Saturday, September 28, 2024

Creepy Crazy Robert Kennedy Junior and Zac and Cody and so much more (Talking Entry)

Creepy, crazy Robert Kennedy Junior is back in the news.  No, it doesn't involve him and another dead animal.  No, another of his many affairs hasn't been exposed.  Melissa Quinn and Caitlin Yilek (CBS NEWS) report:


The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a bid by independent presidential Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to restore his name to New York's general election ballot.

The unsigned order from the court leaves intact a lower court decision declining to place his name back on New York's ballot ahead of the Nov. 5 contest. Kennedy mounted an unsuccessful independent bid for the White House and, after suspending his campaign last month, is working to have his name removed from ballots in more than a dozen states.


Which is good news.  But we need to remember this for the future.  Junior was always running a fake campaign.  He never should have been on the ballots to begin with.  He's no longer pretending he's running for the presidency.  Instead of crawling back under his rock and disappearing, he has spent weeks now trying to get on or stay on the ballots of states that he believes Kamala might win in and trying to get off the ballots of states that he feels Donald might be close to carrying if his voters vote for Donald instead.

It's all garbage.  Maureen Groppe (USA TODAY) notes:


New York Attorney General Letitia James responded that Kennedy's request is "extraordinary and disruptive."

Tens of thousands of ballots already in voters' hands would have to be invalidated, James told the court, even though "Kennedy is no longer seeking the office for which he insists on the right to appear on the ballot and is imploring his supporters to vote for someone else."

Kennedy's lawyers said he was only asking to put his name on ballots yet to be printed.


Yes, he was just insisting that he be on the ones yet to be printed.  Because the legal ploy there is to then challenge New York's election results by insisting it was unfair to voters that he was on some ballots and not others. Donald is expected to lose New York state.  Junior saw this as a loophole that could throw the results into question.  


He's garbage and he's a nutcase.  Emma Specter (VOGUE) observes:


Bizarrely enough, the Olivia Nuzzi scandal is actually perhaps the most normal bit of gossip to emerge about Kennedy since he began his campaign in 2023. This past May, Kennedy attributed the memory loss and brain fog he experienced in 2010 to “a worm that got into my brain and ate a portion of it and then died” (yes, really), and three months later, he confessed to dumping a dead bear cub in Central Park after picking it up from the side of the road upstate with the intent to consume its meat. The same month, a 2012 article resurfaced in which Kennedy’s daughter Kick recounted a story about her father beheading a dead whale and strapping it to the top of his minivan for a five-hour drive. (And then, of course, there are the even more unseemly parts of his story, from sexual-assault allegations to the fact that Kennedy pledged to not “take sides on 9/11.”)

 

He's insane and he's a national joke striving to become a national threat.  Stephanie Mencimer (MOTHER JONES) reports:


MAGA influencer Brandon Straka is still on probation for a criminal charge related to his participation in the mob at the US Capitol on January 6. But on Sunday, he will be back in DC, where he’s slated to appear on the National Mall at the “Rescue the Republic” event, alongside Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Tulsi Gabbard, Russell Brand, a handful of anti-vax doctors, evangelical preachers, plus journalist Matt Taibbi.

The hodgepodge speaker lineup reflects the mishmash of the event’s agenda. The website declares that the United States “is under attack by a conglomerate of industrial complexes,” and calls on Americans to “join the resistance.” It’s the production of the Libertarian Party; a group that fought vaccine mandates during the pandemic; and activists opposed to sending military aid to Ukraine. Gabbard and Kennedy are now officially also surrogates for the Trump campaign.


That's who Junior associates now -- well, insurrectionists and Mike The Pap Smear Papantonio.  


Is RING OF FIRE still trying to pretend that they're progressive? They were happy to promote Junior last year and even as late as this year through the spring.  The Pap Smear and Junior started the program together, it was one of those forgettable weekend programs on AIR AMERICA RADIO that no one listened to. His biggest audience on AIR AMERICA came right after the election when he appeared on UNFILTERED with hosts Lizz Winstead and Rachel Maddow (the show had a third host, Chuck D, but Chuck wasn't on that day) and Pap Smear -- who got his name that day from Lizz and Rachel (and had a hissy fit after the broadcast ended) -- announced he would be flying to DC to challenge the election results.


Lying.


Not flying.  He never did that.  Just a big talker who amounts to nothing -- in fact, that should be the title of his memoir MIKE PAPANTONIO: JUST A BIG TALKER WHO AMOUNTS TO NOTHING.


Some people think Mike is more than a talker.  In 2003, for example, on CNN, James Carville called him an "ambulance chaser."  Well he has to do something, right?  RT is no more.  So he can't count on RUSSIA TODAY money.  Maybe that explains the video RING OF FIRE did today where they trash a retired politician from the Democratic Party and rush to defend Russia?  It can't be because of fact checking.

It they were interested in facts or fact checking, they would have called out Junior long ago. 

 Remember, by the way, when Pap Smear got media push back for hiding professional relationships?


Me too.  And all the above?  Somehow missing from his WIKIPEDIA page.  Maybe go back to this 2003 ROLL CALL report and work on improving his CRAPAPEDIA page which reads like an infomercial because it ignores all of his questionable activities.  


Back to the MOTHER JONES article:


 The self-proclaimed influencer’s lack of meaningful influence doesn’t seem to have stopped a few rich donors from keeping his organization afloat since his arrest. For instance, IRS records show that between November 2021 and October 2023, his foundation received $220,000 from the Bell Charitable Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Kathleen Bell Flynn, heir to the Taco Bell fortune.


Did  not know that.  First off, that explains the grifters, doesn't it?  The Glenneth Greenwalds and the Matt Taibbis and all the rest of the paid whores.  A piece of garbage with no real audience or followers, can get $220,000 from the fright-wing.  

Back home, I mainly go to Tacos Del Barrio for street tacos and throughout the state I'll go to Del Taco.  I don't go to Taco Bell and now that I know that KBF is funding people who committed treason, I won't be going to Taco Bell ever.

Back home?  I'm on the road, I'm pouring every bit of time I've got into campaigning for Kamala Harris.  So I'm mainly eating Birds Eye frozen vegetables that I pop in the microwave.  I mentioned Birds Eye frozen vegetables recently here or at THIRD and an e-mail came expressing disbelief.  On the road, I can't eat fast food -- which will make me sick and sluggish.  We usually do lunch, 30 to 45 minutes, where we go to a sit-down restaurant in whatever town we're in.  Breakfast is usually yogurt and oatmeal -- a piece of fruit maybe -- in whatever hotel we're staying at.  Then by the end of the day, when we get back to the hotel, I pop a Birds Eye into the microwave.  Yes, I do eat Birds Eye.  I have no idea why that's so surprising.  I have to eat healthy and I'm on the road and I know the taste of Birds Eye as opposed to what some regional frozen food might be available.  Again, I have no idea why that's so surprising but someone e-mailed the public account (common_ills@yahoo.com) with a 17K e-mail calling me a liar at length for claiming to eat Birds Eye.


Am I missing something there?  I get e-mails all the time -- many complaining about something -- but no one's ever accused me of lying about eating a frozen food. 


On e-mails, Friday's snapshot included this:


On journalism, I was asked to note this from Brett Wilkins' COMMON DREAMS piece:

 X—the social media platform formerly known as Twitter—suspended Ken Klippenstein's account Thursday after the investigative journalist posted an article containing a link to a dossier on Republican U.S. vice presidential candidate JD Vance that allegedly came from an Iranian hack of former President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign.

Klippenstein, who formerly worked at The Intercept, said on his paid Substack Thursday that his X account was suspended for violating the platform's ban on posting private information.

"I know that it is general practice to delete 'private' information from leaks and classified documents, but in this case, not only is Vance an elected official and vice presidential candidate, but the information is readily available for anyone to buy," he wrote. Vance is also the junior U.S. senator from Ohio.

Klippenstein continued:

We should be honest about so-called private information contained in the dossier and "private" information in general. It is readily available to anyone who can buy it. The campaign purchased this information from commercial information brokers. Those dealers make huge profits from selling this data. And the media knows it, because they buy the data for reporting purposes, just like the campaign. They don't like to mention that though.

According to Klippenstein, the corporate media has "been sitting on" the dossier since June, "declining to publish in fear of finding itself at odds with the government's campaign against 'foreign malign influence.'"

"If the document had been hacked by some 'Anonymous'-like hacker group, the news media would be all over it," he contended. "I'm just not a believer of the news media as an arm of the government, doing its work combatting foreign influence. Nor should it be a gatekeeper of what the public should know."

