Friday, October 5, 2018

LETTER TO WOMEN WHO SUPPORT RAPISTS


Dear white women who support Brett Kavanaugh,
 
Last night when I saw Donald Trump mock Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, I couldn't help focusing on the women behind him who cheered and laughed. I felt like I was falling into a familiar nightmare. It compelled me to reach out to you.
 
When I was a child my father sexually abused and beat me. My mother did not protect me. She sided with my father, just like these women sided with Donald Trump, and I understand why. She sided with him because he was the breadwinner. She sided with him because of her need to survive. She sided with him because the reality of what was happening in front of her was so terrible, it was easier not to see.
 
She sided with him because she was brought up never to question a man. She was taught to serve men and make men happy. She was trained not to believe women. It was only much later, after my father died, that she was able to acknowledge the truth of my childhood and to ask for my forgiveness. It was only then, too late, that she was able to see how she had sacrificed her daughter for security and comfort. She used those words. I was her "sacrifice."
 
Some people when they look at this video of women laughing at Dr. Ford, will see callousness. I see distancing. I see denial. I have worked on ending violence against women for 20 years. I have traveled this country many times. I have sat with women of all ages and political persuasions. I remember the first performances of my play The Vagina Monologues in Oklahoma City, when half the women in the audience came up to tell me they had been raped or battered. Most of them whispered it to me, and often I was the first and only person they had told. Until that moment, they had found a way to normalize it. Expect it. Accept it. Deny it. 
 
I don't believe you want to have to choose your sons and your husbands over your daughters. I don't believe you want the pain that was inflicted on us inflicted on future generations.
 
I know the risk many of you take in coming out to say you believe a woman over a man. It means you might then have to recognize and believe your own experience. If one out of three women in the world have been raped or beaten, it must mean some of you have had this experience. To believe another woman means having to touch into the pain and fear and sorrow and rage of your own experience and that sometimes feels unbearable. I know because it took me years to come out of my own denial and to break with my perpetrator, my father. To speak the truth that risked upending the comfort of my very carefully constructed life. But I can tell you that living a lie is living half a life. It was only after telling my story that I knew happiness and freedom. 
 
I know the risk others of you face who have witnessed those you love suffer the traumatic after-effects of violence and those who worry for both your sons and daughters that may someday face this violence
 
I write to you because we need you, the way I once needed my mother. We need you to stand with women who are breaking the silence in spite of their terror and shame. I believe inside the bodies of some of those women who laughed at that rally were other impulses and feelings they weren't expressing.
 
Here is why I believe you should take this stand with me. Violence against women destroys our souls. It annihilates our sense of self. It numbs us. It separates us from our bodies. It is the tool used to keep us second-class citizens. And if we don't address it, it can lead to depression, alcoholism, drug addiction, overeating and suicide. It makes us believe we are not worthy of happiness. 
 
It took my mother 40 years to see what her denial has done and to apologize to me. I don't think you want to apologize to your daughters forty years from now. Stop the ascension of a man who is angry, aggressive, and vengeful and could very well be a sexual assaulter. Time is short. Call your senators. Stop laughing and start fighting.
 
With all my love,
 

Thursday, October 4, 2018

TAX EVASION - WHY TRUMP MUST POSITION KAVANAUGH IN POWER


EXCERPT FROM DEMOCRACY NOW

NERMEEN SHAIKH: The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance has opened an investigation of President Trump for fraud and tax evasion, following a major exposé by The New York Times. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has also called for a city probe, and Democratic Senator Ron Wyden has urged the IRS to investigate the president.
 
The Times revealed Trump inherited much of his family's wealth through tax dodges and outright fraud, receiving at least $413 million - in inflation-adjusted dollars, that is -from his father's real estate empire. The Times' 13,000-word investigative report found the late Fred and Mary Trump transferred more than $1 billion in wealth to their children, and much of it to Donald Trump, paying less than 5 percent of the $550 million in taxes they should have under inheritance tax rates. As part of a scheme to reduce taxes, Donald Trump also helped his parents undervalue real estate holdings by hundreds of millions of dollars in IRS tax returns.
 
