Tuesday, April 29, 2025
Friday, April 25, 2025
A Tin Horn Dictator Corrupts Justice
If anyone out there was undecided on whether Trump is operationalizing a precise, coordinated plan to destroy our democracy so he can rule until he dies, the move to shut down ActBlue, the primary way Democrats’ campaigns are funded, should be the final proof point.
--Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.)
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| The tool |
ActBlue was founded in 2004. According to Wikipedia,
Both the 2016 and 2020 Democratic presidential nominees, Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden, used ActBlue during their primary and general election campaigns. Bernie Sanders' 2016 and 2020 primary campaigns also used ActBlue for fundraising. Sanders' use of ActBlue was particularly notable as it represented the first time a major Democratic presidential candidate eschewed money from super PACs in favor of grassroots fundraising. This strategy would later be replicated by other Democratic political figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.If Pam Bondi does not only what Trump ordered, but also what Trump wants from an investigation of Act Blue, then we truly have arrived at a tyrant's picnic.
The cautious language of reporter Maggie Haberman et al.:
The Republican scrutiny of ActBlue has focused on claims — thus far unsubstantiated — that it allows straw and foreign donations. Federal election law bars straw donations [made in someone else's name], and it prohibits foreign citizens without permanent residency from donating directly to federal political candidates or political action committees.
Thursday, April 24, 2025
Republicans Violated the State Constitution in Stripping Power From Gov. Stein
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| Dave Boliek. He wants to run elections in North Carolina |
Under S 382, Dave Boliek would run the State Board of Elections, appointing all five members and all the chairs of all the county boards of elections. That promises nothing good for counties like Watauga and Wake and Mecklenburg and Guilford and Cumberland, and is only the latest of a long string of attempts by the GOP to take over the administration and management of elections in North Carolina. It is their North Star, the be-all of absolute power. Every other attempt has failed in the courts; one attempt, a state referendum to change the Constitution, got voted down by the people. Then came S 382.
Long story super-short, the Governor sued, arguing that S 382 violated separation of powers. Yesterday, a three-judge panel of Wake County Superior Court judges ruled 2-1 that S 382 is "facially" unconstitutional. "On its face," they know it's stupid.
The 2-judge majority on the panel included one registered Democrat, one Republican. The lone dissenter is Republican. He evidently thinks the General Assembly's power to jerk the Governor around is virtually unlimited. But because of his dissent, an appeal can go to the Court of Appeals, with its super-majority of Republican judges. The whole thing, we know, will end up at the Supremes, which is where Rumplestiltskin gets gold out of straw.
Why would I want my voting rights in the hands of people whose first instinct is to squeeze down on ballot-access, to make it as difficult as possible for some sorts of people to vote, to drain the registration pool of unwanted participation? No thanks!
Sunday, April 20, 2025
A Spanking From the Bench
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| Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III 4th Circuit Court of Appeals |
The Executive possesses enormous powers to prosecute and to deport, but with powers come restraints. If today the Executive claims the right to deport without due process and in disregard of court orders, what assurance will there be tomorrow that it will not deport American citizens and then disclaim responsibility to bring them home? And what assurance shall there be that the Executive will not train its broad discretionary powers upon its political enemies? The threat, even if not the actuality, would always be present, and the Executive’s obligation to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed” would lose its meaning.
Judge Wilkinson was reacting in real time to what he was hearing out of Trump, who had touted his newest wet dream of deporting American-born criminals to that same Salvadoran gulag: " 'Homegrowns are Next’: Trump Doubles Down on Sending American ‘Criminals’ to Foreign Prisons," ABC NEWS (Apr. 14, 2025, 6:04 PM); David Rutz, "Trump Open to Sending Violent American Criminals to El Salvador Prisons," FOX NEWS (Apr. 15, 2025, 11:01 AM EDT (Time). A president who could do that is fully capable of training his powers for disappearance on his political enemies. Wilkinson sees where this ends.
