How Kamala Harris Went From ‘Female Obama’ to Fifth Place

Her bid for the 2020 Democratic nomination, which began with so much promise, has been marked by a long and painful pattern of self-inflicted lapses and growing disorder among her inexperienced staff.

…Harris undermined her national introduction with costly flubs on health care, feeding a critique that she lacks a strong ideological core and plays to opinion polls and the desires of rich donors. She was vague or noncommittal on question after question from voters at campaign stops. She leaned on verbal crutches instead of hammering her main points in high-profile TV moments. [When presented against this backdrop] The deliberate, evidence-intensive way she arrives at decisions—one of her potential strengths in a matchup with Trump—made her look wobbly and unprepared.

…[Fair or not, it’s a real thing that] her attempts to level with Americans over their concerns about her pioneering [gender/racial] status …[make it] look like Harris is making excuses when she’s given Democrats many other reasons by now to doubt her viability.

…Most of Harris’ advisers are sophisticated enough to know that the kvetching won’t win them broad sympathy. …It will backfire.

…A searing opinion piece by the law professor Lara Bazelon in the New York Times—published days before Harris formally entered the race and headlined “Kamala Harris Was Not a ‘Progressive Prosecutor’ ”—created a simple, effective template for critical assessments of her record.

…[Harris] assembled a cadre of top advisers without instituting a clear chain of command.

Her aversion to risk on some major [criminal justice reform] issues as attorney general, which earned her a reputation as “Cautious Kamala” in California, cropped up throughout the early stages of the race.

…The red phone-evoking message may have tested well in polls, it wasn’t sharp enough to resonate in the real world.

…She pivoted to themes that she’d later come to see as having little connection to her personally or professionally.

Early-state voters have consistently told me they were intrigued and even inspired by Harris’ historic candidacy—as some remain—but many also say they are underwhelmed by her uneven performances, issue walk-backs and failure to succinctly condense a clear rationale for why she should be president of the United States. They like her fine. But they like someone else more. A big part of Harris’ base—well-educated white women—has drifted to Elizabeth Warren, while Joe Biden remains dominant with older voters and African Americans.

Some Harris staffers [and potential supporters] felt blindsided by a decision to lay off field organizers in New Hampshire when they previously were led to believe that they could be redeployed to Iowa. [After all, what does “for the people” mean if she doesn’t even look out for her own people?]

After Biden said he wanted to keep busing a local decision, Harris told him schools where she grew up in Berkeley weren’t fully integrated until “almost two decades after Brown v. Board of Education,” adding, “and that’s where the federal government must step in.

…[Biden’s] team hounded news reporters to press Harris over where she stood on busing. Some Harris advisers wanted her to keep her answers high level, suggesting that she say she would enforce the Civil Rights Act. The courts have tied her hands, she was counseled to argue, but she’d do everything she could, including using mandatory busing today, to address a situation where schools are more segregated now than they were then.

Instead, Harris cast busing as not the responsibility of the federal government, but a choice of local districts. “I believe that any tool that is in the toolbox should be considered by a school district,” she said. Harris shortly after clarified that she supported federally mandated busing in the kind of situations that occurred in the 1970s—when local and state integration efforts were rebuffed or proved ineffective. The situation in 2019, Harris argued, is different than it was then. In the end, her stance on busing became conflated with Biden’s past position, helping his campaign cement the impression that her attack was born of opportunism rather than conviction.

…When Harris’ staff was approached about CNN’s climate town hall in September—and told that the leading contenders already agreed to participate—higher-ups [with an apparent lack of understanding about optics and how to run a national campaign] instructed her communications aides to sit it out in favor of fundraisers in Los Angeles [which is a horrible look for a Democratic candidate running on her desire to fight “for the people.”]

…Harris has long been seen as a politician who tries to avoid taking positions on difficult issues, including those in her wheelhouse. Twice, in 2012 and 2016, she refused to weigh in on narrowly defeated ballot initiatives in California that would have repealed the death penalty. In 2014, she sat out the debate over an important criminal justice reform measure that downgraded several felony crimes to misdemeanors. She was mum on former Gov. Jerry Brown’s sentencing reform effort, which voters also passed. She wanted little to do with the successful ballot initiative that legalized recreational marijuana.

…Her reliance on big-dollar events …took her off the road in early states and ate into her time talking with voters and media.

How Kamala Harris Went From ‘Female Obama’ to Fifth Place – POLITICO Magazine

Put it all together and you have a recipe for an underwhelming campaign.

Missouri officials tracked patients’ periods in abortion clinic battle

At the St. Louis Clinic, four out of more than 4,000 patients who received abortions remained pregnant after the procedure, according to the data made public at the hearing. There’s no reason such a rate — less than one in 1,000 — should have concerned state officials, Brandi said: “It sounds, actually, like a quite safe facility.”

Failed abortions have become a focus of abortion opponents around the country in recent months, with President Trump and others claiming that infants are being born alive after abortion attempts and doctors are killing them (which experts say does not happen). But by using the narrative of abortion failure as an excuse to create a spreadsheet with patients’ periods, the health department is dragging their medical data into a larger effort aimed at shutting the clinic down, Planned Parenthood says.

