CNN exclusive: Grand jury subpoenas issued in FBI’s Russia investigation

5/9/17

Washington (CNN)Federal prosecutors have issued grand jury subpoenas to associates of former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn seeking business records, as part of the ongoing probe of Russian meddling in last year’s election, according to people familiar with the matter. CNN learned of the subpoenas hours before President Donald Trump fired FBI director James Comey.

The subpoenas represent the first sign of a significant escalation of activity in the FBI’s broader investigation begun last July into possible ties between Trump campaign associates and Russia. The subpoenas issued in recent weeks by the US Attorney’s Office in Alexandria, Virginia, were received by associates who worked with Flynn on contracts after he was forced out as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency in 2014, according to the people familiar with the investigation.

CNN exclusive: Grand jury subpoenas issued in FBI’s Russia investigation

theonion:

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA—Stressing the need to take urgent action before it’s too late, the Australian Parliament gathered Monday to discuss the nation’s dwindling Hemsworth reserves. “Over the last decade, our nation’s crucial Hemsworth supply has decreased to the point of being nearly depleted,” said The Honorable Stephen Perry, President of the Senate, adding that Australia could not afford to squander its most precious resource and must preserve what little was left for the sake of its children and grandchildren. “I fear we are reaching a precipice from which there is no turning back. We all saw what happened to Sweden’s Skarsgård reserves and what a disaster that was—if we don’t learn from history, the consequences for our nation will be dire indeed.” At press time, the Parliament had voted to freeze all Hemsworth exports, as it might take a generation for the supply to be replenished.

Here’s what I’ve been up to lately.  

Took a pottery class a while back and the teacher challenged me to start combining some of my interests.  Here’s a couple of the results: an acorn pot with the funny little cap (clay = standard 266, Amaco glazes smokey merlot underneath and seaweed on top, cone=5/6) and a spider web bowl (Porcelain Black ice – no glaze).  

The snack/tea time/coffee and a bagel set are the result of FINALLY finding glaze combinations that I like.  (clay = tom coleman porcelain, Spectrum glazes: Texture Navy underneath and Hot Running Chowder on top)

Crain’s Chicago Business

The outrage surrounding United Airlines’ brutal treatment of a customer has made one thing crystal clear: The story isn’t really about airline travel, overbooking policies or even consumer rights. It’s about the nature of dignity itself, and it doesn’t reflect well on the society it has so preoccupied.

The algorithm that decided to bump Dr. David Dao from an overbooked flight was trained to find the “lowest value customer” to inconvenience — a coach passenger, naturally, not a business traveler, but also a passenger who had paid less than others and wasn’t a rewards member. In addition, the algorithm considered the immediate cost to the airline of bumping someone, which meant avoiding families, or requiring an overnight stay, to save reimbursement fees.

There are countless examples like this online. For example, the websites of various companies — including Capital One Financial Corp. — have used data from people’s computers to help determine their value as customers and decide what specific products or perks to offer them. Some companies even size you up when you call customer service numbers. If you’re high-value, you get connected to an agent quickly. If not, you can stay on hold indefinitely.

It’s the consumer reality, and it’s not pretty — especially when people start to accept ideas like making online privacy available only to those willing and able to pay for it.

We have fallen for this paradigm shift, in every conversation about Dr. Dao’s consumer rights, the exact definition of “boarding the plane” and whether he has grounds to sue. The underlying assumption is that we deserve dignity, but only if we’ve paid for it.


Our economy is a hellscape for consumers. The United flier is the latest victim.

The Washington Post

By Jacob Silverman April 12 2017

Air travel is the most concentrated version of an essentially authoritarian experience that can be found throughout today’s economy. We live, work, shop, and travel under a system of grossly asymmetric power relationships, in which consumers sign away most of their rights just by purchasing a ticket and companies deputize themselves to enforce contracts with hired goons. It doesn’t help that the Trump administration is rapidly stripping away as many regulations as it can, promising to repeal two for every new one implemented — an ultra-wealthy administration’s attempt to formalize the plutocratic free-for-all that has followed decades of growing corporate power, defined by massive income inequality, regulatory capture, a revolving door between agencies and the industries they oversee, and steadily eroding consumer rights.

Survey the economic landscape and you’re likely to find similarly scrambled power relationships. During the foreclosure crisis, banks acted like arms of the state, with local sheriffs becoming the banking industry’s eviction force. Health insurers dictate access to health care for millions while a small coterie of chief executives reaps huge payouts. The telecommunications industry has consolidated into a handful of industry behemoths that maintain regional monopolies. The result is a lack of competition and slow, pricey service. And soon, thanks to a provision recently passed into law by Congress, our ISPs will have the rights to sell all of our browsing data to whomever they choose.

