Trump threatens to break the glass on DOJ succession plan – Politico

An abstract, in-case-of-emergency-break-glass executive order drafted by the Trump administration in March may become real-world applicable as the president, raging publicly at his Justice Department, mulls firing special counsel Robert Mueller.

Since taking office, the Trump administration has twice rewritten an executive order that outlines the order of succession at the Justice Department once after President Donald Trump fired acting Attorney General Sally Yates for refusing to defend his travel ban, and then again two months later. The executive order outlines a list of who would be elevated to the position of acting attorney general if the person up the food chain recuses himself, resigns, gets fired or is no longer in a position to serve.

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In the past, former Justice Department officials and legal experts said, the order of succession is no more than an academic exercise a chain of command applicable only in the event of an attack or crisis when government officials are killed and it is not clear who should be in charge.

But Trump and the Russia investigation that is tightening around him have changed the game.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has already recused himself from overseeing the investigation into possible collusion between Trump campaign aides and Russian operatives, after it was revealed that he failed to disclose meetings with the Russian ambassador during the campaign. And Trump started his morning on Friday by appearing to take a public shot at his deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, who has increasingly become the target of his impulsive anger.

I am being investigated for firing the FBI Director by the man who told me to fire the FBI Director! Witch Hunt, the president tweeted.

The Justice Department said in a statement on Friday that there are no current plans for a recusal, but Rosenstein has said in the past that he would back away from overseeing Muellers investigation if his role in the ouster of former FBI Director James Comey becomes a conflict.

That has legal experts closely examining the dry executive order to figure out who might be next up to bat, or, as Democratic lawyers and consultants view it, who might serve as Trumps next sacrificial lamb.

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We know Rachel Brand is the next victim, said Benjamin Wittes, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the editor-in-chief of Lawfare, referring to the former George W. Bush official who was recently confirmed as associate attorney general, the third-highest position in the Justice Department.

For those of us who have high confidence in Rachel the more confidence you have in someone in this role, the less long you think theyll last, said Wittes, who said he considers Brand a friend. That does put a very high premium on the question of who is next.

That question, however, has become more complicated because the Trump administration has been slow to fill government positions and get those officials confirmed. Typically, the solicitor general would be next in line after the associate attorney general, followed by the list of five assistant U.S. attorneys, the order of which would be determined by the attorney general. But none of those individuals have been confirmed by the Senate, and they would be unable to serve as acting attorney general without Senate confirmation.

Because of that, the executive order comes into play one that puts next in line after Brand the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, Dana Boente. Boente, a career federal prosecutor and an appointee of former President Barack Obama, was tapped last April to serve as the interim head of the Justice Departments national security division, which oversees the FBIs Russia investigation.

Boente, who was briefly thrust into the no. 2 spot at the Justice Department after Yates was fired, was also tasked with phoning Preet Bharara, then U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, to deliver the unexpected news that he was fired. At the time, Boente also vowed to defend Trumps travel ban in the future.

Boente is followed, on the succession list, by the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, John Stuart Bruce; and the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Texas, John Parker. Both are career prosecutors who are serving in their posts on an interim basis, until a presidential appointment is made. But they would not need to be Senate confirmed to take over.

It was not clear why the Trump administration chose those three U.S. attorneys to be in the succession line. During the Obama administration, sources familiar with the drafting of the old executive order said, the positions were chosen based on geographic diversity, and purposely included big cities where officials assumed there would be a talented attorney capable of stepping in: The U.S. attorneys on the succession list were from Washington, D.C., Chicago and Los Angeles.

Some former Justice Department officials said they would find it inconceivable for Trump to clean house, or to fire Mueller even taking into account the sometimes erratic behavior of the commander in chief.

This president is so unpredictable, its hard to say, said Emily Pierce, a former Justice Department official in the Obama administration. It would be the craziest thing hes done to date if he were to start firing the special counsel or Rosenstein. Im trying to give him the benefit of the doubt that he realizes how much trouble he may be in and that with the firing of Comey, he wouldnt do that.

Deputy U.S. Attorney General nominee Rod Rosenstein and Rachel Brand, then a nominee for associate attorney general, testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 7. Brand is considered the next person in the executive order at the Justice Department. | Getty

But others were less willing to predict the actions of a president who prides himself on being unpredictable. At the rate we're going, it's clearly possible, because you could go through a number of people in one go depending on the things that are asked of them, said Jane Chong, a national security and law associate at the Hoover Institution. If Rosenstein had refused to write the memo [laying out the case for Comeys firing], you can imagine him being fired, and you can imagine Brand doing the same thing. Its not difficult to see a scenario like that playing out down the line, Chong said.

In Washington circles, the comparison being made is between Trumps desire to rid himself of Mueller, at potentially any cost, and the Saturday Night Massacre during Watergate, in 1973, when the attorney general and the deputy attorney general both resigned after refusing to obey President Richard Nixons order to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox. It fell to the solicitor general at the time, Robert Bork, to do the deed.

I think the Watergate scenario would make most self-respecting lawyers loath to put themselves in the role that Bork ended up playing, said Brian Fallon, a former Obama Justice Department and Hillary Clinton spokesman. Most career-minded independent lawyers that have high regard for the Justice Department as an institution would be loath to be the modern-day equivalent to Bork.

But Trump, too, is cognizant of the comparison to Nixon, according to one adviser. The president, who friends said does not enjoy living in Washington and is strained by the demanding hours of the job, is motivated to carry on because he doesnt want to go down in history as a guy who tried and failed, said the adviser. He doesnt want to be the second president in history to resign.

A White House spokeswoman referred queries to the Justice Department. A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

Darren Samuelsohn contributed to this report.

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Trump threatens to break the glass on DOJ succession plan - Politico

The one big thing Donald Trump gets totally wrong about the media – CNN

"The Fake News Media hates when I use what has turned out to be my very powerful Social Media - over 100 million people! I can go around them," Trump tweeted.

If Trump believes this -- and he certainly seem to -- it shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how the media views the president's Twitter feed and how he employs it.

The reality is this: Every political journalist in the world is absolutely thrilled that Donald Trump not only tweets but does with the frequency and bluntness that he does. NO reporter wants Donald Trump to stop tweeting. Not one.

Trump's Twitter feed gives the political media -- and anyone else who follows him -- a direct look into his thought processes. We know what he is thinking about -- or angry about -- at all times of day. That's absolutely invaluable. It's "The President: Raw and Uncut."

Even as his White House will be excoriating the media for focusing too little on some policy roll-out or another, Trump will drop a series of tweets about the "witch hunt" Russia investigation or complain, as he did yesterday, about why the Justice Department isn't investigating alleged improprieties surrounding Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.

All presidents have private thoughts that sometimes (often?) run counter to the official message the White House is pushing in a given day, week or month. But, no past president has been willing to put those discrepancies on public display in front of the tens of millions of people who follow him on Twitter before Trump.

What sort of reporter would want that pipeline to end?

The people who do want Trump to stop tweeting or to tweet less aren't the media. They're Republicans and Trump loyalists who believe his willingness to tell people exactly what is on his mind at any minute of the day fundamentally undermines the White House's efforts to find some consistent messaging and build the momentum the administration has been sorely lacking to date.

"[Twitter is] a powerful tool, but I do believe that it can be used more effectively to achieve his purpose," New York Rep. Lee Zeldin, a Trump supporter, said on CNN Friday morning. "I don't know the strategy behind, you know, this morning -- this latest tweet you are asking me about. But if there is a bigger strategy that makes sense, I'm all ears."

If you're reading this, Mr. Trump, let me be crystal clear as a card-carrying member of the media: Please keep tweeting. It provides us insight into how you think that we have never had before and may never get again from a president. Period.

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The one big thing Donald Trump gets totally wrong about the media - CNN

Donald Trump’s Financial Disclosure Has Hollywood Starpower – Deadline

President Donald Trumps financial disclosure released today by the U.S. Office of Government Ethics has provided the greatest detail yet of the CEO-turned-Commander-in-Chief since he ran and became President of the United States. The 98-page filing dropped today doesnt include his much-discussed still-private tax returns, but it does show Trumps income related to his Hollywood interests, including his annual SAG pension totaling $84,292, and monies from his production businesses that co-produced The Apprentice and The Celebrity Apprentice.

In the filing (read it in full here) submitted by Trump on June 14, Trump reported assets totaling around $1.4 billion, with $596.3 million in total for the reporting period through April 15. His debts totaled more than $300 million.

Among his Hollywood assets, Trump reported income from Miss Universe LLP of $10,973,722, and his Trump Productions LLC noted as the television production and entertainment business arm of the privately held Trump Organization brought in income of $1,103,161 and is valued between $1 million-$5 million.