AMY GOODMAN: The New York Times also reports Trump earned $200,000 a year in today's dollars from his father's companies beginning at the age of 3, with a salary that increased to $1 million a year after Trump graduated college and to $5 million a year when Trump was in his forties. Over the years, Trump has repeatedly portrayed himself as a self-made billionaire whose only head start was a "small loan of a million dollars," he would say, from his father.

See the full transcript at -https://www.democracynow.org/2018/10/4/nyt_expose_self_made_billionaire_donald

The day will come when, like Al Capone, Donald Trump will be tried in court for his crimes.

KAVANAUGH SPITS VENOM AT DEMOCRATS - HERE IS AMERICA'S FUTURE





HE WILL JUDGE YOUR DEMOCRATIC CHILDREN

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

THOUSANDS OF MENTAL HEALTH EXPERTS WARN ABOUT TRUMP AND KAVANAUGH


We turn now to look at how a group of mental health experts are urging the examination of the Supreme Court nominee and stating he has, quote, "demonstrated a pattern that's consistent with someone struggling with an alcohol problem." In a letter, the mental health experts write of Kavanaugh's emotional and often explosively angry testimony last week, quote, "Judge Kavanaugh exhibited behavior that, if engaged in during his possible tenure as a Supreme Court Justice, would yield a dangerous combination of instability and power. At the hearing, Judge Kavanaugh manipulated and evaded direct and substantive responses, denigrated those who challenged him, and accused many of conspiring against him. All that behavior reflects an underlying belief that he is above norms and laws," unquote.
 
Well, for more, we're joined by the lead author of this letter, Dr. Bandy X. Lee. She's a forensic psychiatrist on the faculty of Yale School of Medicine, an internationally recognized expert on violence, the editor of the best-selling book The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President.
 
We'll get to the president in a minute, but you have issued this new letter around Judge Kavanaugh. Dr. Lee, explain what you observed, whether you have the right to observe from afar, not having analyzed him yourself personally, and what you're calling for.
 
DR. BANDY LEE: First of all, I would clarify that we're not diagnosing Judge Kavanaugh. And we don't purport to be able to make any assessment other than we can, other than calling for an evaluation, as we are doing, due to the troubling signs that we see.
 
The letter itself was actually written by a group of us in the National Coalition of Concerned Mental Health Experts. It's the same group that also called for an evaluation of the president.
 
Some of the troubling signs that we saw were poor regulation of emotion, evasion of questions, exaggerated entitlement - which actually makes someone more likely to be capable of violating others' rights. Other troubling signs that we've seen were paranoia, conspiracy theories and an inability to have empathy for others. Those were some of the signs that we feel, as mental health professionals—it is our duty to call out signs that are abnormal and signs that indicate possibly a troubling condition on the part of Mr. Kavanaugh.
 
AMY GOODMAN: How many people have signed onto this letter?
 
DR. BANDY LEE: So far, about 150 have signed on. Our group is actually quite large, several thousand in number, but it's often hard to get everyone mobilized within just a couple days. So, we issued the letter and sent it out to the FBI, to senators and to the media.
 
AMY GOODMAN: I want to turn to Judge Brett Kavanaugh giving part of his opening statement last Thursday. Obviously, this was right after Dr. Blasey Ford, obviously enraged.
 
