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And in honor of our dear scion recuperating in hospital, with good ole British humor:
I am delighted to learn that scion is in hospital and not playing a harp upstairs.
I hope scion will know how much he is respected and regarded.
I hope he'll be back relatively soon...
LOLOL!! I wish... If I knew his office manager, I'd offer some suggestions...
I think he may just not have been in the mood to correspond. I hope he feels better when the current problem is taken care of.
Thanks Janice. That is wonderful news. I have missed chatting with him.
now, can you do something about vlad?
You're welcome!
Christ I knew I should have checked with you. I've been trying to contact him since January and never got any response nor has he posted.
You must have some rolodex.
that is the most wonderful news.
What a great piece of news! Thanks!
I'm afraid reports of scion's death have been greatly exaggerated.
Yesterday, I emailed his office manager in Canada. She replied this morning, saying he'd been in the hospital with a non-life-threatening problem, and would be operated on this week. He'll then recover at the hospital for two week, and then come home.
You're welcome.
TBF only Guinness is served ice cold.
Thank goodness. I wouldn't want people to think I was an ugly American.
Started the process of getting our passports renewed last night.
I have a vague memory that Scion, like me, was born in Glasgow.
That would explain his following the Scottish vote for independence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proposed_second_Scottish_independence_referendum#:
Also the Brexit vote and the fact that it won in the end.
We discussed both votes in depth here as they were occurring and he was disappointed in the results of both.
Ireland as it turns out seems to be the smart one in the crowd since they were independent and stayed in the EU.
I have a vague memory that Scion, like me, was born in Glasgow.
Yes, that's correct.
"Scion was a Canadian who purely loved England where he lived half of each year."
I have a vague memory that Scion, like me, was born in Glasgow.
And if so, I'm glad his lum reeked lang.
He also served in the RAF, quite a few years after my father who was a navigator in Wellingtons and Lancasters in WWII.
"Now as to the stout would it be rude of me if I asked for it ice cold. It's an American thing."
TBF only Guinness is served ice cold. But both Lil's Bar (100 m from my front door) and Mary Ann's (300 m from my front door) serve ice cold Guinness and merely chilled Murphy's, so we can both be happy.
Yes. I hadn't heard. I emailed him a few weeks ago, and didn't get a reply. He hadn't been feeling well at all for the past few years...
ihub has lost one of the best.
Indeed, "The world has lost a magnificent gentleman!!!!"
Scion and I enjoyed connecting online. Scion was a Canadian who purely loved England where he lived half of each year. He spoke well of Ireland, my birthplace, and he simply enjoyed his life and doing his best in all things.
Today I will walk down Memory Lane thinking about a wonderful man, scion.
I will miss him a lot!!
Thanks for letting me know. I'm very sad to hear that news confirmed.
I did the best I could. Of course it wouldn't hurt my feelings if he popped up and made a liar out of me but I fear that isn't happening.
My brother and my dad visited Ireland years ago and I'm trying to get some idea of their travels since they had a heck of a time touring the country. They have both since passed away so I may reach out to you for some ideas.
Now as to the stout would it be rude of me if I asked for it ice cold. It's an American thing. lol.
Thanks for letting me know. I'm very sad to hear that news confirmed.
Scion was indeed one of a kind.
I would very much appreciate being able to toast our absent friend with you when you visit. Mine will be a pint of Murphy's - our local (ish) stout.
Sorry that has been confirmed.
I checked with a few people who might have known Scion and regrettably as we suspected he has passed away.
I really wish I had gotten the chance to meet him as I was planning to visit Ireland and hoped I could have hooked up with the 2 of you. I think that would have been enjoyable.
Perhaps if I do get to visit this summer we can hoist a beer to him in his memory.
As one person replied to me who knew him,
Neutral Swiss join EU sanctions against Russia in break with past
By Michael Shields and Silke Koltrowitz
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/neutral-swiss-adopt-sanctions-against-russia-2022-02-28/
Sharp deviation from traditional neutrality
Orders freeze of Swiss assets of people, firms on list
Imposes sanctions on Putin and ministers
Bans entry of five oligarchs close to Putin
ZURICH, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Switzerland will adopt all the sanctions that the European Union has imposed on Russian people and companies and freeze their assets to punish the invasion of Ukraine, the government said in a sharp deviation from the country's traditional neutrality.
"We are in an extraordinary situation where extraordinary measures could be decided," President and Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis told a news conference in Bern on Monday, flanked by the finance, defence and justice ministers.
Only history would tell if such a move could happen again, he said. Swiss neutrality remained intact but "of course we stand on the side of Western values," he added.
Switzerland also adopted financial sanctions against Russian President Vladimir Putin, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, effective immediately, and closed its airspace to most Russian aircraft.
Switzerland has steered clear of imposing sanctions in a string of crises, including when Russia annexed Crimea in 2014. Up to now, the exception has been sanctions imposed by the U.N. Security Council, which it has to implement under international law.
In view of Russia's military intervention in Ukraine, the Swiss cabinet decided to adopt the packages of sanctions the EU imposed on Feb. 23 and 25, the government said.
The EU's head diplomat, Josep Borrell, welcomed the move and said it was "good news" that transferring money to Switzerland would no longer help Russian oligarchs. read more
RUSSIA "RATHER A MINOR PLAYER"
Switzerland had tried to keep a tortuous balance between showing solidarity with the West and maintaining its traditional neutrality that it said could make it a potential mediator.
But the government faced growing pressure from the EU, the United States and thousands of protesters who marched in Bern on Saturday calling for it to side clearly with the West against Moscow.
"Switzerland reaffirms its solidarity with Ukraine and its people; it will be delivering relief supplies for people who have fled to Poland," the government said.
It added that it had also banned five oligarchs close to Putin from entering the country, without naming them.
Commodity trading remained mostly intact as this was not covered by EU sanctions so far, Finance Minister Ueli Maurer said.
He said Switzerland's financial centre could easily absorb the blow of sanctions.
"It is often bandied about that Russia is the most important financial centre for Switzerland, but it is not, it is rather a minor player," Maurer said.
Russians held nearly 10.4 billion Swiss francs ($11.33 billion) in Switzerland in 2020, Swiss National Bank data show.
The government had so far said only that it would not let Switzerland be used as a platform to circumvent EU sanctions.
($1 = 0.9177 Swiss francs)
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/neutral-swiss-adopt-sanctions-against-russia-2022-02-28/
Judge to dismiss Sarah Palin's defamation suit against 'New York Times'
February 14, 20224:04 PM ET
A federal judge announced Monday afternoon that he would dismiss former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, saying her legal team had failed to reach the high standards required for public figures to make their case.
The case centered on a June 2017 Times editorial that Palin's attorneys argued accused her of inciting murder six years earlier in a mass shooting in Tucson, Ariz., that also gravely wounded then-Rep. Gabby Giffords.
The New York Times' legal teams argued she had not shown that the paper or its former editorial page editor, James Bennet, had been motivated by "actual malice," in which he would have had to have known that his characterization was false or he would have known the probability of it being false was so great as to mean that he was acting with reckless indifference to the facts.
And with evident reluctance, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff embraced that reasoning, saying Palin's lawyers failed to present any such evidence against Bennet, who had inserted the problematic language in the article.
The Times' attorneys filed their motion before Rakoff turned the trial over to the jury, which has been deliberating for a day. The judge said he would formally dismiss the case after the jury's verdict so an appellate court could consider its findings, in full knowledge Palin would appeal his ruling.
"Ms. Palin was subjected to an ultimately unsupported and very serious allegation that Mr. Bennet chose to revisit seven years or so after the underlying events," Rakoff said. "So I don't mean to be misunderstood. I think this is an example of very unfortunate editorializing on the part of The Times."
"My job is to apply the law," Rakoff continued. "The law here sets a very high standard for 'actual malice,' and to this case, the court finds that that standard has not been met."
The trial represented a dramatic confrontation between the self-professed hockey mom from Wasilla, Alaska, and one of the nation's most august news outlets. When she broke onto the national political scene in 2008 as Republican presidential candidate John McCain's running mate, Palin routinely derided the press as the "lamestream media." Her routine folksy attacks on the media helped pave the way for Donald Trump's candidacy.
https://www.npr.org/2022/02/14/1080610992/sarah-palin-new-york-times-defamation-suit
Trump accountant Mazars says its statements of his financial condition ‘should no longer be relied upon,’ New York AG reveals
PUBLISHED MON, FEB 14 20223:54 PM ESTUPDATED 6 MIN AGO
Dan Mangan
KEY POINTS
The accounting firm Mazars, which for years prepared income tax returns for ex-President Donald Trump, has informed a lawyer for the Trump Organization that statements of his financial condition “should no longer be relied upon,” the New York Attorney General’s office revealed Monday.
