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RSN: Adam Schiff Is No Friend of Progressives Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=48990"><span class="small">Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 31 October 2019 12:01

Solomon writes: "A huge national spotlight is now on Adam Schiff, the member of Congress leading the impeachment inquiry. In his tenth term, Schiff is really going places. But where is he coming from?"

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Schiff. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite)
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Schiff. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite)


Adam Schiff Is No Friend of Progressives

By Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News

31 October 19

 

huge national spotlight is now on Adam Schiff, the member of Congress leading the impeachment inquiry. In his tenth term, Schiff is really going places. But where is he coming from?

This year, as chair of the House Intelligence Committee, he has relentlessly built a case against a horrendous president. For progressives eager to see Donald Trump impeached, Schiff is an enemy of their enemy. But whether he’s a friend is another matter.

“Schiff’s record on foreign policy, civil liberties, human rights and other key issues has often put him more in line with Republicans than with liberal Democrats,” international affairs scholar Stephen Zunes told me. “It is ironic, therefore, that Trump and the Republicans are portraying him as some kind of left-winger.”

For a backstory perspective on Schiff, I contacted a progressive activist who has been closely tracking his political career for two decades. Howie Klein, the publisher and editor of DownWithTyranny.com, lives in Schiff’s Congressional district in the Los Angeles area. They met when Schiff was a state senator running for Congress in 2000 against a Republican incumbent.

“I was all gung-ho and raised a lot of money for him from my music industry colleagues,” Klein told me. “I didn’t understand at the time that although he was a Democrat, he was a conservative Democrat. There were a couple of hints during the campaign, but it wasn’t until he was elected and joined the Blue Dogs and started voting that I realized that we had traded a right-wing Republican for a GOP-light Democrat.”

Schiff wasn’t merely playing it safe with his constituents. “It was a rapidly changing district that in just a few years went from red to swing to blue to deep blue,” Klein recalled. “The most Schiff was willing to move was from the Blue Dogs to slightly less odious New Democrats.”

As for the dynamics that have elevated Schiff to star on the House impeachment stage, Klein commented: “Most of Nancy Pelosi’s committee chairs do exactly what she tells them to do, but Schiff seems to be even more exact than most of the others. He’s her guy, and she has given him a perfect opportunity to transform himself into a political celebrity.”

Alignment with the most powerful Democrat on Capitol Hill has paid off for Schiff. This month, Speaker Pelosi skipped over Jerrold Nadler — who, as Judiciary Committee chair would have ordinarily taken the lead — instead choosing to appoint Schiff to drive the impeachment train.

Schiff is tenaciously challenging a despicable president who should be impeached. At the same time, while Schiff has emerged as a marquee foe of Trumpism, we should be aware that he remains deeply enmeshed with corporatism and militarism.

Schiff is significantly more hawkish than Nadler. While Nadler was one of the 59 House Democrats who voted against the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2019, Schiff voted yes on that landmark measure — which abetted Trump’s push for a massive two-year 11 percent boost in military spending. Pelosi, who also voted for the bill, proudly wrote to Democratic colleagues: “In our negotiations, Congressional Democrats have been fighting for increases in funding for defense.”

The Pentagon has been able to rely on Schiff to vote for military spending increases throughout his career. And he has rarely done anything contrary to the interests of the military-industrial complex.

In March 2015, when Saudi Arabia launched air strikes against Yemen that began the ongoing murderous intervention, Schiff went out of his way to voice support. The Obama administration, he declared, “made the right decision” to support the Saudi bombing. Said Schiff: “The military action by Saudi Arabia and its partners was necessitated by the illegal action of the Houthi rebels and their Iranian backers.”

After more than four years of vast suffering and death among Yemini people, Schiff recently played a positive role as he co-sponsored an amendment (accepted by the House) that could end U.S. participation in the Saudi-led war in Yemen.

Aside from his reflexive support for military spending hikes, Congressman Schiff’s most egregious roles have involved policies in the Middle East. He voted to greenlight the U.S. invasion of Iraq that began in March 2003. “Schiff was among the right-wing minority of House Democrats who sided with Bush and Cheney over the broad consensus of Middle East experts, international legal scholars, independent arms control analysts and others who warned that an invasion of Iraq was unnecessary, illegal, and would be utterly disastrous,” said Zunes, a professor of politics at the University of San Francisco.

