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Archive for August, 2020

A little change in format today.

There certainly is no shortage of priceless quotes from the most moronic president in the history of this country and I’m building an interesting backlog for inclusion here.

But today, I’m just going to attach a Youtube clip from The Young Turks, a male-female duo who offer a series of frighteningly hilarious observations on Donald Trump.

The essence of this clip is to provide you with a handful of Trump’s most puzzling/amusing/embarrassing utterances in the form of a “contest” to pick the most absurd quote.

To view the clip and to review the seven finalist quotes, go HERE.

(Spoiler alert: My personal favorite is the stealth bomber that you “literally” can’t see.) Stealth aircraft - Wikipedia

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Southeast Louisiana Legal Services (SLLS) told online legal news service Louisiana Record this week that it expects a “tsunami” of EVICTIONS around Labor Day.as tenants who have lost their jobs as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic are no longer able to pay their rent since the federal CARES Act expired on July 25.

Congress, in it typical way of addressing a crisis head-on, allowed the CARES Act to expire and then they went on summer vacation – vacations their constituents could not afford.

Louisiana landlords have been able to file 30day eviction notices in court to get tenants evicted from rental units, according to Laura Tuggle, executive director of SLLS,

Federal law protected half of Louisiana’s tenants from evictions since the COVID shutdown but with federal protection now lost, eviction notices are on the rise and SLLS has experienced a 300 percent increase in people seeking assistance with evictions. Under Louisiana law, sheriffs can lock tenants out of their apartments or houses within about 40 days of the court filing.

“We’re bracing ourselves for a tidal wave or a tsunami – whatever you want to call it,” Tuggle told LOUISIANA RECORD.

Last week, I was paired with conservative Republican Scott Wilfong on the Jim Engster Show (you can hear the entire show by clicking HERE). (That’s me, arms crossed in the red Hawaiian shirt and “Nope” Trump mask and Wilfong in his tacky “Make America Great” or “Keep America Great” – or maybe it was “Grated” – mask on the left).

Besides minimizing the number of coronavirus deaths by noting that the then-total of some 150,000 was such a small percentage of the population as to be statistically insignificant, Wilfong also appeared amused that at the recent Republican confab Lenar Whitney was elected Louisiana National Committeewoman by a single vote – but that only 140 people participated while 141 votes were cast.

I couldn’t help thinking that had that occurred in a Democratic event, like say, the Iowa Caucus, the Repugnicans would’ve been all over that like white on rice. Oh, wait. They were. But to Mr. Wilfong, it was amusing.

What was not amusing to Wilfong, however (besides his assertion on the show that Hillary Clinton had an ambassador murdered and that that Dr. Anthony Fauci is an atheist – as if that somehow renders his qualifications as an epidemiologist null and void – was the idea of an eviction moratorium for those landlords wanting to kick families to the curb.

His complaints about the inability to evict tenants were restricted to off-microphone conversation but basically, he said he was a landlord himself and the system was patently unfair to him. “I have a mortgage and my banker expects payment,” he said. So, how is it fair to say he can’t evict his tenants when they can’t pay the rent?

As best I understood him, he apparently can’t make his mortgage payments because his tenants lost their jobs, their health insurance and they’re unable to pay their rent, pay utilities or buy food because they have no income.

So, again, as best I can grasp what Scott was trying to say, his problem will be solved if he kicks his tenants out, leaving them homeless.

But wait. Doesn’t he still have an empty apartment/rent house? People aren’t exactly lining up to move in because others out there don’t have jobs or health insurance and they can’t afford food, much less rent, either.

Seems to me he’s only added to the growing homelessness problem.

But that seems to be the Repugnican way.

 

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“We have to win the election. We can’t play games. Go out and vote. Do those beautiful absentee ballots or just make sure your vote gets counted. Make sure, because the only way we are going to lose this election is if the election is rigged.”

—Donald Trump, in campaign appearance in Wisconsin on Monday.

 

“The Postal Service is going to be just fine. We’re going to make sure that the ability to function going into the election is not adversely affected and I don’t share the concerns that the president … has mentioned.”

—Sen. Mitch McConnell, to reporters in Kentucky on Monday. [Easy to see politicians who are in a contested race for reelection.]

 

“One day in February 2019, when congressional leaders were waiting for an answer from the White House on a pending deal to avoid a second government shutdown, the president demanded a DHS phone briefing to discuss the color of the wall. He was particularly interested in the merits of using spray paint and how the steel structure should be coated. Episodes like this occurred almost weekly. It is more than a little ironic that Trump is campaigning for a second term as a law-and-order president. His first term has been dangerously chaotic. Four more years of this are unthinkable.”

—Miles Taylor, former chief of staff for the Department of Homeland Security (2017-2019), in Washington Post op-ed, Aug. 17, 2020.

 

“Let me be as honest and clear as I possibly can: Donald Trump is the wrong president for our country. He has had more than enough time to prove that he can do the job, but he is clearly in over his head. He cannot meet this moment. He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us. It is what it is.”

