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It's One Thing to Curse the Darkness. It's Another Thing to Light a Candle. Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=40776"><span class="small">Dan Rather, Dan Rather's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Friday, 20 January 2017 15:29

Rather writes: "It's one thing to curse the darkness. It's another thing to light a candle. This maxim - my rough paraphrase of a quote I have seen attributed to the founder of Amnesty International - has been echoing in my mind in recent days as I hear and talk to many people about the approaching ascension of the Trump Administration."

Dan Rather. (photo: Lucas Jackson/Reuters)
Dan Rather. (photo: Lucas Jackson/Reuters)


It's One Thing to Curse the Darkness. It's Another Thing to Light a Candle.

By Dan Rather, Dan Rather's Facebook Page

20 January 17

 

t's one thing to curse the darkness. It's another thing to light a candle.

This maxim - my rough paraphrase of a quote I have seen attributed to the founder of Amnesty International - has been echoing in my mind in recent days as I hear and talk to many people about the approaching ascension of the Trump Administration.

I know well that there is a tense anxiety eating away at many of my fellow citizens. I have read it in the comments and messages to this page. I have heard it from many of you in person, when we meet on the street, in airports, or even men's rooms. There is a deep dismay bordering on defeatism. The end of the Republic. We are doomed. There is no reason to hope for a better future.

It would be foolish and disingenuous to downplay the challenges we face but every ounce of my experiences convinces me that we, as a people, have more grit than this. Yes the hurdles may be high, but it is time for a bit of a "reality check" as some of my younger colleagues are wont to say.

I witnessed the strategic huddles of Martin Luther King, Jr. and other Civil Rights leaders in the early days of the movement when their country seemed to be ignoring their plight. And they only grew more determined. I walked the dangerous patrols with young GIs in the jungle hell that was Vietnam who wondered whether America would learn about the injustices of that war, and they remained determined. I have stood shoulder to shoulder with so-called common folk as they filled sandbags to hold off a rising Mississippi River. I have walked through neighborhoods leveled by tornadoes, or hurricanes, or even riots with storekeepers vowing to rebuild. I have seen young men and women forsake wealth and an easier life to dedicate themselves to the noble profession of teaching. In these examples, and countless more, I see the America I know, the America I love, the America I expect to continue. But that destiny is in our hands.

Democracy is much more than just the right to vote. It is the duty to participate. I fear that too many who are now so fearful of the future were lulled in the past by the malignancy of passivity. President Obama was in the White House, they told themselves. The demographics of our country are our destiny. At the same time, do not discount the power of the numbers as reflected in the popular vote in the last election.

You can't forsake your voice and then complain about not being heard. And I sense, with a growing activism around such things as the Affordable Care Act, we are seeing the stirrings of a new leadership. I have heard from some of you about how you have attended political rallies and been disappointed by some of the party heads who claim to speak in your name. How they are out of touch and uninspiring. So if you don't like them, tell them so. Advocate for others to take their place or run against them yourself. Run for offices big and small. We need more engineers and teachers and nurses and scientists in our public offices. Why? Why not?

You may not like the politics of the Tea Party, but you can't deny their effectiveness. They didn't like their leadership, so they ran against them. That is how democracy is supposed to work.

I come back to the message with which I started - that of lighting a candle to ward off the darkness. It is important to note that this need not be a raging fire. Even a candle is a start. If you are eager to make a change, starting with a checklist of the possible is a good beginning. And then we can all work from there, together, shining more light along our march to a more just and equitable world.

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The Damage Already Done by Trump's Presidency Print
Friday, 20 January 2017 15:25

Dickinson writes: "Donald Trump moves into the White House already having done damage to the presidency, our democracy, the economy and America's place in the world."

Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States Friday, with historically low approval ratings, and despite losing the popular vote. (photo: Win McNamee/Getty)
Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States Friday, with historically low approval ratings, and despite losing the popular vote. (photo: Win McNamee/Getty)


The Damage Already Done by Trump's Presidency

By Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone

20 January 17

 

Trump's just taking office, but he's already cost America gravely

onald Trump moves into the White House already having done damage to the presidency, our democracy, the economy and America's place in the world.

