Turkey Just Began A Decade Of Paranoia Under A Modern-Day Sultan

ISTANBUL — Alone, anxious and exhausted: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s face shortly after the announcement of the Turkish referendum result was not that of a man celebrating victory but of a man alarmed by near-defeat. Instinctively, one worries for the photographer who took the shot, which tells us all we need to know about the kind of future Turkey faces after granting unparalleled powers to a leader whose lawyers regularly prosecute individuals who insult him and who presides over the single highest number of imprisoned journalists since at least 1990.

Erdogan does not like to look weak or unpopular. He predicted a resounding “yes” vote for the new constitution, which will enshrine his new executive presidency and abolish the role of prime minister, but it passed with only 51.3 percent of the vote, a result disputed by opposition parties and “no” voters in the wake of the announcement on Sunday night, as well as by analysts who are currently examining strange voting swings in unmonitored parts of the country.

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe flagged abnormal vote-counting procedure and warned that the referendum took place “on an unlevel playing field,” referring to the blanket media coverage of the “yes” campaign and the intimidation of the “no” campaign in the weeks preceding the referendum, as well as the imprisonment of opposition party leaders. In response, Erdogan told the organization to “know its place,” a warning he has also extended to The New York Times and the head of the U.S. Central Command.

Erdogan’s face was not that of a man celebrating victory but of a man alarmed by near defeat.

For Erdogan, criticism is an invitation to fight. He has been slamming negative coverage in the Turkish press as “fake” and “politically motivated” for years now, long before U.S. President Donald Trump found it expedient to do so in the U.S. For those who expected Trump’s Islamophobic and Erdogan’s anti-American rhetoric to pose problems for the relationship between the two men, their budding bromance is surprising. Trump took it the next level when he called to congratulate Erdogan on the result, joining the leaders of Djibouti and Guinea, while European leaders and even the Kremlin refrained from congratulations. Trump’s call was allegedly made in defiance of concerns voiced by the U.S. State Department about the OSCE report — a fait accompli that mirrors the style of Erdogan himself.

The Turkish and American presidents share many personality traits and spending habits and are reviled and admired in similar measure. Trump came to power promising to represent marginalized, hard-working voters, which is exactly what Erdogan did in 2002, when the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, he co-founded first came to power. Fifteen years later, he is still riding on that ticket.

For many, it seems unthinkable that Turks would willingly choose to extend the powers of a leader like Erdogan. It is significant that the three biggest cities in Turkey — Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara — voted against him. But even if we accept that as many as 2.5 million invalid ballots may have secured his victory, as the opposition claims, we are still left with the fact that tens of millions of Turks voted “yes.” Why?

It is significant that the three biggest cities in Turkey — Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara —
voted against him.

This referendum was not an idealistic choice between a parliamentary and presidential constitution. It was not a great contest between secularism and political Islam, although those elements were certainly at play. This was primarily a personality test for Erdogan carried out in an atmosphere of fear.

The failed military coup in July last year may have swung the vote among Turks who fear instability marginally more than they fear an authoritarian president. In the intervening nine months, Erdogan has sought to present himself as a bastion of stability and strength — the leader who saved his country from divisive terrorist forces. Shortly after the coup attempt, he declared a state of emergency, under which nearly 50,000 people have been imprisoned, 100,000 detained and 134,000 dismissed from public sector jobs. In the lead-up to the referendum, he declared that “no” voters would be “siding with terrorists” — only a “yes” vote could guarantee the future of the country.

Meanwhile, since June 2015, terrorist attacks in Turkey have killed over 400 people. While many Turks see Erdogan as the problem rather than the cure for this period of violence, others will have had no wish to rock the political boat by supporting a “no” vote, even if they harbor concerns about the methods Erdogan employs to quash dissent — better a strong hand than chaos.

But while the coup attempt may have swung a few million votes, the core “yes” voting base will have been the same as the roughly 40 percent of Turks who have consistently voted for the AKP over the past 15 years. Their lives have undoubtedly improved during this time, both materially (via spending on infrastructure and public health services) and in terms of civic rights (such as the overturning of the headscarf ban in 2010). They also have almost limitless respect for the man himself.

