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War for Ukraine Day 852: Kharkiv, Odesa, and Donetsk – the Bombardments Continue

by Adam L Silverman|  June 24, 20247:46 pm| 24 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Open Threads, Silverman on Security, War in Ukraine

(Image by NEIVANMADE)

Quick housekeeping notes. First, Rosie had her fourth and final chemo treatment of round two today. She now gets two weeks off before she starts round three. According to the oncology vet Rosie is fully in remission. Thank you all for the good thoughts, well wishes, prayers, and donations.

Second, it was a very long day and I’ve got another one tomorrow. So I’m going to keep this on the shorter side.

Russia continued its bombardments today.

Explosions reported in Kharkiv! Right now, russian troops are attacking the city with glide bombs!

— Iryna Voichuk (@IrynaVoichuk) June 24, 2024

That’s how Ukrainian children react to air raid alerts.

There have been three of them in Kyiv just tonight.

Kharkiv has been attacked by guided aerial bombs again tonight.

Our kids spend their childhood to air raid alert sounds.

📹: wla_d83_/TikTok pic.twitter.com/WpZV3zZ3cS

— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) June 24, 2024

Russian strike on Odesa destroyed over 24,000 square meters of the warehouses of a supermarket chain.

Four people were injured.

“There was never any ammunition, weapons or shells in the warehouse. Groceries, food and non-food products were stored there – everything necessary… https://t.co/RazE9LsZEJ pic.twitter.com/vVZtowb70k

— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) June 24, 2024

Russian strike on Odesa destroyed over 24,000 square meters of the warehouses of a supermarket chain.

Four people were injured.

“There was never any ammunition, weapons or shells in the warehouse. Groceries, food and non-food products were stored there – everything necessary for the comfortable daily life of civilian Ukrainians,” noted the Tavria V press service.

📹: Tavria V supermarket

UPD: The death toll due to the Russian attack on Pokrovsk on June 24 has risen to five. 41 people are reported injured, says Donetsk Regional Military Administration. pic.twitter.com/cehlVgiODs

— Hromadske Int. (@Hromadske) June 24, 2024

Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump.

show full post on front page

The Main Focus Is Currently on the Donetsk Region and Supplying Our Forces with Everything They Need – Address by the President

24 June 2024 – 20:01

I wish you health, fellow Ukrainians!

Briefly about this day.

First, there was a morning meeting with the military. The Commander-in-Chief, the Chief of the General Staff, and the Minister of Defense were present. We discussed the situation in key areas, with the main focus currently on the Donetsk region and supplying our forces with everything they need. We also discussed personnel issues within the Armed Forces of Ukraine. I decided to replace the Commander of the Joint Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Lieutenant General Yuriy Sodol, with Brigadier General Andriy Hnatov. There was also a report today on the aftermath of the Russian missile strikes on Pokrovsk. Dozens of people were injured, including three children. Four people were killed. My condolences to their families and loved ones. We will definitely retaliate against this Russian attack, and our response will be totally fair.

Secondly, today I introduced a new Head of the Department of State Protection. His task is to create a new, modern structure of the Department, to ensure a new format and quality. An absolutely patriotic one.

Thirdly, I honored our warriors from the Center of Special Operations “A” of the Security Service of Ukraine with state awards of Ukraine. They are heroic men! We can be really proud of each of them. I thanked them for their strength and congratulated them on the 30th anniversary of the Center of Special Operations “A” of the Security Service of Ukraine.

Fourth, we have achieved several results today in our relations with partners. Another country, Malawi, has joined the Peace Summit communiqué. Greater African representation in global efforts for peace increases the pressure on Russia to stop this criminal aggression. The more countries and leaders that stand with us, with Ukraine, the sooner we will fully restore the power of the UN Charter.

I also want to thank the United States today for a new decision in support of our people. This timely humanitarian decision involves U.S. funding for the urgent printing of books for children in Ukraine. Three million copies, including textbooks, will be printed using Ukrainian facilities before the start of the school year. At a time when the Russian occupiers are literally burning everything, including Ukrainian culture and the infrastructure of culture and education, it is important to feel the support of our partners in this area as well. Thank you, America!

And fifth, the European Union. Final preparations are now underway for tomorrow’s extremely significant, historic event. Negotiations between Ukraine and the European Union regarding Ukraine’s accession are set to begin. This is a day Ukraine has been striving toward for decades. And now we are making it a reality – Ukraine will never be deterred from its path to a united Europe, to our common home of all European nations. A home that must be peaceful! Thank you to everyone who helps!

