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Trump's Contraception Rule Ignores the Reality That Birth Control Is Health Care Print
Thursday, 12 October 2017 13:20

Slaughter writes: "Turning back the clock on contraception also means going back to the days when many women couldn't decide if or when to start or grow their family. It means forcing women to choose between paying for their birth control or paying for their groceries. And it almost certainly will mean higher abortion rates and more unplanned pregnancies."

Woman with birth control pills. (photo: Image Point)
Woman with birth control pills. (photo: Image Point)


Trump's Contraception Rule Ignores the Reality That Birth Control Is Health Care

By Louise Slaughter, The Hill

12 October 17

 

he birth control pill had a revolutionary impact on our nation when the FDA approved it for use more than 50 years ago. It gave women the opportunity to plan their family in a medically-safe way, which studies have linked to lower infant mortality and abortion rates. It also provided treatment for conditions like endometriosis and polycystic ovary syndrome. Despite this clear and essential medical need, birth control pills were rarely treated like an important medication. Insurers often treated it like a luxury instead of basic health care, failing to cover it in insurance plans and leaving women to pay exorbitant out-of-pocket costs that sometimes totaled as much as 44 percent of their health care expenses.

This all changed when President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) into law. More than ten years after Viagra was first covered by insurance, insurers were finally required to cover birth control at no cost. This policy recommendation was made after an Institute of Medicine committee of 16 leading women’s health care experts embarked on a rigorous eight month process. I brought the ACA to the floor of the House as chairwoman of the House Committee on Rules, and it remains one of my proudest moments. The results have been striking.

As a result, 62 million women now access contraception at no cost to them, which has helped drive down total prescription drug costs for all Americans by 63 percent nationwide. One study estimated that women saved more than $1.4 billion on birth control pills alone in just a single year. This is money that women are now free to spend on food, education, other medical or household expenses, or to improve the quality of life for her family and children.

The impacts go beyond just savings. With women free to plan for their future, the rate of unintended pregnancy is at a 30-year low, teen pregnancy is at an all-time low, and women are better able to avoid high-risk medical conditions like pre-eclampsia. In fact, the Guttmacher Institute found in January that the rate of abortions in the United States has fallen to its lowest level since the Supreme Court issued its landmark Roe v. Wade decision protecting a woman’s Constitutional right to choose in 1973.

Unfortunately, the Trump administration moved late last week to roll back this progress. This move would let anyone, from bosses to insurance executives, decide who gets access to contraception coverage. It’s not just employees that will be impacted, students attending a private college or university could also see the health care coverage they rely on ripped away.

Women won’t just have to pay slightly higher costs under this rule, they will have to pay for the full cost of their birth control if it is no longer covered. That’s no small thing. Birth control pills can cost more than $600 a year without insurance coverage, with some brand name and low estrogen pills costing much more. Longer-term methods like IUDs could cost up to $1,000 without insurance, with the up-front costs totaling the average month’s salary for a woman earning minimum wage. Meaning that women may make their health care decisions based on cost, not what is best for them. 

Turning back the clock on contraception also means going back to the days when many women couldn’t decide if or when to start or grow their family. It means forcing women to choose between paying for their birth control or paying for their groceries. And it almost certainly will mean higher abortion rates and more unplanned pregnancies.

Watching Congressional Republicans as the president has announced this rule, I am reminded of what my former colleague, Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), once said. Speaking at Ford Hall back in 1981, he said, “The Moral Majority supports legislators who oppose abortions but also oppose child nutrition and day care. From their perspective, life begins at conception and ends at birth.” 

His words are just as true now as they were then. That’s because the Republicans supporting President Trump’s new rule were unable to extend the Children’s Health Insurance Program before it expired on Sept. 30. More than 9 million children get their health insurance through this program. The Republican majority also routinely cuts funding for food stamps and other nutrition programs. Just last week, the House considered a budget resolution that cut funding for Medicaid, education, and housing, inevitably hurting children. Their hypocrisy is striking. Truly caring about children means caring for them long after they are born.

This is not a controversial issue, an estimated 77 percent of women and 64 percent of men support providing contraception care at no cost. It is outrageous that the president has moved unilaterally to take our country backwards, and far from what Congress intended with the Affordable Care Act. The Washington Post recently found that President Trump said more than 20 times since his campaign began that he respects women. There is not enough evidence to convict him of that. He should put his words into action by realizing that respecting women means trusting them to protect their health and safety and to plan their families.