Erdogan is unapologetically religious, a proponent of traditional family values and a proud nationalist. His supporters see him as an everyman, a champion for their interests whom they must cheer for at every turn — they call him “The Tall Man,” “The Great Master” and “Chief.” He inspires a tribe-like loyalty enforced by respect for his displays of strength and his defiance of the West.

Erdogan’s trademark displays of strength and defiance do not bode well for the next presidency. In his balcony speech on Sunday night, Erdogan suggested a new referendum to reintroduce the death penalty, which would end accession talks with the European Union; within 24 hours, Parliament extended by another three months the already-prolonged post-coup state of emergency, heralding yet more arrests and job purges.

Within 24 hours, Parliament extended the post-coup state of emergency, heralding yet more arrests and job purges.

But the bigger problem is actually that Erdogan does not feel secure. The president is visibly haunted by his near-defeat, even as he embraces his new powers. Three months ago, when he prophesied victory in the referendum, he boasted that “if we were not sure of [victory], we would not have embarked on this business.” Despite everything in his favor, including the near-criminalization of the “no” campaign, he nearly lost.

Perhaps the unthinkable will happen, and Erdogan will be voted out in the next presidential election of 2019. Much more likely, we can look forward to at least a decade of paranoia from an increasingly erratic, modern-day Sultan and to a dangerous level of polarization among his citizens. Already there have been clashes between “yes” and “no” voters in the wake of the result on Sunday. It will not be a happy mix. 

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The Costs Of War — At Home

Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com

Now, we know.  According to Todd Harrison, an expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the replacement cost for the 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles recently dumped on an air base in Syria: $89 million. That not-exactly-decisive strike in Washington’s 15 years of war in the ever more chaotic Greater Middle East against… well, you tell me what or whom… was but a drop in the bucket. After all, the cost of those never-ending wars has already reached into the trillions of dollars. And keep in mind that these are wars in which, as U.S. Army major and TomDispatch regular Danny Sjursen suggests today in “How to Lose the Next War in the Middle East,” the most all-American military word around may be “more” ― as in more troops for Syria, more troops for Iraq, more troops for Afghanistan, and of course more missiles, planes, ships, advanced arms, you name it.

In that context, $89 million is a laughably small sum. Still, just for the hell of it, let’s think about what a figure like that might mean if spent domestically rather than on a strike of more or less no significance in Syria.  That sum is, for instance, well more than half of the $149 million budget for the National Endowment for the Arts and also of the $149 million budget for the National Endowment for the Humanities, both of which the Trump administration would like to wipe out. It represents one-fifth of the $445 million the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, also on Trump’s chopping block, gets from the federal government.  That single strike also represents about a thirtieth of the $2.6 billion his administration wants to cut from the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget and about a sixtieth of the $5.8 billion that it plans to excise from the budget of the National Institutes of Health. 

So each time those Tomahawks are launched, or American planes or drones take off on their latest missions over Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen, or Somalia, or the next batch of U.S. troops heads for Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, or elsewhere in the Greater Middle East and those millions of dollars start to add up to billions and finally trillions, just think to yourself: that’s the arts, the sciences, public health, and environmental safety that we’re knocking off. Think of that as part of the “collateral damage” produced by our never-ending wars, or take a moment with Major Sjursen and imagine just how Washington might continue to lose those wars in the future with even greater flare and at even greater cost.

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Robert Godwin's Family: Our Dad Would Want Us To Forgive His Killer

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Robert Godwin, a 74-year-old beloved grandfather from Cleveland, Ohio, was walking home from an Easter Sunday meal when he was gunned down in what police believe was a random act of violence. 

Now, the victim’s family is asking the suspect, identified by authorities as Steve Stephens, to come forward and face justice after shooting Godwin and posting a video of the murder on Facebook. 

And despite the painful loss Godwin’s family has suffered, relatives say their Christian faith compels them to forgive the killer.

“Each one of us forgives the killer, the murderer,” Godwin’s daughter Tonya Godwin-Baines told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “We want to wrap our arms around him.”

Godwin-Baines said that it was her dad who instilled that incredible faith in his children ― by showing them how to forgive, and not just telling them about forgiveness. 