Klippenstein shared a general overview of the contents of the dossier, which he described as "a 271-page research paper the Trump campaign prepared to vet" Vance, pulling out select quotes from the document:

  • "Vance has been one of the chief obstructionists to U.S. efforts to providing [sic] assistance to Ukraine."
  • "Vance criticized public health experts and elected officials for supporting Black Lives Matter protests while condemning anti-lockdown [Covid] protests."
  • "Vance 'embraced non-interventionism."
  • "In 2020, Vance criticized President Trump's airstrike killing Iranian General Qasem Soleimani, worrying it would continue to bog down America in the Middle East to the advantage of China."
  • "Vance suggested that the country had been entangled in wars in the Middle East so 'financial elites' could profit from the rise of China."

"While the news media has paraphrased some of the contents of the dossier, what they haven't done is provide the American people with the underlying document, in the language in which it appeared, so they can decide for themselves what they think," Klippenstein said. "You decide for yourself."

An X spokesperson toldZeteo's Justin Baragona that "Ken Klippenstein was temporarily suspended for violating our rules on posting unredacted private personal information, specifically Sen. Vance's physical addresses and the majority of his Social Security number." 

 
I'm expected to weigh in on it.  I can't.  I know nothing about it.  I learned about it from a friend who asked me this morning to note it.  

Most days, from an hour or so after this snapshot goes up until nine at night, I'm speaking to groups to get out the vote for Kamala.  So I can't follow everything.  I understand that the usual grifters and hypocrites are trying to spin this to defend Elon Musk and that's probably why I'm being asked to weigh in.  According to Glynneth Greenwald supposedly -- I haven't seen his Tweets -- the hypocrites (of the left -- but that's always implied with Greenwald, right?) are outraged by this and didn't say a damn thing about THE NEW YORK POST article in 2020.

I did.  And that's probably why I'm being asked to weigh in.  I defended the right of THE POST to publish the article.  Unlike Glenneth, I repeatedly stresses this was not stolen material because I knew the press was using that lie about the laptop to avoid covering it.  I defended the right to publish the article and I defended them from the Twitter censorship that followed.

And I may do the same with the issue at hand now.  But I'm going to have to brush up on it because I know nothing other than what we just quoted above.   So we'll put that on my never ending to-do list and it'll be addressed here or at THIRD.

I'm too tired this morning -- and time's too limited -- to do the research required to weigh in so we're putting a pin in it for now.


Some e-mails express disbelief that I didn't know about this.  I really didn't -- and really don't.  I don't pretend to know everything.  I honestly had not been following that.  After the Iraq snapshot is dictated -- wait.  I get up in the morning and I work out.  While working out, I'm dictating the snapshot.  I then hop in the shower.  I then eat breakfast and we hit the road where -- except for lunch and traveling to different sites -- I'm speaking to one group after another about the importance of the election until around nine p.m. at night.  This topic is not one that's come up in any group I've spoken with.  It's more 'insider baseball' than an actual issue on people's minds. 

If I don't know about something, I'm not weighing in.  I've noted that here from the start.  I've repeatedly praised former BOSTON GLOBE columnist Ellen Goodman over the years at this site for refusing to continue on the chat and chews where you jawbone on every topic in the world.  She rightly noted that she cannot be an expert on everything.  

I don't have a lot of respect for people who think they can -- especially when they then open their mouths and, for instance, credit Bernie Sanders with creating Medicare For All.  Yeah, I saw that live stream -- neither the woman hosting it nor the two Disney Kids she had on posted it so I ignored it but, yes, those two men are idiots.  Try opening a book, Zac and Cody (you know who I mean) and learning about FDR.  And from there, you can learn about the movement for Medicare For All -- a movement that began long before not only Bernie's two runs for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, but also before Bernie was in the Senate and also before Bernie was in the House and also before . . .

Zac and Cody's stupidity does serve a purpose.  It always let's me know the level of stupidity out there.  On the topic of the censorship or 'censorship,' their nonsense weigh in was all I needed.


Because I don't just avoid writing about a topic if I know nothing about it, I also have to have a way in, an entry point, to cover something.  Zac and Cody were fanboying again on air and they're stupid.  Their stupidity showed me how I could cover it here -- or at THIRD -- if I choose to.  Again, Zac and Cody never know basic facts.  The first half has them attacking Matt Taibbi -- but not knowing how to attack him on it -- do they ever do any research? -- and then the second had them fanboying over Glenneth Greenwald.  Both of those men are being hypocrites on this topic.  Matt especially,  


Do Zac and Cody not know how to listen?  Matt's hypocrisy is so obvious on this issue but either they didn't pay attention to the Tweets they read on air or they don't know enough to weigh in.  Their weak sauce critique of Matt was a waste of time because they don't what they're talking about.  If they knew the basics, they could have brought the hammer down immediately.  Maybe they were too busy rushing to defend Glenneth?  


They'd do well to grow the hell up.


Which is another issue.  Thursday's snapshot called out that bad DEMOCRACY NOW! interview with the hideous Jill Stein.  This resulted in e-mails to the public account asking if DN! is cancelled here?  No.  We'll continue to note when it's applies to what we're covering.  And, in that same snapshot, we drop back to a segment DN! did last year.


Any outlet -- well any with even 1% of integrity (that leaves out FOX "NEWS") -- can do journalism worth applauding.  And I'm not Zac and Cody.  I hope they grow out of their nonsense phase.


Glenneth is a grifter.  But the world doesn't exist for Zac and Cody until 2016.  So they don't realize that he was one of the Iraq War cheerleaders or that when he realized it was hugely unpopular that he refashioned himself and then pretended for years that he had never supported the Iraq War.  He hung out with a hag who was useless and garbage but promoted herself as the left's queen online.  Those of us in the industry knew she was trash and a menace to women.  She's largely forgotten today but she was Glenn's roll dog long after her brief career in the entertainment industry imploded.  She's forgotten today in the industry and, for that matter, she's forgotten as an online activist.


(For those late to the party, hag is not Laura Poitras.  Laura makes great documentaries.  Hag had a tiny role in feature film production. Am I afraid to note her by name?  Not at all.  I'm just glad she's forgotten and want her to stay that way.)


Let's leave the parenthetical but stay with that thought.  Sam Seder did a good segment on a fright-wing crazy.  It didn't go up here.  It wasn't a reflection on the segment.  It's a reflection on something I struggle with.


I'm all for calling out and warning people about con artis like Naomi Wolf or John Stauber who were for a moment or two on the left.  I feel we need to do that on the left.  We promoted John Stauber, for example.  So now that he's become a freak who rallies against the LGBTQ+ community and promotes Libs of Tik Tok and other hate outlets -- Naomi Wolf does the same thing -- as does morbidly obese Tara Reade -- I feel we on the left are obligated to note these grifters.


But LL whom Sam was rightly calling out?  If I'm noting that or someone else that they call out on THE HUMANIST, am I promoting that person?


Marjorie Taylor Greene is disgusting and needs to be called out. She is a member of Congress which gives her power.  So no problem posting videos where someone's calling her out.


But I always struggle when it comes to the no-names trying to make a buck off hatred.  I try to be careful about my actions and how this space is used.  And I don't want to play a part in promoting  undeserving people who are nothing but hate merchants.

That's not me making a judgment on Sam, THE HUMANIST or anyone who does tackle this -- not even Zac and Cody.  They need to use their platforms as they see fit.  But I do struggle with this -- is this person (whomever it is at any given moment) worth calling out by name or not -- meaning calling them out by name -- and if I do that am I increasing the talk about them and therefore offering publicity to them and advancing their hatred.  


That's what I struggle with.  

Back to Friday's snapshot.  "ADDED" now appears at the end of Kamala's speech and ahead of "The following sites updated."  I don't do that very often but there were enough e-mails that I heard about when I sat down for lunch on Friday.  Martha and Shirley are kind enough to brief me on the e-mails -- and they and a few others are kind enough to do any replies that go out from the public account.  "Holy war" needed to be addressed.  I hadn't realized that there was an expectation that it would be addressed by me in the Friday snapshot so that's what I did.  I also addressed the expectations with regards to two music videos.

Normally, there's not anything added to a snapshot regarding e-mail reactions to that snapshot but when there is, it will always say "ADDED" to note that it wasn't there originally. 

A few e-mails to the public account expressed disappointment that I had -- in the words of one -- "a strong week" up until Friday's snapshot.  He wasn't the only one expressing that opinion.


Don't know what to tell you there.


I'll refund your money?  Oh, wait, you don't pay a dime for this site.  I'm not a grifter.  

Except for one week when I was in the hospital (diabetic coma), I post daily something I've written or co-written here.  And have done that for far too long.  It's twenty years in November. 


