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Balloon Juice

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

So fucking stupid, and still doing a tremendous amount of damage.

DeSantis transforming Florida into 1930s Germany with gators and theme parks.

The republican speaker is a slippery little devil.

“A king is only a king if we bow down.” – Rev. William Barber

Let’s not be the monsters we hate.

Make the republican party small enough to drown in a bathtub.

The republican caucus is covering themselves with something, and it is not glory.

Fundamental belief of white supremacy: white people are presumed innocent, minorities are presumed guilty.

So it was an October Surprise A Day, like an Advent calendar but for crime.

Michigan is a great lesson for Dems everywhere: when you have power…use it!

A norm that restrains only one side really is not a norm – it is a trap.

Anyone who bans teaching American history has no right to shape America’s future.

“Alexa, change the president.”

I desperately hope that, yet again, i am wrong.

Republicans cannot even be trusted with their own money.

We do not need to pander to people who do not like what we stand for.

The fundamental promise of conservatism all over the world is a return to an idealized past that never existed.

Shut up, hissy kitty!

Wake up. Grow up. Get in the fight.

When I was faster i was always behind.

There is no right way to do the wrong thing.

There are times when telling just part of the truth is effectively a lie.

the 10% who apparently lack object permanence

No one could have predicted…

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Open Thread:  Hey Lurkers!  (Holiday Post)

Open Threads

You are here: Home / Archives for Open Threads

I Wonder to Myself ‘Could Life Ever Be Sane Again?’

by @heymistermix.com|  March 7, 20242:26 pm| 40 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I Wonder to Myself 'Could Life Ever Be Sane Again?'

Kevin Drum:

It turns out that transit crime [in NYC] has been flat over the past two years while ridership has increased about 20%. […] The trendline of transit crime is down 13% over the past two years, and the most recent week had nearly the lowest crime rate of the entire period.

Kathy Hochul:

Hochul said on Wednesday that 750 national guard patrolmen as well as 250 state police and Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) officers will be deployed to patrol the stations and conduct bag checks.

“These brazen heinous attacks on our subway system will not be tolerated,” Hochul told a press conference.

Police accountability advocates decried the announced deployment. Robert Gangi, the founder of the Police Reform Organizing Project (Prop), said the added police presence would further criminalize Black and brown commuters, people who are already policed by NYPD officers.

Kathy Hochul’s mental model of the median NY voter is a 57-year-old white guy on Staten Island who watches too much Fox News.  Panic and Republican-generated nonsense rule her world.  Here she is reassuring business owners that the ruling against the Trump Organization does not reflect New York’s general attitude towards business.  On the night before Christmas, not a creature was stirring, but her veto pen was at work on a bill making it easier for those who pled out to challenge their convictions, a law similar to the one that super-liberal Texas already has on its books.  Koch-backed lobbying led to her signing a major corporate transparency bill only after access to the data was removed from the public and limited only to law enforcement and government agencies.

I was in NYC last Spring and rode the subway quite a bit, day and night, though admittedly not in what you’d consider a high-crime area.  I felt pretty safe and nobody hassled me, and there were plenty of cops around.  Adding national guard troops to rifle through my belongings would have made me feel less safe and more hassled.

I look forward to Tish James trouncing her in the 2026 Democratic primary, if Hochul has the guts to run.

I Wonder to Myself ‘Could Life Ever Be Sane Again?’Post + Comments (40)

Alina Habba: Fuck You, Oh Wait, Can You Help Us Out Here? (Open Thread)

by WaterGirl|  March 7, 20249:56 am| 243 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads, Politics, Trump Indictments, Point and Mock

Trump’s attorneys have built up so much good will with the judges in the Trump cases, I can totally see why their first thought is to ask the judge to buy them some more time to get it together.

I hope I’m right about how this is going to turn out for them.

My first laugh of the day.

In a new letter tonight, Alina Habba is asking Judge Lew Kaplan — who has yet to rule on Trump’s request to stay enforcement of the $83.3 million E. Jean Carroll judgment as his post-trial motions are resolved — for some mercy. 1/

— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) March 6, 2024

.

What does this mean? Trump could be having difficulty arranging for a bond of $91-plus million, which is what will be required to cover the judgment and interest. 3/

— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) March 6, 2024

.

—and expecting that Kaplan will deny his request for a longer stay, he is trying to buy himself time to obtain one or free up sufficient cash. FIN.

— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) March 6, 2024

.

The Letter to Judge Kaplan

Something something flies honey vinegar.

Totally open thread.

Alina Habba: Fuck You, Oh Wait, Can You Help Us Out Here? (Open Thread)Post + Comments (243)

Thursday Morning Open Thread: State of the Union Address Tonight

by Anne Laurie|  March 7, 20247:04 am| 177 Comments

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

Watch President Biden’s State of the Union Address tomorrow – Thursday, March 7 – at 9 PM ET to hear him discuss his commitment to lowering costs, taking on drug companies again, protecting women’s reproductive health, saving democracy, and uniting the country. pic.twitter.com/cY5aAdPyYE

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) March 6, 2024

Official WH livestreaming website here.

(I’m not liable to use the ‘Click or hold an emoji [choice of thumbs-up, heart, or party hat] to share your reaction to any part of the address as it happens live’ feature… but I trust President Biden’s excellent media team to know that other younger people will.)

.@JoeBiden will speak to the nation during his State of the Union address on Thursday.

