Sunday, 15 November 2020

The Lost Cause

They say a little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing and a personal mission to try and understand what the hell Trump is up to has landed me at the American Civil War and some institutionalised revisionist history. My ignorance of US history and politics is so complete that I had not appreciated the extent to which the alternative title of The Lost Cause held sway to this day. This from Wikipedia:-

The Lost Cause of the Confederacy, or simply the Lost Cause, is an American pseudo-historical, negationist ideology that advocates the belief that the cause of the Confederate States during the American Civil War was a just and heroic one. This ideology has furthered the belief that slavery was just and moral, because it brought economic prosperity. The notion was used to perpetuate racism and racist power structures during the Jim Crow era in the American South. It emphasizes the supposed chivalric virtues of the antebellum South. It thus views the war as a struggle primarily waged to save the Southern way of life and to protect "states' rights", especially the right to secede from the Union. It casts that attempt as faced with "overwhelming Northern aggression". At the same time, it minimizes or completely denies the central role of slavery and white supremacy in the build-up to, and outbreak of, the war.

In a 2015 San Francisco Chronicle article about films depicting the Confederacy I was alarmed to read:-

They say that history is written by the victors, but the Civil War has been the rare exception. Perhaps the need for the country to stay together made it necessary for the North to sit silently and accept the South’s conception of the conflict. In any case, for most of the past 150 years, the South’s version of the war and Reconstruction has held sway in our schools, our literature and, since the dawn of feature films, our movies.

---//---

Over the past couple of decades, scholars such as Eric Foner and Bruce Levine have overturned most of the myths surrounding the Civil War and Reconstruction, but it took the British director Steve McQueen to put the truth about the horrific plantation era onto the screen and before the public, in “12 Years a Slave.” Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained,” the year before, was a big step in the right direction.

Recently, the mass killing in South Carolina and the subsequent outcry over the Confederate flag flying over statehouses brought the Civil War back into the national conversation, and for once public figures found the courage to say what that flag really means, and to repudiate it and its history.

It may be that in these past few weeks, we have finally turned a page, and the Confederacy will not rise again. If this is so, the truth will benefit the entire country, but especially the South. This is a region with a disproportionate number of our greatest writers, and most of our best soldiers. It has delicious cuisine, gracious women and a tradition of hospitality that is real and sincere. The musical traditions of the South, both white and black, are among the nation’s cultural glories. And America’s best raconteurs are from the South.

The South no longer needs — and never did need — the Confederacy as the organizing principle of its pride. It has many things to be proud of, and despite what the movies have tried to tell you, the Confederacy was never one of them.

So, if I've understood correctly, Trump's astonishing rise to power and subsequent fall from grace not only has its roots in unresolved matters from the 19th century, but has set the scene for a new 'lost cause' and even a virtual confederacy. This from Project Syndicate:-

The Lost Cause of the Trumpocracy

Donald Trump's insistent denial of reality following his loss in the 2020 US presidential election threatens to do still more damage to American democracy, even though it comes as no surprise. Like the southerners who never could get over their loss in the American Civil War, Trump has nothing left but his own mythomania.

---//---

The astonishing outburst of jubilation that broke out across the US – and in countries around the world – following Trump’s defeat was a testament to how frightened people have been by his presidency. The relief may be premature. Axios reported recently that Trump has already discussed with aides the possibility of running for president again in 2024.

This might well be a Trumpian ruse. As of now, Trump seems more focused on creating another “lost cause” myth – like the self-glorifying one concocted by unreconstructed Southerners after the US Civil War. Such incendiary mythology could prove useful to Trump in countless ways in the years ahead, including keeping him relevant and on TV. It may be a long time before the US and the world have seen the last of Donald Trump.