What you're reading is a private conversation in a public square.  I write for this community -- that's why I put priority on community e-mails unless it's something to the public account pointing out an error or asking about bias -- sincerely asking or just trying to work the ref.  

I feel answerable to the community that built up around this site.  

So if you're critique is I wasted your time on Friday and you wanted something harder hitting, are you a community member? I can't imagine anyone who was a community member actually criticizing me for something that minor and stupid.  I've wanted to be done online since 2008.  

From the early days, we have done "talking entries."  And they start out with one thing and then cover other things.  (I'm not referring to dictating snapshots, I'm referring to an entry I type that covers a variety of topics -- usually pulling from community e-mails.)  

So what the ones objecting to?  That feature of working up to something is actually long built into this site with the "talking entries."

So the ones objecting are objecting because we open by calling out a film review.


That's so minor!!!


First off, it's not minor.  ROSEMARY'S BABY is not a film about a pregnant woman learning she's carrying the devil's baby.  That doesn't happen until the last scenes of the film when Rosemary finds out her baby's not dead and she sees it.  And since it happens when she sees her baby, she's not pregnant when she finds out it's the devil's baby -- or do you, like Donald Trump with abortion -- not understand how pregnancy actually works?  


Second, Rebecca knows p.r.  That was her profession.  I've often noted here when someone's insulted her over the years -- she does a great website (disclosure to those late to the party, Rebecca, Elaine and I are friends dating back to college) -- that she knows what she's doing.


It's amazing isn't it, how when a woman does something, it requires a lot of criticism and a lot of people telling her how to do it.  We saw that with COMMON DREAMS and their string of articles about what Kamala Harris needed to do in the debate ahead of the debate.


Rebecca knows how to run her own site.  That is the pig boyz first mistake, thinking that women are sitting around saying, "I wish some man would come along and tell me how to run my website."


So they'd whine in an e-mail to me that we have serious issues and Rebecca wrote about DYNASTY! or some other topic.  


Like now they complain about ROSEMARY'S BABY being in Friday's snapshot.


That snapshot was heavily accessed (hits and clicks don't measure reading, just how many people clicked on it).  And that's because of ROSEMARY'S BABY. 


I'm trying to get Kamala Harris elected -- I'm doing that online and offline.  My goal is not to speak with the same group of people -- online or offline -- over and over but to reach out to new ones who hopefully will get behind Kamala.


We were putting Kamala's entire economic speech in Friday's snapshot.  We'd already covered it in another snapshot.  I assume most people interested only in politics had already heard of it or seen it and certainly we had already covered it.  ROSEMARY'S BABY added a new element that brought in people who don't normally stop by this site.


I've noted that repeatedly regarding Rebecca's site.  If I do a snapshot she thinks people especially need to read, she's going to do a post about sex or a popular TV show or anything that she thinks will get eyeballs on her post with the hope that they'll continue on to the snapshot that she reposts in full.


Stan.  Okay, that's another issue.  I noted Stan noting Rebecca in a snapshot this week and there were drive-bys to the public e-mail account about how it wasn't necessary to note Stan noting Rebecca.  It was absolutely necessary.  First, I'd meant to note Rebecca the day before but we ran out of time and space.  (Her post -- as with all community posts -- was noted in "The following sites updated" section but I meant that I had planned to quote from it.)  So Stan's post actually reminded me of that.  Second, Stan's a community member and I don't need you or anyone questioning my right to quote from the community sites.  No, Stan doesn't usually write about politics.  He noted not long ago that he doesn't feel like he's good at it.  He is very good at it but I understand why he doubts himself -- it has to do with the way the internet has treated African-Americans who write about politics.  It's gotten better in the last 20 years but it's still out there.  Third, his focus is entertainment.  He created his community site to help get the word out on Iraq.  That's true of all of the sites in the community including this one.  Now, for the community newsletters, Stan's happy to tackle politics.  But his site focuses on entertainment.  And he does a great job on it.  But there aren't a lot of times when he gets included in a snapshot.  He's covering entertainment so if we're covering the political race here, I don't have as much reason to include -- link to and quote from -- his posts.  I love Stan's site, I love Stan's work and I love Stan.  I link to everything he does in "The following sites" but I will include him -- quoting something he's written -- anytime I want and I won't apologize.


By focusing on entertainment, he's created his own audience and some of those people reading him for his writing continue to read on to the snapshot that he reposts every time there's a snapshot.  


I love it when men rush into offer 'helpful' advice that no one asked them for.


Reminds me, in fact, of Jane Fonda.  9 TO 5 is a film classic.  It contains great performances from Jane, Lily Tomlin, Dolly Parton and Dabney Coleman.  


But when the film came out, some leftist men used their columns to trash it and to trash Jane.  One male newspaper columnist (again, there are people who I don't want to promote, so we'll leave him nameless) was especially condemning insisting that Jane had blown it.


9 TO 5, he insisted, was a nothing movie and not important like THE CHINA SYNDROME or COMING HOME!!!!


Well, first off, it became the second biggest film in the US of its year in terms of ticket sales.  It was one of the first comedies to rake in over $100 million in ticket sales in the US.  It was the first one starring women to make over $100 million in ticket sales -- and that's true not just of comedy but of any genre film that starred women (plural).  It remains Jane Fonda's biggest hit.


But it was a comedy and she blew her credibility!!!!!


She didn't blow her credibility but I think today we'd read that kind of nonsense and we'd grasp what was actually going on: Women aren't important and therefore their rights aren't important.


That is what was behind the slams.  The film deals with issue of equal pay for equal work, deals with sexism in the work force, deals with the double-shifts that effect many women (and some men -- back then as well but it's true even more today) and so much more.


She didn't blow her credibility.  She produced a huge film -- huge at the box office and huge in the minds of America -- to this day, this film is still being viewed and embraced. 

 

We need to wrap up.  I told myself I'd actually get some sleep tonight.  But Amy and Juan.  No, they aren't cancelled.  I love Juan, he's a great person who's done a life's work that is impressive and outstanding and I love him and remain in awe of him.  But that interview with Jill Stein was awful.


We'll continue to highlight DEMOCRACY NOW! as needed.  And that's the lesson that Zac and Cody refuse to learn.  Stop thinking like a fan boy.  They worship Glenn Greenwald who doesn't deserve worship -- probably no one does but Glenn certainly doesn't.  They attack Matt now but were worshipping him until a year or so ago.  They attack Bri-Bri today while having worshipped her until a few months ago.  They fan boy over and over.

That's not helping us.  It doesn't make for critical thinkers.  DEMOCRACY NOW! does a lot of good work.  We'll continue to take from it what we can use.  And if I feel it or anything else needs to be called out, I'll do so.


I'm sure I left out 800 things I meant to address.  I get four hours a sleep a night on the road.  I'm tired and I'm going to sleep now.  Any drive-bys that need refunds for something I've written that just wasn't up to code for them, send the complaints to common_ills@yahoo.com.


The following sites updated:


 

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Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), a senior member and former Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee (HELP), took to the Senate floor in an effort to pass her resolution, which simply expresses the sense of the Senate that every patient has the basic right to emergency health care, including abortion care, regardless of where they live.  Murray’s resolution was blocked by Republican Senator James Lankford (R-OK), who falsely claimed that no doctors are prevented from providing lifesaving care because of Republican abortion bans and tried to misleadingly place the blame for Amber Thurman’s death on the rare side effects she encountered rather than Thurman’s doctors not providing immediate treatment as a result of Georgia’s abortion ban. ProPublica’s reporting made plain that—according to the state’s own medical review board—Amber Thurman’s death was preventable and doctors and researchers continue to make clear that medication abortion is safe.

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“Let me be perfectly clear about what is happening,” said Senator Murray after Republicans blocked her resolution. “Here in America, in the 21st century, pregnant women are suffering and dying—not because doctors don’t know how to save them, but because doctors don’t know if Republicans will let them. There are skyrocketing maternal death rates in states like Texas. And as I spoke out on the floor last week—there are, at least, two women dead in Georgia today because of Republican abortion bans. Those kids are now growing up without a mother. That is the harsh reality. Republicans can’t ignore that. Donald Trump can’t shout over it. And the American people will not—ever—forget it.”

Since the overturn of Roe v. Wade over two years ago, nearly two dozen US states led by Republicans have passed, banned, or severely restricted access to abortion. These strict laws have created confusion around the treatment doctors can provide even when a pregnant patient’s life is in danger, as physicians fear that they may lose their medical license, be sued, or even charged with a felony if they perform life-saving emergency care. Despite the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act’s (EMTALA) requirements that Medicare-participating hospitals treat and stabilize pregnant patients in need of emergency medical care, women are being turned away from emergency rooms following the Dobbs decision.

