Clarence Thomas helped Judge Aileen Cannon to thwart prosecution of Trump in classified documents case!

Clarence Thomas and Aileen Cannon.  Photos:  Mother Jones; Eric Lee/Pool//CNP/ZUMA; Southern District of Florida

Dear Commons Community,

Yesterday, Judge Aileen Cannon astonished the judicial world by dismissing the classified documents case against Donald Trump. She did so based on a questionable legal argument that the special counsel who brought the prosecution, Jack Smith, had been improperly appointed.

The argument, initially aired by the former US president’s lawyers, had received scant support in judicial circles, given that stretching back a quarter of a century it has been repeatedly rejected by the courts. But there was one jurist who encouraged Cannon to pursue such contrarian thinking: Clarence Thomas.

As reported by The Guardian.

Two weeks before Cannon’s stunning dismissal, Thomas essentially prodded her into making the move. In a concurring opinion to Trump v US, the US supreme court ruling awarding the former president immunity over his “official acts” in the lead-up to the January 6 insurrection, the hard-right justice sketched a legal roadmap that Cannon then duly followed.

Thomas pulled out a line from the appointments clause of the US constitution and used it to argue that the special counsel lacked authority to pursue his two federal criminal prosecutions against Trump. He claimed that in the absence of a law from Congress specifically establishing the role of special counsel, Smith’s appointment was invalid.

As reported last week, Thomas has long used his concurring opinions to signal to outside parties that he would like them to pursue his extreme legal theories. In this case, though he did not mention Cannon by name, he left little to the imagination.

He invited the “lower courts” to look into the “essential questions concerning the special counsel’s appointment before proceeding” with Smith’s prosecutions.

Cannon obediently adopted Thomas’s radical thinking, subsuming it into her 93-page judgment almost to the letter. She cites his concurring opinion in Trump v US at least three times.

Her basic justification for dismissing the criminal case against Trump, in which the former president is alleged to have hoarded secret White House documents in his Mar-a-Lago resort, is identical to Thomas’s. She argues that no statute exists giving Merrick Garland, US attorney general, the “authority to appoint a special counsel like Smith”.

Cannon’s reasoning – just like Thomas’s – flies in the face of decades of legal precedent. Courts have considered numerous cases relating to special prosecutors, from the 1970s Watergate scandal to the appointment of Robert Mueller, the special counsel investigating Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

In every case, judges have upheld the principle that attorneys general have the authority, under the power vested in them by the president, to appoint special prosecutors.

Legal observers responded to the touchdown pass thrown by quarterback Thomas to receiver Cannon with barely disguised incredulity. Leah Litman, a law professor at the University of Michigan law school, wryly quipped on social media that “Justice Thomas’s ‘Cannon-currence’ worked”.

Melissa Murray, a law professor at New York University law school, posted on X that Thomas had “laid the table and Judge Cannon took a seat”.

As Murray noted, Thomas has now participated in two highly contentious legal decisions, released two weeks apart, upending both federal prosecutions of Trump. Thomas was one of the six rightwing justices who voted to give the former president unprecedented immunity protections relating to his conspiracy to overthrow the 2020 election; and now he has presented Cannon with the arguments that she used to dismiss the classified documents case.

That is bold action from a justice who is already being accused of conflict of interest in his dealings with Trump – not to mention the many other ethics scandals that have led Democrats in Congress to call for his investigation and impeachment. Thomas’s wife, Ginni, is heavily implicated in the 2020 election subversion conspiracy, and yet the justice has consistently refused to recuse himself from any January 6 case.

What shame they bring to Washington!

Tony

Man killed at Trump rally identified as firefighter Corey Comperatore!

  Photo courtesy of the Associated Press.

Dear Commons Community,

The following was provided by CNN.

Tony

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Man killed at Trump rally identified as firefighter Corey Comperatore , who ‘died a hero’

Zoe Sottile and Kit Maher, CNN

July 15, 2024 at 5:06 AM

Friends and neighbors are remembering firefighter Corey Comperatore -– the man shot and killed during the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump – as a family man who served his community and was quick to help friends in need.

