The Times also starts to try to explain!

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2024

Also, Hannah Dreier's Pulitzer Prize: Yesterday, to its credit if somewhat belatedly, the Washington Post finally began to try to explain.

In yesterday afternoon's report, we linked you to David Nakamura's report. Yesterday morning, his report had appeared online under this dual headline:

This obscure N.Y. election law is at the heart of Trump’s hush money trial
Prosecutors say a misdemeanor state conspiracy statute spells out the underlying crime Trump aimed to conceal when he made hush money payments in 2016. 

Nakamura was trying to explain the nature of the felony—actually, the nature of the 34 felonies—with which Trump stands charged. Perhaps because the Post had finally made this effort, the New York Times followed suit yesterday afternoon:

Why Does Trump Face Felony Charges? Prosecutors Say He Was Hiding Other Crimes.
Donald J. Trump faces 34 felony counts in his Manhattan trial, but none involve the other misconduct that prosecutors say he engaged in.

Now the Times has started to try to explain! It seems to us that these "explainer" attempts have arrived rather late in the game.

That said, better somewhat late than never! At any rate, it seems that almost everyone agrees with some version of the following:

The New York election law is obscure, or at least is conceptually complicated. Also, Trump is faced with 34 counts—but for some reason, none involve "the other misconduct that prosecutors say he engaged in."

Do you understand that small fandango? At this site, we'll request another day or two to work our way through these reports.

For today, we turn to yesterday's announcement of this year's Pulitzer Prizes. We especially direct your attention to one of the three million topics those of us in Blue America don't seem to give a flying felafel about.

We refer to the reports in the New York Times for which Hannah Dreier won this year's Pulitzer for Investigative Reporting. Headline included, this morning's report in the Times tells us this:

The New York Times and The Washington Post Win 3 Pulitzers Each

[...]

The prize for investigations went to Hannah Dreier of The Times, for an exposé of migrant child labor in the modern United States, and the governmental blunders and disregard that have allowed the illegal practice to persist. This was the second Pulitzer awarded to Ms. Dreier, who won the 2019 feature writing prize for her coverage of the criminal gang MS-13 for ProPublica.

That was the thumbnail in the Times.  In its official list of winners, the Pulitzer organization describes Dreier's work as shown:

INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING
Hannah Dreier of The New York Times

For a deeply reported series of stories revealing the stunning reach of migrant child labor across the United States—and the corporate and governmental failures that perpetuate it.

"Deeply reported?" You can say that again! Also, widely ignored—but then, what else is new?

Dreier's first report about this topic appeared on the front page of the Times on Sunday, February 26, 2023. 

We wrote about it the next day. To review that report, just click here.

As the year proceeded, Dreier followed with several other reports on this topic. You've never heard about those reports because nobody actually cares.

Nobody cares in Red America; nobody cares in Blue. In Blue America, we spend the hours of our days talking, in endless, thoroughly useless detail, about the chances of getting Donald J. Trump frog-marched off to jail.

Nicolle doesn't seem to care about exploited kids, including those 12-year-old roofers. Judging from appearances, neither do her favorite reporters and friends.

To borrow from sacred Thoreau, we denizens of Blue America "labor under a mistake." Over the years, we've managed to persuade ourselves that we're very, very smart and that we deeply care.

Neither proposition is especially true. Our thought leaders spend their days talking to themselves and to their various friends and to no one else.  They talk about the tiny handful of topics which please them, and they talk about no one and nothing else.

Might we denizens of Blue America learn to see ourselves more clearly?  The chances of that are very poor. 

That said, Dreier's work was deeply impressive. Also, no one gives a flying farthing about her prize-winning front-page reports, and no one ever will.

Donald J. Trump may have had consensual sex, on one occasion, in 2006! As with the Argives, so too here:

We care about that with all our hearts, and we care about little else.


70 comments:

  1. "topics those of us in Blue America don't seem to give a flying felafel about"

    At least most of us in Blue America can spell falafel. It is hard to give a fuck about something that doesn't exist (such as the word felafel).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A falafel is some kind of middle eastern confection. I’ve never had one.