In Moyle v. United States, the U.S. Supreme Court had the opportunity to reaffirm that federal law requires pregnant patients to have access to life-saving emergency care in every state, but instead, the Court dismissed the case and sent it back to the lower courts, effectively punting on making a decision on the case itself. While the litigation continues in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the health and lives of women remain at risk as uncertainty around emergency abortion care persists. 121 Congressional Republicans, including 26 Senators, filed an amicus brief arguing that EMTALA does not require hospitals to provide abortion care as emergency stabilizing care in order to save a patient’s life.

Senator Murray is a longtime leader in the fight to protect and expand access to reproductive health care and abortion rights, and she has led Congressional efforts to fight back after the Supreme Court’s disastrous decision overturning Roe v. Wade. Murray has introduced more than a dozen pieces of legislation to protect reproductive rights from further attacks, protect providers, and help ensure women get the care they need; Murray has led efforts to push for passage of these bills on the floor multiple times. Senator Murray also co-leads the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would restore the right to abortion nationwide. This January, Murray led her colleagues in hosting a “State of Abortion Rights” briefing with women who have suffered firsthand from Republican abortion bans. On June 4th of this year, Senator Murray chaired a HELP Committee hearing titled “The Assault on Women’s Freedoms: How Abortion Bans Have Created a Health Care Nightmare Across America.” Recently, Murray also helped lead efforts to force Republicans on the record on votes to protect access to contraception and access to IVF (twice). Murray has also led her colleagues in raising the alarm about how a second Trump administration intends to wage an all-out assault on reproductive rights and abortion access in every state, as outlined in Project 2025.

Senator Murray’s full remarks, as delivered, before seeking unanimous consent are below:

“I come to the floor to offer a simple resolution, one that reaffirms the basic principle that when you go to the ER, the emergency room, they should be allowed to treat you. When your life is in danger, doctors should be able to do their job. When you need emergency care—including an abortion—no politician should stop you from getting it.

“Now this seems incredibly simple to me. It should not be controversial. Especially if everyone who talks about protecting the life of the mother seriously means it.


“After all—that is what emergency care is for—saving the life of the mother.


“And yet, when the Biden-Harris Administration tried to make clear that these women should get care, many Republicans actually opposed them. I really want to emphasize—we are talking about women whose water breaks dangerously early, or who are experiencing uncontrollable hemorrhaging, sepsis, or pre-eclampsia.

“And still, Republicans actually filed a brief in court saying essentially, ‘No, we DON’T think doctors should be required to provide abortion care when a patient’s life is at stake.’

“Their brief rejected the idea—that basic medical reality—of abortion as stabilizing care. That is really shocking to me. It should be shocking to everyone.

“After a brief like that—I am not going to let any of my Republican colleagues off the hook just for saying they care about the life of the mother…


“Not if they won’t lift a finger to actually protect women, and to actually make clear that emergency care can include abortion.

“We need to send a clear message on that. The Senate needs to speak with one voice and tell the American people, ‘Yes, we want to make sure your doctor can save your life. Your doctor can save your life.’

“And before my Republican colleagues get up to object, let me be clear: You will not get by pretending a resolution like this isn’t necessary—not when we are hearing firsthand from doctors wracked with guilt for decisions that Republican politicians made for them, not when we are hearing firsthand from women who have bled, suffered, and nearly died because their care was delayed, and certainly not when Texas saw maternal deaths skyrocket following its strict abortion ban.


“The data in Texas paints a clear, brutal picture of the reality: these abortion bans are killing women. Republicans are also not going to get by trying to shift blame and argue ‘emergency care is already protected.’ Because, the whole point of this resolution is to say emergency care is protected!

“So if you oppose the Senate actually SAYING that don’t you see how that could be part of the problem? Don’t you see how that could be very dangerous for women?

“And again, and I can’t emphasize this enough—if you don’t see, if you don’t understand—all you have to do is listen.

“Women are speaking out. Doctors are speaking out. They are terrified. They are heartbroken. They are angry. And they are watching right now, to see if we can pass this resolution and do the very bare minimum of saying, with one voice: ‘women have a right to get abortion care when their life is at stake.”

Senator Murray’s full remarks as delivered following Senator Lankford’s objection are below:

“I disagree with the Senator from Oklahoma. Let me be perfectly clear about what is happening.

“Here in America, in the 21st century, pregnant women are suffering and dying—not because doctors don’t know how to save them, but because doctors don’t know if Republicans will let them.

“There are skyrocketing maternal death rates in states like Texas. And as I spoke out on the floor last week—there are, at least, two women dead in Georgia today because of Republican abortion bans.

“Those kids are now growing up without a mother. That is the harsh reality. Republicans can’t ignore that. Donald Trump can’t shout over it. And the American people will not—ever—forget it.

“Every day we are going to continue to hold the people opposed to this accountable for the cruelty of these abortion bans. The fact is that the resolution that I offered simply says that doctors can provide emergency care for the life of the mother. I don’t understand where the disagreement is, M. President. And I hope that we can pass this and give doctors and women the confidence that when you are pregnant and having a severe emergency medical situation you’ll be treated. Thank you. I yield the floor.”

###

Sparkle

Baldwin Introduces Bill to Give Small Businesses, Entrepreneurs $50,000 Tax Break

 09.26.2024

Baldwin Introduces Bill to Give Small Businesses, Entrepreneurs $50,000 Tax Break

A recent survey found that small business owners spend an average of $40,000 to get their businesses off the ground

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) introduced legislation to provide tax relief to entrepreneurs looking to start a small business and reduce barriers for startups. The Tax Relief for New Businesses Act would increase the startup tax deduction from $5,000 to $50,000 and allow businesses to write off more expenses to compensate for the increasing cost of starting a business. Currently, small business owners can only deduct up to $5,000 in startup costs in the first year, yet a recent survey found that they spend an average of $40,000 to get their businesses off the ground.

“On Main Streets across Wisconsin, small businesses are creating jobs and contributing to our local economies. For too many entrepreneurs, starting a business can be out of reach and it’s our job to break down the barriers in their way so more Americans can pursue their dreams,” said Senator Baldwin. “This legislation is a commonsense step that will unlock opportunities for Wisconsin’s next generation of small businesses and help ensure they have the capacity to grow, innovate, and shape the future of the Badger state.”

“If the US Senate passes this legislation it would help provide capital to reinvest in small business staff and get them to a stable, profitable bottom line much quicker. This would encourage existing and expanding businesses to invest and grow by improving cash flow in the early years of starting and growing the businesses. As a small business owner I strongly endorse this effort,” said TJ Semanchin, owner of Wonderstate Coffee in Viroqua, WI.

 “The Tax Relief for New Businesses Act is a game changer for entrepreneurs, offering substantial financial relief when it's needed most,” said Scott Resnick, Wisconsin startup advocate. “By significantly increasing the deduction and allowing more flexibility for growing startups, this policy reduces the financial burden of launching a business and paves the way for greater innovation and job creation across the Wisconsin economy.”

“TitletownTech supports policy that reduces early-stage financial pressure on entrepreneurs and increases likelihood of startup success,” said Jill Enos, Managing Partner of Titletown Tech in Green Bay.

“Starting a business is a vote of confidence in the future,” said Richard Trent, Executive Director of Main Street Alliance. “Men and women all across the country start businesses that help our communities thrive. Small businesses are connected to their communities, sponsoring little league teams, providing employment and creating a robust culture and economy. But one of the most difficult parts of starting a business is having the capital to do so. A lack of generational wealth, unfair lending practices and discrimination make this difficult for too many. The Tax Relief for New Businesses Act is a huge step in the right direction to level the playing field and jump start Main Streets all across America.”

“Repeated research has demonstrated that new businesses – ‘startups’ – are a critical driver of economic growth, job creation, and opportunity expansion,” said John Dearie, President of Center for American Entrepreneurship. “But launching a new business costs money. And because startup costs are incurred long before the first dollar of revenue, those costs can be a major obstacle to new business formation. That’s why the Tax Relief for New Businesses Act is so important. The Act would increase the tax deduction of startup costs from $5,000 to $50,000, expand the types of expenses eligible for the deduction, and stretch the phase-out threshold of the credit from $50,000 to $150,000, allowing entrepreneurs to write-off more of the costs required to launch their business once they become profitable. The legislation is powerfully pro-entrepreneurship, pro-growth, and pro-job creation. CAE thanks Senators Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), and Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) for their leadership and looks forward to working with them to ensure swift passage of the legislation.”

This legislation is also led by Senators Jacky Rosen (D-NV) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and endorsed by the Main Street Alliance and Center for American Entrepreneurship.

###

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Iraq snapshot

Friday, September 27, 2024.  That silly news media and its continual rejection of facts.


