A place were I can write...

My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



August 31, 2016

Knockabout

The 6th Annual Stuart Knockabout Regatta was held July 23rd and 24th on Buzzards Bay. A fleet of eleven competed in nearly ideal conditions with the final results being our closest yet. Five races were completed over the two day event with more than half the fleet scoring finishes in the top three.
Earning first place finishes in three of the five races, POLAR EXPRESS becomes our first repeat SKR winner. HARPOON and crew took second overall and MARGUERITE, one of two boats representing the Hingham, MA fleet, ended the weekend in third place.

The Stuart Knockabout is a descendant in a long line of great Herreshoff yachts. More than 80 years since L. Francis Herreshoff drew her graceful lines, she remains a splendid example of the genius in his design.
The design was intended to serve as a large and elegant daysailor among Maine’s coastal islands. The original hull, BEN MY CHREE, achieved that goal perfectly. As the fiberglass reproduction became available in the late 1980s, the Stuart Knockabout found new popularity with PHRF, and more recently, one-design racing. Eighty two boats have now been built to this design and sail from ports around the globe. Established fleets in Massachusetts are growing and new fleets are beginning to gain momentum up and down the East Coast.
The Stuart is exceptionally fast, yet well mannered in all but the heaviest conditions. Designed with a fairly modest sail plan, the rig is surprising powerful and capable of carrying full sail into wind speeds of 20 knots and greater. Light air conditions are equally handled by the relatively light displacement and long waterline.
The Stuart Knockabout is comfortable and forgiving with a classic elegance lost in modern one designs. Remaining true to L. Francis’s design philosophy, every unnecessary piece of gear remains absent. What is left is an uncluttered, simple, easily handled thoroughbred.

Quaoar

NASA’s New Horizons is doing some sightseeing along the way, as the spacecraft speeds toward a New Year’s Day 2019 date with an ancient object in the distant region beyond Pluto known as 2014 MU69.

This is the set of images
New Horizons recently observed the dwarf planet Quaoar (“Kwa-war”), which – at 690 miles or 1,100 kilometers in diameter – is roughly half the size of Pluto. This animated sequence shows composite images taken by New Horizons’ Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) at four different times over July 13-14: “A” on July 13 at 02:00 Universal Time; “B” on July 13 at 04:08 UT; “C” on July 14 at 00:06 UT; and “D” on July 14 at 02:18 UT. Each composite includes 24 individual LORRI images, providing a total exposure time of 239 seconds and making the faint object easier to see.

New Horizons’ location in the Kuiper Belt gives the spacecraft a uniquely oblique view of the small planets like Quaoar orbiting so far from the sun. When these images were taken, Quaoar was approximately 4 billion miles (6.4 billion kilometers) from the sun and 1.3 billion miles (2.1 billion kilometers) from New Horizons.  With the oblique view available from New Horizons, LORRI sees only a portion of Quaoar’s illuminated surface, which is very different from the nearly fully illuminated view of the dwarf planet from Earth. Comparing Quaoar from the two very different perspectives gives mission scientists a valuable opportunity to study the light-scattering properties of Quaoar’s surface.

In addition to many background stars, two far away galaxies – IC 1048 and UGC 09485, each about 370 billion times farther from New Horizons than Quaoar – are also visible in these images. Unlike the galaxies and stars, Quaoar appears to move across the background scene due to its much closer distance. Other objects which appear to move in these images are camera artifacts.

In June the New Horizons mission received the go-ahead to fly onward to 2014 MU69 -- considered one of the early building blocks of the solar system -- with a planned rendezvous of Jan. 1, 2019.

Please, take my Donald...

Obama Pays Mexico Five Billion Dollars to Keep Donald Trump

By  Andy Borowitz

President Barack Obama defended his decision on Wednesday to issue a payment of five billion dollars to Mexico to compel that nation to retain custody of Donald J. Trump.

The payment, which will be delivered to the Mexican government in hard American currency by Wednesday afternoon, will insure that Trump will remain in Mexico for the rest of his natural life.

“I have been assured by the government of Mexico that Mr. Trump will be well taken care of and, if he proves to be a productive member of their society, will be provided a pathway to Mexican citizenship,” Obama said.

While the transfer of funds to Mexico sparked howls of protest from some Trump supporters, it was hailed by congressional Democrats, as well as by over a hundred Republicans currently running for reƫlection, including Arizona Senator John McCain.

The President bristled at the suggestion that paying Mexico to keep Trump was “reverse ransom” and an extravagant use of taxpayer money. “There is only one accurate word for this payment: a bargain,” he said.

Andy Borowitz is a New York Times best-selling author and a comedian who has written for The New Yorker since 1998.

ISIL foreign ops chief blown to bits...

Pentagon says it targeted ISIL foreign ops chief

By Nahal Toosi and Bryan Bender

The Pentagon on Tuesday said it had targeted a top leader of the Islamic State, hours after the group's propaganda arm announced he had been killed in northern Syria.

Abu Muhammad al-Adnani was one of the terrorist network's longest-serving members, according to the group's Amaq News Agency, which said he was killed "while surveying the operations to repel the military campaigns against Aleppo." The group said his death would only increase its members' resolve to "exact revenge against the enemies and to strike out against them."

The Pentagon said that coalition forces had conducted a "precision strike" near Al Bab, a town on the northeastern outskirts of Aleppo, Syria's largest city, aimed at Adnani.

"We are still assessing the results of the strike, but Al-Adnani's removal from the battlefield would mark another significant blow to ISIL," Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said.

Cook described Adnani as the "principal architect of ISIL's external operations" and "ISIL's chief spokesman"; some reports have described him as the network's No. 2 official in Syria.

"He has coordinated the movement of ISIL fighters, directly encouraged lone-wolf attacks on civilians and members of the military and actively recruited new ISIL members," Cook said.

According to a New York Times report in March, Adnani headed ISIL's "external operations unit," directing attacks against foreign targets in Europe and beyond. The United States had offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his capture or death, after the State Department named him a "specially designated global terrorist" in August 2014.

In an audio clip released a month later, Adnani threatened to attack Westerners, “especially the spiteful and filthy French.” He urged his fellow Muslims to join him in the cause of jihad, and by any means at their disposal: “Smash his head with a rock, or slaughter him with a knife, or run him over with your car."

Adnani also warned U.S. President Barack Obama in starkly personal terms, calling him a "mule of the Jews."

"You are vile. And you will be disappointed, Obama," Adnani said. "Is this all you were capable of doing in this campaign of yours? Is this how far America has reached of incapacity and weakness? Are America and all its allies from amongst the crusaders and atheists unable to come down to the ground? Have you not realized—oh, crusaders— that proxy wars have not availed you nor will they ever avail you? Have you not realized, O mule of the Jews, that the battle cannot be decided from the air at all? Or do you think that you are smarter than Bush, your obeyed fool, when he brought the armies of the cross and placed them under the fire of the mujahidin on the ground? No, you are more foolish than him."

According to a U.N. dossier, Adnani had been an active member of ISIL's precursor group, the Islamic State of Iraq, since 2003. He was arrested in May 2005 and jailed for five years. After his release, he left Iraq to run ISI's operations in northern Syria, then subsequently joined ISIL. The dossier describes him as a close associate of ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Aleppo has been the scene of some of the most horrific battles of the conflict in Syria, where President Bashar Assad has spent the last five years battling an array of rebel and jihadist groups eager to oust him from power. The city has seen fierce fighting in recent weeks, with a variety of anti-Assad groups working desperately to break a siege by government forces.

The U.S. is supporting moderate rebel forces in Syria. It also is trying to come to an agreement with Russia, which backs the Assad regime, to coordinate airstrikes against ISIL and other groups.

"The U.S. military will continue to prioritize and relentlessly target ISIL leaders and external plotters in order to defend our homeland, our allies and our partners, while we continue to gather momentum in destroying ISIL's parent tumor in Iraq and Syria and combat its metastases around the world," the Pentagon said in its statement.

Cuba in 50 years

U.S. sends first passenger flight to Cuba in 50 years

By POLITICO Staff

The first commercial U.S. flight to Cuba in more than five decades is heading from Florida to the island nation Wednesday morning, the latest step in normalizing relations between the two Cold War foes.

President Barack Obama restored diplomatic ties with Cuba over a year ago and has used his executive authority to rebuild ties with the country, though U.S. tourism to the country remains officially prohibited and there has been little indication that Congress would act to remove the long-standing trade embargo anytime soon.

The JetBlue flight from Fort Lauderdale to Santa Clara, which is carrying Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, is the first flight in what has been a frenzy by airlines to secure air routes to Cuba. Seven other airlines have also secured permission to fly passengers to the island nation.

Advocates for closer ties between the longtime enemies and an end to the U.S. economic embargo have hailed the restart of travel as a crucial step. James Williams, president of the business and community group Engage Cuba, said Wednesday’s flight “marks a turning point in the relations between the American and the Cuban people,” though he called the tourism ban “inconsistent with our values as a free society" and said it's "stifled economic growth in Cuba.”