Comperatore was one of the thousands of people who attended the rally in Butler, part of Trump’s 2024 reelection effort. He died trying to protect his family, according to according to Gov. Josh Shapiro. Pennsylvania State Police confirmed his identity on Sunday.

Authorities have identified the gunman in Saturday’s attack as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks, who was killed by Secret Service agents at the scene after the shooting. The FBI is investigating the attack as an assassination attempt, the agency said.

Shapiro directed flags to be flown at half-staff in Comperatore’s memory.

“I just spoke to Corey’s wife and Corey’s two daughters,” Shapiro said Sunday.

“Corey was an avid supporter of the former president and was so excited to be there last night with him in the community,” the governor said.

“I asked Corey’s wife if it would be OK for me to share that we spoke. She said ‘yes.’ She also asked that I share with all of you that Corey died a hero,” Shapiro said.

“Corey dove on his family to protect them last night at this rally.”

“Corey was a girl dad. Corey was a firefighter. Corey went to church every Sunday. Corey loved his community. Most especially, Corey loved his family,” said Shapiro.

In addition to Comperatore, two people were critically injured in the incident, according to Pennsylvania State Police.

David Dutch, 57, of New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and James Copenhaver, 74, of Moon Township, Pennsylvania, are in stable condition, state police said in a news release.

The Marine Corps League of Pennsylvania, Inc. identified Dutch as a commandant in their organization’s location in Westmoreland County. Vice Commandant Matt Popovich said on Facebook that Dutch underwent two surgeries after being “shot in the liver and chest.”

“These victims and their families are certainly in our thoughts today,” said state police commissioner Col. Christopher Paris. “The Pennsylvania State Police continue to work tirelessly alongside our federal, state and local partners as this investigation continues.”

The former president was shot in his right ear, he said on social media, leaving his face covered in blood.

A GoFundMe campaign for the victims’ families, verified by the fundraising platform, had raised more than $3 million by Sunday afternoon, more than triple its initial goal. More than 49,000 donations have poured in, according to the website.

Speaking Sunday afternoon, President Joe Biden expressed his condolences to Comperatore’s family.

“We also extend our deepest condolences to the family of the victim who was killed,” the president said. “He was a father; he was protecting his family from the bullets being fired when he lost his life. God love him. We are also praying for the full recovery of those who were injured.”

A community in mourning

Mike Morehouse, who lived next to Comperatore for years told the Associated Press he counts Comperatore as a hero and intends to vote in the upcoming election in his memory.

“As soon as I heard what happened and then learned that it was to Corey, I went upstairs as soon as I got home and I registered to vote,” Morehouse told the AP. “This is the first time I’ve ever voted and I think it will be in his memory.”

Matthew Achilles, who also lived near Comperatore, told CNN affiliate WTAE, “He was a real good guy. He really was. You hear stories all the time that it’s always the good ones that end up getting taken out, and unfortunately, that’s what happened.”

“He helped us out when I was real sick a couple years ago. I was in the hospital and almost died. Corey was one of the first people to message me and say ‘Hey, how can I help you,’” Achilles said.

Bishop David Zubik of the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh said in a statement that “Comperatore’s selfless act in the face of danger speaks to his strength of character, deep faith, and dedication to serving others.”

“Let us also take this moment to pray for unity and an end to violence and inflammatory rhetoric in our community and across our nation,” he said.

In the outpouring of sympathy, many have highlighted Comperatore’s dedication to the community he served.

“Corey Comperatore died a hero, the way he lived, shielding his family from gunfire. He was a former fire chief, a proud father and loving husband. We will pray for his family. May he rest in peace,” Robert Brooks, president of the Pennsylvania Professional Fire Fighters Association told CNN in a statement Sunday.

The Buffalo Township Board of Supervisors condemned political violence in a statement to CNN Sunday.

“Corey was a dedicated husband, father, friend, and volunteer to the community, and will be sorely missed,” the statement said.