JUDGE BRETT KAVANAUGH: This whole 2-week effort has been a calculated and orchestrated political hit, fueled with apparent pent-up anger about President Trump and the 2016 election, fear that has been unfairly stoked about my judicial record, revenge on behalf of the Clintons, and millions of dollars in money from outside left-wing opposition groups. This is a circus…

DR. BANDY LEE: Well, denial, deflection and annoyance at criticism about one's drinking are actually symptoms of alcohol use disorder. It comes with psychological signs, as well as the physiological dependence. And even just looking at him, there are signs such as rosacea or reddening of the central areas of his face. This does not mean that we can diagnose alcohol use disorder, but they certainly point to the possibility. Also, drinking that has begun at an early age and heavy drinking in one's youth makes one vulnerable to alcoholism later in life. So, it would be important to assess whether he suffers from it and whether it would affect his functioning…

DR. BANDY LEE: Yes. It's quite parallel to the concerns that we've had about the president. In fact, when the president was about to issue - or, nominate the Supreme Court nominee, we issued a letter to Senate and House members, expressing our concerns about the signs that the president was showing of, you know, a lack of a capacity to make important decisions. And so we actually thought that it was injudicious to allow him to nominate a Supreme Court nominee, as well as to make important trips such as the Helsinki meeting. And nothing really came of that. That was actually a different group, a group of prominent psychiatrists and myself. But in terms of the Duty to Warn, I know there's a group out there that took the name and call themselves Duty to Warn, but it came out of my conference, which I organized a year and a half ago…
 
 
Some of the troubling signs that we saw were poor regulation of emotion, evasion of questions, exaggerated entitlement -which actually makes someone more likely to be capable of violating others' rights. Other troubling signs that we've seen were paranoia, conspiracy theories and an inability to have empathy for others. Those were some of the signs that we feel, as mental health professionals - it is our duty to call out signs that are abnormal and signs that indicate possibly a troubling condition on the part of Mr. Kavanaugh. 

TRUMP'S ROOTS IN A CANADIAN BROTHEL - LIQUOR AND SEX


Donald Trump's grandfather ran Canadian brothel during gold rush.

Friedrich Trump amassed 'substantial nest-egg' from Yukon hotel before heading to New York

Canadians amused by the improbable presidential run of Donald Trump might be surprised to learn the role their own country played in shaping his story.
 
Trump's grandfather started the family fortune in an adventure that involved the Klondike gold rush, the Mounties, prostitution and twists of fate that pushed him to New York City.
 
Friedrich Trump had been in North America a few years when he set out for the Yukon, says an author who's just completed a new edition of her multi-generational family biography.

​That Canadian chapter proved pivotal for the entrepreneurial German immigrant, says Gwenda Blair, author of The Trumps: Three Generations That Built An Empire.
"It allowed him to get together the nest egg he'd come to the United States for," the author and Columbia University journalism professor said in an interview.
 
"Whether he could've accumulated that much money somewhere else, in that short a period of time, as a young man with no connections, and initially not even English, is certainly ... unlikely."
 
He'd left Europe in 1885 at age 16, a barber's apprentice whose father died young.
 
Trump wanted a life outside the barber shop, far from the family-owned vineyards his ancestors had been working since they'd settled in Germany's Kallstadt region in the 1600s carrying the soon-altered surname Drumpf.
 
He sailed in steerage to join his sister in New York.
 
Within five years he'd anglicized his name to Frederick; moved to the young timber town of Seattle; and amassed enough cash to buy tables and chairs for a restaurant.
 
His next big move was heralded by the front page of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer of July 17, 1897, and its exclamatory headline: "Gold! Gold! Gold!"
 
It described a resplendent scene at the port involving mountains of yellow metal and men returning from the "New Eldorado" with fortunes as high as $100,000.
 
Trump sold everything and headed north.

A caravan of prospectors arrived at Chilkoot Trail to join the great Gold Rush. 

The move to Canada spared him financial disaster. He not only sold off two Seattle eateries, but also land in nearby Monte Cristo, Wash. - right before floods and avalanches destroyed the nearby railroad and development plans for the town were scrapped.

Blair describes his perilous northward journey in early 1898.
 
After boarding a crowded ship to Alaska, Trump trekked over mountains, through Canadian customs, and to the Yukon River where he had to build a boat from scratch and transport a year's worth of personal supplies.
 