Now the branches come too close to grinding irrevocably against one another in a conflict that promises to diminish both. This is a losing proposition all around. The Judiciary will lose much from the constant intimations of its illegitimacy, to which by dent of custom and detachment we can only sparingly reply. The Executive will lose much from a public perception of its lawlessness and all of its attendant contagions. The Executive may succeed for a time in weakening the courts, but over time history will script the tragic gap between what was and all that might have been, and law in time will sign its epitaph.
Trump's "lawlessness and all of its attendant contagions." The plague metaphor perfectly captures the moment we're in.
J. Harvie Wilkinson, aged 80, a Ronald Reagan appointee, grew up in affluence in Virginia and holds his law degree from the University of Virginia. Ran for Congress as a Republican a single time in 1970. After decades on the 4th Circuit, Wilkinson reportedly made President George W. Bush's short list for appointment to the Supreme Court.
In 2002, in a case arising from the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Wilkinson endorsed widened presidential powers when it comes to foreign affairs. He wrote that “the authority to capture those who take up arms against America belongs to the commander in chief.” He has also been critical of judicial overreach, criticizing Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that established a constitutional right to abortion. (NYTimes).
So his slapdown of Trump's lawlessness attracted more than casual interest on the Right, which has idolized Wilkinson as a brilliant conservative.
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
When the Department of Justice Becomes an Insult Comedian
Assessing whether, when and how much [Trump] is defying the courts is complicated by a new phenomenon ... a collapse in the credibility of representations by the Justice Department. These days, its lawyers are sometimes sent to court with no information, sometimes instructed to make arguments that are factually or legally baseless, and sometimes punished for being honest .... It may be an appearance by a hapless lawyer who has or claims to have no information. Or it may be a legal argument so outlandish as to amount to insolence.
But as of this week, the AP was still being turned away. Most recently, they weren't allowed into the infamous club act between Jethro and President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, when both presidents claimed (as bald-faced as any two leaders have ever lied) that there's not a thing either of them can do to return a mistakenly deported man to his wife.
More. "Long after judges ordered the administration to unfreeze funding from contracts and grants disbursed by U.S.A.I.D. and FEMA, contractors and states led by Democrats repeatedly reported that payments were still being held up. Twice in February, judges granted motions to enforce their orders, finding that the administration was dragging its feet."
Jethro started a whole cascade of disrespect when he defied a judge's order to turn around the plane carrying Abrego Garcia to the gulag in El Salvador. That court ordered Garcia brought back. Trump appealed to his gang on the Supreme Court, and apparently all nine justices agreed that the president needed to do what the lower court said, "facilitating" the return of Garcia. The definition of "facilitate" proved slippery. The Federal judge in Maryland wasn't amused. Last Thursday, she asked the government three questions: Where was Mr. Abrego Garcia being held? What steps had the government taken to get him home? And what additional steps did it plan to take?
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| Trump's marionette at DOJ |
On Saturday, an administration official grudgingly acknowledged that “Abrego Garcia is currently being held in the Terrorism Confinement Center in El Salvador.” The official said nothing about what the government was doing to facilitate the prisoner’s return.
Garcia’s lawyers have urged the judge to consider holding the government in contempt. Seems appropriate. The Trump DOJ's contempt for the law must be apparent from the deepest space.
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
A Wrinkle in the Theft of a Supreme Court Seat
The "wrinkle" in the title ought to be a definitive foil to the corruption of the North Carolina judiciary, but I'm cynical enough by now to remember what they do with wrinkles -- they iron them out. Just disappear them with heat.
To overturn Riggs's 734-vote victory, Griffin wanted way over 60,000 votes thrown out, including an obscure little group of 260 North Carolinians whom Griffin labeled “never residents.” And you know what? The two Republicans on the North Carolina Court of Appeals -- apparently without the most basic attempt to verify Griffin's data (?) -- simply accepted Griffin's claim and ordered the State Board of Elections to remove all 260 voters from the count. The state Supreme Court upheld that decision.
You wanna know the best part? Those 260 have no recourse, no mechanism for appeal, and actually no notice probably that their whole voter registration no longer exists.
