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WEEK 39: EXPERTS IN AUTHORITARIANISM ADVISE TO KEEP A LIST OF THINGS SUBTLY CHANGING AROUND YOU, SO YOU’LL REMEMBER.

8/12/2017

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Week #39:  August 12, 2017

Despite Congress being out of session and Trump on vacation, this was one of the most alarming weeks so far. Without provocation, Trump made aggressive statements towards three countries, and escalated the possibility of nuclear war with N. Korea. The country continued to burn in hate as violence surrounding a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville led to a state of emergency in Virginia.

Other troubling trends continued this week including: an increase of media controlled by Trump and his allies, an unstaffed and unprepared executive branch, and steps taken to suppress the vote in future elections. Even with his new chief of staff, it is apparent Trump is consolidating power and answering to no one. He is also stepping up his attacks on the legislative branch.
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1.    Reminiscent of state-owned propaganda, Trump launched the first broadcast of "real" Trump TV featuring Kayleigh McEnany, formerly a commentator on CNN.   Read More About This

2.    The RNC named McEnany to be its national spokesperson, meaning she will get paid by the RNC for her Trump TV work.   Read More About This

3.    Lara Trump will run Trump TV as part of her job with consulting group Giles-Parscale. Per Week 31, Parscale has been called by Congressional investigators to testify on his role in the Trump campaign and Russia.   Read More About This;  Click here, also

4.    Trump's FCC chair, Ajit Pai, revived a regulatory loophole allowing Sinclair Broadcasting to vastly exceed federal limits on media ownership. When a pending deal closes, Sinclair will reach 72% of US households.   Read More About This

5.    VOX analyzed 17 months of Fox & Friends transcripts and found a symbiotic relationship between Trump and the show. Since the election, data reveals the show's primary goal is talk to Trump, not their audience.   Read More About This

6.    On Fox News Sunday, Rosenstein said he has not been directed by Trump to investigate Hillary's email, as suggested by Trump. Rosenstein added, "That wouldn't be right. That's not the way we operate."   Read More About This

7.    Rosenstein dismissed that the Russia probe is a "total fabrication" -- the reference by Trump. He also said Mueller can investigate any crimes he discovers within the scope of his probe.   Read More About This

8.    Conway suggested White House staffers may be required to take lie-detector testsas part of the regime's efforts to find leakers.   Read More About This

9.    WAPO Editorial Board wrote Trump's DOJ is joining the GOP's crusade to suppress voting, citing an Ohio case of culling voters before the SCOTUS. The Obama administration found this unlawful, Trump's does not.   Read More About This

10.    Indiana NCAAP and Priorities USA are suing the state over a law which results in closing voting precincts in black and Latino areas.   Read More About This

11.    Poll: Half of Republicans would back postponing 2020 election if Trump proposed it   Read More About This

12.    AP reported Ivy League schools are bracing for scrutiny from the Trump regime for their efforts to make their campuses diverse.   Read More About This

13.    A bomb was tossed through the window of a Mosque in Bloomington, MN. Minnesota's governor declared the bombing "an act of terrorism."   Read More About This

14.    Trump did not acknowledge the bombing of a bomb that was tossed through the window of a Mosque in Bloomington, MN. Gorka said the WH would "wait and see" in case the blast turned out to be a hoax. By week end, Trump still had no comment.   Read More About This

15.    Trump tweeted out a Fox News story about a vehicle ramming into soldiers in France, which the news agency insinuated, without having evidence yet, was carried out by Islamic terrorists.   Read More About This

16.    The NAACP Legal Defense Fund will appeal a federal judge's ruling allowing a white Alabama town to secede from a racially-mixed county school district and start its own system.   Read More About This

17.    CNN fired conservative pundit Jeffrey Lord after he tweeted the Nazi salute, "Sieg Heil!" at a prominent liberal activist.   Read More About This

18.    A study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found Trump's moves to undermine Obamacare have already triggered double-digit premium increases on individual health insurance policies in many states.   Read More About This

19.    NYT reported government scientists are concerned that a report by scientists in 13 federal agencies, which finds a drastic impact of climate change in the US, will be suppressed by Trump.   Read More About This

20.    In a series of emails obtained by The Guardian, the Trump regime advised staff at the USDA not to use certain terms like "climate change"and "climate change adaption."   Read More About This

21.    Karina Brown, an Asian American woman who attended a Bon Jovi concert in Columbus, OH was told by a fellow concert-goer, "You don't belong in this country."   Read More About This

22.    Five transgender troops sued Trump over his tweet to instate a transgender military ban.   Read More About This

23.    The Canadian military is building a refugee camp in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle near Plattsburgh, NY to house up to 500 US asylum seekers. This is in addition to a shelter at Montreal Olympic Stadium in Week 38.   Read More About This

