Even without the unforced errors by the prosecution, this was always a difficult case. Wisconsin has a strong self-defense standard. After a defendant claims to have acted to repel a threat, the burden is on the prosecution to rebut that claim beyond a reasonable doubt.
Instead, the prosecution prompted its own witnesses to create layers of doubt in the case. In doing so, it seems to have reduced the range of possibilities to somewhere between a hung jury and outright acquittal on the major charges.
The problem is that many people may be unaware that the case is collapsing due to such evidentiary or tactical failures. Any hung jury or acquittal will come as a shock, and the level of outrage is likely to be greater. This case began with violent rioting in Kenosha, and the news coverage is fueling the danger of renewed violence.
It is even worse in that some coverage has dismissed the trial as an exhibition of raw racism. Some have criticized Judge Bruce Schroeder after he enforced long-standing constitutional principles and defended the core constitutional right of the defendant against self-incrimination.
MSNBC host Tiffany Cross advocated for Schroeder’s removal and called on columnist Elie Mystal to discuss the matter. Mystal, who stated earlier this month that white, non-college-educated voters supported Republicans in the 2021 races in part because they care about “using their guns on Black people and getting away with it,” not surprisingly, has written that this trial is a sham.
One man – not society – is on trial
MSNBC’s host Joy Reid also attacked the trial and suggested that Rittenhouse’s emotional breakdown on the stand was fraudulent. Her guest, MSNBC legal analyst and Georgetown law professor Paul Butler, concurred and called it “the greatest performance of (his) life.”
Butler declared Rittenhouse “was well-prepared by his defense attorneys to disrupt his image as a trigger-happy vigilante who went on a shooting rampage at a Black Lives Matter protest.”
Butler, who has written that Black jurors should use “jury nullification” to refuse to convict Black defendants in drug cases, insisted in a previous appearance that an acquittal would fuel future violence by white people.
Reid added Wednesday, “If you want to know why critical race theory exists, the actual law school theory that emphasizes that supposedly colorblind laws in America often still have racially discriminatory outcomes, then look no further than the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse.”
However, Rittenhouse is not to be judged for society’s historical racism, and such history does not change the underlying facts.
Either Grosskreutz (who is white) was pointing the gun at Rittenhouse’s head or he was not. Either Rosenbaum (who was white) was grabbing the barrel of Rittenhouse’s gun or he was not. Such facts do not change through CRT translations.
Many in the media rightly criticized those who encouraged riots on Jan. 6 with unsupported claims of electoral fraud. However, some of the same media figures offer distorted accounts of this trial. The narrative can overwhelm the facts.
The Iraq War. The lies of Russia-gate. Refusing to cover the Kyle Rittenhouse honestly and in legal terms. We could go on and on but there's a reason so many Americans have such a low opinion of the news media in this country.
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Monday, November 15, 2021. As the US economy continues to collapse, Iraq continues to await the release of the final tally of votes for October 10th's election.
Let's start in the US where there's no 'change you can believe in' Things are worse than they were before Joe Biden was sworn in. Abortion rights are under attack, immigrants are still being jailed and taken from their families, the government continues to spy on the citizens (and has increased the spying by sending FBI agents into parent-school conferences), Julian Assange remains persecuted, US troops remain on the ground in Iraq . . . Go down the list. And the economy? Worse, much worse. Inflation hasn't been seen at this rate since 1990. All of this was felt and registered in the Virginia election at the start of this month but people wanted to lie and whore and be blind. Joe Biden is failing as president. Kamala Harris is the vice president. It's not a significant role. But hasn't the press decide to explore her and the way her staff works while ignoring doing the same regarding Joe Biden.
It's time to stop pretending and lying. The media can see its image get even worse or they can get honest. This happy talk nonsense is not working and it will not work as Christmas unfolds. People are suffering and it is registering with them. Where's the stimulus check, Joe?
We need a UBI (Universal Basic Income) but we're led by fools and cowards -- that refers to all the administrations of this century, not just Joe's. The people are suffering. A stimula check is a pittance. But Joe can't even give that, can he.
Ebenezer Robinette Biden?