      Delete
    2. Somerby is not talking about falafels. He is inserting that as a generic f-word to avoid saying fuck. Hell, even Trump is saying fuck at his rallies these days. He'd say it in court if he thought he wouldn't spend the night in jail.

      "Falafel is a deep-fried ball or patty-shaped fritter of Egyptian origin, featuring in Middle Eastern cuisine, particularly Levantine cuisines, and is made from broad beans, ground chickpeas, or both."

      You find falafels all over Europe and in areas of the US with Middle Eastern immigrants, but like tacos and pizza, they are becoming part of universal cuisine, except for Somerby, who uses the word as a G-rated swear.

      His disrespect is intended.

      Delete
    3. He should have said “fritter”.

      Delete
    4. “You find falafels all over Europe and in areas of the US with Middle Eastern immigrants, but like tacos and pizza, they are becoming part of universal cuisine, except for Somerby, who uses the word as a G-rated swear.

      His disrespect is intended.”

      Your flying fatuousness is intended.

      Delete
    5. As you pointed out, fig is just as good and doesn't refer to any ethnicity. So why say falafel? And why misspell it like that? In the middle of a highly contentious conflict in Gaza, which (in case you haven't noticed) is is where falafels come from?

      You'll say anything to defend dear old Somerby, who doesn't deserve your loyalty.

      Delete
    6. Anonymouse 5:37pm, dude merely misspelled “falafel” and you’re malevolently equating THAT as being an intentional ethnic slur.

      There’s no telling what you’re capable of doing or saying as to your targets and THAT because they aren’t constantly telling you that you’re a combination of Albert Schweitzer and Gandhi.

      You’re an absolute creep.

      Delete
    7. @ 4:58 PM:
      fuck

      Delete
    8. Using the word falafel is the slur, not misspelling it. Misspelling shows a lack of concern for getting things right.

      I think you've run out of insults. You aren't making any sense now.

      Delete
    9. After this discussion, I've firmly decided never to try falafels. I like figs.

      Delete
    10. After this discussion, I've decided to support illegal immigration. I like refugees.

      Delete
  2. Many of us in Blue America DO understand what Trump is charged with. How would that be possible if various news media hadn't already explained it?

    Somerby is late to the table. He is pretending befuddlement in order to support Trump's defense and convince Trump's supporters that the charges are fake, prosecutorial vindictiveness, too complex to be real or whatever nonsense red voters will believe.

    By his own admission, Somerby has spent months ignoring the analysis and details of Trump's various trials. Now he complains that no one was told such things. That is pure nonsense. The info has been available but someone has to be motivated to read and think about it. Somerby has refused and now blames the media for his ignorance.

    No explanation of anything will be sufficient to educate a man like Somerby, who doesn't want to know and thus won't make the effort to learn what Trump is charged with.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "Donald J. Trump may have had consensual sex, on one occasion, in 2006! As with the Argives, so too here:

    We care about that with all our hearts, and we care about little else."

    The semi-consensual sex in 2006 is not the reason why Trump is being tried for 34 felony counts of falsification of business records.

    The reason we care about those felony counts is because Trump conspired to manipulate the 2016 election, the crime he covered up by falsifying his business records. We care that Trump manipulated the election because his various frauds and other cheating during that election likely resulted in his winning instead of Hillary Clinton, who beat him massively in the popular vote. And because Trump was such an incompetent president, he was underprepared during the covid pandemic, resulting in many more unnecessary (preventable) deaths during his term. Those people might still be alive had Trump not cheated to get elected to a position he was ill-equipped to occupy.

    So, yes, we do care. But not about consensual sex in 2006. That Somerby cannot see why blue America cares about this stuff, suggests that Somerby is the one who is callous, confused and wrong about what is happening in our country. Not Blue America.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "Might we denizens of Blue America learn to see ourselves more clearly? The chances of that are very poor. "

    In Somerby Speak, "see ourselves more clearly" refers to being gaslighted. The chances of us being gaslighted by Somerby are "very poor" because more people in Blue America are educated than among Republicans. We don't consider teachers and professors to be "elites" but role models, people to emulate. Because many of us in Blue America have immigrant parents or grandparents, we grew up being told that education was the path to success, the way to fit in and move up in a country of limitless possibilities, to make something of ourselves. Republicans preach individual responsibility, but those of us with immigrant backgrounds instead used family and community to help each other prosper. So we value collective effort, hard work and education to get ahead and improvement our communities, not just our own finances.