We’re bringing together supporters from across the country to hear about our historic progress and what’s to come for America’s future. Join our virtual watch party.https://t.co/wZ7IwXK15b

— Kamala Harris (@KamalaHarris) March 6, 2024

Alabama Senator Katie Britt, formerly Shakedown Shelby’s press secretary, has been awarded the offical GOP rebuttal, hopefully to follow in the blighted footsteps of Bobby Jindal and Marco Rubio. TFG announced he’ll be live-Truth-Social-ing through it, assuming he doesn’t get distracted / glitch out. And Tucker Carlson will do his own rebuttal, no doubt further trumpeting the virtues of ‘benevolent’ dictatorship, straight from Putin’s dispatches.

Tomorrow evening at 9 PM ET, I'll deliver my State of the Union address.

Here's what that means.

— President Biden (@POTUS) March 6, 2024

The State of the Union isn’t just a speech – it’s my report to you, the American people.

You hired me to get the job done, build an economy that works for working people, and make life better for families.

Tomorrow, I’ll update you on our progress and lay out the path ahead.

My Administration has accomplished more over three years than most presidents have in eight –

From investing in infrastructure and lowering health care costs to abolishing junk fees, making the wealthy pay their fair share, and fighting for women’s reproductive health care.

But there is still so much to do before the job’s done.

That includes lowering prescription drug prices for every American, getting student debt relief to hardworking borrowers, restoring a woman’s right to choose, and banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.

Tune in at 9 PM ET tomorrow evening for my plan on how we get it done. http://WH.gov/SOTU.

The 20 Guests Who Will Sit With Jill Biden at the State of the Union – Among the attendees will be the prime minister of Sweden and women who were denied an abortion and in vitro fertilization. via @nytimes https://t.co/gdRW2Cuyh7

— Olav Mitchell Underdal (@omunderdal) March 7, 2024

show full post on front page

[Gift link]

… Among the guests are a woman from Alabama whose in vitro fertilization treatments were stopped after a state court decision, and another from Texas who was denied an abortion in the state despite what her doctors said would be health complications from the pregnancy. Their presence signals Mr. Biden’s emphasis on an issue that has lifted Democrats in recent elections as he faces a rematch with former President Donald J. Trump, whom he trails in many polls.

They are among a number of guests intended to touch on health policy, including Maria Shriver, the journalist who has become a women’s health advocate.

Also on the list are the head of the United Automobile Workers and a number of union members, as the president seeks to burnish his labor bona fides. Other guests, including a mayor, a police officer and the prime minister of Sweden, represent a range of issues, from student debt forgiveness to infrastructure to jobs programs.

The wars in Ukraine and Gaza that have consumed so much of Mr. Biden’s time in the past year received scant representation. The White House had hoped that Olena Zelenska, the first lady of Ukraine, and Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of the Russian opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny, would attend, but both said they could not make it. The only guest connected with the Middle East crisis will be a U.S. Navy commander who earned a Bronze Star protecting ships from Houthi rebels…

I approve the following message:

No matter how ill-mannered House Republicans get during Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, expect him to call them out on all their bad decisions, their loyalty to TFG over what’s best for the country and the rest of their dipshit clown fuckery.

Go, Joe! We have your back!… pic.twitter.com/nxOHAJN5mH

— Ashley Votes Blue ☮️ (@KuckelmanAshley) March 6, 2024

Thursday Morning Open Thread: State of the Union Address TonightPost + Comments (177)

Late Night Open Thread: Elon Chooses to Withhold His Campaign Largesse

by Anne Laurie|  March 7, 20241:54 am| 66 Comments

This post is in: C.R.E.A.M., Elections 2024, Grifters Gonna Grift, Open Threads, Proud to Be A Democrat

A Musk check could be transformational for Trump's coffers. Worth recalling, though, that Musk first liked DeSantis –but didn't write a check. He then attended a Ramaswamy fundraiser –but didn't write a check. Of course potentially different now that Trump is effective nominee. https://t.co/JM0Jcrs6Dg

— Alexandra Ulmer (@AlexandraUlmer) March 6, 2024

The NYTimes, as expressed by Maggie Haberman, got themselves very excited about a possible Musk donation to TFG [gift link, if you’re that curious]. What could be more intriguing, to the political horse-race touts and their employers, than the collaboration of two such click-worth Giants of Our Media Age?

On the other hand, Teddy Schleifer’s job at Puck is to stand in proximity to people with large sums of money, agape at their every insight, occasionally murmuring ‘such riches‘. (This can backfire on his subjects — his multiple tales of pitiable friendless nerd Sam Bankman Fried under house arrest did SBF no favors — but I’ve never seen reason to suspect Schleifer of irony.)

If Teddy looks at the Musk / Trump encounter and is not dazzled by the dollars, I suspect there are, indeed, no donations immediately forthcoming:

I cover Silicon Valley political donors. I am very, very bearish on the notion that Elon will *actually* make a donation to any super PAC.

He loves to get people's expectations up.

Vivek's people were CERTAIN they were going to get big money from Elon. Nope.…

— Teddy Schleifer (@teddyschleifer) March 6, 2024

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Of course, our Elon is a volatile personality, so there’s no telling what will happen next week, much less between now and November. Then again, there are two arguments against a Musk / Trump alliance almost as weighty as Elon’s purported fortune: First, given Musk’s cross-platform reliance on government funding, getting too chummy with *either* candidate would be risky. Second… can you really see two such colossal egos working together without attempting to sabotage each other?

