Wednesday Open Thread | Georgia State Rep. Jason Spencer warns black attorney she ‘may go missing’ if she tries to remove Confederate monument

A Republican member of the Georgia House of Representatives issued a veiled threat of lynching to a black former colleague who expressed anti-Confederate memorial sentiments on his Facebook.

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia State Rep. Jason Spencer (R) did exactly that on a Facebook post when former state representative LaDawn Jones expressed a distaste for a photo he took with a Confederate monument.

“This is Georgia’s history,” Spencer wrote on a post accompanied by a selfie he took with a South Georgia monument to Confederate president Jefferson Davis.

Jones, who formerly served in the state legislature until last year, questioned whether state tax dollars help pay for the upkeep of the memorial, which includes the house Davis fled to after the Civil War ended. A few comments in, Spencer began making threatening allusions.

“Continue your quixotic journey into South Georgia and it will not be pleasant,” Spencer replied. “The truth. Not a warning. Those folks won’t put up with it like they do in Atlanta.”

“I can guarantee you won’t be met with torches but something a lot more definitive,” he continued, responding to Jones’ comment about the store-bought tiki torches used by the white supremacists at the Charlottesville rally earlier this month.

After another person commented about the differences between Atlanta (a city who has a large African American population) and the rest of Georgia, Spencer agreed.

“They will go missing in the Okefenokee [swamp],” he wrote. “Too many necks they are red around here. Don’t say I didn’t warn you about ’em.”

Jones didn’t back down from Spencer’s intimidation.

“Sounds like a threat of physical violence … is that what we are doing now?” she wrote. “Desperate times call for desperate measures huh? Afraid of what is going to happen in southern GA? I saw those white supremacists crying when sh*t really hit the fan.”

About SouthernGirl2

A Native Texan who adores baby kittens, loves horses, rodeos, pomegranates, & collect Eagles. Enjoys politics, games shows, & dancing to all types of music. Loves discussing and learning about different cultures. A Phi Theta Kappa lifetime member with a passion for Social & Civil Justice.
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92 Responses to Wednesday Open Thread | Georgia State Rep. Jason Spencer warns black attorney she ‘may go missing’ if she tries to remove Confederate monument

  1. rikyrah says:

    The Hill

    @thehill

    Trump admin appoints ex-dean of college busted for fraud to run student aid fraud office: http://hill.cm/obJh394

  2. rikyrah says:

    Marcus H. Johnson

    @marcushjohnson

    If Kamala Harris says she is for Medicare for all and Bernie Bros still hate her, maybe its more about identity than policy 🤔🤔

  3. rikyrah says:

    Report: GOPers May Hold Children’s Health Insurance Hostage For Tax Cuts
    AUGUST 30, 2017 12:43 PM

    Congress returns next week to a nightmarishly short calendar during which they must pass a host of bills to keep the government running, including the reauthorization of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) which provides health coverage to millions of children in low-income families and expires on Sept. 30.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, Republicans may attempt to use the CHIP deadline as a vehicle to revive their effort to chip away at the Affordable Care Act, and could try to attach amendments to the bill to reauthorize its funding.

    Congressional sources told the Wall Street Journal that Republicans are in particular looking at linking a repeal of Obamacare’s medical device tax to CHIP. Other lawmakers are considering amendments that would stabilize Obamacare’s marketplaces, fearing that a standalone bill to do so would either not pass Congress or would draw a presidential veto.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics, The National Association of Medicaid Directors and several other groups have voiced concerns about attempts to play politics with the CHIP funding, warning that any attempt to attach a controversial “poison pill” provision to the must-pass bill would put it in jeopardy.

    http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/chip-congress-republicans

  4. Ametia says:
    • Ametia says:

      BWA HA HA This fake as MOFO. He’s literally CRAWLING OUT OF HIS SKIN, with all those “misplaced folks”

      But he’s doing the Lord’s work, ya’ll.