Zunes added: “Contrary to the wishes of the majority of his liberal California constituents, Schiff effectively renounced the UN Charter and the Nuremberg Principles by voting to authorize it and lied about Iraq having ‘weapons of mass destruction.’ In doing so, he contributed to the deaths of 4,500 young Americans and close to 1 million Iraqis and others, wasted $2 trillion of our tax dollars, helped destabilized the region, and helped inflict enormous environmental damage, including a huge carbon footprint.”

Notably unconcerned about the human rights of Palestinian people, Schiff has consistently run interference for the Israeli government. “One of the great ironies of Schiff being accused of having a liberal bias in leading the impeachment investigation is that he was one of the leading critics of a 2009 United Nations investigation of violations of international law by both Israel and Hamas,” Zunes said. “He co-sponsored a resolution claiming that the 585-page report, which confirmed earlier assessments by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch and criticized both sides, was somehow ‘irredeemably biased’ against Israel and that its well-documented findings were ‘sweeping and unsubstantiated’ and therefore ‘unworthy of further consideration or legitimacy.’ Like Republican critics of his impeachment hearings, Schiff has shown himself unwilling to consider the actual facts uncovered through a meticulously detailed investigation and instead simply attacks those doing the investigating.”

In December 2016, as President Obama was preparing to leave office, Schiff urged him to veto UN Security Council Resolution 2334. Schiff was among the lawmakers who couldn’t stand the idea that Israel would be censured for violating international law with its settlement building in the occupied Palestinian territories.

With Schiff’s historic role in the impeachment process gearing up this week, I contacted Marcy Winograd, who mounted a strong primary challenge as a peace candidate 10 years ago in the LA area, throwing a scare into hawkish Congresswoman Jane Harman. Winograd said: “I would ask House Speaker Pelosi and Congressman Schiff, a skilled prosecutor undaunted in the face of Trump’s relentless tirades, to broaden the laser-like impeachment focus on Trump’s demagogic extortion of Ukraine to include abuses of executive power that might resonate more with the American people while not provoking a new Cold War nuclear arms race with Russia.”

Schiff’s front-seat presence on the Russiagate bandwagon has done wonders for his mega-media profile. He’s well-positioned to run for California’s Senate seat now held by 86-year-old Dianne Feinstein, while big money has been pouring in faster than ever.

Schiff brought in $6.25 million for his campaign committee during the last two-year election cycle, and he ended 2018 with $4.7 million in cash on hand. This year, as the intelligence committee chair, Schiff has picked up the fundraising pace, raising $4.37 million in just nine months; he now has close to $7 million in the bank. Schiff certainly doesn’t need the money to get re-elected in his heavily Democratic district, where he has received more than three-quarters of the votes in every one of this decade’s elections. His interest in higher office seems clear.

Right now, right-wing media are teaming up with the White House and Congressional Republicans to vilify Adam Schiff while he leads impeachment efforts in the House. Under the circumstances, progressives might view him as an ally. But any alliance with the likes of Schiff should be understood as tactical and temporary.



Norman Solomon is co-founder and national coordinator of RootsAction.org. He is the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and the author of a dozen books, including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS: The Strategic Underpinning - and the Limits - of the Republican 'Due Process' Defense of Donald Trump Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=45295"><span class="small">Bob Bauer, Lawfare</span></a>   
Thursday, 31 October 2019 11:07

Bauer writes: "Impeachment is both a political and a legal process. It is not unconstrained by precedent, nor is it controlled by it."

Speaker Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)


The Strategic Underpinning - and the Limits - of the Republican 'Due Process' Defense of Donald Trump

By Bob Bauer, Lawfare

31 October 19

 

mpeachment is both a political and a legal process. It is not unconstrained by precedent, nor is it controlled by it. In the course of impeachment, legislators may be guided by a sense of constitutional responsibility, but they also keep their eye on public opinion polls. They are sensitive to the constitutional history they are writing. Lawmakers also prefer reelection to defeat. Nothing they say in one moment about process or substance may hold under the pressure of events or swings in public sentiment.

This does not mean that the politics of impeachment take no account of the merits of a charge against the president. Every major development in a presidency under siege reverberates through the political system and causes constitutional actors to adjust their positions. As we have seen with the pace of developments since the revelation of President Trump’s call with the president of Ukraine and subsequent disclosures, it is all in flux.