Let's jump in with a question: If politics is show biz for ugly people, what does that make journalism?

THE GUARDIAN and NEWSWEEK should have you wondering.  Let's start with Benjamin Lee (GUARDIAN) who wrote a review of APARTMENT 7A without using his brains or an editor:


The contained brilliance of Polanski’s original, which starred Mia Farrow as a woman who starts to realise her unborn child is the spawn of the devil, made it tough for those trying to milk more. But its popularity (the film made over 10 times its budget and won a best supporting actress Oscar) meant that more came anyway, from a barely seen TV movie sequel to a loathed 1997 follow-up novel by Levin to a stretched Zoe Saldaña miniseries remake in 2014. There’s a similar sense of pointlessness to the John Krasinski-produced Apartment 7A, which focuses on a minor one-scene character from the original and tells us how she was once part of the same plan that ultimately ensnared Rosemary.

Anyone see the problem?

Ruth Gordon?  Yes, Ruth won the Academy Award.  Two words, he could have named her since she won the only Academy Award for the film and since he brought up the Oscars.

But I'm talking about "starred Mia Farrow as a woman who starts to realise her unborn child is the spawn of the devil."  See the problem with that?  If you've seen the movie, you should see the problem.  Let me say "SPOILER" on a fifty-something year old film but Rosemary does not realize her unborn child is the spawn of the devil.  When Mia's desperate to see Charles Grodin, she doesn't realize that. And that's when she's on the run because she has caught on to what they are.  She is afraid that they will take the baby and do something to it -- based on the book Hutch had given her earlier in the film -- "All of them witches" -- remember and that and her use of the Scrabble game?  And she goes back to the Dakota and thinks she's safe because she wrongly believes the known entrance to the apartment is the only entrance.  It's not.  That's why the woman who died in that apartment had blocked her closet.  So they start entering and she sees them and she's screaming and going into labor.  Then the baby's dead.  But really 'dead.'  They're pumping her breasts for milk, remember all this?  She's suspicious and she puts her spoon in the pumped milk?  She realizes there's another way and it's the closet.  She goes in there and takes down the towels and shelves and, with her butcher kitchen knife, is now in Minnie's apartment.  She's heard a baby crying and thought it might be there and it might be her  baby.

With everyone at the  year-one-Satan party glaring at her, she walks over with the butcher knife to look at her child and screams what have they done to the baby's eyes?  He has  his father's eyes! But, she says, Guy's eyes are normal.  And that's when she's told that Satan is the baby's father.

She's no longer pregnant.  She's given birth.  She's now looking at her baby.

So, no, the film is not about "a woman who starts to realize her unborn child is the spawn of the devil."  She only finds that out after the baby has been born.  That's why Minnie had been testing her with questions once she found out Rosemary was Catholic.  

Angela Dorian plays  Terry Gionoffrio who Minnie had taken in, remember?  Terry (who the news movie is about) met Rosemary in the basement of the Dakota when they're doing laundry (it's Terry's one scene in the movie).  What happens to Terry? She leaps to her death.  She couldn't handle the plan to give birth to the devil's child.  From Terry's remarks (in that one scene), we're meant to see that she's far less traditional than Rosemary.  So if Terry -- 'wild' and 'out there' -- couldn't handle it, Minnie and her husband Roman know Rosemary can't know because Rosemary gets offended at dinner when the others are making jokes about the Pope.

So, no, it's not a film about a pregnant woman who knows she's giving birth to the devil's child.  During the pregnancy, Rosemary has no idea, she only learns this days after she gives birth. 

Does it matter!

That's a direct quote from a friend who was an editor at NEWSWEEK. And, yeah, it does matter.  I was griping over the phone about how they'd misrepresented the facts of a TV show and the reply was it's only a TV show.

So, you stop being a journalist when you're covering TV?

NEWSWEEK doesn't have to be factual or truthful then?

I didn't ask Benjamin Lee to write about the new film.  I wouldn't have, he doesn't even see the point in it.  Sorry, but Terry only has one scene in the 1968 film and her character leaves an impression.  They've done a sequel for Rosemary and her son Adrian (TV movie that Patty Duke starred in).  Terry's the next obvious choice and, honestly, I will watch the move -- even with Benjamin's bad review -- because I'm interested.

But Benjamin is supposed to be a journalist and his assignment was this film.  So since it's a film, he gets to toss aside journalism.  His error is not a minor error.  It goes to did he even see the first film that he thinks was so amazing and so much better than this new one?

NEWSWEEK.


Ewan Palmer's a journalist.  I know that because Ewan often does strong journalism.  So how to explain this garbage that he wrote for Newsweek:


Students at the University of Notre Dame said they favor Donald Trump over Kamala Harris in the election, marking the first time they have backed a Republican presidential candidate in years.
A survey of 705 students conducted by The Irish Rover, a Catholic student newspaper serving the university in Indiana, showed Trump leading the vice president by 47.6 percent to 45.9 percent.



I'm tired of idiots writing about polling when they are qualified to.   From tFrom the article Ewan's writing about:


The Irish Rover poll surveyed 705 likely student voters between September 15 and September 18. The survey was sent to a variety of student dorms, nonpartisan clubs, and distributed in classes. Results were weighted to ensure a representative sample of the Notre Dame student body. The poll has a margin of error of 3.8 percent at a 95 percent confidence level. Full results can be found here.


Ewan does include the facts in that paragraph near the end of his article -- and also manages to quote two students from the IRISH ROVER article -- he ignores the pro-Harris students and just quotes the pro-Trump.  That's suspect.

But the entire article is.

He doesn't tell you that this isn't a student paper.  It's a conservative student paper funded by conservatives (it started up in 2003).

In other words a campus version of FOX "NEWS" published an article about a poll that they did.

And none of that prompts Ewan to grasp that he needs to examine the poll?

Apparently not because if he examines the poll he loses the point of his article entitled "Notre Dame Students Flip to GOP For First Time in 12 Years as Trump Surges."

The poll does not demonstrate that the students flipped to the GOP.

There's a 3.8 margin of error.  Does Ewan understand what that means?

Donald is ahead, in the poll, by 1.7%  and the margin of error is 3.8%.  So the polling demonstrates a statistical tie.  Which defeats the take Ewan serves up in his article that's labeled as "reporting."

He did no research, he put no thought into what he wrote.  

It's a statistical tie.  That was what he should have written if he wanted to be accurate.  

We could get into the polling breakdown (especially party i.d.s) but the reality is that this is a junk poll that NEWSWEEK elected to highlight and you have to wonder why because it was never what they and Ewan present it as, the poll is a statistical tie.  They even quote the professor -- at the end -- comparing the results to the national results -- a close race -- but Ewan and NEWSWEEK missed that point they included as evidence by the title of their piece and by the angle they are presenting.

On journalism, I was asked to note this from Brett Wilkins' COMMON DREAMS piece:

 X—the social media platform formerly known as Twitter—suspended Ken Klippenstein's account Thursday after the investigative journalist posted an article containing a link to a dossier on Republican U.S. vice presidential candidate JD Vance that allegedly came from an Iranian hack of former President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign.

Klippenstein, who formerly worked at The Intercept, said on his paid Substack Thursday that his X account was suspended for violating the platform's ban on posting private information.

"I know that it is general practice to delete 'private' information from leaks and classified documents, but in this case, not only is Vance an elected official and vice presidential candidate, but the information is readily available for anyone to buy," he wrote. Vance is also the junior U.S. senator from Ohio.

Klippenstein continued:

We should be honest about so-called private information contained in the dossier and "private" information in general. It is readily available to anyone who can buy it. The campaign purchased this information from commercial information brokers. Those dealers make huge profits from selling this data. And the media knows it, because they buy the data for reporting purposes, just like the campaign. They don't like to mention that though.

According to Klippenstein, the corporate media has "been sitting on" the dossier since June, "declining to publish in fear of finding itself at odds with the government's campaign against 'foreign malign influence.'"

"If the document had been hacked by some 'Anonymous'-like hacker group, the news media would be all over it," he contended. "I'm just not a believer of the news media as an arm of the government, doing its work combatting foreign influence. Nor should it be a gatekeeper of what the public should know."

Klippenstein shared a general overview of the contents of the dossier, which he described as "a 271-page research paper the Trump campaign prepared to vet" Vance, pulling out select quotes from the document:

  • "Vance has been one of the chief obstructionists to U.S. efforts to providing [sic] assistance to Ukraine."
  • "Vance criticized public health experts and elected officials for supporting Black Lives Matter protests while condemning anti-lockdown [Covid] protests."
  • "Vance 'embraced non-interventionism."
  • "In 2020, Vance criticized President Trump's airstrike killing Iranian General Qasem Soleimani, worrying it would continue to bog down America in the Middle East to the advantage of China."
  • "Vance suggested that the country had been entangled in wars in the Middle East so 'financial elites' could profit from the rise of China."

