Sunday, November 29, 2020

"Empires implode from within due to their own excesses"

"Empires implode from within due to their own excesses." – Gad Saad


Week three of our chaos and calm. The short version: More calm than chaos during this week of the presidential transition.

This week, a few more excessive lawsuits imploded, re-affirming our democracy.

🎶 Someone is getting his comeuppance! 🎶


Losing over and over.
It feels so good to watch the Crybaby-in-Chief lose the election again and again. In Pennsylvania on Friday, a three-judge panel rejected his appeal in challenging Pennsylvania's election. SCROTUS-appointed Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote a 21-page decision, reading in part: “Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy. Charges of unfairness are serious. But calling an election unfair does not make it so. Charges require specific allegations and then proof. We have neither here.... Voters, not lawyers, choose the president. Ballots, not briefs, decide elections.” Boom.

Also in Pennsylvania, the commonwealth's supreme court tossed a lawsuit challenging mail-in ballots there.

Georgia is on its second re-count, after already certifying its results for Biden. 

And most delicious, he lost again in Wisconsin. TЯUMP spent $3,000,000 on a recount in two counties in Wisconsin. The recount not only confirmed Biden's win, but it unearthed 132 more votes for Biden. That's about $22,700 spent by 45's campaign for every extra Biden vote. 


Matt Wuerker 



Transition, a long time coming. 
Emily Murphy, Administrator of the U.S. General Services Administration, finally "ascertained" the "apparent winner" of the presidential election, opening the way for Biden and his team to really begin the transition by allowing release of funds and authorizing him to receive briefings. She sent her letter to President-elect Biden last Monday, stating, "Please know that I came to my decision independently, based on the law and available facts. I was never directly or indirectly pressured by any Executive Branch official—including those who work at the White House or GSA—with regard to the substance or timing of my decision. To be clear, I did not receive any direction to delay my determination." 

Predictably, moments after she sent her letter, the Twitiot send out a tweet taking credit for her decision. 

I feel bad for Ms. Murphy. She was put in a tight spot with all of the lawsuits and dangerous anti-democracy rhetoric, and she got shat on by the media and the public. In any case, I hope the GSA fades back into the anonymous machinations of our government and that we never hear about the agency again for the rest of our lives. 


Concession-ish. 
In his tweet about the GSA letter, he wrote, "...I believe we will prevail! Nevertheless, in the best interest of our Country, I am recommending that Emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols, and have told my team to do the same."

And in response to a reporter's question, he confirmed that he will step down if the electoral college votes for Biden on December 14, saying, “Certainly I will. But you know that.”

I think that's the closest we're gonna get to a concession.


The fight for Georgia. 
Don't forget: both of Georgia senate seats, and the control of the U.S. Senate, are going to be decided in a run-off on January 5. You can help! The Southern Poverty Law Center is hosting a phone bank on Wednesday. You can also write postcards on your own schedule: Postcards to Voters. Or donate to the Dam candidates, Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock, or to Fair Fight


Leadership
Dr. Anthony Fauci has said that he would accept a position on the Biden COVID task force if asked. Yes, please! Lead us! 


Biden gave a moving Thanksgiving address on Wednesday. It was full of complete sentences and well-formed thoughts. Not only that, he inched the nation forward toward unity and triumph over the coronavirus. If you missed it, here is the 17-ish minute speech.




There's just two weeks until the Electoral College votes, and just 52 days until Inauguration Day. We're nearly there! 

Saturday, November 21, 2020

"If everyone is moving forward together, then success takes care of itself."

"If everyone is moving forward together, then success takes care of itself." – Henry Ford

Week two of our limbo.

Lawsuits.
45's lawsuits challenging the election kept a flyin' and were withdrawn or thrown out at great pace. Two that he won were minor matters and did not change the outcome of the election. Attorneys on the plantiff side admitted in open court that they did not have evidence of the fraud for which they were suing. Smart attorneys: they know it's quite unwise to lie to a judge. 

Not to say they aren't incompetent. After all, Rudy Giuliani is in charge. Get this: 45's lawyers filed an affidavit in Michigan where they were complaining about 150%! - 200%! - 350%! voter turnout in many precincts. The trouble is, the voter data were for precincts in Minnesota, not Michigan. What a circus.

Today a Pennsylvania lawsuit fell flat on its face, with strong rebukes from the judge. Judge Matthew W. Brann wrote in part: “Rather than requesting that their votes be counted, they seek to discredit scores of other votes, but only for one race. This is simply not how the Constitution works.”

Thank you, Founding Fathers, for our Judicial Branch and for the rule of law. Every one of 45's attempts to subvert our democracy is failing. So much failing. Are they sick and tired of failing yet?


Cracks.
Republican Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey issued a statement after today's Pennsylvania ruling. “I congratulate President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on their victory.... President Trump has exhausted all plausible legal options to challenge the result of the presidential race in Pennsylvania. To ensure that he is remembered for these outstanding accomplishments, President Trump should accept the outcome of the election and facilitate the presidential transition process."

Several other Republican leaders have acknowledged and supported the Biden win.

 Even Æ’ucker Carlson is calling them out on their ridiculousness. About 45 attorney Sidney Powell, he wrote:

But she never sent us any evidence, despite a lot of polite requests. When we kept pressing, she got angry and told us to stop contacting her. When we checked with others around the Trump campaign, people in positions of authority, they also told us Powell had never given them any evidence to prove anything she claimed at the press conference.

Powell did say that electronic voting is dangerous, and she's right, but she never demonstrated that a single actual vote was moved illegitimately by software from one candidate to another. Not one.

Why are we telling you this? We're telling you this because it's true, and in the end, that's all that matters. The truth is our only hope and our best defense. 

 


Threats.
At least a couple secretaries of state have been receiving death threats. Arizona's Katie Hobbs (D) and Georgia's Brad Raffensperger (R) have both had threats against them for asserting their integrity while performing their jobs in certifying the results of the election. Philadelphia officials are also receiving death threats. Unconscionable.


