The NRA is apparently implicated in Russian election interference.

anexplanationofunfortunateevents:

THIS
IS IMPORTANT. Part of why I often start Trump-Russia posts by saying “this is an explainer for people
who are interested but a little confused, but you don’t need to be interested in this” is because I think it should be easier to
distinguish between “developments which make great clickbait” and
“developments you have to understand.” Let me be clear:

YOU HAVE TO UNDERSTAND THIS.

Even
leftier-than-thou caricatures who don’t care at all about foreign
sabotage of American elections – because what did we expect, going
out in that pantsuit? – need to get a grip on this story, because it
is plugged into the structural issues which give corporations and
wealthy individuals such overwhelming influence in American politics.
If you don’t care about Trump-Russia, mentally replace every
mention of Russian intelligence or the Kremlin with “the mafia,” so you can understand it. 


The
National Rifle Association is singularly responsible for the epidemic
of gun violence in America
.Their primary purpose is so cartoonishly monstrous on its own that it
can be hard to get sight of the other ways they affect American
politics. They’re a keystone conservative interest group.
An “A” rating from them isn’t just “this candidate
supports the second amendment,” it’s “this
candidate passes muster as a conservative overall.” Kind of a
Zagat’s Guide for right-wing assholes.

So,
on top of their other sins, they’ve almost single-handedly
radicalized elected Republicans. It’s not just that they can give
campaign contributions, although those are substantial.
They prop up primary campaigns
against any Republican who doesn’t do exactly what they want
, which
is punishment even if you win the nomination. Primaries cost time and
money, and a nasty primary can hurt their chances in the general
election or make them politically weakened in their next term. (Sound familiar?) They got a lot more effective at that in 2010,
after the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v FEC opened the
floodgates for more “dark” (essentially untraceable) money
flowing through political advocacy groups.

The
NRA actively stokes the public health crisis of gun violence. It
stokes the tensions caused by systemic racism.
 It’s consolidated the power to make or break Republican elected
officials. And it has functionally unlimited funding which is
effectively impossible for voters to track. When you hear about weak
spots in American democracy that the Kremlin could find and exploit,
this is what it means.


That
is exactly what did happen, and special prosecutor Robert Mueller and
his FBI agents are investigating it.
 

The
campaign finance aspect of this is pretty straightforward. It’s
illegal for foreign entities to make financial contributions to a
political campaign, and there’s good reason to suspect that Russian
sources pumped money into the NRA as a means of funneling support to
the Trump campaign
. This might be how they reported spending more in 2016 than any other campaign year…and shelled out even more than reported. Investigators are going to scrutinize that, more or less in the same
way as they’re looking into the other financial crimes.

The
NRA is also implicated in the meetings between Trump campaign
representatives and sketchy Kremlin figures. Their 2016 national
convention was apparently a safe space for a meeting between Donald
Trump, Jr. and the Russian banker/suspected organized crime kingpin Alexander Torshin, who also met with Trump Sr. at the 2015 NRA
convention. It regularly spreads talking points from Russian
propaganda.
 It’s had shady ties to Putin since years before the
Trump campaign.
 

Torshin
is part of The Right to Bear Arms, an NRA partner program in Russia,
which is weird because, Russian history being what it is, gun rights are not a thing in Russia.
Even if there were
widespread interest, it wouldn’t be allowed. Putin’s regime keeps
civil society under its thumb because it’s terrified of peaceful
protests. 

(We are in this geopolitical clusterfuck because President Snowflake got #triggered when his neighbors went out for a walk four years ago.) They really don’t want to arm potential dissidents. 

But they really
do want to form ties with the American right
. Torshin’s
Russian group hosted one high-profile American gun rights activist in
2014
on a trip to Moscow, and a delegation of NRA leadership in late 2015. In
early 2016, members of the group opened a mysterious corporation in
South Dakota with members of the NRA


In
May of 2017, NRA leadership freaked out about reporting on
Trump-Russia
– months before they were accused of being involved. 

So
if congressional Republicans seem more unhinged than usual to you
lately, you’re probably right. If there’s something down this road – and apparently it’s
actually worse than it looks right now
 – then they’re not just protecting Trump out of ideology,
partisanship, or fear of their Trump fanatic voters. If dirty rubles
flowed into the 2016 election through the NRA’s political action
committee, they didn’t just go to the Trump campaign. They
contaminated most of the Republicans in Congress, many of whom also got help from the Kremlin in the form of stolen Democratic
emails

At
best, Republicans in Washington are agitated because they’ve
realized they are in a situation where they look really guilty. At
worst, they’re agitated because they know they are really guilty.

