DL Open Thread: Thursday, September 7, 2023

Filed in Featured, Open Thread by on September 7, 2023

Wisconsin Rethugs Seek To Destroy Democracy To Save Their Legislative Super-Majorities.  Here’s the even sneakier part:  The idea is for the House to impeach her, which would immediately place her in judicial limbo, but for the Senate not to proceed with a trial:

If the Assembly impeaches her, Protasiewicz would be barred from any duties as a justice until the Senate acted. That could effectively stop her from voting on redistricting without removing her from office and creating a vacancy that Democratic Gov. Tony Evers would fill.

Right On Cue, Mike Hucksterbee Sez:

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) on Wednesday said 2024 will be the last election “decided by ballots rather than bullets” if former President Trump doesn’t win the presidential race because of his various legal battles.

“If these tactics end up working to keep Trump from winning or even running in 2024, it is going to be the last American election that will be decided by ballots rather than bullets,” Huckabee warned in his opening monologue.

That sounds like a seditious threat right there.  Arrest him.

How The Navy Wasted Billions On A Crappy Ship.  More great reporting from Pro Publica:

In July 2016, warships from more than two dozen nations gathered off the coasts of Hawaii and Southern California to join the United States in the world’s largest naval exercise. The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea and others sent hundreds of destroyers, aircraft carriers and warplanes. They streamed in long lines across the ocean, symbols of power and prestige.

The USS Freedom had its own special place within the armada. It was one of a new class of vessels known as littoral combat ships. The U.S. Navy had billed them as technical marvels — small, fast and light, able to combat enemies at sea, hunt mines and sink submarines.

In reality, the LCS was well on the way to becoming one of the worst boondoggles in the military’s long history of buying overpriced and underperforming weapons systems. Two of the $500 million ships had suffered embarrassing breakdowns in previous months. The Freedom’s performance during the exercise, showing off its ability to destroy underwater mines, was meant to rejuvenate the ships’ record on the world stage. The ship was historically important too; it was the first LCS built, the first in the water, commissioned just eight years prior.

ProPublica set out to trace how ships with such obvious shortcomings received support from Navy leadership for nearly two decades. We reviewed thousands of pages of public records and tracked down naval and shipbuilding insiders involved at every stage of construction.

Our examination revealed new details on why the LCS never delivered on its promises. Top Navy leaders repeatedly dismissed or ignored warnings about the ships’ flaws. One Navy secretary and his allies in Congress fought to build more of the ships even as they broke down at sea and their weapons systems failed. Staunch advocates in the Navy circumvented checks meant to ensure that ships that cost billions can do what they are supposed to do.

Contractors who stood to profit spent millions lobbying Congress, whose members, in turn, fought to build more ships in their home districts than the Navy wanted. Scores of frustrated sailors recall spending more time fixing the ships than sailing them.

Our findings echo the conclusions of a half-century of internal and external critiques of America’s process for building new weapons systems. The saga of the LCS is a vivid illustration of how Congress, the Pentagon and defense contractors can work in concert — and often against the good of the taxpayers and America’s security — to spawn what President Dwight D. Eisenhower described in his farewell address as the “military industrial complex.”

Everything old is new again.

Guess Who Profits From Disaster Clean-Ups.  Not the resilience workers:

Private equity firms are increasingly profiting from cleaning up climate disasters in the US, while failing to better protect workers and often also investing in the fossil fuels that are causing the climate emergency, new research has found.

The demand for skilled disaster restoration or resilience workers, who are mostly immigrants and refugees from Latin America and Asia, is soaring as greenhouse gases released by burning fossil fuels heat the planet, provoking more destructive storms, floods and wildfires.

As the industry has become more profitable, at least 72 companies that specialize in disaster cleanups and restoration have been acquired by private equity firms since 2020, according to the research, by the Private Equity Stakeholder Project (PSEP) and Resilience Force, a labor rights organization with thousands of members.

Wage theft, lack of protective clothing, and other unsafe conditions are rampant across the industry at the expense of workers, communities and climate, according to the report, Private Equity Profits from Disasters, shared exclusively with the Guardian.

At risk are tens of thousands of resilience workers, traveling from disaster to disaster cleaning up and rebuilding American communities while facing hazards such as unstable buildings, ash and other toxins, and water-borne diseases.

Researchers found that an increasingly complex web of franchises, contractors and subcontractors, insurance providers, labor brokers and agencies and mostly temporary jobs makes it difficult for workers to know who is ultimately accountable for violations.

Delaware NAACP Blisters Lack Of Police Transparency.  They have our next (electorally-) targeted incumbent to ‘thank’ for this situation.  Yes, I’m trying to make myself finish my next ‘intriguing races’ piece…today. I think.

What do you want to talk about?

About the Author ()

Comments (6)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. Jason330 says:

    I’m so old I remember when Mike Huckabee was regarded as a pretty good governor with a strong record supporting public schools.

    The disease that has gripped the GOP has metastasized. It’s in the bones. It is going to do a lot of damage between now and when it does once and for all.

    • mediawatch says:

      So Huckabee has outlined the GOP’s two-step strategy for 2028:
      1. Continue to restrict early voting, vote by mail and absentee ballots.
      2. On Election Day, bring out the automatic weapons to gun down voters at heavily Democratic polling places.

      • mediawatch says:

        Actually, Huckabee did get something right. His last quote in The Hill article: “But if you watched what was more a game show than a substantive debate, you realize none of them have the gravitas of Donald Trump.”
        Gravitas = dignity, seriousness, or solemnity of manner.
        It also connotes “restraint and moral rigor.”
        Indeed, it is good that none of those debaters could match the Donald’s so-called gravitas.

  2. bamboozer says:

    Reagan was the start, his famed tax cuts for the rich started the age of eternal deficits and did nothing more then make the rich richer. Notice that with time they didn’t even mention the deficit or even care to lie about the famed “miracle economy” that never emerged, best of all the tax cuts never did “pay for themselves with increased revenue”. As stated their all MAGA at this point.

    • mediawatch says:

      At the start of the NFL season it’s relevant to recall that familiar adage: “The best defense is a good offense.”
      Trump and his fellow MAGATs have no defense, and that’s why they’re always taking offense at whatever happens outside their bubble of unreality and disinformation.