“The thing that I would take away the most from my father is he taught us about God, how to fear God, how to love God and how to forgive,” Godwin-Baines said.

She reiterated that she holds no animosity towards Stephens. 

“My dad would … want this from us. And he would say, ‘Tonya, forgive him’ because they know not what they do,” the daughter added, quoting words that Jesus said on the cross.

Robby Miller, Godwin’s son, echoed his sister’s statements in an interview with CNN’s Don Lemon.

“No, I don’t want that man to die, I want him brought to justice,” Miller said. “One thing I do want to say, is that I forgive (the killer).”

A nationwide manhunt for Stephens was ongoing Tuesday morning, after a few false leads led police to search for the suspect in Philadelphia and Baltimore. Federal authorities are offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to Stephen’s arrest. 

The public nature of Godwin’s death has left the Cleveland family reeling. Stephens recorded the shooting in its entirety and posted the video to his Facebook page. It remained there for more than two hours before Facebook took it down. But during that time, it had been shared and viewed more than 1 million times. 

Miller said that the taping of his father’s death “stripped him of his dignity.”

“And to post it online for the whole world to see? I’m just angry,” Miller told CNN.  

The family is asking social media users to stop reposting the video. 

Godwin’s former wife, Dorothy Crumpton, told CNN that at this point, the family just wants Stephens to come forward. 

“I don’t want to him to take his life. I don’t want the police to have to take his life,” said Crumpton. “I want him to give himself up, because at the end of the day Jesus died for his sins too, just like he died for mine.” 

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Kindergarten Homework Question Stumps Parents

You’d think a 5-year-old’s homework would be easy enough for most parents to figure out, but this little girl’s assignment has grownups stumped. 

New York mom Royce Winnick posted a photo of her 5-year-old daughter’s take-home worksheet. The assignment focuses on the letter T and includes a section in which the student must “tap out the word in the picture and write out the sounds you hear.” 

The first three words are simple enough: tub, ten and top. But the last one, which has a drawing of five rabbits, had Winnick’s daughter (and adult family and friends) at a loss.

“I posted the homework because we honestly could not figure out the answer,” Winnick told The Huffington Post. The mom shared a photo of the sheet on Facebook and posed the question, “Anybody know this answer to my daughter’s kindergarten homework?”

Suggestions poured in for “twins,” “two by two,” “thumpers,” “twabbit” and “I bet this was an error.”

Though Winnick’s daughter initially thought the answer was rabbit, she eventually settled on “pet,” which the teacher marked as “OK” though it was clearly not the correct answer. 

“The real answer was ‘vet’ which makes no sense!” Winnick told HuffPost.

The mom said her daughter’s homework is not usually so confounding. “But she did have another sheet similar that also had ridiculous answers,” she added. “Gotta love Common Core!”

Winnick shared the other worksheet with HuffPost. “The answers to the two bottoms ones are kin and Ken!” she said. “Again, how is a 5-year-old supposed to know that?”

Good luck getting into college, kiddos.

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The 'LGBT Trump Fallacy' Exists Because The Media Created And Promoted It

This week, the New York Times published an editorial headlined, “The L.G.B.T Trump Fallacy,” in which the editorial board explained that, “the nomination of several key officials [within the Trump administration], who have disparaged the L.G.B.T. community and sought to curtail the rights of its members, has exposed the narrative that Mr. Trump would be a champion of gay and transgender people as a fallacy.”

Better late than never, some would say, since many of us across a variety of media have been pointing out the virulent homophobes named to the cabinet and other jobs for months, including during the transition, while the Times, both in news coverage and opinion pieces, hardly covered the topic. But what’s especially grating about the Times editorial is the line about how these nominations have “exposed the narrative that Mr. Trump would be a champion of gay and transgender people as a fallacy.”

How did that “narrative” begin? According to the Times editorial, it happened after Trump unfurled a rainbow flag onstage during a rally in October of last year.

“It didn’t take long for prominent gay Republicans to proclaim that the Republican Party had, at long last, turned a corner on gay rights under Mr. Trump,” the editorial stated.

Really?

