Feb 232021
 

It’s a tired day here in the CatBox.  I did not sleep well last night, so please pardon my brevity.  Tuesday is Flush your Republicans Day.  I may have some to flush in a bit, but I may have flushed them all yesterday. Have a fine day!

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 3:08 (average 4:58).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?  I blew Technicolor kitty-farts!

Cartoon:

Short Takes:

From The New Yorker: Donald J. Trump said on Monday that his “greatest regret” as President was his failure to name his three adult children to the United States Supreme Court.

Appearing on Fox News, Trump said that Ivanka, Eric, and Don, Jr., would be “way better judges” than “those three clowns” whom he did name.

“Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett are the worst people who have ever worked for me,” he said. “And that includes Scaramucci.”

When the Supreme Court was deciding whether New York prosecutors could obtain his tax returns, Trump said, “none of those three boneheads even called to ask me what they should do. No gratitude whatsoever.”

Well, Andy, he hasn’t gotten the mileage he had expected from Whoresuch, Nazi Kavanookie, and Amy Coney Bullshit. But he was stupid to expect gratitude. What gratitude?!!?  After all…, they ARE Republicans! On the other hand, wouldn’t it be funny as hell if he had gotten his rancid spawn confirmed to SCROTUS (Republican anti-Constitutional VD), and they had given prosecutors his tax records?  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube (NBC News Channel): Merrick Garland Testifies At Attorney General Confirmation Hearing

This video is 6:41:55 in length, so I encourage you to move around to places you want to hear. He will be such a magnificent AG that my only regret is that Biden can’t clone him to nominate to the Supreme Court too!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube (a blast from the past): Arlo Guthrie – City of New Orleans

Ah… the memories!!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

Don’t Let Republicans Steal YOUR Future!!

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Feb 222021
 

Don Winslow Films – anther lie from Lindsey

Really American – Ron Johnson – OMG

Now This News – Florida – Hey, I canfeel where they are coming from – but they are still wrong (not that Florida’s government officials have any moral high ground here. They don’t.)

Now This News – Fighting back against substandard medical care based on race.

Robert Reich – Unrigging the GOP’s Minority Rule

Jesse Dollmore – This is long and a bit repetetive, but it is also the first I have heard of any suggestion – at least any sworn suggestion – that the Secret Service was involved in the January 6 insurrection.

Beau – Forecasting for the GOP with at least one interesting takeaway

This is a petition to Missouri, but you don’t have to live there to sign it. It happily took my signature with my real address.

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Feb 222021
 

I’m not sure what happened this morning.  One possibility is that lightning struck the Bonneville Dam, a major source of hydro-power on the Columbia River, upstream of Portland, causing a massive flood at all points downriver.  However, the volume was insufficient and did not stink.  Therefore, I have to attribute it to the other possibility.  I finally Republicated.  I’m still exhausted, but I’m feeling much better.  The week will still be a little crazy as I’m going to the hospital on Thursday for a CAT Scan to see dust how much worse my tumors are.  OGIM!  Have a great day!

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 3:44 (average 5:27).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Short Takes:

From Crooks and Liars: …How do we keep this sense of Democratic unity in the all-important mission of getting important things done for regular people going?

Here are my guide posts:

1. Understand that Democrats hang together or we hang separately. That old line of Ben Franklin’s at the time the Declaration of Independence was signed was not meant as a joke or clever word play: it was quite literally true and deadly serious. Unfortunately, this moment in history finds us in a similar moment, as that gallows the insurrectionists were building at the Capitol are a deadly sign that the threat is real. We Democrats need to deliver real things for real people over the next two years, or we are going to lose control of the government to a political party which just overwhelmingly rejected the idea that a president who encouraged a coup should not be punished for it.

We need to work together to get anything done, and we need to get substantial things done in order to win in 2022. With the margins we have now, there is literally no choice in the matter. We all know that opportunities for compromise with the Republicans will be few and far between, but compromise between Democrats is mandatory if we want to get anything done. So for my progressive comrades, we need to get everything we can on every bill we can, and then compromise and move on to the next chance. If we can convince the last few swing votes on at least reforming the filibuster, that should work out reasonably well for us, and even if not, there should be a lot we can get into the second reconciliation bill as well as more executive action.

…Conclusion

Passing legislation with the narrow margins in the House and Senate is going to be an intense challenge, requiring Democrats to stay together and requiring everyone to compromise and work things out in good faith. Biden has started off in much stronger political shape than the last two Democratic presidents, and we are on the verge of passing the biggest and boldest recovery package in the history of the republic. We need to methodically get that done, and then build on the success with another reconciliation bill where we can do bigger long-term things.

I’ve included the first of four guide posts and part of the conclusion. I fully agree and strongly recommend that you click through for the rest. We need to overcome the urge to in-fight.  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube (MSNBC Channel): U.S. Reaches Grim Milestone of 500,000 Covid Deaths

 

What a sad day. Of course Trump** virus would have killed thousands, even if Republicans were not doing everything they to give welfare for billionaires precedence while fighting to evade spending to save American lives!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube (a blast from the past): Mr. Bojangles – Nitty Gritty Dirt Band – [With Lyrics]

 

Ah… the memories!!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

Don’t Let Republicans Steal YOUR Future!!

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Feb 212021
 

The Lincoln Project is finding time for Cruz

Meidas Touch – Voting Rights – and we all know why.

The Damage Report – Why is it cold if there’s global warming? for dummies

The Alt-Right Playbook – I Hate Mondays. This is the last in the series to date. However, the site has a couple of other series which may be worth starting.

SNL Cold Open

Beau – Texas and tough guys…

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Feb 212021
 

Please pardon my pit stop.  I’ve tad virtually no sleep in the last three days, and I’ve figured out why.  Lactulose causes bloating, cramping and gas.  That has kept me awake.  WWWendy is coming, and I hope I can nap before she does.  Have a good day.  Maybe tomorrow.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 4:26 (average 5:10).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

This pic of me is a week old.

Short Take:

From YouTube (a blast from the past): Alice’s Restaurant – Original 1967 Recording

 

Ah… the memories of listening to this tune in smoke filled rooms!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

Don’t Let Republicans Steal YOUR Future!!

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Feb 202021
 

Meidas Touch – podcast – Miles Taylor (no CC)

MSNBC – Well, we said we needed another FDR.

Not a video but a Tweet for the ages

Orange Acres Episode 3

Founders Sing – they are ON IT.

Beau on Deb Haaland – He makes good points, but I think he’s missing the one that may be the most important – she’s Native American (and a woman). The QOP won’t tolerate that.

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Everyday Erinyes #254

 Posted by at 10:22 am  Politics
Feb 202021
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

As I’ve been saying, I have a number of articles saved regarding how white supremacy thinks, when it increases, how it expresses itself, and so on – and especially, what to do about it. I hope to get to all of them eventually. This is not one of them – but it is about accountability, which, like democracy, is not threatened.

The United States is not the first nation to have established an impeachment process. Neither are we the first nation to learn that, as a process to achieve accountability – well, let’s just say it is far from perfect. Here’s a little history so that we can consider similarities and differences.
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Why the British abandoned impeachment – and what the US Congress might do next

The impeachment trial of Warren Hastings in 1788.
Library of Congress

Eliga Gould, University of New Hampshire

Impeachment was developed in medieval England as a way to discipline the king’s ministers and other high officials. The framers of the U.S. Constitution took that idea and applied it to presidents, judges and other federal leaders.

That tool was in use, and in question, during the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump. Republicans raised questions about both the constitutionality and the overall purpose of impeachment proceedings against a person who no longer holds office.

Democrats responded that the framers expected impeachment to be available as a way to deliver consequences to a former official, and that refusing to convict Trump could open the door to future presidential abuses of power.

An impeachment case that was active in Britain while the framers were writing the Constitution in Philadelphia helped inform the new American government structure. But the outcome of that case – and that of another impeachment trial a decade later – signaled the end of impeachment’s usefulness in Britain, though the British system of government offered another way to hold officials accountable.

Impeachment in Britain

During the 17th century, the English Parliament used impeachment repeatedly against the royal favorites of King Charles I. One, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, went to the gallows in 1641 for subverting the laws and attempting to raise an Irish army to subdue the king’s opponents in England. Although kings couldn’t be impeached, Parliament eventually tried King Charles I for treason too, sentencing him to death by public beheading on Jan. 30, 1649.

A century later, impeachment no longer carried a risk of execution, but in 1786 the House of Commons launched what would become the most famous – and longest – impeachment trial in British history.

The lower house of Parliament, the House of Commons, impeached Warren Hastings, who had retired as governor-general of British India and was back in England, for corruption and mismanagement. That action provides a direct answer to one current legal question: The charges were based on what Hastings had done in India, making clear that a former official could be impeached and tried, even though he was no longer in office.

Future U.S. president John Adams, who was in London at the time, predicted in a letter to fellow founder John Jay that although Hastings deserved to be convicted, the proceedings would likely end with his acquittal. Nevertheless, Adams and Jay were among those who supported the new U.S. Constitution, whose drafters in 1787 included impeachment, even though that method of accountability was close to disappearing from Britain.

Nearing the end of its usefulness

The trial of Hastings, in Parliament’s upper house, the House of Lords, didn’t actually begin until 1788, and took seven years to conclude. The prosecution included Edmund Burke, one of the most gifted orators of the age. Eventually, though, the House of Lords proved Adams right, acquitting Hastings in 1795.