These cross-cutting and complex pressures are worth keeping in mind in understanding the positions the two political parties and their leaderships have taken in the early round of the Trump impeachment process. They are especially evident in the Republican embrace, for the moment, of a “due process” defense of the president in response to the now-central allegations in the impeachment process: President Trump pressured foreign governments to intervene in the 2020 presidential election.

The transcript of Trump’s call to the president of Ukraine, together with other evidence of his abuse of official authority to undermine a political opponent, resulted in a freshly focused and accelerated move toward impeachment. It also contributed to fissures in the president’s support in the Senate. For example, eight Republican senators initially declined to support a resolution from Senate Judiciary Chair Lindsey Graham demanding that the House formally authorize an impeachment inquiry and afford the president a panoply of due process protections. Now the number who have withheld their support is down to three, but not all those willing to put their names to Graham’s demand for due process seem eager at this time to expand their defense to the merits of the case. The press reports a wariness within the Senate Republican caucus about the, as the Washington Post described it, “troublesome picture that has been painted, with neither convincing arguments from the White House nor confidence that something worse won’t soon be discovered.”

This deep unease about what they have learned about the president’s conduct, coupled with uncertainty about what they don’t yet know, is likely a driving force behind the Republican congressional leadership’s adoption of a due process argument. By falling back on complaints about procedures, they can avoid, for the moment, a fully or primarily substantive defense. A fight over process buys time, puts them on the side of “the law,” and gives some cover to Republicans who want to appear to defend the president without having to go all-out on his behalf. It is an argument about fairness and not what is right and wrong in Trump’s conduct.

The objective of the argument is to press for a case for “due process” that would seem reasonable—who, after all, opposes “due process”?—while potentially prolonging the impeachment debate and making it harder for the House to hold a vote before Thanksgiving. The longer the fight goes on, the deeper the case moves into the presidential election cycle, and, then, the stronger is a Republican case that the “people should decide.” The House Democrats have denied any irregularity in the process to date and are now poised to vote Thursday on a formal authorizing resolution that sets out procedures for impeachment.

It is telling, and entirely predictable, that senior House Republicans immediately ruled out any possibility that these steps would be adequate to meet their due process demands. Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy promptly tweeted that the Democrats’ move would not “legitimize” a “sham impeachment.” Ranking Judiciary Committee member Jim Jordan joined him on Twitter to repeat the “sham” charge and to stress that “codifying [it] halfway through doesn’t make it any less of a sham[.]” Then, late Tuesday, when the House had released text of the resolution, the White House instantly sounded the same note. White House press Secretary Stephannie Grisham declared that the resolution did “nothing to change the fundamental fact that House Democrats refuse to provide basic due process rights to the administration.” She did not fail to echo the McCarthy and Jordan charges that the impeachment process “has been an illegitimate sham from the start.”

By Wednesday morning, Trump was back on Twitter, this time insisting that the Republicans should go with “Substance.”  On this question of whether process or “Substance” is the winning strategy, Trump seems divided. He has also run with the congressional Republican theme that he has been denied due process: he recently retweeted Freedom Caucus Chair Mark Meadow’s attack on the impeachment process as  a “secretive, free for all, no rules, impeachment process” that “blows up precedent.  Another of his retweets endorsed the view that “Serial killers” are afforded more rights than the Democrats are prepared to provide him. It is not hard to imagine that Trump is very much on edge about suggesting that he cannot be defended on the merits, and he is communicating to the base, in his way, that he did nothing wrong and congressional Republicans can prove it. He imagines that the transcript of the call with the president of Ukraine settles the matter. Congressional Republicans, aware of problems with the accuracy of the transcript, may have less confidence that it can carry the case. The parade of witnesses offering additional evidence, such as National Security Director for European Affairs, Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, are further reason for them to stick for the moment with process. 

While this procedural argument serves the interest in diverting attention from substance, and pushing this conflict as deeply as possible into the election cycle, Republicans may looking to seize another opportunity that buying time might open up:: the pending Department of Justice inquiries into alleged intelligence community and law enforcement misconduct in 2016 motivated by bias against the Trump candidacy. The Justice Department inspector general is reportedly readying one such inquiry into the investigation of the conduct of Trump foreign policy campaign adviser Carter Page, and Attorney General William Barr is conducting the other with the help of former U.S. Attorney John Durham. Trump and his allies are undoubtedly hoping that these inquiries produce material that, either fairly construed or energetically “spun,” feeds into their narrative that Democrats and “deep state” civil servants employed any means they thought necessary to keep Trump out of the White House—or, once there, to dislodge him. This would inject fresh energy into their core defense that the impeachment process is a partisan “sham” and Trump is a victim.