He also received stock dividends during the period that included from such entertainment-industry related companies as Comcast, 21st Century Fox, NBCUniversal Media LLC, Apple, Yahoo, Alphabet, Verizon and Microsoft.

Among the 12 books listed in the filing, royalties for 1987s The Art Of The Deal grew to as much as $1 million as his profile rose during the GOP primaries and general election. Crippled America, published in 2015 the year he announced his POTUS run, netted royalties as high as $5 million.

Among his numerous golf holdings is Trump National Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes, which was valued at more than $50 million, earning $14,982,417 in golf-related income and $12,035,000 in land sales.

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Donald Trump's Financial Disclosure Has Hollywood Starpower - Deadline

Donald Trump, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, ‘All Eyez on Me’: Your Friday Briefing – New York Times


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Donald Trump, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, 'All Eyez on Me': Your Friday Briefing
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Steve Garvey, a former major league star, led a prayer before the congressional baseball game in Washington on Thursday. Credit Al Drago/The New York Times. (Want to get this briefing by email? Here's the sign-up.) Good morning. Here's what you need to ...

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Donald Trump, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, 'All Eyez on Me': Your Friday Briefing - New York Times

Donald Trump Is Proving Too Stupid to Be President – Foreign Policy (blog)

Im starting to suspect that Donald Trump may not have been right when he said, You know, Im like a smart person. The evidence continues to mount that he is far from smart so far, in fact, that he may not be capable of carrying out his duties as president.

There is, for example, the story of how Trump met with the pastors of two major Presbyterian churches in New York. I did very, very well with evangelicals in the polls, he bragged. When the pastors told Trump they werent evangelicals, he demanded to know, What are you then? They told him they were mainline Presbyterians. But youre all Christians? he asked. Yes, they had to assure him, Presbyterians are Christians. The kicker: Trump himself is Presbyterian.

Or the story of how Trump asked the editors of the Economist whether they had ever heard of the phrase priming the pump. Yes, they assured him, they had. I havent heard it, Trump continued. I mean, I just I came up with it a couple of days ago, and I thought it was good. The phrase has been in widespread use since at least the 1930s.

Or the story of how, after arriving in Israel from Saudi Arabia, Trump told his hosts, We just got back from the Middle East.

These arent examples of stupidity, you may object, but of ignorance. This has become a favorite talking point of Trumps enablers. House Speaker Paul Ryan, for example, excused Trumps attempts to pressure FBI Director James Comey into dropping a criminal investigation of former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn on the grounds that the presidents new at this and supposedly didnt realize that he was doing anything wrong. But Trump has been president for nearly five months now, and he has shown no capacity to learn on the job.

More broadly, Trump has had a lifetime 71 years and access to Americas finest educational institutions (hes a graduate of the University of Pennsylvanias Wharton School, he never tires of reminding us) to learn things. And yet he doesnt seem to have acquired even the most basic information that a high school student should possess. Recall that Trump said that Frederick Douglass, who died in 1895, was an example of somebody whos done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more. He also claimed that Andrew Jackson, who died 16 years before the Civil War, was really angry that he saw what was happening in regard to the Civil War.

Why does he know so little? Because he doesnt read books or even long articles. I never have, he proudly told a reporter last year. Im always busy doing a lot. As president, Trumps intelligence briefings have been dumbed down, denuded of nuance, and larded with maps and pictures because he cant be bothered to read a lot of words. Hed rather play golf.

The surest indication of how not smart Trump is that he thinks his inability or lack of interest in acquiring knowledge doesnt matter. He said last year that he reaches the right decisions with very little knowledge other than the knowledge I [already] had, plus the words common sense, because I have a lot of common sense and I have a lot of business ability.

Hows that working out? Theres a reason why surveys show more support for Trumps impeachment than for his presidency. From his catastrophically ill-conceived executive order on immigration to his catastrophically ill-conceived firing of Comey, his administration has been one disaster after another. And those fiascos can be ascribed directly to the presidents lack of intellectual horsepower.

How could Trump fire Comey knowing that the FBI director could then testify about the improper requests Trump had made to exonerate himself and drop the investigation of Flynn? And in case there was any doubt about Trumps intent, he dispelled it by acknowledging on TV that he had the Russia thing in mind when firing the FBI director. Thats tantamount to admitting obstruction of justice. Is this how a smart person behaves? If Trump decides to fire the widely respected special counsel Robert Mueller, he will only be compounding this stupidity.

Or what about Trumps response to the June 3 terrorist attack in London? He reacted by tweeting his support for the original Travel Ban, rather than the watered down, politically correct version under review by the Supreme Court. Legal observers including Kellyanne Conways husband instantly saw that Trump was undermining his own case, because the travel ban had been revised precisely in order to pass judicial scrutiny. Indeed, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in refusing to reinstate the travel ban on June 12, cited Trumps tweets against him. Is this how a smart person behaves?

You could argue that Trumps lack of acumen is actually his saving grace, because he would be much more dangerous if he were cleverer in implementing his radical agenda. But you can also make the case that his vacuity is imperiling American security.

Trump shared code-word information with Russias foreign minister, apparently without realizing what he was doing. In the process, he may have blown Americas best source of intelligence on Islamic State plots a top-secret Israeli penetration of the militant groups computers.

Trump picked a fight on Twitter with Qatar, apparently not knowing that this small, oil-rich emirate is host to a major U.S. air base that is of vital importance in the air war against the Islamic State.

Trump criticized Londons mayor, Sadiq Khan, based on a blatant misreading of what Khan said in the aftermath of the June 3 attack: The mayor had said there was no reason to be alarmed about a heightened police presence on the streets not, as Trump claimed, about the threat of terrorism. In the process, Trump has alienated British public opinion and may have helped the anti-American Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, win votes in Britains general election.

Trump pulled out of the Paris climate accord apparently because he thinks that global warming a scientifically proven fact is a hoax. His speech announcing the pullout demonstrated that he has no understanding of what the Paris accord actually is a nonbinding compact that does not impose any costs on the United States.

Trump failed to affirm Article V, a bedrock of NATO, during his visit to Brussels, apparently because he labors under the misapprehension that European allies owe the United States and NATO vast sums of money. In fact, NATO members are now increasing their defense spending, but the money will not go to the United States or to the alliance; it will go to their own armed forces. Trump has since said he supports Article V, but his initial hesitation undermines American credibility and may embolden Russia.

Trump supporters used to claim that sage advisors could make up for his shortcomings. But he is proving too willful and erratic to be steered by those around him who know better. As Maggie Haberman of the New York Times notes: Trump doesnt want to be controlled. In [the] campaign, [he] would often do [the] opposite of what he was advised to do, simply because it was opposite.

The 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that if the vice president and a majority of the cabinet certify that the president is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, he can be removed with the concurrence of two-thirds of both houses. That wont happen, because Republicans are too craven to stand up to Trump. But on the merits perhaps it should. After nearly five months in office, Trump has given no indication that he possesses the mental capacity to be president.

Photo credit:Tom Pennington/Getty Images

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Donald Trump Is Proving Too Stupid to Be President - Foreign Policy (blog)

Who in the White House Will Turn Against Donald Trump? – The New Yorker

The yearning in the character of Donald Trump for dominance and praise is bottomless, a hunger that is never satisfied. Last week, the President gathered his Cabinet for a meeting with no other purpose than to praise him, to note the great honor and blessing of serving such a man as he. Trump nodded with grave self-satisfaction, accepting the serial hosannas as his daily due. But even as the members declared, Pyongyang-style, their everlasting gratitude and fealty to the Great Leader, this concocted dumb show of loyalty only served to suggest how unsustainable it all is.

The reason that this White House staff is so leaky, so prepared to express private anxiety and contempt, even while parading obeisance for the cameras, is that the President himself has so far been incapable of garnering its discretion or respect. Trump has made it plain that he is capable of turning his confused fury against anyone in his circle at any time. In a tweet on Friday morning, Trump confirmed that he is under investigation for firing the F.B.I. director James Comey, but blamed the Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein, for the legal imbroglio that Trump himself has created. The President has fired a few aides, he has made known his disdain and disappointment at many others, and he will, undoubtedly, turn against more. Steve Bannon, Kellyanne Conway, Jared Kushner, Jeff Sessions, Sean Spicerwho has not yet felt the lash?

Trumps egotism, his demand for one-way loyalty, and his incapacity to assume responsibility for his own untruths and mistakes were, his biographers make plain, his pattern in business and have proved to be his pattern as President.