    We aren't going to see the attacks on education, immigration, unions, and collective effort in a negative light. Our life experiences contradict that bullshit. And when we want to open doors to others via tolerance for our differences, we aren't going to let people like Somerby tell us that our wokeness is wrong. Somerby gave up on the education system, on his "beautiful deserving black kids," and on democratic traditions, to embrace book banning. Today he excuses assholes like Trump, Tucker Carlson and Kyle Rittenhouse while attacking those who are trying to make our society better, especially Biden. Somerby should be ashamed of what he is writing these days.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Not only in Gaza:

    https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/05/07/israel-us-arms-used-strike-killed-lebanon-aid-workers

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good job getting that pro-Palestinian propaganda out there quickly! Kudos to your handler.

      Delete
    2. Lebanon, yes. And Zionists murder Syrians as well. Bombing them every week or so.

      Delete
    3. Calling Israelis Zionists is like calling all Palestinians Hamas supporters.

      Delete
    4. Calling all Israelis Zionists would be stupid. It's good that no one did that.

      Delete
    5. Yet you are blaming acts of Israel on Zionists as if they were one and the same.

      Delete
    6. Perhaps that's because Israel is viewed by most people on this beautiful planet as Zionist-controlled militant settler-colonial entity in Palestine.

      Delete
  6. I don’t really care that Trump had sex with anyone at anytime except the instances of rape which Bob clearly does not care about. That’s because rape is very cruel and illegal.
    Other Trump crimes I care about and Bob does not: Fraud, Stealing money from a charitable trust, inciting a riot on the Capitol, not acting to try and stop that riot, sending his DOJ around the world to try and frame his political opponents, trying to overturn ax legitimate election to make him the winner.
    Those are just illegal things, not rotton behavior which Bob also does not care about.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymices 4:01pm, coincidentally Bob is joined by the legal establishment in this interest, and the media, and Democratic Party too.

      It’s a puzzle…

      Delete
    2. Cecelia, I think you missed that the list is about the things Somerby doesn't care about, not the ones he does. The media cares about those things that @4:01 cares about, and those are things Somerby DOES NOT care about. Think more before you write.

      Delete
    3. Anonymouse 6:37pm, I’d say that you missed the part where the entire world is focused the Trump trial, so you saying that Bob doesn’t give a shite about anything else is just the stupid shite you get paid to say.

      Delete
    4. You should quit while you are behind Cecelia. In the post Bob claims the reason we sad Americans are interested in the Stormy encounter is not that he did something criminal but that it’s selacious, a nice word in this case for the mind bogglingly trashy. I’m pointing out that many of the crimes Trump has committed (for the sake of argument if you like) don’t have anything to do with the fact that he is a perverted slob, Bob sees no reason to be interested in those crimes either.

      Delete
    5. Anonymouse 8:13pm, I get how you’re saying that Bob isn’t involved in blogging about all the things you think he should be blogging about and what he is blogging about isn't focused or stated in the way that it should be focused upon and stated.

      God knows we’re all get that. What gets a bit hazy is why you’re here trying to referee and reform Bob night and day instead of toiling in the fields of your own blog or writing odes and rendering burnt offerings to Digby.

      Here the sort of thing that gives you fits and causes you to accuse Bob of not being on target with any of the things that he is actually blogging upon:

      “The New York election law is obscure, or at least is conceptually complicated. Also, Trump is faced with 34 counts—but for some reason, none involve "the other misconduct that prosecutors say he engaged in.

      Do you understand that small fandango? At this site, we'll request another day or two to work our way through these reports.”

      This sort of fastidiousness and inexplicable devotion to individual conscience is what you consider to be dereliction of duty because no throats are being slit.





