Back in January, Representative Liz Cheney earned the ire of many a fellow Republican when she had the audacity to claim that Donald Trump had “lit the flame” of the attack on the Capitol, announced her support to impeach him, and then, days later, voted to do exactly that. Of course, nothing that Cheney said or did was wrong—Trump quite obviously incited the violent riot and he should have been impeached—but to his band of loyalists in the party, the Wyoming lawmaker’s actions were tantamount to treason. (Which is an interesting point of view, given that the guy they were defending had literally tried to overthrow the results of a federal election.) Dozens of Republican representatives tried to strip Cheney of her role as conference chair. Florida representative Matt Gaetz flew to Wyoming and, after declaring like only a mediocre white man can that he knew everything there was to know about the place having been there for one hour, urged voters to oust her from the House. Donald Trump Jr. has spent the last two months and change attacking Cheney for disrespecting his father.
Unfortunately for Junior, his quest to avenge Daddy Trump and maybe get more than one biannual hug, is not going so hot. Per CNN:
Earlier this week, the ex-president’s namesake tweeted a photo of Cheney speaking to Democratic representative Jamie Raskin and suggested the two were conspiring to take down his father:
Last month, Junior said in an interview that he has no intention of running for office right now but wouldn’t rule out a future bid. At the moment, though, he believes he can make a bigger impact on the Republican Party by focusing on the “weaklings” who voted to impeach his dad for a second time. Said weaklings are no doubt quivering in fear.
Someone at Amazon thought it was a good idea to get into a Twitter war with Democratic lawmakers
Oh, Amazon. Dear, sweet, innocent Amazon. You’re a trillion-dollar company that made Jeff Bezos $58 billion richer in the course of one year. You crush mom-and-pop stores just by looking at them. Someday soon, you’ll probably roll out technology that will allow people to use one-click ordering to have a warehouse employee dropped directly into their bathroom to wipe their asses for them, eliminating the need for toilet paper (but not the profit, because the ass-wiping won’t come cheap). You’re the kind of monopoly aspiring monopolies hope to be one day. Yet apparently there isn’t one person on your corporate communications team who realized that this was a stupid idea:
Those are a mere sampling of the tweets sent from Amazon’s corporate account this week in which the tech giant has attempted to own a bunch of lawmakers who’ve said mean but true things about them. In the case of Bernie Sanders, Amazon is presumably mad at him for backing the attempt by workers at an Alabama warehouse to unionize, an effort that the tech behemoth is unsurprisingly unhappy about, hence the anti-union messages in the bathrooms. Of course, Sanders is not the governor of Vermont, and so he can’t control the minimum wage in the state. (Amazon could learn about the difference between federal, state, and local governing in a book called *The Infographic Guide to American Government: A Visual Reference for Everything You Need to Know,* the Kindle edition of which is available right now on Amazon.com.) As for the company’s minimum wage, it was raised to $15 in 2018 after pressure from…Bernard Sanders.
The response to Wisconsin representative Mark Pocan is embarrassing for a lot of reasons, chief among them being that the peeing in bottles story is true:
(Incidentally, employees in the U.K. also reportedly said they were forced to skip bathroom breaks to avoid being fired. A spokesperson for the company said at the time of the report “we don’t recognize these allegations as an accurate portrayal of activities in our buildings.”)
In the case of the Elizabeth Warren tweets—and there are several!—it’s not clear what the endgame is here. Obviously they homed in on the threat to break them up over snotty tweets, while conveniently ignoring the point that Amazon makes billions every year and pays very little and has previously paid nothing in federal income tax. (Also, Warren clearly isn’t going to get Amazon broken up because of tweets, but because of many other things the company would rather not talk about.)
Mostly though, this strategy of hitting back at lawmakers on social media that a presumably highly paid flack came up with is dumb because it’s entirely futile. No one is going to read their snarky tweets and think, “You go girl!” No one is going to be like, “Huh, I’ve really misjudged them, they ARE good for humanity.” Amazon is never going to win here because (1) people don’t rally around corporate communications accounts, and (2) it is in fact true that many of their employees are treated like dirt and that they’re bad for a lot of other reasons too. But props to the person who thought they were going to convince people that Amazon is more progressive than Bernie Sanders. Dream big, you!
Joe Biden blasts Georgia’s ridiculously transparent attempt to stop Black people from voting
Which is the appropriate response here:
“Instead of celebrating the rights of all Georgians to vote or winning campaigns on the merits of their ideas, Republicans in the state instead rushed through an un-American law to deny people the right to vote. This law, like so many others being pursued by Republicans in statehouses across the country is a blatant attack on the Constitution and good conscience,” Biden said in a statement. Shortly afterward, he told reporters the Georgia law is “an atrocity,” adding: “If you want any indication that it has nothing to do with fairness, nothing to do with decency—they passed a law saying you can’t provide water for people standing in line while they’re waiting to vote.”
On Thursday, Georgia state representative Park Cannon was arrested and charged with a felony for knocking on the door while Georgia governor Brian Kemp signed the bill into law.
Florida governor wants health experts to let coronavirus petri dishes set sail
Ron DeSantis wants his cruises and he wants them now, damn it!
In October, the CDC said there had been at least 3,689 COVID-19 or coronavirus-like illness cases on cruise ships in U.S. waters, “in addition to at least 41 reported deaths,” which seems like something people would want to avoid. On the other hand, last March the Daily Beast reported that a not insignificant number of people were jumping at the opportunity to book a cruise vacation given the plummeting cost the pandemic had wrought. “I just have this natural inclination to buy low on things,” Kenny Human told the outlet. “My girlfriend does think I’m crazy, but she is reluctantly on board, no pun intended.” It is not clear if Human ended up setting sail, or what his views are now, one year later.
Elsewhere!
Biden urges Congress to pass election reform in wake of Georgia voting restrictions (Politico)
Ted Cruz mocked for midnight visit to Rio Grande (Independent)
What Can Democrats Do About Georgia’s Voting-Rights Restrictions? (Intelligencer)
New Jersey Is Legalizing Pot, But Cops Can Still Tell Underage Users’ Parents (Bloomberg)
More Americans to become eligible for vaccines and FEMA sites to open (Washington Post)
Devin Nunes’ Mom F*cked Up His Campaign Finance Reports (TDB)
Global Trade Gets Rerouted With Suez Canal Still Blocked (Bloomberg)
Democrats introduce “DeJoy Act” in opening salvo against USPS leader’s mail-slowing plan (Washington Post)
Sharks spotted rolling down Maryland highway (NYP)
The cargo ship in the Suez Canal drew a giant dick pic before getting stuck (Vice)
— Andrew Cuomo’s Biographer on the Governor’s Brutish History
— How Officials in Trump’s White House Scrambled to Score COVID-19 Vaccinations
— A Private Jet of Rich Trumpers Wanted to “Stop the Steal”
— Donald Trump Is Drowning in Criminal Investigations and Legally Screwed
— The Wave of Anti-Asian Hate Could Last Beyond the Pandemic
— Could Brett Kavanaugh Be Booted From the Supreme Court?
— Leak of Bombshell CBS Investigation Led to Multimillion-Dollar Settlement
— From the Archive: The Day Before Tragedy
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