Mazars told Trump Organization attorney Alan Garten that he should inform any recipients that statements of Trump’s financial condition for years spanning 2011 through 2020 “should not be relied upon.”
Attorney General Letitia James’ office has been investigating how the Trump Organization valued certain real estate assets in applications for loans, insurance policies, and tax-related issues.
The accounting firm Mazars, which for years prepared income tax returns for ex-President Donald Trump, has told the Trump Organization that a decade’s worth of statements of his financial condition “should no longer be relied upon,” the New York Attorney General’s office revealed in a court filing Monday.
The letter by Mazars, which has also stopped representing Trump, was cited by AG Letitia James’s office as it asked a state judge to order the Trump Organization, Donald Trump Jr. and his sister Ivanka Trump, and others to comply with subpoenas seeking documents and testimony.
James for several years has been investigating how the Trump Organization valued certain real estate assets in applications for loans, insurance policies, and tax-related issues.
Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen has told Congress that the company manipulated the value of those assets depending on the circumstance to obtain better financial terms and to lower its tax obligations.
James’ office said last month that it had determined that Trump’s statements of financial condition described his valuation process “in broad terms and in ways which were often inaccurate or misleading when compared with the supporting data and documentation that the Trump Organization submitted to its accounting firm.”
Mazars told Trump Organization attorney Alan Garten in a letter last week that he should inform any recipients that the statements of Trump’s financial condition for 2011 through 2020 “should not be relied upon.”
The firm told Garten that its conclusion was based on filings made by the AG’s office, “our own investigation,” and other information from different parties.
“While we have not concluded that the various financial statements, as a whole, contain material discrepancies, based on the totality of the circumstances, we believe our advice to no longer rely upon those financial statements is appropriate,” Mazars said in its letter to Garten.
Mazars also said in its letter that it would no longer “provide any new work product to the Trump Organization.”
The firm said it based on its decision about the past work’s reliability, “as well as the totality of circumstances, we have also reached the point such that there is a non-waivable conflict of interest with the Trump Organization.”
Garten did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CNBC.
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office is conducting a parallel criminal investigation into the issues that James is eyeing in her civil probe.
The DA’s office last year obtained Trump’s personal and corporate tax returns dating to 2011 after a years-long fight by the former president to block a subpoena for those and other documents from Mazars.
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/14/trump-tax-firm-says-documents-not-reliable.html
A thread.
More extraordinary scenes in the High Court involving Arron Banks.
— Carole Cadwalladr (@carolecadwalla) February 8, 2022
LeaveEU - & its last remaining director, an ex-South African special forces intelligence officer - failed to show up to its own appeal. https://t.co/9n3xVMkHs6
Is This What Winning Looks Like?
Modern Monetary Theory, the buzziest economic idea in decades, got a pandemic tryout of sorts. Now inflation is testing its limits.
By Jeanna Smialek
Published Feb. 6, 2022
Updated Feb. 7, 2022
The sun was sinking low over Long Island Sound as Stephanie Kelton, wearing the bright red suit jacket she had donned to give a virtual guest lecture to university students in London that morning, perched before a pillow fort she had constructed atop the heavy wooden desk in her home office.
The setup was meant to keep out noise as she recorded the podcast she co-hosts, a MarketWatch production called the “Best New Ideas in Money.” The room was hushed except for Ms. Kelton, who bantered energetically with the producers she was hearing through noise-blocking headphones, sang a Terri Gibbs song and made occasional edits to the script. At one point, she muttered, “That sounds like Stephanie.”
What Stephanie Kelton sounds like, circa early 2022, is the star architect of a movement that is on something of a victory lap. A victory lap with an asterisk.
Ms. Kelton, 52, is the most familiar public face of Modern Monetary Theory, which posits that if a government controls its own currency and needs money — to make sure its citizens have food and places to live when, say, a global pandemic pushes many out of work — it can just print it, as long as its economy has the ability to churn out the needed goods and services.
In the M.M.T. view of the world, “How will you pay for it?” is a vapid policy question. Real-world resources and political priorities determine how much lawmakers can and should spend.
It is an idea that was forged, and put to something of a test, during a low-inflation era.
When Ms. Kelton’s book, “The Deficit Myth,” was published in June 2020 and shot onto best seller lists, inflation had been weak for decades and had dropped below 1 percent as consumers retrenched in the pandemic. The government had begun to spend rapidly to try to prop up flailing households.
When Ms. Kelton appeared on a Bloomberg podcast episode, “How M.M.T. Won the Fiscal Policy Debate,” in early 2021, inflation had bounced back to around 2 percent.
But by a chilly January afternoon, as ducks flew over the frosty estuary outside Ms. Kelton’s house near Stony Brook University, where she teaches, inflation had rocketed up to 7 percent. The government’s debt pile has exploded to $30 trillion, up from about $10 trillion at the start of the 2008 downturn and $5 trillion in the mid-1990s.
The good news: The government has had no trouble selling bonds to fund its spending, contrary to the direst projections of deficit scolds.
The bad news: Some economists blame big spending in the pandemic for today’s rapid price increases. The government will release fresh Consumer Price Index data this week, and it is expected to show inflation running at its fastest pace since 1982.
And that may be why Ms. Kelton, and the movement she has come to represent, now seem anxious to control the narrative. The pandemic spending wasn’t entirely consistent with M.M.T principles, they say — it wasn’t assessed carefully for its inflationary effects as it was being drawn up, because it was crisis policy. But the situation has underlined how hard it is to know just where the economy’s constraints lay, and how difficult it is to fix things once you run into them.
Last summer, Ms. Kelton called inflation a temporary sign of “growing pains.” By the fall, she painted it as a good problem to solve, compared with a continued weak economy. As it lingers, she has argued that diagnosing what is causing it is key.
“Can we blame ‘MMT’ for the run-up in inflation?” she tweeted rhetorically last month, just hours before her podcast recording.
“Of course not.”
The economy is the limit
To understand how M.M.T. fits in with other dominant ways of thinking, it’s helpful to take a trip to the beach.
In economics, there’s a school of thought sometimes called “freshwater.” It’s the set of ideas that became popular at inland universities in the 1970s, when they began to embrace rational markets and limited government intervention to fight recessions. There’s also “saltwater” thinking, an updated version of Keynesianism that argues that the government occasionally needs to jump-start the economy. It has traditionally been championed in the Ivy League and other top-ranked schools on the coasts.
You might call the school of thought Ms. Kelton is popularizing, from a bay that feeds into the East River, brackish economics.
M.M.T. theorists argue that society should feel capable of spending to achieve its goals to the extent that there are resources available to fulfill them. Deficit spending need not be constrained to recessions, even theoretically. Want to build a road? No problem, so long as you have asphalt and construction workers. Want to feed children free lunches? Also not a problem, so long as you have the food and the cafeteria workers.
What became Modern Monetary Theory began to percolate among a small group of academics when Ms. Kelton, a former military brat and one-time furniture saleswoman, was a graduate student.
She had a gap period between graduating with a bachelor’s degree from California State University, Sacramento and attending Cambridge University on a Rotary scholarship, and her college economics professor recommended that she spend the time studying with L. Randall Wray, an early pioneer in the set of ideas.
They hit it off. She remained in Mr. Wray’s circle, and he — and Warren Mosler, a hedge fund manager who had written a book on what we get wrong about money — convinced her that the way America understood cash, revenues and budgeting was all backward.
Ms. Kelton earned her doctorate at The New School, long a booster of out-of-mainstream economic thinking, and went on to teach at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. She, Mr. Wray, who was there at the time, and their colleagues mentored doctoral students and began to write academic papers on the new way of thinking.
But academic missives reached only a small circle of readers. After the 2008 financial crisis punched a hole in the economy that would take more than a decade to fill, Ms. Kelton and her colleagues, invigorated with a new urgency, began a blog called “New Economic Perspectives.” It was a bare bones white, red and black layout, using a standard WordPress template, that served as a place for M.M.T. writers to make their case (and, in its early days, featured a #Occupy[YourCityHere] tab).
The theory picked up some fervent followers but limited popular acceptance, charitably, and outright derision, uncharitably. Mainstream economists panned it as overly simplistic. Many were confused about what it was arguing.
“I have heard pretty extreme claims attributed to that framework and I don’t know whether that’s fair or not,” Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, said in 2019. “The idea that deficits don’t matter for countries that can borrow in their own currency is just wrong.”
