Sheldon calls on Cruz to hold congressional hearings on Trump, Russia


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Trump - Col.Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Ted Cruz might team up to take on Donald Trump.

Rhode Island’s junior senator and Senator Chris Coons of Delaware, both members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, authored a letter to Cruz, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Oversight, Agency Action, Federal Rights and Federal Courts, asking him to hold hearings on Donald Trump’s recent “encouragement of a Russian cyber incursion of a U.S. presidential candidate.”

The two Democrats want the conservative Republican of Texas, an adversary of Trump’s, to “conduct an oversight hearing to determine whether existing federal criminal statutes and federal court jurisdiction sufficiently address conduct related to foreign entities that could undermine our elections,” according to the letter.

“Specifically,” reads the letter, “we ask that you consider whether requests for foreign entities to conduct cyber attacks on political opponents violate existing federal criminal statutes, and whether there are obstacles to the federal courts asserting jurisdiction to protect the integrity of our nation’s elections.”

No word yet on whether Cruz will agree to hold the hearings. While the climate change-denying Texan is no ally to Whitehouse, he may be a bigger enemy of Trump’s. When Cruz spoke at the Republican National Convention, he implored people to “vote your conscience” rather than voting for Trump, who purposefully interrupted Cruz’s speech. Before that, Trump insulted Cruz’s wife.

Read Whitehouse and Coon’s full letter to Cruz below:

Dear Chairman Cruz:

We write to express our concern regarding recent remarks made by presidential nominee Donald Trump and the threat of foreign influence in U.S. elections.  On July 27, reporters asked Mr. Trump several questions regarding the cyber breach of the Democratic National Committee and potential Russian involvement.  When asked if he would call on Russian President Vladimir Putin to stay out of the United States’ presidential election, Mr. Trump stated:  “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 e-mails that are missing. . . . I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.”  Mr. Trump’s apparent encouragement of a foreign cyberattack on presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, a U.S. citizen and former Secretary of State, is dangerous and irresponsible.  We ask that you conduct an oversight hearing to determine whether existing federal criminal statutes and federal court jurisdiction sufficiently address conduct related to foreign entities that could undermine our elections.

As two dozen national security experts stated in a recent letter calling for a congressional investigation, this is “not a partisan issue” but rather “an assault on the integrity of the entire American political process.”  The “hacking of a political party’s email system by Russian intelligence agencies would, if proven, constitute unprecedented foreign interference in an American presidential campaign.”

Mr. Trump’s encouragement of a Russian cyber incursion of a U.S. presidential candidate represents an unprecedented call for a foreign government to spy on a U.S. citizen and interfere with a U.S. election.  The threat Russia poses to cybersecurity has long been recognized as a national security issue, with a 2009 National Intelligence Estimate warning that Russia had the most “robust, longstanding program that combines a patient, multidisciplinary approach to computer network operations with proven access and tradecraft.”  Recent Russian attempts to influence foreign elections – in Ukraine, Georgia, and France, for example – by engaging in cyberwarfare and orchestrated leaks are well documented.  Mr. Trump’s comments implicate U.S. criminal laws prohibiting engagement with foreign governments that threaten the country’s interests, including the Logan Act and the Espionage Act.  They threaten the privacy of a U.S. citizen and former government official, inviting Russia to engage in conduct that would violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and, if performed by the U.S. government, would contravene the Fourth Amendment.  Finally, Mr. Trump has invited foreign interference with the presidential election, which we believe should be carefully guarded against under U.S. law.

To ensure the integrity of the presidential election and its insulation from Russian cyber threats, we ask that you conduct an oversight hearing to consider whether existing federal criminal statutes and federal court jurisdiction sufficiently address conduct related to foreign entities that could undermine our elections.  Specifically, we ask that you consider whether requests for foreign entities to conduct cyber attacks on political opponents violate existing federal criminal statutes, and whether there are obstacles to the federal courts asserting jurisdiction to protect the integrity of our nation’s elections.

Sincerely,

Christopher A. Coons                                                                         Sheldon Whitehouse

United States Senator                                                                           United States Senator

NBC10 Wingmen: ISIS loves Rep. Nardolillo’s reaction to terrorism


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Experts agree with the progressive left that ISIS wants American politicians to react to terrorism exactly as did Rhode Island state Rep. Bobby Nardolillo and Texas Senator/POTUS candidate Ted Cruz – as if they are scared, and don’t care about freedom and justice.

