I must have missed these two burying the hatchet. Georgia's Marjorie Taylor Greene and Colorado's Lauren Boebert slid into a Washington DC jail with a small cohort of congresspeople to check on the condition of the accused insurrectionists held within.
Democrats joined the Republican contingent, not to show support but rather to debunk any false claims that would likely arise from unobserved Republican visits. โ Read the rest
Tucker Carlson's latest propaganda campaign whitewashed the right-wing domestic terrorists who assaulted 140 police officers and attempted to execute Vice President Mike Pence during their violent insurrection on January 6. He has focused on painting the insurrectionists as patriotic Americans who were simply exercising their right to protest. โ Read the rest
In no uncertain terms, Representative Raskin (D-MD) called bullshit on the Fox/Tucker Carlson January 6th denying hack job. Raskin is impassioned and refuses to forget the violence directed at our Democracy on January 6th or to let it be painted as peaceful tourism. โ Read the rest
A couple of weeks ago, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy handed over 41,000 hours of surveillance footage from the right-wing domestic terrorist assault on the U.S. Capitol to Tucker Carlson, who managed to find a few minutes of relatively calm moments to produce a ludicrous "look, no insurrection" report that ignored the fact that 140 officers were assaulted that day. โ Read the rest
In the final six months of the Trump presidency, the federal government executed 13 people. In January 2021, the same month he incited an insurrection at the Capitol, Trump oversaw three executions in just four days. Thereโs really no other way to put it: Trump was eager for the state to kill people on his watch. Two Rolling Stone reporters detail the unprecedented stretch of executions:
It was Sessionsโ successor, Barr, who took the concrete step in July 2019 of ordering the Federal Bureau of Prisons to resume executions.ย
Barr wrote proudly of the decision in his bookย One Damn Thing After Another: Memoirs of an Attorney General, published about a year after the Trump presidency ended, devoting a whole chapter โ โBringing Justice to Violent Predatorsโ โ to the blitz of federal executions. Not a shocking move from a man who, while George H.W. Bushโs attorney general in the early 1990s, praised the death penalty in a series of official recommendations, claiming that it works as a deterrent, โpermanently incapacitate[s] extremely violent offenders,โ and โserves the important societal goal of just retribution.โ (Without a hint of irony, he added, โIt reaffirms societyโs moral outrage at the wanton destruction of innocent human life.โ)
Trump, of course, was not so keen to engage with the subject intellectually.ย The sum total of his discussions of the death penalty with his top law-enforcement officer, Barr says, was a single, offhand conversation. After an unrelated White House meeting, Barr was preparing to leave the Oval Office when, he says, he gave Trump a โheads-upโ that โwe would be resuming the death penalty.โ Trump โ apparently unaware of his own AGโs longstanding philosophy on capital punishment โ asked Barr if he personally supported the death penalty and why.
Trumpโs lack of interest in the details had grave repercussions for the people whose fates were in his hands. According to multiple sources inside the administration, Trump completely disregarded the advice of the Office of the Pardon Attorney, an administrative body designed to administer impartial pleas for clemency in death-penalty cases and other, lower-level offenses. And Barr says he does not recall discussing any of the 13 inmates who were eventually killed with the president who sent them to the death chamber.ย
That means Trump never talked with Barr about Lisa Montgomery, a deeply mentally ill and traumatized person who became theย first woman executed by the federal government since 1953. Or Wesley Ira Purkey, whose execution was delayed a day by a judge who ruled that his advancing Alzheimerโs disease had left Purkey unaware of why he was being executed. (The Supreme Court reversed that ruling the next day.) Or Daniel Lewis Lee, Dustin Lee Honken, Lezmond Charles Mitchell, Keith Dwayne Nelson, William Emmett LeCroy Jr., Christopher Andre Vialva, Orlando Cordia Hall, Alfred Bourgeois, Corey Johnson, and Dustin John Higgs.
And it means Trump never spoke with Barr about Brandon Bernard.
The infamous gentleman who propped his legs up on former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's desk inside the Capitol during the January 6 insurrection was convicted today "on all eight counts in his indictment," according to AP News. This includes "felony charges of civil disorder and obstruction of an official proceeding." โ Read the rest