Stephan: I simply cannot understand how the Republican senators go home and look at themselves in their bathroom mirror. How do they live with themselves? How do you know that millions of people are on the brink of life-altering catastrophes, and you have recently given billions of dollars to your fellow uber-rich, but you are so nasty, so callous, that you block $2,000 from going to ordinary Americans? And that leads me to ask, Americans how do you justify voting to put these people into power?
On MSNBC Tuesday, anchor Mehdi Hasan tore into Senate Republicans, noting that the top ten richest of them either oppose the increased stimulus, or are only now coming around to it to echo outgoing President Donald Trump.
“In a year when America’s billionaires grew their wealth by a trillion dollars, McConnell and his merry band of multimillionaire GOP colleagues in the Senate denied an attempt to send $2,000 checks to ordinary Americans,” said Hasan. “McConnell blocked the relief measure from coming to the Senate floor for a vote, even though it passed in the House, even though the Republican president is on board with it, even though a majority of Americans, including a majority of Republicans, support it. But the Majority Leader and his super-wealthy friends said no.”
You should know who these people are. Our representatives, who are making life-altering decisions while living very different lives to the rest of us,” said Hasan. “These are the top ten wealthiest Republicans in the senate. Kelly Loeffler of Georgia, along with […]
Stephan: I am really tired of what is happening in this country, fed-up with the lack of compassion, the social priorities that do not make wellbeing a priority. The racism and police brutality that I read about every day. The callous stupidity. If those of us who want to see a society based on a functioning democracy that fosters wellbeing do not become agents of change we are soon going to find ourselves in a very dark world.
Black children were six times more likely to be shot to death by the police than their White peers over a 16-year period, according to a study published in the journal Pediatrics that offers support for a disparity long-highlighted by activists.Hispanic children were three times more likely to be shot to death than White children, the study found.”The results are not surprising, but that doesn’t take away from the tragedy of these results,” lead researcher Dr. Monika K. Goyal told CNN. “When we see that this extends to children, it makes this issue even more tragic.”
Stephan: When your Justice Department does not serve justice democracy cannot survive.
President Donald Trump’s Justice Department decided that it wouldn’t prosecute the police who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was playing in a local park when police opened fire on him.
According to the Associated Press the Justice Department the video that showed Rice playing when officers killed him was “too poor a quality” for prosecutors to make a conclusion about what happened.
“In closing the case, the department brought to an end a long-running investigation into a high-profile shooting that helped galvanize the Black Lives Matter movement and that became part of the national dialogue about police use of force against minorities, including children,” said the AP. The decision, revealed in a lengthy statement, does not condone the officers’ actions but rather says the cumulative evidence was not enough to support a federal criminal civil rights prosecution.”
Stephan: As he prepares to depart Trump is doing everything he can, from environmental to financial policies, everything he can do by Executive Order, to screw average Americans, and about 35% of them are so dim and addled they can't see it. Here is what he has done to Elizabeth Warren's Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Get ready for housing crash 2.0. Families are being targeted once more with predatory mortgages. But this time the agency once charged with protecting borrowers has lessened restrictions on lenders and limited the period during which consumers can defend against foreclosures.
As most of the Trump administration is heading out the door, a holdout regime at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has rushed out two rules that will strait-jacket borrowers and protect lenders.
“Combined, the new CFPB rules likely will lead to more foreclosures while letting mortgage lenders off the hook for peddling loans that people cannot afford to pay over the long term,” said a National Consumer Law Center attorney, Alys Cohen.
The bureau is making it easier for lenders to push costly loans onto homebuyers while severely limiting the time financially troubled borrowers have to fight foreclosures.
The CFPB rewrote a requirement that loan payments not exceed 43% of a household’s income with a much looser “ability-to-pay” requirement for new “qualified mortgage” loans. The bureau also created a new category of “seasoned” qualified […]
Stephan: As the days after the election wind down it becomes ever clearer that we have had a crime family in the White House, like something out of the Godfather only more vulgar and nastier.
The 24 pardons that Donald Trump granted last week drew a lot of attention, but no one seemed to notice the message Trump sent by not issuing pardons. Trump’s choices made it clear that he is a white-collar crime boss.
Trump pardoned four mercenaries who murdered Iraqi civilians, but not Jeremy Ridgeway the soldier-for-hire who plead guilty to manslaughter, testified against the others, and was sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison
Trump pardoned Roger Stone, his dirty trickster confidant; General Michael Flynn his national security adviser who was on the Kremlin payroll; and his 2016 campaign manager Paul Manafort, but not Manafort deputy Rick Gates, who turned state’s evidence and confessed to his crimes.
He also pardoned Rod Blagojevich, the former Illinois governor convicted of trying to sell a Senate seat. But there was no pardon for Michael Cohen, Trump’s lawyer, and longtime fixer who confessed to committing felonies at the direction of unindicted coconspirator “Individual 1,” identified in federal court as Trump.
A future president could use the pardon power to […]