9 Chris Hall: Conservative whip compares online Commons voting to 'swiping right' on Tinder By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 12 Sep 2020 04:00:00 EDT A senior Conservative MP is comparing a government proposal for online voting in the House of Commons to the dating app Tinder. Full Article Radio/The House
9 Chris Hall: There's no path to net-zero without nuclear power, says O'Regan By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 19 Sep 2020 04:00:00 EDT Minister of Natural Resources Seamus O'Regan says Canadians have to be open to more nuclear power generation if this country is to meet the carbon emissions reduction targets it agreed to five years ago in Paris. Full Article Radio/The House
9 CBC Radio's The House: The North Rising By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 28 Nov 2020 04:00:06 EST The House explores Ottawa’s relationship to Canada’s three territories and their path toward province-like powers. Learn how federal funding could help one First Nation in the Northwest Territories ease a housing shortage. Then, a former Iqaluit mayor discusses Nunavut’s connectivity struggles. Plus, the fight to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from the outgoing Trump administration and why it matters to Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation in Yukon. Full Article Radio/The House
9 Iran protests, Kelly Clarkson's best covers, Iain Reid's new novel, The Linda Lindas and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 30 Sep 2022 17:54:17 EDT How protests in Iran threaten the country's regime; Chinese police have set up outposts in Canada; Kelly Clarkson's best Kellyoke covers; Becky Toyne reviews Iain Reid's new thriller, We Spread; The Linda Lindas drop by for an after-school hangout; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Baraye as Iran's protest anthem, The Right Stuff dating app, Derry Girls; The French Laundry's founder & more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 07 Oct 2022 14:44:37 EDT How Baraye became the unofficial anthem of the protests in Iran; former Trump administration staffers have created a dating site for conservatives; Talking Derry Girls podcast hosts get us ready for season three; a new documentary celebrates the founder of California's famed French Laundry restaurant; Cree writer Kenneth T. Williams spins a tale of prophecy, purity and identity in his new play, The Herd; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Attacks on Kyiv, the myth of rainbow fentanyl, the rise of AI art, the price of Alex Jones' lies and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 14 Oct 2022 17:53:38 EDT Fear returns to Kyiv amidst renewed Russian attacks; Russia's new commander in Ukraine is known as 'General Armageddon' for his record in Syria; rainbow fentanyl is all the buzz on social media and so is the misinformation surrounding it; how Alex Jones piled on the trauma for the parents of mass shooting victims; watching a Louis CK show as #MeToo marks its five-year anniversary; why creators are divided over the rapid rise of AI-generated art; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Israel's far right, Putin's Potemkin fixation, Cormac McCarthy's new novels, ending slavery in 2022 and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 04 Nov 2022 18:19:34 EDT Itamar Ben-Gvir's journey from far-right extremist to political power-broker; why Vladimir Putin wanted the bones of 18th-century Russian leader Grigory Potemkin; Becky Toyne reviews Pulitzer Prize winner Cormac McCarthy's first new novels in 16 years; Haiti's political and economic crisis is fueling a public health disaster for women; five U.S. states get ready to vote on whether to close a loophole that allows for slavery in 2022; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Children's hospital crisis, migration to Mastodon, Crown Lands, Herb Carnegie's daughter, and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 18 Nov 2022 18:35:46 EST How parents of sick kids are coping with the children's hospital crisis; what Mastodon could teach Twitter users about 'netizenship'; Bernice Carnegie's call to action for hockey; Lindsay Lohan's Falling for Christmas; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 China protests, accessing healthcare for children, Fisherman's Friends, Taylor Swift dance parties and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 02 Dec 2022 18:06:48 EST As protests spread across China, citizens consider how far they can push Beijing; concerns of privatized healthcare as a virtual pediatric care service shuts down because of reduced government funding; meet Jeremy Brown, one of the real-life Cornish fishermen who inspired the musical Fisherman's Friends; Dr. Nasser Mohamed, an exiled gay physician from Qatar, campaigns for LGBTQ rights; Canadian super-Swifties throw celebratory Taylor Swift dance parties; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Suing Facebook over hate speech, nuclear fusion in sci-fi, invasive Strep A, British 'pantos', Tantura & more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 16 Dec 2022 17:54:30 EST Facebook faces a $2 billion lawsuit over hate speech; Expanse co-author Ty Franck on the role of nuclear fusion in sci-fi universes and the real world; making sense of the connection between respiratory virus outbreaks and invasive Strep A bacterial infections; a theatre director's bid to bring British holiday 'pantos' to Canada; Israeli documentary Tantura confronts an alleged massacre