We have watched this unfold in the open: Trump has thumbed his nose at custom and the Constitution by refusing to resolve the conflicts of interest that will now shadow his presidency. He has used his Twitter account – a 21st-century bully pulpit – not to unify Americans behind his agenda, but to settle personal scores in a sustained assault on freedom of the press, freedom of assembly and freedom of speech. Trump has installed an inner circle that aims to marginalize millions of our countrymen, even as it seeks to degrade the institutions of our government. Finally, Trump has clutched Russia in a perplexing bear hug. Whether he's done this out of genuine admiration for its brutal regime, because he's indebted to its oligarchs, or because Trump has somehow been compromised by former KGB colonel Vladimir Putin we have yet to resolve. For Americans, and for our NATO allies, none of these alternatives will be reassuring.

Republicans in Congress have stood by quietly, almost without objection. They've acted as enablers – even as Trump has inserted himself as the ur-chairman of publicly traded companies, blessing their manufacturing plans or tanking their stock prices with a single tweet. Republicans used to object to politicians "picking winners and losers." Just last July, Speaker Paul Ryan called it "a recipe for a closed economy – for cronyism."

History will judge this period harshly.

Conflicts of interest

Trump has not released his tax returns. The American public remains in the dark about the debts and deals that could bind the 45th president against the national interest or pervert the foreign policy of the United States.

The lack of transparency matters because Donald Trump has not divested from his businesses. His promises to set up a blind trust and to halt new business deals were both empty. As the director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, Walter Shaub, described it, Trump's decision to hand daily management of the Trump Organization to his adult sons instead is "meaningless from a conflict of interest perspective."

Sounding more than a bit like Richard Nixon, Trump has proclaimed that "the president can't have a conflict of interest." By a lawyerly reading of 18 U.S.C. § 208, that may parse as true – but the claim is false from any moral perspective. The Supreme Court has written that when our leaders "engage in activities which arouse suspicions of corruption," those office-holders endanger "the very fabric of a democratic society." Trump, Shaub insisted in remarks delivered January 11th at the Brookings Institution, has failed to rise to the standards "that every president in the past four decades has met."

In fact, during the transition period, Trump and his children appeared to trade on his status as president-elect: The Trumps have reportedly secured a stalled building permit for a tower in Argentina; Ivanka Trump joined her father in a meeting with the prime minister of Japan, where she has business with a state-backed enterprise; and the Trump Organization's new leaders, Don Jr. and Eric Trump, took seats at the conference table for a once-in-a lifetime meeting with executives from Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon, Oracle, Microsoft and others at the "tech summit" convened by their president-elect father at Trump Tower. Even Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, has been pursuing lucrative business deals with foreign investors. Trump has now named Kushner a senior adviser, skirting anti-nepotism laws.

The president's global business enterprise remains an invitation to corruption – from interests who may try to ingratiate themselves to Trump by leasing his properties, golfing at his resorts or lodging at his hotels, including the new Trump International, down the street from the White House.

Trump's business conflicts raise not only ethical but constitutional concerns. Can profits earned from foreign governments paying exorbitant sums for luxury rentals, hotel rooms, golf retreats or $24 cocktails be construed as either bribes or "emoluments" (i.e., gifts)? Those would be impeachable offenses under the Constitution.

The Republican Congress could act to place limits on Trump's ability to profit from his office. Congress could also force Trump to reveal his tax returns, which 74 percent of Americans want him to release. But the only move a Republican from the legislative branch has made on presidential ethics so far is to threaten the independent government watchdog who dared criticize Trump.

This has left our 45th president, in the words of Harvard legal scholar Laurence Tribe, "a walking, talking violation of the constitution from the moment he takes the oath."

Creeping authoritarianism

As he did on the campaign trail, Trump has continued to do violence to both America's political norms and its constitutional values, striking an authoritarian tone and railing against "my many enemies" – including the Senate minority leader, whom Trump now calls "head clown Chuck Schumer."

During his time as president-elect, Trump showed contempt for free speech and free assembly in behavior that the executive director of the ACLU calls "incredibly troubling." After his win in November, Trump lashed out at "professional protesters, incited by the media," calling their street marches "unfair." He proposed punishing Americans who burn the flag with a "loss of citizenship or year in jail!" And in a series of tweets, he accused the cast of Hamilton of having "harassed" Mike Pence with "rude" and "terrible behavior" after the cast appealed to the vice president-elect "to uphold our American values and to work on behalf of all of us."

