Wednesday, July 18, 2018

BOOM! Thanks to NYT, the Trump saga enters a new and darker phase, starting tomorrow

Why muddy a clear message of a nation in danger?

From the Start, Trump Has Muddied a Clear Message: Putin Interfered (NYT)

By DAVID E. SANGER and MATTHEW ROSENBERG
July 19

     If the Times has this right, Trump has known that Putin ordered the interference with our election since early January, 2017.
     That means that Trump has been protecting his pal Putin all this time. He's been obstructing justice.
     BOOM!

The "resignation" episode?



Aargh! Things are gettin' Biblical!












Fox on Trump: "[he] sounds insane"



Quick! Clean up!
Press conference clip:
00:23
Reporter: “Is Russia still targeting the US, Mr. President?”
Trump: “no.”
01:10
Trump: “There’s never been a President as tough on Russia as I have been.”

Fox gang:
01:18
Fox host 1: "All right, so the President there talking about, uh, his record with Russia—'as well as anybody has ever done with Russia'...."
. . .
Fox host 2: [Trump was asked:] “‘Are they [the Russians] still meddling?’… and [Trump] said ‘no,’ … all he said was ‘no,’ which sounds insane.”
Clean up the clean-up!
Fox host 3: “It does sound insane.”
Fox host 2: “It could be that he believes we’re stopping the meddling at this point….”
Fox host 3: “We’re working really hard to make this sound reasonable….”
Fox host 2: "No no no no, I’m not working hard to make it sound reasonable, because it doesn’t sound remotely reasonable; …it sounds insane….”


* * *
     NOT LONG AFTER, Trump's press secretary held a press conference in which she stated that Trump's "no" was a "no" to further questions, not to whether Russia is still meddling.
     Nobody's buying that one either.


The English Major

The Evolving English Major (Inside Higher Ed)
     Report documents decline in numbers of majors but growth in new tracks. Of the specializations within major, writing is doing relatively well, and literature not so much.
By Colleen Flaherty
July 18, 2018
     Bachelor’s degrees conferred to English majors are down 20 percent since 2012, but responsive departments that know how to market their worth to students are finding ways to thrive, says a new analysis from the Association of Departments of English, or ADE. The group, which is part of the Modern Language Association, says its report is the most comprehensive study of English departments to date.
     “While declines in the number of undergraduate majors have affected English departments widely and at all types of institutions, most departments are exploring ways to respond,” reads “A Changing Major: The Report of the 2016-17 ADE Ad Hoc Committee on the English Major,” released today.... (continued)



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...