Fascism and the Republican Party

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Steve has a YouTube channel and he's been making more videos lately. I don't agree with him ideologically, but he is committed to liberal democracy, has a clear mind and sharp wits.


Marjorie Taylor Greene's antics signal disaster for President Biden | The Warning w/ Steve Schmidt

2,802 views Feb 9, 2023
Steve Schmidt breaks down how Marjorie Taylor Greene's antics at the State of the Union signal disaster for President Biden and the Democratic agenda in 2023. He discusses how the Republicans will try to obstruct the President's plans to govern and how a House filled with MAGA extremists is bad for America.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I like Steve, he has important things to say and says them well with a low tolerance for bullshit. :lol:


Why Ron DeSantis vs. Donald Trump will be “World War Stupid” | The Warning w/ Steve Schmidt

3,258 views Feb 10, 2023
Steve Schmidt breaks down how the American media will cover the upcoming Republican primary between Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis. He discusses how, while this political theater is going on, the war in Ukraine is escalating as Vladimir Putin prepares for more aggressive action in 2023, threatening progress and social values across the world.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Stevo is gonna need more lawyers, he is facing serious state crimes in NY. Lawyers take hearsay evidence when it comes to getting paid. Maybe he figures he will be gone for good when convicted and what money he has will go to pay lawsuits. When you are in as much legal shit as he is, you should pay your lawyers, or you will end up paying the new ones up front.


Steve Bannon Ran Up Huge Legal Bills and Stiffed His Lawyers

TRUMP TACTICS
It’s not that Steve Bannon doesn’t have the money. But for some reason, he hasn’t been willing to pay his lawyers.

Steve Bannon—the nativist American media personality who’s backed by a Chinese billionaire—hasn’t paid the lawyers who spent years defending him against an onslaught of criminal charges, according to three sources who spoke exclusively to The Daily Beast.

With massive legal bills still outstanding, Bannon is now scrambling to find new attorneys, as he faces a looming trial over the way he scammed the MAGA crowd with a dubious plan to build a privately funded U.S.-Mexico border wall.

Bannon’s refusal to fully pay his bills has stunned some of his close advisers who’ve stuck around for years.

“I don’t have any reason to believe he doesn’t have money,” one associate said.

After all, Bannon is a former Goldman Sachs investment banker, co-founded the right-wing news website Breitbart, made tens of millions off the iconic sitcom Seinfeld, and hangs out with Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui. In fact, he was relaxing, reading a book on Wengui’s yacht just off the coast of Westbrook, Connecticut when he was arrested by FBI special agents in August 2020.

Then again, Bannon is also a known grifter and liar with a long history of peddling disinformation.

According to sources, Bannon owes “significant” sums of money to attorneys M. Evan Corcoran of Baltimore and Robert Costello of New York City. They—along with David Schoen of Montgomery, Alabama—spent months battling the Department of Justice in 2021 and 2022, and they represented him at a trial in Washington, D.C., last summer when he was eventually convicted of contempt of Congress.

At one point late last summer, Bannon owed Costello alone more than $100,000, according to a source directly familiar with Bannon’s unpaid bills. And Bannon still owes Costello a ton of money, according to two other sources familiar with the situation.

Bannon did not respond to a request for comment over the weekend.

By contrast, Bannon’s miserly attitude toward Costello carries a particularly sharp sting for that lawyer; the former federal prosecutor has represented Bannon in different cases for years and even took some heat himself—ending up on the wrong side of the FBI.

When, in 2020, the feds charged Bannon with money laundering and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for secretly enriching himself with donations to a GoFundMe campaign called “We Build the Wall,” it was Costello who defended him against the DOJ. Later, Costello helped secure Bannon a pardon from former President Donald Trump, a rarely received “get out of jail free” card that upended the federal investigation. And when the prosecutors at the Southern District of New York wouldn’t just dismiss the case, Costello had to sink time into filing additional paperwork to make the case officially go away.