Trump also relentlessly bashed the "crooked" and "dishonest" media. He brought a paid cheering section to his lone press conference. And he used that forum to club CNN as "fake news" and to call BuzzFeed a "failing pile of garbage" for, respectively, reporting on and publishing an intelligence dossier authored by a former British spy that alleged a "well-developed conspiracy of cooperation" between Trump's campaign and the Russian government.

Trump warned that BuzzFeed, in particular, would "suffer the consequences."

Anti-government agenda

When he wasn't trashing the First Amendment, the president-elect was building an inner circle of ideologues who are either hostile to large segments of the American public or to the idea of government itself.

The first list starts with senior adviser Steve Bannon, the hero to white nationalists who built Breitbart into the media platform for the "Alt-Right." Trump tapped as his national security adviser retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, who has tweeted that "Fear of Muslims is RATIONAL" and declared that Islam is a "malignant cancer."

Trump's pick to enforce civil rights and the rule of law at the Justice Department is Jeff Sessions – the Alabama senator who was notoriously denied a federal judgeship in the 1980s over allegations of racism as well as his prosecution of voting rights activists who had been close to Martin Luther King Jr. (Trump, himself, used King's birthday weekend this year to bash Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights hero and King confidant, as being "all talk, talk, talk" and for neglecting the "burning and crime infested inner-cities.")

Trump's anti-government brigade is headlined by EPA nominee Scott Pruitt, the Oklahoma attorney general who repeatedly sued the agency he has been tapped to lead – including in a failed attempt to strike down limits on emissions of neurotoxic mercury. It includes billionaire Betsy DeVos, the would-be education secretary who testified this week that states should decide whether to enforce the federal civil rights law guaranteeing education to students with disabilities; energy secretary nominee Rick Perry, who famously wanted to eliminate his future department; housing secretary nominee Ben Carson, who had assessed himself unqualified to lead any federal agency; and treasury secretary nominee Steve Mnuchin, who profited from both the housing bubble and its aftermath, pivoting from the mortgage desk at Goldman Sachs to running a bank dubbed a "foreclosure machine" by critics – which tossed military service members out of their homes and tried to foreclose on a 90-year-old lady who owed the bank 27 cents. Mnuchin's "number one priority," he's said, is to "strip back" the Dodd Frank financial reforms that Congress passed in 2010 to prevent another housing-market crash.

The Russian cloud

To borrow a line from Churchill, Donald Trump's relationship with Russia is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. We have at best spotty information, but what we do know should alarm any American.

Vladimir Putin's Russia invades its neighbors, threatens NATO allies, is linked to murders of dissidents and journalists, and subverts democracies – including our own. The CIA, FBI and NSA have concluded that Putin had "a clear preference" for Trump over Clinton in the 2016 election and that Russia orchestrated a multifaceted "influence campaign" to help boost Trump, including by hacking emails of the DNC and "senior Democratic officials" ultimately published by WikiLeaks.

We know that Trump – who touted the WikiLeaks disclosures ad nauseam on the campaign trail – laboriously resisted linking Russia to to the hack, insisting "it is very hard to determine who was doing the hacking," that "the whole age of computer has made it where nobody knows exactly what's going on" and that "I know things that other people don't know." Only during his press conference – following an in-person classified briefing by the heads of the intelligence community – did Trump finally admit, "I think it was Russia," only to once more praise the product of Putin's cyber op, telling reporters, "Look at what was learned from that hacking."

We have come to know Donald Trump as a man who relishes dominance displays and bullying his adversaries. Recall: "low-energy Jeb," "lyin' Ted," "little Marco" and "crooked Hillary." But when it comes to the former KGB colonel who leads Russia, Trump has a very different posture. The new American president doesn't hold himself up as the new big wolf on the global stage. Instead, Trump acts like Putin is his alpha – praising him in December as "very smart!"

Far from letting Russia's meddling in American elections spoil the bromance, Trump tweeted in January, "Having a good relationship with Russia is a good thing, not a bad thing. Only 'stupid' people, or fools, would think that it is bad!" With his foreign policy team, Trump has surrounded himself with Russia-friendly advisers, including Gen. Flynn, and Rex Tillerson, the secretary of state nominee and former Exxon CEO on whom Putin pinned a medal of friendship in 2013. Trump's praise for Putin is so effusive, and his administration's posture toward Russia so deferential, it is not difficult to believe the Russians have some sort of leverage. Is it financial? As remarked above, Trump refuses to release his tax returns or business records. We don't know. Back in 2008, Trump's son Don Jr. revealed that "Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assets." Donald Trump has loudly denied in recent days that he owes "Russia" anything. But as the journalist David Cay Johnston has smartly observed, Trump's disavowals seem lawyerly, never extending to "Russians." After all, Russian oligarchs, not the state of Russia, are the lenders Americans would be concerned about.

