The Historic Racist Dog Whistle of Calling People “Animals”

found online by Raymond

 
From North Carolina pastor John Pavlovitz:

Often our words are more than words—they are floodlights.
They pierce through our facades and our artifice, and into our shadow places, and they reveal who we are.
Many times our words illuminate what is most true about the contents of our hearts, even as we try to conceal them.

This week at a roundtable in California, Donald Trump said these words about undocumented immigrants and showed us who he is:

“We have people coming into the country—or trying to come in, we’re stopping a lot of them—but we’re taking people out of the country, you wouldn’t believe how bad these people are. These aren’t people. These are animals.”

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Look What You Made Me Do!

found online by Raymond

 
From PZ Myers:

Wow, the New York Times opinion pages keep reminding me of what a craphole they’ve become. The latest entry is by Gerard Alexander, an associate professor of politics at the University of Virginia, who appears to wag a finger at those dang liberals who keep pointing out that the electorate that voted Trump into office were mostly conservative white folks who were driven by racial bias.

Racist is pretty much the most damning label that can be slapped on anyone in America today, which means it should be applied firmly and carefully. Yet some people have cavalierly leveled the charge against huge numbers of Americans — specifically, the more than 60 million people who voted for Mr. Trump.

In their ranks are people who sincerely consider themselves not bigoted, who might be open to reconsidering ways they have done things for years, but who are likely to be put off if they feel smeared before that conversation even takes place.

“Consider themselves not bigoted”…well, now I’m convinced.

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Many People Look at Many Other Looks at Other People Who May Have Been Drinking Coffee and Thinking

found online by Raymond

 
From The Journal of Improbable Research:

The mystery of whether drinking coffee affects people’s minds is still mysterious, thanks to the results of a new, complex academic study of many old, complex academic studies:

Habitual coffee consumption and cognitive function: a Mendelian randomization meta-analysis in up to 415,530 participants,” Ang Zhou, Amy E. Taylor, Ville Karhunen, et al., Scientific Reports, epub 2018.

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Pastor Brian Tome: God Knows What You Go Through, He Lost His Son

found online by Raymond

 
From The Life and Times of Bruce Gerencser:

I was listening to the Bill Cunningham show on WLW-700 on my way home from my doctor’s appointment today. Cunningham had as his guest Brian Tome, pastor of Crossroads Church in Cincinnati, Ohio. Cunningham and Tome were discussing the untimely deaths of children, young adults, and family members. Tome, evidently, was brought on the show to give advice on handling such deaths. What he did, instead, was spend the time throwing up cheap, worn-out Evangelical clichés. On one hand, Tome went out of his way to say, hey, I am just a regular guy who is looking for answers to questions concerning life and death. On the other hand, he was the typical preacher, ever ready to give an answer when he should have, instead, kept his damn mouth shut.

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Trump Pressured Into Calling Waffle House Hero 3 Weeks Late

found online by Raymond

 
From Tommy Christopher:

It was three weeks ago Sunday that James Shaw Jr. stopped a mass shooting at a Waffle House in Tennessee. And it took that long for Trump to finally contact him.

On Monday afternoon, deputy press secretary Raj Shah opened the White House daily briefing by quickly noting that Trump called Shaw that morning to “commend” him. The 15-second mention contained no direct quotes from the call.

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Fix the Presidential Line of Succession

found online by Raymond

 
From Jonathan Bernstein:

Now is the time to finally fix the presidential order of succession.

The order of succession outside of the vice president is determined by legislation, not the Constitution, and it’s changed several times over the years. The current law has several problems. By inserting the speaker and the Senate president pro tempore into the line of succession, the law raises the possibility of a partisan incentive to remove the elected officials, at least during times of divided government. That’s a terrible idea. The president pro tempore of the Senate, regardless of party, has no business being involved with this at all — they get that distinction by having the most seniority, which means that half the time it’s someone long past their prime. And there has been more than one recent senator with the job who wasn’t remotely capable of handling normal Senate duties, let alone the presidency.

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Regrets, They’ve Had A Few

found online by Raymond

 
From tengrain at Mock Paper Scissors:

The swamp doesn’t drain itself, as we seem to learn again and again, so it comes as little surprise that some multinational corporations are having a few regrets that they paid millions of Ameros to Comrade Stupid’s Stupidest Lawyer, Michael/Mikhail Cohen.

As we know, AT&T wanted to buyTime-Warner, and Novartis didn’t want to negotiate drug prices with Medicare. So you know, what better way to get what you want from a crook than to bribe him?

In the time-honored tradition of being a mark, they didn’t get anything other than being taken.

AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson:

“There is no other way to say it—AT&T hiring Michael Cohen as a political consultant was a big mistake.”

Novartis CEO Vasant Naraimhan:

“We made a mistake in entering into this engagement and, as a consequence, are being criticized by a world that expects more from us.”

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Bevin Determined to Lose Re‑Election

found online by Raymond

 
From Blue in the Bluegrass:

You don’t piss off the people who cook/serve your food or who cut your hair. And you don’t deliver public, deadly insults to the judge who handles all the lawsuits against your maladministration.

From the Herald:

Gov. Matt Bevin went after a Kentucky judge Tuesday, the day after that judge ruled against Bevin’s procedural motion in a lawsuit over Kentucky’s new pension law.

“I now have the most incompetent hack of a judge — I don’t know if in Kentucky, but certainly one of the worst — who happens to be in Franklin Circuit Court,” Bevin said in a radio interview on 55KRC, a talk radio station in Cincinnati.

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Trump Fascinated By Israeli Tradition Of Slaughtering Protesters

found online by Raymond

 
From The Onion:

“It’s very beautiful, such a beautiful custom,” said Trump of the cherished Israeli pastime of mowing down unarmed Palestinians with rifle fire. “They’ve been doing this for years, but this is the first time I got a chance to watch the whole ritual. It’s really something, very powerful. Other countries use just tear gas, but here, they outright murder people for throwing glass bottles. I can really see something like this catching on in the United States.”

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