Glory to all who fight for Ukraine!

Glory to Ukraine!

“More than 30 oil refineries, terminals, and oil depots in Russia have already been hit,” – President Zelenskyy during the presentation of state rewards to soldiers of the SBU Special Operations Center “A.”

“For SBU drones, a distance of 1,500 kilometers is no longer a problem.… pic.twitter.com/loKcLEZCJf

— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) June 24, 2024

More: Zelenskyy announced the latest shakeup of the country’s senior military leadership following a meeting with commanders on Monday evening.

The move to sack Sodol, who previously served as commander of the marine corps, came hours after Azov National Guard Brigade chief of…

— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) June 24, 2024

More: Zelenskyy announced the latest shakeup of the country’s senior military leadership following a meeting with commanders on Monday evening.

The move to sack Sodol, who previously served as commander of the marine corps, came hours after Azov National Guard Brigade chief of staff Bohdan Krotevych among others accused Sodol of essentially working on behalf of Russia and blamed him for the deaths of “thousands” of Ukrainian soldiers under his command.

In the rare display of public criticism of Ukraine’s military leadership by an active-duty officer, Krotevych wrote on Telegram that he had appealed to the State Bureau of Investigations (SBI) to conduct an investigation into Sodol’s activities.

“I wrote a letter to the SBI with a call to launch an investigation against one military general who, in my opinion, has killed more Ukrainian soldiers than any Russian general,” he said.

“I don’t care if they start an investigation against me, and I donʼt care if they put me in prison. I care that combatants and brigade commanders are judged for the loss of an observation post, but the general is not judged for the loss of regions and dozens of cities and the loss of thousands of soldiers,” he added.

Sodol was appointed in February, when Zelensky announced a major military reshuffle and tapped Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky to replace Gen. Valery Zaluzhny as the commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces.

“More than 30 oil refineries, terminals, and oil depots in Russia have already been hit,” – President Zelenskyy during the presentation of state rewards to soldiers of the SBU Special Operations Center “A.”

“For SBU drones, a distance of 1,500 kilometers is no longer a problem. Together with the successes of our Ukrainian Armed Forces and our intelligence agencies, these are very significant results that bring a just end to this war closer for Ukraine and ensure that Russia is held accountable for everything it has done against Ukraine and our people in a real, tangible, painful way,” the President said.

Glory to Ukrainian Defenders!

The cost:

Estonian volunteer Martin Jaeger, who fought in the ranks of the 3rd Assault Brigade, died defending Ukraine in Luhansk region.

Martin Jaeger, 42, was a professional soldier in the Estonian army: he was part of
an elite unit for more than 10 years and had participated in a… pic.twitter.com/8FVz2bGOq3

— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) June 24, 2024

Estonian volunteer Martin Jaeger, who fought in the ranks of the 3rd Assault Brigade, died defending Ukraine in Luhansk region.

Martin Jaeger, 42, was a professional soldier in the Estonian army: he was part of
an elite unit for more than 10 years and had participated in a mission in Afghanistan since 2013. He came to fight in Ukraine more than a year ago, and during this time, he has been in different units. He joined the Third Assault Brigade about a month ago.

Martin Jaager the third Estonian who died defending Ukraine: Ivo Jurak died in Ukraine in March 2023 and Tanel Kriggul – in September.

Eternal memory and eternal glory to fallen Warrior. Ukraine will never forget your sacrifice.

The US:

.@JakeSullivan46 says @USAID will help Ukraine print more than 3mn textbooks ahead of the coming school year after a Russian strike in May destroyed a Kharkiv printing house pic.twitter.com/xDtcXR71Gp

— Felicia Schwartz (@felschwartz) June 24, 2024

The EU:

EU to use legal loophole to bypass Hungary’s veto on using Russian assets to support Ukraine

Chief diplomat @JosepBorrellF told @FT that because Budapest abstained on a vote to raise the money, it “should not be part of the decision to use this money”

https://t.co/v8WQNpU7Si

— Henry Foy (@HenryJFoy) June 24, 2024

The Financial Times has the details:

The EU has devised a legal workaround to sidestep Hungary’s veto on buying weapons for Ukraine with the profits generated by Russia’s frozen assets this year, in a move that could also clear the way for the G7 to pay $50bn to Kyiv.

EU chief diplomat Josep Borrell told the Financial Times that since Hungary abstained from an earlier agreement to set aside the proceeds from Russia’s frozen assets, it “should not be part of the decision to use this money”.

He added that the workaround, which on Monday released up to €1.4bn to purchase military equipment for Kyiv, was “as sophisticated as every legal decision, but it flies”.