Veteran Washington reporters tell me that they have never observed this kind of anxiety, regret, and sense of imminent personal doom among White House staffersnot to this degree, anyway. These troubled aides seem to think that they can help their own standing by turning on those around themand that by retailing information anonymously they will be able to live with themselves after serving a President who has proved so disconnected from the truth and reality.

I thought about Trump and his aides and councillors while reading The Last of the Presidents Men , Bob Woodwards 2015 book about Alexander Butterfield, a career Air Force officer who took a job as an assistant to Richard Nixon. He made the move less for ideological reasons than to indulge a yearning ambition to be in the smoketo be at the locus of power, where decisions are made.

As an undergraduate, at U.C.L.A., Butterfield knew H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, and, after serving in Vietnam and being stationed in Australia, he called on Haldeman, who was Nixons most important assistant. Haldeman made Butterfield his deputy. Butterfield got what every D.C. bureaucrat craves mostaccess. He worked on Nixons schedule, his paper flow, his travel; he offered advice, took orders, no matter how bizarre or transitory. Butterfield could not have been more in the smoke than he was then. He quickly discovered that Nixon was a fantastically weird and solitary manrude, unthoughtful, broiling with resentment against the Eastern lites who had somehow wounded him, be it in his imagination or in fact. Butterfield had to manage Nixons relations with everyone from his Cabinet members to his wife, Pat, who on vacations resided separately from the President. Butterfield carried out Nixons most peculiar orders, whether they involved barring a senior economic adviser from a White House faith service or making sure that Henry Kissinger was no longer seated at state dinners next to the most attractive woman at the occasion. (Nixon, who barely acknowledged, much less touched, his own wife in public, resented Kissingers public, and well-cultivated, image as a Washington sex symbol.)

Butterfield experienced what all aides do, eventually, if they have the constant access; he was witness to the unguarded and, in Nixons case, the most unattractive behavior of a powerful man. Incident after incident revealed Nixons distaste for his fellow human beings, his racism and anti-Semitism, his overpowering personal suspicions, and his sad longings. Nixon, the most anti-social of men, needed a briefing memo just to make it through the pleasantries of a staff birthday party. One evening, Butterfield recounts to Woodward, he sat across from Nixon on a night trip back to the White House from Camp David on Marine One, and watched as Nixon, in one of the more discomfiting passages in the literature of sexual misbehavior, kept patting the bare legs of one of his secretaries, Beverly Kaye:

And hes carrying on this small talk, but still patting her. Because I can see now, Nixon being Nixon, he doesnt quite know how to stop. You know, to stop is an action in itself. So hes pat, pat, patting her. And looking at her. And feelingI can see hes feeling more distressed all the time now about the situation hes got himself into. So he keeps trying to make this small talk, and I can see him saying [to himself], you know, when the small talk is over, what the hell am I going to do? . . . Shes petrified. Shes never had this happen before. The president of the United States is patting her bare legs.

For how long? Woodward asks.

It seems like half the way to Washington but Id say a long time, minutes.

When it appeared, The Last of the Presidents Men did not receive the attention that was paid to some of Woodwards early investigative books, but its intimacy and strangeness are very much worth returning to in the Trumpian momentespecially so if you are blessed with serving the current President. It is instructive.

Butterfield, who is ninety-one and spent dozens of hours with Woodward recounting his experiences in proximity to a President who ran what was essentially a criminal operation from the White House, emerges from the telling as a man of complex motivations. He hardly charged forward in the early days of the scandal to tell what he knew. After Nixons relection, Butterfield left the White House to lead the Federal Aviation Administration. But no matter how hard Butterfield worked to swallow his hurt feelings or to submerge his knowledge of the various enemies lists and the criminal cover-up that took shape all around him during Watergate, no matter how hard he tried to rationalize Nixons venality with his achievements, particularly the diplomatic opening to China, he came to an almost inevitable moment of reckoning.

In February, 1971, Nixon came up with the idea of putting a voice-activated taping system in his offices. Butterfield was charged with the installation. Haldeman told Butterfield that Nixon wanted the system installed on his telephones and in the Oval Office, his office in the Executive Office Building, the Cabinet Room, and the Lincoln Sitting Room. Kissinger was not to know; neither was his senior-most secretary, Rose Mary Woods. Only a few aides and the President were aware that no conversation was now truly confidential. Tiny holes were drilled into the Presidents desktop to make way for the microphones. A set of Sony 800B tape recorders was set up in the White House basement.

It was all for the sake of history, Nixon said. Kennedy and Johnson had taped selectively, but Nixon wanted it all for the recordhis own recordsbut no one was to know. Goddamn it, this cannot get out, Nixon told Butterfield. Mums the word.

In the end, of course, the tapes were Nixons undoing. In July, 1973, when Senate Watergate investigators asked Butterfield point-blank whether the White House taped conversations, Butterfield decided that his loyalty was not to the cesspool of Nixons White House but to the truth. And by confirming what so few knewthat there were tapes of Nixon and his cronies discussing Watergate and its cover-upButterfield helped end a Presidency.

Donald Trump now faces an investigation led by Robert Mueller, late of the F.B.I., and it could last many months. There is hardly any guarantee that the Administration will be found guilty of collusion with Russia, or with Russians, on any score; to predict that is to leap ahead of any publicly available evidence. Nor is there any guarantee, despite the testimony of Comey, and the testimony coming from other top national-security figures, that there will be a charge of obstruction of justice. This is bound to take some time.

But, while Trumps personality is different from Nixons, there is little evidence that the show of bogus loyalty performed last week has any basis in real life. Will Bannon, Spicer, Conway, Sessions, Kushner, and many others who have been battered in one way or another by Trump keep their counsel? Will all of them risk their futures to protect someone whose focus is on himself alone, the rest be damned? Will none of them conclude that they are working for a President whose honesty is on a par with his loyalty to others? The government is already filled with public servants and bureaucrats who have found ways to protest this Presidents actions and describe them to investigators and reporters. Will the inner circle follow? Have they already?

Alexander Butterfield, day after day, would hear Nixon say, Were going to nail those sons of bitches. He heard the lies; he watched the President try to crush his opponents with surveillance and dirty tricks. It disgusted him, but, for a good while, he assumed that the Presidency would endure; it was too powerful an institution to fall. But then momentum toward the truth began to build a wave, as Butterfield called it. He was, all along, ambivalent, torn between loyalty to the Presidentor, at least, to the idea of the Presidencyand a desire to do the right thing. When his time came, though, Butterfield testified.

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Who in the White House Will Turn Against Donald Trump? - The New Yorker

Takata Said to Ready Bankruptcy Filing Ahead of Sale to Rival – New York Times


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Takata Said to Ready Bankruptcy Filing Ahead of Sale to Rival
New York Times
TOKYO Takata, the troubled Japanese airbag maker, is moving to file for bankruptcy protection as soon as next week in preparation for the company to sell itself to a rival, a person briefed on the matter said on Friday. Any such move has long been ...
Takata bankruptcy filings could come next weekCrain's Detroit Business
Takata said to plan bankruptcy filings as soon as this weekSFGate
Airbag Maker Takata Will Reportedly File for BankruptcyNBCNews.com
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Takata Said to Ready Bankruptcy Filing Ahead of Sale to Rival - New York Times

Could Illinois be the first state to file for bankruptcy? – CBS News

Illinois residents may feel some solidarity with the likes of Puerto Rico and Detroit.

A financial crunch is spiraling into a serious problem for Illinois lawmakers, prompting some observers to wonder if the state might make history by becoming the first to go bankrupt. At the moment, it's impossible for a state to file for bankruptcy protection, which is only afforded to counties and municipalities like Detroit.

Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection could be extended to states if Congress took up the issue, although Stanford Law School professor Michael McConnell noted in an article last year that he believed the precedents are iffy for extending the option to states. Nevertheless, Illinois is in a serious financial pickle, which is why radical options such as bankruptcy are being floated as potential solutions.

Ratings agency Moody's Investor Service earlier this month downgraded Illinois' general obligation bonds to its lowest investment grade rating, citing the state's growing pile of unpaid bills and its mounting pension deficit. Illinois, by the way, has the lowest credit rating of any state. Lower ratings mean higher borrowing costs, since lenders view such borrowers as riskier bets.

"Legislative gridlock has sidetracked efforts not only to address pension needs but also to achieve fiscal balance, allowing a backlog of bills to approach $15 billion, or about 40 percent of the state's operating budget," the agency noted.

As noted by the Fiscal Times, Illinois is the only state that's been operating without a balanced and complete budget for almost two years.

