scoffed at the idea that any politician would even consider taking the workers' side in this way. Three older leaders named Donna, Dot and Pat had insisted that we call “our Bernie" and invite him. I, like every union organizer of the time, was well accustomed to Clinton-era Democrats all over the country, even in blue Vermont, preferring to "remain neutral” (while gladly accepting donations from the bosses) in these struggles between local working people and massive multinational corporations.
So I was more than a bit shocked when Bernie actually called back. That he was calling to say he was “unfortunately stuck in Washington” for an important vote and would not be able to come back to Vermont for the action astounded me. Of course he was classic Bernie, a bit brusque and prickly, but here was a member of the U.S. Congress actually calling to apologize to the workers that he could not be with them in this critical moment.
Twenty years ago was the height of the Clinton “Third Way" era, when Democrats cozied up to bosses and governed in opposition to the interests of workers, unions and the middle class. This period saw the rise of such policies as NAFTA, Wall Street deregulation, widespread privatization and mass incarceration. So-called “free trade” agreements had encouraged and sped the movement of hundreds of thousands of quality union jobs from the United States to the Global South where wages and labor protections were even lower than ours. When throngs of workers, environmentalists and activists took to the streets to protest these policies in anti-World Trade Organization demonstrations in Seattle, Quebec City and other locations in the late 1990s and early 2000s, many Democratic leaders scolded us and crossed our picket lines to make common cause with corporate elites. Bernie, on the other hand, stood with us.
While Democrats adopted the age-old Republican “balanced budget” red herring to force though "welfare reform,” slashing public spending on programs that benefited the working class, Bernie was a lone voice calling for increasing taxes on the wealthy, corporations and Wall Street. As Democrats passed financial deregulation that allowed Wall Street to prey upon the working and middle class, resulting most spectacularly in the 2008 mortgage crisis that saw countless Americans lose their homes and their life savings, Bernie demanded that homeowners—not banks—be bailed out. And when the U.S. labor movement issued its protestations against these Democrat-led anti-worker policies, again Bernie was a strong voice defending the interests of working people.
So Donna, Dot and Pat were of course right—what was unimaginable from corporate Democrats was standard operating procedure for “our Bernie,” as they always called him. Over the coming months and years, while these women, with Sanders’ help, went on to successfully form their union (now UE Local 254) and fight tooth and nail for a contract, Bernie, in stark opposition to every other high-ranking elected official, was there. Sanders didn’t just pledge support to the workers, he was consistently attending or calling in to organizing meetings and contract negotiations to encourage workers to vote for the union and stay strong at the bargaining table, walking picket lines, hosting community forums and fundraisers for fired workers, and calling and visiting employers to demand they settle and reinstate workers fired for union activity.
Throughout his career, Bernie has urged workers to “vote for the union” and thanked them for going on strike or fighting for pensions, affordable healthcare, and safe staffing—time after time making it clear that when organized workers fight for their fundamental rights, they’re actually fighting for all workers.
That Bernie is now campaigning on the most pro-worker and pro-union platform in the 2020 field should be no surprise. His plan would double union membership in America and give working people more rights—and democracy—in the workplace. Barack Obama, like many Democrats before him, talked a good game on passing “card check” legislation when addressing union audiences in 2008, only to squander his mandate and two years of congressional majorities without so much as a peep on labor law reform. Bernie's decades-long record makes clear that he will fight fiercely and tirelessly to build the labor movement
It's time for national union leaders to break out of their cocoon and work for Bernie as hard as he’s worked for us. Mobilize membership to elect the most pro-worker and pro-union presidential candidate we’ve seen in our lifetimes.

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