Ms. Kelton kept the faith. She and her colleagues held conferences, including one in 2018 at The New School where she gave a lecture on “mainstreaming M.M.T.”
Rohan Grey organized the conference and a media reception afterward at an Irish pub (“‘Shades of Green,’ monetary pun intended,” he said). It was attended by organizers, academics, “lay people” and lots of journalists. At the happy hour — which lasted until 1 a.m. — Ms. Kelton was mobbed when she walked in the door. “She was already on her way to super celebrity status at that point,” said Mr. Grey, an assistant professor at Willamette Law.
When she gave presentations on her ideas, Ms. Kelton would occasionally display a quote often attributed to Mahatma Gandhi: “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you. Then you win.”
And her star was rising more broadly. She advised Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaigns in 2016 and 2020, getting to know the Vermont senator. He never fully publicly embraced M.M.T., but he nevertheless advanced policies — like Medicare for All — that reflected its ideals.
She amassed a following of tens of thousands, later growing to 140,000, on Twitter. Her first handle, @deficitowl, prompted ardent fans to gift her wise bird figurines, some of which are still on display in her home office. She cultivated a small coterie of prominent journalists who were interested in the idea, most notably Joe Weisenthal at Bloomberg. She signed a book deal. She was regularly talking to Democratic lawmakers, sometimes in groups.
Her idea percolated through Washington’s media and liberal policy circles. Mainstream economic predictions that huge debt loads would come back to haunt nations like Japan had not played out, the anemic rebound from 2008 had scarred society and called the size of the crisis response into question.
Ms. Kelton and her colleagues were ensuring that their theory on benign deficits was an ever-present feature of the blossoming debate.
Then the pandemic hit, and suddenly the theoretical question of just how much the government could spend before it ran into limits faced a real-world experiment.
The $1.9 Trillion Floor
Without thinking about paying for it, Donald J. Trump's government quickly passed a $2.3 trillion relief package in late March 2020. In December, it followed that up with another $900 billion. President Biden took office in early 2021, and promptly added $1.9 trillion more.
They weren’t being driven by M.M.T. — nobody with meaningful power at the time had fully embraced the idea, given the political potency of “fiscal responsibility” — but they were effectively proving its point. The idea that a government issuing its own currency has to pay for its ambitions is misplaced.
Proponents took a victory lap.
“It took a virus to kill the deficit myth,” Ms. Kelton tweeted in March 2020, as that first relief package wound through Congress. She pushed for continued big spending in early 2021 (“$1.9T should have been a floor, not a ceiling in negotiations,” she wrote).
She trolled the Harvard economist Lawrence Summers as he warned that the big spending might be inflationary, cautioning that the stimulus overshot what the economy was prepared to produce. When the package passed, she said in a media interview that the plan “went beyond anything I would have anticipated.”
At first, the results seemed to be the confirmation that she and her colleagues had been right. The economy rebounded faster than anyone had hoped. Many of deficit hawks’ worst nightmares did not come to pass: Rates on government debt remain extremely low, and the dreaded bond vigilantes never came knocking.
Still, as inflation surges, the headlines declaring that the theory had “won” need some caveats.
Ms. Kelton and her colleagues make clear that the pandemic relief packages did not follow one of M.M.T.’s key tenets — they did not try to account for resource constraints ahead of time. In an M.M.T. world, the Congressional Budget Office would have carefully analyzed possible inflation ahead of time, and lawmakers would have tried to offset any strain on available workers and widgets with stabilizing measures and tax increases.
The theory’s basic idea on inflation — as Ms. Kelton tells it — is that the best defense is a good offense.
As 2021 demonstrated, however, the economy is a big, complex entity, and it can be hard to predict. Many economists, both mainstream and M.M.T. ones, did not think that the March 2021 package would be inflationary.
But homebound consumers, flush with cash, spent their money far more heavily on goods than they typically do, and it took them longer to shift back to services than just about anyone expected. That roiled supply chains, pushing up prices for cars and furniture and precipitating the heady inflation that now has America in its grip.
Ms. Kelton supported the $1.9 trillion package that passed last March, and she stands by that. She just questions how much of the inflation now is really coming from the demand it drove. Plus, she argues, you know what is worse than inflation? A crawling recovery.
One of M.M.T.’s big ideas is that the Federal Reserve, which in the United States is in charge of trying to keep prices under control by raising interest rates to lower demand, should not be the one-stop shop for economic management. Raising rates now would cool off investment, the logic goes, and how is that helpful at a moment when we don’t have enough factories or cargo ships?
The problem is that the alternative to a Fed response is, at the moment, not obvious. The Biden administration’s attempts at tamping down price increases — longer port hours, release of strategic petroleum reserves, calling out corporate price gouging — have mostly tinkered around the edges of the issue.
Those kinds of precise moves to counter inflation are what M.M.T. economists would recommend, though. Ms. Kelton laid out other suggestions M.M.T. economists have made in a recent blog post. Among them: Medicare for All, cutting the Pentagon budget, repealing some tariffs and unclogging the ports.
Not exactly “easy peasy,” to borrow a phrase of hers.
“M.M.T. was already pretty marginal,” said Jason Furman, a Harvard economist, noting that, in his view, most policymakers and prominent academics ignored it already. Even if policy in the pandemic effectively embraced the idea that you do not have to pay for your spending, that idea, he said, was also Keynesian.
And the M.M.T crowd, while dismissing the Fed’s role, has not come up with a clear and obviously workable idea for how to stem inflation, he argued, adding, “If you were open-minded, this would discredit it still further.”
In Washington, the suite of ideas has clearly been dealt a setback. Deficit concerns have returned. Mr. Biden’s sweeping policy agenda has not passed because Senator Joseph Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat and member of his own party, has opposed it on concerns about government debt and inflation.
Despite that, some of M.M.T.’s proponents are still sounding celebratory.
“We’ve won the debate on the intellectual level — there are no flaws,” Mr. Wray said.
Flaws or not, there are questions.
Questions like: “Did Congress ‘experiment’ with MMT, and does the run-up in inflation mean that MMT has ‘failed’?”
That is how Ms. Kelton put it in a Substack post — she upgraded from WordPress last year — that she called “How Do You Solve a Problem Like Inflation,” complete with “Sound of Music” art. (The Von Trapps, who famously fled Nazi-occupied Austria in 1938, would have known a thing or two about inflation.)
She published the 3,715-word riff hours before I was scheduled to visit her at her home in Stony Brook. The question she notes that “some people” have been asking is the main one I posed to her in an initial conversation.
During our first talk, she never broke her cool when questioned about the inflationary moment and what it says about her theory. She laid out her response methodically. Times are weird, supply chains are constrained, decades of corporate consolidation make it all worse. True M.M.T. policy would have thought about inflation in the first place, with tax increases or other stabilizers built in.
She was also emphatic. And that tone carries over to the post, if type style expresses tone. Has the M.M.T. experiment failed? “The answer,” it declares, in bold face, “is an unequivocal no.”
Why let someone else shape your narrative, when you could shape your own?
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/06/business/economy/modern-monetary-theory-stephanie-kelton.html
50 Years on, Bloody Sunday’s Wounds Are Still Felt
A half-century after the killings in Northern Ireland, symbols of division and hostility still hold their potency.
By Alan Cowell
Jan. 29, 2022
The events themselves took a matter of minutes to unfold in a paroxysm of one-sided gunfire that snuffed out more than a dozen lives, each one of them a new martyr in Northern Ireland’s somber annals of loss. But the effort to unravel what happened in those brief moments — to parse the antecedents and the outcomes, to trace the lines of command on the grisly day that became known as Bloody Sunday — devoured years of costly inquiry.
And when the questioning was done, the conclusion was drawn by some that the killings by British soldiers on Jan. 30, 1972, had earned a place alongside the Sharpeville shootings in South Africa in 1960 and the Tiananmen Square killings in Beijing in 1989 as exemplars of lethal violence in the name of a state, directed against those who sought to defy its writ.
The failings were legion, committed by a unit of the British military once known for its gallantry and prowess in theaters of conflict as far-flung as Arnhem in the Netherlands during World War II and the Falklands in 1982. Much soul-searching and much obfuscation swirled around the central question of whether, as some of the soldiers initially insisted, they had opened fire in response to an armed and potentially lethal attack by the outlawed, underground Irish Republican Army.
ImageBritish soldiers and civilians on Jan. 30, 1972, in the Bogside district of Derry, Northern Ireland.
