Archive for August, 2017

Keller @ Large: Making A Joke Of The First Amendment – CBS Boston / WBZ

August 21, 2017 6:30 AM By Jon Keller

BOSTON (CBS) Now that the dust has settled on Saturdays events down at the Common, thankfully with no serious injuries that I know of, we can start to take stock of what really happened.

It doesnt surprise me that my suggestion of last week that the community isolate and repudiate the protagonists by completely boycotting their pitiful rally was ignored.

Thousands of protesters march on Tremont Street in Boston against a Free Speech Rally on Boston Common, August 19, 2017. (WBZ-TV)

As we saw at the massive Womens March against Trump last winter and again on Saturday, there are many thousands of people in our community willing to show up and protest peacefully, and thats a good thing.

Thousands of counter protesters march to a Free Speech Rally on Boston Common on August 19, 2017. (Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images)

Its also not surprising that the crowd included a few hundred creepy wanna-be anarchists and others looking for trouble, who found it by roughing up a few Trump supporters and pointlessly confronting the cops.

Some counter demonstrators scuffled with Boston Police after the rally on the Common ended Saturday afternoon. (WBZ-TV)

If they managed to catch any of the creeps who allegedly threw bodily waste at the police, I call on the district court judges to come up with creative punishment.

Some protesters scuffled with riot police escorting conservative activists following a march in Boston against a free speech rally on August 19, 2017 in Boston. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images

But the whole affair left me with a question: why did the City of Boston issue a permit for this travesty at all?

Given the size of the counter-protesting crowd, I can understand keeping them well away from the fringe rally.

An aerial view of protesters on Boston Common demonstrating against a so-called free speech rally on the Parkman Bandstand Saturday, August 19, 2017. (WBZ-TV)

But barring the media not even a pool camera was allowed effectively shut down any public access to the speeches.

That wasnt necessary to protect public safety.

The free speech rally was confined to the Parkman Bandstand on Boston Common Saturday as barriers and police held back a massive protest. (WBZ-TV)

It deprived the public of a good chance to hear how little these folks had to offer.

And it made a joke of the First Amendment just when it needs to be taken more seriously than ever.

Follow Jon on Twitter E-Mail Jon Keller Jon Keller is WBZ-TV News' Political Analyst, and his "Keller At Large" reports on a wide range of topics are regularly featured during WBZ-TV News at 6PM and 11PM. Keller also broadcasts morning dri...

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Keller @ Large: Making A Joke Of The First Amendment - CBS Boston / WBZ

Welcome back, Garrison: Saluting the First Amendment – The Union Leader

But it doesnt hurt.

Our friends at the Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications have invited Keillor to headline the 15th Annual First Amendment Awards, Oct. 5 at the Palace Theatre in Manchester.

Some of our readers dont like that Keillor has sharpened the tone of his homespun prairie punditry in response to President Donald Trump. But we must never take for granted the freedom that allows a writer to call out the head of our government.

Our late President and Publisher, Nackey Loeb, founded the Loeb School in 1999 to promote understanding and appreciation of the First Amendment, and to foster excellence in journalism.

Partisans who rarely agree on anything should be able to agree on the importance of those principles.

Tickets to the First Amendment Awards are on sale now at the Palace Theatre. We would encourage you to attend.

Were sure everyone in the audience will be above average.

Politics Social issues Editorial

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Welcome back, Garrison: Saluting the First Amendment - The Union Leader

Letter: Peculiar First Amendment interpretation – MetroWest Daily News

According to Joseph Rizoli the First Amendment rights of free speech and assembly only extend to those with government-issued permits to exercise those rights (The real haters at Charlottesville, Aug. 15). Thus, the counter-protesters to the supposed non-haters had no right to assemble, no right to speak freely, only to stay home and shut up. Anything else is hate, according to Mr. Rizoli.

Of course, theres no excuse for either side throwing bricks or anything else at the other side, except perhaps insults, even without a permit. You, know, its the free speech thing. I notice, however, that Mr. Rizoli did not mention driving a car into the counter-protesting haters, apparently because having a permit to exercise ones First Amendment rights also allows attacking those without a permit with a 3,000-pound, deadly weapon.