  5. Ladies, check your email

  6. Breaking News: Politico: Mueller’s Team Working With NY Attorney General Eric Schneiderman

  7. Liza says:

    How much more can we take?

    House Republicans looking at cutting almost $1 billion from disaster accounts to help finance Trump border wall: https://t.co/Rko4wJaJSu— AP Politics (@AP_Politics) August 30, 2017

    //platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  8. Liza says:

    How Donald Trump and Elaine Chao Sold Off Flood-Control Policy to the Highest Bidders

    In mid-August, the administration moved to gut a necessary initiative to guarantee the flood resilience of infrastructure.

    BY JOHN NICHOLS | AUGUST 29, 2017

    Even before Hurricane Harvey hit Texas, with devastating impact on the infrastructure of a flooded Houston and other communities, the Trump administration was thinking and acting on flood-control policies.

    Unfortunately, the president’s team was thinking about what corporate interests wanted, and acting on their behalf — even as specialists on flooding issues pleaded with the administration to do otherwise. On Aug. 15, Trump and his team overturned an Obama-administration rule requiring that infrastructure projects, including roads and bridges, be designed to withstand the consequences of climate change — such as rising sea levels.

    Experts in climate change, coastal management and environmental policy begged the administration to maintain the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard for “climate resilience.” The concern crossed traditional lines of ideology and partisanship, as free-market economic groups and Republican members of the House praised the standard.

    But politically influential real-estate developers and builders lobbied for overturning Obama’s order. And they got their way, thanks in no small part to one of the industry’s most powerful allies in the administration, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao.

    Since Trump took office on Jan. 20, Chao and other presidential appointees have rushed to sell off critical decisions to the highest bidders in a crony-capitalist frenzy the likes of which Washington has never before seen.

    Chao was with Trump when he announced the gutting of Obama’s order to insure the “climate resilience” of infrastructure projects. As the Cabinet secretary who will be overseeing much of Trump’s $1 billion infrastructure initiative, she was at the ready on Aug. 15 with complaints about long environmental reviews and regulations and a promise that “This new executive order will slash the time it takes to get vital new infrastructure projects approved and delivered.”

    http://billmoyers.com/story/donald-trump-elaine-chao-sold-off-flood-control-policy-highest-bidders/

    • Liza says:

      DESPITE HURRICANE HARVEY FLOODING, WHITE HOUSE DEFENDS TRUMP’S ROLLING BACK OBAMA FLOOD REGULATIONS

      BY MAX KUTNER ON 8/28/17 AT 3:09 PM
      Trump Rolled Back Obama’s Flood Rules Before Hurricane Harvey

      Former President Barack Obama’s 2015 executive order that put in place flood risk regulations “applied broadly to the whole country, leaving little room or flexibility for designers to exercise professional judgement or incorporate the particular context of the project setting,” a White House spokesperson said Monday in a statement to Newsweek. The spokesperson added that the regulations “were developed without sufficient analysis as to the economic impacts associated with its ultimate implementation.”

      The 2015 order established a federal flood risk management standard and said that for projects using federal funds, developers must take certain measures to assess the flood risk. “The purpose of that federal flood risk management standard was to ensure that where federal dollars were being spent on infrastructure…that the project sponsor understand and take a look at their flood risk portfolio,” says Brian Pallasch, the managing director for government relations and infrastructure initiatives at the American Society of Civil Engineers, a professional organization with more than 150,000 members. “We felt it was a step in the right direction.”

      On August 15, Trump revoked the Obama directive “in order to ensure that the federal environmental review and permitting process for infrastructure projects is coordinated, predictable and transparent,” the Trump order said. It continued, “Inefficiencies in current infrastructure project decisions, including management of environmental reviews and permit decisions or authorizations, have delayed infrastructure investments, increased project costs and blocked the American people from enjoying improved infrastructure that would benefit our economy, society and environment.”

