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Showing posts with label SOTOMAYOR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SOTOMAYOR. Show all posts

Saturday, December 11, 2021

1/6 panel gets Trump's actual coup plan from top aide

 


Tornadoes kill dozens in Kentucky and throughout midwest

Today's Top Stories:

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Trump's chief of staff turns over PowerPoint presentation detailing plans to overturn election results

The damning document was part of a cache of files Mark Meadows turned over to the January 6th committee before he reneged on his cooperation deal.



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Republican fact checked to his face after claiming Listerine could treat COVID

Senator Ron Johnson's disinformation could get you killed or cause you to fall off your chair laughing.


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Major news on the future of Roe

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Wow.


SCOTUS rules lawsuits against Texas' controversial abortion ban can proceed
It's a small procedural victory in the fight to protect a woman's right to choose, but conservative justices continue to refuse to lift the ban while lawsuits play out.



Biden backs Kellogg's striking union workers in their desperate fight against the corporate giant
The President's vocal support is "exactly what we needed at this time," worker hails.


Six more subpoenas issued by the January 6th committee
The noose continues to tighten around Trump's insurrection collaborators with this latest list of aides and associates called to face congress.


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Sonia Sotomayor unloads on conservative justices in her latest salvo in the battle to save abortion rights

The liberal justice is leaving it all on the field as abortion rights hang by a thread


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Meet the four powerhouse rural candidates ready to take the GQP down

No Dem Left Behind: Richard Ojeda introduces No Dem Left Behind's powerhouse first round of Senate endorsements -- each with a plan to connect with rural voters and spotlight their issues in the midterm elections and beyond.


Report: Kanye West's publicist threatened Georgia election worker at the center of Trump's "stop the steal" conspiracy
Trevian Kutti traveled to Georgia after the election to confront Ruby Freeman and pressure her into confessing to the voter fraud conspiracy Trump spun around her.


President Biden orders end to federal funding of new fossil fuel projects overseas
Official cables affirm the Biden administration's commitment to end American financing of "coal and carbon-intensive energy projects overseas."



Trump launched profane tirade about Netanyahu in interview for congratulating Biden on win
In interview with Israeli journalist, the former president once again proved that Trump loyalty is a one-way street.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...




Saturday, December 4, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Robert Reich | There Is No Doubt Any More: The US Supreme Court Is Run by Partisan Hacks

 


 

Reader Supported News
03 December 21

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Reader Supported News

 

'If there's any doubt about the partisan hackery of the supreme court's six Republican appointees, it will be on full display when they overturn Roe v Wade.' (photo: Getty)
FOCUS: Robert Reich | There Is No Doubt Any More: The US Supreme Court Is Run by Partisan Hacks
Robert Reich, Guardian UK
Reich writes: "Justice Amy Coney Barrett recently insisted otherwise but that's now hard to claim."

Justice Amy Coney Barrett recently insisted otherwise but that’s now hard to claim

In mid-September, Clarence Thomas told a crowd of more than 800 students and faculty at Notre Dame University that the US supreme court should not be viewed in political terms, and that justices don’t base their rulings on “personal preferences”.

But if not political or personal preferences, where exactly do they discover the law? Thomas never said. When asked whether the attorneys presenting oral arguments ever compel him to change his mind, Thomas said, “almost never”.

In late September, the court’s newest member, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, told a crowd in Kentucky that supreme court justices are not a “bunch of partisan hacks”.

If there’s any doubt about the partisan hackery of the supreme court’s six Republican appointees, it will be on full display when they overturn Roe v Wade, the 1973 decision that established a constitutional right to abortion and prohibited states from banning the procedure before fetal viability, about 23 weeks.

That ruling is expected next July. The case they’ve teed up to do the dirty deed is Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which centers on a Mississippi law that bans almost all abortions after the 15th week. Moving the constitutional prohibition to 15 weeks would disregard decades of precedent.

On Wednesday, during almost two hours of intense oral argument and questioning from the justices, the court’s six Republican appointees signaled their comfort with the Mississippi law, even though it would flatly overrule Roe. Several of them appeared ready to dispense with Roe entirely, letting states decide whether and when to ban abortions.