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Top Trump Official for Pipeline Safety Profits From Selling Oil Spill Equipment Print
Thursday, 12 October 2017 13:12

Vardi writes: "A newly appointed federal regulator charged with overseeing pipeline safety personally profits from oil spill responses."

Workers attempt to clean up an oil spill. (photo: Roengrit Kongmuang/Greenpeace)
Workers attempt to clean up an oil spill. (photo: Roengrit Kongmuang/Greenpeace)


Top Trump Official for Pipeline Safety Profits From Selling Oil Spill Equipment

By Itai Vardi, DeSmogBlog

12 October 17

 

newly appointed federal regulator charged with overseeing pipeline safety personally profits from oil spill responses, a DeSmog investigation has found.

Drue Pearce is the acting administrator for the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), an agency in the Department of Transportation responsible for ensuring oil and gas pipeline integrity. However, she is also associated with a company specializing in the sale of oil spill equipment.

Pearce, a Republican from Alaska, was appointed on Aug. 7 by the Trump administration to serve as PHMSA's deputy administrator, a position that does not require U.S. Senate confirmation. However, since at the time the administration had yet to nominate an administrator for the agency, Pearce stepped into the role as acting administrator.

In early September, Trump finally nominated, and last Friday the Senate confirmed rail transport executive Howard Elliot as PHMSA administrator. Once Elliot formally takes the helm at PHMSA, Pearce will serve as his deputy.

Pearce's Oil Spill Business

Business records filed in the state of Alaska and reviewed by DeSmog show that since 2009 Pearce and her husband, Michael F. Williams, have owned Spill Shield Inc., an Anchorage-based company selling equipment for oil spill responses. The company's website offers various products, including booms, baffles, skimmers, absorbents and oil spill response kits.

The company advertises itself as "the Arctic's preferred partner for environmental compliance products & Oil Spill Response," and says its products "are very popular in small northern communities, in mining industrial and construction industries, and fishing and hunting lodges."

(photo: EcoWatch)

Since the couple first became involved in the company in 2009, Pearce was listed as its president and majority owner. On Sept. 14 this year, over a month after she began serving as PHMSA's acting administrator, her name was removed from Spill Shield's filings. In her place, Pearce's husband has assumed the role of president and majority owner.

Both Pearce and Williams are also registered in Alaska as owning a company by the name of Cloverland LLC, which shares the same Anchorage address as Spill Shield. Company records for Cloverland indicate it is involved in the "sale of environmental response equipment." The relationship between Cloverland LLC and Spill Shield is unclear.

According to government spending records, since 2010 Spill Shield was awarded three different federal contracts. In 2010 and 2015, the company provided waste disposal equipment to the Department of Defense. In 2014 it supplied the Department of Commerce with similar equipment.

Ethical Questions

Adding another layer of complexity to this situation is the fact that Pearce also has a background as a Washington, DC and Anchorage lobbyist. Before her appointment to PHMSA, and in addition to owning Spill Shield, she headed public affairs at the law firm Hart & Holland LLP, where she focused on energy, natural resources and manufacturing industries. Prior to that, she worked as a lobbyist and senior policy advisor for the law firm Crowell & Moring LLP.

In addition, Pearce has a history of moving among politics, government and the private sector. A former state representative and president of the Alaska state Senate, she was appointed by the Bush-Cheney administration to serve as federal coordinator for Alaska Natural Gas Transportation Projects, an independent federal agency charged with expediting the delivery of natural gas from Alaska to North American markets.

Pearce's husband, Michael Williams, is a former oil executive, who worked at BP for many years.

Government ethics rules define a personal financial interest as instances in which a government employee's immediate family members—including spouses—receive financial gain that may compromise the employee's service of the public interest.

Jeff Hauser, executive director of the Revolving Door Project at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said that Pearce's situation raises serious red flags.

"It's important and disturbing to learn that a senior Trump administration official has a significant financial interest in oil spills. The fact that it's an appointee's spouse who owns a company, rather than the appointee, does not shield them from conflicts of interest scrutiny in either common sense or the law," Hauser told DeSmog.

"But troublingly," Hauser added, "the law generally allows appointees with particular conflicts of interest to work on issues of broad impact on a given sector even when common sense says that they're hopelessly conflicted. That hole in the law was problematic under Barack Obama and previous presidents and has become catastrophic under Trump. Concern that the power of the federal government to do good is being subverted by people seeking to enrich themselves corrodes our democracy."