in a Palestinian village; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Matt Rogers' bid to be Prince of Christmas, the best TV of 2022, Muppet Christmas Carol, Revival69 and more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 23 Dec 2022 16:30:14 EST Comedian Matt Rogers wants Mariah Carey to crown him Prince of Christmas; the best TV of 2022 and what to catch up on over the holidays; why The Muppet Christmas Carol is the best retelling of Scrooge’s story; Revival 69, the improbable rock show that put Canada on the map and helped end the Beatles; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Best pop music of 2022, Hamilton music director Alex Lacamoire, Springsteen's first manager Mike Appel & more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 30 Dec 2022 10:16:14 EST The Day 6 music panel runs down the best pop music of 2022, Hamilton's music director Alex Lacamoire, Bruce Springsteen's original manager Mike Appel on getting the Boss signed to CBS and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Connor Bedard, Damar Hamlin, Prince Harry's book, Ozempic, Dry January, portable MRNA vaccine factories & more By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 07 Jan 2023 09:15:39 EST Connor Bedard's former coach says the World Junior hockey phenom is something special; how Buffalo is rallying together after Damar Hamlin's near death on the football field; how the bid to keep Prince Harry's memoir from leaking plays into the hype; seriously though, what exactly is Ozempic?; Toronto bartender mixes alcohol-free cocktails for Dry January and beyond; why BioNTech's plan to ship prefabricated mRNA vaccine factories to Rwanda is controversial; and more. Full Article Radio/Day 6
9 Can owning a dog be a 'selfish' pursuit? This academic thinks so By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Apr 2022 04:00:00 EDT The way dogs are portrayed in literature reflects the problems in our real-world relationships to canines, says PhD student Molly Labenski, who says people want animals in their lives as “accessories” that can be easily discarded. Full Article Radio/Ideas
9 Room with a view: 60 years on, Gaston Bachelard's ideas still ignite our imagination By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 18 Apr 2022 11:36:00 EDT It's been 60 years since French thinker Gaston Bachelard’s The Poetics of Space made its English-language debut. It’s a hard-to-define book — part architecture, philosophy, psychoanalysis, memoir. And it continues to feed our ongoing need for purposeful solitude and wide-open fields for our imagination. Full Article Radio/Ideas
9 Mary Riter Hamilton, Canada's 1st female battlefield artist, helped the country 'grieve mass loss' By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 10 Nov 2021 16:04:50 EST In 1919, Canadian artist Mary Riter Hamilton embarked on a solo mission to paint the World War One battlefields of France and Belgium. A century later, documentary maker Alisa Siegel speaks to the artist's biographer, historians, and art historians to resuscitate Mary Riter Hamilton's art, life, and legacy. Full Article Radio/Ideas
9 Why doesn't the audio match the video I'm watching on CBC Newsworld? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 18 Jun 2009 10:45:12 -0500 Chances are you are hearing Voiceprint, an independent audio service for blind and vision-impaired Canadians that includes entertainment, news, and information, often read by volunteer presenters. Voiceprint is available on Secondary Audio Program or SAP which is an audio setting on your Television. To hear the CBC Newsworld audio, you need to have your television audio set with the SAP feature off and stereo sound on. Turning SAP on and off is done on most television sets through a menu using the remote control. Every television set is different, so the best way to do that is to follow the instructions in your owner's manual. Full Article permanent-faqs
9 Why don't we get all the cities on the new iPhone App By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 19 Aug 2009 10:50:45 -0500 CBC.ca has launched our new iPhone App for radio. We were so excited about this app that we decided to put it out before all the individual stations were ready to go. Although right now we already have 9 Radio One stations, 4 Radio 2 stations and Radio 3 on board. We are trying to get all the other stations up within the next couple of weeks so please check back. Go to our site iPhone for all our services. Full Article permanent-announcements
9 The Sunday Magazine for September 29, 2024 By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 12:51:01 EDT We unpack the latest on rising tensions in the Middle East, novelist Richard Powers reflects on finding possibility in the threats we face, Sixties Scoop survivor Andrea Currie shares her story and efforts to help other Indigenous people heal, and Eli Burnstein talks about the value of parsing fine distinctions in everyday language. Full Article Radio/The Sunday Magazine
9 There's a real Doc Marten – and he wasn't a shoe designer By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 14 Mar 2024 11:53:28 EDT It all began with a doctorate, a skiing accident and a bit of ingenuity. Full Article Radio/Under the Influence
9 New space hotel will sell vacation homes to Earth's wealthiest humans By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 28 Mar 2024 11:26:25 EDT Poised to open in just six years, featuring spas, concert venues and even a Ferris wheel design, this out-of-this-world hotel will be a veritable playground for the ultra rich. Full Article Radio/Under the Influence