Bypassing Budapest this way could also remove a hurdle that could complicate G7 efforts to raise a $50bn loan for Kyiv by December — designed to be paid off by the future proceeds — a decision taken by leaders at a summit in Italy earlier this month.

Assets worth about €210bn are immobilised in the EU, the bulk of which is in Belgium — and the bloc earlier this year agreed to use the profits generated as of February to buy arms for Ukraine.

Hungary, the EU’s most pro-Russian member state, has long argued against the 27-country bloc collectively providing military support to Ukraine. Budapest is also blocking seven other decisions related to arming Kyiv, worth about €6.6bn.

The legal workaround was not challenged by EU foreign ministers at a meeting in Luxembourg on Monday. It could also be crucial for the G7 deal to work and for the $50bn loan to be issued by the end of the year. Under the G7 plan, the profits generated by Russia’s frozen assets from next year will be spent on paying off the loan.

Hungary’s foreign minister Péter Szijjártó did not strongly object when the details of the legal workaround were presented at the meeting, according to two people briefed on the private discussions.

That has raised hopes among other ministers that Budapest would not consider its own legal options to block it, the people added.

But some capitals are concerned about the legal basis used for the loophole, officials said, and the potential precedent it could set for other issues where Brussels could circumvent potential vetoes.

Szijjártó told reporters on Monday: “The pro-war hysteria continues . . . Many governments are preparing for a long war, and the commandments ‘we must act faster for Ukraine, we must do more for Ukraine’ have been constant.”

On blocking seven other decisions related to arming Kyiv, worth about €6.6bn, he said: “Instead of arms shipments, we are advocating a ceasefire.”

Concerns from the US and other G7 partners over Hungary likely blocking an EU decision to keep the Russian assets immobilised indefinitely caused significant delays in the negotiation over the $50bn loan. The legal workaround for the EU use of proceeds is likely to suffice in guaranteeing the payout of the loan, according to officials familiar with the matter.

However, Hungary could still block EU sanctions under which Russian assets are blocked, a decision that needs to be renewed unanimously every six months by the EU’s 27 countries, officials said.

More at the link.

The Mariinka front:

Video of the Russian attack on the Mariinka front repelled by the 33rd Brigade of Ukraine:

“Early in the morning, the enemies tried to attack Ukrainian lines.

Additional protection, EW and anti drone cages did not save Russian equipment from damage. In particular, our ATGM… pic.twitter.com/LeXgq9lRre

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) June 24, 2024

Video of the Russian attack on the Mariinka front repelled by the 33rd Brigade of Ukraine:

“Early in the morning, the enemies tried to attack Ukrainian lines.

Additional protection, EW and anti drone cages did not save Russian equipment from damage. In particular, our ATGM operators worked effectively – they hit 5 pieces of equipment. Unfinished armor was finally stopped by drone drops.

Our fighters were able to destroy:
🔸 3 tanks
🔸 1 BMP

Damaged:
🔸 2 tanks

And also reduced the presence of the Russian contingent:
🔸 Killed – 5
🔸 Injured- 4”

https://t.me/mechanized33/178

For you drone enthusiasts:

Dream team for such a filming, especially with Russian drones frequently detected overhead pic.twitter.com/VFBL25KHqj

— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) June 24, 2024

Moscow:

There are some major changes coming to the FSB. Mark Galeotti has the details and subject matter expert analysis:

Col. Gen. Sergei Beseda, head of the FSB’s 5th Service, retires
A thread on what I think this means. 1/

Сергей Беседа покинул пост руководителя пятой службы ФСБ, его место занял Алексей Комков — источники «Важных историй»По словам наших собеседников, Беседа стал советником директора ФСБ Александра Бортниковаhttps://storage.googleapis.com/istories/news/2024/06/22/sergei-beseda-pokinul-post-rukovoditelya-pyatoi-sluzhbi-fsb-yego-mesto-zanyal-aleksei-komkov-istochniki-vazhnikh-istorii/index.html

Just a reminder: the 5th Service, the Operational Info & International Relations Service, has other duties but especially runs agents in ex-Soviet countries and as such was meant to have a massive network in Ukraine, that largely failed to materialise in 2022 2/