Which brings us to this from the Guardian on Friday:-

This is no conventional coup. Trump is paving the way for a 'virtual Confederacy'

Race is the message behind his supporters’ legal shenanigans, and a keystone for a Trumpian government in exile

Not for the first time, Donald Trump’s unhinged behaviour prompts an uncomfortable question: should we be laughing in derision or trembling with fear? Is he playing out his last days as nothing more than a sore loser pathetically kidding himself that he might yet score the winning run, even after the crowd’s gone home and the stadium is empty – or is his insistence that last week’s election was stolen an attempt to cling on to power, to stage a coup against his democratically elected successor?

The case for laughter is strong, as Trump’s allegations crumble to dust. On Thursday, a wing of the department of homeland security – part of the government that Trump still heads – declared that last week’s election “was the most secure in American history”, and that there was “no evidence” of any malpractice, still less of the mass-scale fraud that Trump has groundlessly alleged.

The result is that Trump’s lawyers have been all but laughed out of court, forced by impatient judges to admit that they don’t have any evidence, let alone proof. His courtiers continue to pretend that the emperor is fully clothed, of course, but even they are winking at the crowd. Surely Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was joking when he promised with a smile: “There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration.”

The inner circle are happy to let Trump, who has appeared only once in public since election day, remain hunkered down in his White House bunker, “feverishly tweeting, watching television and telephoning allies”, as the Los Angeles Times reports. They carry on telling him what he wants to hear, but they know his cause is doomed. Tellingly, even Trump’s own son-in-law, Jared Kushner, made his excuses for Saturday’s supposed council of war, sending “aides” in his place.

All that should prompt derision rather than fear. We can take the lead set by the president-elect himself, relax and let the process play out until Joe Biden is sworn in on 20 January. That’s certainly appealing, and most of the time I manage it. But every now and then, fear intrudes.

Why, for example, has Trump fired the civilian leadership of the defence department, including the defence secretary, Mark Esper, filling their posts and others in intelligence with ultra-loyalists? Esper stood up to Trump over the summer, when the president wanted to deploy the military to crush peaceful protests. Does Trump have something similar in mind, a move that would require a yes man to nod it through? Is it possible that Pompeo was not, after all, joking?

For now, I can accept that a full, tanks-in-the-streets coup is not on the cards. One Capitol Hill Republican tells me he suspects Trump sacked Esper mainly to “make him feel better”, and “to get even with the people who thwarted him”, rather than because he wants a Pentagon boss who will agree to send in the troops. Equally possible, says my source, is that Trump plans to go out with a bang, and wants pliant people in post. What kind of bang? Some talk of a total withdrawal from Afghanistan. Conversely, there’s chatter about a possible attack on Iran.

That would be huge – and Trump likes huge – but it’s not a coup. On this reading, Trump is rejecting the election result less in order to keep power than to instil in his base the sense of grievance that will bind them to him for his next act – whether that be a new media company, Trump TV, to challenge Fox News or another run for the White House in 2024.

But if that’s true, it’s hardly grounds for relief. That Trump’s attempt to defy a democratic election is comically inept or cynically motivated doesn’t alter the fact that he’s making it. No less alarming, all but a handful of Republicans have backed him. Fearing both his wrath and the hold he continues to exercise over the Republican electorate – highly relevant, given that two Senate seats are up for grabs in Georgia in January – the party’s most senior figures have acquiesced in Trump’s evidence-free claim that the Democrats rigged the election.

That matters. Most directly, it will impair the incoming president as he tries to get to grips with a pandemic that on Thursday saw a record number of new cases in the US – 159,000 in a single day – about which Trump is doing and saying precisely nothing. How can Biden lead if half the country has been primed to believe he is not the rightful president? The Republican rebuttal – that Democrats hardly welcomed Trump in 2016 – trips on one simple fact: Hillary Clinton conceded defeat right away. That is the only way a democratic system can work, with the consent of the loser.

The fear is that Trump and his followers will never give way, that he will remain the head of a “Trumpian government in exile”, as the historian Sean Wilentz puts it, antagonistic to the legitimate, elected government, armed with allies in Congress, sustained via social media and nourished by grievance and the romance of a lost cause: a new, virtual Confederacy.