The worst was a notorious mountain pass. The U.S. National Parks Service estimates 3,000 animals died on the White Pass, with many bones still visible today in its so-called Dead Horse Gulch.
 
"Owners whipped horses, donkeys, mules, oxen, and dogs until they dropped. The bodies were not buried or even moved," Blair writes.
 
"Travellers ... had no choice but to walk over the remains. As the months went by, the walls of the pass were stained dark red from the blood."

Trump smelled opportunity.
 
He opened a canteen along the route, Blair says, where weary travellers likely stopped for a bite of Arctic roadkill. There are records for similar establishments along the route, Blair writes: "A frequent dish was fresh-slaughtered, quick-frozen horse."
 
This established a pattern for Trump's Canadian business model.
 
It's summed up in one chapter title: "Mining the Miners."
 
Unlike other gold-crazed migrants, Blair wrote, "[Trump] realized that the best way to get [rich] was to lay down his pick and shovel and pick up his accounting ledger."
 
'Liquor and sex'

In his three years in Canada, Trump opened the Arctic Restaurant and Hotel in two locations with a partner - first on Bennett Lake in northern B.C., and then moving it to Whitehorse, Yukon.
 
Their two-storey wood-framed establishment gained a reputation as the finest eatery in the area, Blair said - offering salmon, duck, caribou, and oysters.
 
It offered more than food.
 
"The bulk of the cash flow came from the sale of liquor and sex," Blair wrote. She cited newspaper ads referring obliquely to prostitution  - mentioning private suites for ladies, and scales in the rooms so patrons could weigh gold if they preferred to pay for services that way.
 
He had made money; perhaps even more unusual in the Yukon, he had also kept it and departed with a substantial nest-egg.

- Gwenda Blair, author

One Yukon Sun writer moralized about the backroom goings-on: "For single men the Arctic has the best restaurant," he wrote, "but I would not advise respectable women to go there to sleep as they are liable to hear that which would be repugnant to their feelings and uttered, too, by the depraved of their own sex."
 
The Mounties initially tolerated the rowdiness. There were exceptions, according to the legendary Canadian writer Pierre Berton. People faced forced labour or banishment from town if they cheated at cards; made a public ruckus; or partied on the Lord's Day.
 
"Saloons and dance halls, theatres and business houses were shut tight one minute before midnight on Saturday," Berton wrote in "Klondike Fever."
 
"Two minutes before twelve the lookout at the faro table would take his watch from his pocket and call out: 'The last turn, boys!"'
 Trump acted as cook, bouncer, waiter.
 
But Blair cautions: "I wouldn't call him a pimp."
 
She said backroom ribaldry was part of the restaurant package in those towns, and it's not clear how the arrangement worked: "As somebody trying to attract business to his restaurant, of course he would have liquor. Of course he would arrange easy access to women. A pimp is, I think, a different business model."
 
By early 1901, trouble was brewing.
 
The Mounties announced plans to banish prostitution, and curb gambling and liquor. Trump quarreled with his partner. Gold strikes were getting scarcer.
 
"The boom was over, Frederick Trump realized," Blair wrote. "He had made money; perhaps even more unusual in the Yukon, he had also kept it and departed with a substantial nest-egg."
 
He returned to Germany with US$582,000 in today's currency, and found a wife. But he was greeted as a draft-dodger for being away and becoming a U.S. citizen during his military years.
 
So he was deported from his own country. He boarded a ship for New York, his wife pregnant with Donald's dad.
 
The elder Trump died of pneumonia in 1918, leaving behind some real estate. His son built the empire, his grandson the global brand.
 
