Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Steve Rhodes

The New York Times has obtained the transcripts of Donald Trump’s 1040s from 1985 to 1994, and they only reinforce what those paying attention already know: As a financial whiz and supreme deal-maker, he’s a fraud who has spent his life playing with daddy’s money and mostly losing. He does, however, have the kind of big mouth and media manipulation skills that news and entertainment outlets have never been able to resist.
To wit:
“The numbers show that in 1985, Mr. Trump reported losses of $46.1 million from his core businesses – largely casinos, hotels and retail space in apartment buildings. They continued to lose money every year, totaling $1.17 billion in losses for the decade.
“In fact, year after year, Mr. Trump appears to have lost more money than nearly any other individual American taxpayer, The Times found when it compared his results with detailed information the IRS compiles on an annual sampling of high-income earners. His core business losses in 1990 and 1991 – more than $250 million each year – were more than double those of the nearest taxpayers in the IRS information for those years.
“Over all, Mr. Trump lost so much money that he was able to avoid paying income taxes for eight of the 10 years.”
The media’s role?
“As with many things Trump, his adventures in the stock market were more image than substance, helped greatly by news reports quoting anonymous sources said to have knowledge of Mr. Trump’s actions. An occasional quote from an associate – including his stockbroker, Alan C. Greenberg – helped burnish the myth.

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Posted on May 8, 2019

How To Avoid Accidentally Becoming A Russian Agent

By Jennifer Grygiel/The Conversation

American citizens are unwittingly becoming Russian agents.
That’s an unavoidable conclusion of Robert Mueller’s report on his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and an important problem that requires a change in thinking about how people interact on social media.
Old adages like “Don’t talk to strangers” don’t really apply in a hyperconnected world. A more accurate replacement is perhaps even more worrying, though: “If you talk to strangers online, assume they are spies until proven otherwise.”

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Posted on May 6, 2019

For Campaign Finance Violators, Crime Pays

By Michael D. Gilbert and Samir Sheth/TakeCare

The Federal Election Commission recently levied a record-breaking fine against Right to Rise, a Jeb Bush-connected super PAC, for soliciting an illegal contribution from a foreign national.
The fine brought cheers – and self-congratulation – for the FEC, an agency infamous for deadlock, and heartened people on both sides of the aisle who want better enforcement of campaign finance laws.
There’s just one catch: Right to Rise came out ahead.
Newly-released documents tell the tale. In exchange for a $1.3 million contribution, the super PAC paid a $390,000 fine. The difference – $910,000 in illegal money – is the Super PAC’s to keep.

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Posted on April 30, 2019

JB Pritzker’s First 100 Days

Another Beachwood Special Report

Way different than Bruce Rauner’s first 100 days.
* Fewer toilets per capita.
* Gold Coast finally represented in state government.
* Restored “g”s to all Illinois gerunds.
* Now they’re booing, not just saying “Bruuuuuuce!”

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Posted on April 25, 2019

Illinois Supreme Court Draws A Line At 40 Years For “Life” Sentences Imposed On Youth

By The Children and Family Justice Center

The Illinois Supreme Court, in the case of People v. Dimitri Buffer, held Thursday that Buffer’s 50-year sentence, which was imposed for an offense that occurred when he was 16, violated the Eighth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
The court determined that a sentence over 40 years is an unconstitutional “de facto” life sentence for a youth under the age of 18 when it is imposed without consideration of the defendant’s “youth and attendant characteristics.”

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Posted on April 20, 2019

Youth Climate Strike National Outreach Director Is A Barrington 16-Year-Old And She And Her Friends Are Trying To Save The World From Your Cataclysmic Gross Negligence

By Anna Zuccaro/Unbendable Media

Hi Steve –

Happy Wednesday. Hope you’re doing well. I wanted to reach out and flag that Anya Sastry a 16-year-old from Barrington, has partnered with other young activists from around the country – part of Youth Climate Strike – in a new national campaign challenging 2020 Democratic Presidential hopefuls to join a debate or forum exclusively focused on discussing solutions to climate change and other environmental crises. Anya serves as National Outreach Director at Youth Climate Strike.

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Posted on April 17, 2019

Bullies In Blue Must Be Fired

By Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.

As disturbing as the video of two Chicago police officers shoving and dragging a 16-year-old girl down a flight of stairs at Marshall High School on Jan. 29 – stepping on her chest, zapping her with a Taser and then lying about it – is that the officers are still allowed to carry guns and badges, two months after the brutal encounter.
The officers said the slightly built student, Dnigma Howard, started the “physical altercation” after being told to leave the school, according to the Chicago Sun-Times, which recently obtained the video. Yet the video shows the teenager attempting to walk away when one of the officers grabbed her and pulled and pushed her down the stairs.
It is painful to watch.

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Posted on April 16, 2019

Number Of U.S. Corporations Paying ‘Not A Dime’ In Federal Taxes Doubled In 2018

By Eoin Higgins/Common Dreams

A new analysis out Thursday shows that tax policy under the Trump administration is benefitting large corporations to such a degree that twice as many large companies will pay nothing in federal taxes for 2018 compared to previous years.
The report, by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, found that 60 companies – including Amazon, Netflix, Activision Blizzard, General Motors, and IBM – used “a diverse array of legal tax breaks” to bring their federal tax liability to zero.
“For years, corporations have manipulated the system to avoid paying taxes, and it’s clear that the 2017 [Trump tax cut] did nothing to change this,” said Matthew Gardner, a senior fellow at ITEP and lead author of the report.
See the complete list of U.S. companies which paid “not a dime” in federal taxes last year here.

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Posted on April 13, 2019

Bold, Progressive Ideas Aren’t Unrealistic

By Andre Perry/The Hechinger Report

Universal pre-K, which was once considered a pipe dream for liberal Democrats, is coming closer to reality – because predominantly white conservatives in the deep red state of Alabama have decided to dream along with liberals. After decades of lobbying by early childhood advocates, local businessmen agreed to fund individual programs and initiatives, and used their influence with the staunchly Republican legislature to increase state spending on pre-K in 2012 by $9 million, up 47 percent from the year before. In the 2016-17 school year, that figure went up to $100 million. Now, the state is No. 1 in pre-K quality, according to The National Institute for Early Education Research, resulting from a change in mindset about a historically progressive issue.
My, how times have changed since when I worked in public schools in Louisiana! It was only 2014 when Bobby Jindal, then the Republican governor of that red state, stalled when he was offered $15 million in federal funds under the Obama administration to expand pre-K programs. Jindal eventually accepted the funds, but first he showed off his conservative bona fides by threatening to turn away money from a Democratic administration to fund a liberal priority. There seemed to be a dividing line that kept conservatives from transgressing in progressive territory.
Pre-K hasn’t been the only crossover issue. Last year, Republican legislators who vowed to dismantle the Affordable Care Act were put on the defensive by GOP supporters who demanded that their representatives instead maintain or improve upon the law. And in December, Congress passed a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill, the First Step Act, something that the Democratic Party has been trying to pass for decades. Yet universal pre-K, health care and criminal justice reform were once considered too liberal even for establishment Democrats to take up, for fear that it would turn off white working-class voters.

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Posted on April 8, 2019

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