      Delete
    6. Don't forget the defrauding of Trump University "students". Oh wait, he was tried by a Mexican Judge so that one does not count. Seriously, how do Trump humpers shake all the slime off all the time forever? It must be exhausting. Hoping that exhaustion results in a win for Democracy not plutocracy.

      Delete
    7. Many of us understand that which mystifies you and Somerby. It is a matter of paying attention. Calling that fastidiousness is a big fucking joke.

      Delete
  7. Simon Rosenberg (Hopium) says that there are 6 things that Republican voters may not know about Trump, that they will find out as the election nears:

    "Remember here at Hopium we are not waiting for Trump to be convicted to make the case against him. For there are six things voters are going to come to know about Trump (with our help) that they didn’t know about him in 2020, an election he lost, which don’t require any court to do anything:

    1. That he raped E. Jean Carroll in a department store dressing room

    2. That he oversaw one of the largest financial frauds in American history, and owes hundreds of millions of dollars in fines and penalties

    3. That he stole America’s secrets, lied to the FBI about it all and shared those secrets with others. It was without question among the most grave security breaches in our history, and an extraordinary betrayal of the country by a former President

    4. That he tried to overturn an American election, led an armed insurrection against the Congress, fought to end American democracy for all time and has promised to finish the job if he somehow gets into the Oval Office next year

    5. That he and his family have, corruptly, taken more money from foreign governments than any political family in our history

    6. That he was singularly responsible for ending Roe and stripping the rights and freedoms away from the women of America; and last week confirmed, by embracing the states’ rights position, that he supports the most extreme abortion bans in the nation - this making him without question the most dangerous abortion extremist America has ever seen.

    These 6 things are why Trump will lose and Biden will win in November. The Democratic party's job is to make sure that Republicans, Independents, Undecideds and 3rd Party voters all get to hear these 6 things about Trump.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm unclear on #2. I mean, I know he's a shady dealer but "largest financial frauds in American history"?

      Even if you include all the interest and penalties, the civil fraud trial against the Trump Organization doesn't even crack the top 10.

      Source: https://www.fraudfighters.net/news/the-largest-false-claims-act-settlements-in-history/

      Delete
    2. And this list doesn't even include Bernie Madoff ($20 billion) or Sam Bankman Fried ($8 billion). Compared to proper villains, Trump is penny-ante.

      Delete
    3. It comes from Simon Rosenberg. I'll pass your comment along to him.

      Delete
    4. I think there is a difference between what the fraudster had to pay in restitution or penalties and how much damage they did to others. Did Madoff have to pay back $20 billion or is that what he bilked people?

      Delete
    5. The real amount of cash deposited by investors was estimated to be about $17.5 billion. Thus far $14 billion has been recovered and returned.

      Delete
  8. These teenagers are trained and have been certified as nurse assistants. Teens of that age are generally stronger than middle aged female nursing staff and these lifting devices are designed to do the work of lifting patients.

    If it some sort of liability that comes with teenagers being teenagers, then nursing homes shouldn’t be allowed to hire them, which makes for fewer workers. Tough issue.

    ReplyDelete
  9. It is not just a matter of strength (and not all 16 year olds are stronger than female nurses) but also of experience and judgment. The value in hiring teens as aides is that it helps them toward a career path by giving them exposure to what nurses do, but teens are not supposed to be placed in dangerous situations, and their inexperience can jeopardize patients too. The reason for such regulations is that there are accident statistics (both for the teens and the patients who are injured during lifting) that suggest it is not a good idea to have them doing this work. Nursing homes do not want to see such restrictions because then they have to pay more nurses, who typically cost more in salary.

    You seem to be suggesting that Republicans are keeping the kids in mind, but the problem is that they are opposed to ALL of the funding and regulations that would address the problems with child labor, siding with the businesses who are exploiting child labor. I'm sure Republicans have lots of nifty rationalizations for their pro-child labor votes, like yours here.