"We're like a banana republic. We can't manage our money," Gov. Bruce Rauner said after the Illinois Legislature failed to produce a full 2017 budget earlier this month.

The situation has prompted comparisons with Puerto Rico, which earlier this year announced a historic restructuring of some of its $70 billion in debt through courts after negotiations with bondholders failed.

Like Puerto Rico, Illinois has a massive pension crisis. Its unfunded pension liability for the state's five major plans grew 25 percent alone in one year, reaching $251 billion, according to Moody's. On a per-household basis, the state's pension debt burden stands at $27,000, according to the conservative-leaning Illinois Policy Institute.

So how did the state's pensions balloon into such a crisis? First, the pension problem has been a long time in the making. The state has more than 660 government pension funds, which are sometimes called defined benefit plans because they promise workers will receive a specific pension when they retire.

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But critics say some of those pensions carried overly optimistic assumptions, especially given periods of market turmoil like the global financial crisis, which ate into investment returns. The state's general assembly wasn't required to fully fund pensions, which meant tax money was spent on other priorities such as schools or infrastructure.

The result? Growing unfunded liabilities, or money promised to workers in their pensions when they retire that the state doesn't have. Other contributing factors include inadequate employer contributions and benefit increases, according to the Civic Federation.

Adding to the state's financial pain is a shrinking tax base. For the last three consecutive years, Illinois has lost residents. Its population is now at its lowest in a decade. Tepid wage growth on top of fewer residents puts a strain on the state's ability to grow its tax revenue.

It's not unprecedented for a state to default on its debt. Arkansas defaulted in 1933 as it struggled to repay debt during the the Great Depression. Spending on an ambitious road-building project and a series of natural disasters heightened the Southern state's problems.

Bankruptcy is often seen as a last-ditch effort, but it also can help struggling cities or companies reinvent themselves on a stronger financial footing. Detroit serves an example of how a reorganization can help, at least in the near-term. The city is now paying its bills and is keeping up with maintenance, although it still has a looming pension payment that could spell trouble in just a few years, according to the Detroit Free-Press.

As Michigan Treasurer Nick Khouri told the publication, "We certainly know many people were hurt during the bankruptcy, but what would have been the alternative and how would they have been hurt under the alternative?"

As for Illinois, Rauner on Thursday called state legislators to a 10-day special session starting next week to hammer out a budget deal and end an unprecedented impasse that could soon enter a third year.

The Republican announced the news in a Facebook video and statement, accusing majority Democrats of "ignoring" his recommendations.

"We have tough, urgent choices to make, and the Legislature must be present to make them," he said.

Lawmakers adjourned last month without a deal before a critical May 31 deadline, triggering the need for a three-fifths majority vote instead of a majority on a budget agreement. The new fiscal year begins July 1. Rauner has called for a special session running from June 21 to July 30.

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Could Illinois be the first state to file for bankruptcy? - CBS News

Vehicles involved in Dusty Old Cars bankruptcy to be auctioned – WMUR Manchester

MANCHESTER, N.H.

A federal judge has ordered the auction of many of the vehicles involved in the Dusty Old Cars bankruptcy case.

The consignment company and its owner have been at the center of a controversial bankruptcy proceeding for months. About 200 of the cars involved in the case will be liquidated, but it's unclear how much money the original owners of the cars will get.

The troubled consignment company and its owner, Stephan Condodemetraky, have been accused by customers of paying them little or no money once the cars have been sold.

"My view is the case is very much in wind-down mode," said Bill Gannon, attorney for Dusty Old Cars. "The trustee will liquidate the inventory. He's released a lot of the consignment cars."

The original owners of the consigned cars have the option of getting them back, but there could be a fee involved. Others could move forward with the court-sanctioned auction and get what money they can.

Customer Carl Zecha his experience with Dusty Old Cars has been "a nightmare." He said he had five vehicles on consignment through the company. Two were sold, but he said he only received a fraction of his money. He found out Friday that he can get his other three cars back free of charge.

"I'm happy to get them back, but it's still a loss no matter how you look at it," Zecha said. "I don't know what to say."

Condodemetraky was not at Friday's hearing, but his lawyer said he never intended to harm anyone.

"I think he's happy it's being resolved," Gannon said. "I think both he and I thought it could have been a better resolution outside of this court, and we tried hard to make a better resolution inside this court and could not get it done."

Officials said it's likely that all of the cars will be liquidated in about a month.

WEBVTT THE ORIGINAL OWNERS OF THOSECARS WILL GET IS STILL VERY MUCHUP IN THE AIR.A FEDERAL JUDGE HAS ORDERED THATABOUT 200 VEHICLES BE SOLD ASPART OF THE BANKRUPTCY CASEINVOLVING DUSTY OLD CARS ANDIT'S OWNER STEPHANCONDODEMETRAKY.THIS IS THE LATEST CHAPTER INTHE ONGOING STRUGGLES OF THETROUBLED CONSIGNMENT COMPANYTHAT'S BEEN ACCUSED BY CUSTOMERSOF A VARIETY OF ISSUES THATINCLUDE PAYING THEM LITTLE OR NOMONEY ONCE THE CARS HAVE BEENSOLD.>> MY VIEW IS THE CASE IS VERYMUCH IN WIND DOWN MODE.THE TRUSTEE WILL LIQUIDATE THEINVENTORY.HE'S RELEASED A LOT OF THECONSIGNMENT CARS.ANDY: THE ORIGINAL OWNERS OF THECONSIGNED CARS HAVE THE OPTIONOF GETTING THEM BACK, BUT THEREMAY BE A FEE INVOLVEOWNERS MAY WISH TO MOVE FORWARDWITH THE COURT SANCTIONEDAUCTION AND GET WHAT MONEY THEYCAN.>> AND THE WHOLE EXPERIENCE THAT -- >> A NIGHTMARE.ANDY: CARL ZECHA SAYS HE HAD 5VEHICLES ON CONSIGNMENT THROUGHDUSTY OLD CARS.HE SAYS TWO WERE SOLD, BUT HEONLY RECEIVED A FRACTION OF HISMONEY.HE FOUND OUT TODAY THAT HE CANGET HIS OTHER THREE CARS BACKFREE OF CHARGE.>> HAPPY TO GET THEM BACK, BUTSTILL A LOSS NO MATTER HOW YOULOOK AT IT.I DON'T KNOW.I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO SAY.ANDY: CONDODEMETRAKY WAS NOT ATTODAY'S HEARING, BUT HIS LAWYERSAYS HE NEVER INTENDED TO HARMANYONE.>> I THINK HE'S HAPPY IT'S BEINGRESOLVED.I THINK BOTH HE AND I THOUGHT ITCOULD HAVE BEEN A BETTERRESOLUTION OUTSIDE OF THIS COURTAND WE TRIED HARD TO MAKE ABETTER RESOLUTION INSIDE THISCOURT AND COULD NOT GET IT DONE.ANDY: OFFICIALS SAY IT'S LIKELYTHAT ALL OF THE CARS WILL BELIQUIDATED IN ABOUT A MONTH.

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Vehicles involved in Dusty Old Cars bankruptcy to be auctioned - WMUR Manchester

Company of businessman behind polo facility expansion files for bankruptcy protection – Fauquier Times

A foreclosure auction on a 616-acre Middleburg parcel to be held in front of the Leesburg courthouse was canceled Friday morning. The property owned by Travellers Rest, LLC, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Thursday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Eastern District of Virginia.

Travellers Rest, LLC managing members are T. Nelson Gunnell and Alfred Rogers Smithwick, both of Middleburg. Gunnell also is the founder and co-owner of the Banbury Cross polo facility that is not part of the 616 acres.

In recent months, Gunnell has been seeking investors for a proposed expansion of the polo facility along Route 50 that would include a resort and clubhouse and a number of homes. Those plans included using some of the acreage in the 616-acre parcel, which is now on hold, and the polo expansion now is in serious jeopardy.

According to the bankruptcy filing, the liabilities were listed between $1 and $10 million. The minimum bidding price on the 616 acres in the foreclosure auction would have been $5 million. The bankruptcy documents also identified nine creditors with a list of more than $401,000 in unsecured claims, including unpaid legal fees, unpaid real estate taxes and a deposit on a piece of land.

The note-holder on the property is Marshall Capital, LC in Marshall, Virginia. In previous court filings, Travellers Rest LLCs original promissory note on the property was $4 million, not including interest.

Neither Gunnell, nor his attorney, Alexandria-based Jeffrey Martin, returned phone calls after the auction was called off. D. Brook Middleton, who is listed as the manager for Marshall Capital LC, also did not return a call to his office, though his receptionist said he would have no comment. Leesburg attorney David Culbert, listed as the trustee for the property before the auction was cancelled, also declined comment.