 

Dietary aide turned sniper: More on Trump Shooter Thomas Crooks!

Photo courtesy of Reuters.

Dear Commons Community,

The following was provided by USA Today.

Tony

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Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY

Updated July 14, 2024 at 8:25 PM

Donald Trump and would-be assassin Thomas Crooks started on their violent collision course long before the former president’s political rally ended in gunshots and death.

Crooks, 20, was a one-time registered Republican, a nursing home worker with no criminal record, shy in school, and living in a decent middle-class neighborhood in suburban Pennsylvania with his parents. Trump, 78, was eyeing Crooks’ state as a key battleground – but not in the way that anyone envisioned on Saturday.

Riding high on polls showing that he’s got a strong chance of toppling President Joe Biden, former president Trump had been campaigning for reelection in swing states, and Pennsylvania is a key prize. Trump won the state in 2016, but lost it four years later.

And on July 3, Trump’s campaign announced he would hold a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds, about 30 miles north of Pittsburgh.

“Pennsylvania has been ravaged by monumental surges in violent crime as a direct result of Biden’s and Democrats’ pro-criminal policies,” Trump’s campaign said in announcing the event, noting that when he’s elected, he’ll “re-establish law and order in Pennsylvania!”

The Saturday attack on Trump turned the heated rhetoric of the 2024 presidential campaign freshly violent. Authorities said bullets fired from Crooks’ AR-15 style rifle about 150 yards away grazed Trump’s ear, killed a rally attendee as he dove to protect his family, and critically wounded two others. Secret Service agents killed Crooks moments later.

Attack planned well in advance

Investigators are still seeking Crooks’ motive – despite his Republican leanings, he had donated recently to a progressive voter-turnout campaign in 2021 – but indicated he’d planned the attack well in advance.

The shooting marks the first assassination attempt against a former or current U.S. president since President Ronald Reagan was injured in a March 1981 shooting at a Washington, D.C. hotel.

There are many questions about why Crooks turned into a would-be presidential assassin, firing indiscriminately into hordes of political supporters.

FBI special agent Kevin Rojek said on a call with media that law enforcement located “a suspicious device” when they searched the Crooks’ vehicle , and that it’s being analyzed at the FBI crime lab.

“As far as the actions of the shooter immediately prior to the event and any interaction that he may have had with law enforcement, we’re still trying to flesh out those details now,” Rojek said.

None of Crooks’ shocked neighbors or high school classmates described him as violent or that he in any way signaled he was intent on harming Trump. Sunday morning, reporters and curious locals swarmed the leafy streets of the home where Crooks lived with his parents in Bethel Park, about 50 miles from the shooting scene.

Those who knew him described a quiet young man who often walked to work at a nearby nursing home. One classmate said he was bullied and often ate alone in high school.

Sunday morning, neighbor Cathy Caplan, 45, extended her morning walk about a quarter mile to glimpse what was happening outside Crooks’ home.“It came on the morning news and I was like ‘I know that street,’” said Caplan, who works for the local school district. “It feels like something out of a movie.”

Dietary aide turned deadly killer

Authorities say they are examining Crooks’ phone, social media and online activity for motivation. They said he carried no identification and his body had to be identified via DNA and biometric confirmation.

Although no possible motive has yet been released, Crooks nevertheless embodies the achingly familiar profile of an American mass shooter: a young white man, isolated from peers and armed with a high-powered rifle. His attack was one of at least 59 shootings in the United States on Saturday, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

According to records and online posts of the ceremony, Crooks graduated Bethel Park High School, about 42 miles from Butler, on June 3, 2022. That same day, Trump met briefly with investigators at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida as they examined whether he improperly took classified documents with him when he left the White House.

A classmate remembered Crooks as a frequent target of bullies. Kids picked on him for wearing camouflage to class and his quiet demeanor, Jason Kohler, 21, said. Crooks usually ate lunch alone, Kohler said.