Corruption. Oh, the corruption!
45's lawsuits falling flaccid, he turned to state officials. It's unknown whether 45 wielded the carrot or the stick against some Michigan Republicans. He first called a Republican member of Wayne County’s Board of Canvassers, and she nearly overturned her vote to certify. When that didn't work, he invited Michigan Senate Majority Leader and Speaker of the House to the Whitewash House for a chat. He wanted them to subvert their duties and give Michigan's electors to him. Thankfully, they didn't succumb, and they will follow the law to have Michigan's electors vote for Biden. Biden got the majority of votes in Michigan. Duh. 

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham badly overstepped ethical and legal lines when he called Georgia's Secretary of State to ask that all legally cast ballots from certain counties be thrown out. Will he face consequences for his alleged felony action? Doubtful.


Fiirings.
A man of high integrity, Chris Krebs, head of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, was summarily fired after his agency made a statement that the election was "the most secure in American history." The agency did a great job in not allowing foreign – or domestic – cyber interference. And when you do your job with integrity and contradict the boss's flagrant corruption, ...well, you are fired. His firing followed a that of couple other DHS officials in his agency. It's widely speculated that more firings of perceived non-loyalists are to come. 

This is why we can't have nice things. Like a functioning democracy. 

The Usual. 
Hair Twitler has still been quiet in public, but tweeting the usual weird stuff like, "I WON THE ELECTION!" He has not said a word or a tweet about the surging COVID numbers across the country. Cases are increasing exponentially, and we're now losing about 1500 Americans per day to COVID. But from him: silence.

Don Jr. tested positive for "the 'rona" today, instagramming the usual inanities. What an ass. He is at least the 50th person in daddy's orbit to become infected. 


The Giuliani Factor. What is going on with Rudy? Once respected, nicknamed "America's Mayor," he's devolved into a (literally) scum-oozing sycophant. His behaviors have been bizarre for at the last year or more. He has some language difficulties in court ("I’m not quite sure what ‘opacity’ means. It probably means you can see"), and he seems to have forgotten how to lawyer

And why was he leaking? 

Embed from Getty Images


Whatever it was, it was hilarious!

It's altogether fitting that this insane clown is leading the Joker-in-Chief's legal posse.


Obstruction.
The current administration continues to block Biden's transition team access to briefings and funds. General Services Administration director Emily Murphy continues to refuse to send a letter formally starting the transition. It is supposed to be sent once she "ascertains" the "apparent winner" of the election. Here we are, two weeks after the election was called, and the transition is still in limbo. And Congress wants to know why. Murphy has until Monday to explain, or she may be called to testify. 

In any transition, it is important to make the hand-off as smooth and timely as possible. This year, with a raging – truly raging – pandemic, the safety and well-being of United States citizens is at risk. Most importantly, two vaccines have recently been reported to be 95% effective and are ready to manufacture and ship as soon as emergency F.D.A. approval is given. The U.S. Government will be instrumental in coordinating the distribution and administration of the vaccines. It is imperative that Biden's team be allowed to start their work so that this massive undertaking can be done as efficiently and as smoothly as possible. 


The Onion's Competition. 
It's been a real thin line between satire and reality the last four years, but this story takes the Onion Cake. TЯUMP supporters in Georgia have decided to rebel. In a way only Cheeto Benito supporters can reason out a resistance. They are going to take down the GOP in Georgia by boycotting the January Senate runoff election. Go, rebels, go! #Resist!


Moving forward.
Georgia's hand recount confirmed Biden to be the winner of Georgia's electoral votes, and Georgia's Republican governor Brian Kemp moved to certify the results. (Just this evening, though, 45 requested another recount.)

Speaking of Georgia, let's help the MAGATs in that state reach their goal! Let's move forward together in a big way by supporting the Democrat candidates for Senate in Georgia, Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock. You can write to voters in Georgia, like I'm doing! Check out Postcards to VotersGeorgia Postcard Project; or Vote Forward. Or, donate to Stacey Abrams's Fair Fight, or to the candidates' campaigns directly. Through ActBlue, you can donate to all three at one time! 

Current and former TЯUMP administration officials have been reaching out to Biden and his transition team. Though they aren't official meetings, and Biden still does not have access to briefings, it's baby steps toward the inevitable.

Though taxpayer funds allocated for the transition are being held up because of Ms. Murphy's obstruction, Joe Biden is moving ahead with the transition. He has built a diverse team – the most diverse in history. He is crowdsourcing funds and has already raised $10 million. It's common for incoming presidents to raise some transition funds themselves, but Biden has been accelerating fundraising. 

He's also been doing what leaders do. He's been reaching out to Democrat and Republican lawmakers to ask their help in ending the standstill. He hasn't directly attacked SCROTUS or the GSA administrator, but he has blasted their decision to obstruct and has calmly outlined the problems of a delayed transition, appealing for a difference course.

Twitter has announced they will be assigning @POTUS handle to Biden on Inauguration Day, along with other official Twitter handles, concession or no concession.

And the Team at Jimmy Fallon put together the concession speech we badly need:

 



Monday, November 16, 2020

A COVID TALE

Dan Wasserman


While we've been distracted by the election the past couple weeks, over 1,653,000 more Americans have contracted COVID-19, and over 14,000 more Americans have died. There has been a huge surge in infections this month, and governors from coast to coast are implementing more restrictions and mask mandates.

Of all the crimes that 45 has committed over the last four years, the crime of ignoring a public health crisis for the benefit of political standing has got to be the more heinous. 

It's Job #1 of any president to ensure the health and welfare of the country's citizens. This "president" had a direct hand in the death of over 246,000 Americans. He knew! He knew from the start that the virus was airborne, extremely contagious, and deadly. Yet he did nothing. Worse than nothing. He lied about it. He purposefully lied about it; by his own admission he downplayed the virus at the direct peril of millions of American citizens. 