The word is not wholly hyperbolic because, inevitably in America, so much of this turns on race. When Trump’s cheerleaders locate the supposed voter fraud in Philadelphia or Detroit, their listeners get the message: it’s that black cities are corrupt and, at root, that black people shouldn’t be allowed to decide who gets to be president of the United States. As Barack Obama writes in his upcoming memoir, these are “dark spirits” that have “long been lurking on the edge of the Republican party – xenophobia … paranoid conspiracy theories, an antipathy toward black and brown folks”.

So no, this won’t be a coup like we’ve seen in the movies. But nor can we just laugh it off. Trump is often ridiculous, but he’s no joke.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

35 comments:

  1. The Lost Cause is rising:

    Trump is whipping up civil unrest, pitting citizen against citizen. Its the language of war. The following are just a tiny sample from the many overnight tweets posted by the current president of the United States of America:

    * Human Radical Left garbage

    * Radical Left ANTIFA SCUM assault elderly people and families. Police got there, but late. Mayor is not doing her job!

    * ANTIFA SCUM ran for the hills today when they tried attacking the people at the Trump Rally, because those people aggressively fought back.

    * DC Police, get going — do your job and don’t hold back!!!

    * There is tremendous evidence of wide spread voter fraud

    * Hundreds of thousands of people showing their support in D.C. They will not stand for a Rigged and Corrupt Election!

    * The hand recount taking place in Georgia is a waste of time. They are not showing the matching signatures. Call off the recount until they allow the MATCH. Don’t let the Radical Left Dems STEAL THE ELECTION!

    * The Silent Media is the Enemy of the People!!!

    Dogwhistles every one, setting loose the New Confederacy upon the streets of the USA, legitimising violence, placing police & media personnel at risk

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    1. I love that the astonishing BioNtech called their covid-19 vaccine efforts "Project Lightspeed" way back when, which they initiated in Jan'20:

      https://biontech.de/covid-19

      "Aiming to address the global coronavirus pandemic: Project Lightspeed

      We are developing a potential vaccine based on our proprietary mRNA technology to induce immunity and prevent COVID-19 infections in response to the growing global health threat. In order to accelerate the rapid development of our product candidate BNT162 we initiated the global development program Lightspeed. The program leverages

      - BioNTech’s proprietary mRNA platforms for infectious diseases,

      - its fully-owned GMP manufacturing infrastructure for mRNA vaccine production,

      - its global clinical development capabilities

      - collaborations with Pfizer and Fosun Pharma"

      Independent of any and all political/government influence, funds, etc.

      Lost Cause supremo Trump, of course, reckons nothing happened until he initiated Operation Warp Speed (sounds similar to...?), which only came to life in March 2020.

      The Big Orange Fraud relentlessly appropriating others' efforts & rebranding them as his own achievements.

      Delete
    2. The Orange Turd continues his shitstorm on twitter, fomenting hatred, fear & undermining democracy:

      * Doing a great job in Georgia. Their recount is a scam, means nothing. Must see fraudulent signatures which is prohibited by stupidly signed & unconstitutional consent decree.

      * He won because the Election was Rigged. NO VOTE WATCHERS OR OBSERVERS allowed, vote tabulated by a Radical Left privately owned company, Dominion, with a bad reputation & bum equipment that couldn’t even qualify for Texas (which I won by a lot!), the Fake & Silent Media, & more!

      * All of the mechanical “glitches” that took place on Election Night were really THEM getting caught trying to steal votes. They succeeded plenty, however, without getting caught. Mail-in elections are a sick joke!

      And Junior Tumour rides the wave again:

      * The only people worse [than the Antifa Scum] are the media who have essentially been encouraging this kind of behavior by calling anyone right of center a Nazi for the last four years.