Yet he escapes questions while Kamala Harris doesn't. Tommy Christopher (MEDEIAITE) reports that she was asked about the suffering of Americans in relation to the upcoming Christmas holiday by both ABC NEWS' Sarah Kolinovsky and BLOOMBERG NEWS' Jennifer Jacobs:
MS. KOLINOVSKY: Thank you, Madam Vice President. A follow-up to Jen’s question on inflation: For Americans at home who are feeling the economic pinch, when do you expect they can expect to feel relief? You mentioned Christmas in your remarks. Will this be the most expensive Christmas in history after the most expensive Thanksgiving in history?
And then, on one of the provisions in the Build Back Better bill: paid family leave. Here in France, women are offered 16 weeks of paid maternity leave; fathers are offered 28 days. Is it frustrating to you that the U.S. can’t secure the same for American parents? And why is paid family leave not a red line in this package for this administration?
THE VICE PRESIDENT: So, on the inflation piece: We, as I said earlier, fully appreciate the significance of things costing more. It’s a big deal. It’s a big deal.
And so, we are doing what we can, making it probably one of our highest priorities — I talk to the President about it often — one of our highest priorities. We need to bring cost down for the American people and, in particular, for working people and working families.
And again — I’ll go back to my previous point — that is why we have been pushing so hard since the beginning for Build Back Better, because it is absolutely and almost uniquely designed to do just that — to make it easier for people to live. And, for most Americans, making it easier for them to live means bringing the cost of living down, especially for essential services.
On the piece about paid family leave: Yes, it’s frustrating. It’s something I’ve been advocating for for years, as has the President, and it was in our initial proposal. And in terms of what we believe will actually address — again, a topic of conversation — the topic of conversation on the mainstage yesterday — inequities, the inequality of systems and structures.
We know that this is an issue that disproportionately affects women and working women. We know that in the United States — and I know around the world — we have seen working women, because of the pandemic, leave the workforce at the rate in the United States; the most recent number I saw is somewhere around 2 million women have left the workforce.
And let’s be clear about this: An issue that impacts working women not only directly impacts the economy of their household, it impacts the economy of our whole society.
When you lift up the economic status of women, you necessarily lift up the economic status of families, and all of society benefits.
So, yes, I’m frustrated. And it is, I think, a shame that we are not yet a leader on this. We have work to do. And that is why the President and I are committed to doing this work. It’s important, and it matters.
And again, I’ll go back to my previous point: You know, there are those of us who have been fighting for this for a long time, and there are many more who perhaps kind of heard about it but really saw it during the pandemic.
I mean, most recently, I had the TV on but I was doing some- — I was in a briefing, I think, so I was doing something else, so I didn’t hear. But it was an image of somebody doing a Zoom, and their — one child came in — (laughs) — and then the toddler came in after that, and then somebody came in and grabbed the two kids. And then, yesterday, we saw a different example of that. But, yeah, it’s a big issue.
Let's be clear, Americans are suffering and have been suffering. As Trina likes to point out -- and has since the early days of this pandemic -- we are not all in this together. Those inane PSAs were supposed to lull the American people into a stupor of acceptance while the 1% stole everything that wasn't nailed down and now they're coming for the things that are nailed down. That's what the strikes have been about -- whether it's the Kellogg workers or the John Deer workers or whomever. The people who make the products, the people who get them there, they're the ones suffering. Profits are huge if you're a fat cat at the top of hte chain. And the fat cats intend to steal even more. They won't pay fair wages, they won't offer the needed benefits. Yet they take in all this money, more than they did before the pandemic. They're robber barons -- plain and simple. And Joe Biden is another useless fool who can't and won't stand up for the American people. He'll pose as a friend to the worker but a real friend wouldn't allow for any of this to take place.
That's Jake Tapper on CNN (STATE OF THE UNION) asking Joe Biden's economic advisor Brian Deese about reality -- the topic the White House has avoided. CNN notes:
NEWSWEEK's Xander Landen offers:
CNN host Jake Tapper pressed White House economic adviser Brian Deese on Sunday over comments President Joe Biden made in June regarding inflation, which has now reached a 31-year high.
Biden said at the time, "By the way, talk of inflation, the overwhelming consensus is it's going to pop up a little bit and then go back down."
Tapper also played a clip of Deese speaking about inflation then: "To the degree that people are focused on inflationary pressures in the short term, that really is not the issue," he said at the time.
"Do you think that you and the president were wrong and inflation is not a short-term, pop up a little bit and then go back down issue?" Tapper asked Deese.
Brian Deese's response? "No, I don't think so, Jake."