The orange shitstain made the conscious choice to personally spread the disease. He flaunted mask wearing and social distancing as he hosted superspreader events. He outright mocked people wearing them in crowds right before the election! In a recent Stanford study, it was estimated that his rallies and events directly caused around 30,000 people to become ill and upwards of 700 Americans to die. Of course, that's just his rallies. By his actions and inactions throughout the last nine months, it's estimated that of the deaths so far, up to 210,000 of them could have been avoided by stronger leadership and quicker action. To my mind, that makes Hair Twitler a mass murderer. 

One of my very best friends and fellow sister resister recently became ill with the Coronavirus. She is one of the 11,463,782 reported cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. But believe me, she's not just a statistic. She is a wonderful, warm, productive, giving American. She is a sister, a daughter, a mother, a grandmother, a friend, a mentor, a giver, a healer, a teacher, a lover. She is just like you. She contracted COVID. And she wants to share her story. Her story may be the story of someone you love. 

Today, a Q & A.


Q: What was your COVID experience, in a nutshell?

A: It was one of the most challenging experiences of my life. Not only from being more sick than I'd ever been before, but from the reality standpoint of being a functional leper without a colony! I literally had no place to go and was getting sicker every day. 

After about two weeks of the onset of milder symptoms (a bad cough, aches, burning eyes and fever), I woke up early one morning at home struggling to breathe. I was having trouble walking and judging distances. A chest X-ray the prior week showed that I had pneumonia along with the Coronavirus. I called a good friend nearby with COPD; he brought me an oximeter to measure my oxygen saturation. It was scary low, ranging from 61-66% (it should be 90-100%), and my resting heart rate was between 99-121 beats per minute (normal is less than 100). My friend immediately went home and returned with an oxygen tank. It was obvious I needed urgent medical attention, but I had to drive myself three hours to the hospital (It's not like anyone could take me!). While I stabilized myself with oxygen, he went to fill up a portable oxygen tank in case breathing became a problem again on the road.

I fell through the cracks of the system a lot and had to handle many things myself without the stamina to do it properly. I knew there was a medical sheltering option, a quarantine program ("Covid Motel") offered in many areas, and I hoped to recuperate for 10 days there before going home. My home is rustic and cold. Normally this isn't a problem, but it was not allowing my lungs to heal. 

I found testing to be insufficient in the hospital - they released me after a rapid test showed a false negative. Before leaving, I insisted on a throat swab test, which was not rushed (and therefore in my opinion, more reliable). 

I knew I was still positive from more comprehensive tests a week earlier (lung X-ray, throat and nose swab). It was too late to drive three hours back home, and I didn't have the option to stay with my family in Los Angeles because of contamination concerns. I had no choice but to get a motel room for the night. I sanitized everything before I left. I hope it was enough. 

The next day, after I checked out out of the motel, I was still feeling very sick. I was exhausted and I had run out of food and water – I didn't think it was safe to go inside a store. I parked my car at a rest area, sleeping and wondering what to do and where to go. I couldn't risk infecting anyone; I felt paralyzed. Finally, the hospital called me, told me the throat swab test was positive, and asked me to return. 

They kept me overnight, monitored my symptoms, and arranged for me to be accepted into the Medical Sheltering Program. A doctor has to make the referral. 

This temporary quarantine program, using government-leased motels and hotels, is provided in order to prevent the spread of the virus. It includes people who can't quarantine safely at home due to shared bathrooms or other people in the home who are high risk. I had hoped to be there 10 days, but was able to receive only four days. The quarantine program is offered for 10 days - from the onset of symptoms. (They must have counted from my first positive test results the week before.)

After my stay at the "Covid Motel," I was still feeling very sick and felt like I couldn't drive the three hours back home. I literally had nowhere to go. Unbeknownst to me, family and friends arranged for me to be in a timeshare resort for 12 days to recuperate. I wasn't supposed to be there! This is what I mean by saying people like me have few options and honesty isn't one of them. (At check-in: "Have you been sick in the last 14 days?" Me, without blinking: "No.") I stayed in my room or outside on the patio and sanitized everything I touched before leaving. I had stayed there before, recently, so I knew the cleaning crew wore gloves and masks. Again, I hope it was enough. Then I returned home. 


Q: What has been the most difficult thing about all of this?

A: Being a walking germ, a deadly hazard to others. I couldn't see my friends and family; I couldn't go to the store; I couldn't even pet the neighborhood dogs who come to visit me everyday. My friends and family felt helpless. It was tough on everyone who loves me. It was probably the most difficult for my mom, who couldn't mother me in person. Family and friends were calling and texting out of concern. As much as I appreciated it, I didn't have the energy to respond. So my sister sent out text updates to family and friends while I was the most ill. After that, the people who texted me said loving things like, "I know you're too weak to respond now but I want you to know I'm thinking about you, I'm concerned and I feel helpless. Don't answer until you feel better." 


Q: What kind of treatment did you receive? 

A: Prior to the hospital admission, I was on a high dose of azithrimyacin for two weeks (to treat both pneumonia and COVID). I was also on Ivermectin for about a week. Ivermectin is usually used for parasites but has anecdotally shown to be helpful treating COVID. This treatment was from a local doctor friend. I truly received the best, most consistent care from him throughout the entire experience, both in person or via text, compared to everyone else.

At the hospital, they ran a lot of tests including a rapid test, chest X-ray and blood work. The doctor suggested I stop the azithrimyacin and switch to another antibiotic but I preferred to follow the advice of my own doctor, plus I did not want to go to a pharmacy to fill it and risk spreading the virus to others.

After I left the hospital, I continued the protocol from my doctor plus a steady diet of Tylenol to keep fever down and help minimize body aches. The next three months I need to rest a lot and take 1000 mg of Vitamin C daily. And I'm drinking tea made from fresh ginger and turmeric daily to help with the inflammation.