The Kaleidoscopic Campaigning of Russia’s Special ServicesRussia’s operations against Ukraine have involved the full spectrum of its special services. Understanding the role each service plays is vital if the West is to counter their malign influence.https://www.rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/kaleidoscopic-campaigning-russias-special-services
First of all, despite the reporting, I don’t actually think this is ‘punishment’ for his failures around the start of the Ukraine war. Revenge may be a dish best served cold, but 28 months later seems a tad too cold 3/ 
Rather, it is that he has reached the compulsory retirement age of 70 and although he could stay in post by presidential decree, where his failings come in is in that he doesn’t have the political capital to get that, even if he wants to 4/ 
Besides, he is not out in the cold, but is appointed an adviser to the director of the FSB, a usual sinecure. Had the govt wanted to signal displeasure, it would have foregone this courtesy. 5/ 

What’s important is that Beseda’s replacement is Alexei Komkov, who is a client of FSB 1st Dep Director Sergei Korolev and former head of FSB’s Internal Security (ie: he knows where the bodies are buried). 6/

СМИ: Руководитель УСБ ФСБ, занимавшийся задержанием «полковника Захарченко от контрразведки», перешел на другую работуГлава Управления собственной безопасности ФСБ РФ Алексей Комков перешел на другое место работы.https://www.fontanka.ru/2019/05/17/029/
Korolev has been meant to take over for years, his elevation stymied by a scandal, the war (and Putin’s dislike of churn in the security agency management, but also a strong ‘stop Korolev’ camp, including Beseda 7/ 
With Beseda gone, and Alexei Sedov, head of the 2ndService (2nd FSB service (political security and counter-terrorism ) turning 70 in August (assuming he survives the current Dagestan crisis), Korolev is likely to have the power base he needs 8/ 
Besides, 73-year-old Bortnikov is ill and for years has been wanting to retire. This year, surely, he’ll be granted release by Putin, and presumably Korolev will take his place. 9/ 

As I wrote back in 2021, Korolev will be a dangerous FSB director, active, ruthless, smart and with organised crime connections 10/

https://platformraam.nl/dossiers/kremlin/1821-korolev-s-coronation-and-the-rise-of-the-ruthless-in-the-fsb
He may well be even more dangerous for surviving dissidents at home and abroad, not least as he will have something to prove. However, for a little silver lining… 11/ 
…this also marks the rise of a newer generation of security chiefs who do not have a personal relationship with Putin. They are not of his era, not necessarily of his mindset. Not for a minute is Korolev a liberal, but would he go to the wall for Putin? I’m not so sure. 12/end

1. An extremely unpopular high-ranking military commander with a notoriously gruesome service record gets promoted because he’s got connections or because, very often, getting such a character a new assignment with a promotion is the only way to get rid of him.

2. He gets…

— Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) June 24, 2024

1. An extremely unpopular high-ranking military commander with a notoriously gruesome service record gets promoted because he’s got connections or because, very often, getting such a character a new assignment with a promotion is the only way to get rid of him.

2. He gets promoted in this way, again and again, striking terror into entire units under his command over his leadership style and deadly practices.

3. The situation heats up so wildly that popular young mid-ranking battlefield leaders go public nationwide and seek disclosure and support from the media and the nation.

4. The Zelensky administration, amid yet another scandal, gives its reaction and *sometimes* removes the unpopular high-ranking general and gives him another assignment, optionally with yet another promotion.

5. Repeat with another problem that devours this country from the inside.

Ukraine is a country that lives making “two steps forward and one step back” all the time.

And indeed, this nation survives and, in a brutal war of annihilation, tries to win a chance for the future thanks to men and women who make a difference against all odds, again and again, every single day.

Kudos to Ukraine’s Azov Brigade chief executive officer @BohdanKrotevych for his heroic stand, one of his many in this damned war.

Also, Moscow:

The fire in Moscow region has spread to 4,000 square meters, Russian Telegram channels report. https://t.co/LbSUsuSKS8 pic.twitter.com/sfd0d0gIlw

— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) June 24, 2024

Yesyk, Krasnodar Krai, Russia:

Claims regarding the aftermath of the recent Ukrainian strike on Yeysk (see thread attached:

“On June 21, 2024, a strike was carried out on the military training ground of the 726th Air Defense Training Center (military unit 33859, Yeysk) in the Krasnodar Region of Russia.

The… https://t.co/OKXg1mLK0o

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) June 24, 2024

Claims regarding the aftermath of the recent Ukrainian strike on Yeysk (see thread attached:

“On June 21, 2024, a strike was carried out on the military training ground of the 726th Air Defense Training Center (military unit 33859, Yeysk) in the Krasnodar Region of Russia.

The training center is engaged in training and preparing military personnel to use various types of UAVs.

The strike was carried out by two cruise missiles of an unidentified type (probably R-360 Neptune).