"While the news media has paraphrased some of the contents of the dossier, what they haven't done is provide the American people with the underlying document, in the language in which it appeared, so they can decide for themselves what they think," Klippenstein said. "You decide for yourself."

An X spokesperson toldZeteo's Justin Baragona that "Ken Klippenstein was temporarily suspended for violating our rules on posting unredacted private personal information, specifically Sen. Vance's physical addresses and the majority of his Social Security number." 

 
I'm expected to weigh in on it.  I can't.  I know nothing about it.  I learned about it from a friend who asked me this morning to note it.  

Most days, from an hour or so after this snapshot goes up until nine at night, I'm speaking to groups to get out the vote for Kamala.  So I can't follow everything.  I understand that the usual grifters and hypocrites are trying to spin this to defend Elon Musk and that's probably why I'm being asked to weigh in.  According to Glynneth Greenwald supposedly -- I haven't seen his Tweets -- the hypocrites (of the left -- but that's always implied with Greenwald, right?) are outraged by this and didn't say a damn thing about THE NEW YORK POST article in 2020.

I did.  And that's probably why I'm being asked to weigh in.  I defended the right of THE POST to publish the article.  Unlike Glenneth, I repeatedly stresses this was not stolen material because I knew the press was using that lie about the laptop to avoid covering it.  I defended the right to publish the article and I defended them from the Twitter censorship that followed.

And I may do the same with the issue at hand now.  But I'm going to have to brush up on it because I know nothing other than what we just quoted above.   So we'll put that on my never ending to-do list and it'll be addressed here or at THIRD.

I'm too tired this morning -- and time's too limited -- to do the research required to weigh in so we're putting a pin in it for now.


Ginger e-mailed to state that Kamala's speech Wednesday was important (it was important, agreed) and she wished I had included the full speech.  Good point.  I would've and I had planned to but I wasn't sent the transcript.  The little bit that popped up in yesterday's snapshot was my transcription and I didn't have time to do the full speech.  But I do have the transcript now and Ginger's right so let's include it in full.
 



 

THE VICE PRESIDENT:   Good afternoon, everyone.  Good afternoon.  (Applause.)  Hi. 

Well, it’s good to be back in Pittsburgh.  Thank you all.  Thank you.  Thank you. 

Please have a seat.  Please have a seat. 

Andrea, thank you so very much for — for that beautiful introduction and for your leadership.  It really is my honor to be with you today.  Thank you.

And thank you to Risa and the Economic Club of Pittsburgh for hosting us today. 

And I also want to thank Mayor Gainey for being here.  (Applause.)  Mayor, you greet me each time I come to Pittsburgh.  I thank you so very much for that and — and your leadership.  Thank you.

So, hello, friends.  Let’s get started.  (Applause.)  Okay.

So, we gather at a moment of great consequence.  In this election, I believe we have an extraordinary opportunity to make our middle class the engine of America’s prosperity, to build a stronger economy where everyone everywhere has a chance to pursue their dreams and aspirations, and to ensure that the United States of America continues to out-innovate and outcompete the world. 

Over the past three and a half years, we have taken major steps forward to recover from the public health and economic crisis we inherited.  Inflation has dropped faster here than the rest of the developed world.  Unemployment is near record low levels.  We have created almost 740,000 manufacturing jobs, including 650 at the batty- — battery manufacturing plant over in Turtle Creek.  (Applause.)  And we have supported another 15,000 jobs at Montgomery Locks.  (Applause.)

So, these are local, great examples of the work that we have achieved thus far. 

And last week, for the first time, of course, in four and a half years, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates, which will make it just a little easier for families to buy a home or a car or just pay down their credit card bill. 

But let’s be clear.  For all these positive steps, the cost of living in America is still just too high.  You know it, and I know it.  And that was true long before the pandemic hit. 

Many Americans who aspire to own a home are unable to save enough for a down payment on a house and starting to think that maybe homeownership is just outside of their reach.  Folks who live in factory towns and in rural communities who have lost jobs are wondering if those jobs will ever come back.  Many Americans are worried about how they’ll afford the prescription medication they depend on. 

All of this is happening at a time when many of the biggest corporations continue to make record profits, while wages have not kept up pace. 

I understand the pressures of making ends meet.  I grew up in a middle-class family, and while we were more fortunate than many, I still remember my mother sitting at that yellow Formica table late at night, cup of tea in hand, with a pile of bills in front of her, just trying to make sure that she paid them off by the end of the month, like so many Americans just trying to make it all work.

Every day, millions of Americans are sitting around their own kitchen tables and facing their own financial pressures because, over the past several decades, our economy has grown better and better for those at the very top and increasingly difficult for those trying to attain, build, and hold on to a middle-class life. 

In many ways, this is what this election is all about.  The American people face a choice between two fundamentally very different paths for our economy.  I intend to chart a new way forward and grow America’s middle class.  Donald Trump intends to take America backward to the failed policies of the past. 

He has no intention to grow our middle class.  He’s only interested in making life better for himself and people like himself: the wealthiest of Americans. 

You can see it spelled out in his economic agenda, an agenda that gives trillions of dollars in tax cuts to billionaires and the biggest corporations while raising taxes on the middle class by almost $4,000 a year, slashing overtime pay, throwing tens of millions of Americans off of health care, and cutting Social Security and Medicare. 

In sum, his agenda would weaken the economy and hurt working people and the middle class.  You see, for Donald Trump, our economy works best if it works for those who own the big skyscrapers, not those who actually build them, not those who wire them, not those who mop the floors.  (Applause.)

Well, I have a very different vision.  I have a very different vision for our economy.  I believe we need to grow our middle class and make sure our economy works for everyone, for people — (applause) — like the people in the neighborhood where I grew up and the hardworking Americans I meet every day across our nation. 

So, I call my vision the “opportunity economy,” and it’s about making sure — (applause) — everyone can find a job and more — and more.  Because, frankly, having a job, I believe, in our ambition and aspiration should be baseline, and we should aspire and have the ambition and plan to do more. 

 I want Americans and families to be able to not just get by but be able to get ahead — (applause) — to thrive — be able to thrive.  I don’t want you to have to worry about making your monthly rent if your car breaks down.  I want you to be able to save up for your child’s education, to take a nice vacation from time to time.  I want you to be able to buy Christmas presents for your loved ones without feeling anxious when you’re looking at your bank statement.  I want you to be able to build some wealth not just for yourself but also for your children and your grandchildren — intergenerational wealth.  (Applause.)

And here’s the thing.  Here’s the thing.  Here’s the beauty of it all.  We know how to build an economy like that.  We do know how to unlock strong, shared economic growth for the American people.  History has shown it time and again: When we invest in those things that strengthen the middle class — manufacturing, housing, health care, education, small businesses, and our communities — we grow our economy and catalyze the entire country to succeed. 

I have pledged that building a strong middle class will be a defining goal of my presidency.  And the reason — (applause) — but let me tell you, the reason is not about politics, and it’s not about ideology.  From my perspective, it’s just common sense.  (Applause.)  It’s just common sense.  It’s actually what works.  When the middle class is strong, America is strong.  And we can build a stronger middle class.

The American economy — we know this here — the American economy is the most powerful force for innovation and wealth creation in human history.  We just need to move past the failed policies that we have proven don’t work, and like generations before us, let us be inspired by what is possible. 

As president, I will be grounded in my fundamental values of fairness, dignity, and opportunity.  And I promise you, I will be pragmatic in my approach.  I will engage in what Franklin Roosevelt called “bold, persistent experimentation.”  (Applause.)  Because I believe we shouldn’t be constrained by ideology and, instead, should seek practical solutions to problems, realistic assessments of what is working and what is not, applying metrics to our analysis, applying facts to our analysis, and stay focused, then, not only on the crises at hand but on our big goals, on what’s best for America over the long term. 

And part of being pragmatic means taking good ideas from wherever they come.  Listen, you all know my career.  Andrea shared it with you.  I am a devout public servant.  (Laughs.)  I also know the limitations of government. 

I’ve always been and will always be — and be clear about this — I’ve always been and will always be a strong supporter of workers and unions.  (Applause.)  And I — I also believe we need to engage those who create most of the jobs in America. 

Look, I am a capitalist.  I believe in free and fair markets.  (Applause.)  I believe in consistent and transparent rules of the road to create a stable business environment.  And I know the power of American innovation. 

 I’ve been working with entrepreneurs and business owners my whole career, and I believe companies need to play by the rules — (applause) — respect the rights of workers and unions, and abide by fair competition.  And if they don’t, I will hold them accountable. 