Q: Having experienced this for more than six weeks, what are the most important things you want people to know?

A: Several things.

How to take a test properly. With all the information out there, hardly anyone knows the best way to prepare for a COVID test. You need to allow the natural fluids in the head and throat to build up for two hours. This means no food or fluids, no brushing teeth, no chewing gum, etc. Hospitals and testing centers don't tell you this. My doctor told me this.

Learn in advance about testing. Ask what kind of test you are taking and how it is processed. How many people know that the rapid tests are only 50-70% accurate? It's the false negatives we need to worry about the most! When I went to the hospital the first time, I was given a rapid test (nose swab) that showed a false negative. The most accurate way to test is both a nose test and throat swab - not rapid tested.

Repeat infections. It is under-reported and undocumented how many people get COVID more than once. When this began last winter, there were not many tests available yet. We were told not to be tested unless gravely ill. I believe I contracted Coronavirus in early April, but I wasn't tested. I know many other people who believe they had it also; they weren't tested either. There is no way to be certain how many people have been infected. This means that the overall pandemic statistics quoted are actually much higher. 

COVID-19 is a big deal. There is a reason it's called a pandemic. It is a convenient myth, perpetuated by the president* (who turned COVID into a reality show "success story" following his own illness: "COVID Ain't No Big Thang!") that people only feel ill for a few days. It varies widely ranging from a few days to months. It's worth mentioning that the president was very ill and received drugs not available to most that turbocharged his recovery time.

There is also post-viral syndrome. A short list of symptoms include long-term respiratory issues, inflammation, ongoing loss of taste and smell, chronic fatigue, body aches, fever, hair loss, fibromyalgia, vision issues and more. It's still unknown how long the post-viral syndrome lasts, this is so new. I belong to several Facebook groups where many people note their primary care doctors are not taking Post-COVID Syndrome seriously, minimizing their patients concerns and implying it may be psychological issues. The fact is, this virus is still new. There is a lot we don't know yet.

Quarantine time. My personal doctor told me quarantine should only be lifted after 30 days and two negative tests. This is twice as long as what we are told in the media, and also double what the medical professionals in the hospital told me. Moreover, my doctor advised me to only re-test for the virus until three or four days passed without a fever and not using a fever-reducer. I was still taking Tylenol and followed my intuition instead of my doctor's advice. I tested twice within 7 days and passed.


 Q: What are your physical symptoms, then and now?

A: My initial symptoms were fatigue, lungs feeling "cold," cough, fever, body aches, burning eyes and inflammation. I found myself whimpering involuntarily. A lot. I couldn't talk on the phone for a week due to constant coughing. I was in bed most of the time, unable to do basic things (both physically and due to the quarantine), such as take my laundry out to be cleaned, so I was wearing dirty clothes and sleeping in dirty sheets.

Now, more than six weeks later? I've passed two COVID tests (taken a week apart), and have been out of quarantine several days. It's wonderful to be a free agent again! The pneumonia is long gone. My cough lingers a bit still and is mostly triggered by cold air. I haven't had a fever in five days but am still taking Tylenol daily as a fever-reducer and for pain. My inflammation is still pretty bad and the exhaustion is off the hook. I still can't do very much without symptoms flaring up. It is my body telling me to slow down and rest more.


Q: What has been the most difficult part of this experience?

A: During those six weeks it was not knowing when this would be over! Not being able to be self-sufficient but at the same time having to do things myself, even with profound weakness. It was frustrating that no one could be near me without putting themselves in jeopardy. 

Also, because there are still so many unknowns about this disease, there was a real lack of information and guidance. My symptoms were more severe than some who stay home with cold and flu symptoms, but not severe enough for hospitalization. Information was given by several people following up on a positive test result with a phone call; none of them were in a position to advocate for me in a meaningful way. Their job was to tell me how to safely quarantine, which I knew already and had been doing for two weeks prior to going to the hospital.


Q: You've been basically all alone for six weeks. How has that been for you? 

A: I thought the isolation itself would be tough but it really wasn't. I was too sick to care. I slept at least 14 hours a day. Not having the basics we take for granted when we are healthy (going to the store, necessary errands, visiting friends, etc.) was difficult. 


Q: What kind of emotions arose for you all along?

A: Many things seemed impossible, things that are normally easy for a healthy person to do. It was hard to prepare a meal and wash dishes, etc. I found myself struggling to regulate my emotions which ranged from self-pity to outright rage after I sought medical treatment in the hospital and was released after the false negative result. When I finally was accepted in the quarantine hotel program I was lodged in a 4-star hotel - The Crowne Plaza. Yet it took 20 hours and four requests for an extra blanket when the AC was stuck on and my warm clothes were out for laundry service. (Even a 1-star fleabag hotel will provide a second blanket.) The cold air increased my cough and my fever spiked again. I left the hotel feeling worse than when I checked in. As my symptoms reduced in intensity over the following weeks, it became easier to return to my more optimistic self.


Q: Have there been any positives in this experience?

A: So many! Mostly it was how my family and friends rallied around me, helping in any way they could from afar. The day I was in crisis, needing medical attention urgently, everyone jumped in to help. In addition to the aforementioned friend who brought me oxygen, another friend researched healthcare options in advance of my long drive. A bilingual friend helped with translating medical advice in one tricky situation. Another friend made advance phone calls to pave my way through challenges. Yet another friend raised money so I don't have to worry about rent for awhile as I recuperate. My sister sent out daily text updates to about 20 people so I could conserve energy. Local friends dropped off food and staples. And all along my doctor friend provided free medical care, checking in on me several times a day.

I'm a strong, independent person, and it was hard for me to accept help. At the same time, help was badly needed. Sometimes it takes a crisis to bring out the best in people and it has been truly humbling to see how many people care for me.