Crooks worked as dietary aide at the Bethel Park Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation, less than a mile from his home. In a statement provided to USA TODAY on Sunday, Marcie Grimm, the facility’s administrator, said she was “shocked and saddened to learn of his involvement.”

Neighbor Dean Sierka, 52, has known Crooks and his parents for years. The families live a few doors apart on a winding suburban street, and Sierka’s daughter, who attended elementary, middle and high school with Crooks, remembers him as quiet and shy. Sierka said they saw Crooks at least once a week, often when he was walking to the nursing home from his parents’ three-bedroom brick house.

“You wouldn’t have expected this,” Sierka said. “The parents and the family are all really nice people.”

“It’s crazy,” he added.

 

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, America’s pioneering sex therapist, dies at 96!

Ruth Westheimer. Photo – The Associated Press.

Dear Commons Community,

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the sex therapist who became a  media star and best-selling author through her frank talk about human sexuality, has died. She was 96.  Below is her obituary courtesy of  The Associated Press.

May she rest in peace!

Tony

———————————————————————-

The Associated Press

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, America’s diminutive and pioneering sex therapist, dies at 96

By  MARK KENNEDY

Updated 12:35 PM EDT, July 13, 2024

NEW YORK (AP) — Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the diminutive sex therapist who became a pop icon, media star and best-selling author through her frank talk about once-taboo bedroom topics, has died. She was 96.

Westheimer died on Friday at her home in New York City, surrounded by her family, according to publicist and friend Pierre Lehu.

Westheimer never advocated risky sexual behavior. Instead, she encouraged an open dialogue on previously closeted issues that affected her audience of millions. Her one recurring theme was there was nothing to be ashamed of.

“I still hold old-fashioned values and I’m a bit of a square,” she told students at Michigan City High School in 2002. “Sex is a private art and a private matter. But still, it is a subject we must talk about.”

Westheimer’s giggly, German-accented voice, coupled with her 4-foot-7 frame, made her an unlikely looking — and sounding — outlet for “sexual literacy.” The contradiction was one of the keys to her success.

But it was her extensive knowledge and training, coupled with her humorous, nonjudgmental manner, that catapulted her local radio program, “Sexually Speaking,” into the national spotlight in the early 1980s. She had an open approach to what two consenting adults did in the privacy of their home.

“Tell him you’re not going to initiate,” she told a concerned caller in June 1982. “Tell him that Dr. Westheimer said that you’re not going to die if he doesn’t have sex for one week.”

As a sign of her appeal across the generations and social culture, tributes came from actor-comedian Adam Sandler — “She always made us smile,” he wrote on X — to New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, who appointed Westheimer the state’s Ambassador of Loneliness. “May her memory be a blessing,” said the governor in a statement. ”She was brave, funny, candid and brilliant.”

Her radio success opened new doors, and in 1983 she wrote the first of more than 40 books: “Dr. Ruth’s Guide to Good Sex,” demystifying sex with both rationality and humor. There was even a board game, Dr. Ruth’s Game of Good Sex.

She soon became a regular on the late-night television talk-show circuit, bringing her personality to the national stage. Her rise coincided with the early days of the AIDS epidemic, when frank sexual talk became a necessity.

“If we could bring about talking about sexual activity the way we talk about diet — the way we talk about food — without it having this kind of connotation that there’s something not right about it, then we would be a step further. But we have to do it with good taste,” she told Johnny Carson in 1982.

She normalized the use of words like “penis” and “vagina” on radio and TV, aided by her Jewish grandmotherly accent, which The Wall Street Journal once said was “a cross between Henry Kissinger and Minnie Mouse.” People magazine included her in their list of “The Most Intriguing People of the Century.” She even made it into a Shania Twain song: “No, I don’t need proof to show me the truth/Not even Dr. Ruth is gonna tell me how I feel.”

Westheimer defended abortion rights, suggested older people have sex after a good night’s sleep and was an outspoken advocate of condom use. She believed in monogamy.

In the 1980s, she stood up for gay men at the height of the AIDS epidemic and spoke out loudly for the LGBTQ community. She said she defended people deemed by some far-right Christians to be “subhuman” because of her own past.