Oh, you don't? Well as parents struggle to put food on the table and to make a holiday for their children, they can take comfort in the fact that Brian Deese is not merely incompetent, he's also either a serial liar or just flat out living in a land of delusion. How about he uses that wonderful health care plan that he and others officials get -- the kind the American people don't -- to get the mental help he so obviously and so sorely needs.
Sam Raskin (NEW YORK POST) writes:
President Biden in June said that “the overwhelming consensus” was that “it’s going to pop up a little bit and then go back down” — before finally acknowledging publicly Wednesday that soaring inflation was “worrisome.”
The top economist then dodged questions about when inflation will finally cool and instead spent Sunday morning minimizing the commander-in-chief’s role and pushing his $1.75 trillion Build Back Better agenda on a series of TV show appearances.
Deese's answer, by the way, is that we "move forward on the Build Back Better bill that Congress is considering,”"
I guess that response is a little better than the b.s. that Jennifer Granholm, Secretary of Energy, provided. We covered it last week but here's the exchange:
JUDY WOODRUFF:
And it took several months, but here we are.
I'm asking you about when Americans are going to see results from this, because we know many Americans increasingly worried about the price of gas, about the cost of goods that are being shipped, the so-called supply chain problems.
And it caught our eye that, over the weekend, the White House said this bill is going to ease inflationary pressures, strengthen supply chains by making these long — these long-overdue improvements.
How exactly is that going to happen? When are prices going to come down in connection with this legislation in a way that Americans can see that, touch it?
JENNIFER GRANHOLM:
Yes, I mean, first of all, we know that a lot of the mismatch between supply and demand is the world and the economy coming out of COVID. The quicker we can ensure that everybody's vaccinated, the quicker we get back to normal, right?
But there's also 17 Nobel economists who said that this bill will, in fact, address inflationary pressures, especially in addressing some of the physical bottlenecks that we have seen, so the investment in our ports and in our airports, in our railway systems. So that's important as well.
There is no doubt there will be some natural evening out of prices and inflation, as soon as we get through this COVID. But it is going to take a few months before that — before that settles out.
Jennifer's answer to what they will do? Force you to take a vaccine. She's pushing her responsibility off on the American people. She forgets who serves who.
As for the mandates, they're most likely illegal and Joe Biden, as a candidate for president, was against them for that reason. It was a government over reach. And now? Now he's all for him.
Fear.
I can understand people being afraid. But you can't be ruled by fear. That's what led to the roundups at the start of this decade of Muslims. It's what led to targeting of Muslims. In the last century, it's what led to the round up and internment of Japanese Americans. In this century, it led to the PATRIOT Act which should have either expired or been overturned long ago.
In the last century? It led ot scapegoating gay men for AIDS. It led to foolish people attacking those with AIDS.
Fear is an emotion. It shouldn't be a ruling device.
I recently wrote a column on the legal challenges to President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate issued through OSHA. Not only is the use of OSHA regulations unprecedented for imposing a national vaccine mandate, I noted that Chief of Staff Ron Klain went to Twitter to herald the use of OSHA as a “work around” the constitutional limitations placed on President Biden. I asked how a court would respond to such an admission. We have to wonder no more. Late Friday, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit cited Klain’s comment in its decision enjoining the mandate.
In the prior column, I noted Klain acknowledged that the use of OSHA was a “work around” in light of the constitutional barriers preventing President Biden from ordering a national mandate directly. The Fifth Circuit also picked up on that glaring admission in footnote 13:
On September 9, 2021, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain retweeted MSNBC anchor Stephanie Ruhle’s tweet that stated, “OSHA doing this vaxx mandate as an emergency workplace safety rule is the ultimate work-around for the Federal govt to require vaccinations.”
I previously wrote:
Many of us often criticized former President Trump for undermining Justice Department lawyers with damaging comments later cited by courts when ruling against his administration. Now Biden and Klain seem to be competing for the greatest admissions-against-interest, including a prior admission from President Biden that they would be pursuing a presumptively unconstitutional measure simply to buy more time to spend more money. Klain is celebrating a way to evade constitutional limitations — but for courts reviewing the OSHA rule, that is akin to a husband telling a spouse that he has found a “work-around” to his vows by redefining extramarital relations.