General election showdown

Murphy, Rubio to square off in long awaited general election showdown

Both U.S. Senate candidates easily vanquished their primary opponents

By Matt Dixon and Daniel Ducassi

It was a U.S. Senate primary season in Florida brimming with the promise of heated races in both parties after Sen. Marco Rubio decided to run for president, leaving a political crown jewel: an open U.S. Senate seat in the nation's third-largest state.

Ultimately, Rubio abandoned his bid for the White House and in the process shutdown the Republican primary. On the Democratic side, Rep. Patrick Murphy raked in huge endorsements and a large war chest, which was enough to easily defeat fellow Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson and longshot Pam Keith.

By election night, all that was left was the counting.

The Associated Press called both contests as soon as results started rolling in at 8 p.m. As of 9 p.m., Rubio held a 71-18 lead over Republican opponent Carlos Beruff, and Murphy was topping Grayson by a 58-17 margin.

The primary fight has been dominated by a general election dynamic since Rubio got back in the race June 22 after months of saying he did not want to seek re-election.

In their victory speeches, both previewed lines of attack that will no doubt define the field of battle headed into November.

For Murphy, that begins with Rubio leaving his Senate seat to run for president, and then telling CNN Monday that he's not pledging to serve a full six-year term if he wins re-election. It's a sign he could be mulling another run for president in 2020.

“I will serve a full six-year term for the people of Florida,” Murphy said to a packed ballroom at a DoubleTree in Palm Beach Gardens, a city in his congressional district.

Rubio slammed the now Democratic Senate nominee, Patrick Murphy as the “handpicked” choice of the "entire Democratic party establishment."

The choice voters have in November, Rubio said, is "between someone who has achieved things on behalf of our state… and someone who feels entitled to the job because everything he’s ever wanted has been given to him before." He spoke to a fired up crowd at the Embassy Suites in Kissimmee.

Rubio continued: "He likes to call himself a centrist and a moderate,” Rubio said of his opponent, but in his mind, Murphy is "nothing more than an old-fashioned liberal.”

Both had big names from their party show up for their election night events. Murphy was introduced by Rep. Ted Deutch, and was also joined on stage by Rep. Gwen Graham, who is not seeking re-election, but is widely considered a candidate for governor in 2018.

She continued to pound on the narrative that Rubio is an absentee Senator.

“We are the third-largest state in the country, and we have to have two U.S. Senators that are there for us,” she said.

In Orlando, Rubio’s event included appearances by CFO Jeff Atwater, former U.S. Senate candidate Todd Wilcox, and Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera, whose exit from the Senate race was key to getting Rubio to run for re-election.

“But this is not the end,” aid Lopez-Cantera, who introduced Rubio. “This is only the end of the beginning, for the real race starts right now."

Because Rubio had spent months on the national stage running for president and is expected to at least mull a run in 2020, the race has had national juice. That was exacerbated by the fact that Democrats need to flip just four seats to take control of the Senate if Hillary Clinton wins the presidency.

Along with a handful of other battleground Senate seats across the country, national groups on both sides have had heavy involvement in the race, and Murphy picked up the early endorsement of President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden.

Rubio had firepower right off the bat from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Senate Majority Fund, a super PAC that has been hammering Murphy and other Democrats in key seats across the country.

Both sides have millions of dollars in TV time already reserved for the weeks leading up to the general election.

Press releases from outside national groups came pouring in as soon as the race was officially over.

The Senate Majority Fund continued to hit Murphy for relying on huge contributions from his father.

“Murphy needed to use his dad’s millions to buy a primary win over Alan Grayson, an ethically tarnished opponent,” said Ian Prior, the group’s spokesman.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, which endorsed Murphy in the primary and has reserved $8 million in general election ads, continued the theme that will be common over the next two months.

“Rubio views his Senate seat as nothing more than a stepping stone to the presidency, and Florida deserves a Senator who is dedicated to fighting for them,” said Tom Lopach, the group’s executive director, said in a statement.

Just as unpopular

Poll: Clinton just as unpopular as Trump with voters

By Nick Gass

Hillary Clinton is now just as unpopular as Donald Trump among registered voters, according to the results of the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll released Wednesday, after another month of headlines about her email scandal and increased scrutiny about the relationship between her family's foundation and work at the State Department.

Approximately 46 percent of registered voters said they had a favorable opinion of Clinton in early August, dropping eight points to 38 percent in the latest survey, with nearly six in 10 (59 percent) holding an unfavorable opinion of the former secretary of state, an increase of seven points from earlier in the month. Clinton's favorability among all women surveyed swung dramatically negative over the last month, going from a net positive 11 points (54 percent to 43 percent) to a net negative seven points (45 percent to 52 percent), while her standing among men also decreased to a lesser degree.

Clinton's standing also fell among Democrats, going from a net positive 76 points (87 percent to 11 percent) to 61 points in late August (79 percent to 18 percent). Independents' approval of Clinton fell by eight points over the last month, 39 percent to 31 percent, while Trump's support among that group fell by a similar margin.

Registered voters' overall opinion of Trump held steady over the last month, with 37 percent saying they had a positive view of the Republican nominee and 60 percent a negative one. The previous poll showed 36 percent favorable and 61 percent unfavorable for Trump. Among men, Trump's favorability has fallen by six points in the last month, as women voters' views of him have ticked upward, from 26 percent favorable in early August to 33 percent in the latest poll.

The poll was conducted via landlines and cellphones from Aug. 24-28, surveying a random national sample of 1,020 adults with an overall margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Hacked by Russians

Democrats to GOP: Don't use internal memo hacked by Russians

By Rachael Bade

If Russian hackers who breached Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee computers wanted to jostle the left, they’ve certainly succeeded.

Officials at the House Democratic campaign arm appear very worried that their negative assessments about their own candidates, which were hacked and released publicly by a group linked to Russian intelligence, will be used against them by Republicans. DCCC Chairman Ben Ray LujƔn, in a letter Monday to his counterpart, National Republican Campaign Committee Chairman Greg Walden, asked the Oregon Republican to bar all Republicans from using the DCCC internal memo with the damaging information in ads against Democrats.

LujĆ”n argued that the memo could have been doctored, so Republicans' use of it would essentially be “aiding the Russian government" in their attempt to sway U.S. elections.

“The Russians have a long track record of doctoring documents acquired through cyberattacks, and while we cannot confirm their authenticity, their appearance online is certainly a notable concern,” LujĆ”n wrote. “The NRCC’s use of documents stolen by the Russians plays right into the hands of one of the United States’ most dangerous adversaries. Put simply, if this action continues, the NRCC will be complicit in aiding the Russian government in its effort to influence American elections.”

The DCCC, however, refuses to say whether the information in the DCCC memo was altered or not, citing an ongoing FBI investigation. Much of the information in the memo has already been confirmed and reported by local media, making it fair game for Republicans regardless.

The NRCC sparked the debate last week when it aired a digital ad attacking Randy Perkins, a Democrat running in Florida's 18th District, over his company’s alleged over-charging of a school district for contracted work. Florida press had covered the legal dispute, and the back-and-forth was listed on the hacked DCCC internal memo as potentially problematic for their candidate.

"Even Democratic Party bosses are questioning his character," the narrator said in the ad, which included a photo of the internal memo.

The NRCC defended the ad in a statement Tuesday.

“The shady business practices deployed by Randy Perkins highlighted in the digital ad have been well documented through various news outlets and even in Mr. Perkins’ own testimony before Congress,” said NRCC spokeswoman Katie Martin. “It’s not our fault the DCCC recruited a candidate so flawed that they knew he was a liability from the very beginning.”

She also noted that the NRCC has “no control over what our independent expenditure unit does, which the DCCC chairman, Ben Ray LujĆ”n, is well aware of.”

A DCCC source said Democrats were mostly concerned about the NRCC’s reference to a “DCCC Internal Memo, 4/8/16” in that ad, not about the actual negative reports against Perkins, which has been well documented in Florida.

The letter notes that Rep. Ryan Costello, a vulnerable Republican in Pennsylvania, said his campaign “will not use information contained in the hacking as an opportunity to attack our opponent, Mike Parrish.”

LujƔn asked the NRCC to follow in Costello's footsteps.

“I urge you to announce that you oppose any use by the NRCC and other Republican campaigns of materials stolen by the Russians,” the letter states. “This is the only appropriate and patriotic way to respond to this Russian attack on our democracy.”

If it was close....

McCain scores decisive primary win

By Theodoric Meyer

In the end, it wasn’t even close.

Republican Sen. John McCain won an easy victory over his primary challenger on Tuesday in Arizona, defeating former state Sen. Kelli Ward — the most prominent anti-incumbent Senate primary challenger of 2016 — by a double-digit margin. McCain had 55 percent of the GOP vote to Ward's 35 percent when The Associated Press called the race soon after it started tallying the votes.

It was an anticlimactic victory for McCain, who was seen at the beginning of the election cycle as the Republican senator most vulnerable to a challenge from the right. A Public Policy Polling survey last year prompted intense speculation about McCain's future when it found 50 percent of Arizona GOP primary voters disapproving of his job performance.