I think the other positive is to be able to tell my story here. To raise awareness. People like me are under-represented. While roughly 80% of infected people aren't very sick and not for very long, and many are sick enough to be in the hospital and maybe die, the remaining 20% are people like me. Sick longer, needing help and support longer, and perhaps without social support or other resources.


Q: What was your experience with your medical insurance?

A: Enrolling in Medi-Cal/Covered California was done for me at the hospital. I really appreciated that. I also learned from Little Sister Resister that federal coverage through the CARES Act is available to any American with COVID-19.


Q: What resources did you have for your recovery while you had to be isolated? What did you wish you had? 

A: The program at the quarantine hotel was run by a staffing agency. There was COVID-dedicated staff available 24/7. There was one nurse from 7am to 11:30 pm for about 100 patients. The nurse would call every morning to ask for and record my temperature. If I needed Tylenol to control my fever they brought each dose. If I wanted a cough drop, they were dispensed one at a time.Three meals a day were left outside the door and laundry service was twice a week.

I wish medicine (Tylenol and cough drops) had been dispensed more generously, say six doses at a time. I didn't want to make the nurse come to my room three times a day so I wasn't properly dosed. I wish the Crowne Plaza Hotel had moved me to another room when the AC was stuck on but they refused. No one, including maintenance staff and the nurses, were allowed in patients rooms for obvious reasons. 


Q: Do you have any idea where/when you were exposed?

A: Not really. I was likely exposed in Los Angeles (basically Covid Land) visiting family 10 days before onset of symptoms. I was wearing masks in stores and using hand sanitizer (the latter not as often I should have). My mother and uncle share a home, are in their 80s and live next door to my sister. We fastidiously practiced social distancing with masks and sanitizer in the conjoined back yard.

I'm high risk - very prone to respiratory issues and catch pneumonia and bronchitis all too often. For someone like me? With two parents with terminal lung diseases? I probably caught this by breathing air. Masks notwithstanding.


Q: Were you contacted regarding contact tracing?

A: Never. Not at the hospital, not at the quarantine hotel, and not by any of the people from the state who called to make sure I knew how to quarantine properly.


Q: What were the testing protocols afterwards?

A: None. The hotel quarantine program keeps patients there a maximum 10 days and releases without testing again. No one followed up to recommend another test. I arranged my two follow-up tests myself.


Mike Luckovich

Q: What are your takeaways?

A: We need our leaders to take this pandemic seriously. We need a president who has a plan rather than minimizing or outright lying to the American people and the world.

We need to have more options for people not sick enough to be in the hospital but still needing medical monitoring to be safely quarantined. I think quarantine hotel options must include factors like age, length of illness, only be released after fever is normal and after they have passed one COVID test. If people are released too early, they are at risk for infecting others. I'm very grateful that none of the people I was around earlier in the day I developed symptoms became sick. That would be hard for me to live with.

There was great news about two vaccines coming soon, but we won't know how truly effective they will be until they roll out to the general population. In the meantime, it's going to be a long, dark winter. The virus is surging badly. Continue your social distancing. Wear a mask when you go out. Sanitize your hands often. Don't go out when you are feeling sick! We need to keep up the protocols, folks, no matter how much of a drag it is. You just don't know how this will affect the next person, or if the resources they have will be enough.You do not want to end up like me. 

Friday, November 13, 2020

"Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea of liberty."

"Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the tempestuous sea of liberty." – Thomas Jefferson

And we sure are navigating tempestuous seas! Bring it on! I'm confident that Liberty will prevail, but until then we will have some waves and crests. 

Where are we a week after the election was carefully counted and called for Joe Biden? Chaos and calm!

Babyhands has done what he can to disrupt the transition. Anxiety spiked this week as there were nefarious gestures. But Joe Biden is showing himself to be an apt captain and will steer the ship true. 

So far, on the Toddler-in-Chief side...

Sulking: He has rage-tweeted plenty in the last week, but has stayed silent. There have been no public comments about the election, other than his lie-fest on the Thursday evening of election week. Today he spoke publicly about the progress of the COVID vaccine, but nary a word on the election. He nearly let slip acknowledgment of a new incoming administration saying, "This administration will not be going to a lockdown. Hopefully, the – the –whatever happens in the future – who knows which administration it will be? I guess time will tell." He dare not let on; it would spoil his grift.

Suing: Captain Chaos has refused to concede the election. He has filed more than a dozen lawsuits in five states, and so far has prevailed in just one of them, a minor matter in how late to allow Pennsylvania voters to correct their signatures on mail-in ballots. In fact, judges hearing the cases have chastised 45's attorneys over the frivolity of some of the suits. Attorneys in some firms expressed concern, and some quit their firms. In court, attorneys admitted they did not have evidence of fraud. Attorneys withdrew from a lawsuit in Arizona, and two days later when Arizona was finally called in favor of Joe Biden, the lawsuit was dropped completely. Attorneys in a Pennsylvania case also withdrew from a suit this week. 

In short, it's been chaos. As attorney Ben Ginsburg, who headed Bush's team in Bush v. Gore, said: "They’re throwing the kitchen sink against the wall to see what sticks — a mixed metaphor that’s deserving of this legal strategy. And ‘legal strategy’ should be in quotes.” 

There's not much air left in the legal lungs.

Dismissing: SCROTUS fired his Secretary of the Defense Mark Esper and installed loyalists into the Pentagon. This was the source of a giant spike in my anxiety this week. Were we on the verge of a coup? Probably not, as smart friends reminded me. He's exerting some power, but hopefully not more toward despotism. There is speculation that FBI Director Christopher Wray and CIA Director Gina Haspel will also face the chopping block soon. The lame duck is getting his wings chopped off, too. Not great for the country's national security.

Smirking. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's smirky comments were absolutely terrifying. Why the hell would the Secretary of State for the United States of America smile and say, “There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration” after a free and fair election that unequivicably elected a different person? What does this say to the world? Gah! So wrong!

Obstructing: Traditionally after an election is called, the administer of the General Services Administration signs a letter acknowledging the election results. The letter allows access of the president-elect to security briefings, office space and equipment, as well as about $12 million in funds for the transition. But so far, Cheeto Benito appointee, GSA Administrator Emily Murphy, has not written this letter

The State Department, lead by sycophant Mike Pompeo, has also been obstructionist. Among other roadblocks, they have been preventing Biden from accessing messages from foreign leaders. Leaders have had to use other means and contacts, such as through Obama-era diplomats, to reach Biden and offer congratulations. 

Shameful.

Ass-kissing: GOP lawmakers are towing the line. I get it; there are 70 million rabid followers who they need. They be shaking in their boots with the prospect of the Wrath of Kahn't should they disobey. Typical of them, putting party before country. There is real danger for our national security by enabling the Lyin' King. There have been a few from the GOP who have made mouth noises in favor of acknowledging the president-elect, but nothing concrete has been done as I write this. Most notably, Oklahoma senator Tom Lankford said that if 45 hadn't conceded by Friday the 13th, that he would "step in." Well, Okies cried foul, whining that he "shouldn't cave." And cave he didn't. Friday the 13th came and went. There hasn't been a single GOP in Congress who has seriously pushed for a concession, for access to briefings, or even for acknowledgment of the election results. States have until December 14 to certify their results. We may have to wait until then for any from the Right to pull their heads out.

Superspreading: Meanwhile, several in the Corona King's circle have recently tested positive for COVID-19. His chief of staff Mark Meadows, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson, and senior advisor Cory Lewendoski, among others, have all tested positive since Election Night. These are in addition to the many souls who contracted it in early October after the superspreader event in the Rose Garden, not to mention the 130 secret service officers – nearly 10% of the force! – who are infected or in quarantine.This is saddening and maddening. Most of these infections were completely avoidable. 

All this is in the context of a huge acceleration in the spread of the virus (now over 180,000 daily cases!), prompting governors to implement strict restrictions again. Just another example of the piss-poor "leadership" that the current administration* affords.

Grifting: He has made a loud call for donations to his "legal fund" to launch these bogus lawsuits, but read the fine print and you'll see that most of the donations will go to his "Save America" PAC and the RNC, and only donations of $8000 or greater will actually go toward these stoooopid frivolous lawsuits. It's just a scam sandwich!

As it is, he's been personally profiting off of campaign donations. Will his followers ever wise up, I wonder?

And that brings me to... 

The Carrot: Q: What can get him out without wreaking too much destruction? A: The prospect of another con. Some way to make a buck. Being in the spotlight, surrounded by adoring fans. If there is a way to pad his pockets, I bet he would ditch the presidency like yesterday's underwear. What can we dangle? There's already been speculation that he will start a new media company to compete with (and to his mind, destroy) FAUX News. He and his Fox'n'Friends have been on the outs. There is talk about him running for president again in 2024. This one, actually, seems like it would be really the best bet. Just think: if he had been re-elected, he wouldn't have any rallies to hold in front of an idolizing sea of red hats. Given that he started his re-election campaign less than a month after inauguration in 2017, I think that once the sting of losing abates a bit, he'll be back in the ring. No, I don't think he will seriously seek the office again. But he will do fundraising, he will do rallies, he will be on TV. He'll run a long con and he'll be in the spotlight. Just what he wants. 

If only he could just go away in a corner and play TV in a box..... (but if we're lucky, he'll be doing just that, in the steel-barred box he shall find himself in.)


And the Calm:

The Election. Arizona was finally called for Biden, and a few outlets also called Georgia for Biden, though Georgia is undergoing a hand recount. With Arizona and Georgia, Biden now possesses 306 electoral votes and over 5.5 million more votes nationwide. Only Obama in his landslide 2008 win has won by a bigger percentage of the popular vote in the last 20 years. 

Grown-ups in the room. A group of election officials working with the Department of Homeland Security called the 2020 election "the most secure in American history." In their statement they said: “While we know there are many unfounded claims and opportunities for misinformation about the process of our elections, we can assure you we have the utmost confidence in the security and integrity of our elections, and you should, too.” Oh, snap! 

Grace under fire. Dr. Anthony Fauci stayed cool after death threats last week from former Whitewash House advisor Steve Bannon, saying, “It’s obviously been very stressful. I mean, to deny that would be to deny reality. When you have public figures like Bannon calling for your beheading, that’s really kind of unusual, I think. That’s not the kind of thing you think about when you’re going through medical school to become a physician.” I value his steadiness and tenacity in staying in this ultra-important job despite all the roadblocks. Lead us, Dr. Fauci!

The once and future America. Someday these four years will be just a blip in our history. We know what we are. We are kindness and grace, like President Obama was four years ago:



Our president-elect. Joe Biden has been the voice of calm and reason. In his victory speech last weekend, he painted his vision of unity. To reporters on Tuesday, Biden remained unflappable about the lack of a concession. He said with regard to 45's refusal to concede, “I just think it’s an embarrassment, quite frankly. – How can I say this tactfully? I think it will not help the president’s legacy.” Joe reassured us all that the transition is moving forward regardless. He has given us – and the world – reassurance regarding foreign policy. He has given us transparency, releasing transcripts of calls with foreign leaders. He has hit the ground running in terms of a COVID response, and is not waiting until his inauguration to act. He is our de facto leader, regardless of the calendar date or the delusions of the orange cave monster.


In the end, we must wait until the baby is all tuckered out and we quietly swaddle him in his blanky. Until then....





Stay afloat, resisters! Be not timid! We must sail the tempestuous seas, and once we do, we will be sure-footed on the shores of our democracy.


Sunday, November 8, 2020

“The evil that men do lives after them"

“The evil that men do lives after them" - Mark Antony, Julius Caesar, William Shakespeare

Tom Toles


There may be chaos for the next few weeks until Biden and Harris are inaugurated, but even without that, once Biden takes office, he faces a huge plate of problems with extra sauce and meatballs. He will have to work hard to undo so much evil wrought upon our country. And it will take years.