Bidenland responds to Elon Musk's tweet, saying they set another fundraising record.

“So we’re good. But someone should check in on Donald Trump’s lawyers who are now probably more than a little panicked about getting stiffed again," @LaurenHitt says.https://t.co/CZYDGAUBMr

— Josh Wingrove (@josh_wingrove) March 6, 2024


Sometimes fiscal probity is its own reward. Bloomberg:

… “Just to be super clear, I am not donating money to either candidate for US President,” he said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday. Musk stopped short of specifying Trump or Biden by name.

Musk’s comments, however, do not rule out donations to a super political action committee or other political causes.

The announcement, though, is a blow to Trump, who has a serious cash disadvantage as he launches into a general election rematch with Biden. Trump’s last Republican rival, Nikki Haley, dropped out of the race on Wednesday, all but locking up the GOP nomination for the former president…

[Musk] met Trump on Sunday as the Republican looks to woo donors. Trump’s campaign war chest is far smaller than Biden’s. He began February with $30.4 million on hand, compared to the president’s $130 million, according to federal filings. The Republican’s court cases have been a financial drain on his campaign…

“The campaign just broke our grassroots fundraising record for the fourth month in a row, so we’re good,” Biden campaign spokeswoman Lauren Hitt said. “But someone should check in on Donald Trump’s lawyers who are now probably more than a little panicked about getting stiffed again.”

Biden’s campaign announced Tuesday that its February fundraising haul set a fourth consecutive monthly record, but didn’t specify the total.

Also:

leaving vivek hanging was the most righteous thing Elon has done in the last 18 months

— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) March 6, 2024

Late Night Open Thread: Elon Chooses to Withhold His Campaign LargessePost + Comments (66)

War for Ukraine Day 742: Odesa Attacked!

by Adam L Silverman|  March 6, 20248:46 pm| 36 Comments

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

Screen shot of new artwork by NEIVANMADE. The background is black. In the bottom foreground are grey Ukrainian homes and apartment buildings being bombarded by red Russian missiles with the Special Military Operation "Z" symbol on them. Above the missiles, written in red is the word "Ruzzians". Below the buildings being attacked is the statement "Turns Homes Into Graves".

(Image by NEIVANMADE)

Today was exceedingly long, so tonight’s update is going to be brief.

Last night Devore posted this comment:

Thanks.   Nice to have a decent news day

First, you’re most welcome. Second, how about we not tempt fate and/or jinx things again? 😱

Russia attacked Odesa today. There was initial reporting that President Zelenskyy and Greek Prime Minister Mitsotakis were the targets as they were in Odesa at the time of the strike. This is not correct. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s (RFE/RL) Mark Krutov has the accurate details:

I won't post details here, but contrary to what @protothema reported about the Russian strike occurring '150m' from Zelensky and Mitsotakis, the only available photo of the strike can be geolocated as far as 3 km from the place Zelensky and Mitsotakis visited at the port.

— Mark Krutov (@kromark) March 6, 2024

The strike left 5 people dead, and the fact is awful in itself :( Odesa has suffered enough these days. I don't know what it was aimed at (Russia says the naval drones storage), but Humenyuk is right: it was not an attempt to assassinate Zelensky. pic.twitter.com/IA9YjcY6DB

— Mark Krutov (@kromark) March 6, 2024

More on the strike after the jump.

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

show full post on front page

Weapons and air defense are needed here to save lives – address by the President of Ukraine

6 March 2024 – 18:09

Dear Ukrainians!

We’re in Odesa today. There was a meeting with the Prime Minister of Greece. Together we honored the memory of those killed by the Russian “Shahed” strike on March 2. Children, adults… Farewell ceremonies have been held these days. Eternal memory to all the victims of Russian terror!

Of course, the main issue in the talks with the Prime Minister of Greece was our defense, our capabilities in active operations and defense. Air defense is an absolute priority. Just like in negotiations with other partners. The world has enough air defense systems and capabilities to produce weapons for defense. Weapons are needed here to save lives. Decisions are needed now – not someday, but for the people who endure terrorist attacks every day and night. Last night alone, and against Odesa alone, twenty “Shaheds” were launched. This morning there was another missile attack against the city. There are wounded, there are dead… More protection is needed. Today I spoke with Greek Prime Minister Mitsotakis about how we can strengthen our people here in the south of Ukraine. There will be negotiations with other states and leaders as well. We really appreciate every form of assistance.

Today I held an operational meeting with local leadership – regional authorities, government officials – so that they provide all the necessary assistance to people who have lost their homes as a result of Russian strikes and lost their documents. It must be sufficient assistance. And fast. I am grateful to everyone who supports people, who helps and preserves as much normal life as possible here in Odesa and in all our cities. Russia must not achieve anything with its terror.

I thank everyone who fights for our people and country. I thank everyone who works for Ukraine and in Ukraine. I am grateful to Odesa – to everyone who takes care of our Odesa, who protects the city, who works in the city and provides jobs for people. I thank everyone in the world who helps! We will definitely withstand. We will protect normal life.

Glory to Ukraine!