Ironically, their heir is now running for president on a platform of mass-deportation. But Donald and grandpa share some traits - an entrepreneurial spirit, and formative youthful adventures in Canada.
 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/trump-canada-yukon-1.3235254

TRUMP'S GERMAN FAMILY SAY HE WAS ALWAYS A LIAR

 
TRUMP'S GERMAN FAMILY

http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.ca/2017/01/donald-trumps-german-immigrant-family.html

http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2018/06/trumps-german-family-calls-him-liar-his.html


THE SEEDS OF DONALD TRUMP'S FORTUNE GREW IN BROTHELS.

http://metro.co.uk/2016/10/20/donald-trumps-fortune-is-built-on-money-from-prostitutes-and-brothels-6203104/

http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2018/06/donald-trumps-fortune-is-built-on-money.html.

DONALD TRUMP'S FASCIST BASE.

http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2018/06/donald-trumps-fascist-base-does-america.html

WHY IS JARED KUSHNER ALIVE?

JARED KUSHNER'S IMMIGRANT FAMILY

https://www.thenation.com/article/nobody-wanted-to-take-us-in-the-story-of-jared-kushners-family-and-mine/


SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017
PHYLLIS CARTER'S JOURNAL.

DONALD TRUMP'S GERMAN IMMIGRANT FAMILY - HE WAS ALWAYS A LIAR.
 
Distant relatives of Donald Trump still live in the sleepy German village where his grandfather was born, but locals describe the anti-immigrant presidential hopeful as 'spooky'.
 
Kallstadt is a village with a population of just 1,200 people and where stuffed pork belly is the local dish - is the ancestral home of the Trumps.
 
Kallstadt is home to just 1,200 people, but numerous people claim to be distant relatives of Donald Trump.
 
The Donald's grandfather Friedrich Drumpf left Kallstadt in western Germany in 1885 and arrived in New York when he was 16.
 
Bernd Weisenborn, a local restaurant owner, said: 'My father is Donald Trump's third cousin, but we don't talk much about the Trumps in the family.'
 
Many feel it is ironic that Trump, who has made himself notorious both in America and around the world with his anti-immigrant rhetoric, should himself be the offspring of immigrants.
 
'If his grandfather had been treated the way Trump wants to treat immigrants, he would never have made it,' said Veronika Schramm, a local.
 
Friedrich was 16 when he arrived in New York and began working as a barber. He later managed a hotel in California, before opening a bar for gold prospectors in Yukon, Canada.
 
Friedrich returned to Kallstadt to marry his sweetheart Elisabeth Christ, who lived across the street from him when he was growing up.
 
The local history books record how Bavaria, the rulers of the town at the time, would not let him settle back in the town because he had forfeited citizenship by emigrating.
 
Picturesque: Many people feel it is ironic that Trump is the offspring of immigrants, considering his anti-immigrant rhetoric.
 
Still standing: Trump's grandfather's house remains in the village with a sign at the gate reading: 'God sees everything, but my neighbour sees even more'
 

WHO WAS DONALD TRUMP'S GRANDFATHER FRIEDRICH DRUMPF?
 
Donald Trump's paternal grandfather was Fred Trump - originally called Friedrich Drumpf and born in Kallstadt, Germany in 1869 - came to America at the age of 16 with empty pockets.
 
After Fred arrived in New York City, he worked as a barber for six years and lived in tiny immigrant apartments with his sister and brother-in-law before venturing west to Seattle.
 
It was there that he launched his first business, a late-night restaurant in the sleazy end of the town. He learned to navigate the district's saloons, opium parlours, pawn shops and brothels.
 
Next he got his first taste of the phenomenon that was mining, setting up shop in the short-lived mining town of Monte Cristo, just north of the city.
In July 1897, as word of a massive gold strike in the far north spread through Seattle, Fred took advantage, opening another restaurant catering to the thousands of stampeders who were chasing their fortunes.
 
He then had enough money to travel to Germany and then returned to New York City with his wife. In 1905, his son Fred Junior, Donald's father, was born.
 
By the time he died in Queens at the age of 49, during a Spanish flu epidemic, he had built up a fortune worth $31,642.54 - or around $542,000 in today's money.
 
