Now is a time when civility is needed more than ever, to keep our society from falling into hostile and warring camps.
It is easy to call for civility but the lead should come from the President, and he is a model of incivility.
Donald Trump is the rudest, crudest, most publicly vicious person in memory to sit in the White Gouse. His trademark is insulting others, alive or dead, Democrat or Republican. He regularly insults John McCain, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and anyone else he chooses. In Montana a few days ago, he ridiculed George H.W. Bush’s call for volunteering and community service:
“Trump said people get the meaning of his slogans, “Make America Great Again” and “Putting America First.” Then he added: “Thousand Points of Light. I never quite got that one. What the hell is that? Has anyone ever figured that one out?””
No, he can’t ever understand the thought of service or compassion or caring. Those words are not in his vocabulary. If you are not loyal to him, you are his enemy. Expect scorn and abuse.
Now the people who work for him and serve at his pleasure and defend his evil actions find that they are objects of scorn wherever they go. They call for civility for themselves but apparently it never occurs to them that they should ask their boss (or father) to be civil.
Evil begets evil. Incivility begets incivility. Kindness begets kindness.
Trump’s aides are reaping the meanness that he is sowing.
Just after arriving in Washington to work for President Trump, Kellyanne Conway found herself in a downtown supermarket, where a man rushing by with his shopping cart sneered, “You ought to be ashamed of yourself! Go look in the mirror!”
“Mirrors are in aisle 9 — I’ll go get one now,” Conway recalled replying. She brushed off the dart with the swagger of someone raised in the ever-attitudinal trenches of South Jersey. “What am I gonna do? Fall apart in the canned vegetable aisle?”
For any new presidential team, the challenges of adapting to Washington include navigating a capital with its own unceasing rhythms and high-pitched atmospherics, not to mention a maze of madness-inducing traffic circles.
Yet for employees of Donald J. Trump — the most singularly combative president of the modern era, a man who exists in his own tweet-driven ecosystem — the challenges are magnified exponentially, particularly in a predominantly Democratic city where he won only 4 percent of the vote.
“For as long as the White House has existed, its star occupants have inspired a voluble mix of demonstrations, insults and satire. On occasion, protesters have besieged the homes of presidential underlings, such as Karl Rove, George W. Bush’s political strategist, who once looked out his living room window to find several hundred protesters on his lawn.
“Yet what distinguishes the Trump era’s turbulence is the sheer number of his deputies — many of them largely anonymous before his inauguration — who have become the focus of planned and sometimes spontaneous public fury.
“Better be better!” a stranger shouted at Stephen Miller, a senior Trump adviser and the architect of his zero-tolerance immigration policy, as he walked through Dupont Circle a few months ago. Miller’s visage subsequently appeared on “Wanted” posters someone placed on lampposts ringing his City Center apartment building.
“One night, after Miller ordered $80 of takeout sushi from a restaurant near his apartment, a bartender followed him into the street and shouted, “Stephen!” When Miller turned around, the bartender raised both middle fingers and cursed at him, according to an account Miller has shared with White House colleagues.
“Outraged, Miller threw the sushi away, he later told his colleagues.
“On Saturday, as Stephen K. Bannon, Trump’s former strategist, browsed at an antiquarian bookstore in Richmond, a woman in the shop called him a “piece of trash.” The woman left after Nick Cooke, owner of Black Swan Books, told her he would call the police.
“We are a bookshop. Bookshops are all about ideas and tolerating different opinions and not about verbally assaulting somebody, which is what was happening,” Cooke told the Richmond Times-Dispatch, which first reported the incident.
“The cast of “Hamilton” delivered a message to Vice President-elect Mike Pence from stage after he watched the show at Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York. (Twitter/Hamilton via Storyful)
“Steve Bannon was simply standing, looking at books, minding his own business,” Cooke told the paper.
“While he was a part of the president’s team, Bannon dealt with life in Washington, a city he freely described as enemy territory, by hiring security and rarely venturing out in public. When Bannon traveled, it was usually aboard a private plane.
“For a time, a sign on the front steps of his Capitol Hill address read, “STOP.”
“Most of the interactions that Trump’s well-known aides have with strangers amount to nothing more than posing for selfies. But his advisers have also found themselves subjected to a string of embarrassing public spankings, a litany that began even before he took office.