Chapter 11 filings are generally made to give a business or corporation time to reorganize their finances or raise more capital in order to pay off their creditors. All judgments against that business are suspended, as are collection attempts, foreclosures and repossessions of the property.

Travellers Rest LLC now has 120 days to file a reorganization plan. Another 180 days is then granted after the chapter 11 bankruptcy petition is filed for creditors to accept the companys reorganization plan. Several attorneys familiar with the procedure said it could take months, even several years to sort out.

Leonard Shapiro can be reached at badgerlen@aol.com

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Company of businessman behind polo facility expansion files for bankruptcy protection - Fauquier Times

France’s CGG Group Files for Bankruptcy Protection – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
France's CGG Group Files for Bankruptcy Protection
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Oil-services company CGG Group filed for bankruptcy protection Wednesday in the U.S. and France after reaching a restructuring deal with lenders and bondholders that will eliminate about $2 billion in debt from the company's books. Under the deal ...
French oil services firm CGG files for bankruptcy | ReutersReuters

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France's CGG Group Files for Bankruptcy Protection - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Mesothelioma Clinical Trial Opens with High Expectations – Asbestos.com

Newly diagnosed mesothelioma patients around the world have begun enrolling in a much-anticipated, phase III clinical trial involving an immunotherapy drug combination with groundbreaking potential.

The trial, designed as first-line therapy for unresectable pleural mesothelioma, will measure the effectiveness of nivolumab (Opdivo) and ipilimumab (Yervoy) against standard-of-care chemotherapy.

A presentation this month at the 2017 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting sparked high expectations for the trial, detailing early, impressive effectiveness involving the two drugs in second-line and third-line treatments.

Pharmaceutical giant Bristol-Myers Squibb is sponsoring the latest clinical trial that will include investigational sites in 20 countries and 17 cancer centers across the U.S., including:

Were ultimately hoping [with this trial] to forge a new standard of care for mesothelioma, Dr. Patrick Ma, lead investigator at WVU Cancer Center, told Asbestos.com. Yes, the expectations for this trial are high.

The ASCO presentation in Chicago was based on a multi-center phase II trial in France that included 125 patients with recurrent mesothelioma and measured the effectiveness of nivolumab against a nivolumab and ipilimumab combination.

The disease control rate (DCR) the percentage of patients in which the cancer either does not grow or shrinks was 50 percent at the 12-week mark for those getting the drug combination.

It was 44 percent for those receiving only nivolumab. According to the investigators, previous studies using other second-line treatments managed only a 30 percent DCR.

Tumors shrank in 26 percent of patients getting both drugs and in 17 percent of those receiving just the one. The median progression-free survival (until the cancer worsens) was 5.6 months with the combination and four months with the single drug.

Severe side effects were more common with the drug combination than with nivolumab alone, with 18 percent and 10 percent of patients reporting, respectively.

Our findings suggest that immunotherapy may provide new hope to patients with relapsed mesothelioma, said lead study author Dr. Arnaud Scherpereel of University Hospital of Lille in France. It is too early to conclude whether nivolumab alone or the combination is better.

The phase III trial, which is preparing for 600 participants across the 20 countries, is expected to last until 2021. Newly diagnosed patients with unresectable disease are encouraged to participate.

It is a randomized trial in which the immunotherapy drug combination will be measured against a pemetrexed and cisplatin or carboplatin chemotherapy combination.

The concept of clinical trials needs to be promoted for mesothelioma patients, whose standard of care has been chemotherapy after chemotherapy that has not produced a wonderful response or a satisfactory outcome, Ma said. In a sense, these trials should be seen as just part of modern clinical care.

Unlike chemotherapy, immunotherapy drugs are designed to boost the bodys natural defenses to fight the cancer. They work by blocking the molecules which prevent the immune system from recognizing the cancer as foreign.

Ma, co-leader of the lung cancer program at WVU, believes immunotherapy is the future for many tough-to-treat cancers, including mesothelioma.

In 2015, nivolumab was the first immunotherapy drug approved by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for non-small cell lung cancer as a second-line treatment.

In May, the FDA approved pembrolizumab (Keytruda) in combination with chemotherapy for first-line treatment of non-small cell lung cancer, another first for an immunotherapy drug.

Pharmaceutical company Merck is expected to announce soon its latest mesothelioma clinical trial involving a combination of Keytruda and CRS-207, a drug form of the Listeria bacteria.

More immunotherapy combination trials are on the horizon for many cancers.

We are only at the dawn of the immunotherapy revolution. We are moving inch-by-inch closer to better treatment for these cancers, Ma said. In the big picture of things, there is still so much more we can learn about the immune system that will lead to significant advancements.

Mesothelioma, which has no definitive cure, is an aggressive cancer typically caused by occupational exposure to asbestos. The FDA has not approved a new treatment for first line mesothelioma therapy since 2005.

The majority of patients with pleural mesothelioma live less than 18 months after diagnosis.

People need to pay more attention to this rare disease, Ma said of mesothelioma. It is really emotional walking with them through this [cancer] journey and not having great treatment options. Hopefully now, were closer to finding a better way to treat them.

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Mesothelioma Clinical Trial Opens with High Expectations - Asbestos.com

Despite Mesothelioma Diagnosis, Dad Loved Father’s Day – Asbestos.com (blog)

My dad always enjoyed celebrating the holidays, especially Fathers Day.

Unlike Christmas or Thanksgiving, Fathers Day was all about him. It is a day families spend together, expressing their love and appreciation for the father figures in their lives.

Most men revel in the attention and enjoy time spent with friends and family. My father was no exception.

During the late spring of 1993, Dad was receiving the last of his chemotherapy and radiation treatments. He was very sick and was considering ending his treatment.

Despite nearing the end of his battle with mesothelioma, we planned an unforgettable Fathers Day celebration. My family and I knew the party would take his mind off of his treatments.

He loved family get-togethers.

Mom instructed my siblings and me to open the pool for the summer. Dad always took care of the pool, but he was just not up to it that year.

We worked hard to get the pool open, and the water crystal clear. It wasnt up to Dads standards, but he taught us well, and we did our best.

Mom made countless phone calls to invite family and friends to a huge pool party and barbecue. We designed the menu to include all of Dads favorites: German bratwurst and Polish sausages, baked beans, potato salad and cold beer.

He hadnt been eating well, but we knew he couldnt resist a feast like this.

We kept our plans secret, and our excitement grew by the day. Friday came around, and Mom called again to confirm with guests.

With the grocery shopping finished, we giddily worked on the final touches. Saturday came, and the pools pH level was spot on.

The weather forecast for Sunday was beautiful. Our plans were rock solid.

Sunday morning came, and eager anticipation and enthusiasm filled our home.

We let Dad sleep late so we could decorate and prepare while undercover. Mom and I tiptoed around the kitchen, preparing the feast.

My brother and sister gathered extra chairs and placed citronella candles on the patio tables. Things were really coming together.

As the morning crept by, Mom went in to check on Dad. She yelled for me and my siblings to help.

Dad could hardly stand. His face was unusually pale. Our party-induced enthusiasm left the room as quickly as the color faded from Dads face.

Chemotherapy treatments took a terrible toll on his body. He was violently ill, but still just as stubborn. He was reluctant to let Mom call his oncologist.

With the office closed for the holiday weekend, Mom reached the doctor at home. The doctor suggested they go to the emergency room.

Dad refused to go to the hospital that day but agreed to see his doctor the next morning. Mom nervously made the appointment.

Dads surprise party was not happening at least not as planned. He just wasnt up for celebrating.

We never told Dad about the party we planned. He didnt feel like having company or having a barbecue. Telling him about the party would only further dampen his spirits.

My dad didnt need an elaborately planned party that day. He only needed us to be there for him.

Instead of celebrating, we all just lounged around the living room watching sitcoms and game shows. Despite the change in plans, we made the best of the situation and enjoyed a lazy Sunday.

Dad seemed to find comfort being surrounded by those who loved him most.

That summer, Dad focused his care on quality of life and started feeling better. While his battle with mesothelioma raged on, his infectious smile finally resurfaced.

Dad decided he didnt want to deal with the side effects of chemotherapy anymore. He just wanted to enjoy the time he had left and focus on doing, rather than fighting.

A few weeks later, Dad got his special day. He felt so much better that he spent the day poolside with friends and family. Dad enjoyed his favorite dinner and an ice-cold beer.

My father, a masterful poker player, even obliged to remind his friends what a skillful player he was.

