Tag Archives: politics

Republican Election Fraud

The biggest election fraud is Republican lies about elections. Joyce Vance details and debunks the latest in this morning’s post. One example: The viral claim of “ballot harvesting” that turns out to be a 25-year postal employee delivering mailed-in ballots to the election office. Which is literally 100% legal and his job.

Then there are the voter registration purges, Virginia, Texas, and Alabama among them. State officials purge from voter registration rolls anyone who has ever checked “non-citizen” or left that box blank when applying for a driver’s license or on any other official form. Except that this eliminates people who have become citizens, as well as those who erroneously fill out forms. And many who are removed through plain old human error during the purges.

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Letter to My Sister

Red poster, blue and white print: Vote as if the future depends on it. It does.

One of my sisters told me she doesn’t want to hear any more about the election. She says it’s too hard to figure out who is telling the truth. She thinks this year’s election and these politicians are no different than in any other year. 

A lot of people feel that way. They are wrong. This election really is different. 

Please listen. This is important. Our cousins include people who are Black, people who are immigrants, people who are Asian. I have friends who are gay and trans. My husband and children are Jewish. All of them are targets of the right-wing haters led by Donald Trump. If he wins, all of them are in danger. If he wins, our entire country is in danger.

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True Crime Stories and Republican Lies

Image showing decrease in violent crime is from FBI Quarterly Crime Report comparing first quarter of 2024 with first quarter of 2023. 

Crime is falling in the United States. Crime rose during the Trump presidency. Crime has fallen in every year of Biden’s presidency. 

Homicides are falling

Violent crime is falling

Crime is falling in big cities. Crime is falling in blue states. Crime is falling across the country.

Republicans, following Trump’s lead, continue to lie about crime in the United States. Americans continue to believe those lies.  

One example: Trump claimed that “murders & violent crime hit unimaginable records” in New York City. That’s a lie, reports NBC:

“However, major crimes in New York City are down this year by 2.3%, according to police department data comparing year-to-date figures to the same period in 2023.

“Those figures for last year were also far below the highs from recent decades. In 1990, more than 527,000 major crimes were reported, compared to more than 126,000 last year, according to New York police data — a drop of more than 75%.” 

And it’s not just New York City. The Brennan Center for Justice reported:

“Drawing on data from 38 cities across the country, the Council on Criminal Justice reported that homicide declined by 10 percent in 2023. It also noted declines in assaults, gun assaults, burglary, and larceny, but a sharp spike in motor vehicle thefts.

“Similarly, Jeff Asher, a researcher and expert in data on crime and public safety, studied murder data from 175 cities and found a 7 percent decline in murders through December 7, 2023, compared to 2022. These cities are from across the country and include jurisdictions led by Republicans and Democrats alike.

“A murder decline of this magnitude would be historic; the sharpest one-year drop on record occurred in 1996 when the number of murders nationwide fell by a little more than 9 percent compared to 1995.” 

Trump’s latest lies target migrants, just as his first campaign announcement did. There is no migrant crime wave. Migrants are more law-abiding than U.S. citizens. Again, the Brennan Center for Justice analyzes data and focuses on facts

“In the past few months, politicians and certain media outlets have latched on to a narrative that recent immigrants, especially undocumented ones, are causing spikes in crime. Instead of gathering data and examining the issue empirically, they are making this broad assertion based on highly publicized individual incidents of crime by undocumented immigrants. …

“Substantial research has assessed the relationship between immigration and crime. Numerous studies show that immigration is not linked to higher levels of crime, but rather the opposite. Studies have also examined the impact of the concentration of immigrants in a community on crime patterns, finding that immigration is associated with lower crime rates and an increase in structural factors — such as social connection and economic opportunity — that are linked to neighborhood safety.”

Republican lies continue to convince Americans. Polls show almost two-thirds of Americans extremely worried about crime, with 77 percent believing the lie that crime is increasing. 

Instead of just reporting Republican lies, it’s time for the media to call them out as lies—every single time these lies are told. 

Want more on this subject? Check out Judd Legum’s excellent analysis in “Why so many Americans have misconceptions about crime trends.” He documents specific, recent lies about Chicago and Detroit by Trump and Republican Senator Tim Scott–and media failure to adequately rebut these easily disproven lies.