Until the last few years, there was no realistic prospect of overruling Roe. But Donald Trump vowed to name justices who would do so. And courtesy of the machinations of then Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, Trump got an opportunity to appoint three justices – who have now created a six-justice conservative supermajority.

During Wednesday’s argument, the three justices appointed by Democratic presidents warned that overruling Roe so soon after a change in the court’s membership would undermine the court’s legitimacy.

“Will this institution survive the stench that this creates in the public perception that the constitution and its reading are just political acts?” Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked. “If people actually believe that it’s all political, how will we survive? How will the court survive?”

It’s the key question. As the framers of the US constitution well understood, the supreme court is the one branch of government with neither the power to command obedience by force nor to gain it by doling out money. It relies totally on its moral authority. If the public begins to see it as just another political branch, it will lose that authority.

Flashback: I was in law school in 1973 when the supreme court decided Roe. Also in my class at the time was Clarence Thomas, along with Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton.

The professors used the Socratic method – asking hard questions about the cases they were discussing and waiting for students to raise their hands in response, and then criticizing the responses. It was a hair-raising but effective way to learn the law.

One of the principles guiding those discussions is called stare decisis – Latin for “to stand by things decided”. It’s the doctrine of judicial precedent. If a court has already ruled on an issue (say, on reproductive rights), future courts should decide similar cases the same way. Supreme courts can change their minds and rule differently than they did before, but they need good reasons to do so, and it helps if their opinion is unanimous or nearly so. Otherwise, their rulings appear (and are) arbitrary – even, shall we say? – political.

In those classroom discussions almost 50 years ago, Hillary’s hand was always first in the air. When she was called upon, she gave perfect answers – whole paragraphs, precisely phrased. She distinguished one case from another, using precedents and stare decisis to guide her thinking. I was awed.

My hand was in the air about half the time, and when called on, my answers were meh.

Clarence’s hand was never in the air. I don’t recall him saying anything, ever.

Bill was never in class.

Only one of us now sits on the supreme court. It appears that he and his Republican-appointed colleagues – three appointed by a president who instigated a coup against the United States – are getting ready to violate stare decisis, judicial precedent.

I don’t expect them to give a clear and convincing argument for why.


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Friday, December 3, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Charles Pierce | Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey Are Dead Precedents Walking

 

 

Reader Supported News
02 December 21

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Supreme Court Justices John Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
FOCUS: Charles Pierce | Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey Are Dead Precedents Walking
Charles Pierce, Esquire
Pierce writes: "This one is over, folks. The decision will be 6-3 or, perhaps, 5-4. Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are dead precedents walking."

The Supreme Court conservatives signaled as much in oral arguments regarding a Mississippi abortion law.

This one is over, folks. The decision will be 6-3 or, perhaps, 5-4. Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are dead precedents walking. Chief Justice John Roberts tipped his hand late in the session. In a colloquy with U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, Roberts made the astonishing assertion that the Mississippi law was not “a prohibition” because women in Mississippi can still avail themselves of their current constitutional rights up until the 15th week of their gestation.

This is nonsense. The Mississippi law was specifically designed to prohibit abortion, and it was specifically designed by its authors to take advantage of the carefully engineered new majority on the Supreme Court, where Merrick Garland’s nomination was slow-walked into oblivion while that of Amy Coney Barrett’s was sent up on a rocket sled, and where Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed despite his having clearly bullshitted his way through his confirmation hearings—most notably, given our current moment, on his great respect for stare decisis. Roberts is not a stupid man. He knows the history of the Mississippi law as well as anybody does. He knows what it does and he knows why it does it. He also knows that a complete, unambiguous prohibition is the obvious next step. There are already laws ticking away in state legislatures, including Mississippi’s, to do that very thing.

(Personally, I can easily envision state laws prohibiting women from going out of state to access abortions. Welcome back to the Fugitive Slave Law. I can envision that as easily as I can envision the eventual state-based assaults on gay marriage, and the constitutional right to privacy itself.)