The death of instructors and technical personnel from Yelabuga (employees of the plant that produces and maintains the analogue of the Iranian “Shahed-136” – “Geran-2”) is reported. Surnames of the killed instructors: Gunya, Sadreev, Kazhanov.

According to the source, destroyed:
• “Shahed-136”/“Geran-2” – 20 units;
• “Lancet” loitering munition – 50 units;
• Reconnaissance UAV “ZALA” – 40 units.

There is no information about casualties among military personnel.“

https://t.me/dosye_shpiona/548

Before we finish, I want to switch gears really quick and include this clip of Christiane Amanpour interviewing Rear Admiral (ret) Ami Ayalon. RADM Ayalon is both a former director of Shin Bet and a former Chief of Naval Operations. This is important because one of Ayalon’s successors at Shin Bet, Yuval Diskin, both joined one of the largest protests over the weekend, but also addressed the crowd calling for Bibi’s removal and new elections.

“If we shall not end the occupation, we shall not have security,” warns Ami Ayalon, former head of Shin Bet, “and if we shall not end this occupation, we shall not have democracy.”

In an extraordinarily candid interview, Israel’s former internal security chief condemns what he… pic.twitter.com/tUplALZY3G

— Christiane Amanpour (@amanpour) June 24, 2024

If you want to see more of Ayalon and Diskin, as well as four of the former directors of Shin Bet, here they are in The Gatekeepers documentary:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1N93pFcopE

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron!

There are no new Patron tweets or videos today. Here is some adjacent material.

Two cute gingers in Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/wX0dcYeSE9

— Lorenzo The Cat (@LorenzoTheCat) June 23, 2024

Who wants to hear the story of new saved baby ? ) pic.twitter.com/QrrzzJcZ4o

— Eugene Kibets (@eugenehmg) June 18, 2024

Turn up the sound on this video and listen to this little badass Ukrainian kitten as she is rescued. The life force in her! 💙💛💙 https://t.co/HgcAGxDAFW

— Lorenzo The Cat (@LorenzoTheCat) June 20, 2024

#Liptsi . The story of the Shepherd Jessica, rescued by our #military

Jessica was adopted by military #volunteers. “We regularly work on the #frontline, we see animals there, see their condition. We wanted to help at least one of them”.

PayPal: [email protected]#war pic.twitter.com/Y6ebOZqiiH

— Animal Rescue Kharkiv 🇺🇦 (@AnimalRescueKh) June 24, 2024

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 852: Kharkiv, Odesa, and Donetsk – the Bombardments ContinuePost + Comments (24)

Hopeful News & Less So: Updates on Pride Month

by Anne Laurie|  June 24, 20245:35 pm| 99 Comments

This post is in: Justice, LGBTQ Rights Are Human Rights, Open Threads

What better time than pride month to finally paint the centerpiece of my pride theme Sisters of Battle series, Celestine the living saint!

Quite a tricky mini to paint with how fiddly she is, but her wings are the perfect canvas for the rainbow flag.

I hope you like her. pic.twitter.com/zBxhagdqt3

— CerberusXt (@CerberusXt) June 23, 2024

One year ago, the Equality Act was reintroduced in Congress.

As we celebrate Pride Month, we are reminded that the fight to codify civil rights protections for LGBTQI+ Americans is not over.

I call on Congress again to send this bill to my desk. pic.twitter.com/7jBV0vVbU7

— President Biden (@POTUS) June 21, 2024

The cast of @QueerEye joined me at the White House to discuss the hard-fought progress the LGBTQI+ community has made in the past 20 years.

Thank you for a meaningful conversation, for giving my office your stamp of approval, and for being fabulous. pic.twitter.com/L3pzaYpo1W

— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) June 18, 2024

show full post on front page

BREAKING: The shooter who killed five people and injured 19 others at a nightclub in Colorado Springs pleaded guilty to 50 federal hate crime charges. https://t.co/3N8UMtCgom

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 18, 2024

One thing to keep in mind is that while it’s scary to see conservative lunatics pulling shit like this, they’re doing it because *they’re losing*. They’re trying to assert a cultural authority that has already mostly slipped through their fingers on this issue.

[image or embed]

— The Fig Economy (@figgityfigs.bsky.social) Jun 20, 2024 at 7:27 PM

Rome LGBTQ+ Pride parade celebrates 30th anniversary, makes fun of Pope Francis comments https://t.co/qFodI0gzdk

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 16, 2024

Thailand has a reputation for inclusivity but has struggled for decades to pass a marriage equality law — that’s until today.