Our party wasnt on Fathers Day, but it was definitely Dads day. He owned it.

The first few Fathers Days without Dad were torturous.

For several years, I avoided the holiday. I didnt want to talk about it. I didnt want to celebrate it, and I couldnt mention my father without breaking down.

With time and with healing, the joy in my memories returned. I now can reminisce with my family about the many remarkable times we shared with Dad.

I can share with others about the kind of man my father was, the impact he had on those around him, and his battle with mesothelioma.

Within his fight with cancer, Dad unknowingly prepared me to share his story.

It is my sincerest hope that those who hear his story find hope in his triumphs. Through stories of his struggles, others can know they are not alone in their battle with mesothelioma.

As my children and I secretly plan for my husbands big day, memories of my Dad flood my heart and mind.

Rather than wince in heartache, I smile with endearment. Although I must admit, it is a tearful smile at times.

Through my childhood experiences with my dad, I can pass the party-planning torch on to my children. They are bursting with the same excitement and anticipation for the secret surprises in store for their father.

As they craft modeling clay coffee mugs and thoughtfully paint pictures, I am blessed to see Dads smile emerge on the faces of my children.

Our Fathers Day plans are coming together nicely.

My kids have a fondness for celebrating special occasions and sharing time with friends and family.

They must get it from their Grandpa.

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Despite Mesothelioma Diagnosis, Dad Loved Father's Day - Asbestos.com (blog)

I Want to Keep Writing About Mesothelioma and My Family’s Journey Because It Matters – MesotheliomaHelp.org (blog)

People often ask me, Why do you keep writing and working for a cure for mesothelioma, even though your Dad is no longer here? Continuing to work for and with the mesothelioma community is not even a question for me. I do it because it matters.

My Dad is no longer with us, its true, but the memories he left me and the impact he had on my life are still vibrant. I do this so that his struggle will not have been in vain. He meant something to so many people, and I want his story to inspire others to not give up and have strong faith in God.

I write because I hope that my familys journey can bring comfort to someone in need. I hope that if there is a person struggling or looking for an answer, they can find some respite in what we went through. Sure, we went through a hard time, but maybe we can help somebody from going through the troubles that we did.

I work because mesothelioma is already an orphan disease. Why should I orphan it as well? It is because people dont talk about it that this cancer has become so little-known. They say that knowledge is power. I want to bring about as much awareness as I can to highlight the dangers of asbestos and to work to prevent one more person from suffering from this disease.

It matters. This cause, so close to my heart, that took my beloved father from me, matters. You matter. Your loved one matters. Your story matters. Never forget that, and never stop fighting.

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I Want to Keep Writing About Mesothelioma and My Family's Journey Because It Matters - MesotheliomaHelp.org (blog)

The Challenges of Research in Immunotherapy – Mesothelioma.com (blog)

Cancer research has made great advancements in recent years with emerging treatments like immunotherapy. Harnessing the immune system in different ways to better combat cancer has proven effective for a variety of cancer types, including mesothelioma. But there is still a lot of work ahead to truly understand how the treatment can be most effective.

While this progress with immunotherapy has given patients a lot of hope, it hasnt been an easy road and there are still many obstacles to face before the treatment reaches its full potential. Researchers have already faced many barriers with clinical trials and the cost of this treatment, and there will likely only be more challenges ahead.

In observance of Cancer Immunotherapy Month, we spoke with medical professionals working in different specialties to get their take on immunotherapy. In the first article of this series, we asked them about the potential for immunotherapy and recent exciting developments. In this article, we learned what barriers theyve come up against and potential future obstacles for the emerging treatment.

In many cases, patients can only receive immunotherapies through clinical trials because the treatment is still so new. Researching a new drug or type of treatment takes years, and the process goes through different phases of testing. It can be a delicate balance of finding the right clinical trial at the right time during its different phases of research.

There are thousands of clinical trials going on at any given time, and it can be difficult to understand all the nuances of choosing and joining a clinical trial. Its understandably an overwhelming decision to choose a clinical trial to pursue from a list of possibly hundreds a patient may be eligible for. Even with advice from an oncologist and lots of research, patients may be taking a gamble on choosing one promising clinical trial over another.

Research shows, however, that many patients dont even consider such a decision. The majority of cancer patients choose not to participate in a clinical trial and stick with standard treatment methods instead.

There are so many clinical trials that need to be done to get us to the next steps. Clinical trials are, for the most part, the best therapy available to patients, explained Dr. Ezra Cohen, the director of translational science at UC San Diego. The sobering reality is that only 3% of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials. We need to urgently break down barriers to participation and encourage patients to seek out clinical trials.

For those that do choose to participate, there are no guarantees. Different phases of clinical trials take on varying numbers of participants, which ultimately puts some patients on a waiting list to see if they can have their chance at a promising new treatment. And even if the patients are able to join and begin the trial, there are never any guarantees the treatment will work for them or what kind of side effects they may experience.

But despite the risks involved, researchers hope patients take the time to learn about clinical trials they may be eligible for and take a leap of faith. I encourage all eligible patients to consider clinical trials, especially when immunotherapy agents are involved, because it is through these trials that we develop the science and improve patient outcomes, insisted Dr. Bradley Corr, assistant professor in gynecologic oncology at the University of Colorado.

The research is still expensive but I believe more critical now than ever. We are at a time when the technology, biology, and drug development have come together in a way that will change the field forever. We must take advantage of that, said Dr. Cohen.

Cancer treatment costs in general have grown exponentially over the years with no sign of lowering any time soon. The cost of making a cancer drug and going through these trials can be well over a billion dollars, and unfortunately leads to patients also taking on a high expense to receive the treatment.

Keytruda (pembrolizumab) for instance has shown promise for mesothelioma and other cancers, but the cost of the drug can be well beyond many patients means. Recent estimates say Keytruda costs about $13,000 every month, which would add up to $156,000 for one year of treatment.

Once you get to the third, fourth or ninth treatment, you have incurred a lot of treatment cost, and if you dont have coverage what do you do? said Dr. Satish Shah, an oncologist and hematologist at Gettysburg Cancer Center. How can you not have treatment that is potentially life saving? [But] if one treatment is $10,000, how can you justify that treatment?

Since these drugs are often part of clinical trials, much of these costs will be covered by the sponsor of the study. However, that doesnt mean the participants wont have any costs of their own. Any additional testing or procedures required as a result of the trial often arent covered by insurance, though in some cases the sponsor will also cover these additional expenses.

But even with coverage, health insurance is often not enough when dealing with cancer, and its estimated patients on average pay at least 20 30% of cancer drugs costs out of their own pockets. Many cancer treatments and clinical trials span well beyond a single calendar year, meaning patients often end up with a lifetime of debt to receive lifesaving treatment.

Whether participating in a clinical trial or turning to more conventional treatments, patients face a hefty price tag. Chemotherapy, for example, costs a few thousand dollars for a single treatment, so one round of chemo can reach upwards of $50,000.

Though there are some options to alleviate the financial burden of cancer treatment, the price of these drugs can often cause patients to avoid the potential benefits of a more costly emerging treatment.

Since immunotherapies are still in the early developmental stages, researchers still have a lot to learn. As with any developing treatment, there are still many unknowns and more questions will likely continue to emerge as research continues.

I think the biggest barrier presently is our need to understand the immune system further and execute the experiments that move the field forward, said Dr. Cohen.

The immune system is extremely complex, and will take time for researchers to fully understand how it reacts with these new treatments, as well as how cancer reacts with our immune system. One main focus of research currently is determining why immunotherapy has worked so well in certain types of cancers, but not in others, which researchers believe is because of the immune environment. Researchers also question the side effects patients may encounter.

This particular type of treatment is very different so one challenge would be familiarity with the administration of these drugs to understanding the side effects and appropriately because some of these side effects could be permanent damage, Dr. Shah explained. So you have to be knowing as a health care provider, and you as a patient, what changes have occurred and be careful what you report to your doctor so your doctor is aware of what to look for.

Immunotherapies have been found to cause a wide range of side effects, such as skin reactions or flu-like symptoms. In general, researchers have said these therapies are pretty well tolerated, but there are a lot of unknowns in terms of how immunotherapy might affect the body over a long period of time or years after treatment.

Regardless of the obstacles and risks, immunotherapy is an exciting new treatment that has the potential to change cancer care for good. With continued research and support, it will likely only become more effective for more cancers, and maybe even help lead to a cure.