“Before Vice President Pence’s swearing-in, his neighbors in Chevy Chase, where he was renting a house, hung rainbow banners to protest his opposition to equal rights for gay men and lesbians. When Pence went to the musical “Hamilton” in New York, the actor playing Aaron Burr concluded the evening by announcing from the stage that he was afraid that Trump wouldn’t “uphold our inalienable rights.”
“A White House reporter, once on the phone with Sean Spicer while the then-press secretary was standing in his yard in Alexandria, said he could hear a passing motorist shouting curses at him. By then, Spicer had become a regular inspiration for mockery on “Saturday Night Live,” along with Trump, Conway, and Bannon.
“Spicer said he spent his free time at home in those days because he didn’t want to deal with strangers’ interruptions — friendly or not.
“We were very deliberate about what we did and where we went because of the increasing notoriety,” Spicer said. “When we went out, the goal was not to make a spectacle.”
“More recently, Trump appointees have starred in a flurry of in-your-face encounters that ricochet around social media for days on end.
“A week ago, it was a Sidwell Friends teacher who interrupted her lunch at Teaism in Penn Quarter to tell Scott Pruitt — eating with an aide a few feet away — that he should resign as head of the Environmental Protection Agency.
“By last Thursday morning, nearly half a million viewers had clicked on a video of the confrontation that the teacher, Kristin Mink, had posted on Facebook. By late Thursday afternoon, Pruitt quit.
“I would say it’s burning people out,” said Anthony Scaramucci, Trump’s former communications director. “I just think there’s so much meanness, it’s causing some level of, ‘What do I need this for?’ And I think it’s a recruiting speed bump for the administration. To be part of it, you’ve got to deal with the incoming of some of this viciousness.”
“On at least two occasions, demonstrators have assembled outside the Kalorama home of Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner. Both like to attend early-morning spin classes at Flywheel, a nearby studio, where the room goes dark when the class starts — the better to pedal unobserved.
“At the conclusion of a recent session, Kushner, a baseball cap pulled down over his face, headed quickly outside to a chauffeur-driven SUV that whisked him away.
“The president himself leads a cloistered existence, never visiting a restaurant or golf club other than the ones he owns or controls. Reared in New York’s indelicate political culture, Trump does not like to appear meek, using rallies and his Twitter account to lacerate rivals.
“In recent weeks, say senior administration officials, Trump has voiced dissatisfaction with aides who have backed down during public confrontations, including his spokeswoman, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who was asked to leave the Red Hen restaurant in Virginia last month by the establishment’s owner.
“Two weeks ago, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen walked out of a downtown Mexican restaurant after demonstrators followed her inside to rail against the administration for separating children from migrant parents.
“Shame!” the protesters shouted while Nielsen remained in her seat, her head down as she typed messages on her smartphone.
“Newt Gingrich, the former Republican House speaker and Trump ally, said the way to end the public confrontations is “to call the police.”
“You file charges and you press them,” Gingrich said. “We have no reason to tolerate barbarians trying to impose totalitarian behavior by sheer force, and we have every right to defend ourselves.”
“He described the president’s opponents as those who “went through a psychotic episode and are having the political equivalent of PTSD. And when they wake up in the morning to the genius that Trump is, he tweets and they say, ‘Oh my God! He’s still president!’ And they get sicker.”
“Referring to Trump’s advisers, Gingrich said, “They should take solace in the fact that we must be winning, since these people are so crazy. They used to be passive because they thought they were the future. Now they know we’re the future, and it’s driving them nuts.””
This is an administration that thrives on hatred and divisiveness. An administration whose leaders insults Muslims, Mexicans, and anyone who didn’t vote for him.
The only way to end the incivility is to vote him and his toadies out of Office.
It is not the responsibility of the targets of his insults to be civil. It is his responsibility to grow up, act like a person of decency, show respect for those on the other side of issues.
But by now we know that’s asking too much. As his advisors say, “Let Trump Be Trump.” Let him continue to foam at the mouth and lob insults, hostility, and ridicule at everyone who displeases him. He has hatred in his heart. He loves only himself and money. Everyone else is collateral damage in his demand for obeisance. Flatter him if you want his favor. His ego is never satisfied. He is a tyrant. He never read a book, and I doubt that he ever read the Constitution.