Here, however, as Roberts pretends he doesn’t know any of these things, I think we see him fashioning the “reasonable” camouflage for his eventual vote to overturn 50 years of precedent. And, even if he doesn’t employ the camouflage, there are clearly still five votes to read reproductive freedoms out of the Constitution, so Roberts would be free to join the minority if he so chose. The coffin is now complete and sealed.

We should pause here to commend Scott Stewart, the solicitor general of Mississippi, for being one of the most unctuous presences to grace the halls of government since the departure of Kenneth Starr. I don’t know if I’ve ever heard a more revolting set of remarks than listening to the solicitor general of Mississippi Goddamn praising the wisdom of Brown v. Board of Education as a reason to restrict established constitutional freedoms. Justice Kavanaugh also ran down a whole litany of important rulings that overturned precedents, as though he would have been with the majority on any of them. The gorge rose steadily and stayed at high tide.

In reality, the opposing counsel were merely accessories. This was a case in which the justices were clearly contending with each other. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and, surprisingly, Justice Stephen Breyer came in very hot on the issue of how the Mississippi law’s stated reliance on the ideological shift on the Court was an arrow aimed dead at the heart of the Court’s credibility.

"Will this institution survive the stench that this creates in the public perception," asked Sotomayor, "that the Constitution and its reading are just political acts? I don’t see how it is possible."

This point is profound enough on its own. But implicit in it was a rebuttal to one of Mississippi’s sub rosa attacks on Roe: that the decision has been so “divisive” that, somehow, leaving it up to the individual states will ameliorate the anger it has provoked. It is considered impolite to point out that the divisiveness has come mainly from the one side of the debate that has an actual body count. Or that, if this view prevails, it’s not just a victory for conservative politicians and ambitious theocrats, it’s also a victory for snipers and clinic bombers, for Eric Rudolph, and James Kopp, and Paul Hill. That part of the anti-choice movement doesn’t get discussed at fundraising parties, but that is the most graphic historical evidence of what the “divisiveness” of the debate has been about.

In any event, it’s hard to see any result out of Wednesday’s arguments that doesn’t leave the Mississippi law intact. This will open the floodgates fully, not only on reproductive freedom, but also on a lot of the social progress that has come about since the Court decided all those cases that Stewart and Kavanaugh pretended to honor as they equated Roe with Supreme Court decisions that legitimized racial segregation and abusive police tactics. The law isn’t supposed to exist this far beyond the looking glass.


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Friday, October 1, 2021

RSN: Jill Lepore | Unearthing Black History

 


 

Reader Supported News
30 September 21

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WE NEED A REASON TO CONTINUE. YOU ARE THAT REASON. — At this stage we have to battle every day to keep RSN going. It isn’t for the money, there’s barely enough of the to meet the organization’s expenses. So why do it? We have seen that our efforts can and do make a difference. It’s that simple. We are motivated not just by the urgency of resistance but even more by the chance for real progress. We do this for you and the world we share.
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At least fifteen hundred African Americans are buried in Geer Cemetery, in Durham, North Carolina. Only two hundred headstones now remain, but locals are painstakingly working to reconstruct the site's population and to restore its grounds. (photo: Donavon Smallwood/The New Yorker)
Jill Lepore | Unearthing Black History
Jill Lepore, The New Yorker
Lepore writes: "Efforts to rescue African American burial grounds and remains have exposed deep conflicts over inheritance and representation."
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor: 'There Is Going to Be a Lot of Disappointment in the Law, a Huge Amount'
Ariane de Vogue, CNN
De Vogue writes: "Days before the start of a tumultuous term, and after the Supreme Court justices divided bitterly over a Texas law that bars most abortions after six weeks, Justice Sonia Sotomayor warned an audience of law students about the frustration of having to write dissents."
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Andrew Bacevich | 'A Horrible Mistake': Recovering From America's Imperial Delusions
Andrew Bacevich, TomDispatch
Bacevich writes: "The bad news stemming from the ill-planned and ill-managed U.S. evacuation of the Afghan capital just kept coming in. The Washington Post put it this way in blowing the whistle on the culminating disaster: 'U.S. military admits 'horrible mistake' in Kabul drone strike that killed 10 Afghans.'"
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Top Republicans Rub Shoulders With Extremists in Secretive Rightwing Group, Leak Reveals
Jason Wilson, Guardian UK
Wilson writes: "A leaked document has revealed the membership list of the secretive Council for National Policy (CNP), showing how it provides opportunities for elite Republicans, wealthy entrepreneurs, media proprietors and pillars of the US conservative movement to rub shoulders with anti-abortion and anti-Islamic extremists."

