Re: Sen Bookers 25+hr Senate filibuster.
Chuck Schumer: âWould the Senator yield for a question?â
Cory Booker: âChuck Schumer, itâs the only time in my life I can tell you no.â
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Re: Sen Bookers 25+hr Senate filibuster.
Chuck Schumer: âWould the Senator yield for a question?â
Cory Booker: âChuck Schumer, itâs the only time in my life I can tell you no.â
đ

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Justice Stephen Breyer has notified the White House that his retirement will be effective Thursday, June 30, at noon ET.
Then that would make the vote 4-4 ! ! That should fix things for a while ! !
January 5, 2022
The worldâs most anti-democratic body?January 5, 2022
Robert B. Hubbell
[Audio version here.]
     And just like that, Senator Manchin killed any hope of a carveout for voting rights from the filibuster. As before, Manchinâs statements to the press are evasive as he attempts to make his unreasonable positions seem reasonable. On Tuesday, Manchin warned that âAnytime there's a carve out, you eat the whole turkey,â and said that modifying the filibuster would be a âheavy lift.â Manchinâs resort to homespun cliches is intended to conceal the fact that he is assisting Republican efforts to disenfranchise millions of Americans. There is no reason for further delay. Nothing that Manchin says should be trusted. Only one word to be uttered by Manchin will matter: âYeaâ or âNayâ when Schumer attempts to break the filibuster on Martin Luther King Day.
     We should not be distracted by Manchinâs promises to consider âall options,â such as a âtalking filibusterâ or requiring that forty-one Senators remain on the Senate floor to sustain the filibuster. Those procedural smokescreens merely conceal the deeply antiâdemocratic nature of the filibuster, which is layered on a deeply anti-democratic institution. The Framers intended that a handful of small states have disproportionate power in the original Senate in 1789âthe cost of securing their agreement to adopt the new Constitution. Two-hundred-and-forty years and thirty-seven states later, the antiâdemocratic nature of the Senate has been amplified in ways the Framers could not have imaginedâeven before the imposition of the filibuster.
     Without the filibuster, fifty Democratic Senators represent 190 million Americans, while the fifty GOP Senators represent 140 million Americans. Thus, Senators who represent 50 million fewer Americans than the majority party can prevent passage of legislation even in the absence of the filibuster. With the filibuster, it is possible for Senators representing only 34 million Americans (11% of the population) to prevent any legislation from passingâeven if Senators for the other 300 million Americans are in favor of a bill. Whatever protections the Framers intended by giving small states greater sway in the Senate, they could not have intended the ludicrous outcomes possible under the filibuster.
     So, please donât be fooled when you hear proposals to return to a âtalking filibuster.â Measure the minor inconvenience of a talking filibuster on the bladders of aging Senators against the stranglehold on democracy imposed by the filibuster, where 10% of the population can impose its will on 90% of the population. The Senate is frequently (and erroneously) described as the âworldâs most deliberative body.â But with  the filibuster, it is a strong contender for the title of âworldâs most anti-democratic body.â Tell a friend. Better yet, tell your U.S. Senator. Instructions here: Chop Wood, Carry Water 1/3.
Fighting the unholy alliance of disinformation and insurrection.
     The insurrection on January 6th was fueled by disinformation peddled by the right-wing media and funded by corporate America. Corporations support disinformation generators like Fox News through advertising dollars and support the Sedition Caucus through political donations. We must push back against both by leveraging our consumer spending and political voices.
     On Tuesday, the House Select Committee revealed that Fox News personality Sean Hannity was advising Trump before and after the January 6th insurrection. See Politico, âSean Hannity tried to dissuade Trump from Jan. 6 strategy.â Hannity is free to serve as a presidential adviser if he wants, but Fox News presents him as a journalist. In that role, Hannity has spread propaganda about January 6th he knows not to be true. While telling his viewers that âgroups like antifaâ were responsible for the assault on the Capitol, Hannity was begging Trump to tell his supporters to stop the assault.