…The health department director had previously not said much publicly about his position on abortion but at the hearings this week, he said he is “pro-life,” the Star reported on Tuesday.

…The fact that Missouri state officials were analyzing patients’ period data has inspired shock and concern among many. “State law requires the health department director to be ‘of recognized character and integrity,’” Democratic state Rep. Crystal Quade told the Star in a statement. “This unsettling behavior calls into question whether Doctor Williams meets that high standard.”

Meanwhile, Yamelsie Rodriguez, president of Reproductive Health Services of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region, called the news of the spreadsheet “deeply disturbing” in a statement to media. “Missouri’s top health official, Randall Williams, scrutinized menstrual cycles of women in this state in order to end abortion access,” she said.

Missouri officials tracked patients’ periods in abortion clinic battle – Vox

hmmm

Missouri tracked Planned Parenthood patients’ periods to control them.

According to the Star, the spreadsheet “was based on medical records the investigator had access to during the state’s annual inspection, also included medical identification numbers, dates of medical procedures and the gestational ages of fetuses.” It was created in an attempt to find so-called failed abortions, the reason state health officials are giving for refusing to renew the clinic’s license. State officials denied that the director of its health department requested the data, despite the spreadsheet being attached to an email entitled “Director’s request.”

…Missouri passed a law earlier this year forbidding abortions after the eight week of pregnancy, not even making an exception for rape or incest.

…The federal Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is responsible for the health and safety of unaccompanied minors who enter the United States,  …was tracking pregnancies among the cohort, putting such details as the length of their pregnancy and whether they requested an abortion on a spreadsheet. The office’s former head Scott Lloyd — who is writing a book about his antiabortion beliefs — read the spreadsheet on a weekly basis.

Missouri didn’t track Planned Parenthood patients’ periods to protect women. It was to control them. – The Washington Post

hmmm

World Series: Astros must pay a steeper price beyond firing assistant

[The Astros]  finally stumbled upon the decision to fire assistant general manager Brandon Taubman for his expletive-laced tirade supporting an alleged domestic abuser directed at three journalists, all of them women, in the Astros locker room Saturday night after the American League Championship Series.

…In their Thursday statement, the Astros did say that they were wrong about this, and “sincerely” apologized to SI’s Stephanie Apstein, who exhibited the professionalism, grace and class to try to get a comment from the Astros Monday before writing even one word about this troubling incident, only to be trashed by the Astros PR people, who really should be joining Taubman in finding a new line of work.

Let’s go back to that Monday statement. The Astros called Apstein’s story “misleading and completely irresponsible,” then proceeded to make up a story to cover for Taubman. “We are extremely disappointed in Sports Illustrated’s attempt to fabricate a story where one does not exist.”

World Series: Astros must pay a steeper price beyond firing assistant

wow…. F’ the Astros

The women who fall into America’s white power movement

 “Like 70 percent of the time, the women earn the money and the men do podcasts. And they do podcasts about how women shouldn’t have jobs.”

…”It was unconscionable for me to justify creating manipulative content to draw young women into an organization where they were going to alienate themselves from friends and family and open themselves up to predatory men,” she said.

…The movement emerged from the same parts of the internet as violently misogynist groups like incels, or involuntarily celibate men. She says, “I don’t think it’s even possible to have an alt-right movement without the underlying misogyny.”

Women recruiters in these movements are caught in a “really toxic stew of misogyny and self-loathing,” Reaves says. But at the same time, they’re morally implicated.

…Samantha and her former IE friend both say the alt-right was like a cult, in that it separated people from their families and friends and demanded total ideological adherence.

“Like any cult, they want to expose you to as much as they can, but not so much you just turn away,” the woman said. The one difference is that there’s no single leader who dictates the culture and doctrine. Instead that’s created and enforced by largely anonymous people on message boards and in chat rooms, each one trying to one-up the others by posting more cleverly racist and cruel jokes.

“It never was past me that this stuff was dark,” Samantha says. “You become so numb to it… I don’t know if I ever thought it was funny. I don’t know if I ever explicitly said it wasn’t funny.”

How women fall into America’s white power movement – CNN

hmmm

Trump wrongly tells female astronauts they’re first women to spacewalk

“This is the first time for a woman outside of the space station,” Trump, who appeared to be reading from a script, said on the phone call. “They’re conducting the first-ever female spacewalk.”

In fact, the first woman walked in space in 1984 — the cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya holds that record. The NASA astronaut Kathryn Sullivan became the first American woman to do so later the same year.

…”We don’t want to take too much credit because there have been many other female spacewalkers before us,” Meir, who was doing her first-ever spacewalk, said. “This is just the first time that there have been two women outside at the same time, and it’s really interesting for us. We’ve talked a lot about it up here, you know, for us, this is really just us doing our jobs. It’s something we’ve been training for for six years.”

Trump wrongly tells female astronauts they’re first women to spacewalk – Business Insider

mmmhmm

How lame is tim Ryan? Let us count the ways….

