Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Another Trumpian rat bastard (behold the hypocrisy!)

DEVIN NUNES’S FAMILY FARM IS HIDING A POLITICALLY EXPLOSIVE SECRET
BY RYAN LIZZA (Esquire)
     Devin Nunes has a secret. Nunes is the California Republican and chairman of the House Intelligence Committee who has become famous in the Trump era for using his position as a battering ram to discredit the Russia investigation and protect Donald Trump at all costs, even if it means shredding his own reputation and the independence of the historically nonpartisan committee in the process.
. . .
     Nunes grew up in a family of dairy farmers in Tulare, California, and as long as he has been in politics, his family dairy has been central to his identity and a feature of every major political profile written about him. A March story in National Review is emblematic. It describes how Nunes’s family emigrated from the Azores in Portugal to California’s Central Valley, “a fertile, sunny Eden,” and how the family “worked and saved enough money to buy a 640-acre farm outside Tulare.” The soil of the Central Valley is depicted as almost sacred in these articles. National Review quotes a 1912 Portuguese immigrant farmer who wrote that when he grabs a clump of dirt, “I feel as if I had just shaken hands with all my ancestors.” As recently as July 27, the lead of a Wall Street Journal editorial-page piece about Nunes, which featured a Tulare dateline, emphasized the dairy: “It’s 105 degrees as I stand with Rep. Devin Nunes on his family’s dairy farm.” Last year, Nunes noted in an interview with the Daily Beast—headline: “The Dairy Farmer Overseeing U. S. Spies and the Russia Hack Investigation”—“I’m pretty simple. I like agriculture.” The Daily Beast noted, “The cows are not far from his mind. He keeps in regular contact with his brother and father about their dairy farm.”
     So here’s the secret: The Nunes family dairy of political lore—the one where his brother and parents work—isn’t in California. It’s in Iowa. Devin; his brother, Anthony III; and his parents, Anthony Jr. and Toni Dian, sold their California farmland in 2006. Anthony Jr. and Toni Dian, who has also been the treasurer of every one of Devin’s campaigns since 2001, used their cash from the sale to buy a dairy eighteen hundred miles away in Sibley, a small town in northwest Iowa where they—as well as Anthony III, Devin’s only sibling, and his wife, Lori—have lived since 2007. Devin’s uncle Gerald still owns a dairy back in Tulare, which is presumably where The Wall Street Journal’s reporter talked to Devin, and Devin is an investor in a Napa Valley winery, Alpha Omega, but his immediate family’s farm—as well as his family—is long gone.
. . .
     Other dairy farmers in the area [Sibley, Iowa] helped me understand why the Nunes family might be so secretive about the farm: Midwestern dairies tend to run on undocumented labor.
. . .
     In the heart of [Trump supporter] Steve King’s district, a place that is more pro-Trump than almost any other patch of America, the economy is powered by workers that King and Trump have threatened to arrest and deport….

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Utterly contemptible but another example of deceptions in the ranks of some Republican loud mouths.

Anonymous said...

Mr B, have you seen the show Glow?

-Bohrstein (as anonymous)

Roy Bauer said...

—Bohrstein, is the you? Long time, no hear.
Nope, haven't seen "Glow." Have seen "Killing Eve" and "Mr. Mercedes." Like 'em.

Anonymous said...

It is me!

I'll check these out. I highly recommend Glow. Maniac is also pretty good. (Both are Netflix content specifically).

I'm re-watching Dexter. It triggers old mental habits it seems (I.e. trolling Dissent, thinking about biology homework, etc.). Brains are weird.

Are you still teaching?

Roy Bauer said...

yep, still teaching in my old age. Same everything. Same good, same evil.

Anonymous said...

That kind of stability is enviable. Good on you.

-BS

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...