Should this happen, the narrow fairness argument could merge into more of a defense on the merits. The president’s allies could explain the Democrats’ so-called denial of due process as the latest move in a long-standing plot against Trump, in violation perhaps of law but certainly of norms, and therefore a reason to reject the good faith and accuracy across-the-board of the case for impeachment. This will be their chance to contain damage from Ukraine revelations, while lumping it together with many other House investigations, such as those into the Emoluments Clause and other issues raised by the president’s personal finances or the campaign legal questions arising from his payments to women alleging affairs with him and schemes to cover them up. On this Trump theory of the case, the Democratic quest for impeachment was inevitable: nothing less than a refusal to accept the results of the election and, as Trump has said, “a takedown of the Republican Party.” The president and his allies might hope in this way to rally support among Republicans and some share of Republican-leaning independents, and, by inflaming the base, hold anxious or vulnerable Senate Republicans in line.

This sets the conditions in which Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will guide his caucus. He has said that the Senate must try a House impeachment. As I have written here previously, he might have decided otherwise but only if he had the full support of his caucus, which he doesn’t. Given the small margin of Republican control in the Senate, McConnell cannot afford to provoke the senators who have not supported the Graham petition and still others who might not support a Senate refusal to hold a trial. Likely for this same reason, he also expressed doubt about a motion to dismiss, though there is precedent for it in the Clinton impeachment case. It is best to treat the positions he has taken to date as entirely provisional, subject to adjustment as circumstances change.

As circumstances change, to the advantage or disadvantage of this president, McConnell has plenty of room to maneuver. His professed fidelity to the rules may well yield to other imperatives. For example, he has made it clear that he will not commit to a long trial, and he is on safe ground with that assurance: Very few on his caucus want a long trial. They will want to get it over with, go home, campaign in advance of the 2020 election and have it all behind them. Republicans understand the risks of an extensive discussion of the behavior of Donald Trump. Just as the Republicans are arguing about procedures to extend the impeachment process in the House, they may well decide that an abbreviated “process” works just fine in the Senate. They may reasonably believe that they are better off with a quick trial that is largely about “due process” rather than an extended debate about the president’s conduct and the facts supporting the articles of impeachment.

Should “process” become the central Republican defense—not just about the House impeachment process but about impeachment as the culmination of an alleged multipronged coup that was launched against Trump before November 2016McConnell could make quick work of the Senate consideration of articles of impeachment. He has reason to say now that the Republicans will not file a motion to dismiss. He can switch this position later and point to changed circumstances. There is a distinct allure to a motion to dismiss: It can prevail on a simple majority vote.

Even if the Republican senators do not move for dismissal, the Trump lawyers are not prevented from doing so. Will McConnell lead his caucus in a vote against dismissal? This is hard to imagine. Of course, McConnell still has to hold his caucus, staving off defections, and the process argument and the time it is intended to buy is his best bet.

In key respects, the Republican strategy of alleging a corrupted constitutional process bears remarkable similarities to the Democratic Clinton impeachment defense. It is often said that the Republican impeachment drive failed because it was substantively about sex or private matters, which are not constitutional bases for removing a president from office. There is some truth to this, and it shows that constitutional precedent—a key part of the law of impeachment—has some bearing on perceptions of what would be the right outcome. But there was an equally powerful process element.

The Clinton lawyers argued effectively that Ken Starr’s aggressive investigation was part of a wider right-wing conspiracy to “get” Bill Clinton. One book-length defense of the president characterized it as a “ten-year campaign to destroy Bill and Hillary Clinton” that threatened to undermine American democracy. The authors made the case, widely accepted by Democrats, that the investigation and impeachment of Clinton were partisan through-and-through: from the surprising decision by conservative judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to replace then-Independent Counsel Robert Fiske with Starr, to the collaboration of the Starr legal team with a successful Republican attempt to catch Clinton in a lie about his relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

What followed was an impeachment process in which Starr was the House majority’s only “fact” witness in the impeachment hearings: It relied entirely on the record he compiled in his investigation, and Congress conducted no depositions or other fact-finding of its own. In the successful defense against ouster from office, Clinton and his allies contended that impeachment had been infected with—and could not be considered apart from—this 10-year campaign in which Clinton was “portrayed … as unworthy to occupy the office of president of the United States.”