So Bryan Anderson went snooping -- "review of public records, news clips, social media posts, and interviews" -- and soon found 16 voters -- out of no-telling-how-many there really are -- who have resided in North Carolina, or still live in North Carolina, "some having spent their entire childhood in North Carolina, continuing to pay property taxes or working in the state." But the two gullible judges swallowed Griffin's zero evidence and stupidly eliminated the basic rights of 260 voters who happened to be overseas when they requested their absentee ballots.
Notice the last one is from Watauga.
Josiah Young (Jackson County): Young was raised in Webster, played basketball for Jackson County Early College and runs a drone photography business based in western North Carolina. Currently living in Spain.
Michelle Carrillo-Corujo (Guilford County): Corujo grew up in North Carolina. She attended Crestdale Middle School in Matthews in 2015 and has largely remained in North Carolina ever since. She graduated from UNC-Greensboro last year with a degree in political science and recently moved to the Netherlands for further academic pursuits.
Holly Arrowood (Henderson County): Arrowood has been a North Carolina voter since 2008 and has cast a ballot in-person on Election Day seven times. She also appears to still live in Chapel Hill.
David Eberhard (Orange County): Eberhard is a longtime neurologist and taught at UNC-Chapel Hill from 2011 to 2016.
Austyn Blamy (Union County): Blamy graduated from high school at Cuthbertson High School in Waxhaw and has been a seasonal swim coach there since 2018, according to her LinkedIn page. Blamy was also a D1 athlete from 2023-2024 for Liberty University’s swim team.
Ayse Babahan (Wake County): Babahan was born in North Carolina, but grew up in Istanbul. She graduated from the Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York and is now an actress living overseas.
Vicki Brent (Wake County): Brent attended Millbrook High School in Raleigh from 2017 to 2021 and served on the Wake County Black Student Coalition.
Eric Hoffman (Wake County): Hoffman attended UNC-Chapel Hill from 2014 to 2016 and got a master’s degree in business administration and has been a registered North Carolina voter since 2011. He’s since worked out of Holly Springs and Australia.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
The Slow-Motion Mugging of Allison Riggs
I've spent some time trying to grok what the "North Carolina Four" on the state's Supreme Court -- Paul Newby, Phil Berger Jr., Tamara Barringer, and Trey Allen -- decided on Friday in the Griffin v. Riggs rigamarole. And then what was decided yesterday after Riggs appealed in Federal Court. First, the Fab Four overturned the 2-1 decision by the Court of Appeals that accepted Jefferson Griffin's argument that over 60,000 ballots were illegal and must be "cured" to count. Instead, the NC Four accepted those 60,000 ballots as valid, but cherrypicked themselves enough votes cast by mail from overseas by a tranch of liberal sojourners who didn't photocopy their picture ids. The Supreme Court ordered the Court of Appeals to access the eligibility of over 5,500 voters, most of them overseas voters whose absentee ballots were not accompanied by a photocopy of a photo ID or ID Exception Form. Anderson Alerts has a spreadsheet available here listing all the voters whose ballots remain in question, "anywhere from 1,409 to 5,509." There's actually an opportunity to particularly target the "lean-Democratic" vote in the urban counties of Buncombe, Forsyth, and Durham. Challenged voters have 30 days to cure their ballots. Tall order.
Allison Riggs, who won the election by over 700 votes, promptly appealed the Fab Four decision to Federal court, where it landed in front of Judge Richard Myers (who's had a hand in the Griffin v. Riggs case before), a Trump appointee who ordered that the Supreme Court's previous order must proceed, but the election will not be certified until Judge Myers sez it's certified.
Jefferson Griffin is neither a gentleman nor a decent human being. His use of the law has produced a perversion of the law that shows me exactly the kind of "justice" he pursues. He's not fit to sit in judgment of the world's cringiest grin contest.
I don't know what we do when they finalize Griffin's theft of Riggs's election. It's going to feel like Bastille fury rising in the gullet, isn't it? Then what?