      … the White House is standing by the August 15 order. The administration spokesperson said FEMA had not published a final rule on the Obama directive, and “therefore the regulatory changes had not been implemented and today’s executive order does not change current FEMA policies or programs.” By revoking the 2015 order, “the prior standard will remain in effect,” the spokesperson said. State and local jurisdictions can still implement higher standards.

      http://www.newsweek.com/trump-revoked-obama-flood-protections-hurricane-harvey-texas-656050

      • Liza says:

        Here’s what really happened.

        In Trump’s so called administration, everything named Obama must go. Plus, everything must be deregulated, absolutely everything.

        Now Houston has flooded, and the Trumpsters have been caught with their pants down. I strongly suspect that the majority of Americans didn’t know about this. It is only now getting some attention because of the Hurricane.

  9. Liza says:

    Why Houston is prone to flooding
    By VERONICA STRACQUALURSI Aug 27, 2017, 8:09 PM ET
    Richard Carson/Reuters

    ABC News spoke with Texas A & M Professor Samuel Brody, who is an expert on flooding causes and consequences and is also the director of the Center for Texas Beaches and Shores.

    According to Brody, Houston is prone to flooding for a number of reasons.

    The city is situated on a low-lying coastal plain with little topographic relief and the soils beneath it are clay-based, thwarting drainage.

    “But I think the real driver for flood loss and impact in Houston is the built environment,” Brody told ABC News in an interview Sunday. “This is a human-induced problem. Houston is a rapidly growing metropolitan area.”

    Because of all the rapid development in the city, the natural drainage patterns of the region have been changed.

    “Instead of water seeping into the soil or running into the bayous, we’re starting to see it run into people’s homes,” Brody said.

    Houston uses bayous as its main drainage system, however the city has no major levee system in place.

    But in trying to drain the water quickly from one place to another, you run the risk of harming another community downstream.

    In January, the city announced projects — an estimate $130 million — to expedite flood relief in areas surrounding the Brays, Hunting and White bayous.

    “These projects will greatly reduce the flood threat for residents along these bayous and remove hundreds of properties out of the 100 year flood plain,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner said in a press release.

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/houston-prone-flooding/story?id=49452150

    • Liza says:

      This article is kind of simplistic and general, but does touch on the truth which is that Houston’s flooding problem is essentially man made. An antiquated and inadequate system for flood control in a city that just kept sprawling and building and paving itself for decades without dedicating sufficient resources to flood control infrastructure. And they could ill afford this negligence given the topography of the region.

      When I lived in Houston back in the late 1970s, a good hard rain would flood the bayous. It would have been a good time to get on this.

      What is happening didn’t have to happen, certainly not to this extent. But, developers rule.

  10. Liza says:

    This was yesterday…

    “While the world’s attention is on Texas, floods in Bangladesh, India and Nepal have killed 1,200 people and affected 16 million others.

    Charities are calling it one of the region’s worst humanitarian crises in decades.”

    https://www.facebook.com/bbcnewsbeat/videos/10156707805854968/?hc_ref=ARS2BlkaifCOR8i8mKYgSUtEaUDwfgpNHGD3xV8Nhc9_2MGm3BPxd8xMrsY0OXQuRJM

  11. rikyrah says:

    Houston is the 4th largest city in America. And, it has been turned into one big lake.
    I am stunned.

  12. HEARTBREAKING…

    https://twitter.com/Angelus1701/status/902945889689448450

    (CNN)The van in which an elderly couple and their four grandchildren were riding when the vehicle was swept away Sunday by Tropical Storm Harvey’s floodwaters has been found, Sheriff Ed Gonzalez of Harris County, Texas, said Wednesday.

    Two bodies were found in the van, and dive teams were making their way through murky water in a wooded area to inspect the white, cargo-type van for more remains, he said.
    Developing story – more to come

  13. Daughter wants to go see Carson today. I know she wants to see our little darling but I’m so scared. Is 290 to 610 opened? Is it safe?