But, in an early blow to her candidacy, Ward never earned the support of the conservative groups that had been involved in successful challenges to GOP senators like Indiana's Richard Lugar, and she struggled to compete against the better-financed McCain. Senate Conservatives Fund, which warned in a fundraising letter last year that McCain was “in real trouble,” didn’t endorse her. Neither did the Club for Growth, the best-funded conservative outside group.

"When we looked at the Arizona Senate race early on, we saw candidates like [GOP Reps.] Matt Salmon and David Schweikert could have a path to victory," Club for Growth President David McIntosh said.

But Salmon and Schweikert both declined to run, and the Club didn’t see a way for Ward to bring down McCain.

The Arizona senator’s allies, meanwhile, started maneuvering more than two years ago to ensure McCain defeated his primary opponent, no matter who it was. After the Arizona Republican Party censured McCain in 2014, McCain’s allies worked to purge the state party of potential troublemakers and replace them with McCain loyalists.

A super PAC backing McCain, Arizona Grassroots Action PAC, poured nearly $2.7 million into the primary. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce spent another $1.2 million.

“Regardless of opponent, this was always going to be a tough race,” said Jon Seaton, a GOP operative who worked on McCain’s presidential campaign eight years ago and took charge of Arizona Grassroots Action PAC with another McCain veteran, Christian Ferry. “It’s the reason we started laying the groundwork so early. A segment of the Arizona primary electorate opposes John McCain almost no matter who he’s running against.”

The super PAC gave McCain the cover to focus on his presumed general election opponent, Democratic Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick. While McCain started attacking her months ago, Arizona Grassroots Action delighted in calling attention to Ward’s affinity for conspiracy theories, mocking her for supporting “oddball bills” in a digital ad last year. The bulk of the super PAC’s TV ads were devoted to painting Ward as an unsteady voice on terrorism and national security — issues that happen to be strengths of McCain’s.

KelliPAC, a super PAC backing Ward, also hit the air this month after a late contribution from Robert Mercer, the conservative megadonor who spent millions backing Ted Cruz last year and is now supporting Donald Trump.

The ads momentarily put McCain on defense. The campaign quietly started airing TV ads attacking Ward last week.

But Ward’s campaign couldn’t catch up with McCain in the polls, and the incumbent's side had more resources in every aspect of the campaign, including a formidable field operation. Unusually for a super PAC, Arizona Grassroots Action made early investments in a primary-focused ground game, with about 50 staffers knocking on doors and making phone calls in the final weeks before the primary.

The race now shifts to the general election, where McCain is facing his stiffest challenge since he first won the seat three decades ago. Without a primary opponent, Kirkpatrick has been free to focus on stockpiling cash, although she still had less than half the $5 million in McCain’s campaign account.

Kirkpatrick has built her campaign around tying McCain to Donald Trump, arguing that voters can’t trust McCain to stand up for Arizona if he won’t even stand up to Trump’s repeated attacks on McCain himself. Polls have shown a close race, though a CNN poll released last week had the Arizona senator up 13 points.

McCain refused to allow Ward to outflank him on Trump during the primary, telling reporters over and over again that he would back Trump during the primary, even after he tore into the GOP nominee for insulting the parents of fallen Army Capt. Humayun Khan after Khan’s father spoke at the Democratic National Convention.

Some Republican operatives have speculated that McCain could join Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake and other GOP senators in distancing himself from Trump after he’d dealt with Ward. But McCain ruled it out in an interview last week.

“There’s no reason to do that,” McCain told POLITICO. “They all know me. Everybody in Arizona really knows me unless they just moved in.”

I really apologize

Vicente Fox: 'I really apologize' for Trump's Mexico visit

By Nick Gass

Mexican President Enrique PeƱa Nieto "is taking an enormous political risk" by hosting Donald Trump in Mexico City on Wednesday, former President Vicente Fox said, decrying the Republican nominee's visit as "opportunistic" and a "political stunt" while apologizing on behalf of the country for the president's invitation.

"Trump is using Mexico, is using President PeƱa to push his sinking poll numbers," Fox said in an interview with CNN's "New Day" hours ahead of the scheduled meeting in the Mexican capital.

If PeƱa Nieto is seen as "going soft" on the businessman, Fox warned, "it will hurt him greatly."

"He will even be considered like a traitor because we don’t accept to be offended," he added, remarking, "I think this is a big mistake on the part of President PeƱa."

Fox rejected the notion that the trip could improve the standing of either Trump or the sitting Mexican president among Mexicans.

"I mean, you cannot lie to people. You cannot take advantage of people all the time like he's doing. And you cannot cheat people. You have to be straight. You have to speak the truth. This is what he has done none at all. So it's a very opportunistic move and I hope U.S. public opinion, U.S. citizens can see this and finally, and finally see what is behind Trump, this false prophet that is just cheating everybody," Fox said. "It's a desperate move and I don't see how it can work at all."

Asked why he thought PeƱa Nieto invited Trump, Fox was at a loss. (The Mexican president has also extended an invitation to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.)

"That's what I don't understand, and I will not understand unless there's an explanation to it, except that PeƱa will take a very firm stand that he will reject and ask and commit him to apologize to all Mexicans here in Mexico and in the United States and that he withdraws all those stupid proposals of building a wall, putting together a trade war with Mexico, of limiting foreign investment into Mexico, of taxing imports to Mexico," Fox said. "I don't know where PeƱa is."

Fox called Trump's move "very smart," but quickly added that he could not be trusted.

"I don't understand what's going on here, and I really apologize for our president taking this step forward," Fox declared. "I really expect from him, as all 130 million Mexicans, all of our great brother Mexicans in the United States, an explanation from both, from President PeƱa and Trump himself."

Psychological warfare

Trump campaign manager blasts Clinton 'psychological warfare'

By Nick Gass

Donald Trump's campaign manager on Wednesday mocked Hillary Clinton's reported debate preparations, including enlisting the help of one of the Republican nominee's past ghostwriters and psychology experts.

"Hillary hired a psychologist. I won't touch that. But if it's to help get under Donald Trump's skin .... why can't she just — what is she so afraid of?" Kellyanne Conway remarked during an interview on "Fox & Friends."

The New York Times reported on Monday that Clinton's advisers are talking to the ghostwriter of Trump's best-selling book "The Art of the Deal" as well as psychology experts as part of the candidate's debate prep.

Conway continued, asking why Clinton could not merely show up to the first debate next month, "and say I'm going to defend Obamacare that’s been a disaster, I'm going to explain what the heck I meant last month in my convention speech referring to savage terrorists as quote our determined enemies."

"She can explain why she is not for school choice and charters. She doesn't respect home-schoolers," Conway said.

"I mean, why not show up and have debate on the issues? Why all this cage-match stuff, this psychological warfare? It tells you that he knows the issue set don't favor her and it tells you that the only way she can actually win is by trying to make Donald Trump seem so unpalatable," she remarked.

Trump visit

Mexico rages against Trump visit

Reaction from Mexico against the Republican nominee's visit is swift and brutal. 

By Nick Gass

Donald Trump may have accepted the invitation of Mexican President Enrique PeƱa Nieto for a Wednesday meeting in Mexico City, but the Republican presidential nominee is getting the cold shoulder in a country where public views of its own president are already abysmally low.

Reaction was fast and furious among those in the Mexican political cognoscenti.

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox apologized on behalf of the country during an interview on CNN, accusing both Trump and PeƱa Nieto for using the occasion to exploit their own political opportunities.

"It's a very opportunistic move, and I hope U.S. public opinion, U.S. citizens can see this and finally, and finally see what is behind Trump, this false prophet that is just cheating everybody," Fox said during the Skype chat on "New Day" on Wednesday, adding that it is "a desperate move and I don't see how it can work at all."

The only way that inviting Trump makes sense for Mexico would be if PeƱa Nieto gets the Republican nominee to apologize for his past statements about Mexicans, Fox said, admitting that he did not understand the thinking of the current Mexican president while pronouncing Trump's decision to visit "very smart."

Fox had also reacted fiercely to the news Tuesday night, telling Trump that "[t]here is no turning back" from his offensive remarks about Mexicans, Muslims and others that he said "have led you to the pit where you are today."

Added Fox, who previously apologized to the candidate after declaring that Mexico was not going to pay for "that f----ing wall": "¡AdiĆ³s, Trump!"

Trump responded to the CNN interview with a tweet, reminding Fox that he had extended an invitation to visit Mexico along with his apology for using the "f-bomb."

Trump is "not welcome" in her country, former Mexican first lady Margarita Zavala de CalderĆ³n tweeted Wednesday morning, as news broke of the Republican nominee's impending visit and meeting with President Enrique PeƱa Nieto.

"Mexicans have dignity and repudiate his hate speech," she wrote.

Sr. @realDonaldTrump aunque lo hayan invitado, sepa que no es bienvenido. Los mexicanos tenemos dignidad y repudiamos su discurso de odio

Zavala, who has previously expressed a desire to run for the presidency in 2018, previously served in the Mexican Congress in the 1990s.

Her husband, former President Felipe CalderĆ³n, has previously vowed that Mexico would not "pay a single cent for such a stupid wall," telling CNBC in February that Trump is a "not very well-informed man."