     The dual role of Hannity as an adviser to Trump and as a make-believe journalist is a grave violation of journalistic ethics and a fraud on the American people. But Rupert Murdoch doesnât care, neither do the Fox News advertisers. One of the reasons Hannity is immune from pressure by advertisers is that Fox News receives a share of the âbasic cableâ fees paid by cable subscribers like you and me. Even if you donât watch Fox News, if you have cable that carries Fox News, you unintentionally support Sean Hannityâs dual roles as Trump confidant and news-provocateur. One way to pierce Hannityâs immunity is to join a campaign to have Fox News removed from your basic cable package. Details are at UnFox My Cable Box.
     And as noted yesterday, American businesses have broken their pledges to cease political donations to the Sedition Caucus. Judd Legum at Popular Information has released his own excellent analysis of which companies have honored their pledge and which have breached it. See Judd Legum, Popular Information, âSeven major corporations pledge not to support GOP objectors in 2022.â Check out the list and let your favorite airline, accountant, and drug manufacturer know how you feel about their continued support for members of the Sedition Caucus.
     Finally, I received a lot of enthusiastic feedback from readers about the suggestion to fill the editorial pages of newspapers with âletters to the editorâ that counter the lies of the right-wing disinformation machine. One reader who has successfully transitioned to a full-time commentator began her career by writing op-eds. She recommends The Op-ed Project (âWhoever tells the story, writes history.â) I know from email correspondence with hundreds of readers that you have the skills and passion to write op-eds for the editorial pages of major newspapers. Try it! And donât be surprised if my next response to you is, âYou should turn that email in to an op-ed. Check out The Op-ed Project.â
     Another reader suggested the website âFor the Love of Democracy: Speak Up!â The website offers an interesting twist: You identify an issue that interests you, and you will receive a âdraftâ to be modified and put into your own wordsâsort of like the âtalking pointsâ for calling Senators or letters created by text-bots. If you are interested in writing letters to the editor but are hesitant to do so, check out For the Love of Democracy! for a jump start.
     We are in a war against disinformation and part of our strategy is to overwhelm lies with truth. If thousands of readers of this newsletter join the conversation in major media outlets, that will make a difference.
One good thing that happened today.
     Trump had planned to hold a press conference at Mar-a-Lago as the House was commemorating January 6th with a moment of silence. The idea was an obscenity and an insult to the Constitution and those who lost their lives on January 6th. Trumpâs advisers persuaded the usually unpersuadable Trump that holding the press conference was beyond the pale of decency and humanity. I take hope from this development. It says nothing about Trump, but it says that those around him understand the horrible truth of January 6th and want it to fade into the background. But Trump isnât going to let that happen in 2022, forcing every Republican to embrace a credo that asserts the assault on the Capitol was a good thing for democracy. They know otherwise, and will hold their noses as they give lip service to Trumpâs lies, hoping that the voters will be distracted by Critical Race Theory. Trump is the GOPâs greatest strengthâand its Achillesâ heel.
Two court rulings on military mandates for Covid vaccines.
     Two court decisions are setting up a fight in the Supreme Court over the military mandate for coronavirus vaccines. Before Covid-19, members of the military were required to receive nine vaccines to prevent the spread of infectious diseases among the troops. No one complained. When the military added a tenth vaccine to that listâfor Covid-19âRepublican governors howled in protest because . . . well for no good reason given the pre-existing requirement of nine mandatory vaccines. Several GOP governors said that members of the state national guards could refuse to obey the order for mandatory vaccines. A federal judge (Stephen Friot) in Oklahoma issued a strong opinion that followed existing precedent saying that civil courts should not involve themselves in matters of military order. Judge Friot wrote,
     The vaccine mandate to which the governor objects is the one â in addition to the nine that already apply to all service members â intended to protect service members from the virus which has, in less than two years, killed more Americans than have been killed in action in all of the wars the United States has ever fought. The court is required to decide the case on the basis of federal law, not common sense. But, either way, the result would be the same.