Those are the economic costs of this arrangement. The social and cultural costs are harder to define but no less important. As Sandel explains, common experiences become increasingly fragmented and subjected to the vicissitudes of the market: “At a time of rising inequality, the marketization of everything means that people of affluence and people of modest means lead increasingly separate lives. We live and work and shop and play in different places. Our children go to different schools.” It also means wildly diverging expectations, as traditionally guaranteed rights become more contingent and benefits accrue to the wealthy.

In the wake of the House passing the AHCA, I keep thinking about the Washington Post article, 

That’s the danger of having a businessman’s administration in the White House.   People and their rights get defined as commodities.  Health and safety are not valued in and of themselves, but only in terms of the return on investment.

Corporations have always been free to define their services and consumers in these terms, but now the government does.  We’re seeing the blending of corporations and government in ways that erode our rights even further.  

Crain’s Chicago Business

A Little-Noticed Target in the House Health Bill: Special Education

MAY 3, 2017

With all the sweeping changes the Republican bill would impose, little attention has been paid to its potential impact on education. School districts rely on Medicaid, the federal health care program for the poor, to provide costly services to millions of students with disabilities across the country. For nearly 30 years, Medicaid has helped school systems cover costs for special education services and equipment, from physical therapists to feeding tubes. The money is also used to provide preventive care, such as vision and hearing screenings, for other Medicaid-eligible children.

The new law would cut Medicaid by $880 billion, or 25 percent, over 10 years and impose a “per-capita cap” on funding for certain groups of people, such as children and the elderly — a dramatic change that would convert Medicaid from an entitlement designed to cover any costs incurred to a more limited program.

AASA, an advocacy association for school superintendents, estimates that school districts receive about $4 billion in Medicaid reimbursements annually. In a January survey of nearly 1,000 district officials in 42 states, nearly 70 percent of districts reported that they used the money to pay the salaries of health care professionals who serve special education students.

A Little-Noticed Target in the House Health Bill: Special Education

Trumpcare

anexplanationofunfortunateevents:

I am never going to tell you not to look into something for yourself.
I will, however, suggest that if you are going to dig into this bill,
maybe also set aside some time for a palate-cleanser, like Oliver
Twist, or The Hunger Games. What you need to know is that yes, it
is that bad
.
If you see a headline or snippet and think “pft,
that seems a little dramatic” then you should probably be
suspicious that the source is underselling it. 


This bill punishes people for things for which they are blameless:
receiving a cancer diagnosis, or having a baby through a c-section.
It punishes people for responsible behavior, like treating a chronic
health issue before it gets bad, and for really difficult and
admirable behavior, like reporting an abuser for the criminal he is
.

If you are going to read more, some terms:

ACA = Affordable Care Act = Obamacare

AHCA = American Health Care Act = this travesty

CBO = Congressional Budget Office. When you hear about them “scoring”
a bill, it means they’re approximating what implementing it will
cost. The House passed this bill without waiting for the CBO to tell them what it would cost. (Its estimate of Trumpcare 1.0 was horrifying, and a new study shows even worse outcomes.)

What you can do:

Find out who your member of Congress is and how they voted. If they
didn’t support the bill, then you can donate to one of the groups who are working to flip the house in 2018, such as Swing Left,
Daily Kos, or the DCCC. This will help them fund Democratic
challengers, and it might help scare some Republicans into line. 

If you’re represented by someone who did vote for the bill, punish
them. Make an example out of them so that your senators don’t think there will even be a short-term reward for supporting repeal

If you’re not involved in a local activist group, look up the Town
Hall Project
and Indivisible groups in your district. 

It’s also worth being ready to push your senator. Watch The Center
for American Progress (@amprog on Tumblr doesn’t seem to be
frequently updated, but they’re also on Facebook and Twitter), or Indivisible on Facebook or Twitter. They’ll tell you when it’s time to
move. 

And, as ever, when one of your dumber friends starts yelling about
WHY DIDN’T THE DEMOCRATS STOP THIS!! say “because Democrats are
in the minority, because people like you don’t bother to show up
for midterms.”

madelinegxvx:

peppermintdegenerate:

bogleech:

lymphonodge:

kikuzu:

(via ✿_マリコさんのツイート: “#秘密にしておきたかった生き物 ホヤの子供。カールおじさんホヤって愛唱で呼ばれてるけどかわいいと思う https://t.co/RxCXlTwIph”)

:O :O :O :O :O

These are tunicates and the rings really are their mouths but I don’t know what the dots are for!

:O       :O         :O :O

     :O    :O :O

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dots used to see

@edoraslass