But Costello’s history with Bannon goes even further. The attorney stood by Bannon’s side when the right-wing blowhard flatly refused to testify or hand over documents to the House Jan. 6 Committee that would explain how he engaged in the so-called “Green Bay Sweep”—a plan to overturn the 2020 election and keep Trump in office. When the committee threatened to hold Bannon in contempt of Congress, it was Costello who ran interference and told the committee that his client simply wouldn’t comply absent a laundry list of demands.

Things took an odd turn in that case when, unbeknownst to Costello, federal prosecutors zeroed in on him by secretly seizing logs of his communications, as The Daily Beast revealed at the time. That controversial decision to seek his emails and phone logs potentially crossed an ethical line by expanding the scope of an investigation to include a suspect’s lawyer. Costello was put in an even more precarious position when he hopped on a call with prosecutors to try to convince them not to criminally charge Bannon—a standard legal defense procedure—only to have FBI special agents quietly listen in and consider it an official investigative interview without his knowledge.

Bannon was indicted in November 2021, and in the subsequent months Costello regularly traveled from his home on Long Island down to federal court in Washington, where he joined two others on the Bannon defense team. Corcoran and Schoen took charge at the July 2022 trial and presented before the jury, which ultimately convicted him. Bannon didn’t even testify, although it’s unclear if that was his call or his lawyers’ strategy.

Bannon’s legal team immediately appealed, and U.S. District Judge Carl J. Nichols made the generous decision to not imprison him while the case makes its way through the higher courts. At sentencing last November, the judge made a curious statement that undermines the entire case, saying that the appeal “raises a substantial question of law that is likely to result in a reversal or an order for a new trial,” heightening the importance of having Bannon’s lawyers doggedly fight through the appeal to the very end.

That situation—dangling such an obvious gift to the contemptuous media personality—makes it all the more confounding that Bannon hasn’t paid his lawyers fully for the work they’ve done.

“The tragedy here is the judge said he expects it to be reversed on appeal. Highly unusual,” one source said.

The legal team’s reluctance to pour any more time or effort into the fight is evident by the lack of activity on their part in the appellate case in the District of Columbia. Schoen appears to be proceeding alone with the appeal, which was filed on Nov. 12 but has yet to move forward.

Notably, his co-counsel Corcoran hasn’t been filing documents.

Bannon’s drama with his lawyers has spilled over to his latest legal troubles, now in New York City. As with many other Trump-related criminal matters, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has picked up where federal prosecutors left off and revived the “We Build the Wall” investigation as a local case with state-level charges. The not-quite-double-jeopardy case is making its way forward, but now without Schoen or the other New York lawyer on the case, John W. Mitchell.

Last month, Schoen and Mitchell surprised the local judge when they cited a total “communication breakdown” and said that they can’t keep working with him at all, seeking to withdraw from the case entirely. Justice Juan Merchan ordered them to stay put—essentially just to keep their names on paper—until Bannon can find new attorneys by mid-February. But a little over a week ago, the judge pushed back the deadline until the end of the month.

Corcoran and Costello declined to comment for this story. Late Sunday night, Schoen clarified that at least he had been paid in full for the work he’s done.

“I can tell you unequivocally that I have been paid and the withdrawal motion has nothing to do with that, nor is it a delay tactic,” he said.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Christian Nationalism is major cow plop.......no where in the constitution where it say christ, christian, and anything of the sort......
it’s sharia plain and simple, in all its horror.

It’s not even Christian. There is no scriptural basis for the sex-phobic and generally social-control-oriented doctrine common to puritan/Calvinist evangelical ideologues. It’s a tool of the totalitarians.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Why the U.S. is facing extremist violence it doesn't know how to stop

20,732 views Mar 6, 2023 #Extremism #domesticterrorism #Hate
The Atlantic's Adrienne LaFrance joins Morning Joe to discuss a 'new phase of domestic terror' in the U.S.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

In “The New Anarchy,” a sweeping new cover story for the April issue of The Atlantic, executive editor Adrienne LaFrance draws upon years of reporting to argue that America is experiencing an era of increased acts of violence intended to achieve political goals, whether driven by ideological vision or by delusions and hatred.