This was, at best, a complete oversight by the editorial board, whose writers clearly hadn’t been following these events more closely throughout the campaign. Because those of us who followed the campaign, and particularly covered LGBT issues, know precisely where the “narrative” was hatched: In The New York Times itself, on April 22, of 2016, with a story headlined, “Donald Trump’s More Accepting Views on Gay Issues Set Him Apart in G.O.P.”

The piece, by Times political reporter Maggie Haberman, offered what several LGBT journalists and commentators saw as weak evidence of this claim, and I wrote about it in detail at the time. Haberman defended her piece on Twitter, saying it was more so about Trump’s “history,” particularly since the story’s hook became dated literally within hours of her publishing it: Trump had seemed to come out against North Carolina’s horrendous anti-LGBT law ― the hook for the story ― only to flip-flop a day later and say that states should have the right to pass such laws.

The Times piece stuck, exemplifying the power of the paper in setting a “narrative,” and from that point on, in story after story in other publications and on cable news, Trump was portrayed as pro-LGBTQ. This, in spite of his courting of religious conservatives and his promises to them to roll back LGBT rights and marriage equality specifically, promising to appoint justices to the supreme court who wold overturn the Obergefell ruling, which he opposed.

Over the following months I wrote piece after piece taking on the narrative, as did other commentators, but it was to no avail. The media stuck to the narrative, blowing it when Trump said something that fit it ― like using the initialism “LGBTQ” at the GOP convention ― and ignoring his various sit-downs with evangelical media or appearances with anti-LGBTQ groups in which he promoted an anti-LGBTQ agenda. Of course, gay Republicans were backing him ― they back just about every Republican candidate in spite of the candidate’s opposition to LGBTQ rights ― but that was happening well before Trump unfurled a rainbow flag in October.

No, gay Republicans were not responsible for creating the “LGBT Trump Fallacy.” It’s great to see the Times editorial page taking on the “fallacy,” but the least it could have done was explain how the “narrative” truly began.

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Stephen Colbert Shows Exclusive Footage Of Kim Jong-Un Preparing For War

We all watched clips of North Korea’s annual military parade, but unless you speak the language, it’s difficult to know just what the mood is like.

Stephen Colbert acquired exclusive footage with subtitles of Kim Jong-Un’s speech — and the message is “fierce,” to say the least.

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Chris Christie Explains His Endorsement Of Donald Trump

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New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), who ran in the 2016 Republican primary, finally opened up about why he dropped out of the race and endorsed Donald Trump for president.

“I was doing what I thought was best for the country,” Christie told The New York Times in an interview published Tuesday. “And for me.”

Christie has defended his endorsement before, telling reporters in March he truly thought Trump was the best candidate to defeat Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

“I was standing up there supporting the person who I believe is the best person to beat Hillary Clinton of the remaining Republican candidates, and it’s why I endorsed him,” Christie said then.

Christie served as chair of Trump’s transition team for a time, but distanced himself from the campaign in October 2016. Trump eventually replaced Christie, appointing Vice President-elect Mike Pence to do the job in November.

In March, Trump announced Christie would lead a commission to combat the nation’s opioid crisis.

The New York Times reports Christie still thinks there might be a role for him in Trump’s White House. Christie said he still speaks with the president by phone each week.

Read more of Christie’s interview at The New York Times.

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Goose Instructs Police Detective To Kindly STEP OFF

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An Indiana police detective was just trying to grab his keys when he encountered an aggressive goose with no respect for authority.

Detective Ray Hall of the Clarksville Police Department was walking to the front door of the police station when the bird torpedoed toward him, sending the detective flying into a bush, FOX59 reported.

Surveillance equipment captured a recording the incident, which Lieutenant Shane Bassett posted to YouTube

“Detective Hall forgot his keys… he then attempts to enter the building and is challenged by our local geese,” Bassett wrote. “Bad decision.”  

In all seriousness, ABC affiliate WHAS in Louisville, Kentucky, picked up the story and spoke with their Louisville Zoo birdkeeper, Craig Mikel, who told the network that the goose was protecting its nest. And it doesn’t take an expert to know you don’t stand between a bird and its nest.