24.    CNN reported Sam Clovis, Trump's nominee to be chief scientist at the USDA, had on his conservative radio show stoked the birther conspiracy, called Eric Holder a "a racist black," and Tom Perez "a racist Latino."   Read More About This

25.    More than 75 consumer, health and advocacy groups came together to stop the Trump regime from stripping nursing home residents and their families of rights to take facilities to court over alleged abuse or neglect.   Read More About This

26.    As the Trump Organization tweeted about the launch of The Trump Estates and golf in Dubai, concerns continued to surface about ways US foreign policy has been impacted by the Trump family's investments.   Read More About This

27.    WAPO reported on how Trump hotel DC has become a center of influence, where members of industry and others seeking access meet with Trump regime members. And Trump financially benefits.   Read More About This

28.    Trump Hotel DC turned a $2mm profit for the first four months of 2017, far exceeding the Trump Organization's projected loss of $2.1mm. Driving profits were sky-high room prices and spending on food and beverages.   Read More About This

29.    WSJ reported rooms at Trump Hotel DC's average daily room rate was $660 compared with $496 for comparable hotels. The room rates are 60% higher than the hotel's original budget.   Read More About This

30.    The 18 Democrats on the House Oversight Comm sent letters to 15 cabinet departments and nine executive branch agencies requesting information on their spending at Trump Organization businesses.   Read More About This

31.    POLITICO reported Trump's slow pace in filling vacancies at FERC has caused $13bn of infrastructure projects, expected to create 23k new jobs, to be indefinitely delayed.   Read More About This

32.    NYT and ProPublica continued to track Trump appointees put in charge of dismantling government regulations. 85 appointees have been identified, many with industry or legal ties, or other conflicts of interest.   Read More About This

33.    A US District Court judge in NY will hear arguments in the Trump foreign emoluments lawsuit starting on October 18.   Read More About This

34.    According to a letter to the Senate, the OGE has rejected retroactive waivers for the Trump regime.   Read More About This

35.    Trump ally Robert Mercer donated $300k to Flake's Republican primary challenger after Flake spoke out against Trump. Among other benefits, the Mercers' hedge fund has avoided $6.8bn of back taxes under Trump.   Read More About This

36.    AP reported Trump companies applied to a casino trademark in Macau, the world's largest gambling market. Past applications by Trump had been rejected. Trump had pledged no new foreign deals while in office.   Read More About This

37.    Two top aides for UN ambassador Haley  --  her chief of staff and communications director  --  resigned. Haley said on Twitter it was because of "family concerns."   Read More About This

38.    Four top cybersecurity officials resigned from their posts, including the chief information security officer for the EPA and the CIO for the DHS, both of whom had been in their jobs for just a few months.   Read More About This

39.    FORTUNE reported vegetable prices may be going up soon as Trump's immigration policies have led to a farmworker shortage, and crops are rotting in the fields.   Read More About This

40.    The Toronto Star reported Trump has made 500 false claims in his first 200 days in office.   Read More About This

41.    A CNN poll taken at 200 days found just 24% of Americans trust most of what they hear from the WH.   Read More About This

42.    In another sign of Trump's waning popularity, Democrat Phil Miller won a special election (+10) in a Iowa district Trump had won by 22 in 2016.   Read More About This

43.    AP reported Pence has been quietly carving out his own political foot-print, noting Republicans privately admit Trump could be the first president since Nixon to leave office or not to seek re-election.   Read More About This

44.    After Sen. Blumenthal appeared on CNN to discuss the Russian probe, Trump attacked him on Twitter for 2 days, calling him a "phony Vietnam con artist," and saying he "should take a nice long vacation in Vietnam."   Read More About This

45.    Trump tweeted, "Thank you Nicole!" to an account @ProTrump45. The account, under the name Nicole Mincey, was deleted and appears to have been a bot, part of the Russia-backed disinformation campaign.   Read More About This

46.    VICE reported that since taking office, Trump receives a folder full of positive news about himself twice a day. Some in the WH refer to the folder as "the propaganda document."   Read More About This

47.    Bloomberg reported Manafort and Donald Jr. turned over thousands of documents in August to the Senate Judiciary Comm in the Russia probe.   Read More About This

48.    Trump campaign turns over 20K pages of documents to Senate investigators   Read More About This

49.    Bloomberg also reported Fusion GPS, a company linked to the dossier, and its CEO have yet to turn over requested documents. Senate Judiciary Comm chair Grassley wants to know if Russians paid for the dossier.   Read More About This

50.    Page Six reported Trump's story about a renovation at the 21 Club, which Trump told the generals while berating them about losing in Afghanistan (Week 38), was "completely wrong in every detail."   Read More About This

51.    WAPO reported the FBI conducted a predawn raid on Manafort's home in Alexandria, VA, seizing documents and other materials related to Mueller's Russia probe.   Read More About This