—Former First Lady Michelle Obama, speaking at the Democratic virtual convention.

 

“He has tried to prevent people from voting, undermined the U.S. Postal Service, deployed the military and federal agents against peaceful protestors, threatened to delay the election, and suggested that he will not leave office if he loses. This is not normal, and we must never treat it like it is.

—Sen. Bernie Sanders, on Donald Trump, Aug. 17, 2020.

 

“You have the most destructive, hateful, racist president in the history of the country who is tearing apart the fabric of the United States.”

—Former congressman Beto O’Rourke, Aug. 17, 2020.

 

“[H]is only preexisting condition was trusting Donald Trump, and for that he paid with his life.”

—Kristin Urquiza of Arizona, whose Trump-supporting father died of coronavirus, Aug. 17, 2020.

 

“Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Trump golfs.” 

—Bernie Sanders, Aug. 17, 2020.

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The Louisiana ACLU has launched one of the most ambitious PROGRAMS ever to combat police misconduct, harassment and violence in the state, according to an announcement by Nora Ahmed, ACLU of Louisiana legal director.

The initiative, called “Justice Lab: Putting Racist Policing on Trial,” has thus far enlisted the PARTICIPATION of 39 prestigious law firms from 14 states, the District of Columbia and London.

Only Three of the law firms are from Louisiana. They are Barrasso Usdin Kupperman Freeman & Sarver and Kuchler Polk Weiner of New Orleans, and Kutcher Tygier & Luminais of Metairie. None are from Baton Rouge.

Other cities represented are Miami, Atlanta, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Palo Alto, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Minneapolis, Boston, Chicago, Houston, Austin, Dallas, Seattle and Columbia, S.C.

Southern University Law Center’s Externship Program and Tulane Law School’s Civil Rights & Federal Practice Clinic are among 18 law schools and clinics from 12 states and the District of Columbia that are taking part in the intensive litigation program.

LSU’s Paul M. Hebert Law School in Baton Rouge and Loyola Law School in New Orleans are conspicuously absent from the list of law schools and clinics from places like Washington, D.C., Massachusetts, New York, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Texas, Georgia, New Jersey, Ohio and Colorado who have enrolled in the project.

The objective of the campaign is to “unleash a wave of lawsuits intended to hold police accountable for unconstitutional misconduct and (to) stop racially discriminatory policing,” Ahmed said. By focusing intensive efforts on a single state, she said, the initiative hopes to “establish a litigation blueprint for altering police conduct across the country.”

“For centuries, law enforcement officers have brutalized Black communities with near – with justice coming too late or not at all,” said Alanah Odoms Hebert, ACLU of Louisiana executive director. “A dearth of lawsuits challenging these unconstitutional abuses has exacerbated this crisis, compounding the systemic racism that pervades our criminal legal system and allowing these practices to continue unchecked.

“Often, police are only held accountable after we witness gut-wrenching images of people of color being subjected to intense brutality,” she said. “Justice Lab aspires to hold police accountable for every instance of unconstitutional conduct to the extend the law allows.”

She said as efforts continue to fight racism, “Justice Lab will complement these efforts by unleashing a wave of litigation to hold police accountable.”

So, why Louisiana as the target for the pilot program?

Several reasons, really:

Louisiana has the largest ratio of police officers to residents of any state in the US and, perhaps coincidentally, has the highest incarceration rate in a nation that has the highest incarceration rate among civilized nations in the world, thus making Louisiana’s incarceration rate highest in the world.

Louisiana law allows police to expunge any alleged violation of criminal battery and assault involving domestic violence from personnel files if formal complaints are made anonymously or were not substantiated within 12 months, meaning police misconduct goes largely unchecked, making Louisiana a microcosm of the structural flaws that plague the nation’s criminal justice system, Odoms-Hebert said.

Louisiana has a long tradition of abuses of Blacks as evidenced by recent events in IBERIA, JEFFERSON DAVIS, JEFFERSON, ORLEANS and other parishes as well as in municipalities like VILLE PLATTE and HAMMOND.

Victims of unconstitutional police misconduct may not understand how to vindicate their rights, or may not have the financial resources to retain counsel.

That’s why the Louisiana ACLU has rolled out its four-part plan:

First, law firms, law school clinics and local community organizations and activists will be recruited, an effort already well underway.

Second, a social media call will go out for up to 1,000 plaintiffs in Louisiana to come forward and challenge perceived unconstitutional stops and seizures which have occurred over the past nine months.

Third, a police misconduct deterrence campaign will be spearheaded which will encourage the public to record any police encounter they witness involving a police stop.

Fourth, the ALCU and legal volunteers will organize the receipt and dissemination of cases across network participants.

As a culmination of those four steps, law firms will spearhead legal challenges to racially-motivated stops and seizures under the Fourth and 14th Amendments, as well as any other applicable laws.

“If each law firm agrees to take up to 10 legal actions, we can accommodate up to 1,000 cases, Odom-Hebert said.

“We can, and must, do more to stop the police misconduct, harassment and violence that far too often leads to the deaths of innocent people of color,” she said.