British soldiers and civilians on Jan. 30, 1972, in the Bogside district of Derry, Northern Ireland.Credit...Popperfoto via Getty Images
Image
British soldiers used a water cannon on protesters before the shootings began.
British soldiers used a water cannon on protesters before the shootings began.Credit...Gilles Peress/Magnum
Image
A standoff between youths and British soldiers before soldiers opened fire on Bloody Sunday.
A standoff between youths and British soldiers before soldiers opened fire on Bloody Sunday.Credit...William L. Rukeyser/Getty Images
That was not what an official inquiry finally determined in June 2010. None of the fallen — 13 were killed that day, and one died of injuries later — posed “a threat of causing death or serious injury, or indeed was doing anything else that could on any view justify” the firing of over 100 rounds of military-grade ammunition from automatic rifles.
The consequences were enormous, reverberating far beyond the hardscrabble Northern Ireland city of Derry, known to British officials and many members of its Protestant minority as Londonderry, where the bloodletting exploded. Four years earlier, in 1968, in the same mean streets of the city’s Bogside district — a crucible of anti-British sentiment — a civil rights march had dissolved into violent confrontation among mainly Roman Catholic protesters and the mainly Protestant police force, the Royal Ulster Constabulary. The clashes signaled the start of what became known as the Troubles, three decades of tangled sectarian strife that drew Britain’s army into the territory.
From then until the Good Friday peace agreement of 1998, more than 3,500 people died, caught up in the mutually exclusive visions of those, mainly Catholic, who were seeking a unified Ireland, and largely Protestant unionists who were committed to ever deeper ties with mainland Britain.
Opposition to the British Army was so intense that parts of the Bogside district were known as “no-go areas” where soldiers ventured at their peril, risking armed attack. Yet Bloody Sunday hardened the battle lines beyond all measure, strengthening the Irish Republican Army in particular.
Image
Jackie Duddy, 17, was said to be the first to die in the shootings. He was carried away by a small clutch of people, including the Rev. Edward Daly, who waved a bloodstained handkerchief as an impromptu flag of truce.
Jackie Duddy, 17, was said to be the first to die in the shootings. He was carried away by a small clutch of people, including the Rev. Edward Daly, who waved a bloodstained handkerchief as an impromptu flag of truce.Credit...Mirrorpix
Image
Protesters, who were overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, lobbed rocks at the army, which responded at first with tear gas, rubber bullets and a water cannon.
Protesters, who were overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, lobbed rocks at the army, which responded at first with tear gas, rubber bullets and a water cannon.Credit...PL Gould/Images, via Getty Images
Image
Bernard McGuigan, 41, a factory worker who was shot in the back of the head, was among the last of the 13 protesters to die on Bloody Sunday.
Bernard McGuigan, 41, a factory worker who was shot in the back of the head, was among the last of the 13 protesters to die on Bloody Sunday.Credit...Gilles Peress/Magnum
“Many young people I have talked to in prison have told me they would have never joined the I.R.A. had it not been for what they witnessed on Bloody Sunday,” the Rev. Edward Daly, a priest who helped carry away a victim of the shootings, said in an interview in 1998. Father Daly died in 2016.
Jan. 30, 1972, began in familiar ways. Civil rights activists had signaled their plans to demonstrate against the recently introduced British practice of interning people without trial. The authorities outlawed the demonstration, but it went ahead anyhow.
Protesters, who were overwhelmingly Catholic, lobbed rocks at the army. The army responded with rubber bullets, tear gas and a water cannon. Back from the fray, a top commander of the paratroopers issued orders for his troops to arrest suspected rioters without pursuing peaceful protesters too closely.
But a midranking officer ignored part of the order and allowed members of the unit to break cover behind a barricade. As a result, there was “no separation between peaceful marchers and those who had been rioting, and no means whereby soldiers could identify and arrest only the latter,” the 2010 inquiry report said.
The spasm of killing unfolded with chaotic speed. “Only some 10 minutes elapsed between the time soldiers moved in vehicles into the Bogside and the time the last of the civilians was shot,” said the report, written by Lord Saville of Newdigate, an eminent British judge, whose inquiry had taken 12 years and cost an eye-watering $280 million.
“Bloody Sunday was a tragedy for the bereaved and the wounded, and a catastrophe for the people of Northern Ireland,” it concluded.
In the week after the shootings, in the Republic of Ireland, a crowd burned down the British Embassy in Dublin. Protests against the killings spread as far as Chicago. And in Derry itself, huge crowds turned out for the funerals of 11 of the 13 killed on Bloody Sunday.
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A mass funeral was held for some Bloody Sunday victims days after the shooting.
A mass funeral was held for some Bloody Sunday victims days after the shooting.Credit...Bettmann, via Getty Images
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“Bloody Sunday was a tragedy for the bereaved and the wounded, and a catastrophe for the people of Northern Ireland,” a report released in 2010 concluded.
“Bloody Sunday was a tragedy for the bereaved and the wounded, and a catastrophe for the people of Northern Ireland,” a report released in 2010 concluded.Credit...Gilles Peress/Magnum
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Huge crowds showed up for the victims’ funerals in Derry.
Huge crowds showed up for the victims’ funerals in Derry.Credit...Press Association, via Reuters
According to the reconstruction put forward in the 2010 inquiry, the first to die as he ran from the soldiers was Jackie Duddy, 17, a boxer whose image — he was carried away by a small clutch of people, including Father Daly — became as much a totem of the day’s horrors as the photograph of Hector Pieterson, a 12-year-old South African schoolboy who was shot and killed in Soweto in 1976 when the police opened fire on Black students protesting apartheid-era education. In the imagery of Bloody Sunday, the 17-year-old seems limp, and Father Daly waves a bloodstained handkerchief as an impromptu flag of truce.
Among the last of the 13 to die on the day — photographed in a pool of his own blood — was Bernard McGuigan, 41, a factory worker who was shot in the back of the head as he went to help Patrick Doherty, 31, a civil rights activist and factory worker who had been shot as he tried to crawl to safety.
In theory, each of the British soldiers directly involved in the shootings — none of whom was ever officially identified by name or put on trial — had been issued rules of engagement listed on a so-called Yellow Card that set narrow limits for opening fire. Those restrictions were largely ignored, the Saville report said.
Of the 13 who died on Jan. 30, only one, Gerald Donaghey, 17, a member of the youth wing of the I.R.A., was found to be in possession of nail bombs. He was killed by a bullet that had already passed through the body of Gerard McKinney, 35, a soccer team manager, who also died. Mr. Donaghey had not been trying to throw nail bombs when he became collateral damage, according to the Saville inquiry; he was running away from the soldiers.
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A 13-minute silent vigil was held on Feb. 5, 1972, in Chicago in memory of the victims in Northern Ireland.
A 13-minute silent vigil was held on Feb. 5, 1972, in Chicago in memory of the victims in Northern Ireland.Credit...Edward Kitch/Associated Press
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British soldiers searching women’s handbags on Feb. 6, 1972, near the Northern Ireland town of Newry, where a huge demonstration had been planned.
British soldiers searching women’s handbags on Feb. 6, 1972, near the Northern Ireland town of Newry, where a huge demonstration had been planned.Credit...Michel Laurent/Associated Press
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The rally that had been planned for Newry instead took place outside the town to avoid confrontation with the army.
The rally that had been planned for Newry instead took place outside the town to avoid confrontation with the army.Credit...Michel Laurent/Associated Press
The Saville report had been ordered by Prime Minister Tony Blair in 1998, years after an inquiry in 1972 had been widely dismissed as a whitewash in favor of the British establishment and the soldiers on the ground. On June 15, 2010, another prime minister, David Cameron, finally offered an apology, calling the killings “unjustified and unjustifiable.”
But such wounds are slow to heal. Just in the run-up to Sunday’s commemoration, taunting the survivors, someone clambered up light poles in Derry to unfurl the regimental banner of the Parachute Regiment. A full half-century after the killings, the symbols of division and hostility still held their potency.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/29/world/europe/bloody-sunday-ireland.html
Russians back off after Irish fishermen vow to disrupt war games
Newsroom
The Russian military, which had announced naval drills off the coast of Ireland, agreed to move them further away after fishermen vowed to disrupt them. CNN's Donie O'Sullivan speaks with two of the fishermen who were involved in the process.Source: CNN
https://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2022/01/29/russia-naval-games-irish-fisherman-osullivan-nrwknd-vpx.cnn
Gov tells Bette Midler to kiss dog's 'heinie' - and shows it
LEAH WILLINGHAM
Fri, January 28, 2022, 11:08 AM·2 min read
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Gov. Jim Justice has a message for singer and actress Bette Midler, who called West Virginians “poor, illiterate and strung out” in a tweet after Sen. Joe Manchin refused to support President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better Act.