9 Paul Michael Glazer wasn't a fan of Starsky & Hutch's famous Ford Torino By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 25 Apr 2024 11:37:50 EDT It wasn't originally meant to be the TV detective duo's car, but a twist of fate led them to red and white. Full Article Radio/Under the Influence
9 I'd Like To Buy The World A Coke. Again. By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 23 May 2024 11:34:26 EDT Many famous advertising campaigns were laid to rest over the years. Then suddenly they were brought back to life. The Coca-Cola "Hilltop" ad has been revived over and over and over again. Here's why. Full Article Radio/Under the Influence
9 Four little words doubled this company's sales By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 06 Jun 2024 06:37:39 EDT Every company dreams of doubling its profit. It’s almost impossible to do. Yet, some companies do it by tweaking one tiny thing. Full Article Radio/Under the Influence
9 How are you affected by Hockey Canada's sexual abuse scandal? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 14 Oct 2022 14:45:40 EDT Hockey Canada's CEO and board resigned this week after a secret fund to deal with sexual assault allegations came to light. The news came as political and corporate pressure ramped up over the organization's handling of the situation. Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup
9 What question do you have about the new COVID-19 subvariant? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 06 Jan 2023 13:12:27 EST A new COVID-19 subvariant has now been confirmed in multiple provinces in Canada. The Omicron offshoot is also rising rapidly south of the border, and scientists say it could soon be a dominant strain in the U.S. and other countries. Full Article Radio/Cross Country Checkup
9 Miles Davis Quintet - Live in Europe 1969 – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 2 By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 00:00:00 +0000 An important, enlightening document of Miles in a state of stylistic transition. Full Article
9 Henry Mancini - Breakfast at Tiffany's - 50th Anniversary Edition By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 14 Mar 2012 00:00:00 +0000 If you don't yet own this Oscar-winning soundtrack, this is the version to go for. Full Article
9 Jeff Wayne - Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of the War of the Worlds – The New Generation By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 16 Nov 2012 00:00:00 +0000 This new recording, with a new cast, packs a hefty wallop. Full Article
9 3 Reasons You Can't Bank On Social Security Alone for Your Retirement-and What to Do Instead By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:29:00Z Full Article
9 'Taking revenge on society': Deadly car attack sparks questions in China By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:38:12Z Full Article
9 Kerry's Campaign Has Soared From Poorhouse to Penthouse By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:38:01 GMT A $107 million surge in contributions has made Senator John Kerry the best-financed challenger in presidential campaign history. Full Article
9 Sentencing Decision's Reach Is Far and Wide By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:38:01 GMT The Supreme Court's decision on Thursday requiring sentencing factors to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt will create a surge in challenged sentences. Full Article
9 Democrats Find Relief Among Allies at 'Fahrenheit 9/11' By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:38:01 GMT While it is unclear whether Michael Moore's film will influence swing voters, the first wave of the movie's attendees was solidly anti-Bush. Full Article
9 It Depends What the Meaning of 'Liberal' Is By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:38:01 GMT Bill Clinton certainly qualifies as a liberal icon. Yet in many respects, his record belies the liberal tag. Full Article
9 John Kerry's Big Screen Test By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:38:01 GMT In the newly crowded nexus of film and politics, instead of trying to compete with summer movies, politicians seem to be starring in them. Full Article
9 Just Eat Takeaway Sells Grubhub at 90% Discount to Covid Peak By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T07:01:02Z Full Article
9 Development bank financing pledge gives COP29 summit early boost By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T08:44:35Z Full Article
9 Kansas City Chiefs' Harrison Butker attacked LGBTQ rights and said women grads were excited about marriage and kids. Here’s what social media said. By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-05-16T20:36:11Z Full Article
9 The U.S. cricket team just advanced to the Super 8. How an unlikely lineup of 9-to-5ers is making history By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-06-12T01:14:04Z Full Article
9 Olympian Rebecca Cheptegei dies days after partner set her on fire; officials highlight pattern of 'gender-based violence' By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-09-05T16:56:56Z Full Article
9 Why it matters that weight loss drugs are one of Oprah Winfrey's new favorite things By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-03-30T09:00:13Z Full Article
9 5 takeaways from Dr. Anthony Fauci's new memoir By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-06-18T17:34:44Z Full Article