The Senate voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to approve a bill that would legalize same-sex marriage, a first for Southeast Asia. pic.twitter.com/1C6PNxhnHN

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 18, 2024

Billy Porter takes center stage at Capital Pride https://t.co/QpMjMqQSq2

— Washington Blade (@WashBlade) June 5, 2024

Maura Healey, America's first lesbian governor, oversees raising of Pride flag at Statehouse https://t.co/jLMTaGolha

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 6, 2024

LGBTQ+ librarians grapple with attacks on books – and on themselves https://t.co/GH32GPuPDd

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 22, 2024

The art of drag has become a target. With Pride Month nigh, performers are organizing to fight back https://t.co/CgadtAx4Q3

— The Associated Press (@AP) May 29, 2024

Musical 'From Here' explores life before and after the Pulse nightclub massacre https://t.co/K43YOn79E7

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 21, 2024

Stores are more subdued in observing Pride Month. Some LGBTQ+ people see a silver lining in that https://t.co/e70bKRoHjB

— The Associated Press (@AP) June 16, 2024

Hopeful News & Less So: Updates on Pride MonthPost + Comments (99)

Speaking Of the Week Ahead

by WaterGirl|  June 24, 20244:35 pm| 60 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

Really busy today doing everything except what I am supposed to be doing.  I had to move a lot of stuff out of my closet room so the plumber could get to the crawl space, and now the temptation to get that room cleaned up and organized seems impossible to resist.

Unlike my sister, I am not someone who enjoys cleaning.  But it’s just begging to be straightened out instead of just dragging everything back in there.

I saw some news last week, and I’m not sure what to think of it.   Something about the Senate working to pass a bill that would increase the number of judges started in 2025, maybe at the district court level?   If anyone saw that and has a better idea of what that’s about, please chime in.

I’m sure I’ve missed tons of news, what’s  been going on today?  Or is this the calm before the storm?

Speaking of which,

Supreme Court rulings officially on for Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. pic.twitter.com/MHIjvz61k3

— Anthony Michael Kreis (@AnthonyMKreis) June 24, 2024

Totally open thread.

Speaking Of the Week AheadPost + Comments (60)

Open Thread: A Little Good News

by TaMara|  June 24, 20243:27 pm| 87 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads, Republican Stupidity

Busy day, but looks like we could use an open thread

How have I never heard of this gem of a man before:

In case you missed this good new. I think we should have a countdown clock for this flaming bag of poo:

Steve Bannon, former advisor to President Donald Trump, departs the E. Barrett Prettyman US Courthouse on June 6, 2024, in Washington, DC.

CNN — 

A federal appeals court Thursday night rejected Steve Bannon’s bid to delay the July 1 start of his criminal contempt-of-Congress prison sentence.

Following the ruling from the US DC Circuit Court of Appeals, it is likely the former adviser to former President Donald Trump will seek the intervention of the Supreme Court.

The panel voted 2-1, with Judge Cornelia Pillard, a Barack Obama nominee, and Judge Bradley Garcia, a Joe Biden nominee, in the majority. The majority opinion, however, was unsigned.

Judge Justin Walker, a Trump appointee, dissented from the panel’s Thursday night decision, writing that the precedent Bannon is contesting is a “close” question and that Bannon should be allowed to stay out of prison while he appeals it to the Supreme Court.

A couple of videos (I have several stockpiled) if you haven’t already seen them:

So raise your hand if you think trump will find some way to weasel out of the debate. Any guesses on how?

If he does debate, do you think they can keep him drugged up enough to not sound like the drunk at the end of the bar?

Okay, gotta get back to work.

This is an open thread

Open Thread: A Little Good NewsPost + Comments (87)

The Week Ahead Open Thread

by WaterGirl|  June 24, 202411:02 am| 173 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

So, my morning was interesting.  I got up early to water the pots, and the plumber shows up at my door.  Who knew that you were supposed to write something like that on your calendar???  (sigh)

So there went the first two hours of my day, with my plan flying right out the window.  On the plus side, now I will have water and ice from the refrigerator.  My fridge died in the first month of lockdown, so I got a new fridge but I didn’t want anyone in my house and crawl space for 2 hours hooking up the water.  The entrance to my crawl space is in my closet room, and I definitely didn’t want anyone in there with all my clothes, towels, etc.

Anyway, we have a big week ahead with the Supreme Court, and who knows what else.  I guess the world is telling me that I need to stay flexible!