    I've seen the equipment in a hospital setting. My husband, who had bed sores, was injured on his tailbone by a staff member who was inept at using the lifting equipment to help move him to a bedside chair. That person was an adult, but the point is that this isn't easy and it has consequences for those being lifted. There is no reason to put teens in a situation where they may have problems they cannot deal with. Imagine the yelling of the patient and the confusion that arises when someone is demanding that they stop the lifting or is in severe discomfort while an upset teen tries to figure out what to do. And this is happening because the nursing home is too cheap to employ a better qualified person to do that job. Or imagine a patient falling on the teen and injuring him, because the teen used the equipment improperly. It isn't right to put them in that situation.

    But you be you. Whatever the Republicans want must be right, and if it sounds good on paper then why not? Who cares what the facts of the situation might be, if someone gets to save some money by paying people less.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymouse 5:34pm, I said this:

    “If it some sort of liability that comes with teenagers being teenagers, then nursing homes shouldn’t be allowed to hire them, which makes for fewer workers. Tough issue.”

    I’m not sure why that necessitated a lecture, other than anonymices being here to scold and to lecture even when their views are being treated with an open mind.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Wait. The Blue Tribe announced a wide crackdown on labor exploitation of migrant children the day after a news report found they were aware their border policy was contributing to labor exploitation of migrant children?

    ReplyDelete
  12. There is a difference between Biden's actual border policy and the caricature of it presented by the right wing. Are you saying that Trump encouraged the exploitation of child labor because he thought there were no migrant children among such children? That had to be true, if Trump actually had closed the border and put all those kids in camps (separate from their parents). Is it better or worse that Trump wanted more non-migrant children working in those meat packing plants?

    ReplyDelete
  13. I'm saying the New York Times investigation revealed the Biden administration was aware of the risks facing migrant children who are working in violation of child labor laws. And the day after the report, the Biden administration "announced" a wide crackdown on workplaces with migrant children who are working in violation of child labor laws.

    Seems much more like damage control than any real concern about child labor abuses.

    ReplyDelete
  14. "Nobody cares"?

    Sez you.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Off Topic Can anyone explain this?
    Judge Cannon indefinitely postpones Donald Trump's trial for classified document retention

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Holy cats, Dave. It looks like you copied and pasted a headline there. If you want to know more, why not read the story that appears directly beneath it?

      Otherwise, one is left to guess that you're obliquely trying to make some different point.

      Delete
    2. According to Judge Cannon, the court determined "that finalization of a trial date at this juncture—before resolution of the myriad and interconnected pre-trial and CIPA issues remaining and forthcoming—would be imprudent and inconsistent with the Court’s duty to fully and fairly consider the various pending pre-trial motions before the Court, critical CIPA issues, and additional pretrial and trial preparations necessary to present this case to a jury."

      That tells me little. Knowing that commenters here follow Trump trial news closely, I hope to get more clarity and details from this knowledgeable group..

      Delete
    3. Well, I think CIPA refers to Classified Information Procedures Act. Trump has made a bunch of filings that claim that he had the right to declassify documents instantly or declare them "presidential records."

      Personally, I don't think his claims will stand up. Nevertheless, the judge has decided that those issues have to be decided before she can proceed to trial.

      Delete
    4. WaPo says: "Cases that involve classified documents have to follow the rules and legal proceedings required under the Classified Information Procedures Act, or CIPA, and generally move slower than standard cases. Cannon, a Trump nominee who has been on the bench since late 2020, is relatively inexperienced and has moved slowly on key decisions, according to some legal experts, holding hearings on even long-shot motions and posing unusual legal questions."

      Delete
    5. It's been obvious for over a year that Cannon was going to do everything in her power to make sure this case never goes to trial before the election. She has already been strenuously reversed several times by the appeals court. When the defense lawyers tell her to jump, she asks how high? You must be very happy, David, that the coward Donald J Chickenshit doesn't have to face a jury before the election, you fucking fascist.

      Delete
    6. And the Supreme Court is dragging their feet to make sure Donald J Chickenshit doesn't have to face a jury in the DC trial before the election.

      You win again, David, you fucking fascist prick.

      Delete
    7. Hey DIC, you know who George Soros is. Do you have any idea who Leonard Leo is? He is the guy who picks all the religious nutjobs for rebub leadership to put into Jurist robes. (It ain't a brain dead POS like Trump.) Leo and the Federalist Society would have the right wing noise machine stroking out if they were working on the other side. Assume you know this, as another has said, you fascist prick.