A more salacious alternative is that the Russians have compromising material – kompromat – that they are holding over Trump. This possibility is addressed in the scandalous but unverified dossier published by BuzzFeed that Trump has blasted as "A COMPLETE AND TOTAL FABRICATION, UTTER NONSENSE," and "A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!" suggesting it had been leaked by the U.S. intelligence community, which he likened to "Nazi Germany."

A third, and perhaps more disturbing, possibility is that Trump simply and genuinely admires Putin, and seeks to emulate his rule. That Trump sees little value in the NATO alliance that has kept the peace in Europe, and that he'd rather align himself with the Russian autocrat than with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

On day one of the Trump administration, we have far more questions than answers. But we know that the 45th president – historically disliked, elected despite losing the popular vote – has already done real damage to our republic.

And that we owe America our resistance.

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FOCUS: The Inauguration of White Supremacy Print
Friday, 20 January 2017 12:44

Cole writes: "Trump and his Neofascist counselors are wounded white men."

Donald Trump is sworn in as the 45th president of the U.S. (photo: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty)
Donald Trump is sworn in as the 45th president of the U.S. (photo: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty)


The Inauguration of White Supremacy

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

20 January 17

 

rump’s cabinet has no Latinos, the first time that minority, which comprises 18 percent of Americans, is absent for twenty-five years. Trump famously accused Mexican-Americans of being the worst people, including in their ranks rapists and drug dealers and having been deliberately sent across the border by the Mexican government in what he apparently, bizarrely, views as a mammoth conspiracy.

Trump and his Neofascist counselors are wounded white men, who see Latinos and their immigration to the United States as a challenge to white dominance that must be stopped and reversed. Never mind that whiteness is a construct, and that Benjamin Franklin even excluded Germans like Trump from the category. And never mind that Latino immigration saved the US from aging and losing population (these are real problems besetting e.g. Japan), and kept it an economic powerhouse through their labor.

In this way of looking at things, Trump sees Muslim-Americans as Latinos on steroids and so even more threatening to his project of racial hierarchy.

Then yesterday Tom Barrack, in charge of the presidential inaugural committee explained why Kanye West was not asked to perform: “We haven’t asked him . . . He’s been great. He considers himself a friend of the president-elect, but it’s not the venue. The venue we have for entertainment is filled out. It’s perfect. It’s going to be typically and traditionally American.” Kanye seems to have been particularly objectionable because of his hip hop culture. Barrack’s and Trump’s idea of ‘traditionally American’ is obviously an ideal of whiteness, which, of course, is a fantasy. Some 5 percent of self-described white southerners have a recent African genetic heritage. Trump and his circle associate Blackness with crime and inner cities burning, accounting for Trump’s bizarre tweets at Civil Rights legend John Lewis.

Trump is bringing Steve Bannon, the CEO of the neo-Nazi trash “Breitbart,” into the White House. There is a reason for which white supremacists rejoiced at that appointment.

He is also trying to make Jeff Sessions attorney general, who is alleged to have branded the NAACP, an advocacy group for African-Americans, “un-American.”

Aren’t we beginning to see a pattern here? The Trump cabinet and hangers-on think people of northern European descent are the real Americans (though mind you, in the early twentieth century European groups like the Irish, Poles, and even Greeks were not seen as “white.”) In his high appointments, Trump has not completely excluded minorities. though these appointees are either clearly unqualified for the job (thus making the case for white supremacy in an ironic way) or tied so closely in with the white Washington Establishment as to be unthreatening.

Trump also famously has contempt for women across the board, white or not. His white nationalism and that of his Rasputin, Bannon, is in part about male supremacy. White males are the alpha cohort, who can at will grope strange women.

But as strong as the blatant racism and sexism of the Trump circle is, we should not forget social class. Class helps form or tell against “whiteness.” The Irish and Poles were not considered white when they first in part because came they did menial labor or were solidly working class. Whiteness was about middle and upper middle class privilege.