Open thread

The Week Ahead Open ThreadPost + Comments (173)

Monday Morning Open Thread: Keep Moving Forward

by Anne Laurie|  June 24, 20247:43 am| 209 Comments

This post is in: Biden Administration in Action, Open Threads, Proud to Be A Democrat

Traveling the country and meeting millions of Americans, I have become somewhat of a selfie expert.

Here’s to four more years of selfies. pic.twitter.com/Rolrv2ZIAx

— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) June 21, 2024

As always… Sharing is caring!

Today, we mark a major milestone: We have protected one million pensions from devastating cuts thanks to my American Rescue Plan.

That’s what it means to build the economy from the middle out and the bottom up, and to protect the dignity of work. pic.twitter.com/l9sZLBriUA

— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) June 21, 2024

If Donald Trump gets the chance, he will sign a national abortion ban that would criminalize abortion in every single state.

We are not going to let that happen.

When Congress passes a law that restores the protections of Roe, President @JoeBiden will sign it into law.

— Kamala Harris (@KamalaHarris) June 23, 2024

The Biden-Harris Administration’s top economic priority is lowering costs for American families. That’s why we are calling out price gouging and calling on big corporations to lower grocery prices – giving families more breathing room. pic.twitter.com/uTMbewIvJK

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 20, 2024

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When domestic abusers have firearms, survivors and our communities are not safe. This is just common sense.

President Biden and I are committed to continuing our work to end violence against women and keep Americans safe from gun violence https://t.co/uO5YrjRaES

— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) June 22, 2024

Government at its best- SMH – Social Security to jettison obsolete jobs used to deny disability benefits https://t.co/SAJct8p47Y

— Benita Zahn (@benitazahn) June 24, 2024

Biden leading in the last 5 national polls that have been released…suddenly the mainstream media’s poll obsession has taken a pause. Curious. pic.twitter.com/frZtvDo28v

— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) June 20, 2024

Facts below: pic.twitter.com/FHx6vXY0LB

— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) June 20, 2024

Monday Morning Open Thread: Keep Moving ForwardPost + Comments (209)

Sunday Night Open Thread: Concerning the Supreme Court…

by Anne Laurie|  June 23, 20249:32 pm| 111 Comments

This post is in: Elections 2024, Excellent Links, Open Threads, Republican Venality, Supreme Court

Essays like this help keep me sane. I’d save these two for prime time, but there’s so much news these days…

Here’s the great Charles P. Pierce, from his weekly Esquire subscription column — “The Waiting Is Killing Us”:

Nothing became the administration of President James Buchanan like his inaugural address did. Delivered on March 4, 1857, just after he’d been sworn in by Chief Justice Roger Taney, who had other things on his mind, it was a flat and lifeless attempt to hand-wave away the fact that the country was coming apart over slavery. Don’t worry, the new president said, the system was working; the issue of the expansion of slavery was before the Supreme Court. All was well. Or so President James Buchanan told the nation.

This is, happily, a matter of but little practical importance. Besides, it is a judicial question, which legitimately belongs to the Supreme Court of the United States, before whom it is now pending, and will, it is understood, be speedily and finally settled. To their decision, in common with all good citizens, I shall cheerfully submit, whatever this may be, though it has ever been my individual opinion that under the Nebraska-Kansas act the appropriate period will be when the number of actual residents in the Territory shall justify the formation of a constitution with a view to its admission as a State into the Union. But be this as it may, it is the imperative and indispensable duty of the Government of the United States to secure to every resident inhabitant the free and independent expression of his opinion by his vote. This sacred right of each individual must be preserved. That being accomplished, nothing can be fairer than to leave the people of a Territory free from all foreign interference to decide their own destiny for themselves, subject only to the Constitution of the United States.

… As he sat on the dais, Chief Justice Taney had a lot on his mind—specifically, the opinion he’d been writing in the case of Dred Scott v. Sanford, which was the case through which, Buchanan assured the nation, “the long agitation on this subject would end.” Historian Jill Lepore writes that the word on Taney’s decision already was beginning to leak out.

No one tweeted from Washington that week, but reporters knew a decision was coming, and they knew what decision to expect. This news they sent out by telegraph. On Wednesday, March 5th, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Taney was at home, writing his opinion. “The decision in the Dred Scott case will be delivered tomorrow,” reported a correspondent for the New York Herald, adding that the Court was expected to “decide that the Missouri compromise is unconstitutional and that Congress has no power over the question of slavery in Territories.”