The MetroWest News frequently publishes the First Amendment on the editorial page. Mr. Rizoli should read it, contemplate it, and try to understand it.

K. A. Boriskin

Bellingham

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Letter: Peculiar First Amendment interpretation - MetroWest Daily News

Hillary Was Right All Along. Trump Supporters Are Deplorable – Newsweek

This article first appeared on the Dorf on Law site.

We have long since passed the point where it makes sense to try to compare Donald Trump's outrages. "A new low." "Most depressing." "Even more dangerous." "Unprecedented in its depravity."

The inventory of negative superlatives has been depleted. Everything, it seems, is the worst.

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I will not, therefore, try to claim that there was one Trump statement in the last week that shocked me more than any other. I will, instead, take one of his moments of awfulness as a starting point to make a larger argument.

As most observers know, Trump claimed in his indescribable press conference on Tuesday, August 15, that there were "some very fine people on both sides" of the Charlottesville protests.

Trump's claim seemed to be that some fine people marched alongside groups of men carrying Nazi and Confederate flags who were chanting anti-semitic slogans, but the company they kept that does not reflect badly on them, because they were merely there to protest the removal of a statue and the renaming of a park.

A Trump supporter shouts on Fifth Avenue near Trump Tower, August 14, 2017 in New York City. Drew Angerer/Getty

Even giving a complete (and undeserved) pass to people who would defend statues and other public honoraria that exist "to celebrate white supremacy," the best response I have seen to Trump's whitewashing (unfunny pun intended, of course) of bigotry was offered by the late-night host Jimmy Kimmel:

If youre with a group of people and theyre chanting things like 'Jews will not replace us' and you dont immediately leave that group, you are not a very fine person.

Failing to notice the company that people choose to keep is an act of willful moral blindness. Any person who could say, "Well, these people shouting hateful slurs and carrying the symbols of America's defeated enemies don't make me want to leave their presence," is a person who himself is morally bankrupt.

The question is how far this extends. And it brings into sharper focus a question about Trump's voters that far too many commentators have been failing to understand for the past two years.

One of the most ludicrous lessons that mainstream journalists quickly agreed upon after November 8 was that they had been hiding in a bubble, living such sheltered lives in liberal enclaves that they had failed to understand the anger of Trump's voters.

This was not an isolated act of self-flagellation by one or two reporters. The bible of the field, the Columbia Journalism Review, featured a piece on November 9, written by its editor-in-chief and publisher, that excoriated journalists for being unwilling to engage with Trump's supporters. This was, he said, "our anti-Watergate."

This is nonsense. The press did not "miss" the Trump phenomenon by failing to interview angry white people. One could not turn anywhere in the mainstream press or the liberal media universe (including late-night comedy shows) without seeing Trump's voters on camera. The tragicomic, hateful words coming out of people's mouths were not edited or taken out of context.

Moreover, the press thought that Clinton would win because the evidence showed pretty strongly that Clinton was going to win. She did not lose the popular vote, and she barely lost the three states that provided Trump's margin of victory in the Electoral College.

No reporter said (as far as I know) that the polling indicated a 100 percent certainty of a Clinton victory. To blame reporters for believing polls -- polls that showed an 80 percent chance of Clinton winning -- is to elevate anecdotes above systematic analysis.

Even if my dismissal of this argument were wrong, however, the shorthand version of the message from the self-flagellating caucus quickly became a matter of flagellating others. It is not merely coddled, elite journalists who refused to "get it," we were soon being told. It was all liberals, those out-of-touch not-real-Americans who supposedly had had their comeuppance on Election Day.

Easily the most annoying and ultimately dangerous version of this intramural blame-game was Washington Post reporter Aaron Blake's article from last month, "Nearly Half of Liberals Dont Even Like to Be Around Trump Supporters."

Note the word "even," which captures Blake's tut-tutting attitude as he reported that "Liberals don't just hate President Trump; lots of them don't even like the idea of being in the company of his supporters."