    • rikyrah says:

      She shouldn’t risk it, SG2

      • I hope she listens. I know she wants to hold Carson and love on him but I want them all to be safe. Just worried.

      • Liza says:

        I feel so bad for her being separated from her newborn baby. But I’m sure the preemie nurses are holding him and taking very good care of him.

        The water is going down in Houston, but slowly, according to the weather channel.

    • Liza says:

      I agree, SG2.

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      She needs to wait until it is safe to travel. Carson needs her to wait until the flooding recedes.

    • vitaminlover says:

      I feel your daughter, Southern. When my youngest was born, I had to leave her only overnight after being in the hospital for a week for the C-section. She and I were bonding so well but her liver had to mature a little bit more. Well it really hurt my heart and I cried all night. I got her the next day. She was full term but it still hurt that one night. A mother’s love starts right away. God bless your daughter and I know that she will make up for lost time with little Carson. Just bless her.

      • They all were so excited to see Carson. Haley and Jay got a chance to go the hospital and see him. They can’t wait until he comes home. Daughter says she talks to him and he opens his eyes and watches her. Too much sweetness!

  14. Liza says:

    How Harvey exposes America’s dangerously dilapidated infrastructure
    Ryan Cooper
    August 29, 2017

    …During the peak years of the New Deal, one single agency, the Public Works Administration, consumed half the concrete and one-third of the steel output of the entire country doing this stuff.

    Among these relics are the two major flood control reservoirs protecting downtown Houston: Addicks Reservoir and Barker Reservoir, authorized by the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1938 and built by the Army Corps of Engineers. After subsequent upgrades and repairs, they are still functioning today — though they are in need of serious work. Back in 2009 they were deemed to be at “extremely high risk of catastrophic failure” due to their age and proximity to downtown, but the Corps has opted for a series of minor patches, not having had the money or initiative to do the necessary total overhaul. Due to the torrential rain from Harvey, both are right now nearly full and are having to release water to keep from overflowing.

    The simple fact is that the United States could not possibly exist in its hyper-wealthy form — and probably not at all — without tremendous public investment in infrastructure. As societies grow wealthier, they necessarily require more and more sophisticated transportation, communication, and education. Highways, airports, rail networks, telephone and internet, schools, and so forth all require extensive government spending and regulation to function. Indeed, many absolutely vital systems — like the GPS satellite network — are to this day still owned and operated by the federal government.

    Today, America is not only looking at the bill coming due for decades of procrastination, we face dramatically increased infrastructure requirements due to the threat of climate change. The entire power generation and transmission system must be rebuilt to slash carbon emissions; it and transportation and communication networks must be overhauled to increase resilience. And as we’re seeing in Houston, flood protection and drainage systems must be radically strengthened to handle a hugely increased risk of extreme storms.

    Failing to rise to the occasion will only mean spending even more on disaster cleanup. While it may be expensive to build new flood control projects across the nation, it will be much cheaper than rebuilding drowned cities, one after the other.

    http://theweek.com/articles/721140/how-harvey-exposes-americas-dangerously-dilapidated-infrastructure

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      Very informative article. We must take the warning and act now to repair and upgrade our country’s infrastructure.

      • Liza says:

        This issue was prominent throughout the two Obama Administrations. PBO understood both the need and the opportunity to create jobs. It’s GOP obstruction the stood in the way. And from everything I’ve read, Trump’s so called “infrastructure plan” really isn’t a plan.

        And, of course, the Bush wars created the staggering budget deficits that were used as an excuse.

        All we’re going to learn here is that regardless of how much conservatives hate big government, it is big government that builds big infrastructure, and it has to be paid for with taxes. I have no idea how long it will take us to build consensus on this issue, but the cost of not building infrastructure dwarfs the cost of doing it.