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The Challenges of Research in Immunotherapy - Mesothelioma.com (blog)

Mesothelioma Patients May Benefit from Marijuana Research – Mesothelioma.net Blog (blog)

Marijuana has long been known to provide symptom relief for those suffering from cancer, and this is as true for mesothelioma patients as for those with any other form of the disease. Its been shown that smoking the substance eases the nausea and vomiting that follow chemotherapy treatments and that it can help to improve appetite and therefore nutritional intake: there has also been some anecdotal evidence that it eases nerve pain in patients who suffer from the pain caused by growing tumors. Still, because of legal issues the drug has not been the subject of extensive research to determine whether it can offer a cancer cure. Thats all about to change as a California-based technology company has announced that it will begin clinical studies.

The company is CURE Pharmaceutical, and mesothelioma patients will be waiting along with victims of other cancers to see whether their studies will show that cannabis can either kill or slow the growth of cancer cells. The studies will be done in partnership with the Israel Institute of Technology. According to CUREs CEO Rob Davidson, There is strong anecdotal evidence, but we want to put some science into it. First, well do an in vitro study and see the effects on cancer cells. We can get into human trials pretty quickly in Israel. Conducting the study abroad is notable, and is a result of the fact that the U.S. government continues to classify marijuana as a Schedule I drug, making it difficult to conduct research.

According to noted medicinal marijuana authority Dr. Lester Grinspoon, Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, I think the day will come when it or some cannabinoid derivatives will be demonstrated to have cancer curative powers, but in the meantime, we must be very cautious about what we promise these patients.

Marijuanas ability to provide symptom relief for mesothelioma victims is unquestioned, and is the reason why it is made available to patients. At issue is whether the drugcan move beyond symptom relief and slow growth or cause cancer cell death. CURE is uniquely positioned to conduct this investigation as a result of its foreign partnerships, as well as its proprietary extraction technologies.

Finding relief from the ravages of mesothelioma is the goal of patients, their families, and advocates around the world. For information about the resources available to you, contact the Patient Advocates at Mesothelioma.net. We can be reached at 1-800-692-8608and are here tohelp you find help wherever you are.

Terri Oppenheimer is an independent writer, editor, and proofreader. She graduated from the College of William and Mary with a degree in English. Her dreams of a writing career were diverted by a need to pay her bills. She spent a few years providing the copy for a major retailer, then landed a lucrative career in advertising sales. With college bills for all three of her kids paid, she left corporate America for a return to her original goal of writing. She specializes in providing content for websites and finds tremendous enjoyment in the things she learns while doing her research. Her specific areas of interest include health and fitness, medical research, and the law.

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Mesothelioma Patients May Benefit from Marijuana Research - Mesothelioma.net Blog (blog)

Climate, social equality also behind collapse of govt formation talks: Green leader – NL Times

While the topic of a was the final straw for GroenLinks, it was not the only reason behind the party's decision to from the with VVD, D66 and CDA, GroenLinks leader Jesse Klaver said in an interview with the Volkskrant. The party also saw no room for negotiations on climate and social inequality.

After the decision to withdraw, Klaver was flooded with reactions from his followers. According to him, they split into two rough groups. "One: great that you stick to your principles and stand straight. Two: why did it break on immigration, while you could maybe win a lot on other files?" Klaver said to the Volkskrant.

"Then my question is: what files? When it comes to climate: we did not reach the final stage of negotiations, but I did not feel at any moment that we would reach the goals of the Paris Agreement. Not by a long shot." Klaver said. "I also did not see a compromise in the socio-economic field."

According to Klaver, they negotiations focused a lot on dropping the bonus limit on bans so that post-Brexit banks would like to move from London to the Netherlands. "That's the exact opposite of what we want. So we said, we won't do that. The others found that strange." They felt it logical that the Netherlands wants to attract the business of the banks. "But that's not logical! You want to deal with the discontent in the country and the first thing you do is give bankers more rewarding bonuses. We don't want this kind of bank boys and girls."

"Ultimately the formation revolved around the question: are you making the policy a bid less bad or a bit better? It threatened to be the first."

Originally posted here:

Climate, social equality also behind collapse of govt formation talks: Green leader - NL Times

What Do We Celebrate? – The Runner

Remembering 150 years of violent colonialism through the erasure of Indigenous peoples Justin Bige, Contributor

Nicole Kwit

Would you celebrate the existence of a culture that claims to own the land that you and your people have lived on for 10 times longer than those who colonized it? How about 100 times? Or 1000?

The first of July this year will mark the 150th anniversary of Canada existing on Native land. Brandon Gabriel from the Kwantlen First Nation calls this anniversary posturing by political parties to frame Canada as devoid of any political or economic structures.

Indigenous Erasure

The Department of Canadian Heritage is contributing $200 million for events to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Canada. The previous government allocated $150 million for infrastructure for these events to be run, and our current government doubled that amount to $300 million, according to a report from Global News. In total, $500 million has been budgeted for events and celebrations to mark the anniversary.

I had no idea there was that much money allocated for the celebrations, says Gabriel. Despite the fact that a portion of the money was set aside for celebrating Indigenous culture, Gabriel says that he hasnt seen that money go back into his community.

[The money for Indigenous people] is really tokenisticthe window dressing to this big celebration, he says. Its an afterthought.

Gabriel believes that Canadas 150 celebration contributes to the erasure of the Canadian governments crimes against First Nations. The event will encourage people to think of a wholesome, whitewashed Canada instead of the Canada responsible for atrocities.

Nobody will say, Im celebrating 150 years of Genocide. They say, Im celebrating 150 years of fur trade, free market capitalism, resettling of the land, says Gabriel.

The 150 celebration is just the latest Canadian effort to ignore the existence of the Indigenous people who have lived on this land for tens of thousands of years, perhaps even longer. One archaeological dig in North America found the bones of mastodons turned into anvils and stone tools an entire 130,000 years ago. Though there was no evidence of human bones, who else could create tools such as this?

What about the discovery of a 14,000-year-old village on Triquet Island, 500 kilometers northwest of Victoria, by UBC anthropology students? And recently, The Vancouver Sun interviewed Paulette Steeves, a Cree-Metis woman who has been digging into the oral histories of Indigenous peoples in North America and discovered that they trace back over 100,000 years.

So what exactly is Canada celebrating with its 150 event? According to Keara Lightning, a 21-year-old activist from Samson Cree Nation, its a manufactured identity for people who have given up their actual backgrounds, who feel lost and have nothing of actual richness and strength to feel proud of.

[Theyre celebrating] the usual stuff: genocide, colonialism, perpetuating the myths of Canada. It all seems self-evident but its really not to most people, says Lightning.

Though the nation continues with its tradition of Indigenous erasure, the province of British Columbia has added one element to their celebration. They call it Canada 150+, hoping that the plus sign is enough to acknowledge thousands of years of Indigenous existence.

Aboriginal Students Representative for the Kwantlen Student Association, Samantha Davis, believes the plus sign used by the province to be a continuation of the colonial institution, which goes against all of this decolonization that they like to tack onto everything that theyre doing.

150 years doesnt cover everything thats happened in so-called Canada. Its been way over 150 years that our peoples have been oppressed, says Davis.

Lightning echoes Davis frustration over the use of the plus sign.

Some of us dont want to be Canadian, she says. To take Indigenous culture and resistance, which are so many years old, and to include Indigenous peoples in that celebration is just insulting.

Celebrating Genocide

Many Canadians see their country as a long-standing refuge for multiculturalism and inclusivity. But most overlook the fact that establishing this nation required the genocide of Indigenous people.

The colonial wars of the fur trade and the germ warfare of smallpox predates the nationhood of Canada by a long shot. Later, to make Indigenous people desperate enough to sign treaties and move to reserves, the early Canadian settlers enacted starvation policies, not allowing the trade of food to their communities. When treaties were signed, the agreements were often about agriculture to recover from the disease and famine that colonialists imposed on them. Instead of honouring the treaties, the government banned communities from using newer farming implements and technology.

Then there are the more recent policies of cultural genocide as noted by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Much of this began with the Indian Act of 1876, which pushed an assimilationist policy on Indigenous people and forced remaining Indigenous people onto Canadian reserves. Colonial government systems uprooted traditional Indigenous governance structures, replacing them with band councils. To ensure compliance, Indian Agents were dispatched to restrict Indigenous people leaving their own reserves, devastating trade and culturally important journeys.

Lets not forgot the removal of 150,000 Indigenous children from their homes, 6,000 of which died in the Indian Residential School System. These schools were meant to kill the Indian in the child, according to John A. Macdonald, the alcoholic forefather of this 150-year celebration.