      Anyone else posting such claptrap would surely be facing incitement charges?

      Delete
    3. "Anyone else posting such claptrap would surely be facing incitement charges?"

      No, because the USA has the first amendment which protects freedom of expression. You may not agree with what someone says but the constitution protects their right to say it.

      An example of how a written constitution preserves basic freedoms in the way our non-constitutional system does not. Which I mention because Jim posed the question recently of whether the UK should have a written constitution. My answer to that question is a whole hearted yes".

      Delete
    4. That's a narrow view, and misleading.


      "Imminent lawless action" is a standard currently used that was established by the United States Supreme Court in Brandenburg v. ... Under the imminent lawless action test, speech is not protected by the First Amendment if the speaker intends to incite a violation of the law that is both imminent and likely.

      Delete
    5. Your response is itself misleading because the US Supreme Court later clarified in Hess v Indiana 1973 that speech is protected where such speech "amounted to nothing more than advocacy of illegal action at some indefinite future time". Unless you're telling me that Trump has incited others to commit illegal acts at a specified place and time, e.g. specifically telling people to riot in Washington at 10am on 16th November then that speech would be protected under the first amendment.

      Delete
  2. The UK's shameful 'lost causes' that have profited from the pandemic:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/nov/15/chumocracy-covid-revealed-shape-tory-establishment

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    1. HAND sanitiser was bought up by mandarins to fight Covid in prisons at £35 a litre - at the same price as a bottle of David Beckham’s posh single malt whisky.

      Nearly 75,000 bottles were purchased of the alcohol-based cleaner when the pandemic took hold earlier this week.

      One UK supplier is currently offering sanitiser for £3 a 500ml bottle - or a tiny fraction of the amount paid by the MoJ.

      The boss of Site Supply which sold the Ministry of Justice the sanitiser said he could not believe the price being paid for the hand cleaner for use in prisons.

      Martin Bullock, managing director of The Site Supply Company said his company were not profiteering and the price went up because manufacturers prices went through the roof in the pandemic.

      He said: “It was a crazy time and there was raw panic of people trying to get hold of sanitiser. It does look ridiculous and scandalous. Someone has made a killing, but I can assure you it was not us. 

      “We were making a lot less than normal as our profit margins went down. If we were making £30 a bottle, I would be on a beach now.”

      The £35 per litre price tag is equal to a litre of David Beckham’s Haig Club single malt whisky brand or a 24 crate of 500ml Carling lager cans.

      The MoJ said the order was placed for HM Prisons and Probation Service at the height of the pandemic when there were global shortages forcing up the price.

      A spokesperson said: “We were able to secure enough hand sanitiser during a global shortage to help stop the spread of coronavirus and save lives.”

       


      Delete
  3. uk briefing-against-the PM-vs-girlfriend-in-a-spin govt covid-19 data 15 nov 2020

    * new cases: almost 25,000

    Sun 8/11 to Sun 15/11 incl: 198,000 positive cases identified through testing

    * deaths (28 day rule): 168 (weekend caveat applies)

    no other data has been updated

    FranK.

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    1. "Young and previously healthy people with ongoing symptoms of Covid-19 are showing signs of damage to multiple organs four months after the initial infection, a study suggests.

      Preliminary data from the first 200 patients to undergo screening suggests that almost 70% have impairments in one or more organs, including the heart, lungs, liver and pancreas, four months after their initial illness."

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/nov/15/damage-to-multiple-organs-recorded-in-long-covid-cases

      Delete
  4. CNN Latest:-

    I've been glued to my new favourite news source all afternoon and my take is as follows:-

    The Chief of the General Staff recently made an astonishing rebuke to the Commander in Chief by reminding him that the armed forces do not swear an oath to a King or Queen, not to a tyrant or dictator, but to the US constitution!