52.    The raid on his home occurred on July 26, the day Manafort was scheduled to testify before the Senate Judiciary Comm and a day after he met with the Senate Intel Comm.   Read More About This

53.    The FBI search warrant was for documents relating to tax, banking and other matters. Sources said the FBI agents left with a "trove of material."   Read More About This

54.    ABC reported Manafort was awoken in the predawn hours by a group of armed FBI agents knocking on his bedroom door.   Read More About This

55.    On July 26 Trump called for acting FBI director McCabe to be fired. Also, that morning he inexplicably tweeted his transgender military ban without notifying the DoD or having a strategy in place.   Read More About This

56.    Bloomberg reported Manafort alerted Congressional investigators about the June 9 Trump Tower meeting three months ago.   Read More About This

57.    Trump ally the National Enquirer posted a story, "Trump Advisor Sex Scandal  --  Paul Manafort's Sick Affair," shortly after the WAPO article hit.   Read More About This

58.    POLITICO reported Federal investigators sought cooperation from Jeffrey Yohai, Manafort's son-in-law, early in the summer, in an effort to increase pressure on Manafort.   Read More About This

59.    On Thursday, Manafort fired WilmerHale and switched to Miller and Chevalier, a boutique firm in Washington that specializes in complicated financial crimes.   Read More About This

60.    A story in The New Yorker noted that with Manafort's sophistication and links to Russia oligarchs, he was in a good position to "understand what Vladimir Putin wanted from the Trump campaign."   Read More About This

61.    ABC reported Congressional investigators want to question Rhona Graff, Trump's assistant for 30 years, on the email exchange and meeting at Trump Tower on June 9 with Russians.   Read More About This

62.    The bipartisan Sen. Judiciary Comm asked the White House to respond to questions about changes to Kushner's security clearance forms related to undisclosed meetings with Russians. The deadline to reply was July 6.   Read More About This

63.    WAPO reported that analysis by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) concluded N. Korea has passed the key threshold of producing missile-ready nuclear weapons.   Read More About This

64.    From his golf course in Bedminster, Trump warned N. Korea against threatening US cities, saying threats "will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen."   Read More About This

65.    In reaction to Trump's 'red line' of N. Korea threatening US cities, Kim Jong-un's regime said it may strike Guam.   Read More About This

66.    Trump's "fire and fury" comments broke the Dow's 10-day winning streak.   Read More About This

67.    Trump's comments were condemned by Democrats, Republicans and nuclear weapons experts, saying his incendiary rhetoric would make things worse.   Read More About This

68.    The Toronto Star reported on the numerous time Trump has used varieties of the hyperbolic phrase, "like the world has never seen," to make a point, including while a businessman and running for office.   Read More About This

69.    Wednesday, NYT reported Trump's "fire and fury" threat to N. Korea was improvised. The sheet of paper in front of him was about the opioid crisis, and he ad-libbed without input from his team on wording.   Read More About This

70.    As the North Korea crisis unfolds, Trump has yet to appoint an ambassador to S. Korea. As per Week 38, 22 of 24 assistant secretary positions in the State Dept are either unfilled or staffed by Obama holdovers.   Read More About This

71.    Blumenthal told MSNBC the Senate Armed Services Comm has been informed as N. Koreans moved from milestone to milestone, indicating Trump also should have known progress and not been alarmist.   Read More About This

72.    A 30-foot inflatable chicken with Trump-like hair floated next to the WH on Wednesday. The balloon was set up by documentary filmmaker Taran Singh Brar to protest Trump "being a weak and ineffective leader."   Read More About This

73.    Foreign Policy reported on a 7-page memo written by Rich Higgins about the "deep state" targeting Trump, thought to be behind the recent NSC shake-up, including McMaster firing Higgins.   Read More About This

74.    On Thursday, Trump escalated the rhetoric on N. Korea further, saying his "fire and fury" comment may not have been "tough enough." Asked how he could of been tougher, Trump replied, "You'll see. You'll see."   Read More About This

75.    Shortly after, flanked by Pence and McMaster in Bedminster, Trump did a 20 minute lie-ridden press conference. A historian described Trump's bizarre outpouring as "he was a dam that had suddenly burst free."   Read More About This

76.    Trump called it a "disgrace" that the Senate didn't pass a bill to repeal and replace Obamacare, placing blame on McConnell and saying he wants him to get back to work and get it done.   Read More About This

77.    Trump also twice tweeted about McConnell's failure to repeal and replace Obamacare, and retweeted a Fox & Friends story Friday saying Trump was leaving the door open on whether McConnell should step down.   Read More About This

78.    On the other hand, Trump said he was "very thankful" to Putin for expelling hundreds of US diplomats "because now we have a smaller payroll." This is a false statement: diplomats remain on the payroll.   Read More About This