"The first loser of such a policy would be the United States," CalderĆ³n said at the time. "If this guy pretends that closing the borders to anywhere either for trade (or) for people is going to provide prosperity to the United States, he is completely crazy."

CalderĆ³n retweeted the message from his wife, as well as the Clinton campaign's statement denouncing Trump anew in light of his meeting with the current Mexican president.

Mexican Senate President Roberto Gil Zuarth tweeted that the invitation to Trump only served to legitimize his "proposal of demagogy and hate."

"We are threatened with war and walls, but we open the National Palace," he wrote, referring to the building housing the country's executive branch.

Former Mexican diplomat Jorge Guajardo, who served as the Mexican consul in Austin and later as the Mexican ambassador to China, also slammed PeƱa Nieto for Trump's visit.

"I am taking suggestions on the best place to hide in Washington. I feel embarrassed as a Mexican thanks to my president. I want to hide," he tweeted.

Public approval of PeƱa Nieto fell to 23 percent in the latest public poll released earlier in August, with approximately three-quarters of Mexicans holding an unfavorable view of the job he is doing as the country's president.

But in another poll conducted in June, Trump's approval rating in the country he has used as a political punching bag was far lower: 2 percent.

Peter Schechter, director of the Adrienne Arsht Latin America Center at the Atlantic Council, said it's clear that the Mexico meeting helps Trump appeal to a broader base. But what it means to PeƱa Nieto isn't as certain.

"Why Pena Nieto wants this meeting is a total mystery. No matter how it is spun, it raises candidate Donald Trump’s profile and legitimacy," he writes. "It will be unpopular with Mexicans, with the Hillary campaign, with all Americans who are worried about attempts to mainstream Trump."

And on Tuesday, a delegation of top Mexican officials, including Foreign Secretary Claudia Ruiz Massieu, were in Wisconsin, where they met with Republican Gov. Scott Walker — a Trump supporter — and marked the opening of a new consulate in Milwaukee.

Mexico is America's third-largest trading partner, and analysts say at least 6 million U.S. jobs depend on trade with Mexico. So many U.S. governors, including Republicans, have tried to keep relations warm, despite the tirades of their party's presidential nominee.

During Tuesday's ceremony in Wisconsin, Walker avoided questions about immigration policies and Trump's call for a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. "One of the things we've stressed is as long as our governor is still coming to Mexico to talk about commerce and trade opportunities, it doesn't matter what the president is doing," Walker said. "We're still going to have a strong relationship."

Cold Election Day reality

Trump chilled by cold Election Day reality

The Republican will strike a moderate tone on immigration as he searches for a path through the swing states.

By Eli Stokols

When Donald Trump walks on stage here Wednesday, he will be guided by anti-immigration zealots to a more moderate sounding platform, one that represents a pragmatic calculation of his Election Day challenge if not a deeper belief in the unforgiving border policy that won him the Republican nomination.

Conflicting advice from Trump’s remade inner circle of advisers—including former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, newly installed campaign manager Kellyanne Conway and campaign CEO Steve Bannon—and the outside counsel of conservative mega-donor Sheldon Adelson have led to a series of muddled statements that have left Trump sounding at times like President Obama and his former GOP rivals on immigration, not a hardliner ready to deport illegal immigrants.

But over the last week, this coterie of aides, together with speechwriter Stephen Miller, has convinced Trump that some moderation in his rhetoric is undeniably necessary if he aims to compete in swing states on Election Day.

“Trump cannot get the current levels of Latino votes he’s getting in Florida, Colorado and Nevada and win,” one campaign source, speaking privately, acknowledged. “He’s just trying to soften the rhetoric just a little bit. They should have understood sooner the logistical impossibility of what they were saying about mass deportations and the potential political damage, but here we are.”

Bannon, the former Breitbart CEO who has long cheered and defended Trump’s immigration policy, “would never” urge Trump to go soft on the issue, according to a source close to the controversial adviser. “He’s still a bomb-thrower,” said another campaign source. “But he knows that a few things need to be done to win this race.”

According to that source, there is “broad agreement” among the inner circle that winning the election will require Trump to put a more humane gloss on his immigration proposals without significantly watering them down.

Conway, who joined the campaign less than three weeks ago, is an experienced pollster who has spent a lot of time message-testing conservative arguments on immigration. Working for Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, now one of Trump’s main allies on Capitol Hill, she presented a template for Republicans in 2014 that called for presenting the issue in economic terms and arguing that immigration is depressing wages for American workers.

In June 2014, she was among several Republican pollsters who offered new research concluding that while a majority of Americans oppose so-called “amnesty” for undocumented immigrants, a majority also “don’t believe ‘deportation’ is a viable policy.

“In fact, there is an overwhelming consensus in support of some kind of legalization for undocumented immigrants,” the report concluded.

In interviews about the speech, Conway has vowed that Trump’s policy will be “fair” and “humane.” But Trump himself has seemed to contradict her suggestions that his policy is at all evolving, while criticizing the media broadly for noticing that it has.

In his remarks Wednesday night, Trump will stick to his “no amnesty” language but stop well short of calling for mass deportations and refusing to consider some extended pathway to legal status for those undocumented immigrants who pay a fine and back taxes. He is expected to emphatically restate his commitment to building a physical wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, aides said Tuesday, beating back suggestions from surrogates that Trump has been speaking metaphorically and planned only to build a “virtual wall.”

And he plans to enumerate his other policy ideas aimed at curbing illegal immigration, from punishing “sanctuary cities” to increasing the number of federal ICE and making E-Verify mandatory, all while explaining the importance of taking these steps for economic and national security reasons.

“It's important that he lay out the 'principles' behind his immigration policy,” said Frank Luntz, a GOP pollster. “He needs to explain why, not just what or how. The public will embrace the details if they embrace the principles. Thus far, he has made declarative statements—but it's not the same.”

Trump will also detour to Mexico before the speech Wednesday, leaving the campaign trail to meet with Mexico’s president to discuss the wall and other border issues. This is not without risk, as President Ernesto Pena Nieto has repeatedly rejected Trump’s assertion that America’s southern neighbor would finance a border wall, and chastised the Republican for his comments about Mexican immigrants.

Trump launched his unlikely presidential bid by broadly painting undocumented immigrants from Mexico as “criminals” and “rapists,” and then surged to the GOP nomination by blasting away at rivals Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz for their alleged openness to “amnesty.” Now, predictably, Trump is struggling to broaden his support and being forced to soften his tone before the election slips away. His speech at the Phoenix Convention Center, delayed a week after the candidate and his team struggled to alight upon a workable position and more mainstream language, now lands as polls show Arizona, a state that’s gone blue just once since 1952, increasingly up for grabs.

In an interview with MSNBC Wednesday, Conway insisted Trump is still firmly opposed to amnesty for undocumented immigrants, but hedged slightly, seemingly excusing her candidate’s apparent waffling by stating that “he also respects it's a complex issue.” The obvious problem is that Trump’s stated views on immigration and the heated rhetoric he used to sell them showed no recognition of those complexities at all. He portrayed several of his primary opponents as weak when they acknowledged the humanity of undocumented immigrants or the implausibility of deporting 11 million of them.

Last August, Trump took issue with Bush’s statement that many undocumented immigrants came to the U.S. as an “act of love,” seeking a better life for their families. “There’s no act of love. It’s tough stuff,” he said at an Aug. 25 press conference. “They’re gonna be gone so fast if I win, your head will spin.” Weeks later during a raucous rally in Dallas, Trump railed against “anchor babies” and vowed to boot undocumented immigrants if elected president. “You people are suffering,” Trump told the Texans. “I’m in New York, but they’re in New York, too. They’re all over the place.”

After a year of such promises that the country’s 11 million undocumented immigrants will all “have to go,” Trump expressed personal misgivings about mass deportations and the impact on families during a town hall last week with Sean Hannity.

In a speech in Iowa Saturday, Trump blamed the media for fixating on the deportation issue, one he used to rile up his supporters at countless rallies and that ultimately propelled him through a crowded and competitive Republican primary field, stating that he would “begin swiftly removing criminal illegal immigrants from this country” on his first day in office. The tough rhetoric was an effort to paper over what is a significant departure from the “deport ‘em all” primary rhetoric Trump used for over a year to vanquish his primary rivals, whose slightest openness to allowing undocumented immigrants to stay he cast as “amnesty”—before arriving at their position himself.

“It is very clear from a policy perspective that his proposal to forcibly deport 11 million people was obviously unworkable and has been so ever since it first passed his lips,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster in Washington who worked for Rubio’s presidential campaign. “But it sold well during the primary because people are frustrated with this problem. It’s harder, of course, to sell it now.”

The incongruity, however, is a problem for which there is no easy solution. Many of Trump’s defenders like Ann Coulter effectively shrugged their shoulders over his hedging, asserting that he wasn’t changing his position. Many of his surrogates hit the airwaves to remind the public that their candidate is new to politics. “Some of these issues are very difficult to talk about,” said Jack Kingston, the former Georgia congressman who is now a Trump surrogate, on CNN.