Born Karola Ruth Siegel in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1928, she was an only child. At 10, she was sent by her parents to Switzerland to escape Kristallnacht — the Nazis’ 1938 pogrom that served as a precursor to the Holocaust. She never saw her parents again; Westheimer believed they were killed in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.

At the age of 16, she moved to Palestine and joined the Haganah, the underground movement for Israeli independence. She was trained as a sniper, although she said she never shot at anyone.

Her legs were severely wounded when a bomb exploded in her dormitory, killing many of her friends. She said it was only through the work of a “superb” surgeon that she could walk and ski again.

She married her first husband, an Israeli soldier, in 1950, and they moved to Paris as she pursued an education. Although not a high school graduate, Westheimer was accepted into the Sorbonne to study psychology after passing an entrance exam.

The marriage ended in 1955; the next year, Westheimer went to New York with her new boyfriend, a Frenchman who became her second husband and father to her daughter, Miriam.

In 1961, after a second divorce, she finally met her life partner: Manfred Westheimer, a fellow refugee from Nazi Germany. The couple was married and had a son, Joel. They remained wed for 36 years until “Fred” — as she called him — died of heart failure in 1997.

After receiving her doctorate in education from Columbia University, she went on to teach at Lehman College in the Bronx. While there she developed a specialty — instructing professors how to teach sex education. It would eventually become the core of her curriculum.

“I soon realized that while I knew enough about education, I did not really know enough about sex,” she wrote in her 1987 autobiography. Westheimer then decided take classes with the renowned sex therapist, Dr. Helen Singer Kaplan.

It was there that she had discovered her calling. Soon, as she once said in a typically folksy comment, she was dispensing sexual advice “like good chicken soup.”

“I came from an Orthodox Jewish home so sex for us Jews was never considered a sin,” she told The Guardian in 2019.

In 1984, her radio program was nationally syndicated. A year later, she debuted in her own television program, “The Dr. Ruth Show,” which went on to win an Ace Award for excellence in cable television.

She also wrote a nationally syndicated advice column and later appeared in a line of videos produced by Playboy, preaching the virtues of open sexual discourse and good sex. She even had a series of calendars.

Her rise was noteworthy for the culture of the time, in which then-President Ronald Reagan’s administration was hostile to Planned Parenthood and aligned with pro-conservative voices.

Phyllis Schlafly, a staunch anti-feminist, wrote in a 1999 piece “The Dangers of Sex Education,” that Westheimer, as well as Gloria Steinem, Anita Hill, Madonna, Ellen DeGeneres and others were promoting “provocative sex chatter” and “rampant immorality.”

Father Edwin O’Brien, the director of communications for the Catholic archdiocese of New York who would go on to become a cardinal, called her work upsetting and morally compromised.

“It’s pure hedonism,” O’Brien wrote in a 1982 opinion published by The Wall Street Journal. “The message is just indulge yourself; whatever feels good is good. There is no higher law of overriding morality, and there’s also no responsibility.”

Westheimer made appearances on “The Howard Stern Radio Show,” “Nightline,” “The Tonight Show,” “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” “The Dr. Oz Show” and “Late Night with David Letterman.” She played herself in episodes of “Quantum Leap” and “Love Boat: The Next Wave.”

Her books include “Sex for Dummies,” her autobiographical works “All in a Lifetime” (1987) and “Musically Speaking: A Life through Song” (2003). The documentary “Ask Dr. Ruth” aired in 2019.

During her time as a radio and television personality, she remained committed to teaching, with posts at Yale, Hunter College, Princeton and Columbia universities and a busy college lecture schedule. She also maintained a private practice throughout her life.

Westheimer received an honorary doctorate from Hebrew Union College-Institute of Religion for her work in human sexuality and her commitment to the Jewish people, Israel and religion. In 2001 she received the Ellis Island Medal of Honor and the Leo Baeck Medal, and in 2004, she received the degree of Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, from Trinity College.