There is no excuse not to vote in 2018 and 2020. This troglodyte is tearing our country apart.

Now the Trump associates might learn what it feels like to be a black person in Trump’s USA.
LikeLike
Ha! Good point! Except they are well paid for the stigma they bear.
LikeLike
“…a man rushing by with his shopping cart sneered, ‘You ought to be ashamed of yourself! Go look in the mirror!’
“‘Mirrors are in aisle 9 — I’ll go get one now,’ Conway recalled replying.”
She is good at what she does. If only she’d used her powers for good instead of evil…
😦
LikeLike
The person should have replied, “Since it’s you looking into it, it’ll crack, & that’s 7 years of bad luck for ya! Bye!” & walked away before KC had time to utter one word back.
LikeLike
Good answer!🙂
>
LikeLike
A Sidwell Friends teacher.
Obama’s daughters went there. It would be interesting to see the repercussions if a public teacher had approached Pruitt. Me thinks the internet backlash would have been strong.
.
LikeLike
Have been
LikeLike
“They call for civility for themselves but apparently it never occurs to them that they should ask their boss (or father) to be civil.”
Yes. 100% agreement. He is aided and abetted by those who fail two call him out.
LikeLike
Here’s North Korea’s underground nuclear testing site. It’s toast.
Dump is HATE. He’s hateful because he is really stupid, this his disgusting bravado cover-up.
Kim played dump.
Here’s North Korea’s underground nuclear testing site. It’s toast.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/north-korea-nuclear-test-site-damage-worse-thought-kim-jong-un-a8346836.html?amp
LikeLike
Sorry, I repeated the same sentence. Read around it.
LikeLike
It is sad that our beautiful country has descended into such depths. Trump is responsible for the growth of hatred and fear. Nobody deserves to be treated the way he talks when criticized. Nobody should have to put up with the demeanor that he portrays to his loyal subject by declaring he is the best ever and anyone who doesn’t believe that needs to be demonized.
This country should be better than that. No Democrat in the past has ever been this demoralizing. Republicans still don’t stand up to Trump. Why are they so afraid of saying, “Our leader is corrupt in his thinking. We stand by the constitution and believe we have had enough of this type of talk.”.
What will come of all of this? More hatred and more fear? That is not good in a land with an excess of guns. Guns do kill.
LikeLike
Although fictitious, this sums up what is needed to guide the resistance:
LikeLike
Disruption of their comfort zones is in order since the Trump team and his Congressional cabal isn’t interested in what Americans have to say or want. Since they refuse to listen to us through civil discourse, the response is civil disruption…
LikeLike
DeVos is going to a vocational high school outside Toledo. I went there.
It opened in 1965. Ed reformers will pretend they invented it because vocational ed is newly fashionable in DC circles. Ohio has lots and lots of “vo-techs” and has for decades. Ed reformers realized they exist just this year, and put Ivanka Trump in charge of policy for them, because who better to run vocational schools than the privileged daughter of a millionaire who has never worked for a wage in her life?
The ed reform team from the US Department of Education will deliver yet another droning lecture bashing public schools, and the vocational school will go on their merry way, serving students, same as they have since 1965.
I wish they’d stay in DC. Using vocational school kids for photo ops while having such disdain for them and their schools makes me ill. So cynical. So exploitive.
They don’t support public schools! Why pretend?
LikeLike
I always wondered how vitriol rose to the level it before the Civil War. I am starting to worry now about those levels.
LikeLike
Civility has little to do with it. Hypocrisy is the more fitting term. These horrible people are used to doing their shady deals behind closed doors but now they are public servants. That means being accountable to the people, and freedom of speech means that if the people don’t like you, they are free to say so. Not one of the instances cited in this article is violent. Trump’s supporters have been physically violent in many incidents, but now his goons whine that the people they represent are calling them out on their incivilities? Cry me a river. Are any of these folks sitting in a cage in a detention center on the border separated from the people they absolutely depend on? Didn’t think so. I’m all for non-violence, but I feel like the issue of civility is not what we need to be talking about right now. When someone is abusing children and brewing conflict across the entire world, is the main concern whether we are “nice” to him? Ordinary people like Kristin Mink and the Red Hen owner are showing far more courage, action and, yes, civility, that anyone on Capitol Hill right now.