Yet, I feel hopeful for the future. It will be a time of healing and progress. Though Joe isn't the most progressive, we have a good chance of righting our ship and getting her back on course.

I envision Joe Biden helping us to:
  • Unite the country against our common enemy, COVID
  • Cement healthcare for all Americans 
  • Pave the way for humane and just immigration. We must find the parents of those 545 caged children and close inhumane detention centers immediately!
  • Revere and listen to science
  • Take climate change seriously. Let's rejoin the Paris Accord and be the world's leader again
  • Reform the Supreme Court
  • Reform the criminal justice system so that it is truly just, from the traffic stop up to bail, sentencing, and parole
  • Further equal rights
  • Affirm that black lives matter
  • Rebuild allied international relationships
  • Sever damaging international relationships
  • Reverse tax cuts for the uber-rich.
  • Pledge liberty and justice for all
  • Rid our nation of the Electoral College
  • Return the White House to the People's House (Mr. Biden, tear down those walls!)
  • Have a functional Executive Branch with a full slate of permanent Cabinet members
  • Engage in normal, reasoned political discourse
  • Sleep well at night and not wake up with the pit of despair looming. Boring ol' government! What a relic!
  • And related, not think about the government daily and have faith that they are doing their jobs 

And speaking of Cabinet members, while we are dreaming, let's guess at who would be good for Biden to choose. Progressives turned out for Biden, and he should bring some progressive voices in. Elizabeth Warren certainly needs to be appointed to Secretary of the Treasury. I would love the country to be moved further left, but I don't think it would be bad if Biden chose a Republican or two to help run the Executive Branch, for the sake of healing our fractured nation. Cindy McCain (Secretary of Education!), George Conway, Michael Steele, and Steve Schmidt are my first thoughts. Is that weird? These folks all have been instrumental in calling the current iteration of the GOP to the carpet and rejecting 45's toxicity, as well as bringing along some conservative votes. How deliciously ironic it would be to have George Conway take a role in the new White House! Former Ohio GOP Governor and former presidential candidate John Kasich has sounded like a very reasonable person lately, as well as former Sen. Jeff Flake. Maybe just one of those folks to help build those bridges.

Other good picks for Biden senior advisors: Stacey Abrams, Amy Klobuchar, Andrew Yang, Mayor Pete, Beto O'Rourke, Van Jones. How about Susan Rice and Tammy Duckworth? 

It's exciting to consider the possibility of having smart, capable, normal people running the Executive Branch, who have experience and who believe in the offices they run. There are such possibilities! Who are your picks?

There's been a lot of talk about reaching out to the right and showing compassion. Ok, compassion is at the top of Libs' traits. We have always had compassion for conservatives who need help and protection. And most liberals I know have no argument with conservatives voicing their opinion on, and working toward, policies they believe in. If you wanna talk about taxes, fracking, spending, regulations, let's talk about those. I've said it over and over. I have disagreements with conservative policy but not conservative people. The last four years were not about policy (oh to talk about policy again! Oh happy day!).

What we do take issue with is racism, misogyny, and hate for LGBTQ folks and attitudes and actions that hurt people. That's pure hate. And if you're there, expect more rejection. As long as you don't hate my neighbor, I don't hate you. 

But we all understand the mourning the MAGAts are going through. Loss stings. So, my advice to them to cope with their loss: do what we did. Call your members of congress and express your views. Organize neighborhood meetings on how best to maintain tax cuts for the 1%. Go ahead, vote against your own interest. Guess what? We snowflakes will be still be fighting for you and will be there to pick you up again. 

I saw this map yesterday, and I love it. 

 

Or how about this one. The solid red and blue blocks are misleading. People vote, not acres. Here's a cool graphic from 2016:




So, onward.

  • We still face a Senate fight. Two – count 'em two – Senate seats in Georgia are up for run-off on January 5, and the control of the Senate is in the balance. Stacey Abrams got the vote out in Georgia for president. Let's help her get two blue seats for Georgia. Donate or volunteer to Abram's organization, Fair Fight, today. Check this website to volunteer for a postcard-writing campaign. I'm not sure if Postcards to Voters will re-up for Georgia, but check here in the next few days.
  • It's unknown who our Governor Newsom will appoint to take over Senator Kamala Harris's seat. I hope he picks Rep. Karen Bass from LA. She checks a lot of the boxes. 
  • Don't hold your breath for a concession speech from Babyfingers. Yes, it would help toward healing the nation. Yes, it would reflect a bigger character. This grub does not have character. He does not care about healing. He does not care about the nation. He doesn't care! He doesn't care. 
You wanna talk character and caring? Watch Al Gore's or John McCain's concession speeches. Now, those were statesmen.
  • SCROTUS doesn't even care enough to plan a news conference right. What a fitting end to a whimpering campaign: a botched reservation at the Four Seasons sent his team to the Four Seasons Total Landscaping parking lot, next door to Fantasy Island, an adult-video store, and across the street from a crematorium. *chortle* The Onion couldn't have done it better. Pathetic. (And please read this poem appearing in The Atlantic
  • Biden is not waiting until January 20 to govern. He has already hit the ground running for COVID response. He is readying a task force, which he will unveil tomorrow, Monday November 9. He has already reached out to governors and mayors. He has a plan. He simply can't wait on this. In the 70+ days until his inauguration, at current pace it's possible that there will be nearly 8,000,000 new cases and 70,000 more deaths in the United States. Unacceptable. 
  • COVID remains our #1 crisis. Please watch this space for a personal COVID story, coming soon.

Saturday, November 7, 2020

The End of an Error



We voted. Pandemic be damned, we voted! And in record numbers. 

And here we are, the day that we have been waiting what seems like 4000 years for. A day to look forward, in hope.

What a rollercoaster ride! Tons of feelz over the last few days.