But on Monday, Rush Limbaugh made it plain that, in his view, Trump’s 14-month-long appeal to the immigration zealots among conservative primary voters was little more than a con job.

“I never took [Trump] seriously on this,” Limbaugh told an angry caller who pointed out the hypocrisy of a candidate and his defenders for excoriating critics of Trump’s deportation proposal and now looking the other way when he’s seemingly abandoning it.

“Nuance is antithetical to his brand, so shifts aren’t credible and make him look weak. Because he demagogued on immigration to win the primaries and mocked his opponents who had thoughtful policy positions on immigration, he has no credibility to soften, tweak or moderate his stance,” said Rob Stutzman, a GOP operative in California. “Ironically, he’s hemmed in by the wall of rhetoric he built over the past 18 months and now it’s his cell.”

On Tuesday, Donald Trump, Jr. insisted that gradually deporting some undocumented immigrants starting with those who have broken the law—essentially the Obama administration’s policy already—and leaving the door open to an indefinite number of future deportations doesn’t amount to any softening of his father’s position. “He didn’t change his stance on anything,” Trump, Jr. insisted during an interview with CNN.

To anti-Trump Republicans who long warned of his likely struggles to win over Hispanics and general election swing voters, the candidate’s recent contortions have been as frustrating as they were predictable.

“It's infuriating to watch Trump, who separated himself from rest of field by taking the extraordinary and extreme position on immigration to get to the right of everybody and tapped into a core constituency—and now it just looks like it's going to be more of the same,” said Rick Tyler, who served as a communications adviser to Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign.

“People are starting to mock Donald Trump now. ‘#AmnestyDon’ was trending on Twitter. And this is all self-inflicted,” Tyler said. “This is Donald Trump not having a core governing philosophy to guide him, and not understanding the entire electorate. He oversold all of this, but I'm not sure he even understood what he was selling."

Fell for old trick

Clinton camp thinks Trump fell for old trick

The Democrat’s team telegraphs a red-state push and then cheers Trump’s detour outside the battleground zone.

By Gabriel Debenedetti

Hillary Clinton’s campaign feels confident. So confident that behind closed doors her team is taking some credit for forcing Donald Trump to seemingly defend territory that Republicans almost never lose.

After weeks of Brooklyn telegraphing a competitive race in traditionally red states and making public moves that look like initial investments — boosting staff, holding fundraisers, and promising more investments — Trump is now campaigning in Arizona, which has voted Republican in 15 of the last 16 elections, while his running mate goes to Georgia, a state that’s gone red in seven of the last eight cycles.

That’s a deployment of precious resources away from swing states that Trump must win to make the Electoral College math work in his favor.

In private, members of Clinton’s team draw a direct line between their activity in those states and Trump's worries there. In public, Democrats are starting to cheer the success.

“This would be the equivalent of Hillary having to campaign in Massachusetts or having to campaign in California, except [to raise] money," said Democratic strategist Chris Lehane, a veteran of Bill Clinton’s campaign and White House teams who remains close to the family’s operation. “Either he has fallen for it hook, line, and sinker, or there are substantive concerns given his changes in some of the margins within specific cohorts of voters. Either way, it’s good news."

Certainly, Trump is hitting the critical swing states too. He has a stop in Ohio on Thursday while Mike Pence had scheduled stops in North Carolina and Florida on Tuesday and Wednesday. But with 69 days to go and polls showing Clinton with beyond-the-margin leads in nine of the 11 states POLITICO identified as battlegrounds, Trump can little afford detours.

Clinton’s camp is now intensifying the effort to spread him thin — a push that has already landed running mate Tim Kaine in a handful of red states, put both Bill Clinton and Barack Obama in Atlanta to raise money for the Democratic nominee this month, and seen the campaign join the Democratic National Committee in circulating a direct mail piece — obtained by POLITICO — in Utah, a state that has voted for every Republican nominee since Barry Goldwater.

“You care about your community and the future of this country,” reads the mailer, featuring a concerned-looking woman holding a mug on the front. “That’s why the thought of Donald Trump as President is so alarming."

But there’s a reason the Democratic cheering has remained behind closed doors, even beyond the risk of publicly giving away their game: Trump’s irregular travel comes at a rough stretch for Clinton, whose team has not capitalized on her advantage by sending the candidate into the battleground states.

Earlier in the summer while Trump was accusing Clinton of “hiding,” she was holding lower-profile public events in states like Florida and Colorado, looking to generate positive local coverage while cable news went wall-to-wall with Trump’s controversies. But more recently, apart from one headline-grabbing speech in Nevada last week and an address in Ohio on Wednesday, Clinton has almost exclusively stuck to private fundraising events in the liberal strongholds of Massachusetts, California, and New York — all while dogged by questions about the Clinton Foundation.

Nonetheless, the fact remains that Democrats are cheered by Trump’s schedule, which is keeping him from focusing more narrowly on his for-the-win map.

To Clinton’s allies, Trump’s decision to hold Wednesday’s immigration speech in Arizona rather than Nevada, where the presidential race is much tighter and a state the Republican likely needs to carry to have a shot at the White House, underscores just how distracted he is by Democrats’ activities in red states.

Even Trump advisors defend the candidates’ travel, but acknowledge it’s an unorthodox time to be going into deep-red territory.

Pence “is doing fundraising among other things, which is important,” said former Georgia Rep. Jack Kingston, a campaign advisor, of the vice presidential nominee’s trip to the state — which had three public, non-fundraising events attached to it. “I just think that by sending Trump down [to heavily Republican areas] now, it’s out of the way. But Trump has a 50-state vision."

If anything reveals the lack of aggression with which Clinton is for now approaching the red states it’s the lack of ad buys.

In Utah, for example, Clinton placed an op-ed in the Deseret News a day before her husband raised cash in Park City. Before long, top policy aide Jake Sullivan stopped through Salt Lake City to open an office there. But Clinton’s team has yet to drop a dime on television advertising there, nor has it in Arizona. There, it’s been involved with helping organize the state party’s field presence on the ground, said Rep. Ruben Gallego.

“It’s a state that elected the alpha and beta forms of Trump: [former] Governor [Jan] Brewer and Sheriff Joe Arpaio,” he said ahead of Trump’s speech there. “The fact that he’s coming here shows they’re worried, and they should be worried."

(“Now you’re just being silly,” said Trump campaign communications advisor Jason Miller. “Wednesday is an illegal immigration speech, so of course we’re going to do it in a border state.”)

Such head fakes are classic campaign tactics, but they rarely appear to have the immediate effect of sending one’s opponent or running mate to a targeted state.

It's true that Trump is still likely to win Georgia, Arizona, and Utah. But, in addition to his and Pence’s travel, he is now spending critical campaign cash on operatives in Georgia, and even in South Carolina — where a pair of Democratic Party-sponsored polls have shown another unexpectedly tight contest.

Meanwhile, even Clinton herself has signaled that she wants the expansion to continue. She wants to win, she privately told campaign donors in Easthampton, N.Y. on Monday, “as resoundingly as possible."

Red and white...


 




 

August 30, 2016

Whitman to campaign for Clinton

Meg Whitman to campaign for Clinton in Denver

The California Republican will be Clinton's first aisle-crossing supporter to go on the trail for her.

 By Gabriel Debenedetti

Hillary Clinton’s campaign has been touting the support of high-profile Republicans opposed to Donald Trump for weeks, but those GOP leaders have yet to actually appear for Clinton on the campaign trail.

Until Tuesday, that is.

Meg Whitman, the Hewlett-Packard executive and former California Republican nominee for governor, is set to make her battleground state debut for Clinton in Denver, beginning to answer the question of how Clinton will publicly use her aisle-crossing backers in the campaign's homestretch.

Just days after joining Clinton for multiple stops on her latest behind-closed-doors political fundraising tour in California, Whitman will convene a breakfast with local business leaders in Colorado, according to the campaign.

It’s a safe spot to debut Clinton’s most prominent Republican surrogate. The Democrat has consistently led Trump in Colorado, a traditional swing state.

While Clinton and her campaign have looked to bring on more GOP backers of all stripes, her fundraising team has also mounted a large-scale push to win over longtime Republican donors, frequently pointing to Whitman as the prime example of their success so far.

Big Weed

How Big Alcohol Is About to Get Rich Off California Weed

With recreational marijuana on the ballot, some worry that big business will transform the way pot is grown, distributed and sold.

By Sara Solovitch

More than 20 years later, Hezekiah Allen remembers the Blackhawk helicopters hovering over his childhood home, the armed soldiers barricading the road to the family’s northern California pot farm, the neighbor who hang-glided to escape from the Feds. More than once, Allen came home from a friend’s house to find his mother and stepfather had been arrested again.

Allen eventually entered the family business and was himself arrested in 2009 for cultivation and intent to sell. The charges, dropped for lack of evidence, didn’t impede his ambitions: in 2014, he ran unsuccessfully for California State Assembly on an environmental platform. A few months after bowing out, the scruffy 30-year-old college-dropout, who was by then the executive director of a coalition of small-farm marijuana growers, moved to Sacramento and elbowed his way into negotiations over new rules governing how medical marijuana would be grown, distributed and sold.

