Blamer-In-Chief: The Art Of The Dodge

“I blame myself – it was my fault, and I take full responsibility for it,” said Donald Trump, not once, ever, in his entire life.

Here’s what else he didn’t say about the rout and ruin of repeal and replace: “I was clueless about health care policy. Instead of reading my briefing books or even my own bill, I played golf. I bullsh*tted my way through every meeting and phone call. And when it was explained to me that this dumpster fire of a bill would break my promise that everybody’s going to be taken care of much better than they are now, which was a huge applause line, by the way, I threw my own voters under the bus.”

In the wake of his Waterloo, instead of manning up, Trump blamed Democrats for not voting to strip health insurance from 24 million people, not voting to cut Medicaid by $880 billion in order to cut taxes by $883 billion and not voting to obliterate the signature legislative accomplishment of the Obama years. “Look,” he complained with crocodile bafflement to the “New York Times,” “we got no Democratic votes. We got none, zero.” Yet not once had Trump or Paul Ryan asked a single Democrat what it would take to get them to support a bill. “The good news,” Trump said, seeing the sunny side of the catastrophe he predicts is coming, is that the Democrats “now own Obamacare.” Don’t blame me – it’ll be their fault when it explodes, not mine.

Trump blamed Republicans, too. Friday morning, when the bill was still in play, he tweeted that if the Freedom Caucus stops his plan, they would be allowing Planned Parenthood to continue. Friday afternoon, amid the wreckage, Trump told the “Washington Post’s Robert Costa that he was just an innocent bystander. “There are years of problems, great hatred and distrust” in the Republican Party, “and, you know, I came into the middle of it.”

White House aides, bravely speaking without attribution, blamed Ryan for snookering the rookie-in-chief into tackling Obamacare before tax reform. Trump himself told Costa, “I don’t blame Paul.” He repeated it: “I don’t blame Paul.” Then again: “I don’t blame Paul at all.” The laddie doth protest too much, methinks. By tweet time Saturday morning, clairvoyantly touting Jeanine Pirro’s Saturday night Fox News show, Trump had found a surrogate to stick the knife in Ryan without his fingerprints on it. “This is not on President Trump,” Pirro said, avowing that “no one expected a businessman,” “a complete outsider,” to understand “the complicated ins and outs of Washington.” No, it’s on Ryan, she said. Ryan must step down.

Blame precedes politics. In Western civilization’s genesis story, Adam blamed Eve for tempting him, and he blamed God for Eve. But America’s genesis story contains a noble, if apocryphal, counter-narrative: When George Washington’s father asked him who chopped down the cherry tree, the future father of his country didn’t blame someone else – he copped to it. That’s the legacy Harry Truman claimed when put “The buck stops here” sign on his Oval Office desk.

But Trump is the consummate blame artist, a buck-passer on a sociopathic scale. He kicked off his campaign by blaming Mexico for sending us rapists and stealing our jobs. He blamed Hillary Clinton for founding the birther movement. He blamed Obama for founding ISIS. He blamed Obama’s Labor Department for publishing a “phony” unemployment rate. He blamed three million illegal voters for losing the popular vote. He blamed the botched raid on Yemen on U.S. generals. When U.S. District Judge James Robart ruled against his Muslim travel ban, he blamed Robart for future terrorism: “If something happens, blame him and court system.” He blamed “fake news” for treating Michael Flynn, “a wonderful man” whom he fired, “very, very unfairly.” He blamed Obama for wiretapping Trump Tower. He made his spokesman blame British intelligence for carrying that out. When GCHQ called that a crock, Trump played artful dodger: “All we did was quote… a very talented lawyer on Fox. And so you shouldn’t be talking to me, you should be talking to Fox.”

Obamacare is imperfect but fixable. But Trump wants to bomb it, not improve it. He wants to light the fuse, but to blame Democrats for exploding it. Trump could shore up the insurance exchanges that cover 10 million Americans by marketing them when enrollment opens again in November – but I bet he won’t. He could instruct government lawyers to appeal a lawsuit halting federal subsidies for co-payments and deductibles of low-income enrollees that House Republicans won last year – but I bet he won’t. On the other hand, he has the power to narrow the essential benefits Obamacare requires insurers to provide by, say, limiting prescription drug coverage and lowering the number of visits allowed for mental health treatment or physical therapy – and I bet he will.

Will Trump get away with it? He’s spent a lifetime banging his highchair and blaming the dog for his mess. No wonder he calls the free press fake news; no wonder he calls citizen activists paid protesters. You call someone who gets away with blaming others “unaccountable.” You know what the antonym of that is? Impeachable.

This is a crosspost of my column in the Jewish Journal, where you can reach me if you’d like at martyk@jewishjournal.com.