He left his small fortune to his wife Elisabeth, who used it to go into business with her eldest son Fred Junior, who was just 15 at the time.

The pair created the Trump empire, which is now headed by Fred Junior's entrepreneurial son, Donald.
 
Elisabeth went with him back to America and after he died, founded the E. Trump & Son company, which would become the property empire inherited by and built upon by Donald.
 
'Kallstadt people were never barons, real-estate magnates and all that,' said Hans-Joachim Bender, a retired winegrower who also claims distant familial links with The Donald.
 
'He was packing things into bottles and selling it, just as the winegrowers do.'
 
Ms Wendel, who in 2014 made a documentary about the town and its links to the mogul, said: 'Many locals find Mr Trump a little…spooky.'
 
Donald Trump claimed in his 1987 autobiography that his grandfather came from Sweden, not Germany.
 
Ms Wendel told the Wall Street Journal that most people don't really 'get' Trump, adding: 'Knowledge of the connection is so ingrained locally that it's almost like something you'd get in your breast milk, but people still care little.
 
'Many don't get what you're supposed to do all day with real estate.'

What is baffling to many Kallstadters is that Trump claimed that his grandfather came from Sweden, not Germany. He stated it in his 1987 autobiography, 'The Art of the Deal.'
 
Gwenda Blair, the author of several Trump biographies, said 'there is no possible way he could not know' his grandparents were German. 'His grandmother spoke German.'
 
'He's full of hot air,' one sales woman at a local butcher shop told Der Spiegel.
 
By Allan Hall In Berlin and Jenny Stanton For Mailonline
 
26 January 2016

Monday, October 1, 2018

KAVANAUGH IS A LUSH AND A LIAR.


Chad Ludington, a Yale classmate of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, accused him on Sunday of being untruthful in his testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee and making a "blatant mischaracterization" of his drinking while in college. Read his full statement below:
 
I have been contacted by numerous reporters about Brett Kavanaugh and have not wanted to say anything because I had nothing to contribute about what kind of Justice he would be. I knew Brett at Yale because I was a classmate and a varsity basketball player and Brett enjoyed socializing with athletes. Indeed, athletes formed the core of Brett's social circle.

In recent days I have become deeply troubled by what has been a blatant mischaracterization by Brett himself of his drinking at Yale. When I watched Brett and his wife being interviewed on Fox News on Monday, and when I watched Brett deliver his testimony under oath to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday, I cringed. For the fact is, at Yale, and I can speak to no other times, Brett was a frequent drinker, and a heavy drinker. I know, because, especially in our first two years of college, I often drank with him. On many occasions I heard Brett slur his words and saw him staggering from alcohol consumption, not all of which was beer. When Brett got drunk, he was often belligerent and aggressive. On one of the last occasions I purposely socialized with Brett, I witnessed him respond to a semi-hostile remark, not by defusing the situation, but by throwing his beer in the man's face and starting a fight that ended with one of our mutual friends in jail.  
 
I do not believe that the heavy drinking or even loutish behavior of an 18 or even 21 year old should condemn a person for the rest of his life. I would be a hypocrite to think so. However, I have direct and repeated knowledge about his drinking and his disposition while drunk. And I do believe that Brett's actions as a 53-year-old federal judge matter. If he lied about his past actions on national television, and more especially while speaking under oath in front of the United States Senate, I believe those lies should have consequences. It is truth that is at stake, and I believe that the ability to speak the truth, even when it does not reflect well upon oneself, is a paramount quality we seek in our nation's most powerful judges.

I can unequivocally say that in denying the possibility that he ever blacked out from drinking, and in downplaying the degree and frequency of his drinking, Brett has not told the truth.

I felt it was my civic duty to tell of my experience while drinking with Brett, and I offer this statement to the press. I have no desire to speak further publicly, and nothing more to say to the press at this time. I will however, take my information to the FBI.

CNN