Examples can be drawn from the headlines on almost any day: the January 6 storming of the Capitol. A paramilitary group’s plans to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. A man in body armor trying to breach the FBI’s Cincinnati field office. The attack on Paul Pelosi in his home in San Francisco. A failed Republican candidate for state office in New Mexico arrested for the alleged attempted murder of local Democratic officials in four separate shootings.

What America faces now, LaFrance writes, can best be understood as “a new phase of domestic terror, one characterized by radicalized individuals with shape-shifting ideologies willing to kill their political enemies. Unchecked, it promises an era of slow-motion anarchy.” Today’s political violence, LaFrance observes, is fueled by something new and dangerous: National leaders, as we see in an entire political party, are complicit in the violence and seek to harness it for their own ends.

With all of the historical conditions that breed political violence present in our era, LaFrance’s cover story asks: How can America survive this period of mass delusion, deep division, and political violence without seeing the permanent dissolution of the ties that bind us? For the answer, LaFrance looked overseas, and across history—including to 1970s Italy and the anarchist movement in early-20th-century America—and found lessons for our nation that are both deeply complicated and crucially important. She warns that the conditions that make a society vulnerable to political violence are complex but well established:

“Highly visible wealth disparity, declining trust in democratic institutions, a perceived sense of victimhood, intense partisan estrangement based on identity, rapid demographic change, flourishing conspiracy theories, violent and dehumanizing rhetoric against the ‘other,’ a sharply divided electorate, and a belief among those who flirt with violence that they can get away with it. All of those conditions were present at the turn of the last century. All of them are present today.” During such eras, LaFrance writes, “societies tend to ignore the obvious warning signs of endemic political violence until the situation is beyond containment, and violence takes on a life of its own.”

In contemporary America, one place where political violence became an everyday reality is Portland, Oregon, with its recent long period of clashes among anti-police protesters, right-wing counterprotesters, and the police. Reporting from the city, LaFrance interviews Portland’s mayor and goes on to write: “The situation in Portland became so desperate, and the ideologies involved so tangled, that the violence began to operate like its own weather system—a phenomenon that the majority of Portlanders could see coming and avoid, but one that left behind tremendous destruction. Most people don’t want to fight. But it takes startlingly few violent individuals to exact generational damage.”

The decisions that we as a society make today will determine everything tomorrow. LaFrance concludes: “Someday, historians will look back at this moment and tell one of two stories: The first is a story of how democracy and reason prevailed. The second is a story of how minds grew fevered and blood was spilled in the twilight of a great experiment that did not have to end the way it did.

The New Anarchy” builds upon LaFrance’s past work for The Atlantic, including “The Prophecies of Q,” from June 2020, which demonstrated how American conspiracy theories were entering a dangerous new chapter. Both articles join The Atlantic’s ongoing, broad coverage on the rise of extremism and the worsening democratic crisis, which LaFrance also collected in a reader’s guide for the magazine in January 2022, and which includes the essential reporting of Anne Applebaum, Barton Gellman, George Packer, Adam Serwer, and a range of other Atlantic writers and contributors who have investigated the growing threats to global democracy in recent years.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

“Blood grows hot, and blood is spilled. Thought is forced from old channels into confusion. Deception breeds and thrives. Confidence dies, and universal suspicion reigns. Each man feels an impulse to kill his neighbor, lest he be first killed by him. Revenge and retaliation follow. And all this … may be among honest men only. But this is not all. Every foul bird comes abroad, and every dirty reptile rises up. These add crime to confusion.”
— Abraham Lincoln, letter to the Missouri abolitionist Charles D. Drake, 1863
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member

Why the U.S. is facing extremist violence it doesn't know how to stop

20,732 views Mar 6, 2023 #Extremism #domesticterrorism #Hate
The Atlantic's Adrienne LaFrance joins Morning Joe to discuss a 'new phase of domestic terror' in the U.S.
It's facing terrorism it doesn't know how to stop because it allows enemies of humanity to broadcast subversive propaganda within it's borders.
Shut fox news down, take carlson off the air, permanently. shut down bannon, bongino, and all the others who spout conspiracy theory instead of news.
They're enemies of the nation and it's people, and have no business on the air in this country, perhaps they could find new jobs in russia or china...
 
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