He voted against renewing the Do Not Call registry to block unwelcome phone solicitations. He was honest. “I have a lot of call centers in my district,” he replied with a laugh. “We were trying to recruit workers.”

…Ryan himself voted for trade sanctions on China, tweeting what sounded a lot like [Trump.]

…Ryan isn’t ready to give up on a $5 billion natural gas plant in Western Pennsylvania that he says employs 6,000 union workers at between $80,000 and $120,000 a year.  “Donald can be as f—-‘d up as anybody but he’s not going to take their jobs,” he said.

…faulting party leaders who [anyone who has a basic grasp on things would know and acknowledge that no one] advocate[s] free health care for undocumented immigrants, when citizens have to pay for theirs 

…the “pro-life” stance he entered Congress with

2020 candidate Tim Ryan: A self-declared pragmatist in race of extremes

1 – pandering putz
2 – no fixed moral compass
3 – Anyone with half a brain knows illegal immigrant actually pay taxes, they just don’t have access to services. Ryan is either intentionally spouting racist dog-whistles or he’s a complete and total moron without a clue about the issues he speaks on
4 – Held anti-women stances until it got through that thick skull of his that people don’t like abject bigotry
5 – His stance against Big Ag is populist pandering and beyond toothless.

Tim Ryan ends presidential campaign

Ryan will now return to the House, where he had previously made a (dubious) name of himself because of his opposition to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holding a leadership position. But those efforts have failed, and even Ryan voted for Pelosi earlier this year when Democrats picked their next House leader after taking back the chamber in 2018.

Tim Ryan ends presidential campaign – CNNPolitics

A mediocre white male whose only claim to fame is being arrogantly ignorant enough to think he could do the job better than a brilliant and experienced woman didn’t catch on. Or raise any money. Hmmmmm

bye felicia

 

Sulli: K-pop star’s death prompts outpouring of grief and questions over cyber-bullying

She was one of only a few celebrities to be publicly pro-choice when South Korea legalized abortion this year, was open about her own mental health struggles and insisted women shouldn’t have to wear bras if they found them uncomfortable.

Sulli: K-pop star’s death prompts outpouring of grief and questions over cyber-bullying – CNN

sigh….

Plus, no country is perfect but Korea seems so un-modern in their attitudes towards women to these American eyes.

Trump’s “Nervous Nancy” photo shows his problem with powerful women

The president’s attempt to shame Pelosi likely worked among his base. But for most other Americans, it backfired. 

…“Nervous Nancy” is not what a lot of people saw in the photo. Instead, they saw a lone woman standing up to a roomful of men, giving them a piece of her mind. Soon, #PelosiOwnsTrump was trending on Twitter. The House speaker made the photo her Twitter cover image.

…The fact that Pelosi was able to use it so easily to her advantage is yet more evidence of a weakness with Trump’s approach — a lot of his alpha-male bullying tactics just don’t work very well on women. Unable to impugn their masculinity, Trump usually goes for attacks on their appearance or implying that they’re mentally ill. But women who have managed to attain positions of power in American society are used to these tactics — and, as Pelosi showed, they’re often more than capable of using Trump’s insults to their own advantage.

Trump’s “Nervous Nancy” photo shows his problem with powerful women – Vox

mmmhmm

Trump’s Department of Justice Could Allow Women to Be Forced to Wear Skirts

Although the case centers on transgender rights, Trump’s lawyers took a position that would diminish the rights of [all] women and girls…. — by allowing employers to force all employees to dress and behave in accordance with archaic gender norms and punish them if they do not.

…If the Trump administration has its way, schools and employers can soon force women and girls to wear stereotypically “feminine” clothing like skirts and dresses.

Trump’s Department of Justice Could Allow Women to Be Forced to Wear Skirts | Teen Vogue

aggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!

Trump demanded to meet his “accuser.” There are at least 22 of them.

Trump’s demand to face the person accusing him struck many observers as ironic, given that at least one person accusing Trump of crimes is quite eager to face him in court.

…Zervos sued Trump in 2017 for calling her a liar when she came forward with her allegation, and ever since, she’s been fighting to take him to court.

…Trump’s claim that he deserves to meet the whistleblower who raised the alarm about his communications with Ukraine reads as an attempt to intimidate that person, especially given Trump’s previous comments on this issue. At a private event last week, Trump described the whistleblower, whose identity is not publicly known, as “almost a spy,” and said, “we used to handle [spies and treason] a little differently than we do now.” Similarly, Trump has tried to intimidate the women who came forward with misconduct allegations, saying in 2016 that “all of these liars will be sued after the election is over.”

Trump demanded to meet his “accuser.” There are at least 22 of them. – Vox

mmmmm

Michigan native to travel in NASA’s 1st all-female spacewalk

Since the world’s first spacewalk in 1965, only 14 women have done them, versus 213 men, according to NASA.

…Astronaut Christina Koch, born in Grand Rapids, has been teamed up with astronaut Jessica Meir to venture out Oct. 21 to plug in upgraded batteries for the solar power system.

Michigan native to travel in NASA’s 1st all-female spacewalk

hmmm

(Also, dun f’ it up this time NASA!)