Bill Rappleye, Jon Brien and I discuss on NBC10 Wingmen:

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Bernie Sanders in Milton ahead of Super Tuesday


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2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 002Waiting for Bernie Sanders in the press line outside Milton High School in Massachusetts ahead of Super Tuesday, I talked to Rita Colaco, a journalist from Portugal. She’s surprised that I know where Portugal is, because most Americans she talks to think her country is part of Spain, or Puerto Rico. She was at a rally for Hillary Clinton in Boston earlier in the day, and now she’s covering a rally for Sanders. She’s in the United States for four days to cover Super Tuesday.

“So what do they think about this election in Portugal?” I ask.

“They think what you’re thinking over here,” says Colaco, “They see the popularity of Trump as funny.” The way she says funny, she doesn’t mean “Ha-Ha” funny. People from around the world are worried about what a Trump presidency means.

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John May

“I wouldn’t be here from Portugal if it wasn’t for Trump,” says Colaco. She hasn’t been able to find a rally for Trump in Massachusetts yet, though.

Inside the rally I meet an older couple who support Sanders, but they are realists, and will happily switch to Clinton if they have to. “We can’t let Donald Trump or Ted Cruz win,” says the woman, “That would be terrible, and I’m too old.”

John May from Franklin holds home made signs in support of Medicare for All. He knows the sales pitch well. “You can’t tell me that we can’t afford to do, in America, what every civilized country on Earth already does,” says May.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 028May lost two friends to pancreatic cancer years ago. They were diagnosed within weeks of each other and they died within weeks of each other. Their treatment was the same. The only difference between the two is that one friend lived in Denmark, the other in the United States.

The friend in Denmark, says May, spent his last six years of life with family and friends, unconcerned about the economic impact of his disease on himself and his loved ones.You can only begin to imagine the last years of the life of his American friend. That massive qualitative difference made May a supporter of single payer healthcare, and by extension, a supporter of Sanders.

My last conversation was with three girls, between 10 and 12 years old. They monkeyed around in front of my camera and were eager to be interviewed, but the adult with them asked that I not use the footage, since he wasn’t sure about their parent’s permission.

I asked the girls who they’re voting for.

2016-02-29 Bernie Sanders 001“We can’t vote,” said the oldest, “but my Dad’s voting for Trump.”

“Trump?” I asked.

The girl shrugged. “Whatever.”

“I can’t decide between Bernie Sanders and Marco Rubio,” said the second girl.

“Really?” I asked, “how does that work? They’re not much alike on the issues.”

“I don’t know,” she said, honestly. “I just like them.”

“I’m still deciding between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders,” said the youngest girl, “That’s why I’m here, to listen to what Sanders has to say.”

“You know,” I replied, “that makes sense.”

Then Sanders took the stage.

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Satellites and thermometers: Ed Achorn on truth, science and reason


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SatelliteIt’s bad enough that Providence Journal editor Ed Achorn regularly runs op/eds from climate change deniers but its worse that he responds to those who question his decision to do so by accusing them of having a “totalitarian mindset” and of believing that “issues of vast public importance should not be debated.”

Achorn made his comment to me on Facebook, after I wrote that “publishing anti-climate change op-eds from conservative disinformation groups” is “completely irresponsible ‘journalism.’” I was referring to Herbert E. Stevens’ piece “Fuzzy data on warming”  in which the meteorologist claimed that readings from surface thermometers that show the Earth is warming are less accurate than satellite readings of temperature that, Stevens claims, show “much less warming… than the surface data — and show no net warming of the planet over the past 18 years and 8 months.”

The piece seems innocuous enough, until you realize that it’s a piece in defense of Ted Cruz, Republican nominee for President, who repeatedly claims that there has been “no significant warming whatsoever for the last 18 years.”

As Chris Mooney ably demonstrates in his Washington Post piece, Cruz is seriously misleading the public when he makes these claims. He’s taking a minor (if interesting) debate about the accuracy of surface thermometers versus satellites when taking global temperature readings and using it as a way of calling into question the very existence of human caused climate change, which is not a seriously debated issue at all.