The media covered Trump’s ill-advised tweets with great detail and indignation, particularly when those tweets were cited by lower courts. He was mocked for undermining his own case in court. To its credit, the Fifth Circuit did not give the Klain tweet the weight that the Ninth Circuit gave Trump’s tweets in its rulings against his immigration orders. I was critical of how those tweets were used by the Ninth Circuit and those decisions, as predicted, were ultimately reversed.
Yet, the media is virtually silent on this and other cases where Biden and his staff have directly contradicted or undermined the position of the Administration.
There are two world currently: the real one and the one most of the media pretends exist.
Turning to Iraq, AHLUL BAYT NEWS AGENCY reports:
Iraqi sources say the deputy commander of the anti-terror Karbala Operation has been killed in an ambush in Iraq.
Iraqi
media outlets reported that Haider Hamoud al-Husseinawy was
assassinated on Monday while he was heading from his workplace in the
town of al-Nukhib in Anbar Province to his home in Dhi Qar Province.
Baghdad Today cited a security source as saying that he was killed by “unknown” gunmen.
Meanwhile, Shafaq News said al-Husseinawy “died in mysterious circumstances.”
No further details were immediately available.
The assassination was the second of its kind in the past few days.
On Thursday, Abdul-Zahra Nassir al-Maleki, a member of the Iraqi intelligence apparatus, was killed by unknown gunmen.
The assailants, who were riding a motorcycle, opened fire on al-Maleki’s car and fled to an unknown destination.
An
Iraqi political alliance on Saturday warned of US plots to assassinate
political and military figures in the country and pin the blame on
resistance groups, after reports said the drones that recently targeted
the Iraqi premier’s house took off from the American embassy in Baghdad.
It's not a surprise to me. If it is to you, maybe you're one of those people sending e-mails to the public account slamming me for "saying" that the us government tried to kill Mustafa al-Kadhimi.
You obviously can type. Can you comprehend words on the screen?
I repeatedly said I had no idea what happened.
I also noted that the Iraqi people on social media were seeing this as a US plot to rally support for their designated choice Mustafa.
The Iraqi people don't support him. They don't want him. He's on his way out. Then Joe gets a hail mary from the militias? It doesn't seem logical and that's why they questioned it.
They continue to questions it. I'm not surprised that officials are now echoing that sentiment publicly.
AVA TODAY Tweets:
There are a few weeks left in November, the month of December and then it's 2022. Will a final count, an official one, be available before the end of this year?
As unrest continues, PRESS TV reports:
An Iraqi political alliance has warned against movements by the US to assassinate political and military officials in the Arab country and pin the blame on the country’s resistance groups, amid reports that the drones that recently targeted the Iraqi premier’s house flew out of the site of Washington’s embassy in Baghdad.
In an interview with al-Maloumah news agency on Saturday, Mohammad al-Baldawi, a member of the Fatah (Conquest) Alliance in the Iraqi parliament, expressed surprise at the government’s foot-dragging in disclosing the facts about a recent drone attack on Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi’s residence.
He said that the government accused some parties, whose loyalty to the country has been proven in the fight against the [ISIS] terrorist group, while the real culprit behind the attack was left alone and allowed to destabilize the situation.
The American forces are “the first and last culprit” in the incident since the airspace of Baghdad’s Green Zone, which houses foreign embassies and government offices, is protected by the US Counter-Rocket, Artillery, Mortar (C-RAM) systems and American planes are constantly flying over Iraq, Baldawi added.
The unrest isn't going away. I see so-called 'think' pieces from various institutes. No one mentions SABREEN NEWS. Maybe they're like most in the media, ignorant on Iraq? SABREEN NEWS is relatively new (it's one year old) and it's a hugely popular news outlet that most see as a front for the militias. However you see see it, this outlet did offer predictions a month before the elections and people continue to cite those predictions when they note problems with the vote.
If you're going to talk -- gas bag? -- about Iraq and the people's reaction to the vote tally, you might try examining their media landscape and the expectations that were created.
Meanwhile, official count or no official count, outside the focus of the western press, negotiations are taking place. Nouri al-Maliki is talking to anyone in his effort to regain the spot of prime minister or at least prevent Moqtada al-Sadr having the final say. (The two are sworn enemies who have long opposed one another.) Firas Adnan (ALMADA) reports that Sunni and Kurdish politicians are watching the negotiations taking place as various Shi'ite blocs try to come out on top. Saad al-Lami -- a member of the Sunni Victory Alliance -- notes that everyone is in a holding position as they await a final tally of the votes.
The following sites updated: