samedi 26 novembre 2016

The conscience of James Comey in the year to remember (2016)










Will any American in 2016 ever forget


* James Comey flitting in and out

weaving in and out of the presidential campaign *


A spectacle



Affecting forever the course of American history



Much sadness now



from The New York Review of Books:





What James Comey Did

A Trump supporter at a campaign rally in Golden, Colorado, October 2016
Jason Connolly/AFP/Getty Images
A Trump supporter at a campaign rally in Golden, Colorado, October 2016
Whatever else one might say about the just-concluded 2016 presidential election, one thing is certain: FBI Director James Comey played an outsized and exceptionally inappropriate part. His highly prejudicial announcement on October 28, just eleven days before the election, that he had reopened an investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private e-mail server ensured that the final critical days of the campaign were taken up with innuendos and suppositions set off by his action.
When Comey then announced on November 5, just two days before the election, that upon further review he had again found no basis to believe that Clinton had committed any crime, it only underscored the impropriety of his October 28 announcement. Had he conducted the review in confidence, as Justice Department rules require, the entire matter would have been resolved without interfering with the election. As it was, his October 28 announcement dramatically shifted the trajectory of the campaign, deflected attention from Donald Trump’s own considerable troubles, and inevitably influenced the choices of many early voters.
Comey made the renewed investigation public against Justice Department policy and rules, and over the objections of the attorney general and several other Justice Department officials, even though he had not even seen the new evidence, much less determined that it hinted at any wrongdoing on Clinton’s part. The announcement predictably played right into the hands of Trump, who immediately took the occasion to repeat his charge that Clinton should be locked up. None of this should have happened; under long-standing Justice Department practice, Comey should have kept silent about the fact of further investigation, especially so close to an election.
Whether Comey’s imprudent intervention changed the outcome of the presidential election, the damage to the integrity of both the political and criminal processes has been done. The criminal process has been politicized, and the political process has been tainted by misuse of official power. The question that remains is what should happen now. At a minimum, the Justice Department policies that Comey violated must be strengthened and formalized to ensure that this never happens again.
The first rule Comey disregarded requires law enforcement officials to avoid public comment on ongoing investigations. The Justice Department’s guidelines on “Disclosure of Information Concerning Ongoing Investigations,” set forth in the US Attorneys’ Manual, provide that, as a general matter, officials “shall not respond to questions about the existence of an ongoing investigation or comment on its nature or progress.” The rule recognizes that on “matters that have already received substantial publicity” or where public safety requires, “comments about or confirmation of an ongoing investigation may need to be made.” But that exception is plainly a narrow one. The general no-comment rule is designed to prevent prosecutors and law enforcement officials from using their authority to cast aspersions on the reputations of citizens; their job is to conduct investigations, not offer public character assessments.
Comey’s original sin in this regard was his highly unusual press conference in July in which, rather than simply reporting that he had closed the e-mail investigation because he had found no evidence of Clinton violating any laws, he went on to castigate her as “extremely careless.” The federal criminal code is byzantine, to be sure, but carelessness is not a federal crime, and therefore, as FBI director, Comey had no business offering his personal opinion. The authority of the nation’s top law enforcement investigator comes with responsibility to weigh one’s words and actions carefully; if anything, it was Comey who was “extremely careless.”
Having violated the rule against public comment once, Comey then went further, using that violation to justify another infraction. In an e-mail to his staff, he defended his extraordinary step of publically announcing the resumption of a closed criminal investigation by stating that he had promised to keep Congress informed when he testified in July about the investigation’s closure.
The job of the FBI, however, is not to offer Congress public progress reports on criminal investigations, but to conduct those investigations in confidence unless and until they warrant an indictment or dismissal. And Comey’s October 28 “report,” a brief letter to Congress, was bound to be misleading. The announcement followed the discovery of e-mails of Huma Abedin, Clinton’s chief of staff at the State Department, on the computer of Abedin’s now-estranged husband, Anthony Weiner, who is under a separate investigation for allegedly “sexting” with a minor. Neither Comey nor his staff had actually read any of the newly discovered e-mails when he first notified Congress, and therefore had no basis for believing that they constituted evidence of wrongdoing. But the announcement nonetheless set off a flurry of renewed accusations against Clinton.
The second policy Comey transgressed is even more fundamental. That policy, which has been endorsed by attorney generals of both parties for decades, requires law enforcement officers to avoid filing even completed indictments against candidates for political office within sixty days of an election. As Jamie Gorelick and Larry Thompson, former deputy attorney generals in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations respectively, explained in The Washington Post:
Decades ago, the department decided that in the 60-day period before an election, the balance should be struck against even returning indictments involving individuals running for office, as well as against the disclosure of any investigative steps. The reasoning was that, however important it might be for Justice to do its job, and however important it might be for the public to know what Justice knows, because such allegations could not be adjudicated, such actions or disclosures risked undermining the political process. A memorandum reflecting this choice has been issued every four years by multiple attorneys general for a very long time, including in 2016.
This policy applies to all elections, from those for local school boards to those for our nation’s highest office. Under this policy, even if the FBI had acquired enough evidence to charge Hillary Clinton formally with knowingly transmitting classified information or otherwise violating criminal law, that fact should not have been made public until after the election. Yet Comey chose to go public, just eleven days before a presidential election, without even a basis for believing that the “new” evidence he had come across was actually new, much less evidence of any crime.
Not only had FBI officials not reviewed the e-mails on Weiner’s computer at the time of Comey’s October 28 announcement. They had not even received a warrant to examine them. (They only got the warrant the following Sunday.) Accordingly, the FBIhad no basis for believing that the e-mails offered any evidence of criminal conduct on Clinton’s part. In fact, we now know, they provided no incriminating evidence, and many were simply duplicates of e-mails previously reviewed.
As important and widely accepted as the policy against interfering in impending elections reportedly is within the Justice Department, however, it is not formally reflected in any written rule. The memorandum that Gorelick and Thompson cite refers only to investigations of “election crimes,” not other crimes. And the sixty-day rule is also not reflected in that memo. It’s “custom,” I’m told. But if we are to avoid repetition of this blunder, the policy should be reduced to writing and clearly codified.
Some have argued that Comey violated the Hatch Act in making the renewed investigation public, but I see no evidence to support that charge. The Hatch Act makes it a crime for federal employees to use their “official authority or influence for the purpose of interfering with or affecting the result of an election.” Comey’s October 28 announcement certainly affected the results of the 2016 election, but there is no evidence that he took his action for that purpose, and absent such a motive, the Hatch Act is not implicated.
Indeed, Comey prides himself on being independent. While serving as deputy attorney general under President George W. Bush, he bravely stood up to White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales, who was seeking to pressure the hospitalized and sedated Attorney General John Ashcroft to approve an NSA program whose legality many Justice Department officials had questioned. But independence can be taken too far. As another former deputy attorney general for George W. Bush, George Terwilliger, said, commenting on Comey’s recent actions, “There’s a difference between being independent and flying solo.” There are strong reasons for rules limiting public comment on ongoing criminal investigations and interference in upcoming elections. A heightened sense of one’s own “independence” doesn’t excuse breaking those rules.
Comey was no doubt worried that, had he not informed Congress of the new evidence, and had it come out after the election that he had kept it quiet—and assuming the e-mails were of any importance—he might have been subject to criticism from his own Republican Party and from Donald Trump. But such criticism is one of the burdens a responsible government official must bear. Following the rules was the right thing to do, even if it might have come at some cost to Comey’s reputation in his own party. By elevating his concern about his reputation above the rules, Comey will forever be remembered as the FBI director who abused the power of his office to interfere baselessly in an imminent presidential election.
—November 9, 2016