The
National Rifle Association is the rotten heart of the modern
Republican Party. If it’s this deep in the Russian campaign against
American democracy, the implications are massive.

Further
Reading:

wilwheaton:

wetwareproblem:

grison-in-labs:

feminismandmedia:

aka14kgold:

butts-bouncing-on-the-beltway:

redmagus77:

kaylapocalypse:

thatadult:

The Stanford prison experiment tapes were so stupid when I watched them in AP psych and so stupid when I watch this film about them. Literally they could’ve all sat and played cards and got $15 a day to tell ghost stories all day and be best friends. But masculinity and whiteness and power created this violent irrationality that positioned young ass men to be met with brutality and trauma and disrespect even when it was obviously taken too far. and it makes no sense. If someone put me in a room with Black girls and said I would get paid $90 a day (that’s the equivalent apparently) to be a prison guard, do you know how fast I’d be sitting with them and learning about them and exchanging Instagrams and like.. sleeping.. like what the fuck was the point of any of that…

My psych teacher introduced us to this study and literally before she showed us was like “don’t ever confuse a study based on one type of person (white men/boys) to be an example of an Everyman situation. There is strong evidence that if this was recreated with diversity, or even just with girls, that the results would have been drastically different. This is an example of bias and sexism in the medical research community.”

“Other, more subtle factors also shaped the experiment. It’s often said that the study participants were ordinary guys—and they were, indeed, determined to be “normal” and healthy by a battery of tests. But they were also a self-selected group who responded to a newspaper advertisement seeking volunteers for “a psychological study of prison life.” In a 2007 study, the psychologists Thomas Carnahan and Sam McFarland asked whether that wording itself may have stacked the odds. They recreated the original ad, and then ran a separate ad omitting the phrase “prison life.” They found that the people who responded to the two ads scored differently on a set of psychological tests. Those who thought that they would be participating in a prison study had significantly higher levels of aggressiveness, authoritarianism, Machiavellianism, narcissism, and social dominance, and they scored lower on measures of empathy and altruism.”

http://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/the-real-lesson-of-the-stanford-prison-experiment

The thing about this study is that whether or not it’s generalizable to the public is debatable at best.

But it’s certainly generalizable to the population of people who tend to be drawn to prison system and law enforcement jobs because that’s exactly the demographics that tend to show up in those positions.

“But it’s certainly generalizable to the population of people who tend to be drawn to prison system and law enforcement jobs because that’s exactly the demographics that tend to show up in those positions.”

@half-crazedauthor

It is worth noting that, in fact, the BBC replicated this experiment in 2001 with very different results. Instead of recruiting volunteers for a psychological study of prison life, they advertised the experiment

“It asked ‘Do you really know yourself’ and asked for men to take part in a social science experiment to be shown on TV. It warned that the research would be a challenge and involve ‘hardship, hunger, solitude, anger’.

In the case of the BBC Prison Experiment, the mock prison did not devolve into the torturous, abusive hellishness of the Stanford Prison Experiment–even though the experimenters very deliberately attempted to create conditions that would destroy cohesion among the prisoners and encourage authoritarian behavior from the guards. Prisoners were told that they might be able to be promoted to guardhood in an effort to keep them divided, shaved upon entry to the prison, and the guards were encouraged to create the rules of the prison and enforce them in any way they saw fit. 

It’s important to note that one of the very first things the experimenters noted was that the guards were, at the very outset, uneasy about the status differences between themselves and the prisoners and conscious of their power. 

Because food–both quantity and quality–were very salient and powerful status treatment differences in the prison, there was almost immediately a showdown over food. (Prisoners were fed much, much smaller and worse-tasting food than the guards, and indeed prisoners were made to serve the guards their meals and watch them eat in part so everyone would be aware of these status issues.) 

The guards almost immediately felt guilty and attempted to share their sausages with the prisoners by giving them the guards’ leftovers… and the prisoners immediately go “not until we consult with the other prisoners,” and then collectively decide to refuse absolutely to take small rewards from guards in lieu of the right to good food. 