    Mention was made of the 1918 'Stab in the back' myth. This from Wiki - an antisemitic conspiracy theory, widely believed and promulgated in right-wing circles in Germany after 1918. The belief was that the German Army did not lose World War I on the battlefield but was instead betrayed by the civilians on the home front, especially Jews and the republicans who overthrew the Hohenzollern monarchy in the German Revolution of 1918–19. Advocates denounced the German government leaders who signed the Armistice on November 11, 1918 as the "November criminals". How did I not know this?

    Finally, it seems there is growing disquiet about 50 states holding elections in at least 50 different ways and calls for an independent Federal Elections Commission to take over. Good luck with that one!

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    1. Oh I forgot - Murdoch experiencing mass defection of loyal Trump viewers from Fox News as punishment for being more 'balanced' - or honest!

      Delete
    2. Not sure I got this right (?!?) but I'm pretty certain someone on R4 said about the GOP team led by Giuliani at Four Seasons:

      "they were caught between a rockery & a hard-on place"

      It might just be my poor hearing...

      Delete
  5. Probation's favourite auditors are on the naughty step...

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/nov/15/call-for-three-year-ban-on-ey-bidding-on-public-contracts

    "Spotlight on Corruption’s letter stated: “EY’s serious and recurring professional misconduct amounts to sufficient grounds to review whether a discretionary exclusion under the Public Contracts Regulations 2015 should apply.

    “It should also trigger proper consideration of whether the firm is, as a result, a ‘high-risk’ supplier as defined in the government’s Strategic Supplier Risk Management Policy, and whether it can be considered a reliable contractor.”

    Other examples of EY’s alleged misconduct cited by the campaign group included:

    An EY whistleblower awarded $10.8m (£8.6m) in damages in April 2020 after being forced out of his job following his claims of misconduct during an audit of a Dubai gold refiner. The metals company had been silver-coating gold to avoid export restrictions...

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    1. Boris Johnson is in self isolation after being contacted by track and trace!
      I rather feel after this weeks problems in No10 and forthcoming problems he's more likely to be in self hiding.

      'Getafix

      Delete
  6. Trump is very busy exploiting the whatever amendment of the US constitution as best he can via his tweety-pie account.

    Many of the tweets are accompanied by video clips which he claims show 'his supporters' being assaulted while police watch and do nothing.

    * RIGGED ELECTION. WE WILL WIN!

    * He only won in the eyes of the FAKE NEWS MEDIA. I concede NOTHING! We have a long way to go. This was a RIGGED ELECTION!

    * John Bolton was one of the dumbest people in government that I’ve had the “pleasure” to work with. A sullen, dull and quiet guy, he added nothing to National Security except, “Gee, let’s go to war.” Also, illegally released much Classified Information. A real dope!

    * WATCH: D.C. Cops Direct Trump-Supporters into Gauntlet of Protesters, Do Nothing When They Are Assaulted. These thugs and lowlifes only stalked and attacked when most of the tens of thousands of people had left town. Ran away earlier!

    * We won’t let a RIGGED ELECTION steal our Country!

    * Why does the Fake News Media continuously assume that Joe Biden will ascend to the Presidency, not even allowing our side to show, which we are just getting ready to do, how badly shattered and violated our great Constitution has been in the 2020 Election. It was attacked, perhaps like never before! From large numbers of Poll Watchers that were thrown out of vote counting rooms in many of our States, to millions of ballots that have been altered by Democrats, only for Democrats, to voting after the Election was over, to using Radical Left-owned Dominion Voting Systems, turned down by Texas and many others because it was not good or secure, those responsible for the safeguarding of our Constitution cannot allow the Fake results of the 2020 Mail-In Election to stand. The World is watching!

    * I WON THE ELECTION!

    Their next civil war is not very far away now...