The structure of this defense may well have contributed to the wide public support that Clinton enjoyed by the time the Senate took up the articles. It certainly helped mobilize and energize the Democratic Party’s base and keep congressional Democrats firmly lined up behind the president. Today, the Republicans are rolling out the same kind of argument, which is in essence a claim that the abuse of power at issue in this impeachment process is the one Democrats are committing in their quest to remove this president from office. 

The Republicans face significant obstacles in pursuing this same strategy. One is that the Clinton case was at the core about personal, not official, behavior, and there was no serious contention that his relationship with Lewinsky corruptly influenced his official conduct. The merits still matter. Another is the positive public perception of how Clinton was performing. The politics also matter.

And, finally, the president’s supporters must reckon with an impulsive and poorly organized defense by a president who has relied, among other counsel, on the likes of Rudy Giuliani. In the Clinton case, the president’s defense was in the hands of first-class lawyers who executed it exceedingly well. There are reports that Trump and his staff are coming to look to Jared Kushner to lead the political and public communications components of the impeachment defense. According to one account, he will “provide perspective on reacting to the news cycle and a high-level approach to problem-solving.” Of course, Kushner has no experience in matters like this, and his one notable contribution to White House damage control was his ill-fated advice that his father-in-law fire FBI Director James Comey.

Moreover, Kushner and the president seem to share the view that the best defense should focus on the facts and not process. That Trump and the Republican congressional leadership are apparently pulling in different directions—lawmakers reluctant to engage with the facts and the president and Kushner pushing them to do so—does not bode well for the coherence of the defense.

Now both the Democrats and the Trump Republicans are watching the clock and awaiting developments. The calendar calls for Democrats to proceed apace in the House, and for the Republicans to slow things down there and speed them up again in the Senate. The timing of the Carter Page and Barr-Durham inquiries is a critical factor. What the Republicans are able to make of the results of those inquiries is still unknown. But then also far from clear, and ominous for the Republicans, is the evidence of misconduct emerging from the congressional investigation and from investigative news reporting. 

The Republicans have one heavy burden to carry, which may in the end catch up to them: Donald Trump, and all that comes with him—the ignorance about the matters within his official responsibility, his inability to distinguish the legal from the illegal, his habitual disregard for even basic norms and for rudimentary standards of truth-telling, and the obsessional and crudely self-referential tweeting and personal commentary. This is where the politics and law of impeachment may eventually converge. Enough Republican senators may conclude that Trump should not be president and that, in defending him, they are putting themselves and their party at fatal political risk.

For now Trump and his Republican supporters are taking their stand on process and playing for time. But that is just for now. It is all in flux.

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6 Ways Trump Has Sold Out America Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51635"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog</span></a>   
Thursday, 31 October 2019 08:25

Reich writes: "One of Donald Trump's main campaign promises was to put 'America First' and defend American interests above all else. It was a theme that riled up his base at rallies across the country, but this has turned out to be yet another big lie."

Robert Reich. (photo: Getty)
Robert Reich. (photo: Getty)


6 Ways Trump Has Sold Out America

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog

31 October 19

 

ne of Donald Trump’s main campaign promises was to put “America First” and defend American interests above all else. It was a theme that riled up his base at rallies across the country, but this has turned out to be yet another big lie.

At every turn, he has sold out America for his own personal interest. Instead of putting America first, here are 6 ways Donald Trump has put himself first:

1) He has encouraged foreign powers to interfere in our democracy. Trump is using the power of the presidency to encourage foreign leaders to interfere in our elections – asking the President of Ukraine to investigate Trump’s political opponents in exchange for military aid. He has also publicly called on Russia and China to investigate his political opponents.

2) He receives money from foreign governments through his hotels and real estate business. Since taking office, representatives of at least 22 foreign governments, including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Russia, have spent money at properties owned by the Trump Organization. These payments are clear violations of the Constitution’s Emoluments Clause, which forbids the president from accepting anything of value from foreign governments. Trump had even planned to host next year’s G-7 meeting at his Doral golf resort, in Florida, but this brazen corruption was apparently too much even for his supporters in Congress.