htps://www.nybooks.com/articles/2016/12/08/what-james-comey-did/




 * * * * *


"I tried to fuck her...just grab her pussy, I can do it, too..."

"Global warming is a hoax perpetuated by the Chinese."

"I can't provide my income tax returns because they are in audit."

"Lock her up:  You'll be in jail, Hillary, once I'm elected."

"She has hate in her heart."

"I will eliminate the capital gains tax.  I will give tax cuts to all Americans, but especially to the top 1%."



Something about the course of history, of our days, which we can affect but whose outcome we cannot control.   I wonder what Buddhism can teach us about what happened:



The acceptance of the very difficult (to accept): I don't want this at all

??


That one man, not just any man but a very powerful man, can do and did what cannot be undone now.

What would the Dalai Lama say (or has he said)?Or does he refuse to judge?













mardi 22 novembre 2016

Seattle tolerant and diverse: I understand now







It dawned on me today that the downtown YMCA in Seattle, and much of the rest of the Seattle that I have encountered, is telling me, ultimately, that I, a member of a racial minority, cannot be honest and openly talk about my experiences with racial prejudice--including aggression and even assault--from black people.

If I do, I will encounter condemnation and ostracization.

I understand the price they are making me pay.

It is a very high price.

America the land of the free.

Seattle--tolerant and diverse.









vendredi 18 novembre 2016

Lock him up








LOCK HIM UP, 
(DONALD TRUMP),
now.






A rapist, tax dodger, and a liar should not be President.






samedi 12 novembre 2016

The most undeserving candidate for the U.S. president in history won. An historic defeat.







No one is angrier than I am than that that blow-bag/demagogue/plutocrat Trump won.  It is the worst political event that I have witnessed in my entire lifetime.   

My disappointment that Hillary Clinton, a decent, smart, hard-working person with incredible experience as First Lady, U.S. Senator, and Secretary of State did not win after two campaigns in which she showed her fortitude and in debates in which she showed great dignity in the face of the relentless, vicious assaults of Donald Trump ("She has hate in her heart," "I'll put in you jail once elected,"  and "You're a dishonest person").*

To have to listen to and see his face, as well as deal with the things he as bloviated windbag will do to this country, for the next four years is more than I can really bear.

The appearance of his very voice and face make me groan inside.  I will not enjoy, either, watching so-called liberals the next four years marching in mass demonstrations every other few weeks with posters saying "Trump is a c---" (talk about misogyny) and burning his effigy in public.

I am leaving this country.

At least for two weeks during his "coronation" in January next year.


# # # # #


If his election, past the shock, does not cause widespread long-term depression among a significant part of the population, I don't know what will.

It is of  some consolation that Hillary Clinton won the presidency in terms of the popular vote by probably at least a million votes.  





* At the same time some responsibility must be laid at the feet of Clinton  herself and especially the aide who approved the ill-advised email server set-up.  And FBI Director James Comey's weaving in and out of the campaign since August was not just unjustified but, in retrospect, ridiculous and, moreover, shameful. I don't believe History will not be kind to Mr. Comey.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/13/us/politics/hillary-clinton-james-comey.html?_r=0

vendredi 11 novembre 2016

My take on the US presidential election 2016: a dissident view from a liberal



The following was prompted at my health club yesterday by a discussion of the election with a fellow member, born and raised in a mining town of the Rust Belt, spoke to me of people in Seattle who had stated that they "would never think of setting foot in a Walmart" and will probably not go on ad nauseum about "how fucked up this country is" (devoted readers of Seattle's The Stranger, for instance).

I know my ideas are unorthodox, but from my perspective the irony of the U.S. presidential election in 2016 was not the outcome that the talking heads had predicted.

Much of the mainstream and liberal media forecast that it was the Republican Party which after the presumed defeat of Donald Trump would have to do soul-searching and reconcile itself to not being able to attract people of color.

The terrible irony--for I am a democratic socialist and am devastated by Hillary Clinton (a decent, diligent human being)'s defeat is that it is the Democrats who will have to do as much if not more soul searching.

To be blunt, the Democrats' loss in the Rust-Belt states was due to reverse racism as much as an echo chamber of coastal elites.  They have not been able to appeal to less educated, blue-collar workers in decades.

Calling people "dumb racist white people" is deeply insulting.

The tragedy of the Democrats' misguided rhetoric (and policy) is that Donald Trump is on path to cut taxes primarily for the extremely wealthy, including income and capital gains taxes.

Hillary Clinton--after prodding, albeit from Bernie Saunders--would have raised taxes overwhelmingly on the top 1% and provided mild relief for the lower and middle classes.

The  anger of the white working classes in America against the federal government is based on the fact that they have an aversion to taxation, especially when they do not see any direct, or even indirect benefit, to it.

All Donald Trump, the worst demagogue America has seen since Huey Long, has to do is decrease taxes for everyone (but, sleight-of-hand, primarily the 1%) and somehow come up with a plan to create jobs and prevent job loss to China, etc. and--voila--he wins their support.

In the meantime, expect the plutocrat to axe government programs right and left that benefit the lower and middle classes to benefit the 1%.  Starving the government, in the long run, will make people even more angry at the inefficiency and inefficacy of the federal government, snowballing into the maximal dismantlement of the government, the guiding philosophy of the Republican Party and one held so dear to the Tea Party and, increasingly, to the white working class.

...

Enough, too, of wholly blaming white people for the state of race relations in America.