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    1. And he can't resist this:

      * Another Vaccine just announced. This time by Moderna, 95% effective. For those great “historians”, please remember that these great discoveries, which will end the China Plague, all took place on my watch!
      _______________________

      breaking news - 11 million positive cases, over 100,000 new cases daily & 250,000 deaths (and counting) also took place on Trump's watch

      Delete
    2. Trump should be made to personally foot the bill for the costs of his lies, conspiracy theories & total bullshit - the additional policing, the lawsuits, the re-counts, etc.

      Oops, forgot - he's a soon-to-be bankrupt who pretends he's a millionaire.

      Delete
    3. I've also seen reference made on Twitter that his special status in relation to being able to violate Twitter rules will end when he ceases to be a head of state. Now should Twitter pull the plug on his account - he's got quite a problem come Jan 20th.

      Delete
    4. Trump should be reminded that according to him there was already a vaccine available on his watch and before the election.
      All you had to do was inject some bleach and swallow some bright lights.
      Is he really now complaining about the timing of new vacancies being announced, or complaining that they might be better vaccines then his?

      'Getafix

      Delete
    5. BioNTech - 90% effective

      Russian vaccine - 92% effective

      Moderna vaccine - 95% effective

      Bleach & bright light - 1000% effective, although you might turn orange, you might have to wear a hairpiece & you might suffer personality change

      Delete
    6. Trump is an idiot and is spouting nonsense. But it's great that he is able to, freedom of expression protected in law is the ultimate barometer of a free society. The USA isn't called the land of the free for nothing!

      It's a shame we don't have a written constitution in the UK legally protecting freedom of speech. If we did then we wouldn't have the Law Commission's latest ridiculous proposal to extend the Public Order Act to private dwellings which would mean if you invited me to your house and you said something I found offensive then I could call the police and have you arrested and locked up. Or the Labour Party's suggestion that anybody spreading anti-vax information on the internet should be imprisoned.

      Delete
    7. Oh how I would love to have the privelege of true freedom of expression but, like the fantasy that is socialism, it is inherently flawed because of the human condition - the same flaw that plagues efforts to address the current global pandemic, i.e. I want so I will have/get/do whatever I want & fuck everyone else.

      Trump is not an idiot nor is he spouting nonsense. He is being very clever & very calculated in his actions, and has been sowing these seeds since he formally announced his candidacy at a campaign rally on June 16, 2015.

      His is a prime example of how the systematic, malicious yet focused abuse of that privelege foments hatred, division & civil unrest for the sole purpose of consolidating personal power.

      The reach of global communications means that 'freedom of speech' is now just another tool for immoral, the amoral, the vicious, the pernicious, the malicious, the hatemongers...

      Delete
    8. From Guardian 4th November 2020

      Proposals to prosecute individuals for hate crimes based on what they discuss in their own homes need to be more widely debated, free speech organisations have said.

      The suggestion to remove the “dwelling” privacy exemption from criminal legislation is buried in a few paragraphs of the Law Commission’s 544-page consultation on hate crime published in September.

      The commission said on Wednesday that it was “not intending for private conversations at the dinner table to be prosecuted as hate speech”, although that appears to be one possible consequence of the proposed change.

      Until 1986, the offence of using words or behaviour intended or likely to incite racial hatred could only be committed in a public place. The scope was later expanded, but an exception remains “where words or behaviour are used or written material displayed within a dwelling, provided that they cannot be seen or heard outside.”

      The proposal was spotted by the organisation Fair Cop, which campaigns against what it says is misuse of legislation to curb free speech. Sarah Phillimore, a barrister and member of the organisation, said it would encourage “state surveillance or people to inform on their friends. How else would they get the evidence? It will be like the East German Stasi security service.”

      Delete
    9. There must surely be limitation to 'free speech'. Maliciously crying 'fire' in a crowded theatre and that leads to injuries must have consequences for the person committing such an action.

      Delete
    10. Freedom of speech updates from the racist hatemonger:

      * The Radical Left Democrats, working with their partner, the Fake News Media, are trying to STEAL this Election. We won’t let them!

      * European Countries are sadly getting clobbered by the China Virus. The Fake News does not like reporting this!