Here is a further taste of the condescension: "The poll shows almost half of liberal Democrats 47 percent say that if a friend supported Trump, it would actually put a strain on their friendship " (italics in original). Wow, it would actually do that? Tell us more!

And while partisanship and tribalism are pretty bipartisan things in American politics today, Democrats are actually substantially less able to countenance friends who supported the wrong candidate: Just 13 percent of Republicans say a friend's support of Hillary Clinton would strain their relationship.

It sure is a good thing a liberal Washington Post writer is there to tell us tribal liberals that we are worse than our Republican counterparts.

Sarcasm aside, what was Blake's explanation of the poll's over-hyped findings?

He claims that liberals live in more homogeneous neighborhoods and are not exposed to "dissenting political voices." He thus posits that "perhaps it's no surprise that they don't hear and don't want to hear those voices coming from their friends' mouths." Perhaps, but maybe there are other reasons?

Blake then rolls out what is supposed to be the ultimate proof that liberals are uniquely at fault in their disdain for Trump supporters: Hillary Clinton's description of roughly half of Trump's base as "deplorables." Blake then admits in a parenthetical: "Her campaign later clarified that she meant only people at Trump's rallies. But still."

But still ... what? Blake's article trades in the most simplistic kind of equivalence, acting as if Trumpists and anti-Trumpists are all "very fine people" but that a somewhat larger percentage of the latter are simply closed to dissenting views.

In a final flourish, Blake informs us that 68 percent of Democrats and leaning-Democrats find it "stressful and frustrating" to talk to Trump voters, and 52 percent of the other side say the same.

When people ask why politicians in Washington can't get along, this is why: Americans can't even talk to each other about politics anymore without getting flustered. (emphasis in original, again)

Flustered. What exactly is it that might make an anti-Trump voter uncomfortable "even talking" to a Trump voter.

What possibly could make an anti-Trump voter not want to be friends with a Trump voter?

What was Clinton thinking when she described people at Trump's rallies as "a basket of deplorables"?

The answer is that a lot of Trump's voters really do hold deplorable views, and they have made no secret of that fact. Remember the rallies in which people defiantly displayed Confederate flags with Trump's name written on them?

The rallies where Trump encouraged people to commit violent acts against black protesters?

The speeches and rallies where Trump trafficked in shameless and unrestrained race-baiting?

If a person who finds Trump's racism, his misogyny, and his channeling of white supremacist views (including his hiring of more than one white nationalist leader) learns that a friend or a person sitting across from her supports Trump, I would think that she would have good reason to be flustered, at the very least.

Prior to Trump's reversion to form at his August 15 press conference, when the conversation was focused on Trump's insincere prepared statement condemning the KKK and others, the never-Trump conservative columnist Jennifer Rubin recently put it this way:

One might conclude from Trumps foot-dragging and obsession with stoking racial tensions (e.g. his vote fraud commission, his crusade against legal and illegal immigrants, etc.) that, despite his apologists protestations, his campaign message was aimed at white resentment.

Trump continues to tell those who want to 'take back their country' that 'their' country is being overrun by foreigners, non-Christians, non-whites.

Even so, Rubin was willing to be generous: "The majority of his followers had a more benign, non-racial interpretation (take the country back from liberals, elites, urbanites, etc.), but it surely hit home and brought out from the shadows Duke and his ilk."

And she had also offered in a column before Charlottesville: "They liked him because he hated the 'right' people (e.g. elites), fought for them, channeled their fears and prejudices and spoke his mind.

Why would it not bother a liberal to find out that a friend bought into all of that hatred, even if the friend claimed not to be a bigot (and had not seemed to be one prior to 2016)?

The evidence is clear that Trump's voters were more motivated by bigotry than "economic anxiety," although that does not say that all Trump voters bought into everything Trump said.

But again, why is it somehow evidence of closed-mindedness or "living in a bubble" to have watched Trump's speeches and rallies and concluded that people who supported him were wrong -- not wrong in the way that voting for McCain or Bush or Reagan was wrong in the eyes of liberals (bad on policy grounds for any number of reasons), but wrong in the sense of being inexplicable?