79.    Reuters reported the State Dept was "horrified and rattled," by Trump's remarks on expelling diplomats. The third ranking State member under W. Bush called the remarks, "grotesque."   Read More About This

80.    Also at the press conference, in contrast to what his regime said days earlier, Trump seemingly impromptu declared the opioids a federal emergency: "I'm saying officially, right now, it is an emergency."   Read More About This

81.    Also, on the transgender military ban, Trump said "I think I'm doing the military a great favor." and on the transgender community: "I think I have great support…I got a lot of votes."   Read More About This

82.    On Kim Jong-un, Trump said, "He got away with it for a long time…He's not getting away with it. This is a whole new ballgame." Adding, "And nobody, including N. Korea, is going to be threatening us with anything."   Read More About This

83.    Also at the press conference, Trump said "I don't think Iran is in compliance," on the 2015 deal to curtail nuclear weapons.   Read More About This

84.    Trump also said there was "no collusion between us and Russia. In fact, the opposite. Russia spent a lot of money on fighting me."   Read More About This

85.    Gordon Humphrey, a former GOP senator, suggested Congress should use the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office, saying of Trump "He is sick of mind, impetuous, arrogant, belligerent and dangerous."   Read More About This

86.    Tillerson sought calm on North Korea, saying Wednesday "Americans should sleep well at night." Gorka told BBC radio, "the idea that Secretary Tillerson is going to discuss military matters is simply nonsensical."   Read More About This

87.    On Friday, Trump escalated tensions further, tweeting the US military is "locked and loaded" should N. Korea "act unwisely."   Read More About This

88.    As tensions rose, US allies and adversaries urged caution. Germany PM Merkel said, "verbal escalation will not contribute to a resolution," and Russia foreign minister Lavrov said rhetoric was "over the top."   Read More About This

89.    In a phone call Friday night, China's President Xi Jinping also urged Trump to exercise restraint according to Chinese state media.   Read More About This

90.    As tensions heightened with N Korea, former Defense Secretary Panetta told CNN "we're dealing with probably the most serious crisis involving a potential nuclear war since the Cuban Missile Crisis."   Read More About This

91.    In Hawaii, emergency management officials are working on reinstating alarm sirens to warn of a nuclear attack, last used during the Cold War.   Read More About This

92.    On Friday evening, Trump spoke to reporters with Tillerson, McMaster and Haley by his side. Speculation was this was to assure Americans that diplomacy was also being used with N. Korea.   Read More About This

93.    Instead, Trump escalated the rhetoric yet again, saying Jong-un "will not get away with" what he's doing, and if he attacks Guam, or American territory or ally, "he will truly regret it and he will regret it fast."   Read More About This

94.    When asked about Venezuela, Trump said we have many options, "including a possible military option if necessary."   Read More About This

95.    His threat played into Maduro's hands. Venezuelan officials have long said the US is planning an invasion. Maduro requested a phone call with Trump on Friday, which was rejected.   Read More About This

96.    A Deptment of Defense spokesperson said Friday evening the US is not planning to invade Venezuela, and "any insinuations by the Maduro regime that we are planning an invasion are baseless."   Read More About This

97.    Trump called the governor of Guam Friday night to reassure him of US protection. He also joked that Governor Calvo has become "extremely famous," and offered, "your tourism [is] going to go up like tenfold."   Read More About This

98.    On Friday night, hundreds of white supremacists marched on University of Virginia's campus carrying torches and chanting "White lives matter," and "You will not replace us," and "Jew will not replace us."   Read More About This

99.    On Saturday morning, white supremacists in Charlottesville to attend the Unite the Right rally carried Confederate flags and flag with the Nazi Swastikas. Militia groups carrying guns also attended.   Read More About This

100.    Violent clashes between white supremacists and protestors broke out. Local police declared a state of emergency.   Read More About This

101.    Later Saturday, the Virginia Governor, Terry McAuliffe, declared a state of emergency in response to the Unite the Right white nationalist rally. White supremacists were ordered to vacate the park before the rally.   Read More About This

102.    Trump addressed Charlottesville hours later, but failed to condemn white supremacists, many of whom were wearing Trump gear, instead tweeting, "We ALL must be united & condemn all that hate stands for."   Read More About This

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Replicated from:   https://medium.com/@Amy_Siskind/week-39-experts-in-authoritarianism-advise-to-keep-a-list-of-things-subtly-changing-around-you-so-1b911b954f30

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    AUTHOR
    Amy Suskind is a national spokesperson, writer and expert on helping women and girls advance and succeed. A highly successful Wall Street executive, she's Co-founder and President of The New Agenda, a national organization working on issues including economic independence and advancement, gender representation and bias, sexual assault and domestic violence.Read About
    Amy Siskind

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