Nowhere in the op/ed does Stevens mention Cruz. He writes as if he is simply covering an interesting meteorological topic, apropos of nothing. But Stevens ideological bent is revealed when he includes obvious falsehoods, such as when he says, “Back in the early 1990s NASA recommended that satellite measurements be used as the preferred method of measurement because it was the most accurate method.”

The truth is that “Roy Spencer and John Christy, two satellite experts affiliated with NASA and the University of Alabama in Huntsville, argued in the prominent journal Science that satellite measurements are able to deliver “more precise atmospheric temperature information than that obtained from the relatively sparse distribution of thermometers over the earth’s surface.”

Two university experts “affiliated with” NASA is a far cry from an official NASA statement. But it gets worse. One of those experts, John Christy, is known as a climate “skeptic” and he’s one of the key people that Cruz seems to be depending on for his climate denial position, a position that Stevens seems happy to echo in the pages of the ProJo, without proper attribution.

The idea that satellites are more or less accurate than surface thermometers is not settled science, and that debate is interesting, but that’s not the context in which Stevens frames his article. Stevens wants us to believe that satellite data is more accurate and that this more accurate data somehow contradicts the idea that the Earth is warming. Therein lies his second falsehood.

Stevens claims that the data shows that there has been “no net warming of the planet over the past 18 years and 8 months,” ignoring the fact that we have satellite data going back to 1979, not just 1998.  As Mooney points out in his piece debunking Cruz, 18 years gives us a starting point during the “very warm El Niño event of 1997/1998.” Starting in 1998 shows little to no warming, because our starting point is artificially higher due to El Niño. If we start in 1979, however, even the satellites show a warming trend that can only be caused by humans using fossil fuels.

Stevens has committed a serious scientific fallacy called cherry picking that even a climate skeptic like John Christy has disavowed. Stevens is only looking at the evidence that bolsters his claim, not the evidence that runs counter to what he’s trying to prove. That’s dishonest.

In response to Achorn telling me that I have a “Totalitarian mindset” I said, “Following the science, rather than the vested opinions of think tanks and cranks, is not totalitarian. Using that word [Totalitarian] against critics to silence them is.”

Instead of acknowledging my point, Achorn doubled down saying, “I strongly believe that discussion of major matters of public interest is healthy. I strongly oppose the totalitarian mindset that those who disagree with me must be silenced.”

Is disinformation masquerading as science contributing to the healthy “discussion of major matters of public interest,” as Achorn seems to be claiming? Is it “totalitarian” to demand something akin to the truth and honesty – even in a ProJo op/ed?

I wish I had taken the time to compose a better response to Achorn, but Facebook is a place of quick writing and off the cuff thoughts. Achorn graciously allowed me the last word, not responding to me when I wrote:

“Though as an editor, you choose all the time who to print and [who] to silence, by not printing their opinions. One of the qualifying rationales for accepting a[n op/ed] piece must be truth, as informed by reason and science. If not, what are you basing the decisions on? There are disagreements in the community of climate scientists, but these are not the subjects you traditionally cover. Instead, you print pieces by deniers following the same playbook as the tobacco lobby followed in the 50s, 60s and 70s. This does nothing to further the discourse, but instead hinders and reduces it.”

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Nick Kettle’s campaign strategy: cut and paste


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Sen. Nicholas Kettle Photo: State House Photographer? Do we have one of those?
Sen. Nicholas Kettle Photo: State House Photographer? Do we have one of those?

Politicians are beginning to understand that a campaign website is essential in any race. Maybe they got the idea while perusing a newspaper from 2001, or maybe the idea has been “held for further study” for the last 13 years. Either way, in 2014, a campaign website is de rigeur.

Most politicians “borrow” ideas from one another – sometimes between generations. Politicians may change the words they use to express these ideas and policies, but  it’s pretty easy to spot these borrowed ideas because the overriding characteristics of economic or social policy are, frankly, pretty easy to spot, despite the shift in semantics. It appears, however, that many Libertarian and Republican candidates can’t even be bothered with the window dressing of new language.

BuzzFeed reports this week that several elected Republicans and Libertarians across the country have lifted language from the website of U.S. Senator and second generation libertarian, Rand Paul (R – Kentucky), including Rhode Island state Senator and Deputy Minority whippersnapper, Nicholas Kettle. Not surprisingly, Rand’s policies are derived from his namesake, noted author Ayn Rand whose abysmally bad prose serves as the moral justification behind the most wrong-headed libertarian and Republican policies. Hell, in Rhode Island, many policies promulgated by the so-called Democrats have echoes of Atlas Shrugged.