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Ana's Fate Rested With An Asylum Officer Who Had Just Been Told To Doubt Her Word

AUSTIN, Texas ― Ana was working at a restaurant in Guatemala four years ago, when a teenager with baggy pants approached. He ordered a tostada, then remained standing at the entrance even as another waitress invited him several times to take a seat. Instead, he took a few steps toward Ana, pulled out a gun and pointed it at her face.

She froze, looking him in the eyes without speaking. His hand trembled. When a co-worker saw the gun and screamed, the boy pulled the trigger. The bullet grazed Ana’s head and she fell to the floor, hoping he’d think she was dead and leave her alone.

She reported the attack to the police, but they didn’t arrest anyone. Authorities suspected he was a gang member and might have confused her with someone else or attempted to kill her as part of an initiation rite. To protect herself, she moved to a town nearby.

But a few months ago, she ran into him again. Now a fully grown man, he was bulkier but still wore baggy pants. She could tell he recognized her from the way he stared. “All that fear I had became reality again,” she said.

When she saw him a few weeks later, he raised his hand, extending his fingers toward her as if they were the barrel of a gun. Fearing that he wanted to kill her for reporting the shooting, she fled the country with her 3-year-old daughter, traveling overland through Mexico and into the United States.

Ana, whom we are identifying with a pseudonym because she fears for her life if she’s deported, told all this to a U.S. asylum officer last month. The officer didn’t disbelieve her story, according to a record of the interview. But after they spoke, he checked the box on her application that read “credible fear NOT established.” Instead of sending her claim for asylum onto an immigration court, the interview fast-tracked her for deportation back to Guatemala.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement plans to deport Ana on Tuesday, returning her to a country where she thinks she’ll be killed.

“I’m not lying,” Ana told The Huffington Post by phone from the Karnes County Residential Center in Texas, where the 24-year-old has been detained for the last month. “I thought I was safe. Why don’t they believe me?”

Asylum is the best known of several ways that unauthorized immigrants can obtain legal permission to remain in the United States when they fear for their safety at home. The bar for establishing “credible fear” ― the first step in the asylum process ― had been low for most of the Obama administration, requiring officers to err on the side of leniency so that people don’t get deported to a place where they’ll be killed, tortured or abused.

But last month, President Donald Trump’s administration ordered asylum officers to take a more skeptical approach in these interviews, making it more likely that the U.S. will deport people whose cases previously would have advanced to an immigration court. Ana had her interview on Feb. 27, the day the new rules went into effect.

I’m not lying. I thought I was safe. Why don’t they believe me?
Ana, who has been denied asylum in the U.S.

Claims for asylum (and other forms of relief from deportation) can often take years to settle, so most who pass the credible-fear interview are released from detention while their cases wind through the courts. But a negative ruling on credible fear prevents immigration judges from setting bond hearings for those detained and makes deportation quicker and easier.

It’s impossible to say whether any specific person would have passed that first step in the asylum process under past presidents. Asylum officers have wide latitude to make their determinations. And even once a person clears that first step, judges’ rulings on who eventually is granted asylum status vary widely between jurisdictions  and individual cases.

But several experts consulted by HuffPost, as well as the attorneys who represent Ana, thought her case would have easily passed muster under the previous administration’s guidelines. Manoj Govindaiah, the director for family detention services at the legal group RAICES, said Ana’s case shows that Trump’s new rules are already pushing asylum seekers into deportation more swiftly.

“The new guidance raises the bar as to what is considered a credible fear of return,” Govindaiah said. “We believe that if her interview had been only a few days earlier, she would not be facing deportation today.”

Denise Gilman, a lawyer who is trying to help Ana avoid deportation, agreed that Trump’s new directives undermined her client’s claim.

“It does appear that she was denied based on the new guidelines,” Gilman said. “It was a perfectly viable case.”

Ana is part of a wave of tens of thousands of Central American mothers who have entered the United States with their children since 2014. The Obama administration hastily established two new family detention centers ― including the Karnes facility, where she has been detained ― in an effort to dissuade the women from coming. 

The mothers and their children generally apply for asylum or other humanitarian exemptions from deportation. The vast majority of those detained at the two family detention centers in Texas were making it over the first hurdle. The credible-fear approval rate hovered around 85 to 95 percent over the last two years, according to data from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Trump has accused immigrants of abusing this system to avoid deportation. 

Ana appealed the decision on her credible-fear claim after getting legal advice from lawyers with RAICES. When she went before a judge, she also raised the fact that she had been sexually abused by her father, who she says abused her mother as well. But the judge denied her appeal. Gilman said the judge held that the abuse claim wasn’t credible because Ana hadn’t raised it in her initial interview.

The news sank Ana into desperation. Guards at the facility put her on medical observation for the day to keep her from taking her own life. She composed herself to avoid giving the impression that she is not competent to care for her child. “If it wasn’t for my daughter, I think it would have been better to die at that moment so I wouldn’t have to live with this anguish,” she said.