Ryan White, the director of “Ask Dr. Ruth,” told Vice in 2019 that Westheimer was never someone following trends. She was always an ally of gay rights and an advocate for family planning.

“She was at the forefront of both of those things throughout her entire life. I met her friends from her orphanage saying even when she met gay people throughout her life in the ’30s, ’40s, and ’50s she was always accepting of those people and always saying that people should be treated with respect.”

She is survived by two children, Joel and Miriam, and four grandchildren.

Trump Shot in the Ear During Rally (Video)!

Donald Trump and Alleged Shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks

Dear Commons Community,

Donald Trump was shot in the ear (see video below) by a gunman identified as Thomas Matthew Crooks, of Bethel Park Pennsylvania. The authorities have not established a motive for the shooting. Bellow are initial comments from several news outlets. 

  • Trump was rushed off the stage after shots were fired while he was speaking at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Trump said in a Truth Social post he was “shot with a bullet” that pierced his top of his ear.
  • A Trump spokesman said the former president is “fine” and is receiving medical care at a nearby facility.
  • The Secret Service said Saturday the suspected gunman took an elevated position outside the venue’s security perimeter and fired “multiple shots” in the direction of the stage where Trump was speaking.
  • The Secret Service said its agents killed the shooter. They also confirmed at least one rally attendee was killed in the shooting, and two others were critically injured.
  • Biden delivered remarks about the shooting on Saturday, calling the attack “sick” and saying he was hoping to speak with Trump directly soon.

Tony

The race is on to save the 150-year-old Hudson-Athens Lighthouse from crumbling into the Hudson River!

Hudson-Athens Lighthouse.  Courtesy of the Associated Press.

Dear Commons Community,

The race is on to save a 150-year-old lighthouse from crumbling into the Hudson River.

Wooden pilings beneath Hudson-Athens Lighthouse are deteriorating, and the structure, built in the middle of the river when steamboats still plied the water, is beginning to shift. Cracks are apparent on the brick building and its granite foundation.

While there are other endangered lighthouses around the nation, the peril to this one 100 miles 161 (kilometers) north of New York City is so dire the National Trust for Historic Preservation placed Hudson-Athens on its 2024 list of the country’s 11 most endangered historic places. Advocates say that if action isn’t taken soon, yet another historic lighthouse could potentially be lost in the coming years.

“All four corners will begin to come down, and then you’ll have a pile of rock in the middle. And ultimately it will topple into the river,” Van Calhoun of the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse Preservation Society said during a recent visit.

The society is trying to quickly raise money to place a submerged steel curtain around the lighthouse, an ambitious preservation project that could cost up to $10 million. Their goal is to save a prominent symbol of the river’s centuries-long legacy as a busy waterway. While the Hudson River was once home to more than a dozen lighthouses, only seven still stand.

A good cause and an important part of New York history.

Tony

 

Trump’s Biggest Donors and How Much Have They Contributed?

Dear Commons Community,

Former President Donald Trump, has had a number of prominent donors  who have contributed millions of dollars to support  his run for the White House.  Since Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts in May, financial contributions to back him have poured in, according to his campaign, which said it received $34 million in the hours immediately following his conviction.

Below are the nine biggest donors — all of whom have donated at least $5 million — to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024, according to OpenSecrets.

Tony

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Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Foundation

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $5,000,000

The Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Foundation has been around for nearly 40 years. The foundation and its founders, Laura and Isaac “Ike” Perlmutter, support cancer research, the exoneration of wrongly convicted criminals and first-responder organizations, among other groups. According to the foundation’s site, it has donated more than $78,000,000 to various causes and missions.

CrownQuest Operating

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $5,000,936

Based in Midland, Texas, but operating in several areas of the continental U.S., CrownQuest is an active driller looking to expand its leasehold in the Permian Basin.

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Energy Transfer LP

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $5,007,719

Energy Transfer is a midstream energy company in North America with more than 125,000 miles of pipelines and associated energy infrastructure in 44 states, dedicated to transporting oil and gas products.