Now, the journalistic both-sides-do-it habit -- a move that, we can certainly hope, has been dealt a death blow by Trump's embrace of false equivalence this week -- is to say, "Well, Republicans would say the same thing about Clinton's voters."

But if that is true, then one has to stop engaging in relativism and make some actual judgments based on evidence and morality. It should be obvious that the Clinton-haters who still think that she killed Vince Foster are truly nuts. It is the people who otherwise viewed her as a she-devil whose awfulness justified a vote for Trump who are in question.

And what is the worst that one can say about Clinton that is based on even a tiny bit on evidence?

The worst accusations against her were all repeatedly disproven, of course, but even giving the Trump voters the full benefit of the doubt, what was so bad about her?

She supposedly ignored calls for extra security in Benghazi, erased emails that might or might not have made her look bad, used the Clinton Foundation as a slush fund, and ... and what? She was guilty of being Hillary Clinton.

It is inevitable that some people will grow to hate their political opponents, but if one takes the things that Clinton has done and said and puts them up against what Trump had done and said before election day, it would take an effort in total dishonesty to say that their partisans had equally understandable reasons to feel discomfort with the other side.

Trump voter: "I'm voting for Trump even though he has attacked racial and ethnic minorities and women in extreme and unapologetic terms."

Clinton voter: "I'm voting for Clinton even though I don't completely follow the back-and-forth about her emails, and six Republican-run committees exonerated her on Benghazi."

See? They're the same!

And all of that was before Trump's August 15 meltdown. In the days since then, only a tiny percentage of Republicans have changed their minds about Trump because of his indefensible comments. In addition, two-thirds of Republicans in a recent poll approved both of Trump's handling of the Charlottesville situation and of his apportioning of blame.

All of which brings us back to Kimmel's formulation of the matter. If you could see what Trump had done before the Charlottesville tragedy and still be in the group of people who supported him, you were already on shaky ground.

Now that Trump has sided with white supremacists even more blatantly than he already had, however, if "you dont immediately leave that group, you are not a very fine person."

Neil H. Buchanan is an economist and legal scholar and a professor of law at George Washington University . He teaches tax law, tax policy, contracts, and law and economics. His research addresses the long-term tax and spending patterns of the federal government, focusing on budget deficits, the national debt, health care costs and Social Security.

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Hillary Was Right All Along. Trump Supporters Are Deplorable - Newsweek

Julia Louis-Dreyfus was caught up in Hillary Clinton’s email scandal – NEWS.com.au

Take a look at the all new trailer for Season 5 of 'Veep' starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus was caught up in the Hillary Clinton email leak.

JULIA Louis-Dreyfus has shared an incredibly awkward/hilarious story about a gift she received from Hillary Clinton.

The actress told The Late Late Show host, James Corden, that she worked with someone on her TV show Veep that also did makeup for the politician.

Her friend asked the then Secretary of State to write a note to Louis-Dreyfus as a gift and she obliged.

It said, Dear Julia, I hope you get job reform and education reform ... as Veep. Best wishes, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Louis-Dreyfus said about the note.

So of course I was thrilled to get this and I had it framed in my house.

But Louis-Dreyfus attitude towards the gift changed slightly in 2016 when WikiLeaks published more than 30,000 emails sent to and from Hillary Clintons private email server.

One of the released emails revealed that the politician actually had very little idea about who Julia Louis-Dreyfus actually was.

Somebody tweeted to me an email that Hillary Clinton sent to a staffer that said, a friend of mine needs me to write something for Julie Dryfus (sic). Any idea what to say? Shes on some show, the actress told Corden.

And so he writes back, its called Veep. I will admit I have not seen it ...

The actress, who played Elaine on Seinfeld, told the talk show host that she now has the email exchange printed and on display next to the original note from Hillary Clinton.

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Julia Louis-Dreyfus was caught up in Hillary Clinton's email scandal - NEWS.com.au