9 A cheaper weight loss drug, more heat-related deaths and new restrictions on tobacco sales: Here's what happened in health this week By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-08-31T09:00:04Z Full Article
9 Systemic Racism in the Home Mortgage Context: We Don't Have Time to Notice By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Dec 2020 01:41:00 +0000 In 2020, pivotal events ushered in a season of antiracism rhetoric in the U.S. The brutal deaths of unarmed black Americans at the hands of police officers and white vigilantes, and the disproportionately harsh impact of COVID-19 in the black American community, launched the nation into a discussion about systemic racism. Unfortunately, it seems likely that the 2020 antiracism discourse was merely seasonal rather than enduring, and unlikely to result in meaningful change. Black American’s vulnerability in the face of systemic racism is not limited to death, sickness and injury as a result of COVID-19 or antiblack bias in police departments. Our vulnerability is precipitated by things like lack of access to nonpredatory financial services. This is just one of the contexts that compromise black Americans’ economic survival. Unacknowledged systemic racism destroys the wealth and wellbeing of black individuals, families and communities, sometimes causing working and middle-class black Americans to plummet into poverty. As 2020 comes to a close, an election that threatened democracy in the U.S. and the existential threats of an uncontrolled pandemic, eclipse a system of intentional antiblack racism on the part of the financial institutions that engaged in predatory mortgage lending in the years leading up to and beyond the 2008 recession. It is now well documented that lenders, brokers, and mortgage servicers engaged in conduct that was fraudulent and misleading. The mortgage market charged excessively high rates and fees, engaged in high-pressure sales tactics, imposed unnecessarily harsh prepayment penalties, and distorted loan structures to avoid the application of consumer protection statutes. But, more than a decade later, many black Americans are still fighting to prevent financial institutions from taking away their homes. In a book I coauthored with Dr. Janis Sarra, a law professor at the University of British Columbia, Predatory Lending and the Destruction of the African American Dream (Cambridge University Press, 2020), we describe new iterations of predation that continue to target black consumers years after financial institutions settled litigation that alleged pervasive fraud on their part for steering black Americans into predatory subprime loans. But these renovated predatory practices are obscured by the nation’s focus on COVID-19 and a vitriolic election season. Meanwhile, more black Americans will lose their homes even after investing all or most of their wealth in attempts to keep them. This reality requires the calls for moratoriums on mortgage foreclosures to be answered in the affirmative. Full Article
9 MAGA'S CRAVEN WAR ON DEMOCRACY & VIOLENT EMBRACE OF INSURRECTION By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 23:18:00 +0000 Eyewitness accounts regarding the events of January 6, 2021 give us the most reliable version of what happened that dark day. Particularly those eyewitnesses from the Republican Party who do not seek partisan advantage. For example:"What happened here today was an insurrection incited by the President of the United States."Republican Senator & former Presidential Nominee Mitt Romney, Jan. 6, 2021. "Today’s violent assault on our Capitol, an effort to subjugate American democracy by mob rule, was fomented by Mr. Trump. His use of the presidency to destroy trust in our election and to poison our respect for fellow citizens has been enabled by pseudo political leaders whose names will live in infamy as profiles in cowardice."Former Trump Defense Secretary and Marine Corps General James Mattis, Jan. 6, 2021."The mob was fed lies. They were provoked by the president and other powerful people. And they tried to use fear and violence to stop a specific proceeding of the first branch of the federal government which they did not like."GOP Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Jan. 19, 2021"Today was a dark day in the history of the United States Capitol… We condemn the violence that took place here in the strongest possible terms… To those who wreaked havoc in our Capitol today, you did not win. Violence never wins. Freedom wins."Trump Vice-President Mike Pence, January 6, 2021. "These men and women in the uniform, they got overrun. One officer got killed…they got broken arms. You don’t understand what was transpiring at that moment and that time. . . . People brought ropes. . .