Trump’s cabinet is a cabinet of multi-millionaires and billionaires who think the poor and the working class are not rich because they are lazy, rather than seeing their economic struggles as deriving from not being employed enough or not being paid enough. Andrew Puzder, Trump’s pick for secretary of labor, doesn’t believe workers should get breaks and opposed all minimum wage hikes.

Trump and many of his close advisers and appointees stand for white privilege, for the rights of corporations manned by filthy rich self-described “whites” to rule us without let or hindrance, without regulation or consequence. On the surface, white nationalism attempts to make it look as though only minorities are munchers are targeted as freeloaders. But ultimately what they mean by “white” is people like themselves, multi-millionaires and billionaires. All the rest of us are in some sense “untraditional” or “unusual.” The surprise awaiting the working class Reagan Democrats is that Trump doesn’t think they are really white, either.

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FOCUS: The Official Donald Trump Inauguration Drinking Game Print
Friday, 20 January 2017 11:40

Taibbi writes: "Barring a late re-entry into the picture by the Sweet Meteor O'Death - a candidate who among independents was polling even with Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton last year - Trump will be sworn in as president of the United States."

If you're taking the day off for Trump's inauguration Friday, or even if you aren't, you may want to drink heavily during this moment in our anti-history. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
If you're taking the day off for Trump's inauguration Friday, or even if you aren't, you may want to drink heavily during this moment in our anti-history. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


The Official Donald Trump Inauguration Drinking Game

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

20 January 17

 

Throw your livers in the air, and wave 'em like you just don't care

arring a late re-entry into the picture by the Sweet Meteor O'Death – a candidate who among independents was polling even with Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton last year – Trump will be sworn in as president of the United States Friday.

At night, when he climbs out of whatever wrench-tightened contraption he uses to keep his gelatinous pink hulk from spitting the seams of his suits, Trump will lay his head in chambers once occupied by the likes of Lincoln, Roosevelt and Kennedy.

It is a good bet that the first time he has occasion to use the toilet, he will, with great satisfaction, tell us about it in a tweet. He may even rate the experience. If you think that's not possible, remember all the things you might have thought were impossible prior to the beginning of the 2016 presidential campaign.

Trump says he began working on the speech three weeks ago in Fort Lauderdale. He even posted a picture of himself "writing" it. He's dressed in a suit and tie and frozen in an action pose with a pen and a legal pad, which must be his idea of what writing looks like.

If you're taking the day off, or even if you aren't, you may want to drink heavily during this moment in our anti-history. If that's your plan, we're here to help, with Donald Trump inauguration speech drinking game rules.

These rules were decided upon on social media. Each of the persons who came up with a rule will receive a signed copy of my new book of campaign reports, Insane Clown President. For those of you waiting for copies, I'm sending them out today. Apologies for the wait.

I will be live-tweeting during the speech. I haven't decided on a beverage of choice for this one, although the White Russian might be a possibility. The only problem is that I have to appear on TV later in the evening, and all that Kahlua might make me puke on Chris Matthews. Which would be OK, I guess. I mean, he might not like it, but it would be fitting somehow.

Without further ado, here we go. Drink every time:

1. Trump deploys the "pinchy fingers" rhetorical maneuver, holding his hands out to his sides and waving them back and forth with Spaghetti-Oed mini-fingers. (@jasonweiler)

Make it a double if he uses his trademark "high-fives (or high-tens) the invisible ghost in front of him" move. (@PentaTronic)

2. Trump berates or insults a media outlet, or gloats about one that is dying or dead. (@brittanygrogan)

3. Mike Pence holds a fake smile for 30 consecutive seconds. We have someone monitoring this, so I'll be tweeting it out if we have confirmed instances. (@keithchaput)

4. Trump name-checks a celebrity, or references The Apprentice. (@dwfriedheim)

5. Trump praises someone who until recently was a political enemy. Jager shot for Paul Ryan. (@LotusBroxton)

6. Trump doubles up a modifier, i.e. "many, many" or "very, very." (@pat_donovan)

7. The crowd chants "Lock her up!" (@DrKaz)

8. Trump makes preemptive excuses for his incipient failures. This could mean just about anything, including long excoriations on the "mess" and "disaster" his predecessor left for him to clean up. (@superiorwang)

9. Trump references the popular vote vs. the Electoral College. Double if he claims he would have won the popular vote if he'd wanted to. (@RobJRII)

More than 50 House members have said they'll skip this week's inauguration festivities. Watch here.