      But this is the money shot for Trump:

      * STOCK MARKET GETTING VERY CLOSE TO 30,000 ON NEW VACCINE NEWS. 95% EFFECTIVE!

      * You cannot judge my Stock Market performance since the Inauguration, which was very good, but only from the day after the big Election Win, which was spectacular due to the euphoria of getting Obama/Biden OUT, & getting Trump/Pence IN. I Went up BIG between Nov. 9 & Inauguration!

      Delete
    11. The first amendment didn't help those wanting to speak and express themselves on Tiktok because Trump didn't like it.
      A UK written Constitution? A Tory Bill of Rights?
      A government that's hamstrung trade unions, restricted Judicial Review and priced people out of employment tribunals. Prepared to break international law, and wants to tear up the Human Rights Act.
      Freedom of speach and freedom of expression should be a given, but freedom comes with responsibilities.
      People like Trump want the freedom to say what they like but don't want the responsibility that goes with that right.
      A Tory Bill of Rights?
      F*** right off!

      'Getafix

      Delete
    12. Trump: "Big victory moments ago in the State of Nevada. The all Democrat County Commissioner race, on same ballot as President, just thrown out because of large scale voter discrepancy. Clark County officials do not have confidence in their own election security. Major impact!"

      The Facts: "Nearly two weeks after the election, the Clark County Commission voted on certifying the election results on Monday with the exception of the County Commission District C race and will consider a special election for the race in December.

      As it stands the results [for District C] show democrat Ross Miller winning [i.e. beating] republican Stavros Anthony by 10 votes.

      The Registrar of Voters Joe Gloria delivered a full report to county commissioners in Monday’s special meeting. The report is required by law and Gloria stated the following:

      936 discrepancies in ballots
      710 with mail-in precincts
      121 in early voting precincts
      105 on election day
      [of which] 6 voters voted twice

      The results were 76,586 (D) v 76,576 (R)"

      So, just to correct Trump's misdirection:

      "Clark County Commission voted on certifying the election results on Monday with the exception of the County Commission District C race"

      The stench of bullshit is high.

      Delete
    13. The Nevada votes totalled around 1.5 million, with Biden taking 50.1%, Trump behind on 47.7%.

      The discrepancy over District C was 0.6%.

      Extrapolate that "major impact" to Biden/Trump - 49.5% plays 48.3%. Erm, Biden wins. Again.

      Delete
  7. "Due to technical difficulties we are unable to update the dashboard before 6pm."

    hahahahahahahahah

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    1. uk thank-god-we've-missed-the-six-o-clock-news-slot-bury-bad-news-with-a-track-n-trace-ping govt covid-19 data 16 nov 2020

      new cases: 21,363

      deaths (28 day rule): 213

      overall deaths where covid is mentioned: no updates since 30 october

      testing: 284,000 on Sunday, capacity = 504,000

      other data still stuck on last week's figures
      _____________________________________________

      How many £billion spent on tracking & apps?

      "The NHS Covid-19 app has stopped working for many iPhone owners, who are unable to get it to launch.

      Users report being stuck at a blue loading screen with the contact-tracing app's logo - but nothing else happens.

      The NHS has published a workaround for the problem in its help files, but has not said what caused the problem or when it will be fixed.

      Apple does not believe the problem is at its end, since it has not seen the issue arise in other countries' apps."

      FranK.

      Delete
  8. https://youtu.be/CNc2UdmnVXU

    ReplyDelete
  9. This one's for JB seeing as he's defected to CNN:

    "Matt Hancock's months-long absence from Good Morning Britain ended on Monday, as he faced questions about why he hadn't resigned over COVID.

    Ministers such as the health secretary have dodged being questioned by presenters Morgan and Susanna Reid since April due to a government boycott of the ITV show.