Wealthy entrepreneurs and media moguls also named on membership list for influential Council for National Policy
A leaked document has revealed the membership list of the secretive Council for National Policy (CNP), showing how it provides opportunities for elite Republicans, wealthy entrepreneurs, media proprietors and pillars of the US conservative movement to rub shoulders with anti-abortion and anti-Islamic extremists.
The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which monitors rightwing hate groups, describes the CNP as “a shadowy and intensely secretive group [which] has operated behind the scenes” in its efforts to “build the conservative movement”.
The leaked membership list dates from September last year, and reveals the 40-year-old CNP put influential Trump administration figures alongside leaders of organizations that have been categorized as hate groups.
The group was founded in 1981 by activists influential in the Christian right, including Tim LaHaye, Howard Phillips and Paul Weyrich, who had also been involved in founding and leading the Moral Majority. Initially they were seeking to maximize their influence on the new Reagan administration. In subsequent years, CNP meetings have played host to presidential aspirants like George W Bush in 1999 and Mitt Romney in 2007, and sitting presidents including Donald Trump in 2020.
In videos obtained by the Washington Post in 2020, the CNP executive committee chairman, Bill Walton, told attendees of the upcoming election: “This is a spiritual battle we are in. This is good versus evil.”
The CNP is so secretive, according to reports, that its members are instructed not to reveal their affiliation or even name the group.
Heidi Beirich, of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, said in an email that “this new CNP list makes clear that the group still serves as a key venue where mainstream conservatives and extremists mix”, adding that CNP “clearly remains a critical nexus for mainstreaming extremism from the far right into conservative circles”.
The document – which reveals email addresses and phone numbers for most members – shows that the CNP includes members of SPLC-listed hate groups.
They include leaders of organizations listed as anti-Muslim hate groups, including:
Frank Gaffney, founder and executive chairman of the Center for Security Policy (CSP)
Brigitte Gabriel, founder and chairman of Act For America (AFA)
They also include several founders or leaders of groups listed as anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups, such as:
Michael P Farris, president and CEO of the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF)
Brad Dacus, founder and president of the Pacific Justice Institute
Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council
Matthew Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel
Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association
Also, there are members of organizations listed as anti-immigrant hate groups, including James and Amapola Hansberger, co-founders of Legal Immigrants For America (Lifa).
Additionally, the list includes members of groups that have been accused of extremist positions on abortion. They include Margaret H Hartshorn, chair of the board of Heartbeat International, which has reportedly spread misinformation worldwide to pregnant women.
Several high-profile figures associated with the Trump administration, or conspiracy-minded characters in Trump’s orbit, are also on the list, such as Jerome R Corsi, who has written conspiracy-minded books about John Kerry, Barack Obama and the September 11 attacks. Corsi is listed as a member of CNP’s board of governors.
Along with these representatives of extremist positions, the CNP rolls include members of ostensibly more mainstream conservative groups, and representatives of major American corporations. Still others come from the Republican party, a network of rightwing activist organizations, and the companies and foundations that back them.
A newcomer to the group since a previous version of the member list was exposed is Charlie Kirk, founder and president of Turning Point USA (TPUSA), a conservative youth organization.
Although TPUSA works hard to make inroads into mainstream culture with stunts and on-campus events, Kirk has recently staked out more hard-right positions, saying last week that Democratic immigration policies were aimed at “diminishing and decreasing white demographics in America”, a day after Tucker Carlson ventilated racist “great replacement” conspiracy theories on his Fox News program.
Conservative movement heavyweights in the group include Lisa B Nelson, chief executive of the American Legislative Exchange Council; Eugene Mayer, president of the Federalist Society; Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform; Daniel Schneider, executive director of the American Conservative Union, which organizes the CPac conference; and L Brent Bozell III, the founder of the Media Research Center and a member of the Bozell and Buckley dynasties of conservative activists.