LikeLike
What you said. Thank you.
LikeLike
I agree.
LikeLike
Yes x 1,000!
LikeLike
I think it is a blessing that only insults are being shouted back and forth — and not bullets.
But Trump started it all and his followers encourage his vile behavior with their hate-filled slogans and roars of approval for the Orange Buffoon.
I know two wrongs do not make a right but in this case, Trump cannot be allowed to be a racist bully without him getting some of his own rancid medicine tossed back at him and anyone that works for him or supports him.
Fight Trump fire and lies with rational fire and truth. Trump does not have an honest bone or patch of skin in or on his body.
LikeLike
Last I knew, these people are PUBLIC SERVANTS. Well, they’re hearing from the public even if it’s often in a crude manner.
LikeLike
My mother always said you reap what you sow. Trump and his deplorables have sown the seeds of discontent, and their harvest has come in.
LikeLike
Now that their harvest is in, let the rest of us filter out the worthless chaff.
LikeLike
Here is an article that shows the ‘generosity’ of Trump towards his personal driver.How many people have been stiffed by our Orange Buffoon? Why do people believe he has their best interests in mind?
…………….
Trump’s longtime personal driver files lawsuit for backpay after 25 years of unpaid overtime
Jen Hayden
Daily Kos Staff
Monday July 09, 2018 · 10:57 AM CDT
Luckily for Trump’s new drivers, taxpayers are footing the bill.
Noel Cintron spent 25 years working as Donald Trump’s personal driver and now he’s filed a lawsuit against his former employer for years of unpaid overtime. According to Blooomberg, he’s seeking compensation for 3,300 hours of overtime during a six-year period. He’s unable to seek compensation for the other 19 years of unpaid overtime due to the statute of limitations.
Cintron says that in 25 years of working for Trump, he only received two raises and the second wage came with a huge catch, a catch that essentially nullified any wage increase at all.
The wage bump in 2010 came with a catch, Cintron said. He was induced to surrender his health insurance, saving Trump approximately $17,866 per year in premiums, according to the lawsuit.
“President Trump’s further callousness and cupidity is further demonstrated by the fact that while he is purportedly a billionaire, he has not given his personal driver a meaningful raise in over 12 years!” Cintron said.
Cintron joins a long line of of people and businesses to be stiffed by “billionaire” Donald Trump.
LikeLike
Donald Trump is a shell of a human being, a bottomless pit of narcissism who values only money and what it can buy. People are disposable, to be used and discarded when they no longer serve his purpose or toady to him.
LikeLike
Hundreds allege Donald Trump doesn’t pay his bills — among those who say Trump didn’t pay: dishwashers, painters, waiters.
At least 60 lawsuits, along with hundreds of liens, judgments, and other government filings reviewed by the USA TODAY NETWORK, document people who have accused Trump and his businesses of failing to pay them for their work. Among them: a dishwasher in Florida. A glass company in New Jersey. A carpet company. A plumber. Painters. Forty-eight waiters. Dozens of bartenders and other hourly workers at his resorts and clubs, coast to coast. Real estate brokers who sold his properties. And, ironically, several law firms that once represented him in these suits and others.
Trump’s companies have also been cited for 24 violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act since 2005 for failing to pay overtime or minimum wage, according to U.S. Department of Labor data.
In addition to the lawsuits, the review found more than 200 mechanic’s liens — filed by contractors and employees against Trump, his companies or his properties claiming they were owed money for their work — since the 1980s …
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/06/09/donald-trump-unpaid-bills-republican-president-laswuits/85297274/
LikeLike
Lloyd,
Trump’s personal chauffeur of 25 years sued him today for years of unpaid overtime.
LikeLike
I read that. The evidence is strong that no one is immune from Trump, his greed, and his cruel arrogance, except maybe the one daughter he would like to date and have an illicit affair with.
LikeLike
The evidence is strong thay Trump is immune to accountability. The driver is NOT going to get his money, and if he does, it will be a fraction of the true amount. At least he is giving Trump more bad publicity . . . and educating Americans about what this administration is all about.
LikeLike
Trump’s lawyers will be directed by the monster micromanager to bankrupt his former driver. The only way the driver will get any money is if Trump runs for re-election and this issue becomes something he has to get rid of like he did for Trump university when he offered to pay back millions without admitting guilt to kill that case from reaching court.
LikeLike
Public confrontations are all we have. The political process has been thwarted by the GOP; fresh insults to the underpinings of democracy and the rule of law come to light hourly. When a minority ignores the will of the majority, this is the result. At a minimum.
The last time I was in Paris, we were stopped in traffic along the Seine. The cabdriver pointed out the spot where the French stood, throwing garbage at Marie Antoinette as her barge floated along, bringing her to her fate. Does the Potomac run to any prison along its course? (No guillotine, of course!)
LikeLike
The public shaming couldn’t happen to more deserving people…
LikeLike
Here’s where Kavanaugh stands on some major issues issues. Looks like he is in favor of eliminating abortions and will vote against the Consumer Financial Protection Agency’s work to protect consumers from corporate fraud. He protects jobs and not the environment.
I was looking for information and first came upon an article from Fox. The comments there are not what most of us would want to read. Liberals don’t know the facts. [Sarcasm] We certainly don’t get our news from Fox, the way our Great Leader does.
……………………………….
Brett Kavanaugh: Supreme Court nominee straight out of central casting
Richard Wolf, USA TODAY Published 9:06 p.m. ET July 9, 2018 | Updated 11:40 p.m. ET July 9, 2018
…Kavanaugh’s 12 years on the D.C. Circuit – longer than any recent Supreme Court nominee but Ginsburg, who served there 13 years – have included some controversial cases. Among them:
In 2011, he dissented from an appeals court decision upholding the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate. But rather than declare it unconstitutional, he wrote a 65-page dissent arguing that judges had no authority to decide the case. “We’re courts of judicial restraint,” he said during oral argument. “It’s a delicate act to declare an act of Congress unconstitutional.” That has caused some conservatives to liken him to Roberts, who saved Obamacare from extinction in a 5-4 ruling the following year.
During a hearing in 2016 on Obama’s “clean power” plan to combat global warming, he called the policy “laudable” but said it set unachievable limits that would drive plants out of business. “Lots of people are going to lose their jobs, lose their livelihoods,” he said. The plan never took effect.
Last year, he dissented from the appeals court’s ruling in favor of an undocumented teenage girl seeking an abortion. He cited Supreme Court precedents, under which he said that “the government has permissible interests in favoring fetal life, protecting the best interests of a minor, and refraining from facilitating abortion.” But he did not sign on to another dissent that argued illegal immigrants have no right to abortion.
Earlier this year, he dissented from a decision upholding the structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created during the Obama administration to enforce regulations against banks, lenders and other business groups. He called independent agencies such as the CFPB “a headless fourth branch of the U.S. government….
https://usat.ly/2L115Ut
LikeLike
NPR: “He has written almost entirely in favor of big businesses, employers in employment disputes, and against defendants in criminal cases,” according to Adam Feldman of the Empirical SCOTUS blog.
Justin Walker, a law professor at the University of Louisville who clerked for both Kavanaugh and Kennedy, said Kavanaugh will “never, ever go wobbly” and deviate from conservative principles.
Walker said Kennedy’s replacement will be much more conservative, foreshadowing big changes in issues including affirmative action, school prayer and guns.
“I predict an end to affirmative action, an end to successful litigation about religious displays and prayers, an end to bans on semi-automatic rifles, and an end to almost all judicial restrictions on abortion,” he said.
LikeLike
This might be why the Orange One picked Kavanaugh. “A president shouldn’t be burdened by investigations or indictments because it world cripple the federal government.”
……………………..
Vocal Supporter Of Expansive Presidential Power…HuffPost
Kavanaugh has emerged as an outspoken champion of unitary executive theory: the justification of what is effectively unchecked presidential power over the executive branch.
Kavanaugh has argued that a president shouldn’t be burdened by lawsuits, investigations and indictments, a position that may be of great interest to the White House as special counsel Robert Mueller continues his investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
“Whether the Constitution allows indictment of a sitting President is debatable,” Kavanaugh wrote in a 1998 article that argued that impeachment, not criminal prosecution, is the appropriate mechanism to hold a president accountable for criminal acts. About a decade later, Kavanaugh wrote in a Minnesota Law Review article that he believed a president “should be excused from some of the burdens of ordinary citizenship while serving in office.” He also argued that an indictment of a president would “cripple the federal government,” rendering it “unable to function with credibility” domestically and internationally. Such an outcome, Kavanaugh said, “would ill serve the public interest, especially in times of financial or national security crisis.”