Friday, April 11, 2025
Checking in on the Most Important Republican Primary of 2026
Why, of course I'm trying to follow the developing Republican primary between Phil Berger, paterfamilias to a whole tribe of power-wielders in Rockingham County and statewide and the absolute boss of the NC General Assembly, and current Rockingham Sheriff Sam Page, who plays a cowboy-hat-wearing scourge of God. (I've written extensively about Sam Page, especially his crusade against Berger's sudden affection for gambling casinos. Use the search engine above.)
WXII in Winston did some pretty in-depth reporting on this race. Sam Page said that Berger had been in office too long, and he'd lost touch with the people he's supposed to be serving. Berger fired back and may have drawn blood:
"Yeah, so I think Sam Page is probably looking in the mirror," WXII quoted Berger. "He's been the sheriff of Rockingham County for over 20 years. It's no secret that he's spent the last seven or eight years at the border, focused more on things outside of the county. It's no secret that the jail in Rockingham county, because of his failure to look after the job he has now, has deteriorated to the point where insurance premiums for the county have gone through the roof." WXII found out, indeed, that insurance premiums at the jail had increased by 118% and the deductible went up by a factor of 20. That doesn't sound good.Actual Dirt Is the Only Vaccination
Trump has no philosophy or ideology. His only governing principle is to hurt people he hates. And that’s a lot of people.
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| Annabelle Hydrangeas. That is not our garden |
Trump has taken Russia off the leash, and is letting Putin swallow Ukraine, because Jethro can't get over how Zelenskyy refused to manufacture dirt on Joe Biden. A whole nation gets destroyed.
Trump hates Anthony Fauci, Mike Pompeo, and John Bolton, who were all important cogs in Trump 1.0, but insufficiently slavish, apparently, and Jethro removed their security details. Pompeo and Bolton have been targeted for assassination by Iran, and Anthony Fauci has more death-threats against him than Tesla.
I could come up with examples of Trump's mean pettiness for hours, but contemplating all that wreckage is exactly what has driven me into my current obsession with gardening. I've been throwing myself into raking out beds, composting weeds and debris, and mulching every blessed inch of the place with well-aged horse manure, and during that labor with dirt and plants I forget Trump 2.0 and its absolute madness and danger.
We have extensive gardens of perennials, shrubs, and trees -- a collector's garden with many rare natives but also plenty of exotics, particularly the Asians (because many of those specimen species are as close to outer space that I'm likely to come). I have two people who help me, not counting Pam, who will eventually have worked her way on her knees through every inch of every bed, lifting and dividing, and discouraging where discouragement is required, and uncovering the over-taken for a new shot at light -- the "editing" that every well-kept garden requires.
I'm an editor too, though old age has made knee-work more difficult. When stooping, I'm reminded that stoop-labor was the curse on Adam (and talk about mean old gods who love to hurt people!). Gardening is order; also chaos; reassuring in its repetition; but combustible with mutation. It's invigorating; also frustrating, rambunctious, and capricious. With invasives and aggressive native weeds, it can seem like Ukraine, losing territory to relentless plunder.
But it's a cold rainy day today, so I'm inside psychoanalyzing myself instead of dividing Annabelle Hydrangeas.
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Once Bitten, Twice Shy?
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| The mean eyes of Keith Kitwell |
Wiley Nickel Jumps; Is There Water in the Pool?
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| Wiley Nickel applauding Roy Cooper in earlier days |
Cooper will be the instant frontrunner if and when he announces a campaign against Tillis. Maybe Nickel is trying to flush Cooper out, but will he graciously step aside when Cooper announces, or will he insist on going through defeat in a primary?
“I have absolutely nothing but good things to say about former Governor Roy Cooper,” Nickel said. “My focus is Thom Tillis, who is voting over and over with Donald Trump on disastrous policies that are going to harm North Carolina.”
A person directly familiar with Cooper’s thinking granted anonymity to speak about private conversations said the governor is still “actively considering the decision to run” and he’ll decide after he completes his Harvard University fellowship later this spring. “Announcements by other potential candidates will not have an impact on his decision,” the person added.
