Monday, June 26, 2023

Disqualify Trump? Enforce the 14th Amendment


 

CREW - Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington helped establish precedent when it successfully sued to remove a New Mexico state lawmaker from office for his participation in the January 6th insurrection.

CREW is resolved to restore the fundamental expectation that sustains our democracy—that the American people elect their leaders and that government leaders [OFFICIALS] accept those results. If you seek elected or appointed office despite being constitutionally disqualified under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment for engaging in insurrection, we and others loyal to the Constitution will defend it.





Who is Sheryl Lee Ralph?


“Whatever the mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve." - Napoleon Hill




Monday, June 19, 2023

Remember this word: DECOMPENSATION

Dr Bandy X Lee, MD forensic psychiatrist

Come on people. This evening (Eastern Daylight Time) Trump went on Fox for an extended interview.

Really, I want to hear what forensic psychiatrist Dr Bandy X Lee has to say about it. Well, before today, she has had plenty to say about Trump. It's about effing time corporate media took Dr Lee's insight on that person very seriously. It IS time to stop saying Trump could win the presidency in 2024. That's NOT going to happen. [Vox Populi, as we Rise UP, with ONE Voice]

As far as I am concerned, it is totally insane for corporate media to continue to act as if polls, no matter how scientific they might be, of voters in the United States, are at all relevant. We are well beyond that point. (Some pundits today haven't said the polls are reasonable)

I strongly recommend every concerned citizen AND every interested journalist daily read Bandy Lee's substack. And read her book: Profile of a Nation: Trump’s Mind, America’s Soul. Dr Lee also edited The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President.




Mental Health Epidemic
‘As a Nation, Our Healthcare Workforce, Especially in Mental Health, is Woefully Inadequate’
We have a very serious mental health epidemic in our country. It is impacting especially the young. Rates of drug abuse, shootings, violence in many forms, depression, and suicides (completed, attempted, and contemplated) continue to skyrocket.

Ever since Donald Trump’s election, I have publicly warned against “the poor state of collective mental health” that gave rise to his presidency, and an acceleration of “the public mental health crisis” that was to come as a result of his presidency. These two issues are interrelated, and I will have much more to say about this in the months ahead. (more at the link above, which Lee posted yesterday, June 18, 2023)

Signs of psychological decompensation:

Decompensation is the psychological term used when a person is showing signs of deterioration regarding their daily functioning... When a person's stress levels are higher than their ability to cope with stress, especially over a long period of time, the person may show signs of psychological decompensation. This could be manifested with signs such as being easily startled/alarmed, resistance/shutting down or psychological exhaustion to the point where they are no longer able to function at work or at home like they normally could.

Trump is mentally unstable 

Mental instability, or mental illness, is a condition that greatly affects a person’s thoughts and behaviors. Individuals who are mentally unstable often experience difficulty coping with the everyday functions, demands and challenges of life. There are several signs and symptoms that indicate a person is suffering from a mental instability. 
Mental illness also develops during adulthood. An early sign of mental illness in an adult is the development of prolonged and extreme depression. In some cases, a mentally ill adult experiences hallucinations or delusions. Other signs of a mental instability include substance abuse, anger, confusion, denial and multiple unexplained physical ailments.

 DISCLAIMER: I am NOT and never have been a licensed medical professional/clinician. 


Sunday, June 18, 2023

Daniel Ellsberg's granddaughter remembers him as...





Read this lovely tribute to her grandfather, written by Catherine Ellsberg, bypassing the Washington Post's paywall

Catherine Ellsberg is a culture writer and English teacher based in Paris.
Most people know Daniel Ellsberg as the whistleblower who came to fame after releasing the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret study of the Vietnam War, to the New York Times, The Post and a dozen other newspapers. Or they knew him as the advocate who dedicated a lifetime to the pursuit of peace and justice, a fervent anti-nuclear activist and defender of the press.

But me? I knew him as my grandfather, the movie fanatic. (more at the link)

 


Friday, June 16, 2023

Rest in Peace Daniel Ellsberg


Ellsberg was perhaps the person most responsible for bringing the Vietnam Era, and the Vietnam War to it's end. Video courtesy of Washington Post.