3) He is making foreign policy on the basis of where his business is located around the world. The simplest explanation for why he cozies up to Turkey’s dictator Recep Erdogan, even withdrawing US troops from the Syrian border, is the Trump Towers Istanbul is his first and only office and residential building in Europe, and businesses linked to the Turkish government are also major patrons of the Trump Organization.

4) He has called on foreign powers to investigate Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who concluded that Trump’s campaign sought help from Russia during the 2016 election. The Trump administration has encouraged officials in Italy, Australia, and the United Kingdom to investigate details of Mueller’s investigation in an effort to discredit his report.

5) He is favoring authoritarian regimes around the world, turning his back on America’s allies. Beyond Turkey’s Erdogan, Trump has said he’s “in love” with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, and, of course, praised Vladimir Putin.

6) He has ignored American intelligence agencies, relying instead on foreign governments. He has repeatedly disputed that Russia interfered in the 2016 election, favoring Vladimir Putin’s version of what happened over the findings of our own intelligence community.

Donald Trump claims to be a patriot at the same time as he sells out America. He has brazenly sought private gain from foreign governments at the expense of the American people. Instead of putting “America First,” he has repeatedly put “Donald First.”

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Why I Support Bernie Sanders for President of the United States Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=35918"><span class="small">Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Wednesday, 30 October 2019 13:04

Moore writes: "I love Bernie Sanders. And in my primary, that is whom I'm enthusiastically voting for as my choice for President of the United States."

Michael Moore. (photo: New York Times)
Michael Moore. (photo: New York Times)


Why I Support Bernie Sanders for President of the United States

By Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page

30 October 19

 

here comes a time when you have to say you can no longer wait for the America that has been promised to you since you were a child. That you will no longer be told to be patient, or that you should wait just a little longer until the stubborn change their ways. There comes a time when you are no longer interested in seeking a “middle ground” on issues like health care or climate change — as if there even is a middle ground on whether to save the planet or to save yourself from a health care system that makes you go only half bankrupt — and so finally you just have to say “ENOUGH!” The days of compromise are OVER. We must stop being afraid to demand what we need right now. We need to stop running to the middle where we think it’s “safe” (when even a 10-year knows it’s never safe to stand in the middle of the road). Friends! Stop wringing your hands with such fear! I know it’s been a rough three years, but the only way to beat Trump (if in fact there still is a Trump next year) is for all of us to be bold and brave and brazen in these next 12 months. The time has come when your only job in this dark and dangerous moment is to be your true self, to vote your conscience, to vote for YOUR vision of the country you want to live in — because you may never get this chance again. Our side blew it in 2016 — we can’t afford to let that happen again. 

We are blessed in this election year with an incredible field of Democratic candidates who can lead us out of the madness and into a better world. All of the polls now show the top five or six Democrats can and will beat Donald Trump in a head-to-head race — and if that’s the case, then you can and should vote for the candidate who most closely resembles your beliefs and not play some unnecessary game of Stratego. Kamala can win! Buttigieg can win! Biden can win! Warren can win! Bernie can win! So if that’s the case, and we agree that we’re ALL voting in the general election next November for whoever the Democratic nominee is, then please, use the primary election/caucus in your state to vote for that one candidate who most speaks to you — and I’ll vote for the one who most speaks to me. Let’s each, finally, stop compromising for someone we don’t really want and, instead, vote for the one you love. 

I love Bernie Sanders. And in my primary, that is whom I’m enthusiastically voting for as my choice for President of the United States.

Here is why I’m for Bernie:

1. Only Bernie completely understands and clearly states what is the singular reason causing so many of our social ills: A cruel economic system, which is, at its very core, brutally unfair, profoundly unjust and not at all democratic. There is no democracy when it comes to our economic system — you and I simply have no say in how this economy is run. Until we end the greed that allows just 3 men to own more wealth than 160 million Americans COMBINED, then we will be spinning our wheels forever and dooming millions of our fellow citizens to permanent poverty, woefully inadequate health care, crushing student debt and a life of struggling to live from paycheck to paycheck — the middle class an elusive dream that exists only in the distance of your rearview mirror. 