And if anyone has a question about that, just look at my record as attorney general.  (Applause.)  Look at my record in California, taking on the big banks for predatory lending — (applause); taking on big health care companies for conspiring to jack up prices — (applause); taking on a big for-profit college for scamming veterans and students. 

At the same time, I believe that most companies are working hard to do the right thing by their customers and the employees who depend on them, and we must work with them to grow our economy.  I believe an active partnership between government and the private sector is one of the most effective ways to fully unlock economic opportunity.  (Applause.)

And that is what I will do when I am president.  I will target the major barriers to opportunity and remove them.  We will identify commonsense solutions to help Americans buy a home, start a business, and build wealth, and we will adopt them.

So, let’s start, then, with the first pillar of an opportunity economy, which is lowering costs.  So, I made that our top priority for obvious reasons, because if we want the middle class to be the growth engine of our economy, we need to restore basic economic security for middle-class families.  To that end, the most practical thing we can do right now is to cut taxes for middle-class families and individuals.  (Applause.)  And that’s what we will do.

Under my plan, more than 100 million Americans will get a middle-class tax break that includes $6,000 for new parents during the first year of their child’s life — (applause) —

to help families cover everything from car seats to cribs.  We’ll also cut the cost of childcare and eldercare — (applause) — and finally give all working people access to paid leave, which will help everyone caring for children, caring for aging parents, and that sandwich generation, which is caring for both.  (Applause.)

So, I have a personal experience with caregiving.  I remember being there for my mother when she was diagnosed with cancer — cooking meals for her, taking her to her appointments,

just trying to make her comfortable, figuring out which clothes were soft enough that they wouldn’t irritate her, and telling her stories to try and make her laugh.  I know caregiving is about dignity.  It really is.

And when we lower the costs and ease the burdens people face, we will not only make it then easier for them to meet their obligations as caregivers, we will also make it more possible for them to go to work and pursue their economic aspirations.  And when that happens, our economy as a whole grows stronger.

Now, middle-class tax cuts are just the start of my plan.  We will also go after the biggest drivers of cost for the middle class and work to bring them down.  And one of those — some would argue, one of the biggest — is the cost of housing.

So, here’s what we will do.  We will cut the red tape that stops homes from being built and take on, in addition, corporate landlords who are hiking rental prices.  (Applause.)  And we will work with builders and developers to construct 3 million new homes and rentals for the middle class because increasing the housing supply will help drive down the cost of housing.  (Applause.)

We will also help first-time homebuyers just get their foot in the door with a $25,000 down payment assistance.  (Applause.)

Because the goal is clear: Let’s help more Americans afford to buy a home, which we know is a critical step in their ability to grow their wealth and intergenerational wealth. 

And we will work to reduce other big costs for middle-class families.  We will take on bad actors who exploit emergencies and drive up grocery prices by enacting the first-ever federal ban on corporate price gouging.  (Applause.)  I had the experience of dealing with that when I was attorney general. 

We will take on Big Pharma and cap the cost of prescription drugs for all Americans — (applause) — just like we did for our seniors.

Now, by contrast, Donald Trump has no intention of lowering costs for the middle class.  In fact, his economic agenda would actually raise prices. 

And, listen, that’s not just my opinion.  A survey of top economists by the Financial Times and the University of Chicago found that by an overwhelming 70 to 3 percent margin, my plan would be better for keeping inflation low.  (Applause.)  Objective economists have been very clear.

The second pillar of an opportunity economy is investing in American innovation and entrepreneurship.  So, for the last century, the United States of America has been a beacon around the world.  And as your vice president now for almost four years, I’ve been traveling the world, meeting with world leaders, meeting with foreign leaders, meeting with business people in various countries with which we have partnership.  And I will tell you, America remains a beacon for what it means to inspire and invest in innovation not only for our ability to come up with some of the most breakthrough ideas but also our ability to turn those ideas into — into some of the most consequential innovations the world has ever known.

I believe the source of our success is the ingenuity, the dynamism, and enterprising spirit of the American people.  To paraphrase — (applause).  Yes, it is.  It’s our nature.  It’s our nature.

To paraphrase Warren Buffett: Since the founding of our nation, there has been no incubator for unleashing human potential like America.  And we need to guard that spirit.  (Applause.)  We have to guard that spirit.  Let it always inspire us.  Let it always be the source of our optimism, which is that spirit that is so uniquely American.

And let that then inspire us by helping us to be inspired to solve the problems that so many face, including our small-business owners. 

So, as I travel the country, what I hear time and again from those who own small businesses and those who aspire to start them is that too often an entrepreneur has a great idea — not too often; that’s good — and they have the willingness to take the risk, but they don’t have access to the capital that they need to make it real. 

And as Andrea said, not everybody was handed on a silver platter $400 million and then filed for bankruptcy six times.  (Applause.)  Oh, I said that.  (Laughs.)  Right?  I sa- — I actually said that.

Well, we can make it easier.  We can make it easier for our small businesses to access capital.  On average, it costs about $40,000 to start a new business.  But currently, the tax deduction for start-ups is only $5,000.  So, currently for start-up costs, the tax deduction is $5,000. 

Well, in 2024, it is almost impossible to start a business on $5,000, which is why, as president, I will make the start-up deduction 10 times richer and we will raise it from $5,000 to $50,000 — (applause) — tax deduction and provide low- and no-interest loans to small businesses that want to expand, all of which will help achieve our ambitious, some would say — but that’s okay; let’s be ambitious — our ambitious goal of 25 million new small-business applications by the end of my first term.  (Applause.)  I know this is very achievable.

And for anyone here who is a small-business owner, works for a small business, or has a small business in your life, you understand what I’m talking about in terms of when we build up our small businesses, what that does to entire communities to lift them up economically, civically, culturally, and in every way.

Small businesses, the point being, help drive our economy, and they create — (applause) — they create nearly 50 percent of private-sector jobs, and they strengthen our middle class. 

And if we can harness the entrepreneurialism of the American people and unlock the full potential of aspiring founders and small-business owners, I am optimistic that no one will be able to outpace us.  (Applause.)

By contrast, Donald Trump, when he was president, has been described by one of the nation’s leading experts on small businesses in a piece he published in a major paper as not being good for small business.  In fact, the title — (laughs) — the title — wait, because I’m burying the lede right now.  (Laughter.)  One of the leading experts on small businesses published a piece in one of the major newspapers, and the title — I’m going to quote — “Does Donald Trump Hate Small Businesses?”  (Laughter.)  And their answer was yes.  (Laughter.)  Their answer was yes. 

Because at the same time that Donald Trump was giving a tax cut to big corporations and billionaires, he tried to slash programs for small businesses and raise borrowing costs for them.  Instead of making it easier, he actually made it more difficult for them to access capital.  And that’s not surprising, because Donald Trump just does not prioritize small businesses.  He does not seem to value, frankly, the essential role they play. 

But, look, when I look at small-business owners, I see some of the heroes of our economy — not only entrepreneurs but, as I said, civic leaders, community leaders, part of the glue that holds communities together.

The third pillar of our opportunity economy is leading the world in the industries of the future and making sure America, not China, wins the competition for the 21st century.  (Applause.)

One of the recurring themes in American history is that when we make an intentional effort to invest in our industrial strength, it leads to extraordinary prosperity and security,

not only for years but for generations. 

Think of Alexander Hamilton having the foresight to build the manufacturing capabilities of our new nation.  Think of Lincoln and the transcontinental railroad.  Think of Eisenhower and the Interstate Highway System; Kennedy committing America to win the space race and spurring innovation across our society.

From our earliest days, America’s economic strength has been tied to our industrial strength, and the same is true today.

So, I will recommit the nation to global leadership in the sectors that will define the next century.  We will invest in biomanufacturing and aerospace; remain dominant in AI and quantum computing, blockchain and other emerging technologies; expand our lead in clean energy innovation and manufacturing —  (applause) — so the next generation of breakthroughs from advanced batteries to geothermal to advanced nuclear are not just invented but built here in America by American workers.  (Applause.)

And we will invest in the industries that, for example, made Pittsburgh the “Steel City” by offering — (applause) — tax credits for expanding good union jobs in steel and iron and manufacturing communities like here in Mon Valley.  (Applause.)

And across all these industries of the future, we will prioritize investments for strengthening factory towns — this is so important — for strengthening factory towns; retooling existing factories; hiring locally and working with unions, because no one who grows up in America’s greatest industrial or agricultural centers should be abandoned.

And understand what that means for real people — people we know, people we care about.  We don’t have to abandon a strength we’ve known to achieve a strength that we plan.  (Applause.)