[T]hey were well planned for it. They scaled walls. . . . They, they overtook the place.”"Let me be clear: Last week’s violent attack on the Capitol was undemocratic, un-American and criminal…And make no mistake: Those who are responsible for Wednesday’s chaos will be brought to justice…The president bears responsibility for Wednesday’s attack on Congress by mob rioters."GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Jan. 13, 2021 "Today, the people's House was attacked, which is an attack on the Republic itself. There is no excuse for it. A women died. And people need to go to jail. And the President should never have spun up certain Americans to believe something that simply cannot be."GOP Rep. Chip Roy, Jan. 6, 2021. WOW! The US Capitol became a combat zone on January 6. The legal upshot of the above is Trump and his cultists levied war against the US in violation of 18 USC section 2381! They engaged in an insurrection in violation 18 USC section 2383!These provisions carry severe criminal sanctions and section 2383 prohibits insurrectionists from ever holding federal office again. Trump also disqualified himself from federal office under the Fourteenth Amendment, section 3. As painful as it may be, the Biden Administration has little choice but to fully investigate these potential violations of law immediately. Donald Trump in particular must face swift justice. .In his unending fantasy and lies of victory, President Donald Trump unleashed a violent coup on our democracy, our constitutional republic and ultimately our freedom in the lawless pursuit of autocracy, dictatorship, and dimwitted megalomania. This directly aided and abetted the ongoing efforts of Vladimir Putin to use Russian New Generation Warfare (RNGW) to weaken, undermine, subvert, and diminish the power of the USA to defend itself and its interests and allies across the world. As Lt. General H.R. McMaster explains RNGW aims to weaken the US and other democratic societies through the sustained use of misinformation. They seek to “disrupt, divide and weaken” American democracy. Yet, again the Trumpists continue to toss the nation and its people into bloody pitched battle with each other while doing the bidding of Putin.Addendum:"[T]here can be no soft-pedaling what happened and no absolution for those who planned, encouraged and aided the attempt to overthrow our democracy, Love of country demands nothing less. That’s true patriotism.” Karl Rove, writing in the Wall Street Journal, Former Republican Political Operative, January, 6, 2022."The importance of January 6th as an historic event cannot be overstated. I was honored and proud to join my daughter on the House floor to recognize this anniversary, to commend the heroic actions of law enforcement that day, and to reaffirm our dedication to the Constitution. I am deeply disappointed at the failure of many members of my party to recognize the grave nature of the January 6 attacks and the ongoing threat to our nation.”Former Republican Vice President Dick Cheney, January 6, 2022. January 6th, 2021 was a dark day for Congress and our country. The United States Capitol, the seat of the first branch of our federal government, was stormed by criminals who brutalized police officers and used force to try to stop Congress from doing its job. This disgraceful scene was antithetical to the rule of law. One year later, I am as grateful as ever for the brave men and women of the U.S. Capitol Police who served our institution bravely that day and every day since. I continue to support justice for those who broke the law.GOP Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, January 6, 2022. On the first anniversary of January 6, GOP Senator Ted Cruz and Trump-appointed FBI Director Christopher Wray called the violence "a violent terrorist attack on the Capitol" and "domestic terrorism," respectively. Full Article
9 Fascism Rising & the Burning of the Reichstag: February 27, 1933 By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Feb 2024 06:01:00 +0000 Fascism means an extreme concentration of power in one person who thereby rises above the law. Such irrational power concentration always arises from lies, delusions and hatred--such as racism. It always leads to violence, bloodshed and war. From its origins in Italy after World War I through today as manifest in Donald Trump, and his comrades in arms, Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un and Xi Jinping, it always fails and leads to destruction and mass death. Human rights violations and oppression universally accompany fascism. Even a cursory review of history reveals that fascism entails pain, misery, and mass murder. Yet, fascism rises across the world and even in America. Tuesday, November 5, 2024, will determine whether fascism will march forward in the world or fail to overcome the freedom, prosperity and determination of the West. I will chronicle this contest here. Along the way we will explore the history of fascism and its manifold failures. Fittingly, today coincides with the 91st anniversary of the Burning of the Reichstag. This event launched Adolph Hitler toward totalitarian dictator. The next day the German President Paul von Hindenburg suspended civil liberties. Opposition to Nazis effectively became a crime. Today, controversy surrounds the Burning of the Reichstag. The new consensus in Berlin holds that the Nazis did it. In any event, it became a Big Lie that supported the onset of fascism in Germany. Things did not end well for the German people nor the wider world--over 8 million Germans perished. Donald Trump already called for the suspension of the Constitution so that he may seize power. He promises to be a "dictator" on day one of his new administration. He claims power to override the Constitution via executive order--the first President to ever make such an outlandish claim. Trump will never concede defeat and acquiesce in the peaceful transition of power as he proved on January 6, 2020 when he led an insurrection rather than concede defeat. Trump proved he will never consent to the peaceful transition of power. Which is why his admission that he seeks to exercise dictatorial power on day one of his new administration should he win the election must be taken seriously:It is hard to imagine a more clear and present danger to our Constitutional Republic than Trump's own admission that he seeks dictatorial power. Full Article