Guards tried repeatedly throughout the study to get prisoners to see them as basically equal, bar the circumstances of their current positions; prisoners instead repeatedly pointed out the actual circumstances of their current situation placed them at very different power levels indeed and insisted that guards actually change the system in order to make the conditions fair and equal. In general, prisoners quickly and collectively exploited the guards’ shame at the unequal conditions in order to receive fair treatment. 

At this point, out of curiosity, the experimenters introduced a new prisoner into the system, one who had been trained as a trades unionist… 

….and this unionist prisoner quickly chose to approach a disaffected guard, empathize with his unhappiness, and turn the blame for the situation at the unequal and unfair conditions set in the prison. Those conditions, of course, were set not by the guards–they were set by the experimenters. The very first thing, then, that this unionist does is build bridges to unify all the people in the prison. 

Prisoners steal the guards’ keys; guards choose instead of “cracking down” or punishing the prisoners to ask politely for the prisoners to help them find the keys, and cheerfully accept them when provided. This gives prisoners leverage for a negotiation, which is then deftly picked up by the experienced negotiator (although not without some pushback from another charismatic and decisive prisoner). 

Here’s what the negotiator had to say:

Negotiations begin. pDM outlines the forum proposal. One of the Guards points out that the Prisoners are asking to be rewarded for stealing the keys. pDM responds by outlining a stark choice. Certainly the Guards can refuse to accept his plan, but the alternative is a return to conflict: “It’ll not be the keys tomorrow, it’ll be something else. It’s a game. All I’m saying is that there is a way to resolve that game”.

pDM is confident. He knows he speaks for the Prisoners. The Guards, even in their own mess, are despondent. They know that they can’t handle the Prisoners. And so they accept the new order. Even if they have given up much of their power, at least this system might work and offer them some respite:

gTM: I’m in high spirits after that.
gBG: It actually went alright. This geezer is alright. We can all deal
         with him.

At this point, experimenters withdrew the negotiator to see what would happen to the egalitarian vision he set out. As it turned out, the prisoners peacefully overthrew the rule of guards (by, effectively, mounting a sitdown protest in the guard’s sanctuary) and decided instead to organize an egalitarian commune for the remainder of the experiment. 

so OP’s really not that far off the mark! 

So literally the only thing the Stanford experiment proved is “all cops are bastards,” and the followup demonstrated that, in the absence of bastards, socialism works?

I know you saw this wall of text and scrolled right past it, but I’m sharing it because this is so interesting and raises issues that we don’t think about enough. A lot of you are the same age as my kids, and you’re going to be in charge of the world that I’m an old man in, and I really hope you’ll study and learn from things like this.

So what I’m saying is, I know it’s a long read, but go read it, anyway. You’ll gain emotional and intellectual experience points.

Larry Nassar Sentenced To Up To 175 Years In Prison By Michigan Judge

npr:

Larry Nassar, the USA Gymnastics and Michigan State University doctor who has admitted to abusing patients in his care, was sentenced to 40 to 175 years in prison.

“I just signed your death warrant,” said Judge Rosemarie Aquilina on Tuesday afternoon in the Lansing, Mich., courtroom.

Aquilina allowed scores of accusers to give victim impact statements during the sentencing.

Nassar had already been sentenced to 60 years in prison on separate federal child pornography charges.

Continue reading

welkinalauda:

hearseeno:

osheamobile:

theweddingofthefoxes:

estebanwaseaten:

spacedijks:

enoughtohold:

who is she

woman seeking woman. i’m six feet tall, fashionable, and enjoy long walks through brackish estuary water off the coast of virginia

She’s our most famous cryptid 

The bae in the bay

The Chesapeake Bae

…so we’re thinking some kind of selkie?

image

As in caffeinewitchcraft’s swan story

Ali H. Soufan on Twitter

A year after the Women’s March, a record number of women are running for office. Will they win? By Danny Hayes January 19 The Washington Post

A record number of women are running

This year’s congressional elections are likely to feature a record number of female candidates. As of this week, the Center for American Women and Politics had identified 390 women who have filed or are likely to file as U.S. House candidates and 49 women likely to run for the U.S. Senate. Among House candidates, the vast majority — 82 percent — are not incumbents. If those numbers hold up, it would constitute the largest pool of female congressional candidates in history.

Many women say they’re running because they were furious about Trump’s election, especially after the “Access Hollywood” tape, and energized by the Women’s March in Washington the day after his inauguration.

Ali H. Soufan on Twitter