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ICYMI: Killing the news; Pinocchio politics; Trump’s foreign adventures; “Kevlar Ken” Paxton

Killing the news: Sadly, the newspaper where I first wrote about 60 years ago became one of the latest victims of a vulture hedge fund. The Litchfield Independent Review will end its almost-150-year run this month, alone with the Hutchinson Leader and seven other Minnesota local newspapers. They are not alone. Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism reports on the devastating losses of small-town newspapers over the past two decades:

“Since 2005, the country has lost almost a third of its newspapers — 2,886 — and today has only 6,005 survivors, including 4,792 weeklies, or nondailies, that are often the sole source of news and information in their communities. North and South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota lost the most newspapers per capita between 2005 and 2023. All but a handful were weeklies.”

NPR reported a couple of years ago on what happens when hedge fund “investors” buy newspapers. Alden is the hedge fund that acquired and is now closing these nine Minnesota newspapers, and also owns the St. Paul Pioneer Press.   

“Research shows that when local newspapers disappear or are dramatically gutted, communities tend to see lower voter turnout, increased polarization, a general erosion of civic engagement and an environment in which misinformation and conspiracy theories can spread more easily. …

“Coppins describes Alden as a specific type of firm: a “vulture hedge fund.” It has figured out how to make a profit by driving newspapers into the ground, he says, since Alden’s aim is not to make them into long-term sustainable businesses but rather maximize profits quickly to show it has made a winning investment.”

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ICYMI: Aleksei Navalny: “Here we need an elephant — a hot, fried elephant;” Nex Matters; more

Aleksei Navalny died at the age of 47, days after appearing in court. His crime: opposing Putin. Navalny had survived multiple attacks and poisoning, including a near-fatal 2020 poisoning. Even after extended treatment for that attempt on his life, he returned to Russia in 2021. Putin imprisoned him immediately, eventually transferring him to a cold, isolated prison north of the Arctic Circle. In that prison, he was repeatedly confined to a 7×10-foot, unheated punishment cell. He died in that punishment cell, “after a walk,” according to authorities. The New York Times published Navalny’s description of those “walks:” 

“In a letter from prison last month, Mr. Navalny described how he could walk a total of 11 steps from one end of the open-air space to the other, noting that the coldest it had been so far on one of his walks was -26 Fahrenheit.

“’Even at this temperature, you can walk for more than half an hour, so long as you have time to grow a new nose, ears and fingers,’ he wrote. ‘There are few things as invigorating as a walk in Yamal at 6:30 in the morning. And what a wonderful fresh breeze blows into the yard, despite the concrete enclosure, wow!’

“While walking there on a recent day, he said he was freezing and thinking about how Leonardo DiCaprio climbed into a dead horse to escape the cold in the wilderness survival movie ‘The Revenant.’ A dead horse would freeze in that part of Russia within 15 minutes, Mr. Navalny surmised.

“’Here we need an elephant — a hot, fried elephant,’ he said.”

After initially refusing to release Navalny’s body to his mother for burial and threatening to bury him inside the prison in an anonymous grave if she did not consent to a secret burial, officials finally agreed to release his body.

Read Navalny’s obituary here and his 2021 interview from prison here

Nex Matters

Nex Benedict was a 16-year-old high school sophomore in Oklahoma. Loved and supported at home, they were bullied at school because they were non-binary. Then the bullying escalated to a physical fight in a school bathroom, leaving Nex “badly beaten with bruises over their face and eyes, and with scratches on the back of their head.” The school suspended Nex, but not their attackers. The next day, Nex collapsed and died. 

Local police insist that the beating was not the cause of Nex’s death, though without evidence. The coroner’s report has not been released.

Bullying extends far beyond the students who attacked Nex. Popular Information reports: 

“Oklahoma’s top education official, Superintendent Ryan Walters (R), has instituted a number of policies targeting trans and LGBTQ+ students. … 

“Walters is not the only Oklahoma official elected official targeting LGBTQ people. According to a report by the ACLU, members of the Oklahoma legislature have introduced 54 anti-LGBTQ bills in 2024, the most of any state. …

“Walters has also enlisted the help of right-wing extremist Chaya Raichik. Raichik runs the X account Libs of TikTok, which routinely promotes anti-LGBTQ rhetoric to its 2.8 million followers. Raichik’s posts have, on numerous occasions, inspired violent threats, including bomb threats to schools and children’s hospitals across the country.” 

“[Raichik]  does not have a professional background in education and has never worked as a librarian. She is a former real estate agent based in New York, and does not even live in Oklahoma.” 

Before her appointment, Raichik repeatedly targeted schools, students, and teachers in Oklahoma and elsewhere, with her posts followed by bomb threats, harassment, and firings.  