Bernie knows it doesn’t have to be this way. He knows that this is no longer about a debate between “capitalism” and “socialism.” In fact, let’s be honest: capitalism is no longer “capitalism.“ It has become a modern-day feudal system where a few billionaires buy and own the politicians and the government so they can rule over and profit from the 330 million of us. Bernie proposes a different way: a modern-day true Democracy — he calls it democratic socialism — which means we must have both political AND economic democracy. A democracy wherein the people control the economy and decide how the money should be spent. It’s a belief system that says everyone gets a seat at the table, everyone shares and gets a slice of the pie. Yes, of course I know Oprah and Anderson Cooper will get a larger slice of pie — but NOT at the expense of the 60 million who get no slice at all. In Bernie’s democracy, no one is left behind. “The last shall be first and the first shall be last.” That’s what Bernie believes in. Whenever you hear the words “Democratic socialism” it’s just a clunky way of saying Social Security. Or Medicare. Or the GI Bill. The public library (books you can read for free!). Public schools. The animal shelter. The mailwoman. The garbage man. Services your government provides for you at little or no charge and where profit is not the motive. Those in the top 0.1% who want the pie all to themselves — well, trust me, they are dreading the day the words “President Sanders” will be spoken. 

2. Bernie will never sell out. He simply can’t be bought. That gruff exterior of his? That’s his armor to let the enemy know he is in the thick of the battle, that he will stand firm and stop them from stealing our future. That’s why young voters are behind Bernie — he’s the brave, wise elder who’s fighting NOT for himself but for them — and you. He’s had 78 years to cash in, to get the big yacht and the gold-plated mansion, and yet he’s never broken faith with his conscience or the people. And everybody knows he’s not about to start now. Can’t we please have the occupant of the Oval Office in there doing OUR bidding and not that of the corporate elites? 

3. Here’s what I can promise you Bernie will do as President:

  • With a Democratic Congress which he will embolden as Franklin Roosevelt once did, Bernie will sign legislation that gets us the same health care every other industrialized nation has — where everyone lives longer lives than Americans do and no one loses their home due to medical bills which will no longer exist!

  • Bernie will get the minimum wage raised to at least $15 an hour (or more) and lift millions out of poverty. A good job with a decent middle class income (with a strong safety net for the old, the young and the challenged) is the goal in an economic democracy you and I run.

  • Bernie will begin an all-out battle to protect this planet and save its species from extinction.

  • Bernie will see to it that women are paid the same as men and that no man or legislature or court will have any say over a woman’s reproductive rights.

  • Bernie will fight racism in every sick corner in which it exists. He will lead a more diverse United States which thrives because of our multitude of cultures — an America which welcomes immigrants, shares its wealth, makes amends for its sins, seeks peace instead of war, and guarantees no African-American is shot for being black./li>

4. For over 50 years Bernie has fought for all these things — all of which were vigorously opposed at one time or another by the majority of the American people. But over time, Americans were convinced by activists like Bernie to see things a different way — and now they finally do. That’s what a leader does — she or he is able to convince the masses to try a different, better path. Decades ago they said Bernie was crazy to believe women should be paid the same as men, that anyone should be able to marry the person they’re in love with, that those who destroy the environment should be stopped and brought to justice, that the rich aren’t being taxed enough, that unions are a good thing and on and on and on. These are now, according to nearly every poll, the positions that a MAJORITY of Americans take! And they are now the positions which all of the Democratic presidential candidates take! Bernie is the OG! He and others led us here. And now we get the chance to have him lead this country further down the road to more compassion, decency and love. 

Get behind the candidate who ignites some passion in you. If you so decide, please join me in supporting Bernie. Bernie will crush Trump (should Trump make it to the ballot). And when Bernie enters the Oval Office, on that day in January of 2021, we the people will all enter the Oval Office with him. 

— Michael Moore

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FOCUS: Katie Hill's Resignation Is a Travesty. This Is Not What Justice Looks Like Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=49798"><span class="small">Nathan Robinson, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Wednesday, 30 October 2019 12:00

Robinson writes: "There are very clear elements of slut-shaming and homophobia in the Hill story, and her resignation letter is deeply sad."

'Hill is one of the first openly bisexual members of Congress, and at age 32 was considered a rising star among the freshman class.' (photo: Zach Gibson/Getty)
'Hill is one of the first openly bisexual members of Congress, and at age 32 was considered a rising star among the freshman class.' (photo: Zach Gibson/Getty)


Katie Hill's Resignation Is a Travesty. This Is Not What Justice Looks Like

By Nathan Robinson, Guardian UK

30 October 19


There are very clear elements of slut-shaming and homophobia in the Hill story, and her resignation letter is deeply sad

emocratic congresswoman Katie Hill has resigned after being accused of violating House Ethics rules by having a sexual relationship with staffers, and possibly using her position to grant improper favors. Members of her own party made it clear she did not have their support, with Nancy Pelosi saying that Hill “has acknowledged errors in judgement that made her continued service as a member untenable.” Hill’s case may seem straightforward: she violated the rules, she abused her office, she has to go. But there’s much more to it, and we should be disturbed at the speed with which Hill was forced out of office before completing a single term.