Tuesday, April 08, 2025
Did NC Somehow Elect a Non-MAGA Republican as Our Treasurer
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| NC Treasurer Brad Briner |
Republican State Treasurer Brad Briner likened the president’s new tariffs to a corporate tax, and he sees more pain ahead. He said the tariffs will result in some combination of three outcomes for North Carolinians: Companies raising prices at consumers’ expense, companies cutting costs (and presumably payrolls) to protect their margins at the expense of workers, or companies accepting lower profits at the expense of investors.
“We don’t know if these tariffs will stick, or which of the three bad choices companies will make as a result,” Briner told The Assembly in a statement. “I also don’t think humpty dumpty can be put back together again. At the very least, countries and companies will be much more hesitant to trust that U.S. policy will remain constant, which slows decision making and lowers economic activity definitionally.”
Monday, April 07, 2025
January 6th Participant Becomes Apostle
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| Nathan Baer, Jan. 6th convicted participant |
Perrotti has a hell of a lead:
On Jan. 6, 2021, Nathan Baer stormed the Capitol in Washington, D.C. On April 26, 2023, he was arrested in Asheville and hit with numerous charges. On April 5, 2024, he pleaded guilty to one felony and was sentenced to four months in federal prison. On Jan. 21 of this year, he was pardoned by President Donald Trump and released from incarceration. On March 19, he spoke to the Macon County Republican Women’s Club in Franklin. (Smoky Mountain Times)
I come away from the article understanding this man Baer as a visionary libertarian, and not a little paranoid, seeing Jesus in all things and understanding the whole world otherwise as a giant ganging up that must be opposed. Baer told those Republican women that "while he wanted to support Trump, it was also something bigger — it was a sort of calling to take a stand against the cabal he perceives has corrupted the whole political system. His talk, which seemed at some times like an academic lecture and others like a sermon, verged into moral philosophy and religion."
Baer had become a fairly notorious fugitive before he was finally identified on Feb. 21, 2021, because of indisputable photos with Baer easily identifiable, front and center during the infamous "Tunnel assault" on the West Front of the Capitol. One photo shows him nearly nose-to-nose with Officer Michael Fanone. Another shows him hefting a police shield over his head to pass it forward to the frontline. Identified by a tip that a particular musical performer pictured on a Brooklyn theater's website bore a striking resemblance to Baer. Yep, Baer, an aspiring actor/singer. The FBI didn't arrive to arrest him in Asheville, where he was living with his sister, until June 2023.
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| The infamous photo of Baer face-to-face with Officer Fanone |
A singer? You bet! Baer apparently has an astounding baritone, "seeming to fill the room as if coming from a surround-sound stereo system." Baer punctuated his talk with resounding, a capella renditions of "America the Beautiful" and "How Great Thou Art," the old George Beverly Shea number guaranteed to put everyone in the right frame to receive the Lord.
He veered into both the "visionary" and the Libertarian -- Ron Paul is his hero, "who showed me what godly courage means,” Baer said. He also served up a big slice of that inherent paranoia. He said he wasn't so opposed to Obama and Hillary as he was on his guard against the “military industrial complex” (that old warhorse) nefariously running everything, running the bigwigs, running the economy. The reactions of the women: "Some topics, like how Wikileaks leader Julian Assange should be pardoned seemed to receive mixed results; some more obscure topics, like how a corrupt economic system based off the model used for the Bank of London has undermined the United States’ Hamiltonian economic system, seemed off people’s radars entirely."
Baer's saga about his few months' behind bars before Trump liberated him deepens the ambiguities. Perrotti:
There were cliques and gangs. Men would dominate others they perceived as weak. Some correctional officers were crooked and some were territorial. The thing Baer seemed to dislike most about prison was the lack of human connection; even looking someone in the eye is a faux pas worthy of immediate conflict. Callousness is a virtue and loneliness is the byproduct.