Earlier today The Washington Post reported that the Biden administration had made over 100 weapons and munitions shipments to Israel that just happened to be below the monetary value threshold that would require them to report the shipments to Congress. These are in addition to the two that they notified Congress about via emergency declaration, which I covered in Israel-Hamas war updates. I had two initial thoughts when I read the reporting. The first was that now we know where the resupply for Ukraine went. The second was if I was the Ukrainians I’d be pissed that the Biden administration isn’t doing this for us. I think these are both valid first impressions, but we’ll have to wait for subsequent reporting to see if they hold up over time. Here’s the reporting so you can think through it for yourself.

The United States has quietly approved and delivered more than 100 separate foreign military sales to Israel since the Gaza war began Oct. 7, amounting to thousands of precision-guided munitions, small-diameter bombs, bunker busters, small arms and other lethal aid, U.S. officials told members of Congress in a recent classified briefing.

The triple-digit figure, which has not been previously reported, is the latest indication of Washington’s extensive involvement in the polarizing five-month conflict even as top U.S. officials and lawmakers increasingly express deep reservations about Israel’s military tactics in a campaign that has killed more than 30,000 people, according to Gaza’s health authorities.

Only two approved foreign military sales to Israel have been made public since the start of conflict: $106 million worth of tank ammunition and $147.5 million of components needed to make 155 mm shells. Those sales invited public scrutiny because the Biden administration bypassed Congress to approve the packages by invoking an emergency authority.

But in the case of the 100 other transactions, known in government-speak as Foreign Military Sales or FMS, the weapons transfers were processed without any public debate because each fell under a specific dollar amount that requires the executive branch to individually notify Congress, according to U.S. officials and lawmakers who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive military matter.

Taken together, the weapons packages amount to a massive transfer of firepower at a time when senior U.S. officials have complained that Israeli officials have fallen short on their appeals to limit civilian casualties, allow more aid into Gaza and refrain from rhetoric calling for the permanent displacement of Palestinians.“That’s an extraordinary number of sales over the course of a pretty short amount of time, which really strongly suggests that the Israeli campaign would not be sustainable without this level of U.S. support,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, a former senior Biden administration official and current president of Refugees International.

State Department spokesman Matt Miller said the Biden administration has “followed the procedures Congress itself has specified to keep members well-informed and regularly briefs members even when formal notification is not a legal requirement.”

He added that U.S. officials have “engaged Congress” on arms transfers to Israel “more than 200 times” since Hamas launched a cross-border attack into Israel that killed 1,200 people and took more than 240 hostage.

More at the link.

This is just strategic incompetence.

If Navalnaya were to protest Russia’s war in Ukraine, witness the war crimes in Bucha committed by Russian army, or even perform one small act of solidarity like many genuine supporters of Ukraine have done, she won’t probably be “viewed with some skepticism in Ukraine”. pic.twitter.com/qKkJFndpJk

— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) March 6, 2024

Whomever is the Senior Director for Ukraine, Russia, and Eurasia on the National Security Staff either needs a welfare check because their recommendation that this would be a bad idea was ignored or needs to be fired because they failed to make it. This is really basic stuff that you have to get right.

House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul, who is working on a foreign aid package with Ukraine money and border provisions, expressed confidence today that a bill will be on the floor after government funding is done on March 22.

Asked if Johnson has committed to that,…

— Manu Raju (@mkraju) March 6, 2024

House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul, who is working on a foreign aid package with Ukraine money and border provisions, expressed confidence today that a bill will be on the floor after government funding is done on March 22.

Asked if Johnson has committed to that, McCaul told me today: “I think so.” More on McCaul’s and Johnson’s handling of the issue:

https://cnn.com/2024/03/03/politics/mike-johnson-ukraine-funding/index.html

CNN has the details on this definitely, might possibly, could happen vote:

Speaker Mike Johnson swiftly derailed the Senate’s bipartisan aid package for Ukraine, but he’s left the door open to a new proposal emerging in the House.

Behind the scenes, Johnson has met privately with House Republicans who have been trying to build support for a new bipartisan foreign aid package that includes restrictions on the US border with Mexico. And now House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul is taking a lead role in trying to finalize a proposal and build consensus within the conference as part of a push for floor action by late March or April.

Johnson has not yet taken a position on the plan or committed to giving it a floor vote, telling his colleagues that they need to finalize government funding legislation first. But once that process is done by mid-March, Republican backers of the plan believe he will let it come to the floor – even it risks backlash from hard-right members or even a vote for his ouster from the speakership.

“More than you think,” Pennsylvania Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, a leader of the effort, said bluntly when asked about the support the GOP leadership team has given his bipartisan proposal. “We have to get something done.”

Still, getting legislation through the House remains an extremely tall order. Republicans are badly divided over Ukraine, and former President Donald Trump could effectively kill the bill with one social media post. Plus, ample Democratic support would be needed to pass it – a tall order given that the package includes new border restrictions and aid to Israel that would likely prompt a revolt on the left.

With Russia making gains in Ukraine, proponents say action is needed immediately. Fitzpatrick plans to begin a process this week to circumvent leadership and force a vote – known in the Capitol as a discharge petition, which would require support from a majority of House members to succeed. But even organizers of that effort recognize that it amounts to a long-shot bid and consider it a last resort. Their best bet: convincing Johnson to put the bill on the floor once it’s ready for action.

“I think, first, the speaker wants to get through the normal appropriations process, which is not easy,” McCaul said. “And then after that is done, then we tackle the supplemental. We are currently working on a draft. I think you’ll see a House imprimatur on this supplemental.”