“By focusing critical law firm and law school resources on a single state …the ACLU of Louisiana can help establish a litigation blueprint geared toward altering police conduct that every other state in the nation can follow.”

Participating law firms to date are:

  • Akerman, Miami
  • Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, Washington D.C.
  • Alston & Bird, Atlanta
  • BakerHostetler, Cleveland
  • Ballard Spahr, Philadelphia
  • Barrasso Usdin Kupperman Freeman & Sarver, New Orleans
  • Boies Schiller Flexner, New York City
  • Cohen & Gresser, New York City and Washington, D.C.
  • Cooley, Palo Alto, Calif.
  • Covington & Burling, New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, C.C.
  • Dorsey & Whitney, Minneapolis
  • Durie Tangri, San Francisco
  • Fish & Richardson, Boston
  • Foley Hoag, Boston and New York City
  • Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, London
  • Gilbert, Washington, D.C.
  • Holwell Shuster & Goldberg, New York City
  • King & Spalding, Atlanta
  • Kirkland & Ellis, Chicago
  • Kuchler Polk Weiner, New Orleans
  • Kutcher Tygier & Luminais, Metairie
  • Morgan Lewis & Bockius, Philadelphia
  • Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, Columbia, S.C.
  • Norton Rose Fulbright, New York City, Houston, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C.
  • Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe, San Francisco
  • Perkins Coie, Seattle
  • Proskauer Rose, New York City
  • Reid Collins & Tsai, New York City, Austin, Dallas, Washington, D.C.
  • Roche Cyrulnik Freedman, New York City, Miami
  • Sidley Austin, Chicago
  • Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, New York City
  • Steptoe & Johnson, Washington, D.C., New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco
  • Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City
  • Susman Godfrey, New York City, Houston, Los Angeles, Seattle
  • Anthony Cecutti, New York City
  • Jennifer R. Louis-Jeune, New York City
  • Venable, Washington, D.C.
  • Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, New York City
  • Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, Palo Alto

Participating legal clinics include:

  • Boston University School of Law’s Clinical and Experiential Programs
  • Cardozo Law’s Civil Rights Clinic, New York City
  • Denver Law’s Civil Rights Clinic
  • Fordham Law School’s Federal Litigation Clinic, New York City
  • Georgetown Law’s Appellate Courts Immersion Clinic, Washington, D.C.
  • Howard University School of Law’s Criminal Justice Clinic, Washington, D.C.
  • New York University School of Law’s Civil Rights Clinic
  • The Ohio State university Moritz College of Law’s Civil Clinic, Columbus, Ohio
  • Penn Law’s Appellate Advocacy Clinic, Philadelphia
  • Penn State Law’s Civil Rights Appellate Clinic, University Park, PA.
  • Seton Hall School of Law’s Center for Social Justice, Orange, N.J.
  • Southern University Law Center’s Externship Program, Baton Rouge
  • Tulane Law School’s Civil Rights & Federal Practice Clinic, New Orleans
  • University of California-Irvine School of Law’s Critical Race Lawyering Civil Rights Clinic
  • University of Georgia School of Law’s Appellate Clinic, Athens, GA.
  • University of Texas Law School’s Supreme Court Clinic, Austin, TX.
  • William & Mary Law School’s Appellate & Supreme Court Clinic, Williamsburg, VA.

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78 days to the Nov. 3 election

 

“They want $25 billion — billion — for the post office. Now they need that money in order to have the post office work so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots. But if they don’t get those two items, that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting.”

—Donald Trump, on why he’s cutting funding for the USPS.

 

“If we don’t make a deal, that means they don’t get the money. That means they can’t have universal mail-in voting; they just can’t have it.”

—Trump, to Fox News host Maria Bartiromo, Aug. 13.

 

“This is a repugnant, unbelievable scenario unfolding in front of public eyes. The Postal Service is the one arm of public service that reaches every household and every business every day in America. I believe Trump and the Republicans are playing with fire in trying to disrupt or discredit the Postal Service.”

 

—Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.), who chairs a congressional subcommittee with oversight of the USPS.

 

“He is undermining the safest voting method during a pandemic and forcing people to cast a ballot in person. It is reprehensible.”

—Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, speaking about Trump.

 

“I am alarmed. I am disheartened. But no one in America has given up, because people are on to him. They know what he’s doing. Americans, as you can see from their votes in their primaries, would rather put ballots in the mailbox than their families in the hospital.”

—Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), who is pushing for a $3.6 billion appropriation to assist states in preparing for the fall elections.

 

“This is not just terrible policy, but it may be illegal under federal law and other state laws as well. A lot of work is being done literally as we speak over the weekend and at nights to try to figure out what Trump and DeJoy are doing, whether they have already violated or are likely to violate any laws and how we can take swift action to try to stop this assault on our democracy.”

—Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring. He has joined fellow attorneys general from Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Washington and North Carolina in opening discussions on how to sue the administration to prevent operational changes or funding lapses that could affect the election. [You may have noticed that Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry is not among them. Obviously, Jeff Landry is unconcerned about the voting rights of Louisianans.]

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