“Our parents wanted to get back to the land. We want to get back into the system,” says Allen, who grew up in a house with no plumbing. “I’ve been lying my whole life about who I am and what my family did. Now I’m addicted to telling the truth.”

In Sacramento, he insisted that growers be treated like farmers of any other crop. Most important, he won the removal of a limit on the number of growing licenses for small farms. But the price of that legitimacy has been steep and it is about to redefine the nature of the marijuana industry in ways that make many of its most committed supporters deeply uncomfortable. California’s iconic counter-culture drug is about to be treated just like a six-pack of beer.

Under the new regulations, licensed distributors were given control over measurement, taxing and testing for all medical marijuana before it can move to the retailer. The rules are modeled on the system that emerged at the end of Prohibition to wrest control from mobsters and their illegal liquor empires. States required wholesalers to bring alcohol from the manufacturer to the retailer, a system that has proven fantastically lucrative for distribution companies. Some of those players are now poised to make millions of dollars as the middlemen in California’s burgeoning medical marijuana market.

The familiar alcohol distribution model gives comfort to California law enforcement and state regulators who still view marijuana growers with suspicion, even 20 years after medical marijuana was legalized. But it runs counter to the 22 other states that have legalized marijuana in some form where cultivators sell their wares directly to retailers.

“We made some challenging compromises and the distributor model was by far the most challenging,” acknowledges Allen, who found himself allied with interests like law enforcement he and his family once considered enemies. “But it was the foundation for what we’ve done.”

It might also be the foundation for marijuana policy across the country. In November, Californians will vote to legalize marijuana for recreational use, a ballot initiative that has received backing from Napster’s Sean Parker and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who’s running for governor in 2018. Polls indicate 60 percent support for the measure, which, if passed, is expected to grow the state’s $2.7 billion marijuana market into an industry worth $15 billion or more in five years. Hedge fund managers, venture capitalists and savvy entrepreneurs have begun flooding into the arena, alert to opportunities for legal profits that dangled out of reach when marijuana was underground. The sheer size of California’s market (U.S. sales totaled $5.7 billion in 2015), along with pressure from prominent marijuana policy advocates, could influence other states contemplating legalization (there are eight with measures on the ballot this fall) and permanently shape the regulatory landscape nationally.

But the transformation is causing discomfort within California’s community of renegade pot growers, many of whom worry that their long wished for legitimacy may end with them being coopted by the implacable force of corporate America.

Not so, says Allen, who argues that the alcohol distribution model will ultimately prove the guardian of that very culture. “There’s going to be big business in this industry, we can’t keep it out,” he concedes. “[With this model], we can put all the distributors in the Big Business box and we keep the boutique businesses for ourselves. Yeah, this is big money, big business, but it’s contained.”

The legalization of marijuana in California has created some unlikely allies—growers like Allen and the cops who used to bust them. But it has also created some unlikely foes. One of the loudest critics of the proposed recreational use law—and by extension of Allen—is the so-called “father of the legal cannabis market.”

Steve DeAngelo, 58, is owner of Oakland’s Harborside Health Center, the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the country (and possibly the world), president of The ArcView Group, an influential marijuana investor network, and co-founder of Steep Hill Labs, a commercial chain of marijuana testing labs.

Over the last few months he has stoked growers’ fears in op-eds (published in the San Francisco Chronicle) and video clips (on his website), claiming that mandatory distribution will jack up the price of medical marijuana, add red tape, slow down the supply chain and reinforce the black market.

DeAngelo has made some headway among the growers, including some of the 650 farmers that Allen’s group represents. They fear the new law will bring about their demise. They worry that their already thin profit margins will be further whittled away by distribution charges that could climb as high as 30 percent.

Sunshine Johnston, who manages a 2,500- square-foot farm in the Eel River Valley south of Eureka, is one of the growers who is most skeptical.

“I’ve been growing for close to 30 years, doing it for supplemental income – though I don’t even know if income’s the word,” says Johnston, who’s also a winemaker and distributor. “This is my time now. The big-time growers, you had your time, you made your money during the Green Rush.

“But it’s complicated,” she continues. “A lot of growers are thinking only about law enforcement and getting Water Quality enforcement off their backs. What they don’t realize is by January 1, 2018, if you’re operating a commercial grow and you don’t have a cultivation license and aren’t in the process of getting one—it’s just a cease and desist order. That can be thousands of dollars a day. And it could be ugly when the IRS comes in in a few years and businesses get audited. We do want to keep all our small farmers. They hold the culture. They hold the innovation. If we lose the small farmers we’re going to lose a lot.”

Growers, as well as small business leaders, contend that this new highly regulated system will operate like the alcohol industry, where Budweiser and Coors rule shelf space and small craft brewers struggle for distribution.

“It’s such an archaic model,” says Kyle Sherman, CEO of Flowhub, a Colorado company that does `seed-to-sale’ tracking for retailers across the United States, to make sure they stay compliant with multiple state laws. “In a world of Uber, who needs taxis? Why do we have to go back to these old models that provide no added value?”

Because, some say, groups with deep pockets to spend on political lobbying wanted it that way. Groups like the Teamsters.

“We concluded it was the best model for us and we proceeded to forge an alliance with law enforcement and local government because we thought that it fit their needs as well,” says Barry Broad, legislative director of the California Teamsters Public Affairs Council.

Broad acknowledges the potential gain to the Teamsters’ organization.

“I’m not hiding our self interest. This is a growing industry and we’d like it to grow unionized,” he says. “To have local government, organized labor and law enforcement all together is a pretty potent alliance. What’s on the other side? A couple marijuana people with illusions of grandeur?”

He is referring here to DeAngelo, who was recently named one of the seven most powerful people in the marijuana industry by Fortune magazine. Yet for all his power, DeAngelo hasn’t managed to stop “the rollover by alcohol.”

“It’s a payoff to the liquor industry,” DeAngelo says. “They’re using the same strategies, drawing from the same capital pool, and they have the same problematic culture as the liquor industry. There’s a thin fig leaf of being independent, but in fact this is the alcohol industry making a play for cannabis.”

His accusations are targeted at a retired 78-year-old liquor executive named Ted Simpkins who last year set up a marijuana distribution company called RVR, also known as River Wellness or River Collective, based in West Sacramento.

Simpkins, who declined to be interviewed for this story, is by most accounts a formidable businessman. As senior manager of the Florida-based Southern Wine & Spirits, the country’s largest liquor distributor with $12 billion in revenues, he earned $7.8 million a year in salary and bonus compensations. That figure was made known in a 2011 federal lawsuit filed by Southern Wine & Spirits, which accused Simpkins of breaching a restrictive covenant after he jumped ship for a competitor. The judge ruled in favor of Simpkins, who was until recently the owner of an esteemed Sonoma vineyard, Lancaster Estates.

During the 2015-16 state legislative session, Simpkins’ company paid out $134,500 for lobbying of medical marijuana distribution, the very rules that Allen helped negotiate, according to California disclosure filings.

RVR invested heavily in other ways, too, leasing a 17,237-square-foot storage and distribution warehouse in West Sacramento and investing in armored vehicles to transport cannabis around the state. After the state announced it would embrace mandatory distribution, the members of CGA, Allen’s group, were surprised to learn that they now shared the same Sacramento lobbyist as RVR.

“It’s pretty common for lobbyists to represent different clients,” says Allen. “We reviewed the potential conflicts and decided there wasn’t one.”

His chief critic remains skeptical.

“I don’t think Hezekiah has the political experience to outwit and outplay the people he’s made alliances with – people like the Teamsters and RVR, who are very accomplished political players,” says DeAngelo.

The hostilities between Allen and DeAngelo are a microcosm of the relationship that has festered between pot growers and the dispensaries that have sold their product ever since legalization 20 years ago.

As the 1996 law was written, the only regulated and licensed participants were the dispensaries. They operated in the open while the growers continued to be treated as outlaws; no legal distinction had been made between growers who were supplying dispensaries and those who might be raising high-grade pot for the black market. That gave the dispensaries leverage and led to a common complaint from growers—that the dispensaries often reneged on agreed upon prices and then turned around and commanded top dollar from their customers over the counter.

“Cannabis is the epitome of the free market supply and demand model,” says Stephen Dillon, executive manager of the Humboldt Sun Growers Guild, a CGA member. “We’re going into a stage where the supply is growing and growing. The prices are dropping, dropping, dropping.”

But while the prices to farmers have fallen from about $3,000 to about $1,400 a pound, the dispensaries have continued to realize a profit of 200 to 400 percent, according to Dillon.

“That doesn’t create the best feeling,” he says. “And that’s why the dispensaries are so against the distributors. It’s going to come to light. It’s their hidden nest egg, they’ve had all the power, and that’s going to change.”

Allen doesn’t hesitate to share his personal grievances. Four years ago, he drove the 290 miles from his farm in Humboldt to Harborside in Oakland, a pound of marijuana in his car. The dispensary had promised $2,200 on the phone, but when he presented the product a clerk adjusted the price to $1,100 – take it or leave it – with a lecture on the proper curing method of delicate buds.