Hendricks Holding Co

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $5,013,650

A private holding company, Hendricks Holding Company, Inc. (HHC) invests in and oversees a variety of companies — many of which are in the manufacturing and transportation space.

McMahon Ventures

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $5,250,000

According to Bloomberg, McMahon Ventures, LLC provides management consulting services. Little other information about this organization is available.

America First

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $6,007,770

There are a few organizations that have some variation of the words “America First” in their title; it is unclear which of them is so generously backing Trump, but OpenSecrets marks America First Action and America First Policies among its affiliates.

Bigelow Aerospace

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $9,182,000

Headquartered in Las Vegas, Bigelow Aerospace is a general contracting, research and development company that focuses on “achieving economic breakthroughs in the costs associated with the design, development and construction of habitable space structures for private enterprise and government use,” according to the company’s website.

Uline Inc

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $10,009,176

For over 40 years, Uline, a family-owned business, has been a leading distributor of shipping, industrial and packaging materials to businesses throughout North America.

Timothy Mellon

  • Amount contributed to the Trump campaign as of June 21, 2024: $75,000,000

Trump’s biggest donor by far is Timothy Mellon, an extremely wealthy investor and known political donor who has helped fund Donald Trump’s Super PAC, while also giving millions for Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the third-party candidate, in his 2024 bid to claim the Oval Office.

 

Joe Biden’s news conference: Insistence on staying in the race and flubbed names

Saul Loeb. Getty Images.

Dear Commons Community,

I watched President Joe Biden’s news conference last night. He was better in his presentation than during the debate, however, he probably did not win anybody over about his mental acuity. 

Here is a brief recap courtesy of The Associated Press.

The news conference was meant to reassure a disheartened group of Democratic lawmakers, allies and persuadable voters in this year’s election that Biden still has the strength and stamina to be president. Biden has tried to defend his feeble and tongue-tied performance in the June 27 debate against Republican Donald Trump as an outlier rather than evidence that at 81 he lacks the vigor and commanding presence that the public expects from the commander in chief.

He made at least two notable flubs, referring at an event beforehand to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as “President Putin” and then calling Kamala Harris “Vice President Trump” when asked about her by a reporter. But he also gave detailed responses about his work to preserve NATO and his plans for a second term. And he insisted he’s not leaving the race even as a growing number of Democratic lawmakers ask him to step aside.

Perhaps Biden’s biggest slip-up in the press conference came early on when he referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as “Vice President Trump,” in saying he picked her because he believed she could beat Trump.

Even before the news conference, Biden had bungled an important name at the NATO summit and instantly lowered expectations for his performance.

“Ladies and gentlemen, President Putin,” Biden said as he was introducing Ukrainian President President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is most definitely not Russian President Vladimir Putin. The gaffe immediately prompted gasps, as Biden caught himself and said to Zelenskyy: “President Putin? You’re going to beat President Putin.”

But he was defiant when a reporter brought up his reference to “Vice President Trump” and noted the presumptive Republican nominee’s campaign was already promoting the slip-up.

Give it up, Joe!

Tony

New York Times editorial board declares Trump ‘unfit to lead’

Courtesy of MSNBC.

Dear Commons Community,

The editorial board of the New York Times declared yesterday that “Donald Trump is unfit to lead” in a piece  published just ahead of the Republican convention, where Trump will once again be formally named the party’s choice for president.

Noting that the former president and convicted felon has now become the Republican nominee three times in eight years, the board said: “A once great political party now serves the interests of one man, a man as demonstrably unsuited for the office of president as any to run in the long history of the republic, a man whose values, temperament, ideas and language are directly opposed to so much of what has made this country great.”

It called the selection of Trump “a chilling choice against this national moment”.

On Monday the paper’s editorial board also made Joe Biden the subject of an article, in which it insisted that “that the best hope for Democrats to retain the White House is for him to step aside”, given that the president “continued to appear as a man in decline” following Biden’s disastrous debate against Trump in Atlanta last month.