DeSmog has requested copies of Pearce's financial disclosure, which executive branch officials must submit to ethics officers upon appointment. On Sept. 26, a representative of the Department of Transportation's ethics office told DeSmog that Pearce needed to "clarify a couple of items on the report" and have the disclosure certified. The official said that the document will be provided to DeSmog "ASAP," but at the time of publication it has yet to be supplied.

DeSmog also inquired whether, as acting administrator, Pearce filed an ethics agreement, which would detail which steps she plans to take in order to mitigate any potential conflicts.

In response, a PHMSA spokesperson said that Pearce will recuse herself from involvement in instances that might affect her finances.

"In accordance with executive branch ethics laws, Ms. Pearce timely filed a Public Financial Disclosure Report (OGE Form 278e) that is under review by agency ethics officials," the spokesperson said. "Under the ethics laws, Ms. Pearce is recused from participating in any particular matter that would have a direct and predictable effect upon the financial interests of any entity in which she holds a financial interest. Only Presidential appointees who are confirmed by the Senate file Ethics Agreements; here, because Ms. Pearce is not a Senate-confirmed appointee, she does not have an Ethics Agreement."


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FOCUS: There Is Only One Way to Deal With the Reality Show Called President Donald Trump. Turn It Off. Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Thursday, 12 October 2017 11:09

Robert Reich writes: "He's a showman and salesman, a conman and a charlatan, a circus barker who would be nothing without the roar of the crowds."

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


There Is Only One Way to Deal With the Reality Show Called President Donald Trump. Turn It Off.

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

12 October 17

 

rump craves attention the way most of us need air. He has to be at the center of chaos and controversy. He covets high ratings. He needs an audience that’s mesmerized by his outrageous tweets, his incendiary insults, his keep-them-guessing asides, his over-the-top story lines, his petty vindictiveness.

He’s a showman and salesman, a conman and a charlatan, a circus barker who would be nothing without the roar of the crowds.

So suppose the crowds stopped roaring? Suppose we all stopped reacting to his every taunt and jeer? What would happen if we no longer paid attention to his tweetstorms and tantrums? What if the media and the rest of us focused only on the real news – decisions actually made by Congress, the courts, and the Trump administration? Policies actually put forward? Official acts that have a practical bearing on our lives?

After all, Trump doesn’t really govern America; he just stirs America up. If we ignored him and got back to the basics of governance, Trump would nothing -- isolated, alone, dismissed. He would be a showman without a show, a barker without a crowd, a provocateur without anyone provoked. Like the Wicked Witch of the West he’d melt away, shouting at all of us as he disappeared: Look what you've done!! Ohhhhh, what a world, what a world. Who would have thought that you could destroy my beautiful wickedness!

Worth a try, isn’t it?


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FOCUS: Bob Corker and the Disgrace of Republican Silence Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6853"><span class="small">Frank Rich, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Thursday, 12 October 2017 10:28

Rich writes: "The senators who remain silent while privately nodding in agreement with Corker don't seem to understand the urgency of the situation. Someone should tell them that the tax cuts they are holding out for will not be honored in the event of nuclear Armageddon."

Sen. Bob Corker. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
Sen. Bob Corker. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


Bob Corker and the Disgrace of Republican Silence

By Frank Rich, New York Magazine

12 October 17


Most weeks, New York Magazine writer-at-large Frank Rich speaks with contributor Alex Carp about the biggest stories in politics and culture. Today: Bob Corker’s revolt, the potential of a Bannon-backed run for Blackwater founder Erik Prince, and the Republican hypocrisy over the Harvey Weinstein allegations.

tating that his “most important public service” could occur in the 15 months between announcing his retirement and the end of his term, Bob Corker has unleashed some of the most direct attacks ever to come from a senator about his own party’s president. Virtually no Republican senators have spoken out in Trump’s defense — will they eventually have to pick sides?

It’s a watershed moment that even when the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee invokes World War III, it is not enough to get the Vichy Republicans in Washington to speak up. The senators who remain silent while privately nodding in agreement with Corker don’t seem to understand the urgency of the situation. Someone should tell them that the tax cuts they are holding out for will not be honored in the event of nuclear Armageddon.

Those tax cuts aren’t going to become law anyway. Such is Trump’s ignorance about every aspect of American government he didn’t seem to understand that when Corker announced he was retiring from the Senate that meant he was leaving at the end of his term — not the end of the week. Trump has failed to get any major legislation through the Senate as it is; he can’t afford to lose Corker or anyone else for the next 15 months. That the likes of Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan still believe they can get a tax bill or anything else through Congress, even after the repeated “repeal and replace” humiliations on health care, is a fascinating case study in the power of denial. Trump will keep making a mockery of their ambitions every day.