And then, finally, on Saturday evening this happened.



WE DID IT!!

A decent, good man is to be our 46th President. 

I was most moved seeing Kamala on that stage dressed in suffragette white. The first woman! First Black person! First Black woman! First Asian American person! First Asian American woman! to be elected to be Vice President. I felt elated and relieved at the victory for Biden, but I was deeply moved for Kamala, similar to my emotions when Obama was elected. Wow. Wow. Wow. 





What a journey.

Election Day began with hope and calm, knowing that the polling numbers were favorable for Joe and Kamala. As the polls closed and walk-in vote tallies began, 2016 PTSD washed over with a vengeance and doom and hopelessness set in. By Wednesday morning, counts from drop-off and mail-in votes were more favorable for Biden. Rollercoaster headed back up.

By mid-day Wednesday, it really felt like Biden's victory was cemented. The TV talking heads began talking about what a Biden presidency will feel like. I remember that same moment in 2016, when the election wasn't called, but the pundits were giving us the reality. It felt like a hard punch in the gut. This time, it was a wonderful wave of relief. Once Wisconsin and Michigan were called for Biden, I became confident. So did Biden and his team. They launched his transition website.

On Thursday morning, it was becoming apparent that Biden could take Georgia and Pennsylvania, but the margin was shrinking in Arizona. Roller. Coaster. 

Friday morning news graphics showed four battleground states with outstanding votes – Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Arizona – were all in the blue. And they stayed there. 

I was a TV junkie all week. I heard many secretaries of state from battleground states talk about their election process. All of them were proud of their state's efforts, and all were very affirming: the election was performed carefully, transparently, fairly, with integrity, and every single vote was being counted by dedicated poll workers. Our democracy works. 

This is an important point to make. The elections are run not by the Federal government, but by states and local officials. Local election commissions run elections. County clerks run elections. Some of the officials are elected; some are appointed. Every state – indeed every county in the nation – does things differently. But for all of their differences, they do their job steadfastly and ethically. Our system is completely decentralized, and that's what makes it both frustrating and absolutely wonderful. 

Late Thursday we endured 20 minutes of lies and some very disturbing attacks on our democracy from the finger-lickin' puckerface. As expected, he attacked our processes and spun wild conspiracy theories, of course without a shred of evidence. He hadn't grasped that the voters are in charge. There is no evidence of fraud anywhere. Please, someone send a memo to the Whitewash House? In a style he understands: THERE IS NO CONSPIRACY TO STEAL THE FREAKING ELECTION. THIS IS OUR DEMOCRACY SPEAKING. THE VOTERS DECIDE. WE THE PEOPLE VOTED YOU OUT. 

It was disappointing that more Repugs didn't rebuke the orange anus's Thursday statement. A few did issue comment defending democracy the next morning, but others, particularly the odious Lindsey Graham, and Ted Cruz, supported the festering boil. But a bright spot: one of the best voices was former New Jersey governor Chirs Christie, close TЯUMP advisor and ABC News commentator, who said immediately and forcefully: "We heard nothing today about any evidence. This kind of thing, all it does is inflame without informing. And we cannot permit inflammation without information."

And the count went on.



It. Took. For. Ever. We are in a historic time. It would have been unwise to call the election before it was crispy around the edges. Due to the pandemic, states and counties were implementing brand-new election methods. Pennsylvania, for example, had never had a state-wide mail-in ballot. Oregon and Washington? They've been doing only mail-in voting for decades. Add to Pennsylvania's woes: the state GOP actually muddied the waters by not allowing pre-canvassing. If county clerks had been allowed to start processing mail-in and drop-off ballots as they came in, the actual counting wouldn't have taken all freaking week. 

But the fact that it happened this way: Americans and the world can be confident in the integrity of our process.


Some election notes:

This election turned out a record-setting projected 66.4% voter turnout, giving Joe Biden over 74.5 million votes, the most votes received by a presidential candidate ever. Yay Joe!

The networks were very careful in calling states' electoral votes.to characterize states as "too early to call" (vs. "too close to call") during the first couple days, and did not call states such as Arizona and Nevada even though the math was pretty clear that Biden would take those states. The Associated Press and Fox News (!!) called Arizona for Biden really early, while most other outlets held off until [....still loading]. 

There were some deep disappointments. It is quite dismaying that so many Americans just don't seem to have been paying attention over the last four years and still chose to support the fascist, misogynistic, racist toddler. It makes one wonder. Are they really truly that uninformed? Or are they misinformed? Did 45's propaganda work? Did Russia's propaganda work? Why have millions of Americans stopped thinking? Books shall be written about that. 

And the Senate seats we expected to flip, didn't. But! Both of Georgia's Senate seats will be up for run-offs in January. It's possible that Dems will control the Senate if they win both of Georgia's Senate seats. Get ready to donate and write postcards again! Otherwise, we'll have to wait until 2022 to get the Senate. 

That the blue wave didn't crash over us, was surprising and saddening. I must say, the Dems who rigged the election and stole it from the Mango Mussolini really should've planned better and held on to House seats, got rid of Lindsey Graham and Mitch McConnell, and flipped the United States Senate. And how 'bout more states and a bigger margin next time, huh?

One of the best story of the election: Georgia! I'm so happy for the results in Georgia. Though there is a razor-thin margin of less than 10,000 votes as I write this, Georgia flipped blue! They haven't voted for a Democrat since 1992. Georgia is the poster child of voter suppression and the fight for voter rights. What a success story! Thank you, Stacey Abrams, for being the consummate community organizer and getting out the vote for Georgia and across the country! Let's have more from Ms. Abrams! She's a national hero! 

Indeed, Black people from coast to coast mobilized and voted. We owe a debt of gratitude to black people for making this election happen. 


It was quite a journey this week, but in the end... We the people prevailed. We did it. Go, Team U.S.A!



Congratulations, Resisters! We did it!!