It’s unclear whether others like Ana, who might have once passed their credible-fear interviews, are now being rejected. Citizenship and Immigration Services could not immediately provide updated statistics, which are compiled by quarter.

Asylum officers are going to read between the lines and distill that the guidance is ‘deny more cases.’
Stephen Legomsky, former head counsel for Citizenship and Immigration Services

Blaine Bookey, who co-directs the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, said Ana likely had several avenues to apply for asylum. Failing to raise the sexual abuse claim during a credible-fear interview is common, she noted, because women often aren’t comfortable disclosing such abuse and many times don’t know that it could help their cases ― unless they have lawyers to tell them.

“This case really demonstrates the complete lack of understanding ― whether it’s willful or through ignorance ― of the impact of trauma on the survivors at these interviews,” Bookey said. “A woman experiencing sexual abuse wouldn’t be immediately forthcoming about it in the context of a credible-fear interview.”

While it’s too early to tell if cases like Ana’s will become more common, Stephen Legomsky, who served as head counsel for Citizenship and Immigration Services from 2011 to 2013, said the message of the Trump administration’s revised guidance is unmistakable: Reject more claims.

“Asylum officers are going to read between the lines and distill that the guidance is ‘deny more cases,’” said Legomsky.

As for Ana, he said, “It does seem to me that based on the assertion of domestic violence in combination with the gun threat, that she has at least a ‘significant possibility’ of succeeding in an asylum claim, which is what the statute says.”

Ana has struggled to sleep since the judge rejected her first appeal. She said her daughter sometimes wakes up crying in the middle of the night.

On Monday afternoon, Immigration and Customs Enforcement rejected her lawyer’s second request to reconsider the deportation. She could be on a plane back to Guatemala as early as midnight.

“I don’t want to go back,” Ana said. “This man wants to kill me.”

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What's on TV: 'Planet Earth II,' 'Review,' 'Legion' and 'Walking Dead' finale

This week it’s time to pick up some new demo material for your Ultra HD television, since Planet Earth II is available in 4K and HDR. Other than that it’s a big week for finales, with Legion and The Walking Dead wrapping up their most recent seasons…

New It Images Are Here to Add Some Clown Terror to Your Monday Evening 

As the numbered balloons on director Andy Muschietti’s Instagram have warned us, we’re just two days away from the first trailer for It. We’re looking forward to seeing this version of villain Pennywise the Clown in action, and creepy new photos released today reminded us of the nightmares we’ll be having as a result.

Read more…

A Side-by-Side Comparison of Movies and the Historical Clips That Inspired Them

Period films are the bane of movie producers’ existence. They cost a ton of money, limit locations, require elaborate costuming and are always fighting against the very existence of the modern world. But when it all comes together, the films function as one of the closest things we have to a time machine.

Read more…

Elon Musk’s Neuralink Wants To Connect Brains With Computers

Elon Musk is a man with pretty huge ambitions and one that isn’t afraid to dream big, at least that’s what we can tell from his ventures so far whether it be Tesla, SpaceX, the Hyperloop, or digging a tunnel underground to help circumvent traffic. This is why Musk’s latest efforts doesn’t really come as a surprise.

In a report from The Wall Street Journal, they are reporting that Musk has launched a new venture called Neuralink. Note that Musk has yet to officially comment or confirm the existence of the company as this is based on people who are “familiar with the matter”, but Max Hodak who founded Transcriptic claims that the company is real and Musk is involved.

So what is Neuralink? Basically this is a company that is exploring the possibility of connecting brains to computers with “neural lace” technology. Ultimately the goal is to perhaps one day be able to upload or download thoughts from our brains onto computers, and vice versa, so just like the Matrix movie, perhaps one day learning something new could simply be about downloading it into our minds.

According to The Verge, Musk has hinted several times at creating such a venture. About half a year ago, Musk told a crowd in Dubai, “Over time I think we will probably see a closer merger of biological intelligence and digital intelligence.” He added that “it’s mostly about the bandwidth, the speed of the connection between your brain and the digital version of yourself, particularly output.” We’re not sure what exactly will be the result of launching such a company, but it sounds very interesting indeed.

Elon Musk’s Neuralink Wants To Connect Brains With Computers , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Analyst Thinks iPhone 8’s Price Will Help Keep Demand In Check

If there is one thing that is almost guaranteed with every iPhone launch it is that unless you’re quick enough, there is a good chance that you will have to wait a couple of weeks before your order arrives. However according to JPMorgan analyst Rod Hall, he thinks that Apple might try to curb demand for the iPhone 8 with its price tag.