McCaul, who briefed Republicans in the speaker’s office last week on the emerging plan, told CNN that Johnson has been “very deliberate.”

Other proponents of the measure say Johnson has clearly been open to their plan.

“No, I don’t think he’s trying to kill it,” said Rep. Mike Lawler, a freshman New York Republican who has signed on to the effort. “I think he understands the need to get support for Israel, for Ukraine, for Taiwan. … It’s a function of process and working through these issues within the conference.”

Lawler added: “Any threat to use the motion to vacate (the speaker) is idiotic. We need to be focused on solving the problems.”

Johnson has faced pressure on all sides. He has endured criticism internationally and from Democrats who say his failure to act immediately amounts to siding with Vladimir Putin. Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell has pressed him to allow a House vote on the Senate’s $95 billion aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, warning that any House changes to that plan would simply delay action and make it harder for Ukraine to defeat Russia.

Yet Johnson’s right flank has pointedly warned him not to approve a dime more of funding for Ukraine.

“That would be a huge mistake,” said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican and staunch opponent of Ukraine aid. “The American people don’t support it, and our job title is representative. Our job title is not fund the CIA’s war against Ukraine. That’s not what we’re elected to do.”

Rep. Bob Good of Virginia, the leader of the House Freedom Caucus and one of the eight Republicans who voted to oust Kevin McCarthy as speaker last fall, would not say whether moving on Ukraine aid would cost Johnson his job. But he said that any aid package must be offset with spending cuts and should not be tied with Israel – a much different approach from the one Fitzpatrick and McCaul are taking.

“Ukraine divides the Republican conference,” Good said. “I don’t think it has majority support. … So if it doesn’t have Republican majority support, it should not be brought.”

The effort to approve more aid to Ukraine has been delayed for months amid GOP infighting. First, Republicans demanded Congress move on tougher border security measures before advancing aid to Ukraine. Then, after a bipartisan border security deal was cut after nearly five months of talks in the Senate, Johnson – along with Trump – immediately declared it too weak, effectively killing the effort.

After the Senate dropped the border deal amid Johnson’s opposition and then approved the $95 billion aid package last month, McConnell said the House GOP could no longer wait to act.

“If they change it and send it back here, we have further delay,” the Kentucky Republican told reporters last week. “Not only do we not want to shut the government down, we don’t want the Russians to win in Ukraine. And so we have a time problem here. And the best way to move quickly and get the bill to the president would be for the House to take up the Senate bill and pass it.”

Johnson has said he won’t take up the Senate plan because it’s silent on the border. But on Thursday, he suggested that he’s willing to consider measures being developed in the House.

“The House is actively considering options on a path forward,” Johnson said. “And so, we’re getting government funding done, and then we’re going to turn to these other priorities.”

Johnson definitely, maybe, possibly might eventually do something.

Latvia, however, is stepping up:

Thank you for your support!
Together, we will win.
🇺🇦🤝🇱🇻 https://t.co/EajuEIEcL2

— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) March 6, 2024

Overnight across Ukraine:

Russia unleashed 42 Shahed drones on Ukraine tonight. 38 were downed. Drones, not missiles, are now the deadliest weapons Russia targets civilians with. Each time, I wonder, will we have enough weapons to take them down? pic.twitter.com/OguhiM2GTC

— Maria Avdeeva (@maria_avdv) March 6, 2024

The Financial Times has more on Russia’s attack on Odesa. This was reported before RFE/RL reported the accurate information that the impact site was several kilometers away from where President Zelenskyy and PM Mitsokasis were at the time of impact.

A Russian ballistic missile struck “very close” to Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Kyriakos Mitsotakis while the pair were visiting the port of Odesa on Wednesday, according to the Greek prime minister.

Five people were killed by the missile, Ukraine’s navy spokesperson Dmytro Pletenchuk told the Financial Times. Russia said it hit a hangar housing sea drones that have been used to attack Russian ships in the Black Sea.

“We saw the explosion today,” Zelenskyy said. “You see who we are dealing with, they don’t care where to hit. I know that there were victims today. It doesn’t matter if it’s soldiers, civilians or international [guests], they don’t care.”

The attack happened shortly after the two leaders and their teams were at Odesa’s harbour, where Zelenskyy was explaining the Black Sea port’s importance to Ukrainian exports and pointing out the damage to infrastructure from Russia’s previous attacks as the full-scale war entered its third year.

Sirens went off during the visit. “A little later, as we entered into our cars, we heard a large explosion,” Mitsotakis said. The incident was the “liveliest reminder that in Ukraine, there is a real war going on,” he added.

The explosion took place about 300 metres from where the motorcade was, according to a Greek official.

“That’s another reason that all European leaders should visit Ukraine,” Mitsotakis said. “It’s one thing to see or hear the description from the media or from President Zelenskyy, with whom we communicate regularly, and it’s completely different to experience the war first hand.”

More at the link!

Avdiivka:

The "Avdiivka" naval drone will be a revenge for russia for destroyed Ukrainian cities.

📷: @ServiceSsu pic.twitter.com/IDvUgV3rLu

— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) March 6, 2024

And we have video!