    In Hancock's first appearance since the boycott was lifted, Morgan listed government failings on COVID, saying thousands of elderly people were sent out of hospitals back into care homes without being tested, that 20 million people were allowed to fly into the country during the first wave, and that the public had initially been told not to wear masks.

    The presenter also criticised authorities for allowing the Cheltenham Festival to take place, said the country had locked down "at least two weeks late", and said the UK "stopped community testing" early in the first wave.

    "The 'world-class' testing system", which you then promised us in January, is now a complete shambles," Morgan said.

    "So I put it to you, given we now have over 50,000 deaths in this country, which is the worst death toll in the whole of Europe, why are you still health secretary and why haven't you offered your resignation?"

    Hancock said: "Because we've been building the response to all of these enormous challenges of this unprecedented pandemic.

    "The first thing is on testing, we've hit each of the targets I've set, half a million tests capacity now.

    "And I'm here to tell you we're going to double that over the next few months, and that means we can use testing in order to find where the virus is and we've got those turnaround times down so people can get the result faster and then isolate if needed."

    Labour MPs were quick to highlight Morgan's criticisms, and also noted that Hancock had not appeared on Channel 4 News for months either.

    Hancock is expected to host a press conference at Downing Street on Monday.

    The UK has recorded 1.3 million cases of COVID-19 and 51,934 deaths of people who tested positive for the disease within 28 days before they died.

    This article originally appeared on Yahoo"

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    1. Thanks for that - I watched the whole interview and it was a 'car crash' with Hancock very evasive and smirking nervously. Can't wait for Jenrick to get the same treatment shortly!

      Delete
    2. From Guardian:-

      Door Matt could only smile insincerely as Piers Morgan and Susannah Reid humiliated him for 20 minutes

      It’s the new touchy-feely government. One that will smother you with promises of love even if it can’t keep you alive. There was no coincidence in the government ending its 201-day boycott of ITV’s Good Morning Britain on the first available day after wannabe hardmen Dominic Cummings and Lee Cain had been kicked out of No 10.

      Nor was it a coincidence that it was Matt Hancock who was the member of the cabinet chosen to be the GMB whipping boy. To smile insincerely and nod his head from time to time as Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid humiliated him for more than 20 minutes. The health secretary is Boris Johnson’s go-to Door Matt. A person who commands almost as little authority inside the cabinet as he does outside. The harder he tries to become one of the in-crowd, the less respect he gets from his colleagues. The pathos is almost unbearable. He is the loser’s loser.

      “Where have you been?” Morgan asked. Door Matt insisted he had come on to the programme at the first moment his diary had allowed. He had been working so hard that he hadn’t had a spare minute for ITV. Morgan bulldozed onwards, determined to make up for lost time. Had Hancock supported the GMB boycott? “I’m here to answer your questions now,” Matt continued, apparently unaware he had omitted to answer the first one that had been asked.

      The two presenters then took turns to act as the battering ram, with Morgan at one point reading out a 90-second charge sheet of the health secretary’s failures over the past six months. Why hadn’t he resigned? That was just cruel. Everyone knows that Boris gets far more pleasure out of having someone he can bully in charge of the department than finding someone able to run the NHS.

      Door Matt tried to think of one or two things that had gone right on his watch, but little came to mind. Reid gently asked him if he was prepared to admit to having made any mistakes. For a moment it looked as if Hancock might burst into tears, but he pulled himself together and trotted out something about funerals. Really? With the UK having locked down too late, old people kicked into care homes without a coronavirus test and the UK having the highest death rate in Europe, the health secretary’s one regret was that he hadn’t allowed more people to attend funerals?

      The interview – AKA the pile on – continued in much the same way, with Door Matt defending his right to exist while failing to answer direct questions on anything, including whether he regretted tweeting his support for Dom’s right to roam back in May, as the list of government failures mounted. And all Hancock could do was stand – bizarrely, he appeared to have been filmed in the street outside the BBC – and take it. Praying for the seconds to tick down until he was off air.

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