He began to teach singing to fellow inmates, making himself useful, fulfilling WWJD.
Sunday, April 06, 2025
Every Prick Wants To Rewrite History; This Prick Did
Donald Jethro issued one of his ExecOrders late last month directing the Smithsonian Institution to eliminate “divisive narratives.” It's time to whitewash history, boys!
Some were edited to remove references to slavery. On other pages, statements on the historic struggle of Black Americans for their rights were cut or softened, as were references to present-day echoes of racial division. The Post compared webpages as of late March to earlier versions preserved online by the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.
Changes in images, descriptions and even individual words have subtly reshaped the meaning of notable moments and key figures dating to the nation’s founding — abolitionist John Brown’s doomed raid, the battle at Appomattox and school integration by the Little Rock Nine.
An educational page on Benjamin Franklin, which examined his views on slavery and his ownership of enslaved people, was taken offline last month. Mentions of Thomas Stone, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, owning enslaved people were removed from several pages on the website of the Stone National Historic site in Southern Maryland. ...
At the Interior Department, which oversees the Park Service, political appointees directed senior career officials to identify webpages that might need to be changed, according to two Park Service employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they feared retribution....
For years, a National Park Service webpage introduced the Underground Railroad with a large photograph of its most famous “conductor,” Harriet Tubman. “The Underground Railroad — the resistance to enslavement through escape and flight, through the end of the Civil War — refers to the efforts of enslaved African Americans to gain their freedom by escaping bondage,” the page began.
Tubman’s photograph is now gone. In its place are images of Postal Service stamps that highlight “Black/White cooperation” in the secret network and that feature Tubman among abolitionists of both races.
The introductory sentence is gone, too. It has been replaced by a line that makes no mention of slavery and that describes the Underground Railroad as “one of the most significant expressions of the American civil rights movement.” The effort “bridged the divides of race,” the page now says.
Unpaid Protest
Posted on Twitter by @herotimeszero. I consider it a masterpiece of the genre:
MAGA is screaming that the anti-Trump protesters are all paid actors.
Just so I’m clear. The guy who was hated by his spouses for cheating, hated by his contractors for not paying, hated by his partners for lying, hated by his staff for being a bully, hated by his first administration, hated by his chiefs of staff, hated by his generals, hated by the intelligence community, hated by his “friends” with Trucker texting "I hate Trump passionately,” hated by Americans for ignoring a pandemic, inciting an insurrection, destroying our government, firing millions of Americans, stealing our retirement, torching our constitution, and crashing our economy, the guy is possibly the most hated man in America, if not the universe, and you think we need to get paid to loathe his vile slithering ass?
(Keep Your Thieving) HANDS OFF!
Forget the millions who turned out in the big cities yesterday to protest Trump 2.0. Look what was happening in the little towns. Impressive by any standard.
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| Photo by Donna Lisenby |
Saturday, April 05, 2025
Judge Toby Hampson Dissents
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| Judge Toby Hampson |
Judge Toby Hampson, the 3rd justice hearing the case, dissented:
To be clear: on the Record before us, Petitioner [Jefferson Griffin] has yet to identify a single voter—among the tens of thousands Petitioner challenges in this appeal—who was, in fact, ineligible to vote in the 2024 General Election under the statutes, rules, and regulations in place in November 2024 governing that election. Every single voter challenged by Petitioner in this appeal, both here and abroad, cast their absentee, early, or overseas ballot by following every instruction they were given to do so. Their ballots were accepted. Their ballots were counted. The results were canvassed. None of these challenged voters was given any reason to believe their vote would not be counted on election day or included in the final tallies. The diligent actions these voters undertook to exercise their sacred fundamental right to vote was, indeed, the same as every other similarly situated voter exercising their voting right in the very same election. Changing the rules by which these lawful voters took part in our electoral process after the election to discard their otherwise valid votes in an attempt to alter the outcome of only one race among many on the ballot is directly counter to law, equity, and the Constitution.

