LikeLike
Of course.
LikeLike
I have been away for a time, off in Canada, out on the American Great Plains for a time. Coming back to civilization, I find no civility. At least not on a national level. While Trump has to take the blame for this carnival, it strikes me that other political leaders need to get some of the blame, the media needs to take a bit, and we voters should come in for some criticism too.
Trump was elected by the people who stayed away from the polls. His wildly indignant 34% has seized control of the reins of power because all his opponents refuse to vote. Republicans, sensing the changing demographics of a nation they long have dominated to the God of their own pocketbook, have encouraged this behavior. People who believe that there can be good government of both parties have tended not to enter politics.
I hope this caricature of a president will be removed by voters in 2020, but incumbency has been a powerful tool in recent years, classism has replaced racism as a dividing mechanism, and a thriving middle class that might promote civility has dwindled over the years.
Meanwhile, people should not be attacking the presidential advisors this way, it only leads their supporters to see them as victims of abuse, strengthening the already unwavering support they have for Trump. Being civil is the way to redeem a nation that longs for people to be friendly and supportive.
LikeLike
“Meanwhile, people should not be attacking the presidential advisors this way, it only leads their supporters to see them as victims of abuse, strengthening the already unwavering support they have for Trump. Being civil is the way to redeem a nation that longs for people to be friendly and supportive.”
I have to disagree. Trump supporters are unwavering, so why worry about their reaction: they take umbrage even at simple reporting/ commentary on their leader’s daily incivility via tweet. Following Trump’s example, Fox TV amplifies anything & everything into perceived insult, & toss crude epithets at Dem elected reps for good measure; when they have no grist for their mill they use sawdust & blame Dems/ ‘liberals’.
“Being civil” — refusing to publically call out and counter the ugly stuff confronting him daily earned no points for Obama & simply encouraged more & made him look like a pushover. WH staff are paid by the public and use their jobs to bulldoze the public & invect gratuitously while they’re at it. If they can’t handle being asked to leave a restaurant– getting comments or gestures in public– having demonstrators outside their their homes– they should get out of the kitchen.
LikeLike
By being civil, I do not mean refraining from political discourse. Being civil means not yelling obscenities at someone who deserves it.
LikeLike
Yea, don’t yell. Throw your accurate verbal insults calmly with a smile.
LikeLike
That any member of the Trump administration would presume themselves an arbiter of civility is bitterly ironic indeed.
LikeLike
Follow SPLC [Southern Poverty Law Center]
FIGHTING HATE // TEACHING TOLERANCE // SEEKING JUSTICE
JULY 10, 2018
President Trump has just nominated another right-wing ideologue to the Supreme Court – and it’s hard to overstate the implications.
If Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed, we’ll no longer be able to rely on the federal judiciary to protect the rights of the most vulnerable people in our country.
Even worse, much of our progress toward economic, social and racial justice could be rolled back in the coming years.
Everything is at stake – marriage equality … voting rights … access to health care … reproductive and privacy rights … racial equality … religious freedom … more.
We can’t take our basic rights for granted.
Trump announced his choice on the 150th anniversary of the 14th Amendment. Enacted just after the Civil War, it guaranteed citizenship to all people born in the United States in addition to equal protection of the law and due process.
Soon after, however, the Supreme Court gutted the amendment, ignoring its principles of equality for nearly a century as it upheld racial segregation. All of that changed in a fundamental way when the Court in 1954 resurrected the 14th Amendment’s promise of racial equality in Brown v. Board and subsequently dismantled Jim Crow.
Since then, the Court has cited the 14th Amendment to extend the rights of citizens in landmark decisions, including Roe v. Wade and the more recent ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.
All of this could change once again.
Trump has chosen his nominee from a list compiled by the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation. Without question, these groups are committed to a hard-right agenda.
Our country deserves better.
Make your voice heard today! Contact the following six key senators – whose votes could make the difference – and tell them not to be a rubber stamp for the Federalist Society. Tell them to vote “no” on this Supreme Court nomination.