And here’s what else we will do when I am president.  We will double the number of registered apprenticeships by the end of my first term.  (Applause.)  Because I almost made it — a goal of mine — I — I am — I think I am going to fall short, but trying to visit every IBEW Local in America — (laughter) — because I’m going to tell you, those apprenticeship programs, those are tough-duty, man — and women and everyone.  (Laughter.)  They’re tough-duty. 

I mean, talk about the skills that are about engineering and science and math and just the most highly skilled folks who are in those apprenticeships and teaching there. 

And so, one of the things we must do, understanding that and understanding the nature of that part of our educational system, is let’s eliminate degree requirements while increasing skills development.  (Applause.)  And let’s start with something I can do as president — was ensure that we do that for the half a million of federal jobs that are within our ability to make it so — (applause) — showing what is possible and then challenging the private sector to make a similar commitment to emphasizing skills and not just degrees.  (Applause.)

And we will reform our tax laws to make it easier for businesses to let workers share in their company’s success.  And I will challenge the private sector to do more to lift up workers through equity, profits, and benefits so more people can share in America’s success and prosperity.  (Applause.)

And not only must we build the industries of the future in America, we must also build them faster.  You know, there’s a time for patience, and there’s a time for impatience.  That’s not in Ecclesiastics [Ecclesiastes], but — but — (laughter). 

Just went off script for a minute, Mayor.  (Laughter.)

But the simple truth is, in America, it takes too long and it costs too much to build.  Whether it’s a new housing development, a new factory, or a new bridge, projects take too long to go from concept to reality.  It happens in blue states, it happens in red states, and it’s a national problem. 

And I will tell you this.  China is not moving slowly.  They’re not.  And we can’t afford to, either.  If we are to compete, we can’t afford to, either. 

As president, if things are not moving quickly, I will demand to know why, and I will act.  I will work with Congress, workers and businesses, cities and states, community groups and local leaders to reform permitting, to cut red tape, and get things moving faster.  Because, look, as I said, patience may be a virtue but not when it comes to job creation or America’s competitiveness. 

Many of you know — the Empire State Building, you know how long it took to build that?  One year.  The Pentagon, you know how long that took?  Sixteen months. 

No one can tell me we can’t build quickly in our country.  (Applause.)  I’ve got empirical evidence. 

Now, look, my opponent, Donald Trump, well, he makes big promises on manufacturing.  Just yesterday, he went out and promised to bring back manufacturing jobs.  And if that sounds familiar, it should.  In 2016, he went out and made that very same promise about the Carrier plant in Indianapolis.  You’ll remember Carrier then offshored hundreds of jobs to Mexico under his watch. 

And it wasn’t just there.  On Trump’s watch, offshoring went up and manufacturing jobs went down across our country and across our economy.  All told, almost 200,000 manufacturing jobs were lost during his presidency, starting before the pandemic hit, making Trump one of the biggest losers ever on manufacturing.  (Applause.)

Donald Trump also talked a big game on our trade deficit with China, but it is far lower under our watch than any year of his administration.  While he constantly got played by China, I will never hesitate to take swift and strong measures when China undermines the rules of the road at the expense of our workers, our communities, and our companies, whether it’s flooding the market with steel, inferior or at all; unfairly subsidizing shipbuilding; or hurting our small businesses with counterfeits. 

Recall Donald Trump actually shipped advanced semiconductor chips to China, which helps them upgrade their military.  Understand the impact of these so-called policies that really are not about a plan for strengthening our prosperity or our security. 

I will never sell out America to our competitors or adversaries.  (Applause.)  Never.  Never.

And I will always make sure we have the strongest economy and the most lethal fighting force anywhere in the world.  (Applause.)

So, at this pivotal moment, we have an extraordinary opportunity to chart a new way forward, one that positions the United States of America and all of us who are blessed to call this home for success and prosperity in the 21st century. 

You know, there is an old saying that the best way to predict the future is to invent it.  Well, that is the story of the Steel City.  (Applause.)  That is the story of the Steel City, the city that helped build the middle class, birth America’s labor movement, empower the rise of American manufacturing, and the city where Allen Newell and Herbert Simon launched the first AI research hub at Carnegie Mellon — (applause) — and created entirely new fields like machine learning.  And Carnegie Mellon is now home to the largest university robotics center in America.  (Applause.)

So, the proud heritage of Pittsburgh I so strongly believe reveals the character of our nation, a nation that harnesses the ambitions, the dreams, and the aspirations of our people; seizes the opportunities before us because we see them, because we believe in them; and then invents the future. 

That is what we have always done, and that is what we must now do.  And I know we will. 

I thank you all for inviting me. 

May God bless you.  And may God bless the United States of America. 

Thank you all.  (Applause.)



ADDED: 




E-mails asked what about Stevie Nicks?  That's her new song "Lighthouse."  Since we noted it last night ("Stevie Nicks - The Lighthouse (Official Music Video)") a few minutes after it was posted on YOUTUBE.  And Saturday is music day here so it was going to be noted again then.  But  Martha and Shirley count over 100 e-mails from  community members who wanted it in today's snapshot and expected it would be.  So now it is.  Stevie, of course, endorsed Kamala Harris for president a few weeks back.  
 


Adding to the cryptic nature of the post, there is only one line of lyrics in the post’s recording. They are,  I wanna teach you to fight. The lyrics come from a poem Nicks released back in 2022 titled “Get Back.” Which in essence was a politically motivated post urging Americans to vote in the upcoming mid-term elections at the time. Nicks wrote in the post, “At 74 years old, I can honestly say that I am worried about every one of you.” 
Regarding Nicks’ political moves, earlier this month she again urged her followers to vote after Taylor Swift endorsed Kamala Harris. Nicks stated in the post, “Your vote in this election may be one of the most important things you ever do.” Between these two posts and the lyrical similarities, it seems Nicks’ new single might be heavily political. This makes sense as America is only 40 days from the election and Nicks’ is known for her political advocacy. 

Second, why wasn't Carly Simon's video in Thursday's snapshot?  That refers to "Let The River Run."





Yesterday's snapshot included this:

 Has anyone bothered to check out the Green Party's embarrassing gun policy?  It's no stronger than the Democratic Party's and I thought the Greens were going to wake the nation, come the new Jerusalem.

'"Let The River Run" opens with:

Let the river runLet all the dreamers wake the nationCome, the New JerusalemSilver cities riseThe morning lights the streets that lead themAnd sirens call them on with a song

The plan was to include the video of the song that Carly won an Academy Award for writing, and won a Golden Globe for writing and won a Grammy for writing. 

I honestly don't know if an attempt was made to include it.  I dictate the snapshots.  Yesterday's snapshot reference a DEMOCRACY NOW! video that was put in but in posting not only did not show but also wiped out the transcript as well.  Dona came on and fixed that around one o'clock EST when she saw it.  Something similar may have happened with Carly's video.  I don't know but the plan was to include it. 


One more thing that the media failed to note on CAIR's poll?  Not all Palestinians are Muslim.  Most are but there are significant numbers who are Christian.  Palestinians, however, are Arabs.  Meaning put a little more faith in a poll of Arab-Americans if you're trying to figure out where Palestinian-Americans might stand on an issue.  There's a whole thing we could go into here about holy wars and how categories can provide the wrong impressions but we'll save that for another day.

A number of e-mails thought I was going to address "holy wars" today.

No, that was never the plan.

There is something that I want to address regarding the Supreme Court but I'm still thinking it through.  That was a possibility yesterday of a topic that might have made today's snapshot.  

But there was no plan to address "holy wars" in today's snapshot.

The impression that it would be is from the last paragraph yesterday:


One more thing that the media failed to note on CAIR's poll?  Not all Palestinians are Muslim.  Most are but there are significant numbers who are Christian.  Palestinians, however, are Arabs.  Meaning put a little more faith in a poll of Arab-Americans if you're trying to figure out where Palestinian-Americans might stand on an issue.  There's a whole thing we could go into here about holy wars and how categories can provide the wrong impressions but we'll save that for another day.


In the briefest way possible, let's explain that.  It is not a religious war -- what Israel is doing to the Palestinians.  A lot of people want it seen that way.  Who benefits from that?

The Israeli government because, if it's a "holy war," then every attack on any area of Israel is an attack on the Jewish faith and, therefore, Jewish people around the world are being attacked and are under attack.

The Israeli government is led by a conservative War Criminal and that's the biggest problem right now.  Those who want to make it about religion will need to make that argument without me.  We have repeatedly noted that the Israeli government is an actor in these attacks.  I do not equate Judaism with the Israeli government.  If you do, I hope you're on the side of the Israeli government because that's who it helps.   

That ends the update to this snapshot.

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