After pushing Roy Moore to victory in Alabama’s GOP Senate runoff last month, Steve Bannon is reportedly urging Erik Prince, of Blackwater fame, to be part of a wave of alt-right primary challengers against Establishment Republicans in 2018. Does Prince stand a chance of becoming a senator, or is the announcement part of some Bannon scare tactic with more immediate goals?

I have no idea whether Prince can be elected senator in Wyoming. He presided over Blackwater when it killed 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad in 2007; he is the brother of arguably the most widely loathed Trump cabinet member, Betsy DeVos; and he admitted to having an affair with his children’s former nanny while his wife was dying of cancer. In the Trump-era GOP, of course, these may well be sterling credentials for winning a Republican primary.

But the larger picture here is that Bannon, emboldened by Moore’s Alabama victory, has declared that he is going to run Trump-ish primary candidates in some half dozen GOP Senate races in 2018, thereby threatening incumbents who were thought to be shoo-ins for reelection. If enough of Bannon’s candidates win, it could conceivably tilt the Senate to the Democrats. What’s more, Bannon’s new candidates, like Moore, will be declaring war on McConnell, Ryan, and whatever else remains of the so-called GOP Establishment if they get to Washington. In tune with Trump’s alienation of Corker, Bannon doesn’t care if his bomb-throwing means an end to any hope of getting Republican legislative wish lists through Congress. His goal, like Trump’s, is to remake the GOP along white nationalist lines.

But why worry? Last weekend a typical GOP Establishment voice, the pundit Hugh Hewitt, flatly declared on Meet the Press, that Bannon’s strategy for 2018 is not “going to work.” Expect to keep hearing this from Republicans who said Trump could never be elected president in 2016.

Amid mounting allegations of Harvey Weinstein’s systematic sexual harassment and assault, many Democrats have tried to distance themselves from his long history of political fundraising, with some giving away amounts equal to the campaign contributions they’d received. Will this scandal drag any of them down?

Before we get to the partisan politics surrounding this horror tale, we need to start with the story itself. Weinstein’s behavior toward women was no secret. It was so widely known in Hollywood circles — and comparable circles in New York, where he was based — that Seth MacFarlane got a laugh when he made a joke about it on the 2013 Oscar telecast: “Congratulations” — he said of the actress nominees — “you five ladies no longer have to pretend to be attracted to Harvey Weinstein.”

What’s more, a specific incident had surfaced in the press two years later when a model named Ambra Battilana Gutierrez alleged that Weinstein had groped her. What happened next? “Page Six” of the Post, in league with London’s Daily Mail, immediately and relentlessly trashed Gutierrez as a promiscuous gold-digger looking to trade sexual favors for a show-biz career. (Gutierrez was even accused of degrading herself to score Broadway tickets — available half-price at the TKTS booth — to Weinstein’s flop musical Finding Neverland.) Two weeks later the Manhattan DA, Cy Vance, decided not to pursue charges. End of story. Until now.

We now know that Weinstein’s lawyer, David Boies, was a Vance donor. What we don’t know (yet) is what strings Weinstein might have pulled to get the Post on the case to destroy Gutierrez’s credibility. At the same time Gutierrez’s accusations were being tabled by the DA and derided by the tabloids, there was evidence supporting her case, the chilling tape of her and Weinstein produced by a police sting operation and made public this week by The New Yorker: it contains Weinstein’s tacit admission that he had assaulted Gutierrez, and his verbal bullying as he attempted to force her to have sex with him.

Since this week’s Times story, there’s been an avalanche of social-media comments (especially, but not exclusively, from the right) that the press had been covering up Weinstein’s actions. That is hardly the case, and it demeans the bravery of the women who came forward in this week’s Times exposé, women like Ashley Judd and Rose McGowan, without whom there would be no front-page story. As the Gutierrez case demonstrates, Weinstein had the power to destroy any woman who went public: He could sic the tabloids on her personal reputation; he could destroy her professional career; he may even have been able to grease the legal system to get any charges thrown out. He also was capable of physical violence, as Rebecca Traister writes in her compelling piece this week detailing why many dogged reporters, including David Carr at New York back in 2001, have for years failed to nail Weinstein.