Now obviously Apple wants customers to buy the iPhone 8, but to help control demand and to prevent extended waiting times, Hall believes that this could be the reason why Apple could price the iPhone 8 upwards of $1,000. We have heard rumors that the iPhone 8 could be that expensive, and Hall’s report seems to offer a reason as to why that is, along with the fact that its BOM will be higher due to the new features like an OLED display, 3D scanning cameras, wireless charging, and so on.

According to Hall, he estimates that the iPhone 8 (or iPhone Pro as he calls it) will cost $65 more than the iPhone 7. We have heard that the iPhone 8 could be launched in limited quantities, so it makes sense that Apple will want to control some of the demand to prevent orders from spiraling out of control.

In any case we guess we’ll just have to wait and see what the situation is when the phone launches, but assuming all the iPhone 8 rumors are true, Apple will no doubt have another winner on their hands and will be looking at another “super cycle”.

Analyst Thinks iPhone 8’s Price Will Help Keep Demand In Check , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Apple TV Remote App Now Available On The iPad

The Apple TV remote is a great way to control your Apple TV. However if you’re not a fan of physical remotes, or maybe you lost it and don’t want to buy a new one, there is always the iPhone version that you can use. However if you wanted a bit more screen real estate, you’ll be pleased to learn that the app has recently been updated to support the iPad.

By all accounts it seems that the iPad version is essentially the same version as the iPhone app. However given that the iPad has a much larger display, we guess things are a bit more “spacious” and stretched out, which may or may not be a good thing depending on you. However the good part is that the so-called blank space above the controls acts as one giant touchpad, so you’ll be able to swipe freely without worrying about hitting the other controls.

That being said there are some differences between the app. According to Apple, this comes in the form of an enhanced “Now Playing” experience where the lyrics and playlists for music, chapters, and audio tracks are more visible/accessible. Users will also be able to move the persistent buttons around the screen depending on what makes you comfortable, according to a tweet by Apple’s Justin Voss.

The update to the Apple TV remote should already be live, so if you’re interested then head on over to the iTunes App Store and check it out.

Apple TV Remote App Now Available On The iPad , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

First Look At The Rebooted ‘Tomb Raider’ Movie

Image credit – Graham Bartholomew

Considering that the Tomb Raider video game franchise was given a reboot, we guess it only makes sense that the movie series gets rebooted too. The reboot was officially announced last year where it was also revealed that actress Alicia Vikander will be starring in the lead role, and now thanks to an interview with GQ, the movie’s director Roar Uthaug revealed some images from the upcoming film.

As you can clearly see in the photo above, the rebooted Tomb Raider movie will look nothing like the previous Tomb Raider movies that starred Angelina Jolie. Instead it appears that they are taking some cues from the newer Tomb Raider video games in terms of how Lara Croft will look.

When asked how closely the movie will follow the 2013 reboot, Uthaug said, “That game was certainly part of what inspired our film. I think fans will be delighted to discover many touchstones from the game throughout the story. At the same time, this is not the kind of video game adaptation you often see, with a lot of CGI and effects. Our movie takes a more realistic, grounded approach. Lara Croft is a hero and a champion but she is not a superhero. She is very much human, and we see her deal with that humanity in many ways.”

To date, pretty much all video game movies have been somewhat of a disappointment. We’re not sure if this Tomb Raider movie will change that, but Uthaug seems to be pretty optimistic about it. That being said, the movie is due for a release on the 16th of March, 2018 so it looks like fans still have a bit of waiting to do.

First Look At The Rebooted ‘Tomb Raider’ Movie , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Siri In iOS 11 Will Apparently Be Capable of Learning User Behaviors

Come this June at WWDC 2017, we expect that Apple will most likely introduce iOS 11 (with its release probably pegged for later this year alongside the new iPhones). iOS 11 will undoubtedly bring a lot of changes and new features to the table, and a report from The Verifier (via 9to5Mac) is suggesting that big changes are headed for Siri.

According to a report, they claim that Siri in iOS 11 will apparently be able to learn user behaviors, meaning depending on how you use it, Siri will be able to adapt itself to you and maybe even predict some of your behaviors. The report goes on to add that Apple will integrate Siri with iMessage and offer up iCloud syncing.

Whether or not these claims are true remains to be seen, but 9to5Mac points out that Apple has in the past filed patents for similar features, so perhaps it’s not completely out of the question. Let’s not forget that companies like Amazon and Google are already way ahead of Apple in their AI efforts in the form of Alexa and Google Assistant respectively, plus with Samsung announcing Bixby, we’re pretty sure Apple does not want to be seen as lagging behind.

Take it with a grain of salt for now, but regular improvements to Siri is something Apple has been working on so like we said, perhaps some of these changes are to be expected, but hopefully we’ll have more details to share at WWDC 2017 come this June.

Siri In iOS 11 Will Apparently Be Capable of Learning User Behaviors , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.