It was, says Allen, a humiliating experience. “I’ve been doing this since I was six and you don't get to make me feel like crap and offer me half of what it’s worth.”

That longstanding grudge would lead to major repercussions down the road. Harborside’s owner, DeAngelo, had not only founded the organization that morphed into CGA; he had a seat on the board. As Allen embraced the new alcohol model, his relationship with DeAngelo grew increasingly strained. The young man spoke openly of “bad blood.” The father of legal cannabis alluded to betrayal. In March 2015 Allen accepted the resignation of DeAngelo from the board of CGA. DeAngelo was replaced by an executive from RVR, the company established by Ted Simpkins, the retired alcohol distribution executive.

What is going on in California has a chance to influence the rest of the country. Voters in eight other states will decide this November whether to legalize the medical or recreational use of marijuana. And the organization behind most of these initiatives is the Marijuana Policy Project.

MPP, the nation’s most prominent cannabis reform organization, has been instrumental in writing many of the initiatives in the 23 states where cannabis has already been approved in one form or another. As a result, they have generally reflected a corporate-friendly libertarian approach, one based on commercial, for-profit goals. MPP is founded and directed by Rob Kampia, who in 2000 ran for Washington, D.C.’s congressional seat as a member of the Libertarian party.

In April, Kampia unnerved health policy experts by his blunt and unapologetic embrace of the alcohol industry. At a national cannabis forum, he described how he successfully sought a buy-in from alcohol distributors in return for lucrative concessions in Nevada. The ballot initiative, known as Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, gives preference to 18 alcohol distributors for the first 18 months after it passes. Alcohol distributors committed $200,000 to the initiative, which will appear on the Nevada ballot this November.

“Therefore we wrote them into the initiative,” Kampia tells POLITICO, adding that he’d been reaching out for months to alcohol distributors around the country before he actually got a bite.

“The (alcohol) manufacturers might have a little to lose, they’re the first tier. The second tier – the wholesalers/distributors – should be interested because they already have a distribution system in place. It’s easy enough for them to put marijuana on their trucks.

“The retailers! They should be courting us actually. Because we write the laws. And the retailers are writing themselves out of the game, because they’re not showing us any love.”

Kampia sees no downside. Public health experts suggest otherwise. They say that most state initiatives on cannabis legalization have replicated the same mistakes once made around Big Tobacco – marketing and glamorizing a product that in retrospect demanded government regulation.

“To me, the strongest argument against legalization has never been the cannabis plant,” says Keith Humphreys, a Stanford University drug policy expert and co-chairman of California’s Commission on Marijuana Policy. “It’s our experience with tobacco and alcohol, and our inability to regulate those industries well. I’ve worked to regulate these companies all over the world and they usually win. The question is how can you do this without corporate takeover? Buying legislators flat out? Throwing money around?”

The corporate takeover is already underway. Dillon, of the Humboldt Growers Guild, ran into it head on at a 2014 national cannabis convention in Las Vegas.

“I looked around and saw 3,000 to 4,000 people and they were almost all hedge fund managers, stockbrokers and venture capitalists, all trying to figure out a way into this business. They had no soul, no spark in their eyes. They care about the bottom line. For us, cannabis is about more than that.”

The big money investors concede that small growers like Dillon should be alarmed. California already produces 10 times more marijuana than it can consume, according to the state Board of Equalization. The corporate transplants – MBAs from Goldman Sachs and Ernst & Young – are flooding the market, hiring government policy experts, land use teams, and community relations wizards. And the future is no longer in 10,000-square-foot lots; it’s in farms that are eight times as large. Growers who’ve staked their claims on steep land with little access to roads and water will find it difficult if not impossible to be compliant with the state’s new regulations, as corporate analysts are quick to point out.

“The ones who are not evolving are the ones who lose,” warns Leslie Bocskor, who has been called “the Warren Buffett” of the cannabis industry. As CEO of New York-based Electrum Partners, Bocskor is developing a $25-million hedge fund to meet the anticipated demand for cannabis investment on a state-by-state basis.

The real money, “the on-ramp” to the cannabis industry, is in distribution. That’s where he’s telling his clients to invest.

“Evolve or die. If you don't make the transition, you won’t find yourself participating,” he says. “I can easily see a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Cannabis.”

It’s a warm July night in Oakland when Hezekiah Allen arrives at the meeting of Supernova Women, “a space for women of color in cannabis,” as the group describes itself. The advocacy group was founded by several women, including Tsion (“Sunshine”) Lencho, a Stanford Law graduate who left one of the nation’s top legal firms to start a practice focused on marijuana. Lencho is determined to bring minority and marginalized women into an emerging industry that has up to now resulted in mass incarceration. The regulatory process is complex and Lencho’s organization is focused on creating access for minority women in the areas of cultivation, delivery services, and the manufacturing of tinctures and edibles. This meeting is part of her mission—to provide free community education about legal permitting, city statutes and the ins and outs of good business practice.

Standing at the back of a windowless, cinderblock basement, awaiting his turn to talk, Allen suddenly remembers the thrift store jacket stuffed inside his vinyl laptop bag. It’s crumpled but he slips it on over his T-shirt for a more professional look. This is just one of seven informational meetings he would attend that week, traveling by Amtrak up and down the state to explain the new laws and drum up membership for the CGA, which has expanded beyond growers to include retailers, processors, distributors and labs.

There are 150 people in the room and many of them— Allen acknowledges—are among those most impacted by America’s Drug War. “It’s an inspiration,” he begins. “This,” he gestures at the crowd, “the center of all the injustice…”

He briefly alludes to the new distribution model and says he is happy to talk about it “if anyone wants to know.” But then he quickly moves on to the good news: the fact that there are no caps on the number of cultivation licenses. “When I moved to Sacramento in 2014, the leading proposal was 30 cultivation licenses statewide. I bet you there’s more than 30 people in this room.” The crowd whoops in agreement.

“If there were a limit on 30 cultivation licenses it would have been a pretty serious impact on our communities,” Allen continues. “And so we started in a pretty deep hole at the end of 2014, trying to dig ourselves out of that.”

“We want to be sure there’s the lowest possible barrier going forward,” he tells them. “Before too long we’re going to be business owners and not criminals.”

Allen speaks easily, like an actor who doesn’t need a microphone to project to the back of the room. Politics, he tells them, is “all about being at the table. If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.”

6-year term?

Rubio won't commit to serving 6-year term

By Nolan D. McCaskill

Marco Rubio on Monday refused to commit to serving a full six-year term in the Senate should he win reelection. And the former Republican presidential candidate subtly suggested that if he ran for the White House again, he would be prepared to leave politics behind if he lost.

“No one can make that commitment because you don’t know what the future’s gonna hold in your life personally or politically,” the Florida senator told CNN on Monday, opening the door for a presidential run when asked if he could commit to a full Senate term before seemingly slamming it shut in the next breath.

Rubio, who’s expected to win the primary in his Senate race Tuesday, leads Democrat Patrick Murphy by nearly 6 percentage points in the RealClearPolitics average of state polls. Murphy, a Florida congressman, is favored to prevail in his primary against Rep. Alan Grayson.

Murphy seized on Rubio’s comment that “no one” could make such a commitment, retweeting his remarks while boasting, “I can.”

Rubio initially vowed to return to private life if his presidential run failed. But the Florida senator was encouraged by his GOP allies in the Senate to seek reelection and ultimately did, telling CNN in June that he simply changed his mind.

And, although he left the door open to another presidential bid, Rubio was noncommittal Monday about his future plans.

“I can commit to you this, and that is that if I am running to be a U.S. senator, I am fully prepared to allow the U.S. Senate to be the last political office I ever hold,” he said.

Rubio’s statements are in keeping with his pledge last year to seek the presidency or retire from politics — only to reverse himself.

As he runs for reelection, Rubio has been walking a fine line with regard to the Republican presidential nominee, putting some distance between himself and Donald Trump while refusing to disavow him.

Rubio dismissed Trump’s deportation force as an unrealistic proposal but maintained that a wall should be built across key sectors of the U.S.-Mexico border, though he cautioned that Mexico will not pay for it, as Trump has said since he launched his campaign. And the senator also downplayed his past criticisms of the real estate mogul.

“Right now the primary’s over. The Republican voters have chosen a nominee and we have a choice between two people,” he said. “I do disagree with Donald on a number of things. I disagree with Hillary Clinton on everything.”

So far, polls indicate Rubio's effort might be working. Trump is generally behind Clinton in Florida polling while Rubio leads in a general-election matchup against Murphy.

Rubio’s campaign said he ran for reelection because he wants to serve Floridians — and took a parting shot at his likely opponent.

“Unlike Patrick Murphy, Marco has been there for Floridians and will continue to fight for them,” Rubio press secretary Olivia Perez-Cubas said in a statement.