Joe Manchin (WV)
Phone: (202) 224-3954
Twitter: @Sen_JoeManchin
Joe Donnelly (IN)
Phone: (202) 224-4814
Twitter: @SenDonnelly
Heidi Heitkamp (ND)
Phone: (202) 224-2043
Twitter: @SenatorHeitkamp
Lisa Murkowski (AK)
Phone: (202) 224-6665
Twitter: @lisamurkowski
Susan Collins (ME)
Phone: (202) 224-2523
Twitter: @SenatorCollins
Doug Jones (AL)
Phone: (202) 224-4124
Twitter: @SenDougJones
Sincerely yours,
Richard Cohen
President, Southern Poverty Law Center
LikeLike
How many people believe the Democratic party is going to begin murdering Republicans? What kind of ‘Christian’ is Rick Wiles? He is SICK!!
………………
Christian Broadcaster Claims Democrats Will Go on Killing Spree Against Republicans in Deranged Rant @alternet
…Christian broadcaster Rick Wiles, a popular apocalyptic commentator akin to conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, went on a deranged rant Tuesday and told his viewers that Democrats are going to begin murdering Republicans.
“At what point do you charge the Democratic Party with being a terrorist organization?” Wiles asked.
“They’re willing to do anything and killing is the next thing that they’ll do,” he said, adding, “The Democrats started the first Civil War to protect slavery. The Democrats will start the second Civil War to protect abortion.”…
https://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/christian-broadcaster-claims-democrats-will-go-killing-spree-against-republicans#.W0UExnT6mvQ.gmail
LikeLike
Whenever someone on the extreme right starts making allegations like that, it means they are the ones that will do it or are already doing it.
If a Trumpist says Democrats are murderers, the Trumpist is the murderer.
If a Trumpist says Democrats are liars, the Trumpist is the biggest liar.
If a Trumpist claims liberal media is fake, the Trumpist’s media is the fake one.
If a Trumpist claims a Democrat is a thief, it is the Trumpist that is the thief.
The Alt-Right Trumpists will always blame everyone else for what they are doing and saying.
LikeLike
Subject: Sign the petition! U.S. Senators: Please Tell Your Senator to Reject Trump’s Destructive SCOTUS Nominee
I signed a petition on Action Network telling U.S. Senators to Please Tell Your Senator to Reject Trump’s Destructive SCOTUS Nominee.
In 2015, President Trump vowed to only appoint U.S. Supreme Court justices who would overturn the Affordable Care Act (ACA). His recent nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh has made that threat a reality. Judge Kavanaugh has routinely ruled against working families and their access to health care. He has promoted the overturning of well-established U.S. Supreme Court precedents. Please sign our petition to urge your U.S. Senator to vote against his nomination.
Can you join me and take action? Click here: https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/please-tell-your-senator-to-reject-trumps-destructive-scotus-nominee?source=email&
Thanks!
Carol
LikeLike
Diane, don’t put this on your site. The petition can’t be reached. It pulls up a blob of junk. Sorry, it is a good petition.
LikeLike
This is what democracy looks like. Free speech is rarely “civil” when people speak truth to power.
LikeLike
Exactly right. The powerless are free to boo and jeer the powerful. Too bad if their feelings are hurt.
LikeLike
This was posted from the WH. These commenters seem to be lacking knowledge on what Kavanaugh stands for….eliminating civil rights and putting the US back decades. No wonder they like him so much.
…………..
Support builds for President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee
Judge Brett Kavanaugh is widely admired as a brilliant jurist with impeccable legal credentials, and those qualifications are earning him widespread support on Capitol Hill and beyond. In less than 48 hours since President Trump announced Judge Kavanaugh as his nominee for the High Court, nearly 100 members of Congress and counting have expressed their support.
Former President George W. Bush weighed in, as well. “President Trump has made an outstanding decision in nominating Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Brett is a brilliant jurist who has faithfully applied the Constitution and laws throughout his 12 years on the D.C. Circuit,” the former President says.
Senate leaders agree. “President Trump has made a superb choice,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) says. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) adds that “Judge Kavanaugh is one of the most qualified Supreme Court nominees to come before the Senate.”
LikeLike