The white working class, no matter how, was clearly taken for granted in the Rust Belt, and Hillary Clinton did not even attempt to do reach-out or visit Eastern Pennsylvania or other areas outside of the large urban centers (Philadelphia, Detroit...).  Obviously, her internal pollsters--like the public ones--did a poor job, just as the ones who helped set up her email server when she was Secretary of State.

Once a time, the Democratic Party stood for the working class, especially the largest sector of that demographic, the white working class--instead of ignoring or looking down or blaming it.

Clinton's strenuous appeals to women, Hispanics, and others did not pan out very well, and as a racial minority myself, I will dare to say that African-Americans were not especially motivated to go to the polls because, unlike Obama, she was a white person (and hence could not and would not identify with as strongly).

We already know as well that white women without college educations also were not moved by Clinton's candidacy despite the awful things that Trump had been caught saying on that Access tape ("I tried to f--- her...just grab them by the p----").  I don't know how anyone can see this as anything but clear gender betrayal.




No one is angrier than I am than that that blow-bag/demagogue/plutocrat Trump won.  It is the worst political news of my entire lifetime.   My disappointment that Hillary Clinton, a decent, smart, hard-working person with incredible experience as First Lady, U.S. Senator, and Secretary of State did not win after two campaigns in which she showed her fortitude and in debates in which she showed great dignity in the face of the relentless assaults of Donald Trump ("She has hate in her heart," "I'll put in you jail once elected,"  and "You're a dishonest person").




Fear as a state of mind (Timi Gustafson, R,N.)




When President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously proclaimed in his first inaugural address that there was “nothing to fear but fear itself,” it was intended to encourage people not to despair in the face of an unprecedented economic crisis, a.k.a. the “Great Depression.” Much has been argued over the true meaning of his words, not least because they don’t make a lot of sense if taken out of context. Yet, they have lived on in the public discourse ever since, applicable as they seem in every generation.

Fear as a State of Mind Can
Paralyze Us, and Even Make Us Sick

Indeed, we are experiencing a time of acute fear and anxiety right now. People around the world are worried for countless reasons. There is hardly a place left on earth where populations enjoy relatively tranquil lives – not even in the remote Himalayan country of Bhutan, where achieving happiness for all is a declared goal of the government.
Many of us seem to be affected by an epidemic of worry. Oftentimes, it may start with something concrete, a situation or event one can point to, like the attacks of 9/11. But over time, a specific fear can turn into a state of growing uneasiness.
Worry is circular, it feeds on itself, gets out of hand, and eventually becomes almost uncontrollable, according to Francis O’Gorman, a professor of English literature at the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom, and author of “Worrying, a Literary and Cultural History” (Bloomsbury 2015).
While today’s world is a risky place and evokes many well-founded concerns, the experience of fear itself creates new risks that can affect a person’s health and well-being, says David Ropeik, an expert on risk perception. In fact, the hazards of fretting over perceived threats may be more harmful than the actual risks themselves, he argues.
The reason is that when a state of fear persists over extended periods of time, our bodies react to chronically elevated levels of stress. Once stress hormones flood the bloodstream without finding relief, they can literally become poisonous and lead to dire, even life-threatening consequences.
The human species could not have survived for long without the experience of fear. The ability to identify certain events and situations as dangerous and respond appropriately is essential for our existence. But these responses are meant to be rare and short-lived. If we cannot switch off this built-in alarm system of ours, it will quickly exhaust us, even turn against us.
In contrast to justified concerns – which can be motivating to take action – fear as a state of mind is paralyzing. It prevents clear thinking. It destroys hope and optimism. It can lead to destructive behavior and make us sick.
The fact that we are constantly bombarded with messages that contain potential threats, whether they occur nearby or halfway around the world, is not conducive to our psychological (and subsequently overall) well-being. We may live in an ever-more globalized environment, but we also must consider our limits as individuals who can only digest a finite amount of information.
No one should retort to a head-in-the-sand attitude. Our lives have become too complex and too intertwined to hide from reality. But if we keep getting overloaded with data that leave us feeling more helpless than empowered, we won’t be useful in tackling the problems we could otherwise help solving. We just end up hunkering down in fear, anger and despair. Not a healthy prospect. Not for anyone of us, and not for the world.


http://www.timigustafson.com/2016/what-fear-can-do/

mercredi 9 novembre 2016






J'ai honte d'etre americain aujourd'hui.


Un tres grand cauchemare s'est produit le 8 novembre 2016 aux etats-unis.