The 70-year-old Republican governor ended his televised State of the State address Thursday night by lifting up his English bulldog and flashing its rear end to the cameras and crowd.
“Babydog tells Bette Midler and all those out there: Kiss her heinie," Justice said, grinning as people applauded and some gave him a standing ovation.
Justice had spent more than an hour touting the state's accomplishments, including two recently announced economic development projects.
“Absolutely too many people doubted us," he said. "They never believed in West Virginia. ... They told every bad joke in the world about us.”
The crowd in the House of Delegates gallery included lawmakers, state Supreme Court justices, agency heads and members of the high school girl's basketball team Justice coaches, who were sitting in the gallery.
Not everyone was amused. In a tweet, West Virginia Democratic Del. Shawn Fluharty called the move “embarrassing and beneath the office.”
“The @WVGovernor brought his Babydog and pony show to the State of the State and pulled this stunt as some bold statement. It was nothing short of embarrassing and beneath the office,” he said. “Jim Justice habitually lowers the bar of our state. They don’t laugh with us, but at us.”
Manchin, a Democrat, effectively tanked his party’s signature $2 trillion domestic policy initiative that would have poured billions of dollars into child care, health care and other services.
“What #JoeManchin, who represents a population smaller than Brooklyn, has done to the rest of America, who wants to move forward, not backward, like his state, is horrible,” Midler tweeted. “He sold us out. He wants us all to be just like his state, West Virginia. Poor, illiterate and strung out.”
After receiving backlash, Midler apologized “to the good people of WVA” for her “outburst" in follow-up tweet later that day.
The Associated Press sent an email to Midler's publicist Friday requesting comment.
https://news.yahoo.com/gov-tells-bette-midler-kiss-160823546.html
Stalwart Irish fishermen uncowed by Russian threats and diplomatic games
Rachel Maddow updates reporting on the Irish fisherman who intend to continue to fish where they always do even if it means disrupting Russian navy war games planned for those same waters. Mixed signals from the Russian embassy have not altered the fishermen's plans.
Jan. 28, 2022
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/stalwart-irish-fishermen-uncowed-by-russian-threats-and-diplomatic-games-131892293711
Good for the fishermen!
Fishermen plan to disrupt Russian military exercise off Irish coast
Published3 days ago
A group of fishermen is planning to peacefully disrupt Russia's plans to hold a military exercise off the coast of Ireland in February.
The chief executive of the Irish South and West Fish Producers Organisation (IS&WFPO) has said the area is "very important" for members.
Patrick Murphy says they want to protect biodiversity and marine life.
But Russia's Ambassador to Ireland says controversy around the exercise is "hugely overblown".
On Monday, Yury Filatov held a press conference at the Russian Embassy in Dublin.
He said the planned exercises by Russian naval vessels was "not in any way a threat to Ireland or anybody else" and that no harm was intended by it.
Mr Filatov said three or four ships would be involved, but he did not know if missiles or submarines would be used.
He said: "There is nothing to be disturbed, concerned or anguished about and I have extensively explained that to our Irish colleagues."
Mr Filatov also said the exercise was a "non-story" which has become part of a "propaganda campaign" about an alleged Russian threat to Europe.
Mr Filatov said the exercise posed no threat
Meanwhile, Mr Murphy said he spoke to an official of the Russian Embassy on Tuesday afternoon.
He said the official told him "it would be reckless" for the fishing organisation to send boats out to intervene with the exercise.
Mr Murphy said he assured the official that the fishermen's organisation would not be sending boats out to specifically engage with the Russian Navy.
"We are letting them know that we will be fishing in our traditional fishing areas and if this has an impact on their exercise this would be considered a peaceful protest," Mr Murphy added.
'These warships shouldn't be having war games'
Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, Mr Murphy said there were currently "half a billion tonnes" of blue whiting in the area that move up along the coastline, representing "a one million tonne fishery".
"This is a very important ground where fish come to spawn... and we don't know what's going on out here.
"We should be entitled to go fishing there, and if we're fishing there then these boats, these warships, shouldn't be having war games."
Mr Murphy said an issue of "real concern" was that their fishing gear at the back of their boats could get tangled with a submarine.
He has called for the government to intervene.
Labour Leader Alan Kelly has contacted Mr Murphy to say he will raise the matter in the Dáil (Irish Parliament).
On Monday, Tánaiste (Deputy Prime Minister) Leo Varadkar said he would be briefed on the situation by Foreign Affairs Minister Simon Coveney, and that the minister would also brief the Cabinet on Tuesday.
Mr Varadkar said: "While the Russian military can, within the law, carry out these exercises off our waters and in our economic zone, they are certainly unwelcome and that has been communicated to the authorities."
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60130486
And insurance companies.
Aon should be concerned right now.
Supreme court rejects Trump bid to shield documents from January 6 panel
Court’s move leaves no legal impediment to turning National Archives documents over to congressional committee
Hugo Lowell in Washington
Thu 20 Jan 2022 01.28 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/19/us-capitol-riot-trump-documents-national-archives
New York AG says Trump’s company misled banks, tax officials
By MICHAEL R. SISAK
today
https://apnews.com/article/business-trump-investigations-donald-trump-new-york-b4895a63c5aee3991a2ffc42becfb564
NEW YORK (AP) — The New York attorney general’s office late Tuesday told a court its investigators had uncovered evidence that former President Donald Trump’s company used “fraudulent or misleading” asset valuations to get loans and tax benefits.
The court filing said state authorities haven’t yet decided whether to bring a civil lawsuit in connection with the allegations, but that investigators need to question Trump and his two eldest children as part of the probe.
Trump and his lawyers say the investigation is politically motivated.
In the court documents, Attorney General Letitia James’ office gave its most detailed accounting yet of a long-running investigation of allegations that Trump’s company exaggerated the value of assets to get favorable loan terms, or misstated what land was worth to slash its tax burden.
The Trump Organization, it said, had overstated the value of land donations made in New York and California on paperwork submitted to the IRS to justify several million dollars in tax deductions.
The company misreported the size of Trump’s Manhattan penthouse, saying it was nearly three times its actual size — a difference in value of about $200 million, James’ office said, citing deposition testimony from Trump’s longtime financial chief Allen Weisselberg, who was charged last year with tax fraud in a parallel criminal investigation.
James’ office detailed its findings in a court motion seeking to force Trump, his daughter Ivanka Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. to comply with subpoenas seeking their testimony.
Investigators, the court papers said, had “developed significant additional evidence indicating that the Trump Organization used fraudulent or misleading asset valuations to obtain a host of economic benefits, including loans, insurance coverage, and tax deductions.”
Messages seeking comment were left with lawyers for the Trumps.
Trump’s legal team has sought to block the subpoenas, calling them “an unprecedented and unconstitutional maneuver.” They say James is improperly attempting to obtain testimony that could be used in the parallel criminal investigation, being overseen by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
Trump sued James in federal court last month, seeking to put an end to her investigation. In the suit, his lawyers claimed the attorney general, a Democrat, had violated the Republican’s constitutional rights in a “thinly-veiled effort to publicly malign Trump and his associates.”
In the past, the Republican ex-president has decried James’ investigation and Bragg’s probe as part of a “witch hunt.”
In a statement late Tuesday, James office said that it hasn’t decided whether to pursue legal action, but said the evidence gathered so far shows the investigation should proceed unimpeded.
“For more than two years, the Trump Organization has used delay tactics and litigation in an attempt to thwart a legitimate investigation into its financial dealings,” James said. “Thus far in our investigation, we have uncovered significant evidence that suggests Donald J. Trump and the Trump Organization falsely and fraudulently valued multiple assets and misrepresented those values to financial institutions for economic benefit.”
Although James’ civil investigation is separate from the criminal investigation, her office has been involved in both, dispatching several lawyers to work side-by-side with prosecutors from the Manhattan D.A.’s office.
James’ office said that under state law, it could seek ”a broad range of remedies” against companies found to have committed commercial fraud, “including revoking a license to conduct business within the state, moving to have an officer or director removed from board of directors, and restitution and disgorgement of ill-gotten gains.”
In the court papers, James’ office said evidence shows that Trump’s company:
-- Listed his Seven Springs estate north of New York City as being worth $291 million, based on the dubious assumption that it could reap $161 million from building nine luxury homes.
-- Added a “brand premium” of 15% to 30% to the value of some properties because they carried the Trump name, despite financial statements explicitly stating they didn’t incorporate brand value.