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Cleveland Man Suspected In Facebook Video Killing Found Dead

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The man suspected of carrying out a chilling homicide in Cleveland that was filmed and shared on Facebook was found dead Tuesday in Erie, Pennsylvania, from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said. 

Pennsylvania State Police said Steve Stephens, 37, was spotted by authorities Tuesday morning and shot and killed himself after “a brief pursuit.” Stephens was wanted for the aggravated murder of 74-year-old Robert Godwin Sr.

Cleveland police issued a warrant for Stephens’ arrest on Sunday night after a video from around 2 p.m. that day was posted on his Facebook page. The footage appeared to capture Stephens complaining about a woman before approaching Godwin and shooting him at close range.

Godwin, who apparently did not know Stephens, had been walking home from an Easter meal with his family on the city’s northeast side near I-90. Police say Stephens apparently selected Godwin at random. 

Authorities searched for Stephens across the city on Sunday, but speculated that he may have left the state in a white Ford Fusion. They alerted residents of Pennsylvania, New York, Indiana and Michigan that he was on the run and considered armed and dangerous.

The FBI as well as other statewide law enforcement joined the Cleveland PD’s efforts on Sunday and offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to Stephens’ arrest. 

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) praised the state police for their efforts and said he was “thankful no one in PA was hurt.”

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The 'Fast And The Furious' Joyride Could Outlive Us All Thanks To A New Baby Driver

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Warning: “Fate of the Furious” spoilers ahead.

Calling the “Fast and the Furious” series a full-throttle success is an understatement. Having grossed $4.4 billion worldwide and counting, Universal Pictures’ most successful franchise in history now has one mantra: Bigger is better. So far, so good, considering “The Fate of the Furious” just landed the largest global opening weekend of all time.

At this point, bigger means revving up the plots to include a tangled web of villains (Charlize Theron’s dreadlocked Cipher is the latest) and villains-turned-heroes (Jason Statham’s Dackard Shaw has joined the family after they targeted his terrorist brother, Owen). Still, all this gravity-defying action must come to an end at some point, right? Based on the title alone, “The Fate of the Furious” sounds like a solid climax for this long, expensive ride. 

Nope! No way. You see, “The Fate of the Furious” introduces a whole new trilogy, according to Vin Diesel, who’s appeared in almost every installment since the 2001 original. With “Fate of the Furious” marking the eighth entry, that guarantees us at least 10 movies in total, not to mention talk of spinoffs surrounding individual characters. 

Now there’s another way Universal can keep this franchise speeding into the future: little baby Brian. Named after the late Paul Walker’s police-officer protagonist, Brian was introduced in “The Fate of the Furious” as the charming infant son of Dom (Diesel) and Brazilian cop Elena (Elsa Pataky). He’s already pivotal to the plot, with evil Cipher kidnapping Brian as ammo so Dom will subscribe to her vague plot to secure Russian nuclear codes. The tyke survives and Dom returns from the dark side, joining the crew for a rooftop barbecue after they vanquish Cipher and her cronies (for now). 

Thus, the potential future of the “Furious” has been sealed. If Universal wants to keep the franchise alive for eternity, all it has to do is put the storyline in this baby’s hands. (Too bad “Baby Driver” is already a movie title.) End the 10th installment with Dom teaching a teenage Brian how to take over the family’s vigilantism, and we’ve got 10 more films on our hands. Yippee. 

“Fast and the Furious” releases have become a biennial April tradition. One could argue they alone are why summer blockbuster season now spans spring, too. With studios slating sequels years in advance, Universal will soon consider whether to extend this property’s shelf life past April 2021, at which point it will have been running red lights for a whopping two decades. It makes sense: The physics-agnostic stunts get crazier with every go-round, and the series remains a force to be reckoned with among audiences of all races. To boot, the plots are so ludicrous that they have effectively become critic-proof.

If nothing else, we can expect wee Brian to make another showing in the ninth outing, which will open in 2019. Director F. Gary Gray and the cast have sung the little actor’s praises. “He was really smiling all the time,” Pataky told The Hollywood Reporter. “One of the scenes … he was actually pulling Vin’s hand and saying, ‘Da-da, da-da.’ I couldn’t believe it. He is going to have a big career.”

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