      Delete
  16. “dating back to the dawn of the west, it has been the norm for us the humans to bow to the divine right of kings.”

    As opposed to the divine right of kings, the word and idea of “democracy” comes from Greek, and was practiced to a certain degree in Ancient Greece. According to Wikipedia, “as many as half of the over one thousand existing Greek cities might have been democracies.”

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athenian_democracy

    In Anglo Saxon areas (England for example), it was typical for the ruler to be chosen from among several likely candidates. There was a council that could overrule the king. The feudal system was a series of agreements to provide mutual support among men with varying degrees of power. The traditional power of local magnates was reaffirmed with Magna Carta in 1215. A number of English kings were deposed and executed, including Richard II and Richard III, as dramatized by Shakespeare, up to and including Charles I in 1649.

    So, it’s not clear that European history is clearly founded on the idea of divine right of kings.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Damage control would be if you did the PR without doing anything beyond that. When you address the problem (no matter who called your attention to it), it is doing something. And the point above is that the Republicans, including Trump, have done nothing despite being aware of the problem now.

    ReplyDelete
  18. The Biden administration only did the PR and didn't do anything beyond that. Are you kidding? You think the Biden administration did something beyond the "announcement"?

    ReplyDelete
  19. The additional things are listed above. The Republicans did nothing.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Rodent: the "additional things" listed above are all just announcements. That's all. They just made the announcements as damage control and then totally forgot about it and nothing ever came of it. Don't you know this is how the game is played?

    1. Crackdown on Labor Exploitation of Migrant Children: Announced by the Biden administration .....
    2. Request for Additional Funding: President Biden requested an additional $100 million from Congress in October 2023
    3. Child Labor Accountability Act of 2023: This proposed legislation,
    ...
    4. Biden's Fiscal Year 2025 Budget: The proposed budget ...

    ReplyDelete
  21. It is in the 2025 budget. Money was allocated in 2023 for increased enforcement in 2024 (now). That is doing something. The legislation is held up by Republicans, in committee. The parts that can be enacted by the president alone, have been.

    ReplyDelete
  22. No - this was asked for but never received. The bill never passed. No money was allocated. It was just damage control.

    Biden asked congress for $100 million to enact these measures (in October 2023):

    https://news.bloomberglaw.com/daily-labor-report/biden-asks-congress-for-extra-100-million-to-curb-child-labor

    ReplyDelete
  23. Are you seriously proud that Republicans blocked this funding? Whatever could be done was done. You cynically believeDemocrats are performative but Biden and his staff care about addressing child labor. Republicans do not. Biden will not give up and the Dems will be back in control of the House soon.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Biden and his staff don't care about addressing child labor at all. As you know from the Drier article, they knew they were placing children in precarious conditions without adequate follow-up. Their zeal to clear shelters led to rushed sponsorships that included sponsors who explicitly stated their intent to employ the children! There were numerous warnings from government staff and outside contractors about children being at risk and Biden and his cabal of technocrats ignored them, proving forever that they care nothing about these hundreds of thousands of children.

    Once they were caught they made a few symbolic ass-covering moves to pretend they care .. but as you know from reading the article, we know they don't care at all.

    ReplyDelete
  25. If both sides don't care, why vote for the rapist? Because he gives you the bigotry you crave?

    ReplyDelete
  26. That's what Tara Reade said.

    ReplyDelete
  27. __________________
    __________________

    ReplyDelete
  28. Tara Reade. May as well listen to what Donald Trump or the NY Times has to say.
    SMDH.

    ReplyDelete
  29. This blog readily demonstrates that you Soros bots eagerly listen to Donald Trump's every word.

    ReplyDelete
  30. I know who Soros is, but who is this Donald Trump character you speak of?

    ReplyDelete
  31. He's a television actor. He played a real-life failed real estate investor from Queens, back in the 70s and 80s. In the 2000s he showed range by playing against type, and showed some range by acting like a successful businessman.
    They say he smells like a soiled baby diaper, that should have been changed two days ago.

    ReplyDelete