But the latest piece focuses squarely on the danger posed by Trump, 78, and questions his own cognitive fitness.

Many voters, the Times argued, were “frustrated, even despondent”. On Thursday, a new survey from the Washington Post, ABC News and Ipsos said 67% of US adults (and 58% of Democrats) wanted Biden to step aside, while 50% of US adults (but only 11% of Republicans) said the same about Trump.

Saluting Republicans that it said “pursued electoral power in service to solutions for such problems”, such as Ronald Reagan, George HW Bush, John McCain and Mitt Romney, the Times board went on to say that “too many Republicans set aside their concerns about Mr Trump because of his positions on immigration, trade and taxes. But the stakes of this election … are more foundational: what qualities matter most in America’s president and commander-in-chief”.

Trump was convicted on 34 criminal charges concerning hush-money payments to a porn star that a jury agreed were designed to interfere with the 2016 election. He was originally slated to be sentenced today, with the possibility of jail time, but after the supreme court ruled that presidents have some immunity from prosecution the judge has delayed the sentencing until September to review the case.

Trump faces 54 other criminal charges, concerning election subversion and retention of classified documents, and in civil cases has been fined hundreds of millions of dollars for business fraud and millions more in a defamation suit arising from a rape allegation a judge called “substantially true”.

His attempts to overturn the 2020 election culminated in the January 6 attack on the US Capitol. Nine deaths, about 1,300 arrests and hundreds of convictions are linked to the riot. Trump was impeached a second time for inciting an insurrection but Republican senators acquitted him, leaving him free to run for office. Trump has promised to pardon rioters.

The Times editorial board said these events and other indicators – which it categorised as moral fitness, principled leadership, character, a president’s words and the rule of law – indicated that Trump had “shown a character unworthy of the responsibilities of the presidency.

“He has demonstrated an utter lack of respect for the constitution, the rule of law and the American people. Instead of a cogent vision for the country’s future, Mr Trump is animated by a thirst for political power: to use the levers of government to advance his interests, satisfy his impulses and exact retribution against those who he thinks have wronged him.

“He is, quite simply, unfit to lead.”

It added that while Democrats “are rightly engaged in their own debate about whether President Biden is the right person to carry the party’s nomination into the election, given widespread concerns among voters about his age-related fitness”, the importance of that debate was down to “legitimate concerns that Mr Trump may present a danger to the country, its strength, security and national character – and that a compelling Democratic alternative is the only thing that would prevent his return to power.

It said it was a “national tragedy that the Republicans have failed to … [set] aside their longstanding values” and ignoring what former Trump officials “have described as his systematic dishonesty, corruption, cruelty and incompetence”, and urged American voters to “perform a simple act of civic duty in an election year: listen to what Mr Trump is saying, pay attention to what he did as president and allow yourself to truly inhabit what he has promised to do if returned to office”.

Amen!

Tony

Minnesota Becomes First State to Crack Down on Open Program Managers (OPMs)!

Online Program Management (OPM) Companies.

Dear Commons Community,

For those institutions planning on contracting out for online program management (OPM) for hosting, online course/program development, or support services, a careful analysis should be undertaken.  Schools and colleges have been cautioned to be careful in developing a relationship with OPMs, some of which are less than scrupulous in their operations.

OPMs have also faced increasing scrutiny from the U.S. Congress and consumer advocates who have urged greater oversight from the U.S. Department of Education and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to protect colleges and students from “predatory conduct by OPMs. Last week, Minnesota became the first state to pass legislation stipulating the use of OPMs in its thirty public colleges.  Among the stipulations are that OPM contracts can’t include or allow for tuition sharing and can’t grant an OPM ownership over faculty members’ intellectual property. A college working with an OPM will also have to submit an annual analysis of the partnership to specified committees in the state legislature.  Other states have tried to enact similar legislation but have been stymied for a number of reason.

An article in yesterday’s Chronicle of Higher Education, is worth a read for any school contemplating entering into a contract with an OPM.

Tony