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Trump Education Nominee Betsy DeVos Lied to the Senate Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=33125"><span class="small">Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept</span></a>   
Thursday, 19 January 2017 14:33

Scahill writes: "The idea that her own mother's foundation would accidentally list her as a vice president for years as result of a clerical error is just not believable. The Democrats should go to town on this obvious attempt to mislead the Senate."

Betsy DeVos, Trump's pick to head the Department of Education. (photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty)
Betsy DeVos, Trump's pick to head the Department of Education. (photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty)


Trump Education Nominee Betsy DeVos Lied to the Senate

By Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept

19 January 17

 

here are many reasons Betsy DeVos’s nomination to serve as Donald Trump’s education secretary could be justifiably quashed by the U.S. Senate. Her long public record indicates she is a religious Christian zealot who does not believe in the actual separation of church and state, wants public monies funneled into religious schools, and has contributed through family foundations to bigoted groups with a militant anti-gay agenda. During her confirmation hearing she gave disturbing answers to questions about her views of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, standardized tests, and school vouchers. She also suggested guns have a place in American schools, though her claim that they were necessary to defend students from grizzly bear attacks was not very compelling.

DeVos is married to Richard DeVos, the heir to the Amway Corporation fortune. She is also the sister of Blackwater founder Erik Prince, who is secretly advising the Trump team on intelligence matters, as The Intercept reported Tuesday. The Prince and DeVos families’ merger through marriage was reminiscent of the monarchies of old Europe, and since the 1980s they have funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into Republican campaign coffers and the war chests of far-right religious organizations, at least one of which — the Family Research Council — has been designated an anti-LGBTQ hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

As Mother Jones pointed out:

The Dick and Betsy DeVos Family Foundation gave $275,000 to Focus on the Family from 1999 to 2001 but hasn’t donated since; it gave an additional $35,760 to the group’s Michigan and D.C. affiliates from 2001 to 2010. The Prince Foundation donated $5.2 million to Focus on the Family and $275,000 to its Michigan affiliate from 2001 to 2014. (It also gave $6.1 million to the Family Research Council, which has fought against same-sex marriage and anti-bullying programs — and is listed as an “anti-LGBT hate group” by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The FRC used to be a division of Focus on the Family before it became an independent nonprofit, with Dobson serving on its board, in 1992.)

During Tuesday’s hearing, the Democratic senators protested Republican chair Lamar Alexander’s unprecedented ruling that senators would only be permitted one round of questioning. Nonetheless, several senators pressed DeVos on the contributions made by her and other family members through their foundations. DeVos, clearly prepared for such questions, assured the committee that she has nothing to do with the contributions made by her mother’s foundation, the Prince Foundation (formerly known as the Edgar and Elsa Prince Foundation). DeVos said that her immediate family — presumably meaning her husband and children — had nothing to do with the financing of anti-gay causes and groups and that she has never supported “conversion therapy” for gay people.

Newly elected Democratic Sen. Margaret Hassan pressed DeVos on these claims. She asked DeVos directly if she was on the board of her mother’s foundation during the period in which large donations were made to Focus on the Family. DeVos said that she was not on the foundation’s board.

When I heard that, I pulled up the 990 tax documents of the Prince Foundation, which I investigated for my book “Blackwater.” Betsy DeVos was clearly listed as a vice president of the foundation’s board, along with her brother Erik, for many years, at least until 2014. DeVos was a vice president during the precise period Hassan was referring to. I then began a tweet storm about this lie:

At the very end of the hearing, Sen. Patty Murray, the ranking Democrat on the committee, allocated the small time she had left to Hassan, who proceeded to reference the 990 tax forms. DeVos then made an astonishing claim. These government tax forms, filed by her own mother’s foundation, were incorrect. For years. Many years. “That was a clerical error. I can assure you I have never made decisions on my mother’s behalf on her foundation’s board.”

The idea that her own mother’s foundation would accidentally list her as a vice president for years as result of a clerical error is just not believable. The Democrats should go to town on this obvious attempt to mislead the Senate. This alone should disqualify DeVos, though there is a vast ocean of other reasons they could fish from.

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