I never thought I’d write the next six words

Thanks, BuzzFeed for the investigative reporting. Seriously? BuzzFeed?

Senator Kettle,  pay close attention to what I do next. I using a bold font to make sure you don’t miss it. It’s called attribution.

BuzzFeed Staffer Andrew Kaczynski writes, “In Rhode Island, state senator and deputy minority whip, Nicholas Kettle appears to also have plagiarized his entire campaign issues page from Paul.”

Notice how I used not only a direct attribution, but also italicized text so that you’d understand where my words stop and someone else’s begin? It’s simple really. Also take heed; a mere 145 words ago, I was kind enough to include a link back to what journalists and every other person refer to as the “source.”

I won’t bore you with the details, suffice to say that the similarities of word choice and sentence structure between the two Right, Honorable Senators are striking. And by striking, I mean nearly verbatim. Even without the attribution and italics, it’s 4th grade easy to notice where Paul’s words end and Kettle’s begin. Kettle tries to localize the energy debate by using the Deepwater Wind Farm. Feast your eyes on this butchering of the written English language from Kettle’s energy policy.

As for the off shore wind project off of Block Island I believe the Government should stay out of this issue but I will say for the community of Block Island should approve of it before anything should go forward.

I’ve seen better usage from a second year ESL student. The live version of Kettle’s website has been significantly pared down, but thanks to the miracle of webpage caching and a little website called the Wayback Machine, his plagiarism lives on. You don’t even have to use the Wayback; his live homepage is an absolute scream – and not in the we-all-scream-for-ice-cream way.

Enter the ProJo

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According to the ProJo, this is a picture of Nick Kettle and Rand Paul. Photo: Providence Journal/ AP

Now, when the story broke locally the Providence Journal ran this story. Which is funny in and of itself because the original picture in the story was, in fact, a composite of Nick Kettle and Ted Cruz, not Rand Paul.

Journal staffer Randy Edgar asks if he wrote the position statements on his 2010 site, he said no, that they were written by someone who no longer works for him.

Kettle responds:

“To me I think it’s a tempest in a teapot and looks like Democratic smear tactics,” the Coventry Republican said. “If anybody has any concerns with plagiarism, it should be Rand Paul.”

This may be the penultimate answer to this question. Not only does he not back down, or at least give the pat, I’ll look into it and get back to you, he DOUBLES DOWN by simultaneously blaming Democrats, all but accusing the Rand Paul campaign of plagiarism, and if I’m not mistaken, making a pun about his last name. Kettle hasn’t made comment on whether the pun was intended or unintended.

I wonder if Rand Paul feels worse about a) The ProJo mistaking Ted Cruz for him, or b) Kettle’s unattributed seizure of Mr. Paul’s intellectual property. The world may never know. As recently as 2010, the libertarians are in the midst of a bit of an identity crisis over intellectual property rights. As for Mr. Kettle’s alleged plagiarism, I suggest he change his website’s policy page to one line of text:

For more information on my policies and positions, please visit www.paul.senate.gov.

(Clarification: As pointed out to me on Twitter, by the ProJo’s intrepid web guru, Daryl Ann West or @darylawest, the photo on the website was fixed almost immediately after several Facebook and Twitter posts – some of them my own – pointed out the discrepancy. Congrats to Ms. West for actually following best management practices by monitoring and reacting to social media feedback. Give her a raise, ProJo!)

National wingmen: Sheldon takes on Ted Cruz


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crossfireRhode Island progressive hero Sheldon Whitehouse took on Texas tea party scourge Ted Cruz on Crossfire last night debating the merits – or, more to the point, the lack thereof – of the government shutdown.

“Everyone that I know in Rhode Island knows the difference between negotiating and negotiating while holding hostages,” Whitehouse said. “I really think it is important that we do our level best to both take away the threat of the debt limit  and reopen the government then everything is on the table, of course it is, but we want to negotiate like Americans without guns to our heads.”

For a local version of this very same debate, Justin Katz and I will be squaring off on the same topic today on the Wingmen segment of 10 News Conference. I’ll post that later today, in the meantime, enjoy the national version via CNN: