DL Open Thread: Thursday, October 12, 2023

Filed in Featured, Open Thread by on October 12, 2023

Best Thing Dubya Ever Said:

Word. Just remember this before you demand to know ‘Whose side are you on?’   That kind of intimidation says a lot more about the intimidator than about the intimidated.

End of lecture.

If there is one redeeming feature about the Israel/Hamas War, it’s that Donald Trump has not been on my TV screen for the last three days.  Small consolation indeed, but something.

Supreme Court Poised To Uphold South Carolina’s Racial Gerrymandering.  Don’t be shocked–they gutted the Voting Rights Act, which protected against racial gerrymandering:

The justices and attorneys alike all candidly acknowledged that South Carolina legislators had manipulated their maps to artificially maximize Republican vote power and minimize Democrats’. They made no attempt to obfuscate that state Republicans were determined to pick their own voters, to rig elections until it became virtually impossible for their party to lose.

It’s a reflection of how grotesque redistricting cases have become ever since the conservatives on the Supreme Court, in 2019, decided that partisan gerrymandering cases were no longer justiciable in federal court. The only danger for South Carolina legislators, then, would come from the Supreme Court agreeing with the district judge panel that they’d used voters’ race — rather than party — to try to achieve that partisan end. It paints another layer of farce onto the case that, particularly in the South, race and partisan lean are often inextricably linked.

The right-wing justices, almost all of whom sounded firmly on the side of the South Carolina lawmakers, were dismissive of the plaintiffs’ case, which they said rested on circumstantial evidence.

Meaning, it’s time to read this award-worthy article about Leonard Leo, the man who reshaped the Supreme Court and the entire Federal judiciary.  Please read it:  You’ll emerge smarter and angrier.

My Kind Of (Former) Billionaire:

The selfless billionaire is a rare creature indeed. Chuck Feeney, who died on Monday at the age of 92, was one of them. He is “my hero and Bill Gates’ hero,” Warren Buffett once remarked. “He should be everybody’s hero.” Indeed, Feeney was an inspiration for the Giving Pledge that Buffett and the Gateses launched in 2010, whose 241 megawealthy signatories have promised to dedicate a majority of their fortunes toward charitable pursuits.

Feeney did a lot better than a “majority.” By the time the pledge was announced, he was reluctant to join because he was no longer a billionaire. He’d long since heeded Andrew Carnegie’s advice that a rich man should distribute his fortune for the public good during his lifetime—else “die disgraced.”

Feeney, who was Irish-American, used his riches over the years to broker a peace agreement in Northern Ireland, finance a public health system in Vietnam, ex­pand access to AIDS drugs in Southern Africa, and support young leaders around the world—the Atlantic Fellows—who are working to improve their societies. He bankrolled Ireland’s public university system and donated billions to American universities—including about $1 billion to Cornell—never allowing the schools to affix his name, or Atlantic’s, to the buildings he paid for. He lobbied, too, to keep himself off the Forbes list, and managed to dispense with huge sums before the New York Times finally outed him in 1997. His stealthy ex­ploits earned him a nickname: “the James Bond of philanthropy.”

Will The Rethugs Ever Elect A Speaker?

The inability of House Republicans to agree on who will lead them has left the chamber in an effective standstill since Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) was ousted as speaker, unable to consider any legislation to aid Israel in its war against Hamas or pass any appropriation bills to avoid a potential government shutdown in mid-November. Neither issue produced enough urgency for Republicans to quickly elect a speaker as many had hoped, again highlighting the conference’s deep divisions.

At least a dozen Republicanshave refused to back Scalise for speaker. Their reasons include what they say is the lack of a plan to fund the government, no plan to change how Washington works, anger that McCarthy lost the job, and opposition to giving the next person in line a promotion. Some lawmakers also were angry at Scalise’s effort to block a proposed conference rule change that would have kept House Republicans voting behind closed doors until a speaker nominee earned 217 votes. A vote on the proposed rule change failed in Wednesday’s meeting, and Scalise was able to grab the nomination with a simple majority.

The closed-door R Caucus meeting was a cluster-bleep:

Multiple Republican lawmakers said it was a monumental mistake for Scalise to block a measure that would have united the Republican conference behind a speaker nominee behind closed doors.

Nearly 100 members backed a rule change that would require the speaker to find 217 Republican votes before they adjourned from their closed, no-phones-allowed conference meeting. Scalise and his allies worked on tabling the motion because they knew he would win the nomination with a simple majority, and made a bet that it would be easier to coalesce around him on the House floor with the public pressure of the cameras rather than if the vote were closed. They were able to successfully table the proposed change.

House is scheduled to reconvene at noon today.  I’m not a betting man, but if I was, I’d bet on a recess at 12:01.

Lawsuit Claims Inadequate Healthcare For Delaware Prisoners.  When you put ‘for-profit’ and ‘prisons’ together, the results are inevitable:

A new lawsuit that seeks to represent potentially hundreds of Delaware prisoners accuses the current and previous health care provider for the state’s prison system of ignoring and exacerbating the health of state prisoners in favor of profits.

The lawsuit accuses state officials and private companies hired by those officials of systemically delaying and denying treatment or diagnosis for serious medical conditions suffered by individuals the government incarcerates and, constitutionally, must provide health care for.

The defendants?:

The lawsuit names as defendants Centene Corp., a publicly traded health care conglomerate, as well as its former local subsidiary that managed the state’s prison health care services from April 2020 to June 2023. It also names VitalCore Health Strategies, the prison system’s current health care provider as defendants.

The lawsuit also names current Delaware Department of Correction Commissioner Terra Taylor and her two predecessors, Monroe Hudson and Claire DeMatteis, as defendants.

It accuses the government defendants of failing a duty to provide effective oversight of the system.

Does anyone doubt that, if he could, Carney would force the prisoners to enroll in a shitty Medicare Advantage program?

What do you want to talk about?

 

 

 

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  1. Alby says:

    Thom Hartmann sums up American politics in one sentence:

    The difference between Republican and Democratic visions for America is as clear as the difference between Russia and Norway (or California and Mississippi).

  2. puck says:

    Fortunately Gaza now has an option to ease its humanitarian nightmare:

    “[Israel’s] energy minister, Israel Katz, wrote on social media that no “electrical switch will be turned on, no water hydrant will be opened and no fuel truck will enter” until the “abductees” were free.”

    • Hamas has the hostages. Residents of Gaza can’t do anything to free them.

      • puck says:

        I don’t buy that narrative. “Hamas” is the husbands, sons, fathers, brothers, and cousins of the “Residents of Gaza.”

        If they don’t have the ability to free the hostages, then they can point them out to those who do have that ability.

        • Clay says:

          ^seconded. Hamas are radicalized Gazans, very few if any are true “outsiders”

        • delacrat says:

          Edwards S Herman, co-author with Noam Chomsky of “Manufacturing Consent” in an appendix to his The Real Terror Network had listed the term:

          “Viet Cong”

          the true meaning in practice was:

          Vietnamese, especially ones we have killed.

          Kinda think that’s how “Hamas” is used by zionists.

          • Clay says:

            Vietnam was a rural country full of dense jungle, not the case in urbanized gaza. People know what’s going on in the room upstairs and choose to be silent

            • delacrat says:

              https://www.addameer.org/statistics

              People know the zionist entity holds 5,200 palestinians of which 1,264 are in administrative detention (i.e. without charge) and 170 are CHILDREN. This far greater atrocity has existed for decades and has elicited no comparable moral outrage in the West generally. So you can understand why Gazans would be not be overly moved by any “hostages” “in the room upstairs”.

              • puck says:

                ” So you can understand why Gazans would be not be overly moved”

                Ask them again in a week.

  3. bamboozer says:

    Leonard Leo has emerged as the rich man who assembled a far right supreme court as well as a small army of far right lesser judges, they will live to plague us for a generation. Mad? No, but resigned to the eternal stupidity and corruption of American politics. A reminder that in the third world, also known as our destination, gunfire would result. As for speaker of the house Scalise will probably be it, and probably suffer the same fate as McCarthy. I always remember the goal of the Republicans is to collapse the government and install a Fascist regime, this is just another game for them to play.

  4. nathan arizona says:

    W looks a lot better now that we know just how bad a president can be. I wouldn’t give him an A as president, but I wouldn’t give him an F either. Fs are for traitorous assholes. I remember W’s overheard comment after listening to Trump’s inauguration speech: “That was some weird shit.” I like what he said and I like how he said it. But I still wouldn’t vote for him against any democrat.

    • puck says:

      Please, no Bush revisionism. Bush gave us a lasting economic crash and an unjust war. He was a far worse President than Trump, until the enormity of Jan. 6, which catapulted Trump into the lead by a nose.

  5. nathan arizona says:

    “He was a far worse president than Trump.” I don’t think so, despite that really bad war. I didn’t say W was actually a *good* president, but I do think he was an actual human being.