Lepore emphasizes that the decision in Dred Scott was delayed because Buchanan wanted it delayed. Moreover, Buchanan leaned on one of the justices to join the eventual majority. But it’s hard to imagine either man was completely oblivious to the ongoing turmoil in the country…

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The Scotts’ suit had taken 11 years to get to Taney’s desk. In that time, the moral volcano on which the Founders had built the Constitution repeatedly had erupted. Abolitionism intensified. The Compromise of 1850 made things infinitely worse. Its strengthening of the Fugitive Slave Act brought a slew of new converts to abolition’s cause. Then, two days after he’d sworn in President Buchanan, and two days after Buchanan had reassured the country that it would all work out, Chief Justice Taney delivered his infamous decision in which he ruled that a “Negro had no rights that a white man need respect.”

By the end of May, the city of Lawrence in Kansas had been sacked by pro-slavery mobs and, in retaliation, John Brown led a band of followers as they hacked five pro-slavery settlers to death. In the Senate, Charles Sumner delivered a jeremiad on Kansas that so enraged Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina that he walked onto the floor and nearly killed Sumner at his desk. President Buchanan’s inaugural address had proven less than clairvoyant.

So here we sit, waiting for another crucial decision unreasonably delayed by an arguably compromised Supreme Court. Trump v. U.S. has undeniable constitutional import. It is preposterous to argue that the president has absolute immunity to do any damn thing the president wants, but that’s where we are, waiting…

It looks as though the final decision will be of the ring-and-run persuasion. The Court will drop its decision at the last possible moment and then get the hell out of town. This would be the crowning act of cowardice of an era in which every institution of government and politics has shirked from their duty of self-defense against an onslaught of ignorance, rage, and accelerated authoritarianism. It has been a decade in which we all have lived through a re-enactment of James Buchanan’s inaugural placebo. Be at peace because the institutions of government will handle all this. Remain calm. All is well.

via GIPHY

Painful but true from me @BulwarkOnline:
The 6 conservative justices could be Biden’s ticket to a 2nd term. They’re a scandal-and-controversy machine, constantly renewing old furors and creating new ones. Ds couldn’t ask for better material, or more of it. https://t.co/b4iq7ooDoB

— Jill Lawrence (@JillDLawrence) June 19, 2024


Jill Lawrence, at the Bulwark, (snarkily) looks for the pony in the pile of manure:

THE SUPREME COURT IS CAUSING great pain and upset to tens of millions of people, and it isn’t done yet. But in the end, by which I mean the day after the presidential election, America might owe the Court’s conservative supermajority a gracious thank-you note—“We couldn’t have done it without you!”—or even dinner.

The high court’s six conservative justices,half of them named by Donald Trump, could well be Joe Biden’s ticket to a second term. Like Trump himself, they are a scandal-and-controversy machine, constantly renewing old furors and creating new ones.

Democrats couldn’t ask for better material, or more of it. Whether the issue is abortion, guns, or the rule of law, and pondering if presidents are like kings and, if so, how much, there’s a ruling for that. Sometimes two or three. And if there isn’t yet, there will be soon.

The dramatic case that will first come to mind for most people is the Court’s June 2022 Dobbs decision revoking the constitutional right to abortion access. But there is also its Bruen decision one day earlier gutting state regulation of firearms. There is the March 2024 decision neutering the Fourteenth Amendment that is supposed to bar insurrectionists and their enablers from running for or holding federal office. There is the opinion last month upholding racial gerrymandering. And there is the Court’s tortured reasoning in last week’s 6–3 decision to overturn a Trump-era ban on bump stocks…

That [EMTALA] decision will draw attention once again to the crises that can occur at any point in a pregnancy, regardless of what a state bans and when, and the judgment calls that doctors must make amid persistent legal threats and medical uncertainties. So will the second anniversary of the Dobbs decision on Monday. The Biden-Harris campaign is organizing over thirty-five events to mark the date, and planning what it calls “storyteller” training so people can share their personal experiences and “put a face to Donald Trump’s cruel policies.” They’ve already released two powerful ads doing just that…

All this in a diverse country, where nearly two-thirds of adults say abortion should be legal in all or most cases. Where voters have chosen to protect abortion access in all six states that put it on the ballot in 2022 and 2023, and where measures to enshrine abortion rights could be on the ballot in up to ten more states this year.

Character matters, as the Biden campaign says in a new ad about Trump’s felony convictions. All of it matters—accountability, democracy, freedom, the general welfare, and the blessings of liberty. All of it is at risk from Trump and the Court he made.

That’s got to help Joe Biden. So thanks in advance for the assist, and (fingers crossed) dinner’s on me.

Sunday Night Open Thread: Concerning the Supreme Court…Post + Comments (111)

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