-- Inflated the value of a suburban New York golf club by millions of dollars by counting fees for memberships that weren’t sold or were never paid.
-- Valued a Park Avenue condominium tower at $350 million, based on proceeds it could reap from unsold units, even though many of those apartments were likely to sell for less because they were covered by rent stabilization laws.
— Valued an apartment being rented to Ivanka Trump at as high as $25 million, even though she had an option to buy it for $8.5 million.
-- Said in documents that its stake in an office building, 40 Wall Street, was worth $525 million to $602 million -- between two to three times the estimate reached by appraisers working for the lender Capital One.
One judge has previously sided with James on an earlier request to question another Trump son, Trump Organization executive Eric Trump, who ultimately sat for a deposition but declined to answer some questions.
Last year, the Manhattan district attorney brought tax fraud charges against the Trump Organization and Weisselberg, its longtime chief financial officer.
Weisselberg pleaded not guilty to charges alleging he and the company evaded taxes on lucrative fringe benefits paid to executives.
Both investigations are at least partly related to allegations made in news reports and by Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, that Trump had a history of misrepresenting the value of assets.
The disclosures about the attorney general’s investigation came the same day as Trump ally Rudy Giuliani and other members of the legal team that had sought to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election were subpoenaed by a House committee investigating the U.S. Capitol insurrection.
https://apnews.com/article/business-trump-investigations-donald-trump-new-york-b4895a63c5aee3991a2ffc42becfb564
I really don't see what the issue is with Boris Johnson. Trump did this every day and worse and we were still stuck with him.
UK’s Boris Johnson in leadership crisis, accused of lying about ‘industrial scale partying’ during Covid lockdowns
PUBLISHED MON, JAN 17 20222:31 AM ESTUPDATED MON, JAN 17 20225:28 AM EST
Holly Ellyatt
KEY POINTS
U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s position is looking increasingly vulnerable.
There have been numerous reports of parties taking place in government buildings, including Johnson’s official office in Downing Street, during periods of Covid lockdowns and restrictions.
Johnson has admitted to attending a drinks party though he insisted he thought it was a work event.
Keir Starmer, the leader of the opposition Labour Party, has accused Johnson of breaking Covid laws.
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/17/uks-boris-johnson-clings-to-power-as-partygate-scandal-rumbles-on.html
The fake electors from Michigan tried to send their forms to the National Archives.
They sent them back.
Fake Documents Declaring Trump and Pence the 2020 Winners Sent to but Rejected by National Archives: Report
According to Politico, the false certificates of ascertainment were sent from Arizona and Michigan groups but they were instead turned over to the Jan. 6 congressional committee
By Aaron Parsley
January 11, 2022 03:57 PM
https://people.com/politics/forged-documents-declaring-trump-pence-winners-sent-to-national-archives/
Two interesting things this week.
The US DOJ expanded their domestic terrorist task force this week.
And then charges of sedition.
Merrick Garland is playing this very close to the vest.
I suspect he would not have brought these indictments if he couldn't prove his case at trial.
If I was Trump and his band of idiots I'd start worrying if I am next.
Maddow's bombshell: MSNBC host reveals suspicious link between GOP's "forged" election documents
“We now know: multiple states — Republicans in multiple states — had sent in false assertions and forged documents"
By ALEX HENDERSON
PUBLISHED JANUARY 13, 2022 6:03PM (EST)
https://www.salon.com/2022/01/13/maddows-bombshell-msnbc-host-reveals-suspicious-link-between-gops-forged-documents_partner/
MSNBC's Rachel Maddow has been offering in-depth analysis of MAGA Republicans' efforts to undermine the Electoral College results in states that now-President Joe Biden won in 2020, including sending out fake electors. And in a recent broadcast, the liberal MSNBC host reported that those fake electors tried to pull off that deception in "at least" five different states.
Maddow showed five Electoral College documents side by side on the screen, explaining, "I picked these five states to show you what the real electoral vote ascertainment documents look like. I picked these five because thanks to the watchdog group American Oversight, we now know that in all five of these states, Republicans also prepared forged fake documents that were sent to the government — proclaiming that actually, these other electors were the real electors from these states, and they were casting the states' Electoral College votes not for Biden, but for Trump."
...
MUCH MORE
https://www.salon.com/2022/01/13/maddows-bombshell-msnbc-host-reveals-suspicious-link-between-gops-forged-documents_partner/
Analysis: U.S. built 'textbook' case of sedition charges for Capitol attack -legal experts
By Jan Wolfe
January 14, 2022 12:04 PM GMT
Last Updated 44 minutes ago
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-built-textbook-case-sedition-charges-capitol-attack-legal-experts-2022-01-14/?taid=61e17057b732710001520c5e&utm_campaign=trueAnthem:+Trending+Content&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=twitter
Jan 14 (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors appear to have proceeded carefully in bringing sedition charges against 11 people linked to a far-right militia who took part in the deadly 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol and are likely to obtain convictions, legal experts said.
An indictment was released on Thursday against the founder of Oath Keepers, Stewart Rhodes, and 10 purported members of the group, accusing them of conspiring to forcefully oppose the transfer of power between then-President Donald Trump, a Republican, to his successor, Democrat Joe Biden.
Seditious conspiracy is defined as attempting "to overthrow, put down or to destroy by force the government of the United States" and the U.S. Department of Justice has been wary of lodging such a charge in part because of losing a case 12 years ago, a former government lawyer said.
The indictment for the Jan. 6 attack is "thorough and rigorous," said Alan Rozenshtein, a former Justice Department national security lawyer who teaches at the University of Minnesota Law School.
"I don't think there is much the defendants can say here," said Rozenshtein. "This is the textbook definition of seditious conspiracy. If this isn't seditious conspiracy what is?"
The sedition charges are the first against participants in the storming of the building by Trump supporters after he gave a fiery speech repeating his false claims that his November 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread fraud. U.S. prosecutors have brought criminal charges against at least 725 people linked to the riot.
The seditious conspiracy charges were filed a year and a week after the assault amid concern from some Democrats and advocates that the Justice Department had been too sparing in bringing serious criminal charges against people who stormed the building or planned for violence.
The Oath Keepers are a loosely organized group of activists who believe that the federal government is encroaching on their rights, and focus on recruiting current and former police, emergency services and military members.
'STACK' ATTACK
Members of the group moved up the Capitol steps on Jan. 6, 2021, in a military-style "stack" formation and wearing tactical gear, the indictment said. Nine of the 11 people named in the indictment were already facing charges.
"We aren't going through this without civil war. Too late for that. Prepare your mind, body and spirit," Rhodes said in a November 5, 2020, Signal message, according to prosecutors.
They said that in December 2020 Rhodes wrote of the certification of Biden's election win scheduled for Jan. 6 that "there is no standard political or legal way out of this."
Amy Cooter, an expert on U.S. militia movements and a lecturer at Vanderbilt University, said: "It's important to reserve seditious conspiracy for serious cases, and I personally think this is one."
A failed 2010 prosecution against a Christian nationalist militia called the Hutaree gave federal prosecutors pause, said Rozenshtein.
Members of the Hutaree were charged with conspiring to kill a Michigan police officer and then ambush the officer's colleagues who would have gathered for the funeral. But the seditious conspiracy charges were dropped after a judge ruled prosecutors had failed to prove that the militia members were doing anything more than talking about their hatred for authority.
Legal experts said that high-profile outcome highlighted a common issue in seditious conspiracy cases: that the charges might encroach on the broad free speech protections afforded by the U.S. Constitution.
In September 2020, amid civil unrest, then-U.S. Attorney General William Barr urged federal prosecutors to consider filing seditious conspiracy charges against people who engaged in violence at anti-police protests. That move drew immediate pushback from civil liberties group, who said the seditious conspiracy statute should be reserved for more dire threats to U.S. democracy.
Lawyers and extremism researchers said the Justice Department appears to have carefully vetted the Oath Keepers indictment, possibly using cooperating witnesses to build a more clear-cut case of attempting to overthrow the government.
One police officer who battled rioters on Jan. 6 died the day after the attack and four who guarded the Capitol later died by suicide. Four rioters also died, including a woman who was shot by a police officer while trying to climb through a shattered window. About 140 police officers were injured during the hours-long attack.
"The government has a strong case against the Oath Keepers," said Joshua Braver, a professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Unlike the Hutaree, the Oath Keepers "executed their real agreement to obstruct the peaceful transfer of power."