June 16, 2023 (Friday)
In one of the quirky coincidences that history deals out, Daniel Ellsberg died today at age 92 on the eve of the fifty-first anniversary of the break-in at the offices of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C.
Ellsberg was a military analyst in the 1960s, disturbed by the gulf between what the government was telling the public about the war in Vietnam and what he was seeing behind the scenes.
After serving as a Marine, Ellsberg earned his doctorate at Harvard and joined the RAND Corporation, where he learned to apply game theory to warfare. By 1964 he was an advisor to Robert McNamara, who served as defense secretary under presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. In 1967, Ellsberg was part of the team tapped by McNamara to compile a history of the conflict in Vietnam to evaluate the success of different programs.
Ellsberg was concerned by investigators’ conclusions. The 7,000-page secret government study detailed U.S. involvement in Vietnam from Harry Truman’s presidency to Lyndon Johnson’s. It outlined how successive presidents had lied to the American people, expanding the war with promises of victory even as the costs of the war mounted and the chances of victory moved farther and farther away.
Ellsberg copied the secret study and shared it with congressmen, who buried it. Finally, Ellsberg shared the report with a New York Times correspondent on the condition the reporter would only take notes and would not copy the pages. But the correspondent broke the agreement, believing the documents were “the property of the people” who had paid for them with “the blood of their sons.”
On June 13, 1971, the New York Times began to publish what became known as the Pentagon Papers, showing how presidents had lied to the American people about the nation’s involvement in Vietnam. President Richard Nixon’s attorney general, John Mitchell, warned the New York Times that the publication was jeopardizing national security and warned that the government would prosecute. The editors decided to continue publication—the Supreme Court later agreed that the newspaper had the right to publish the information—while Ellsberg leaked the report to other newspapers.
The study ended before the Nixon administration, but the president was deeply concerned about it. The report showed that presidents had lied to the American people for years, and Nixon worried that the story would hurt his administration by souring the public on his approach to the Vietnam War. Worse, if anyone looked at his own administration, they might well find evidence of his own secret actions in the Vietnam arena: the Chennault affair, in which a Nixon ally undermined peace talks before the 1968 presidential election in order to undercut Johnson’s reelection campaign, and what was then the undisclosed bombing of Cambodia.
News of either could, at the very least, destroy Nixon’s reelection campaign.
Nixon became obsessed with the idea that the Pentagon Papers proved that opponents were trying to sink his campaign for reelection.
Frustrated when the FBI did not seem to be taking an investigation into Ellsberg seriously enough, in July 1971, Nixon put together in the White House a special investigations unit to stop leaks. And who stops leaks? Plumbers.
Officially known as the White House Special Investigations Unit, Nixon’s “plumbers” burglarized the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist on September 9, 1971, hoping to find damaging information about him that would discredit the Pentagon Papers. (Their burglary, showing gross governmental misconduct, was later key to the dismissal of charges against Ellsberg for leaking the report.)
Some of the plumbers began to work with the Committee to Reelect the President (aptly called “CREEP” as its methods came to light) to sabotage Nixon’s Democratic opponents by “ratf*cking” them, as they called it, planting fake letters in newspapers, hiring vendors for Democratic rallies and then running out on the unpaid bills, and planting spies in Democrats’ campaigns. Finally, CREEP turned back to the plumbers.
Early in the morning on June 17, 1972, Frank Wills, a 24-year-old security guard at the Watergate Office Building in Washington, D.C., noticed that a door lock had been taped open. He ripped off the tape and closed the door, but on his next round he found the door taped open again. He called the police, who found five burglars in the Democratic National Committee headquarters located in the building.
The White House denied all knowledge of what it called a “third-rate burglary attempt,” and most of the press took the denial at face value. But two young reporters for the Washington Post, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, followed the sloppy money trail behind the burglars directly to the White House.
The fallout from the burglary gained no traction before the election, which Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew won with an astonishing 60.7 percent of the vote. But the scandal erupted in March 1973, when one of the burglars, James W. McCord, Jr., wrote a letter to Judge John Sirica before his sentencing, saying that he had lied at his trial, under pressure to protect government officials. McCord had been the head of security for CREEP, and Sirica, known by reporters as “Maximum John,” later said, “I had no intention of sitting on the bench like a nincompoop and watching the parade go by.”
Sirica made the letter public, White House counsel John Dean promptly began cooperating with prosecutors, and the Watergate scandal was in full swing. On August 9, 1974, Nixon became the first president in American history to resign.
Ellsberg decided to release the Pentagon Papers to alert the American people to the fact that their government was lying to them about the Vietnam War. But he helped set in motion a series of events that determined the shape of the political world we live in today.

Friday, June 9, 2023

USDOJ has indicted Donald Trump and, to quote Glenn Kirschner, "Trump.Is.DONE" (UPDATED 8:30pm mSt 6-9-2023)

 In case you hadn't yet heard, this is a BFD!

Hear it from Jonathan Turley, a law professor who advocated in favor of Trump in the impeachment trial(s).


and Special Counsel Jack Smith.


and talking heads commentary


and former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal


and commentary regarding the unsealed indictment



By all means, check your favored sources for additional coverage, including your local news outlets.

-----

Last (here) but not least, here you can listen to the entire indictment, courtesy of The Bulwark.