Are we celebrating this institutionalization and theft of Indigenous children who were violently abused physically and sexuallywho were beaten for speaking their Indigenous language in institutions where there were graveyards on campus for students to bury their classmates? This system only ended 21 years ago, in 1996.

Of course, there was the strong-arm assimilationist policythe Sixties Scoop of Indigenous children into care in the 1960s up through the 1980s. This affected 20,000 Indigenous children who were taken from their families to be adopted or fostered.

Intergenerational trauma from both grave and despondent acts of genocide is still affecting communities today. The Canadian government has fought every lawsuit over the Residential School System and The Sixties Scoop, and the Conservatives even destroyed evidence of the Residential Schools during the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Is legal power established through a court system set up on Native land also something that were celebrating?

One of the things that will be celebrated will be the railroad from coast-to-coast, and it will only be the sanitized version of it, says Gabriel. It wont show entire communities that were thrown off their land and waters to make way for this intrusive governing body.

Whats more, these communities were thrown off their land by the marginalization of other groups as well, such as the Chinese railroad workers who dealt with the Chinese head-tax.

Broken Treaties

So what about the treaties? Many talk about the treaties that lent out the land in much of Canada, but what do they mean?

They were comprehensive agreements made between the provincial and federal governments with different Inuit, First Nations, and Metis people that obligated the government to assist them in terms of education, medical services, trade, and economic benefit for and from the land.

Treaty Four, for example, says, The promises we make will be carried out as long as the sun shines above and the water flows in the oceans.

Today, the lack of adherence to these obligations shows in Indigenous communities. The government still neglects their critical infrastructure, causing long-term boil water advisories in 98 reserves and short-term advisories in 28 reserves. Houses are condemned but people are still living in them. Schools are built on contaminated land, and go unused while alternatives are not planned. Suicide crises have impacted reserves from coast-to-coast, especially for Indigenous youth.

In January of last year, The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal found Canada guilty of discriminating against Indigenous children by underfunding reserves. Although Canada continues to do this, the tribunal has no ability to force them to change.

Despite representing less than 10 per cent of the population, Indigenous children account for 62 per cent of the 7,000 children-in-care in B.C.. This happens when Aboriginal agencies are underfunded and running under confusing agreements.

Theres nothing confusing about the need to acquire Free and Prior Informed Consent for resource extraction projects on Indigenous land, as outlined by the United Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples that Canada helped create but failed to adopt. Mining, fish-farming, dam-building, oil fracking, and anything else the resource economy can devour happens across the country, despite opposition from Indigenous peoples. Imperial Metals mine in Mount Polley Secwepemc territory, Site C Dam in Peace River Treaty 8 territory, and Kinder Morgans Trans Mountain expansion have and will continue to be major issues for Indigenous people.

Kinder Morgan has a pipeline running from Alberta through the West Coast and ending in Burnaby. It crosses through traditional unceded Indigenous territories and was built without the consent of many Nations along its path, including Kwantlen First Nation. The expansion of this pipeline will triple its capacity for transport from 300,000 to 890,000 barrels of oil a day.

When it comes to resource extraction, 150 years later, Canada has found its new gold rushes and fur trades to celebrate in the fossil fuel industry.

Dismantling Colonization

So what alternatives are there? What would be a better way to commemorate Canada 150+? For Lightning, the answer is simple.

Dismantle Canada, she says. I dont know what else there is.

If that cant be, the actions she would like to see would be actually stopping extraction projects and giving land back.

Canada is celebrating 150 years, but all of us come from generations and generations of people, she says. Dont come here and call yourself Canadian, because what is that? Dont give up over six generations of who you are for 150+ years.

Gabriel says, Ive come to recognize that I cant seek restitution from the colonizer, and their colonizing ways have no respect for our position. I seek nothing from them. Im not seeking anything from them. One of the things were doing here is starting a hashtag at Kwantlen events which is #Kwantlen12000.

He hopes the message will connect with a wide audience. Thus, he maintains his pride in his community and wants to celebrate excellence within the Kwantlen First Nation instead.

If I were approached tomorrow by Kwantlen youth, as in a young person in our community, and I asked them what we should be doing in our Canada 150 celebrationswe have always been doing it. We have always been protecting our water, our spirituality and culture and we dont need people outside our community to acknowledge that, he says.

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What Do We Celebrate? - The Runner

Tell the truth about failed leadership before August 8 – The Star, Kenya

THE Jubilee government must understand we have freedom of expression and freedom of speech. It is our right to express ourselves and it is well anchored in the Constitution.

Jubilee must differentiate between hate speech and the truth. Facts and reality do not change. As political leaders, we must highlight issues that affect Kenyans. Some issues are very pertinent and must be given priority. We cannot overlook them but highlight and address them.

When you tell the truth the Jubilee government claim you have committed hate speech. However, it is not about hate speech they just want to blackmail a good leader.

It is not NASA flagbearer Raila Odinga alone being targetted by the Jubilee administration, they want to blackmail everyone in the opposition. They want to demean us.

JP want to bring up issues to divert your focus when they realise you are growing politically and have good goals. They want to silence you and kill your political ambitions. But, as a country, we must be focussed to address the issues that affect Kenyans. I am just wondering if politicians are being stopped from speaking, what about other Kenyans who have no platform to express themselves!

They want to stop the opposition from telling the truth, because it hurts them. When you tell the truth they fear Kenyans will become brighter and wiser and turn against the government injustices. They know that when Kenyans know the truth they will make sober decisions. One of these decisions is sending this government home. It has failed in all aspects.

They dont want Kenyans to tell the truth so that they can stay in power after 2017. I am just wondering if leaders cannot tell the truth, who will tell Kenyans the truth! Who will talk about the Jubilee government oppression! When you tell the truth, you mess with someone who committed injustices on Kenyans. When you tell the truth, it is clear that you are hurting someone who is stealing. We call on the government to respect our rights and the foundation of our nation.

Kenyans want a free, fair, credible and peaceful election. In fact, Kenyans want the most peaceful election in the countrys history.

But Jubilee has failed and that is why they are everywhere with their propaganda.

Kenyans are increasingly well informed and will make a sober decision on Election Day August 8.

Mboko is the Mombasa Woman rep

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Tell the truth about failed leadership before August 8 - The Star, Kenya

Monumental Oppression – KRWG

Commentary: Critics claim that creating the Organ Mountains Desert Peaks National Monument amounted to a massive overreach of federal power. When signing the executive order to re-evaluate the Monument, President Trump said that it would end another egregious abuse of federal power and give back that power to the states and to the people, where it belongs.

Sounds catchy, but the suggestion that the feds imposed the OMDP Monument on Dona Ana County in an act of oppression turns history on its head. In fact, the feds created the monument at the communitys request. When Congress failed to heed popular proposals to protect Dona Ana Countys most notable natural and cultural assets, our community organized to ask the President to do it instead. This was not an abuse of authority. It was government at its best - effectively responding to the peoples wishes.

Local advocates, sportsmens groups, businesses, environmental groups and individual citizens all pitched in to help design a monument that would best preserve our unique treasures. Both the city of Las Cruces and the Dona Ana Board of County Commissioners endorsed the proposal.

New Mexicos US Senate offices, the Department of the Interior, and the State Land Office worked closely with stakeholders to ensure that ranching, border patrol and national security activities could continue unimpeded by the new designation.

By the time the Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewel visited to inspect the proposed monument, the proposal enjoyed overwhelming support in polling, from stakeholder groups throughout Dona Ana County, and at a massive event held for the community at large.

It is an outrage for the Trump administration to second guess such a fully articulated expression the will of Dona Ana Countys citizens.

Meanwhile, our local Congressman Steve Pearce derides the monument by inventing a new elite and falsely claiming the monument tramples them. In the West, Pearce says the custom and culture is ranching. Its something that the law was not supposed to change, our custom and culture, and it is.

The assertion that the custom and culture of the twenty some odd Dona Ana County ranchers is more important than the desires of two hundred thousand other residents is downright insulting. And there is not one shred of evidence that the monument has created new burdens on ranchers, or changed their culture, or that it ever will. There is only an abiding ranchers paranoia that anything federal must be bad except for their subsidized grazing rights of course.

So lets set the record straight. The federal government acted according to the will of our community by creating the Organ Mountains Desert Peaks National Monument. The only federal officials disregarding the publics wishes are office holders bent on lopping off 90% of the lands Dona Ana County residents successfully fought to include.

Those egregious abusers of power would be Donald Trump and Steve Pearce.

Steve Fischmann is a former state senator and one of the many Dona Ana County residents who helped shape and support the Organ Mountains Desert Peaks National Monument.

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Monumental Oppression - KRWG