Dakota Oil Pipeline Blockade

Why There’s a Media Blackout on the Native American Dakota Oil Pipeline Blockade

By Nick Bernabe

As the Lakota Sioux continue their peaceful blockade of the $3.8 billion Dakota Access Pipeline, the story’s absence from the national media narrative is palpable. Considering the corporate media’s chronic quest for controversial stories on government versus public standoffs, you’d think this situation would garner the typical media frenzy invoked during a right-wing militia occupation of a federal building, for example, or a tense standoff between the Black Lives Matter movement and police. But it’s not.

As of late, the media has faced criticism for its selective coverage of certain events — like, say, focusing on single terror attacks in Western Europe that garner thousands of headlines while basically ignoring similar or worse attacks that occur on a constant basis in Muslim-majority countries.

But the confrontation unfolding in North Dakota, in particular, is strikingly similar to the recent standoff at the Malheur Wildlife Refuge in Oregon, which involved a right-wing militia advocating land rights against the federal government. The militia was led by the controversial Bundy family, which previously drew sensationalized coverage during a similar standoff in Nevada in 2014. So why were these stories covered extensively while the other — also centered around land rights — has been mostly ignored?

The first point is actually very simple: Native Americans standing up for themselves is not polarizing. In an age of institutionalized media divisiveness and hyper-partisanship, the story of Native Americans in North Dakota fighting for land and water rights just doesn’t fit the script of deep, societal divides plaguing the nation’s law and order, nor does it fit in with the left-right paradigm. People from both sides of the political spectrum pretty much agree that Native Americans have been screwed by the U.S. government and resource-snatching corporations long enough. Considering this sentiment, there’s really no exploitable controversy on this issue from the mainstream media perspective, which inherently drives topical, superficial news narratives.

It’s easy to create a controversy out of right-wing white nationalist militias occupying an obscure federal wildlife preserve building (if that sounds petty and not exactly newsworthy, that’s because it was petty and not exactly newsworthy). I witnessed liberals so incensed by the Oregon occupiers they were calling for the FBI to literally gun them down. Meanwhile, the alt-right movement hailed them as heroes and harbingers of the second American Revolution. It made for a great, divisive controversy. But in the end, nothing was accomplished. It was topical. It was superficial. It was essentially meaningless — and the media loved it so much it dedicated a month’s worth of prime time TV coverage to it.

In contrast, the only thing the mainstream media would accomplish by publicizing the growing tribal opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline would be to effectively kill the prospects of the pipeline. Providing ongoing coverage would likely inspire national outrage toward the oil company, Dakota Access LLC, and the government agencies currently trying to evict the indigenous people from their own ancestral lands.

It’s important to understand that the media doesn’t always cover certain stories just because they’re actually newsworthy. Often, the media’s coverage is intended to promote and drive narratives, and the divisive flavor has been a top seller for a long time. This coverage has accomplished at least one thing in the United States: the country is now the most divided it’s been in a very long time. Maybe that has been the media’s intention all along.

The second and more obvious reason why mainstream outlets have not focused on the situation in North Dakota is money — oil money, to be exact. The corporate media in the United States is deeply in bed with oil interests. From fracking advertisements on MSNBC to individuals on Big Oil’s payroll literally working for Fox News and the Wall Street Journal, the ties cannot be understated. Why would mainstream media publicize a standoff that could potentially kill an oil pipeline when their own financial interests would be negatively affected? The answer is they wouldn’t.

And there you have it. That’s why right-wing militias pointlessly occupying a wildlife refuge is one of the biggest stories of the century but Native Americans stopping the construction of a multibillion-dollar pipeline isn’t worth a single headline on CNN.

Reagan solicitor can't take Trump...

Reagan solicitor general: Donald Trump is a risk we can't take

By Charles Fried

It was urgent that Hillary Clinton in her Reno speech indict Donald Trump for his regular, unremitting embrace of the slogans, causes and emblems of the far right (not conservative, please!) hate-mongering fringe of our public discourse.

This is not just an accidental association. It is his chosen signature. Remember, he was an enthusiastic birther and has gone on to embrace every sinister paranoid fantasy since.

These are not ghosts you can raise just when it seems convenient or because a particular crowd might thrill to them and then when the time comes to govern you can waive aside and pretend you never summoned them. You lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas. And these fleas carry the disease of virulent hatred and discord.

I have a sense for these things. I am not, like Judge Gonzalo Curiel, just the child of immigrants but an immigrant myself. I was four years old when my family and I fled Prague just after the Nazis invaded. I was 13 when I raised my hand and swore an oath of allegiance to the United States and became a citizen. That was a privilege and it was an even greater privilege when Chief Justice Warren Burger administered a very similar oath to me and I was able to serve my country and the Constitution as Ronald Reagan's solicitor general.

I am a student of the history of the man and the movement who drove me and my family out of a young but prosperous and real democracy. He ranted and gestured and whipped up his people with streams of hatred and invective for those he accused of betraying them, stabbing them in the back, polluting their "race," and promised that, if the people would follow him, tomorrow would belong to them.

I only met Ronald Reagan, the president I served, once for any length of time. He hosted a lunch at the White House for the justices of the Supreme Court and the members of his administration who worked before that court.

Reagan sat across from Thurgood Marshall and that whole lunch he and Marshall laughed and joked and swapped football stories. My mother, who had revered President Franklin D. Roosevelt as the savior of Europe, loved "Ronnie," but not his neckties.

I could see why she admired him. He was a firm but good man, who hated no one, who could work with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik to start ridding the world of nuclear weapons, yet tell him to his face with a genial grin "Trust, but verify" in painfully learned Russian, and who could stand before the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and say, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." And he never once told people how smart he was -- he was smart and secure enough to think it was to his advantage to let people underestimate him.

Can you imagine him insulting a Gold Star mother, casting obscene aspersions on a woman reporter who had done her job -- on Fox, indeed -- by tough questioning, pledging to round up and deport 12 million undocumented men, women and children? One of Reagan's iconic moments had to do with tearing walls down. Trump asks forever to be remembered as the man who will build a "great wall."

Trump tells us that we need to rebuild our schools, roads, bridges, airports; so does Hillary Clinton. But he is going to cut everyone's taxes in order to pay for it. I believe her; I don't believe him because what he promises is simply unbelievable. And now he tells us Mexicans are great people; that maybe he won't deport all those people after all; that the insults he hurls about like confetti were not really meant to hurt anyone's feelings.

This is a man about whom the best you can say is that he doesn't believe anything he says. After that, it's downhill all the way. Hillary Clinton will give us a decent, competent, understandable government. That's plenty good enough for me, and considering the truly dreadful alternative, it's good enough for increasing numbers of my fellow Republicans.

Are they watching us???

SETI has observed a “strong” signal that may originate from a Sun-like star

The star is located 95 light years from Earth and has at least one confirmed planet.

By Eric Berger

It remains only the barest of probabilities that astronomers have just found evidence of extraterrestrial, intelligent life. Nevertheless, in the community of astronomers and other scientists who use radio telescopes to search the heavens for beacons of life there is considerable excitement about a new signal observed by a facility in Russia.

According to Paul Gilster, author of the Centauri Dreams website, the Italian astronomer Claudio Maccone and other astronomers affiliated with the search for extraterrestrial intelligence have detected "a strong signal in the direction of HD164595." HD 164595 is a star of 0.99 solar masses about 95 light years from Earth, with an estimated age of 6.3 billion years. The system is known to have at least one planet, HD 164595 b, which is similar in size to Neptune and orbits its star in 40 days. Other planets may exist in the system as well.

The observation was made with the RATAN-600 radio telescope in Zelenchukskaya, in southern Russia, Gilster reports. He cautioned that the evidence is very preliminary:

No one is claiming that this is the work of an extraterrestrial civilization, but it is certainly worth further study. Working out the strength of the signal, the researchers say that if it came from an isotropic beacon, it would be of a power possible only for a Kardashev Type II civilization. If it were a narrow beam signal focused on our Solar System, it would be of a power available to a Kardashev Type I civilization. The possibility of noise of one form or another cannot be ruled out, and researchers in Paris led by Jean Schneider are considering the possible microlensing of a background source by HD164595. But the signal is provocative enough that the RATAN-600 researchers are calling for permanent monitoring of this target.

More information may be forthcoming soon. According to Gilster, the discovery and work to understand its origin will be discussed at a SETI committee meeting during the 67th International Astronautical Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico, on Tuesday, September 27.

Ars contacted Nick Suntzeff, a Texas A&M University astronomer, for insight into what this signal at 11Ghz might be if it were not of alien origin. "If this were a real astronomical source, it would be rather strange," Suntzeff told Ars. Although there are mysterious, high-energy astrophysical phenomenon called “fast radio bursts” that are seen at a few gigahertz, they last only 10 milliseconds or so (this event lasted longer). Unfortunately, he said, there is no information given about the strength of the signal as a function of frequency.

Suntzeff added that he would not be surprised if the signal was due to a terrestrial origin, because it was observed in part of the radio spectrum used by the military. "God knows who or what broadcasts at 11Ghz, and it would not be out of the question that some sort of bursting communication is done between ground stations and satellites," he said. "I would follow it if I were the astronomers, but I would also not hype the fact that it may be at SETI signal given the significant chance it could be something military."