Other members include pillars of the Republican political establishment, including former GOP congressional majority leader Tom DeLay; former Wisconsin governor Scott Walker; Reagan administration attorney general Edwin Meese III; and former RNC chair and Trump White House chief of staff Reince Priebus.
Their number also includes sitting congressmen such as Barry Loudermilk and influential operatives like David Trulio, who was the senior adviser and chief of staff to the under-secretary of defense in the Trump administration.
The member list also includes representatives of major US corporations, such as Marc Johansen, vice-president for the satellites and intelligence program for Boeing; Jeffrey Coors, of the Coors brewing family, who have extensively sponsored conservative groups; Lee Roy Mitchell, the founder and chairman of the board for movie chain owner Cinemark Holdings; Steve Forbes, the founder and chief executive of the Forbes business media empire; and Scott Brown, a senior vice-president at Morgan Stanley.
Other members of the group represent organizations that operate under a veil of secrecy, with conservative “dark money” organizations well represented.
One member, Lawson Bader, is the president of Donor’s Trust and Donors Capital Fund, nonprofits that disguise the identities of their own donors, and whose largesse to rightwing causes has earned them the reputation as “the dark-money ATM of the conservative movement”.
Another member, Richard Graber, is the president and chief executive of the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. The Bradley foundation has long bankrolled conservative movement causes, including Donors Trust, and has reportedly sponsored widespread efforts to discredit the election of Joe Biden in 2020.
Conservative media figures are also on the list: Neil Patel, co-founder and publisher of the Daily Caller; Larry Beasley, chief executive of the rightwing newspaper the Washington Times; and Floyd Brown, the founder of the Arizona-based Western Journal and founder of the Citizens United Pac.
Pro-gun groups are also represented, with NRA chief executive Wayne LaPierre and Gun Owners of America founder Tim Macy each listed as members.
The 220-page document – which includes a statement of principles and an indication of members’ policy interests alongside a complete member list – was leaked and provided to journalists via a transparency organization, Distributed Denial of Secrets.
An earlier, redacted version of the list was published along with reporting by the Center for Media and Democracy in late 2020. DDOSecret’s publication restored personal information, which allowed further reporting and verification of the list’s contents.
Emma Best from that group said in a messenger chat that CNP was “a secretive forum for ultra-wealthy and elite conservatives to strategize and form long-term plans that have national and international impact”. Therefore, she said, “any opportunity to shine a light on their members, activities and interests is clearly in the public interest”.
The Guardian repeatedly requested comment from CNP staff, including executive director Brad McEwen, and other groups mentioned in this story but received no immediate response.
This article was amended on 30 September 2021 because an earlier version misnamed Americans for Tax Reform as “Americans for Tax Return”.
Top Republicans rub shoulders with extremists in secretive rightwing group, leak reveals
THEGUARDIAN.COM
Top Republicans rub shoulders with extremists in secretive rightwing group, leak reveals
Wealthy entrepreneurs and media mog

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Senator Warren Calls Fed Chair Powell a 'Dangerous Man,' Says She Will Oppose His Renomination
Jeff Cox, CNBC
Cox writes: "Sen. Elizabeth Warren charged Tuesday that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has led an effort to weaken the nation's banking system, and she vowed to oppose his renomination."
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Ecuador Declares Prison Emergency After 116 Killed in Riot
teleSUR
Excerpt: "Ecuadorian officials on Wednesday said more than 100 inmates were killed in a prison riot Tuesday in the southwest port city of Guayaquil, after initially reporting the death toll had climbed to 30."
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One of the World's Oldest Rainforests Returns to Indigenous Control
Olivia Rosane, EcoWatch
Rosane writes: "Australia's Daintree Rainforest - a World Heritage Site and one of the oldest rainforests in the world - is being returned to Indigenous ownership."
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"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...