Tests of the new version of the Ukrainian Sea Baby naval drone with a new hull design. As said new model can carry up to 10 centners of explosives over distances of up to 1000km. But the possibilities of using marine drones of this model will not be limited only to use in the… pic.twitter.com/4n7QtuqLag

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) March 6, 2024

Tests of the new version of the Ukrainian Sea Baby naval drone with a new hull design. As said new model can carry up to 10 centners of explosives over distances of up to 1000km. But the possibilities of using marine drones of this model will not be limited only to use in the kamikaze role. It is said that the design of the drone allows the installation of modules for firing at enemy coastal targets. There is also said to be the possibility of installing air defense systems on the platform.
https://youtu.be/6eVBn6gYZNE?si=jPiLfS-6ZXQ2NOsR

Here’s the full video:

More on the attack on the Kotov:

/12. Clear view on the Kotov before the attack also shows that there was no TOR air defence system on the helipad. Therefore, theoretically, there could be a helicopter on board (in the ship’s hangar). However, this can only be visually confirmed if someone wants to dive after… pic.twitter.com/WWj82G9M7E

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) March 6, 2024

And we have new video of the February 2024 strike on the Caesar Kunikov:

/2. Same video but partially sounded published by Russians. pic.twitter.com/uhb4nvuHPw

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) March 6, 2024

Video of the Ukrainian MAGURA V5 naval kamikaze drones attack on Caesar Kunikov from the Russian point of view.

As well as the Russian claims regarding this attack:

“The crew repelled the naval kamikaze drone attack with all available forces and means, the battle lasted 20 minutes. Of the 10 drones, four were destroyed. The fifth drone hit the ship in the stern, thereby immobilizing the ship, after which the 6, 7, 8 and 9 drones alternately hit the ship on the port side in the midship area (middle) and closer to the stern, with the aim of capsizing the ship (due to the influx of a large amount of water from one side). The ninth drone partially entered the hole made by the previous one, and detonated almost inside of the ship.

There was no way to save the ship (the list was rapidly increasing, the ship was lying on the left side). From the moment the enemy drones were discovered and the start of the battle, until the ship was completely flooded, a little more than 40 minutes passed. The crew left the ship using life rafts, without loss of personnel, and evacuated all secret documentation and part of the secret equipment with weapons. The last 10th drone monitored the dying ship until the sinking, after which the 10th drone tried to attack the accompanying tug, but was destroyed by the group on board”

Novomykhailivka:

/2. Ongoing Russian attacks on Novomykhailivka, video by Shadow unit. https://t.co/0pRHe3kOa8 pic.twitter.com/R4Sjbfl73h

— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) March 6, 2024

/1. Another video of the ongoing Russian attacks on Novomykhailivka area. Published by the 79th Brigade. At the 0:51 their is another loss of the Russian T-62M with KMT-6 mine plow. Since February, the statistics of losses of Russian T-62/55/54 have increased significantly compared to previous figures.
https://facebook.com/79AMBUA/videos/427359869951493/

Kursk Oblast, Russia:

One of the largest plants producing raw iron ore materials in Russia in Zheleznogorsk, Kursk Oblast, was attacked by unidentified flying objects. Reportedly, the drone struck right into the fuel tank on the territory of the plant.

The facility is sanctioned by the US and the UK… pic.twitter.com/lggayGiIsk

— WarTranslated (@wartranslated) March 6, 2024

One of the largest plants producing raw iron ore materials in Russia in Zheleznogorsk, Kursk Oblast, was attacked by unidentified flying objects. Reportedly, the drone struck right into the fuel tank on the territory of the plant.

The facility is sanctioned by the US and the UK as it’s linked to oligarch Alisher Usmanov.

Last night AlaskaReader asked:

@Adam L Silverman: I see action on one nominee today, Ronald T. Keohane, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice James N. Stewart.

Are these ongoing holdups still fallout from Tuberville or are there other actors involved?

I’m going to assume the resistance to nominees is coming from one party, or are there persons identifiable so as to become a target for applied pressure from the public?.

Some of this is still hangover from Tuberville. Others are being slow walked as a result of objections from the GOP minority on the Senate Armed Services Committee. This is what seems to be the case with the nominee to become Undersecretary of Defense for Policy. Apparently he’s controversial.

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron.

First some Ukrainian dogs and cats courtesy of Michael Kofman. Look at that Frenchie in the first pic!

Back from a recent field study in Ukraine. Some thoughts soon to follow. But first, a few photos of some of the cats and dogs I met on the trip. pic.twitter.com/d986pKjFfs

— Michael Kofman (@KofmanMichael) March 6, 2024

A new episode of Patron’s official cartoon!

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 742: Odesa Attacked!Post + Comments (36)

Wednesday Evening Open Thread: Sinema-tically Terrible Reviews

by Anne Laurie|  March 6, 20246:40 pm| 100 Comments

This post is in: Excellent Links, Open Threads, Proud to Be A Democrat

Finally, an example where redistributing cash from hedge fund managers causes the recipient to reduce their labor supply https://t.co/BypHBtiz4W

— James Medlock (@jdcmedlock) March 5, 2024

Even the professional ‘bold contrarians’ (like Politico‘s Burgess Everett) are having a hard time scrounging up an argument in favor of soon-to-be-ex Senator Kyrsten Sinema. The Haterz, however, are having a field day — and I am here for it!

Nonsense. Sinema wasn't "driven out," she betrayed the people who voted for her and as a result was unpopular and had no chance of re-election. https://t.co/pfGtXlNi1r

— Max Kennerly (@MaxKennerly) March 6, 2024

As we say goodbye to Sen. Sinema, let's not forget that to save the archaic filibuster rule, she allowed critical voting rights protections to be blocked.

