Monday Morning Read

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Tim Howard’s management of the county’s two jails was a nightmare; more than 30 prisoner deaths during his tenure attests to that. There’s a new sheriff in town, in the person of John Garcia, but it appears it’s business as usual. The Buffalo News had to go to court to obtain video footage of Correctional Officer Daniel Piwowarczyka kicking a handcuffed prisoner in the head. Garcia tried to block release claiming – get this – he wanted to protect the privacy of the prisoner. The story pointed out that no fewer than a dozen correctional officers were in the vicinity of the assault, but none mentioned the kick in their reports. Ah, yes, the Blue Wall of Silence. An internal investigation cleared Piwowarczyka and District Attorney John Flynn declined to prosecute, despite what the video revealed. That’s what happens when you entrust law enforcement to investigate itself.

A city of good neighbors? Complaints of housing discrimination locally have doubled since 2020.

National Fuel has employed scare tactics via a robocall campaign in an effort to thwart Gov. Kathy Hochul’s climate change initiative, New York Focus reports. National Fuel, based here in WNY, is, of course, in the fossil fuel business.

Hochul wants to increase subsidies to film and television producers. In response, Reinvent Albany released research that purports to show how wasteful the subsidies are. One example: current subsidies generate 27 cents in benefits for every $1 in tax breaks. Another example: subsidies work out to $66,819 per full-time job equivalent.

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Camden, New Jersey, has a good idea: require companies receiving subsidies to specify how many local residents they employ. The city’s disclosure requirements revealed that few residents got jobs as a result of tax breaks.

State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli has called on Tesla to stop with the union busting at its South Buffalo plant.

Things are bad at The Buffalo News; they’re worse at papers with the misfortune of being owned by the Gannett chain, including the Democrat and Chronicle down the road in Rochester. Employment throughout the chain since late 2019 has fallen from 25,000 to 11,200. Ouch.

Reform-minded prosecutors are under assault from the right, as reported by The Intercept. So are programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion, according to The Center for Public Integrity. (Martin Luther King once said the arc of the moral universe bends towards justice: I’m not sure that holds true today.)

What we eat – and more specifically, how our food is produced – is bad for the climate. Reports from Wired and The Guardian tell the tale, and what can be done about it. Elsewhere on the food front, the growing use of artificial sweeteners – they’re even making their way into pediatric products – is bad for you. Like, really bad.

The Elvis Presley franchise pulls in over $100 million a year in sales – and that’s not counting record sales. It’s one reason why the fight over his estate has gotten ugly in the wake of the death of his daughter, Lisa Marie. Oh, for better times.

The post Monday Morning Read appeared first on Investigative Post.

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Concurrent with Donald Trump's hush money trial finishing up its second week of prosecution testimony, the former president's emails to his supporters are becoming increasingly over-the-top and shrill, leading to speculation he is not only having donation problems but also the pressures of his legal problems are getting to him.

As noted by Salon's Chauncey DeVega who has been reporting on the former president's diminishing mental state and possible psychological problems, there is a growing vibe of panic in Trump's emails as evidenced by a recent one that blared: "All hell breaks loose in 24 hours!" and another declaring he is being held "hostage."

According to DeVega's report, the strident tone in the emails begging for donations are demonstrating an increasing spiral in victimhood as he sits day after day in a Manhattan courtroom while facing the possibility of jail time if convicted on just one of the 34 felony counts he is charged with related to paying hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

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"With the beginning of Trump’s first criminal trial in New York, his emails have only become more extreme – and will only continue to – as the 2024 election and potentially three other criminal trials are closing in on him," he wrote before pointing to the recent Trump email that stated: "Friend, in 24 hours, the hearing on my GAG ORDER will begin. I COULD BE THROWN IN JAIL AT THAT VERY MOMENT! This is what the Hate-America Deep State has always dreamed of. STAND WITH TRUMP I won’t be able to campaign. I will be muzzled and silent. And Democrats will have free rein to destroy our country."

That led DeVega to argued that, "Of course, Donald Trump is lying. There is no substantive evidence to support his fabulist conspiratorial delusions-fantasies of persecution and other harm. The corrupt ex-president is in no way a victim, except perhaps of his own apparent sociopathy if not outright psychopathy, and other parts of his obviously diseased mind."

Add to that, he wrote that there is a sense that the former president is struggling to raise money to fund both his multitude of legal teams fending off criminal indictments as well as his presidential campaign.

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To make that point, he cited a recent Washington Post report that relayed, "In the years after Donald Trump lost the presidency to Joe Biden, Trump sent so many emails and text messages asking for money that Republican consultants warned his mailing lists could become useless. The former president’s friends told him that they were being asked for too much, too often, and Trump himself ordered aides at one point to slow the solicitations. Some of his fans, pockets emptied, mailed handwritten letters apologizing for not being able to give more. Now, as Trump and Biden prepare for a rematch, Trump’s vaunted small-dollar fundraising operation is not bringing in as much money as it once did."

"They will need to find a way to trigger more fear, pain, discomfort, terror, and other negative emotions among the MAGA people and other prospective Trump donors and voters. Those negative emotions will be the motivation for giving a literal form of protection money to Donald Trump and the MAGA leadership," the Salon columnist suggested.

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