“I have been having conversations about Harvey Weinstein’s history of sexual harassment for more than 17 years,” Traister writes. The reason why it took so long for the breakthrough story at the Times is the same reason why it took so long for the Bill Cosby, Roger Ailes, and Bill O’Reilly stories to see the light of day: A legitimate news organization cannot bring these charges without evidence provided by accusers willing to be named. So let’s pause for a moment to honor the special bravery of Gutierrez: the first woman to go public about Weinstein, and who suffered nothing but grief for her courage.

Anyone in show business who says he or she is shocked, shocked by the Weinstein revelations is lying. And most anyone who worked with Weinstein, whether at Miramax or the Weinstein Company, who says he or she was ignorant is also lying. Just as there were countless enablers at Fox News for Ailes and O’Reilly, including in the network’s executive and legal ranks, so there were for Weinstein at his workplace. We need to learn who pimped for him and who covered for him.

Both political parties take lots of money from sleazy donors. The Democrats are no more likely to be hurt by their Weinstein dependency than the Republicans have been by their far more profound ties to Ailes and O’Reilly. The Clintons and the Obamas, it must be said, didn’t just tolerate Weinstein as a donor and fundraiser but welcomed him as a courtier. If they really hadn’t heard the stories about his behavior toward women until now, they didn’t want to hear them. Based on what was publicly known, they should have broken off with him at least as early as the Gutierrez case in 2015, before Weinstein suited up as a donor and fund-raiser for the 2016 campaign.

But it is the rankest hypocrisy for Republicans to seize on Weinstein as a distraction from the sexual abuser that they helped install in the White House even after he was found on a publicly disseminated tape bragging about his own commission of sexual assault. As the GOP political operative Tim Miller wrote in a fine piece this week at crooked.com:  “Yes, Harvey Weinstein is a despicable creep. Yes all his pious liberal Hollywood enablers who said nothing for decades are contemptible. But that doesn’t absolve anyone who helped put a morally vacuous, narcissistic louse into the office of president of the United States.”


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Bigoted and Unprofessional Police Chief Backed by Michigan Governor Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 12 October 2017 08:45

Boardman writes: "Director Col. Kriste Kibbey Etue apparently gave no thought to her pre-packaged, knee-jerk reaction to NFL players kneeling during the national anthem in protest of police treatment of African Americans in America. Col. Etue was apparently unprepared for the intense reaction to her casual castigation of fellow citizens, predominantly black athletes, acting on principle."

Michigan State Police Director Col. Kriste Kibbey Etue. (photo: M Live)
Michigan State Police Director Col. Kriste Kibbey Etue. (photo: M Live)


Bigoted and Unprofessional Police Chief Backed by Michigan Governor

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

12 October 17


“Dear NFL: We will not support millionaire ingrates who hate America and disrespect our Armed Forces and Veterans. Who wins a football game has ZERO impact on our lives. Who fights for and defends our nation has every impact on our lives. We stand with the Heroes, not a bunch of rich, entitled, arrogant, ungrateful, anti-American, degenerates. Signed, We the people.”

his is an unsurprisingly nasty internet meme that was publicly shared by the director of the Michigan State Police on her Facebook page on Sunday, September 24. Director Col. Kriste Kibbey Etue apparently gave no thought to her pre-packaged, knee-jerk reaction to NFL players kneeling during the national anthem in protest of police treatment of African Americans in America. Col. Etue was apparently unprepared for the intense reaction to her casual castigation of fellow citizens, predominantly black athletes, acting on principle. A Michigan State Police spokesperson actually asserted that Col. Etue’s slanderous social media post was “not about race” — even though the issue wouldn’t exist without a racist justice system that allows cops (mostly white) to kill unarmed, innocent black people without suffering significant consequences.

Roughly two days after the posting, Col. Etue issued a brief, substance-free non-apology apology for it, posted on the Michigan State Police website (not on Facebook):

It was a mistake to share the message on Facebook and I sincerely apologize to anyone who was offended. I will continue my focus on unity at the Michigan State Police and in communities across Michigan.

This is the nature of systemic racism. This example happens to be in Michigan, but its general pattern can be found almost anywhere in the US: some official makes a casually racist remark, perhaps even unaware of its racist import, and then when objections come, the official apologizes “to anyone who was offended” — which is a second offence compounding the first.

Col. Etue should not only be apologizing to everyone for embracing a dishonest, insupportable opinion, she should be apologizing for the opinion itself. And if she has the humanity for it, she should be ashamed. She should be ashamed both as an individual and as the head of the Michigan State Police.