She also torpedoed raising the federal minimum wage to $15/hour.

I say good riddance.

— Robert Reich (@RBReich) March 6, 2024

Actual Arizona voter:

At the AZ capitol she was known as the Neiman Marxist because she made noise about being radical, but really seemed to be in it for her own benefit. If AZ can move from her to Gallego that would be a significant step up.

— Jean-Michel Connard (@torriangray) March 5, 2024

show full post on front page

Point/Counterpoint: Senator Kyrsten Sinema Retires: https://t.co/GYMjMNiGzU

— Defector (@DefectorMedia) March 5, 2024

You can always count on Dave Roth and Albert Burneko, at Defector, for pithy takes on pissy divas:

Point: Kyrsten Sinema Was The Perfect Senator For A Moment Without A Purpose, By David Roth
The political obituaries for Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, many of which give the impression of having been prewritten in the way that newspapers do for public figures whose last and signal contribution to their legacy will be dying at some point TBD, tend to mention what she was and did before she came to the United States Senate five years ago. These are interesting things, especially by Senate standards—Sinema was a social worker and an anti-war activist, a failed progressive candidate for local offices and then a successful and progressively less principled one for national ones. All of those are more interesting than the years of undistinguished and lavishly well-compensated corporate board service that await Sinema, who is 47, over the rest of her life. None of them really seem meaningful at all in light of what she became, which is something like the living emblem of America’s luridly uninhabitable upper house. Hit a cheeky curtsey while casting a thumbs-down no-vote on a bill raising the national minimum wage to $15, and whatever or whoever you were before having done so will naturally matter less. Or, anyway, all the various possibilities latent in that biography seem less significant than what you have become instead…

She was not an avatar for her state’s voters, with whom she made a habit of avoiding any kind of contact from the moment she entered the Senate; she was also not, in the way that senators tend to age and blanch into something indistinct and vaguely the color of money, just dressing for the job she had. Sinema was representing herself and herself only; she raised money and still has it, $10.6 million in campaign funds that she now won’t spend, but her compromises, which came in time to become the whole of her politics, left her with nothing much to sell. The stilted meta-governance that became her hallmark guaranteed that the references through which she communicated weren’t really attached to anything. Her thumbs-down against the $15 minimum wage echoed the one cast by Arizona Sen. John McCain, but was in point of fact just an echo. He cast his against a Republican vote to end the Affordable Care Act, and that heresy became a part of his legacy; she cast hers against that minimum-wage increase, and it wasn’t really a heresy at all, just someone ostentatiously performing the blank sadism of centrist politics. It was just her doing what she did, in short, which was keep things from happening in a visually busy way. Sinema governed, in that moment and in general, like a layoff email with an incongruous and jarring number of Zany Face Emojis in it…

Counterpoint: Kyrsten Sinema Is A Vicious Day-Glo Demon And The World Is Demonstrably Worse Because She Was Born, By Albert Burneko
… This society’s total prostration could hardly find a better—which is to say worse—avatar than Kyrsten Sinema, the mandate that nothing may ever be allowed to disrupt its consumption (or even to facilitate the hope that it could be slowed) congealed into a sneering blonde Karen theatrically performing her own imaginary cuteness while she kills even mild and popular compromise initiatives toward a better future. It’s rare for a single person to hold that kind of power, and unspeakably awful and sad that it fell into the hands of an absolute F-minus of a human being.

In any case, if holding her spiteful, obstructive, nihilistic line turns out not to have benefited any electoral ambitions—there’s no real broad base for a program best described as “the most hateful possible centrism,” to the surprise of no one else—it’s also not clear that Sinema ever authentically had any, at least as such things might be said to exist separate from her own quest to get ahead. Which fits, since she also lacks any authentic political beliefs, convictions, or sympathy to or solidarity with humanity, at least as such things might be said to exist separate from her own quest to get ahead. Her constituents as electoral politics defined them hated her guts; on the other hand she all but explicitly did not consider them her real constituents. Her real constituency (assuming Literally Dracula doesn’t count here) is the class of rich freaks for whose benefit she will now even more openly serve. Few could promise to protect them with as little shame, or as much sheer sadistic glee. I wish her all the very worst, forever and ever.

Hallelujah!

Manchin & Sinema prevented Democrats from passing the John Lewis and Freedom to Vote Acts.

If we can hang on to all our seats besides WV, we might actually have a shot at passing some big legislation in 2025.

LFG. pic.twitter.com/HYA08dGvrs

— Nick Knudsen 🇺🇸 (@NickKnudsenUS) March 5, 2024

Everything here is correct & expressed well. But there’s an additional piece: she’s deeply weird. Like probably-has-a-diagnosable-personality-disorder level weird. She really likes her (newly acquired) rich friends. But she also demonstrated a poisonous disdain for everyone else https://t.co/NSvBtBKys2

— Dana Houle (@DanaHoule) March 6, 2024

Jon Chait, normally the most ‘reasonable’ of professional centrists, at NYMag — “Good Riddance, Kyrsten Sinema, Plutocratic Shill”:

Senator Kyrsten Sinema announced her retirement with a self-serving message about how she is too good for this fallen world — too committed to bipartisanship and progress when people just want anger and division.