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-built-textbook-case-sedition-charges-capitol-attack-legal-experts-2022-01-14/?taid=61e17057b732710001520c5e&utm_campaign=trueAnthem:+Trending+Content&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=twitter
THE PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED IN THE JANUARY 6TH, 2021 INSURRECTION MUST BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE
https://insurrectionindex.org/
The Insurrection Index - goes live 06 Jan 22
More than 1,000 US public figures aided Trump’s effort to overturn election
Ed Pilkington
@edpilkington
The Guardian
Wed 5 Jan 2022 02.00 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/05/trump-capitol-attack-democracy-election-insurrection-index
The index shows the extent to which Donald Trump’s attempt to undermine the foundations of presidential legitimacy has metastasized across the US. Photograph: Samuel Corum/Getty Images
----------------
The Insurrection Index identifies those who acted as accomplices by participating in 6 January attack or spreading Trump’s ‘big lie’
More than 1,000 Americans in positions of public trust acted as accomplices in Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election result, participating in the violent insurrection at the US Capitol on 6 January or spreading the “big lie” that the vote count had been rigged.
The startling figure underlines the extent to which Trump’s attempt to undermine the foundations of presidential legitimacy has metastasized across the US. Individuals who engaged in arguably the most serious attempt to subvert democracy since the civil war are now inveigling themselves into all levels of government, from Congress and state legislatures down to school boards and other local public bodies.
The finding that 1,011 individuals in the public realm played a role in election subversion around the 2020 presidential race comes from a new pro-democracy initiative that launched on Wednesday.
The Insurrection Index seeks to identify all those who supported Trump in his bid to hold on to power despite losing the election, in the hope that they can be held accountable and prevented from inflicting further damage to the democratic infrastructure of the country.
All of the more than 1,000 people recorded on the index have been invested with the public’s trust, having been entrusted with official positions and funded with taxpayer dollars. Many are current or former government employees at federal, state or local levels.
Among them are 213 incumbents in elected office and 29 who are running as candidates for positions of power in upcoming elections. There are also 59 military veterans, 31 current or former law enforcement officials, and seven who sit on local school boards.
When the index goes live on Thursday, it will contain a total of 1,404 records of those who played a role in trying to overturn the 2020 election. In addition to the 1,011 individuals, it lists 393 organizations deemed to have played a part in subverting democracy.
The index is the brainchild of Public Wise, a voting rights group whose mission is to fight for government that reflects the will and the rights of voters. Christina Baal-Owens, the group’s executive director, said that the index was conceived as an ongoing campaign designed to keep insurrectionists out of office.
“These are folks who silenced the voices of American voters, who took a validly held election and created fraudulent information to try to silence voters. They have no business being near legislation or being able to affect the lives of American people,” she said.
The project has been set up with legal advice from Marc Elias, one of the most influential election lawyers in the US who was Hillary Clinton’s top counsel in the 2016 presidential campaign and who successfully led Joe Biden’s resistance to Trump’s blitzkrieg of lawsuits contesting the 2020 results. Elias told the Guardian that the index was needed urgently to avoid history repeating itself in 2024 or beyond.
“We are one, maybe two elections away from a constitutional crisis over election subversion,” he said. “If we don’t recognize who was behind the attempt to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power, then next time we will be less prepared and it may succeed.”
Elias said he saw the index as an example of the kinds of robust action progressives need to take to combat an unprecedented wave of anti-democratic legislation emanating from Republicans in the past 12 months. While Trump had reshaped the right to be laser-focused on elections and winning at all costs, Democrats are spreading their energies thinly between a number of causes of which protecting democracy was just one, he said.
“The central theme of the Republican party today is undermining free and fair elections. Under Trump that has become a credential within the party, and we can’t let those folks win without a fight because if we do we lose our democracy.”
The individuals recorded on the index who are already in public office include the 147 members of Congress who objected to the certification of the 2020 election result. The list also names many elected officials in state legislatures across the nation, including states like Arizona that were ground zero for Trump’s efforts to steal the election from Biden.
Jake Hoffman, a lawmaker who represents Arizona’s 12th district, wrote to fellow Republicans a day before the Capitol insurrection urging them to pressure then vice-president Mike Pence into blocking Biden’s victory. “Vice-President Pence has the power to delay congressional certification and seek clarification from state legislatures in contested states as to which slate of electors are proper and accurate,” Hoffman wrote, reflecting a theory embraced by Trump that has been thoroughly rebutted.
The week before the insurrection, 17 Arizona state lawmakers wrote to Pence urging him to “block the use of any Electors from Arizona” despite multiple counts by then establishing that Biden had won the state by more than 10,000 votes. Among the signatories was Mark Finchem, a member of the Arizona House of representatives who was present at Trump’s “stop the steal” rally in Washington on 6 January and who is now vying to become Arizona secretary of state – the top election official who oversees the presidential count.
Among the 59 individuals on the index with military backgrounds is Christopher Warnagiris, who in June became the first active-duty member of the armed forces to be charged in relation with the Capitol assault. Despite facing nine counts of assault and violent entry, he has been permitted to continue serving within the training and education section at the Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia.
Public Wise has drawn on a number of public information sources to compile the index, working in partnership with other pro-democracy groups who have added specialist skills. The partners include American Oversight, a non-partisan organisation that has used freedom of information laws to extract information from government agencies that exposes participants in the big lie.
“The goal is to build up a holistic picture so that nothing can fall through the cracks and no one can slip away,” said Austin Evers, the executive director of American Oversight. “We ask: who is this cc’d on this email? What handle is this on a social media account? If we can connect the dots we can ensure accountability can be brought to bear.”
Evers said that the most chilling revelation of the research was that the 6 January insurrection was inspired by an ideology that was supported by people in power. “State legislators in Arizona were involved in the run-up to January 6 and after January 6 used their positions to drive the big lie. That feels cancerous – the attack on democracy has the backing of political, and even governmental, infrastructure.”
One likely charge leveled at the new index by rightwing individuals and groups is that it is a form of “cancel culture”, designed to silence anyone airing uncomfortable views. Baal-Owens dismisses any such criticism.
“Our call to action is about voting, not doxing,” she said, pointing out that no private information is included on the index. “The call to action is not to show up at this person’s house or chase their child to school, but to allow every registered voter to have an educated way to cast their vote.”
The groups behind the index hope that it will alert voters to the anti-democratic actions of people running for elected office. The value of such a record, they believe, would increase exponentially were the Republicans to take back control of Congress in this year’s midterm elections, leading almost certainly to an abrupt halt in congressional investigations into the events of 6 January.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/05/trump-capitol-attack-democracy-election-insurrection-index
Companies race to stem flood of microplastic fibres into the oceans
New products range from washing machine filters and balls to fabrics made from kelp and orange peel
Damian Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Thu 30 Dec 2021 11.28 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/dec/30/companies-race-to-stem-flood-of-microplastic-fibres-into-the-oceans
From filters to bags to balls, the number of products aimed at stopping the torrent of microplastic fibres being flushed out of washing machines and into rivers and oceans is increasing rapidly.
Grundig recently became the first appliance manufacturer to integrate a microfibre filter into a washing machine, while a British company has developed a system that does away with disposable fibre-trapping filters.
Entrepreneurs are also tackling the problem at source, by developing biodegradable fabrics from kelp and orange peel, and tweaking a self-healing protein originally discovered in squid tentacles.
...
MUCH MORE
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/dec/30/companies-race-to-stem-flood-of-microplastic-fibres-into-the-oceans
CNN medical analyst rips Sen. Ron Johnson over vaccine comments: 'Most ignorant man in the United States Senate'
Kyle Moss
Wed, December 29, 2021, 2:32 AM·2 min read
On CNN’s Erin Burnett Out Front Tuesday, fill-in host Poppy Harlow spoke with CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner about all things COVID-19, and got his reaction to comments made by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) on Fox News during their Monday primetime block, regarding the safety and effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccines.
“We all hoped and prayed the vaccines would be 100 percent effective, 100 percent safe. But they’re not,” Johnson said on Monday. “We now know that fully vaccinated individuals can catch COVID, they can transmit COVID. So what’s the point?”
After playing a clip of Johnson’s interview, Harlow asked Reiner, who advised the White House medical team under President George W. Bush, what he thought of those comments.
“I’d say that he’s so misguided that it makes me wonder whether this is all just an act. And if it is an act, what does that say about what he thinks his constituents want to hear?” Reiner said, later adding. “And if this is not an act, then he is just the most ignorant man in the United States Senate. And that says a lot.”