9 An Update on All of Trump's Crimes and Alleged Crimes By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Thu, 29 Aug 2024 21:29:00 +0000 On August 27, 2024, Special Prosecutor Jack Smith announced a Superseding Indictment Against Donald Trump arising from Trump's misconduct on January 6, 2021. The January 6 Insurrection already led to over 1400 indictments, 950 convictions, and landed over 600 protestors in jail. The Superseding Indictment seeks to restate the crimes alleged against former President Trump in light of the Supreme Court's novel and unprecedented decision in United States v. Trump granting Presidents a new-fangled immunity for official acts. In sum, according to the outstanding website January 6: And Why it Matters:While the core of the case remains unchanged with the four original charges intact, the revised indictment refines the scope of the accusations. Notably, it excludes certain claims, such as those involving attempts to use the Justice Department to support Trump’s false election fraud allegations.This case will not go away absent an order to Jack Smith that he desist from prosecution. That will not happen unless Donald Trump assumes the Presidency. On the other hand, Trump will likely move to dismiss the Superseding Indictment and the trial judge could well partially grant that motion. Whatever remains of this case will very likely go to trial well after election day on November 5, 2024, and even if a jury convicts Trump litigation will continue about the scope of Presidential immunity leading to further Supreme Court review.But what about the other criminal cases against Donald Trump?In one criminal action brought in Florida federal court, Special Counsel Jack Smith filed an appeal with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals of the dismissal of all charges relating to Trump's alleged pilfering and mishandling of government documents including classified documents. Judge Aileen Cannon ruled that Smith's appointment as Special Prosecutor did not comply with law. Special Counsel Smith just filed an appellate brief and Trump will file a response; but, this appeal will not conclude before the election and any decision will then face Supreme Court review. Consequently, the election could well decide this matter instead of a jury.In another criminal action in New York state court, a jury Trump helped pick from his native state, unanimously found Trump guilty of all 34 felony counts alleged against him. Trump's guilt rested on evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. According to Politico:On May 30, 2024, Trump became the first U.S. president to become a convicted felon. After a six-week trial . . . he was found guilty of falsifying business records in connection with a payoff to Stormy Daniels, a porn star who claimed she had a sexual encounter with him. By buying Daniels’ silence, the payoff avoided a possible sex scandal in the final weeks of the 2016 presidential campaign. Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal attorney and “fixer” at the time, sent the $130,000 hush-money payment to Daniels in October 2016, and then, while Trump was president, he reimbursed Cohen in a series of installments processed by Trump’s company. A unamimous 12-person jury found that Trump fraudulently disguised those installments as corporate legal expenses in violation of New York law.In short, Trump defrauded voters in election 2016 by covering up his adulterous affair with a porn star. Currently, Judge Juan Merchan will rule on the impact of the Supreme Court's new-fangled immunity defense on September 16, 2024, and will sentence Trump for these felony convictions for these 34 felony convictions on September 18, 2024. Experts disagree on the likelihood of prison for these felonies.Trump also faces felony charges in Georgia for alleged criminal efforts to change the outcome of election 2020 in Georgia. As stated at Politico:Trump’s efforts to overturn his loss in the 2020 election were perhaps most aggressive in the state of Georgia. Multiple recounts confirmed that Joe Biden narrowly prevailed in the race for the state’s 16 electoral votes. But Trump and his allies spread lies about voter fraud, urged Georgia officials and state lawmakers to reverse Biden’s win and plotted to send fake electors to Washington. On Jan. 2, 2021, Trump called Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, and urged him to “find” 11,780 votes — the number needed to overcome Biden’s victory. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charged Trump and 18 of his allies for these efforts, alleging a wide-ranging criminal enterprise.Essentially Trump refused to accept the reality of his defeat in Georgia and allegedly resorted to criminal measures to change the outcome. Trump filed an appeal arguing that District Attorney Fani Willis should be removed due to a a romantic relationship with a special prosecutor. Willis' team filed an appeal of a dismissal order of six counts of the indictment. Trump also filed a motion asserting Presidential Immunity. Consequently, this criminal action is hopelessly stalled and will not be resolved for years.The above summary of the criminal actions pending against Trump suggests the following:1) Somewhere American law went wrong. The people no long hold sufficient confidence in the fairness and impartiality of our system of justice. Otherwise, Trump