As an explanation for why Sinema is giving up politics, this is obviously a total crock. Americans do appreciate bipartisan compromise. Sinema is not the only member of Congress who has been involved in legislation with both parties. But she is the only Democrat who incinerated her political career because the causes she chose to fight for are substantively awful and deeply unpopular…

There is plenty of room in the Democratic Party for a bipartisan dealmaker, and Sinema’s sob story should not deter anybody from pursuing that profile. There’s no room for a transparent shill for the self-serving rich.

The most generous interpretation of Sinema’s career arc is that she came to deeply and earnestly subscribe to the worldview of the wealthy people who surrounded her, to the point where she was willing to incinerate a promising political career to defend their interests. A less generous interpretation is that she was played for a sucker. In either case, the cause of bipartisanship will be no worse, and the Senate will be better off, without her.

Bub bye Kyrsten Sinema.
Thanks for your cutesy curtsy thumbs down on increasing minimum wage to $15.
Patting McConnell on the back first like a good little girl was the chef’s kiss on your ladder pulling bullshit. ✌️ pic.twitter.com/ENKwq06ThZ

— Jo (@JoJoFromJerz) March 5, 2024

Receipts have been kept…

Just a reminder that Kyrsten Sinema had Jesse Jackson and @RevDrBarber arrested for peacefully protesting at her office less than 6 months ago. She is absolutely against civil rights.

— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) January 16, 2022

Here’s hypocrite sellout Kyrsten Sinema bashing Joe Lieberman for doing exactly what she is doing now.

Lieberman similarly switched from Democrat to Independent while in the Senate. (Lieberman basically became the #1 Senate troll, blocked progress, and faded into irrelevance.) pic.twitter.com/wquJ0PdSpT

— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) December 9, 2022

Almost like Sinema doesn’t actually care about bipartisanship at all…?? pic.twitter.com/amoolS7bE0

— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) June 16, 2021

Kyrsten Sinema will not seek reelection. Her decision last year to leave the Democratic Party and register as an independent puzzled many, @mckaycoppins wrote in 2023. But according to Sinema, there was no ideological mystery to solve: https://t.co/6wO92vpsC2

— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) March 5, 2024

McKay Coppins, Mormon, has a gift for drawing out the worst in terrible people. This was not quite a year ago:

Kyrsten Sinema knows what everybody says about her. She pretends not to read the press coverage—“I don’t really care”—but she knows. She knows what her colleagues call her behind her back (“egomaniac,” “traitor”). She knows how many articles The New York Times has published about her wardrobe (five). She feels misunderstood, and she would like to explain herself…

Sinema tells me that there are several popular narratives about her in the media, all of them “inaccurate.” One is that she’s “mysterious,” “mercurial,” “an enigma”—that she makes her decisions on unknowable whims. She regards this portrayal as “fairly absurd”: “I think I’m a highly predictable person.”

“Then,” she goes on, “there’s the She’s just doing what’s best for her and not for her state or for her country” narrative. “And I think that’s a strange narrative, particularly when you contrast it with”—here she pauses, and then smirks—“ya know, the facts.”

You can see, in moments like these, why she bothers people. She speaks in a matter-of-fact staccato, her tone set frequently to smug. She says things like “I am a long-term thinker in a short-term town” and “I prefer to be successful.” The overall effect, if you’re not charmed by it (and a lot of her Republican colleagues are), is condescension bordering on arrogance. Sinema, who graduated from high school at 16 and college at 18, carries herself like she is unquestionably the smartest person in the room…

… Sinema insists that people overstate how much she’s changed. Leaving the Democratic Party was, in her telling, a kind of homecoming. “I’m not a joiner,” she says. “It’s not my thing.” She points out that she wasn’t a Democrat when she started in politics. I point out that at the time she was aligned with the Green Party. She demurs.

“I never think about where [my position] is on the political spectrum, because I don’t care,” she tells me. “People will say, ‘Oh, we don’t know what her position is.’ Well, I may not have one yet. And I know that’s weird in this town, but I actually want to do all of the research, get as much knowledge as possible, spend all of the time doing the work, before I make a decision.”

I ask her if there’s any ideological through line at all that explains the various votes she’s taken in the Senate. She thinks about it before answering, “No.”…

Here's what Sinema once said about post-Senate life, per @mckaycoppins book:

"I don't care. I can go on any board I want to. I can be a college president. I can do anything."

"I saved the Senate by myself. That's good enough for me."https://t.co/DlZCCR4qCF

— bryan metzger (@metzgov) March 5, 2024

For possibly the first and only time, I am in full agreement with Senator Sanders…

COLBERT: “How much will you miss Kyrsten Sinema?”

BERNIE: “Not at all.” pic.twitter.com/Y1v38YkwTf

— The Tennessee Holler (@TheTNHoller) March 6, 2024

Wednesday Evening Open Thread: Sinema-tically Terrible ReviewsPost + Comments (100)

Help Me Out Here, Which One Is the Piece of Shit?

by WaterGirl|  March 6, 20245:34 pm| 77 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

Trick question.  They both are!

This is what McConnell said about the man he endorsed for president today.

History will remember. pic.twitter.com/4AyngpPbbt

— Marc E. Elias (@marceelias) March 6, 2024

I really don’t get it. Have the Russians bought bought the Republcan party, lock stock and barrel? Or nearly so?

If you’re on social media, think about how we can help spread the word, using McConnell’s own words against him.

Open thread.

Help Me Out Here, Which One Is the Piece of Shit?Post + Comments (77)

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