     But a group of Seal Team Six members sued the military in a Texas federal court, where a Trump appointee (Reed OâConnor) issued an injunction against the mandatory Covid vaccine. The opinion is egregiously badâin fact, it is so bad that if it were a brief written by a lawyer, the lawyer would likely be sanctioned for misleading the court by failing to cite controlling Supreme Court precedent. See Ian Millhiser in Vox, âOne of Americaâs most partisan judges just gave Navy SEALs permission to defy a direct order.â For lawyers out there, Ian Millhiserâs take-down of the opinion is must-read. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals (or the Supreme Court) should rebuke Judge OâConnor for knowingly omitting controlling authority in his opinion.
Concluding Thoughts.
     After writing this edition of the newsletter, my personal reaction is, âWe are in the thick of the fight.â I have been buoyed by the reaction of readers who say that they are resolving anew to engage in political activism in the face of dire warnings that the end is nigh. The next few days may be tough. The DOJ has announced that Merrick Garland will make a statement to the entire Justice Department on Wednesday. While I hope I am wrong, I expect Merrick Garland will likely explain his inaction in prosecuting the leaders of the insurrection with bromides about âfollowing the factsâ and âneed for confidentiality.â Watching counter-demonstrations by wannabe insurrectionists on Thursday will be difficult. And we will likely learn on Friday that the Supreme Courtâs reactionary majority doesnât believe the federal government has the power to stop a pandemic that has killed more Americans than all U.S. military battles combined.
     None of the events of this week should discourage us. We have seen that Merrick Garland has little inclination to act boldly in a time of crisis. We know that angry white males with limited prospects like to parade with guns in front of local television crews desperate for content. And we know the reactionary majority will exalt religious freedom above all other rights guaranteed in the Constitution. All of that is old news. But the future is oursâif we are bold enough to claim it. I am hearing from readers that they are ready to go âonce more into the breachâ in service of democracy. As always, we have every reason to hope, but no reason to be complacent.
     Talk to you tomorrow!
i'm so glad you're watching hamefura!!! I rewatched hamefura s1 in preparation for season 2 and man...there are four men in this 7-person harem and I only would want one of them with Catarina
why is that man Alan, i ask myself while pictures of Kyo Sohma fall out of my pocket
DON'T CALL ME OUT LIKE THIS ANON!!!! Not when my bookshelf is covered in Kyos.....
Urrrrrgggghhhh I have a type and it is Soft Grumpy Boys who lack self belief but whose true nature is someone who laughs and smiles easily....
With some goth aesthetic on the side. I mean, OKAY Kyo was a jock not a goth, but he also wore the bones of dead monks on his wrist and that's PRETTY goth lbh.
I mean, it says a lot about the show that I'm actually shipping so much of the Harem and can see it work! I wouldn't even mind if she got with Raphael! Sirus WAS my pick in the early days of S1 and then things took a turn....
The only ones I don't like for Catarina are Geordo and Keith. But I am absolutely team "Keith and Geordo Need To Kiss" though. I gather Geordo isn't so much a creep in the manga/light novel? But in the anime? *shudder* And Keith is her BROTHER!!!!
So what i mean is, Geordo and Keith deserve eachother.
I watched S1 when it aired last year, but it was airing at the same time as Furuba? So it got lost in my blogging lol But I actually renewed my Crunchyroll for this so I could fill the furuba shaped void in my life a little better xD
FUN FACT! The Seiyuu for Catarina is the sister of the Seiyuu for Kyo! It's all connected B)

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Centrist Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, a pivotal vote in the U.S. Senate, on Sunday advocated making the procedural maneuver called the filibuster more "painful" to do, with Democrats concerned about Republicans obstructing President Joe Biden's legislative agenda.
Politics is the art of compromise.
Me as a senator: ...The Black King can also be defeated if players team up with the Warweary Villein. This quest, unlike the Jack Noir/Black Queen backdoor I mentioned earlier, is time sensitive, as the Warweary Villein is doomed to fail in his attempt to unite the armies and end the war. Yes, Senator, what is your question?
Another Senator: We've been here for hours, what are you even trying to block?
Me, shuffling through my giant stack of notes: Block?