Johnson has been making headlines with what some have considered to be outrageous claims throughout the course of the pandemic, causing many health experts to label him as one of the main perpetrators of misinformation happening in our country. And that’s something that Reiner says has consequences.
“His propagation of this nonsense that somehow vaccines don’t work and are unsafe is the reason why so many of his constituents are becoming hospitalized and are dying,” Reiner said.
Erin Burnett Out Front airs weeknights at 7 p.m. on CNN.
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/cnn-medical-analyst-rips-sen-ron-johnson-over-vaccine-comments-most-ignorant-man-in-the-united-states-senate-073255797.html
Capitol panel to investigate Trump call to Willard hotel in hours before attack
Committee to request contents of the call seeking to stop Biden’s certification and may subpoena Rudy Giuliani
Hugo Lowell in Washington
Mon 27 Dec 2021 10.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/27/capitol-attack-panel-investigate-trump-call-willard-hotel-before-assault
Congressman Bennie Thompson, the chairman of the House select committee investigating the Capitol attack, has said the panel will open an inquiry into Donald Trump’s phone call seeking to stop Joe Biden’s certification from taking place on 6 January hours before the insurrection.
The chairman said the select committee intended to scrutinize the phone call – revealed last month by the Guardian – should they prevail in their legal effort to obtain Trump White House records over the former president’s objections of executive privilege.
“That’s right,” Thompson said when asked by the Guardian whether the select committee would look into Trump’s phone call, and suggested House investigators had already started to consider ways to investigate Trump’s demand that Biden not be certified as president on 6 January.
Thompson said the select committee could not ask the National Archives for records about specific calls, but noted “if we say we want all White House calls made on January 5 and 6, if he made it on a White House phone, then obviously we would look at it there.”
The Guardian reported last month that Trump, according to multiple sources, called lieutenants based at the Willard hotel in Washington DC from the White House in the late hours of 5 January and sought ways to stop Biden’s certification from taking place on 6 January.
Trump first told the lieutenants his vice-president, Mike Pence, was reluctant to go along with the plan to commandeer his ceremonial role at the joint session of Congress in a way that would allow Trump to retain the presidency for a second term, the sources said.
But as Trump relayed to them the situation with Pence, the sources said, on at least one call, he pressed his lieutenants about how to stop Biden’s certification from taking place on 6 January in a scheme to get alternate slates of electors for Trump sent to Congress.
The former president’s remarks came as part of wider discussions he had with the lieutenants at the Willard – a team led by Trump lawyers Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Boris Epshteyn and Trump strategist Steve Bannon – about delaying the certification, the sources said.
House investigators in recent months have pursued an initial in into Trump’s contacts with lieutenants at the Willard, issuing a flurry of subpoenas compelling documents and testimony to crucial witnesses, including Bannon and Eastman.
But Thompson said that the select committee would now also investigate both the contents of Trump’s phone calls to the Willard and the White House’s potential involvement, in a move certain to intensify the pressure on the former president’s inner circle.
“If we get the information that we requested,” Thompson said of the select committee’s demands for records from the Trump White House and Trump aides, “those calls potentially will be reflected to the Willard hotel and whomever.”
A spokesperson for the select committee declined to comment about what else such a line of inquiry might involve. But a subpoena to Giuliani, the lead Trump lawyer at the Willard, is understood to be in the offing, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The Guardian reported that the night before the Capitol attack, Trump called the lawyers and non-lawyers at the Willard separately, because Giuliani did not want to have non-lawyers participate on sensitive calls and jeopardize claims to attorney-client privilege.
It was not clear whether Giulaini might invoke attorney-client privilege as a way to escape cooperating with the investigation in the event of a subpoena, but Congressman Jamie Raskin, a member of the select committee, noted the protection does not confer broad immunity.
“The attorney-client privilege does not operate to shield participants in a crime from an investigation into a crime,” Raskin said. “If it did, then all you would have to do to rob a bank is bring a lawyer with you, and be asking for advice along the way.”
The Guardian also reported Trump made several calls the day before the Capitol attack from both the White House residence, his preferred place to work, as well as the West Wing, but it was not certain from which location he phoned his top lieutenants at the Willard.
The distinction is significant as phone calls placed from the White House residence, even from a landline desk phone, are not automatically memorialized in records sent to the National Archives after the end of an administration.
That means even if the select committee succeeds in its litigation to pry free Trump’s call detail records from the National Archives, without testimony from people with knowledge of what was said, House investigators might only learn the target and time of the calls.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/27/capitol-attack-panel-investigate-trump-call-willard-hotel-before-assault
Capitol rioters hit with severe sentences and sharp reprimands from judges
Some of the longest sentences have gone to rioters charged with ‘assaulting a police officer with a dangerous weapon’
Maya Yang
Thu 23 Dec 2021 10.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/23/capitol-rioters-severe-sentences-reprimands-judges
Judges across the US have been handing down stiff sentences and hard words in recent weeks for extremist supporters of Donald Trump who took part in the 6 January insurrection at the US Capitol.
Since a federal judge sentenced Jacob Chansley, the US Capitol rioter nicknamed the “QAnon shaman” for his horned headdress, to 41 months in prison last month, more US judges have been delivering strict sentences to defendants charged over their roles in the attacks earlier this year.
Since the riots, federal prosecutors have brought cases against 727 individuals over their involvement in the deadly riots. With hundreds facing criminal charges, Trump has come under growing scrutiny from the House select committee investigating the attacks.
The longest sentence so far was handed down to a Florida man who threw a wooden plank and fire extinguisher at police officers during the riots. On 17 December, Judge Tanya Chutkan sentenced Robert Palmer to 63 months of jail time, describing the prison term as “the consequence of those actions”.
According to Chutkan, individuals who attempted to “violently overthrow the government” and “stop the peaceful transition of power” would be met with “absolutely certain punishment”.
At his hearing, Palmer said he was “really, really ashamed” of his behavior, adding that he was “absolutely devastated” to see the “coldness and calculation” that he used to attack Capitol police.
On Tuesday, a Washington state man was sentenced to 46 months of prison time for assaulting police officers with a speaker and a metal baton during the riots. According to court documents, Devlyn Thompson helped move police shields up against a line of rioters in a tunnel, as well as hit police officers.
US District Judge Royce Lamberth told Thompson, “The violence that happened that day was such a blatant disregard to the institutions of government … You’re shoving and pushing … and participating in this riot for hours.”
Thompson is the second rioter, after Palmer, to be sentenced for the felony of assaulting a police officer with a dangerous weapon. More than 140 other rioters face the same charge.
Lamberth also sentenced an 81-year-old Army veteran on the same day to three years of probation for illegally breaching the Capitol.
Gary Wickersham, one of the oldest of more than 700 rioters facing charges, was sentenced to 90 days of home detention, and will also have to pay a $2,000 fine and $500 for building damage.
Defense lawyers argued against any confinement, saying that Wickersham would be unable to visit his grandchildren during his “golden years”.
During his hearing, Wickersham asked for “mercy” from Lamberth and explained that he went to the Capitol because “you get bored” sitting at home.
“Mr Wickersham, I appreciate what you’ve done here. I think you have led the way for others to recognize that the jig is up,” said Lamberth. The 78-year-old judge also told Wickersham that he is “the first defendant I’ve had that’s older than me in quite some time”.
On Tuesday, a Pennsylvania man was also sentenced over his involvement in the riots after his wife accidentally implicated him in a Facebook status. US District Judge James Boasberg sentenced Gary Edwards to one year of probation, 200 hours of community service, as well as a $2,500 fine and $500 in damage fees.
In a since deleted Facebook post, Edward’s wife wrote, “Okay ladies, let me tell you what happened as my husband was there inside the Capitol,” adding, “these were people who watched their rights being taken away, their votes stolen from them, their state officials violating the constitution of their country.”
According to authorities, Edwards took pictures, helped teargassed protesters and entered an office of an unidentified congressional official.
“There really is no more serious and profound action democracy takes than the certifying of a lawful and fair election,” Boasberg said. “And to the extent anyone would interfere with that, particularly with force of violence, they strike at the root of democracy,” he added.
That message would seem to go for organizers of the 6 January events as well as participants in the violence.
On 22 November, US District Judge Royce Lamberth sentenced Capitol rioter Frank Scavo to 60 days in prison, one of the strictest sentences handed down to a misdemeanor defendant and more than four times the prosecutor’s recommendation of two weeks.
Scavo, a Trump supporter from Pennsylvania and former school board official, was found guilty of chartering buses to transport approximately 200 residents from Pennsylvania to the Capitol on 6 January.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/23/capitol-rioters-severe-sentences-reprimands-judges
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