        Look at the below example. They needed 14 billion. Katrina damage is estimated close to 150 billion. And, of course, 1,800 deaths.

        They Saw It Coming
        By MARK FISCHETTISEPT. 2, 2005

        The debate over New Orleans’s vulnerability to hurricanes has raged for a century. By the late 1990’s, scientists at Louisiana State University and the University of New Orleans had perfected computer models showing exactly how a sea surge would overwhelm the levee system, and had recommended a set of solutions. The Army Corps of Engineers, which built the levees, had proposed different projects.

        Yet some scientists reflexively disregarded practical considerations pointed out by the Army engineers; more often, the engineers scoffed at scientific studies indicating that the basic facts of geology and hydrology meant that significant design changes were needed. Meanwhile, local politicians lobbied Congress for financing for myriad special interest groups, from oil companies to oyster farmers. Congress did not hear a unified voice, making it easier to turn a deaf ear.

        Fed up with the splintered efforts, Len Bahr, then the head of the Louisiana Governor’s Office of Coastal Activities, somehow dragged all the parties to one table in 1998 and got them to agree on a coordinated solution: Coast 2050. Completing every recommended project over a decade or more would have cost an estimated $14 billion, so Louisiana turned to the federal government. While this may seem an astronomical sum, it isn’t in terms of large public works; in 2000 Congress began a $7 billion engineering program to refresh the dying Florida Everglades. But Congress had other priorities, Louisiana politicians had other priorities, and the magic moment of consensus was lost.

        Thus, in true American fashion, we ignored an inevitable problem until disaster focused our attention. Fortunately, as we rebuild New Orleans, we can protect it — by engineering solutions that work with nature, not against it.

        http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/opinion/they-saw-it-coming.html?mcubz=0

      • yahtzeebutterfly says:

        Whew!

        I learn so much from you, Liza.

      • Liza says:

        TY, Yahtzee. :)

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      Heartbreaking… so very sad.

      So much devastating news and so much suffering.

      “9 Ways You Can Give Money, Food or Supplies to Help Hurricane Harvey Victims”
      http://fortune.com/2017/08/29/hurricane-harvey-donate-help/

      The situation in Houston and other parts of Southeast Texas continues to worsen – and the people there need help.

      Corporations and celebrities are chipping in, but the relief efforts really depend more on individual donations and acts of charity. As much of the nation watches the disaster unfold from the comfort of its living room, there are a multitude of ways you can lend aid to victims of the storm, even if you’re in the midst of a financial crunch yourself.

      Here are a few of the ways you can help:

      Red Cross – The relief organization has put the call out for cash donations and is launching blood drives. If you’d prefer to give cash, you can do so online, calling 1-800-RED-CROSS or, if you text “HARVEY” to 90999, you can make a $10 donation.

      City of Houston Relief Fund – After getting an influx of calls from people asking how they can help, Houston’s mayor Sylvester Turner established a relief fund accepting tax deductible donations. You can donate online with a credit card or send checks or wire money. Find additional details on the Relief Fund’s Website.
      GlobalGiving – The crowdfunding site has launched a campaign to assist victims of the storm, providing supplies including food, water and medicine.

      The Salvation Army – The nonprofit has launched a drive to help Harvey relief efforts. Suggested gift amounts start at $25, but the organization will take any amount.

      Samaritan’s Purse – Five tractor-trailer disaster relief units are queued up to head to Texas to help as soon as conditions allow – two for Houston and others for Victoria, Rockport/Portland and Galveston/Santa Fe. You can help out by donating, in case others are needed.

      Save the Children – With a focus on the most vulnerable, this charity is looking to provide cribs and shelter to displaced children, along with other items to help care for them.

      Heart to Heart – While this group will welcome any donations, it’s also looking for volunteers to help lend aid to flood victims.

      Feeding Texas – Want to donate food instead of cash? Feeding Texas is looking for ready-to-eat staples like pop-top meat/fish, powdered milk, cereal, canned fruit, fruit cups, peanut butter and jelly as well as cleaning supplies.United Airlines – The carrier is offering up to 1,000 bonus miles to MileagePlus members who donate to relief efforts on its fundraising page – and matching the first $100,000. Donate $50-$99 and you’ll earn 250 bonus miles; $100-$249 will get you 500 bonus miles.

  15. Lord Jesus! A continuing nightmare. Please help these people.

    https://twitter.com/abc13houston/status/902911590135193600

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      I ache for all these victims of the hurricane flooding. It is heart wrenching!

      Lord have mercy!

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      Also:

      “Exxon Mobil’s Beaumont refinery along with Total’s and Valero Energy Corp’s Port Arthur refineries were shut on Tuesday and Wednesday due to the storm.

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      Excerpts from the article linked in above tweet:

      Concern continues to grow over the environmental impact of Hurricane Harvey on the Houston area, home to more than a dozen oil refineries. The group Air Alliance Houston is warning the shutdown of the petrochemical plants will send more than 1 million pounds of harmful pollution into the air. Residents of Houston’s industrial communities have reported unbearable chemical-like smells coming from the many plants nearby. Stranded communities are “literally getting gassed by these chemicals,” according to Bryan Parras, an activist at the environmental justice group t.e.j.a.s. Those closest to these sites in Houston are disproportionately low-income and minority communities.

      …DR. ROBERT BULLARD: “Well, the best predictor of health and well-being in our society, and including Houston, is ZIP Code. You tell me your ZIP Code, I can tell you how healthy you are. And one of the best predictors of environmental vulnerability is ZIP Code and race. And all communities are not created equal. Houston’s people of color communities historically have borne the burden for environmental pollution, and also the impact of flooding and other kinds of natural and man-made disasters.”

      “… Historically, even before Harvey, before this storm, before this flood, people of color in Houston bore a disproportionate burden of having to live next to, surrounded by, these very dangerous chemicals. And so you talk about these chemical hotspots, these sacrifice zones. Those are the communities that are people of color.

      “Houston is the fourth-largest city, but it’s the only city that does not have zoning. And what it has is—communities of color and poor communities have been unofficially zoned as compatible with pollution. And we say that is—we have a name for it. We call that environmental injustice and environmental racism. It is that plain and it’s just that simple.”

  16. Liza says:

    I thought the princess went home. Is she still around?

    Ivanka Trump has backed her father's plans to scrap Obama-era equal pay measures https://t.co/ZVJndNAXDG pic.twitter.com/jJ5tFbqZIJ— Newsweek (@Newsweek) August 30, 2017

    //platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  17. rikyrah says:

    Trump steered clear of storm victims during Texas visit
    08/30/17 08:00 AM
    By Steve Benen

    The fact that Donald Trump went to Texas in the wake of Hurricane Harvey is not surprising. It’s been common for many years to see presidents travel to areas hard hit by disasters, meeting with officials on the ground, and offering support to victims.

    But reading Politico’s report, it’s clear Donald Trump can’t stop being Donald Trump.

    It was a presidential trip to a deluged state where the president didn’t meet a single storm victim, see an inch of rain or get near a flooded street.

    But the daylong visit, during which President Donald Trump spent far more time in the air than on the ground, gave the optics-obsessed president some of the visuals he wanted, as he checked in on the government apparatus working on relief efforts and was buoyed by a roaring crowd of locals.

    Perhaps the most memorable moment of the day came when Trump marveled at the size of his audience, saying in Corpus Christi, “What a crowd, what a turnout.” Apparently, in the president’s mind, what mattered during his brief visit to Texas was the number of locals who wanted to see him.

  18. rikyrah says:

    ALL IN WITH CHRIS HAYES 8/29/17
    Chris Christie: Ted Cruz is lying
    The New Jersey governor says his Republican colleague isn’t telling the truth about why he voted against Hurricane Sandy relief – but now wants money for Texas after Harvey.