supporters would not so readily fall prey to the Big Lie that all these criminal proceedings arise from a vast Democratic and deep state conspiracy to get Trump. No evidence supports this Big Lie. We need to rebuild confidence in the American criminal justice system.2) The rule of law in America failed to hold President Trump accountable for the wrongdoing in connection with contesting the election of 2020, and especially the Insurrection of January 6, 2020. Many others sit in jail. Still more pleaded guilty. There is little doubt Trump led those efforts. He did so openly on television, and in recorded phone calls. Yet, Trump suffered no adverse legal consequences for his role. This failure of the rule of law must lead to reform. Citizens must view criminal justice as fair and non-partisan. It also needs to apply swiftly, even to the rich and powerful.3) We need enhanced legal education in primary and secondary schools as well as at the college level. The judicial power in the US is highly fragmented. The split starts with 51 differing sovereigns each with a largely independent judicial power. Yet, many apparently believe that Joe Biden or the Democratic Party holds the ability to influence the independent judicial branch across jurisdictions. This, despite a complete lack of evidence of any improper influence. We should certainly reinforce the independence of the judicial power while simultaneously increasing transparency and accountability. At the same time citizens require more education regarding the structure and protections already in place to maintain a fair and non-partisan criminal justice system.4) A Trump victory at the polls will destroy the quest for a fair and non-partisan criminal justice for decades to come, as he has promised to eliminate independence in criminal enforcement at the federal level and to use the system to exact retribution and revenge upon his political opponents. Full Article
9 Trump's Cruel and Racist Attack on All Immigrants: Operation Wetback II By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Sat, 21 Sep 2024 22:24:00 +0000 No campaign promise will impose more mass oppression than the zero due process mass round-ups that Donald Trump touts at every rally. Former President Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance continually promise an almost unimaginable assault on American (legally here or otherwise) workers if elected. They want to bring back Operation Wetback from the 1950s but at a much greater magnitude. These promises play a leading role in their campaign for the White House and make an appearance in each and every campaign rally. In fact, at one recent rally Trump promised a "bloody" round-up and removal operation. These round-ups also feature prominently in the GOP platform so the entire party supports mass round-ups.The original Operation Wetback rounded-up American workers with no due process and summarily dropped them across the border into Mexico. Undocumented as well as legal workers suffered a militarized round-up across the nation. The operation even ensnared unknown numbers of US Citizens and broke-up families consisting of US Citizens and legal workers along with undocumented workers. It amounted to a terror campaign to get immigrants to self-deport. This brazenly racist effort serves as Trump's model.Trump and Vance promise to round-up as many as 20 million American workers a million at a time. Vance would round-up legal and illegal immigrants alike. Like Eisenhower's approach, legality does not matter, only skin color, which explains the utter cruelty of its implementation.The mass deportation program the Eisenhower Administration in the 1950s pursued is the closest and best historical corollary to such a proposal:The only historical comparison to a mass deportation programme came in 1954, when as many as 1.3 million people were deported as part of Operation Wetback, named after a derogatory slur then commonly used against Mexican people. . . . The programme, under President Dwight Eisenhower, ran into considerable public opposition-partly because some US citizens were also deported - as well as a lack of funding. It was largely discontinued by 1955. Immigration experts say that the earlier operation's focus on Mexican nationals and lack of due process makes it incomparable to what a modern-day mass deportation programme would look like. President Trump, however, proposes a militarized and no due process round-up that likely would leave the 1950s program in the dust. In a Time magazine interview Trump said: "So if you look back into the 1950s, Dwight Eisenhower . . . was very big on illegal immigration not coming into our country. And he did a massive deportation of people." The former President assumes he can do the job with the National Guard, but Trump promises to use the military if necessary, claiming that no federal law prohibits the use of the military against non-civilians. Indeed, it appears that Trump will accord those ensnared in this military operation zero due process,, as he makes clear in this video, from his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). He states: "We will pick them up and we will throw them out of our country and there will be no questions asked."Trump will also not rule out the use of detention camps. Trump's top immigration advisor, the notoriously racist Stephen Miller, said: "Because of the logistical challenges…you would need to build an extremely large holding area for illegal immigrants that at any given points in time . . . could hold upwards of 50, 60, 70,000 illegal aliens while you are waiting to send them . . . somewhere that would be willing to accept them.” Presumably, citizens ensnared in these round-ups would hold some means of getting released.Make no mistake, Trump promises cruel and brutal treatment for those rounded-up, otherwise why would he work so hard to dehumanize and demonize migrants? Alfonso Aguilar, of the American Principles Project's Latino Partnership, states: "The Eisenhower mass deportation policy was tragic, human rights were violated. People were removed to distant locations without food and water. There were many deaths, unnecessary deaths. Sometimes even U.S. citizens of Hispanic origin, of Mexican origin were removed. It was a travesty. It was terrible. Immigrants were humiliated." In her book Impossible Subjects, Mae Ngai writes that many Mexicans were deported by ship. A congressional investigation, according to the book, compared the conditions on the ship to that of an "eighteenth century slave ship."Trump and his MAGA cult consistently dehumanize migrants and propagate the most heinous lies about them--calling them animals and wrongfully accusing them of eating pets. They do this to pave the way for unspeakable evil. This evil plotting constitutes the core of their campaign and features in every rally and every campaign event. Dehumanization and demonization is the way to get many people to engage in deeply immoral and evil misconduct.Miller himself admits that much of this will occur pursuant to a "shock and awe blitz of Executive Orders" such that the slow-moving courts will not keep pace with the Trump plan. Miller promises that the next Trump Administration will not include those counseling compliance with law; instead, officials will prepare to move quickly on Day 1.“Trump will unleash the vast arsenal of federal powers to implement the most spectacular migration crackdown,” Miller led the Trump Administration's family separation policy which courts found unlawful but which still inflicted permanent cruelty upon children, many of whom remain separated from their families. As of mid-2024, Trump's policy of family separation still violates the law and about 1100 children still remain separated from their families despite a federal injunction to the contrary, and despite a Biden task force charged with repairing this manifest cruelty. Many of the barriers and guardrails that stopped Trump from pursuing unlawful conduct such as these round-ups are now weakened or simply gone. The judiciary includes many more Trump appointees compared to 2016. Trump now prepares for a second term with a greater focus on appointing compliant and obedient underlings. Indeed, he wants to eliminate the civil service. His lawyers already laid out arguments for the use of little used laws like the Alien Enemies ActWorse yet this fast-moving mass round-up campaign will combine with Trump's promise to abolish birthright citizenship to create a perfect storm of lawless cruelty, which I will focus upon in my next post. Full Article
9 THE TRUMP/VANCE ASSAULT ON EVERYONE'S BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP By corporatejusticeblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 16:42:00 +0000 Donald Trump promises to sign an Executive Order on day one of his new term abolishing Birthright Citizenship. This will trigger litigation thar promises to land in Trump's Supreme Court for final adjudication, Assuming Trump prevails there, the GOP already introduced a Bill to abolish Birthright Citizenship legislatively. JD Vance co-sponsored that Bill. This amounts to an historically unprecedented assault on virtually every American's Citizenship. Under Birthright Citizenship proof of birth in the US, via a birth certificate for example, suffices to prove citizenship. The Fourteenth Amendment secures this clear and easy path to Citizenship for all Americans born here, and so operated over the last 156 years. With the abolition of Birthright Citizenship no American will qualify for Birthright citizenship without additional proof of parental citizenship. You read that correctly, nearly every voter will face new evidentiary burdens to prove citizenship. Under the GOP approach we will all need to prove the legitimacy of our parents' citizenship.The Vance sponsored Constitutional Citizenship Clarification Act, introduced on June 5, 2024, purports on its face to totally and instantly abolish Birthright Citizenship. According to one co-sponsor's website the Act will:Amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to clarify that no child is eligible for birthright citizenship if their parents are unlawfully present in the United States, present in the U.S. for diplomatic purposes, or engaged in a hostile operation against the U.S.Notably, the Act proposed by Vance includes no limitation on this "clarification" of who enjoys citizenship and who does not. The Act includes no limitation on retroactive effect and lacks any express limitation providing for prospective impact only. The Constitution only proscribes retroactive criminal sanctions The intent of the Act is to correct errors in prior interpretations of the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment. More broadly, the GOP assault on virtually everyone's citizenship seeks to maximize the power of the next Trump Administration to round-up citizens, as discussed in my prior blog post. As such, this amounts to the greatest power-grab of rights over American citizens in history. Full Article