This stunning loss could have been the death knell for impeachment in Great Britain, but Hastings was not the last British political figure to be impeached. That dubious honor goes to Henry Dundas, Lord Melville, Scottish first lord of the admiralty, who was charged in 1806 with misappropriating public money. Dundas was widely assumed to be guilty, but, as with Hastings, the House of Lords voted to acquit.

These examples showed that impeachment, even when the accused government official had done the things that he was accused of doing, was a blunt, cumbersome weapon. With both Hastings and Dundas, the House of Commons was willing to act, but the House of Lords – which was (and is) not an elected body and therefore less responsive to popular opinion – refused to go along. As a tool for checking the actions of ministers and other political appointees, impeachment no longer worked, and it fell out of use.

A new method of accountability

The decline of impeachment in Britain coincided with the rise of another, more effective process by which high officials there could be held accountable.

British prime ministers answer to Parliament, doing so literally during the now-weekly question time in the House of Commons. Leaders who for whatever reason lose the support of a simple majority in the lower house, including through a vote of no confidence, can be forced to resign. The last time a British prime minister lost a vote of no confidence was in 1979, when the minority Labour government of James Callaghan was defeated.

A packed House of Commons
The U.K. prime minister’s ‘question time’ is one key method by which the government’s leader can be held to account by other lawmakers.
U.K. Parliament via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

If a prime minister receives a vote of no confidence, there is an alternative to resignation: call an election for a new Parliament, which is what Callaghan did, and let the people decide whether the current government gets to stay or has to go. If the prime minister’s party loses, he or she is generally out, and the leader of the party with the new majority takes over. In 1979, the defeat of Callaghan and the Labour Party paved the way for the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher, Britain’s first female prime minister.

This provides an immediate course of action for those who oppose a British government for any reason, including allegations of official wrongdoing, and delivers a rapid decision.

[Like what you’ve read? Want more? Sign up for The Conversation’s daily newsletter.]

In the United States, by contrast, a president can be accused of corruption or even sedition but face no real consequences, so long as one more than a third of the Senate declines to convict.

Now that Trump has been acquitted, then the Constitution’s bulwark against presidential malfeasance could become yet another mechanism of minority government.

Another path

If impeachment is rendered useless in the U.S., as it was in Britain two centuries ago, the Constitution does offer another remedy: Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

Rep. Jamie Raskin gestures during the Trump impeachment trial
If Rep. Jamie Raskin and the other House managers of the impeachment case don’t prevail, that may not be the end of possible accountability for former President Donald Trump.
Senate Television via AP

Originally intended to prevent former Confederates from returning to power after the Civil War, Section 3 bars people who have “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the U.S. from serving in state or federal governments, including in Congress or as president or vice president.

The language in the amendment could justify barring Trump from future office – and the resolution to do so may require only a majority vote in both houses of Congress, though enforcement would likely also need a ruling from a judge.The Conversation

Eliga Gould, Professor of History, University of New Hampshire

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, I don’t think it requires a whole lot of logic, or imagination, to see that instituting the option of a vote of no confidence (or the equivalent) would not work well here. I think the most obvious reason is that, in those nations which use it, there are at least three active political parties, so that it is impossible to govern without forming some kind of coalition with someone. Here, a vote of no confidence would be essentially the same as a recall election. And, if you have ever lived through one of those, you know how dangerous those can be. And particularly with no consistent media delivering facts.

Further, a vote of no confidence, like impeachment, is a political tool. What we need today (and would have benefitted from having for the last four years) is a legal tool. The decision that no sitting president can be prosecuted for crimes is based on one legal opinion almost fifty years old. Some of us thought it wrong at the time. Many thought it wrong during the events of the last four years. Yet it is held as sacrosanct.

I am not a lawyer nor a legislator myself. But might Congress not consider writing and passing a law along the lines that no one in the Federal Government, elected or appointed, can be considered immune from prosecution for any Federal crime, or any State crime committed under that State’s jurisdiction, even while in office? Because that’s what we have needed, and I guarantee we will need it again. (Actually, we need it already. I’m confident Nameless will concur and have a suggestion.)

The Furies and I will be back.

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Feb 202021
 

It’s an exhausted day here in the CatBox.  I’ve made three trips to the throne this morning, but the output has been too tiny to qualify for Republican Party membership.  I could not sleep last night.  I’m falling asleep at the keyboard, so I need to go back to bed.  Tomorrow is a WWWendy day, so I’ll have no more than a Personal Update, albeit better than this, I hope.  Have a fine weekend!

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 5:26 (average 5:49).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Short Take:

From YouTube (a blast from the past): The Yardbirds – For Your Love (1965) (Full version)

 

Ah… the memories!  RESIST the Republican Reich!!

Don’t Let Republicans Steal YOUR Future!!

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