  19. rikyrah says:

    THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW 8/29/17
    In odd move, Mueller subpoenas former Manafort lawyer
    Rachel Maddow reports on the atypical treatment former Donald Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort is receiving from Special Counsel Robert Mueller, including subpoenaing his former lawyer to give grand jury testimony.

    THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW 8/29/17
    Trump attorney testimony unlikely in light of Moscow deal story
    Rachel Maddow reports on the development of the Trump Tower Moscow story and how Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen’s role in it raises new questions about whether Cohen will testify to congressional investigating committees.

  20. rikyrah says:

    8 Top Trump cyber-sec advisers resign: ‘Your actions have threatened the security of the homeland.” https://t.co/oO7HTbmjWT via @Change
    — bardgal (@bardgal) August 30, 2017

  21. rikyrah says:

    No one asked Cajun Navy, Houston mosques and @MattressMack to help. But pastor with 16,800-seat church had to be? https://t.co/RPIjpWHrPQ
    — Mark Elliott (@markmobility) August 30, 2017

  22. rikyrah says:

    THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW 8/29/17
    Houston hazards multiply as flooding worsens
    Stephanie Gosk, NBC News correspondent, talks with Rachel Maddow about the emergency response to the crisis in Houston as flood waters push dams and levees to their limits and a chemical plant is being watched for potential explosion as safety systems lose power.

    THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW 8/29/17
    As Houston levees overflow, so do flood evacuation shelters
    Maya Rodriguez, NBC News correspondent, talks with Rachel Maddow about the plight of flood evacuees in the Houston area and the effort to find enough shelter space to accommodate everyone in need.

    THE RACHEL MADDOW SHOW 8/30/17
    How natural disasters became a presidential test
    Michael Beschloss, NBC News presidential historian, talks with Rachel Maddow about the secondary story that accompanies any natural disaster in the United States: whether the president has responded and behaved appropriately.

  23. rikyrah says:

    Trump Likes to Dig Deep Holes for Himself

    There is no doubt some ideological component that helps explain why the Trump administration has made so few appointments and seen so few confirmations of people to fill out their government. But the fuller story is one of lack of preparedness, a refusal by Trump to consider nominees who have been critical of him, a lack of desire by an increasing number of people to seek employment in his administration, and a lack of qualifications or actual disqualifications among those why were vocal supporters of Trump’s candidacy. The Democrats have engaged in some slow-walking, too, mainly in a reciprocal denial of unanimous consent in the Senate that would speed along the nominees who have been named. On the whole, though, Democratic obstruction explains almost none of the phenomenon.

  24. rikyrah says:

    Republicans Will Let America Burn While Holding Out for Tax Cuts
    The core principle of the GOP is to make the rich richer, and that’s more important to its congressional leaders than any U.S. institution

    Their priority will not change no matter what Trump does and no matter how many vastly more pressing problems confront the nation. The core principle of the GOP is to make the rich richer, and that is more important to people like Ryan than any of our institutions. As reality dawns on the naively hopeful GOP members who believed they could “manage” Trump, their willingness to keep the nuclear codes in the hands of a giant toddler says a lot about their values.

  25. rikyrah says:

    ” She may go missing?”
    The phuck?
    What is this…the times of Emmit Till?
    T
    He just threatened her life!!!😠😠😠

  26. rikyrah says:

    Prayers for everyone in the path of Harvey. I have never seen anything like this.🙏🙏

    • yahtzeebutterfly says:

      Amen.

      “Muskegon-made kayaks will aid in Harvey relief
      KL Outdoor partners with Walmart to help with storm rescue and relief effort”

      PepsiCo And The PepsiCo Foundation Commit More Than $1 Million To Support Disaster Relief Following Hurricane Harvey

  27. rikyrah says:

    Good Morning, Everyone 😐😐😐

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