Hill is one of the first openly bisexual members of Congress, and at age 32 was considered a rising star among the freshman class. Earlier this month, conservative media website RedState began revealing details about Hill’s sex life. Hill was alleged to have to been in a polyamorous relationship with both her husband and a female campaign staffer, as well as to have had an affair with her male legislative director. Hill acknowledged the relationship with the female staffer but denied having a relationship with the legislative director. Because the House of Representatives has a new, post-MeToo rule prohibiting sexual relations between members of Congress and staff, an investigation into Hill’s potentially unethical sex life was announced.

It’s understandable to look into allegations of relationships between congresspeople and staff. After all, the rule was put in place because of the disturbing power imbalances present in such situations, and the House certainly has to look into evidence that Hill may used her position to offer financial and employment rewards to those she was in relationships with. But the way details of Hill’s sex life have been exposed, and Hill’s claim that her career is being ended by a vindictive husband, should give us serious pause before jumping to conclusions.

The media did not only publish evidence that Hill violated ethics rules. It also published photographs of her naked body. The Daily Mail offered its readers “shocking” photos of Hill nude, saying that her “wild lifestyle has been laid bare in a cache of texts and intimate photographs.” (The wild lifestyle consists of being naked, kissing a woman, and possibly smoking marijuana.) The Mail did not name its source, but it appears likely to have been Hill’s husband, who she claims is trying to get revenge on her. The husband said in his divorce complaint that he was upset Hill wanted him to be a “house husband” who stayed home and did chores.

It’s outrageous that any newspaper would publish these kinds of photos. Imagine what it would feel like to wake up and find naked photographs of yourself printed and seen by millions; it’s literally the stuff of nightmares. No wonder Katie Hill has vowed to use her post-Congressional career to fight “revenge porn.” The way Hill’s sex life has been sensationalized into something lurid—with headlines like “swing district”—certainly makes public service a less appealing career. Who would want to serve in Congress knowing that their most intimate details could become public overnight?

I do not take a position on whether or not Katie Hill violated House ethics rules. That’s the entire purpose of having an adjudication procedure. If she did, she should be disciplined. That might not actually include pushing her out of Congress; my own position is that most decisions like that should be left up to voters. The prohibition on sexual relationships with staffers is new, and there is something disturbing about the fact that after untold numbers of men have had such relationships in Congressional history, the first person whose career will be ended by it is a young queer woman.

A complicated question is raised by Hill’s case: if it is the case that Hill violated ethics rules, but it is also the case that this violation only came to light as part of a campaign of revenge by her husband, should this affect whether Hill steps down? If men and women violate ethics rules at the same rates, but men are more likely to go public with accusations of ethics violations (because of what happens to female accusers), we might see women punished more often for misbehavior that occur with the same frequency across genders. In fact, it’s unclear whether Hill’s resignation is a just outcome even if the allegations against her are true – one of the subordinates with who she is accused of having a relationship says that all the staffers’ lives have been ruined. These are the very people whose interests the rule is supposed to be protecting.

Even if it is complicated by the fact that Hill might simultaneously be “guilty” and “persecuted,” Hill’s case should be clear in one respect: she should have had a greater opportunity to clear her name. Hill says that she is being victimized. That needs to be taken seriously. It’s disappointing that Nancy Pelosi threw Hill under the bus, and women’s groups seem reluctant to speak up for her, while Republican Matt Gaetz, of all people, says Hill “isn’t being investigated by Ethics or maligned because she hurt anyone — it is because she is different.”

There are very clear elements of slut-shaming and homophobia in the Hill story, and Hill’s resignation letter is deeply sad: she talks of the cruel toll that this “appalling invasion of my privacy” driven by a “monster [waging] a smear campaign” is taking. I don’t think anyone should feel as if justice is being done here, and elected officials like Hill should not be judged by conservative media campaigns but by a full investigation into the facts.

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