As an individual, she is entitled to her opinion, even though this isn’t even her own opinion. She is also responsible for the falsehoods and provocation of her opinion: she has owned the false “disrespect” meme, she has ignored the real, racial roots of this protest, and she has adopted the divisive false dichotomy between “heroes” and “players” since there are players who are veterans. She has, in a word, publicly posted her own stupidity, and she could learn from that, but not until she recognizes and understands her actual offense.

As the leader of the Michigan State Police, she has additional responsibility beyond whatever personal bias she harbors. She is an appointed representative of the people charged with enforcing the law even-handedly. Her meme post is incredibly stupid from a professional perspective. A true professional learns to hide her bias, maybe even repair it, not broadcast it to the population that already distrusts her and police in general. In that sense, her mindless post was a form of incompetence and she should apologize for that, too.

It’s not as though racial insensitivity is a new issue in Michigan. As of March 2017, the Michigan State Police was essentially a white male institution (88% white, 90% male) that reflects no population anywhere. Of 1875 enlisted officers, there were 182 minority officers (121 African Americans, 47 Hispanics, and 14 Asians). 187 of the 1875 were women. Michigan’s state population of 9.5 million is 79.7% white and more than 50% female. Two troopers who won a racial discrimination suit against the Michigan State Police in 2013 (a $5.2 million jury verdict) later claimed they were targeted for retribution within the police force; Col. Etue said Michigan State Police would never discriminate or retaliate against one of its own (a second lawsuit based on retaliation is still pending). Faced with charges of racial profiling, Michigan State Police have changed their record-keeping to be more accurate. A Detroit attorney who has won several lawsuits against the Michigan State Police said he wasn’t surprised by Col. Etue’s ugly post because, as he said, “I’ve become familiar with the display of coarse bigotry, narrow-mindedness and racism throughout the ranks of the Michigan State Police department.” In late August, a Michigan State Trooper fired a taser from his moving cruiser (a policy violation) causing the death of a 15-year-old black boy driving an ATV (currently under investigation by the Detroit police and subject of a $50 million lawsuit as “a drive-by shooting“ by the boy’s family).

Col. Etue’s post and apology do not pass any credibility test unless she’s so obtuse that she should be removed from office on that basis. Col. Etue has promised she won’t resign till 2018. She will continue to draw both her salary of $150,000 a year and a state pension of $80,000 a year until she retires. After her October 5 meeting with leaders of the Michigan Legislative Black Caucus, Col. Etue told reporters:

Obviously, my comments on a personal Facebook post was very offensive, and I’m truly sorry, that was never my intent. There’s a lot of issues in Michigan that I think we should be dealing with, and I’m going to stay focused on working throughout the state to make Michigan a safer place, and I will work with everyone in this legislature. Primarily we have some work to do with our minority populations. If I offended anyone I am truly sorry. I am not resigning. Thank you.

As soon as the story broke, before he had a chance to assess it meaningfully, Michigan governor Rick Snyder made clear he would not seek Col. Etue’s resignation. As of October 10, he had not met with the Legislative Black Caucus. Col. Etue is subject to internal discipline since her post apparently violated state police guidelines. For that, she might get a 5-day suspension or just a reprimand. That’s the way institutional racism works. Get caught at it, maybe you get a slap on the wrist. On October 5, Gov. Snyder illustrated the institutional racism playbook with his response about Col. Etue’s post:

I don’t agree with those statements…. Again, I said she made a mistake. She did something wrong, but part of being human is people do make mistakes, and the key thing is you apologize and you learn from those.

What you learn is to lay low. You don’t have to make a real apology to anyone specific. You don’t have to make an apology for your egregious and offensive remarks. You don’t have to retract any racist sentiments, you don’t have to acknowledge your racist bullying, you don’t have to make even false promises to fix actual problems.

A governor who wanted to fix a racist police force and establish something like even-handed justice in his state would have repudiated the race-baiting and offered some gesture toward equality and decency. Such a governor might have sought Col. Etue’s suspension until she made some credible effort to repair the damage she caused, until she actually made some act of atonement for reinforcing the racial divisiveness that keeps white people in power. But Gov. Snyder is in power in part thanks to his own racist dog whistles, the same racist dog whistles that have helped Republicans into high office at least since Nixon’s southern strategy and Reagan’s campaign kickoff in Philadelphia, Mississippi, the dark heart of racist murder.

This is what the party of Lincoln has become, a vehicle for racism and white supremacy that doesn’t mind poisoning a whole city like Flint, Michigan, and then letting it stay poisoned — because how many white voters live there anyway?



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

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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