Judge Frees Right Wing Terrorist 

A right-wing federal judge in California dismissed criminal charges against a right-wing white nationalist who organized violence at protests and attacked a police officer.  In doing so, U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney wrote that ““There seems to be little doubt that Defendants, or at least some members of RAM, engaged in criminal violence.” But, he claimed, the government “selectively prosecuted” right-wing terrorists and did not prosecute left-wing protesters. 

This was the second time that Robert Rundo was charged—after the same judge dismissed the 2018 indictment, Rundo fled the country and posted photos of himself traveling around Europe. He was eventually extradited from Romania after the federal appeals court reinstated the indictment.

The Los Angeles Times reported

“The federal indictment against Rundo alleged he and other defendants recruited new members to the organization, coordinated training in hand-to-hand combat, and traveled to political rallies to attack protesters at events across the state.

“The indictment alleged that various members participated in attacks at political rallies in Huntington Beach on March 25, 2017; in Berkeley on April 15, 2017; and in San Bernardino on June 10, 2017. Afterward, they allegedly trained for future events and celebrated by posting photos online of RAM members assaulting people.

“Rundo was accused not just of organizing the violent confrontations, but also of attacking protesters and police officers.”

Nursing Home Strike

Nancy Poll worked as a Certified Nursing Assistant and a scheduler in a rural MN nursing home. Writing in the Minnesota Reformer, she eloquently describes chronic short-staffing and too-low pay:

“Picture this: you’ve been rushing around all morning to get your nursing home residents bathed, dressed, and ready for breakfast, and you receive an alert that there’s an emergency in the next hall. You must assist, but that means you’ll have to cut short your time with Mr. Larsen, who enjoys recounting the plays from the Vikings game the night before, and skip checking in with Ms. Peterson to see how she’s doing with her daily crossword puzzle.

“This is the third time this week you’ve been pulled away to help cover a staffing gap. You feel heartsick, disempowered, and pulled in a thousand directions. Your residents crave connection and a routine. But you and the other workers at your nursing home are stretched thin, and one absence or challenge sets off a cascade of problems that affects the quality of care you and your coworkers are able to provide.”

More than 600 unionized workers at seven Twin Cities nursing homes voted to authorize a one-day strike on March 5. They want $25 an hour, more affordable health insurance, a pension and higher staffing levels. Why?

[MN Reformer] “’Last year I worked 23 straight days. And unsurprisingly, I ended up tearing my biceps,’ said Teresa Brees, a nursing home worker at The Estates of Roseville. ‘I know so many nursing home workers who face stress and injury because of overwork and understaffing.’ …

“Nursing home workers suffer the highest rates of workplace injuries and illnesses of any industry — more than three times the rate of the labor force as a whole, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.”

The nursing homes affected by the strike vote are Saint Therese of New Hope, Estates of Roseville, Estates of Fridley, Estates of Excelsior, Villas at Robbinsdale, Cedars at St. Louis Park, and Cerenity Senior Care Humboldt in St. Paul. But they could be anywhere. Short-staffing, low pay, and under-appreciation are endemic in nursing homes across Minnesota and the entire country. 

Part-time Work

Sure, there are jobs available. Many employers struggle to find workers. But a big part of the problem is created by employers who deliberately keep workers on irregular part-time schedules, with hours low enough to avoid paying benefits, including health insurance. Adelle Waldman, a writer who worked at a big box store in 2018, writes about the problems faced by involuntarily part-time workers. As of December, more than four million U.S. workers were involuntarily part-time: wanting full-time work, but only able to find part-time. That means even when companies—like Target, WalMart, TJ Max, Starbucks—pay $17 or $18 an hour, most of their workers still may be below poverty level because they do not have anything near full-time work. 

“The unpredictability of the hours made life difficult for my co-workers — as much as, if not more than, the low pay did. On receiving a paycheck for a good week’s work, when they’d worked 39 hours, should they use the money to pay down debt? Or should they hold on to it in case the following week they were scheduled for only four hours and didn’t have enough for food? …

“Many of my co-workers didn’t have cars; with such unstable pay, they couldn’t secure auto loans. Nor could they count on holding on to the health insurance that part-time workers could receive if they met a minimum threshold of hours per week. While I was at the store, one co-worker lost his health insurance because he didn’t meet the threshold — but not because the store didn’t have the work. Even as his requests for more hours were denied, the store continued to hire additional part-time and seasonal workers.” 

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