Artistic License Under Trump: Revoked?

by William Skink

The political cartoonist Ted Rall is watching the new regime closely for signs that it’s time to leave. His duel citizenship could be a life saver.

In my latest video piece, I punch Trump in the face. How long will us creative types be allowed artistic license to free expression?

The steps Obama took to chill dissent weren’t met with howling outrage. Now that Trump has seized power people are beginning to panic as the threat of consolidated executive power becomes apparent.

You were warned. You ignored the warnings. Now we will all reap the consequences.

Have a nice weekend.

How Noble Is Our Killing?

by William Skink

SCENE I

But “Putin’s a killer,” O’Reilly said.

“You got a lot of killers,” Trump shot back. “What, you think our country’s so innocent?”

SCENE II

“Turns out I’m really good at killing people,” Obama said quietly, “Didn’t know that was gonna be a strong suit of mine.”

SCENE III

“We have heard that half a million children have died. I mean, that’s more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?”

I think this is a very hard choice, but the price — we think the price is worth it.

SCENE IV

Asked about the strike that killed him, a senior adviser to the president’s campaign suggests he should’ve “had a more responsible father.”

Cornered by reporters with video cameras, former White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, a senior adviser to President Obama’s reelection campaign, attempted to defend the kill list that the Obama Administration uses to determine whose body should next be blown apart.

Will a Bill Regulating Warm Springs Discharges Make Things Worse?

by William Skink

One might think, having worked at a homeless shelter for 7 years, that I would be excited to see a bill prohibiting Warm Springs from discharging people to the streets and homeless shelters.

But I’m not because the bill is significantly flawed, which makes sense considering who sponsored it. From the link:

Rep. Ellie Hill Smith, D-Missoula, said her bill would end the practice of dumping homeless patients, and force health officials to include housing arrangements in their discharge plans from Montana’s only state-run psychiatric hospital in Warm Springs.

“When Warm Springs discharges them, they are often still in their hospital clothes and they are given seven days of medication,” Hill Smith said. “It is, frankly, morally reprehensible and it’s fiscally unsound.”

First, there is already discharge planning happening at Warm Springs. I’m not a fan of how that facility is run, but the problems are primarily from inadequate staffing and training, which ultimately means money. The problems were recently so bad, the facility risked losing Federal money:

Montana State Hospital, the state’s publicly run psychiatric facility, was set to lose its federal agreement in February because of what’s called an “immediate jeopardy,” a situation where the hospital’s noncompliance with federal regulations was considered serious enough to risk death or serious injury to a resident.

After a legal notice was published in The Montana Standard on Thursday announcing the termination of the agreement between the Warm Springs hospital and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid set for Feb. 8, the agency sent the paper a notice of retraction, saying that the situation that put residents at significant risk had been “abated.”

The second major problem with this bill is pretty straight forward: if there are no appropriate housing arrangements for a discharge, what is Warm Springs supposed to do? And what is this bill going to do to address the shortage of transitional housing and other community-based placements? There aren’t any good answers to those questions, and, as it turns out, there isn’t even data available regarding how many of the returning patients to Warm Springs are homeless:

Not having a stable home environment increases their chances of being readmitted to the hospital, Smith said. Hill Smith, an attorney who previously ran a Missoula homeless shelter, said 386 of the 768 people who were admitted in the hospital last year were returning patients. It was not clear how many of those returning patients were homeless.

I wonder if Rep. Hill even talked to anyone at the shelter she once ran about this issue. I doubt it. If I had been consulted, I would have described how the shelter got a request from Warm Springs to discharge a mentally ill woman, and the Pov said no. So what happened? Warm Springs got her set up with case management from the worst (in my opinion) mental health provider, then discharged her to a motel room. Within a few days the woman stopped taking her meds and got kicked out of the motel, then showed up at the shelter.

Does this bill also prohibit discharges to motel rooms? Because if it doesn’t, that’s the kind of thing Warm Springs will do.

Finally, there’s the money. The fiscal note makes one six figure claim, and Rep. Hill makes a counter claim that I think is ridiculous:

Health department officials said in a fiscal note accompanying the bill that the state would be forced to pay for temporary housing costs upfront while hospital officials await a determination of whether the patients are eligible for federal aid.

The cost to the state would run more than $150,000 a year, according to the agency’s estimate. Hill disputed that, saying the costs would be lower if hospital officials begin patients’ discharge plans when they are admitted.

The bill also requires health officials not to delay a person’s discharge from the hospital in order to comply, and to provide patients who are headed to temporary housing with information on how to find permanent housing.

How in the hell is immediate discharge planning supposed to lower the cost of paying for transitional housing? That makes absolutely no sense to me. Here’s another question: where is the money for more staff time to engage in discharge planning supposed to come from? Warm Springs can barely provide enough staffing to keep patients from dying and nearly lost federal funding because of it.

I also don’t get what is going to happen when this bill “requires health officials not to delay a person’s discharge from the hospital in order to comply”. If no facility will take a discharging patient, Warm Springs can’t delay the discharge, but they also are prohibited from discharging people with no appropriate place to go. It’s a classic damned if you do, damned if you don’t scenario.

In summary, when one looks beyond the feel-good headlines of this bill, it starts looking crazier than the people who end up in Montana’s lone psychiatric hospital. It’s almost as bad as Rep. Hill’s “revenge porn bill”, which was interestingly dressed down at Moogirl a few days ago by Mary Moe.

What’s happening with mental health and homelessness in Montana is a serious problem. Unfortunately this bill doesn’t offer a serious response. If passed into law, it will actually create more problems when the funding to do what needs to be done doesn’t materialize.

On Not Belonging: Notes from the Political Wilderness

by William Skink

There are people who are not Trump zealots and also not rushing to join the resistance. I consider myself one of them. So does Mike Krieger, who is back from a self-imposed break to report that everyone is going insane.

Facebook is probably the best platform offering daily proof of Krieger’s assertion. Earlier today I was reading proof that people are losing their shit and that real, long-lasting damage is being done to relationships with friends and family.

The original post was a demand for Brady and Darth Belicheck to denounce white supremacy. Pepe the frog was mentioned. But it’s in the comments where one sees the familial strain come out:

I was very conflicted watching the game last night and cheering for the Pats knowing that TB and Belichick endorse Trump, and by extension Bannon and white supremacy. I am made sick today by seeing my friends and family sharing pictures of TB and calling him a hero. The cumulative effect is that people very close to me are tacitly endorsing my extinction. I do not expect anything from the NFL, especially not in response to Dick Spencer and his fringe lunatics. I do expect my friends and family who care about being football fans to demand it of the NFL.

I really try to avoid getting sucked into Facebook threads, but I have my moments of weakness where I can’t help pulling back the lens a bit from the hysteria calling itself the resistance. A local musician I’ve known for years put up something about impeaching Trump, and I said this:

Trump is part of a continuum of the executive office grabbing power. I don’t remember similar outrage when Obama executed US citizens without due process while presiding over an immense expansion of government surveillance, violating our constitutional rights.

To this he said:

Trump/Bannon represents an immediate and out-of-control shift toward authoritarianism that I feel needs to be resisted with all possible strength now. Your concern over the long term degradation of our system is valid and important, but IMO is not the thing to be diverted by today. Right now, I am sick of people talking about Hillary, or Obama, or Bill Clinton or any other thing that any other president has done in the past. I believe we must act today to minimize the insane, hateful, power-usurping situation that is unfolding.

Now, I’m not saying he’s wrong in his assessment of the authoritarian shift being out of control. Just read this piece, titled “Wait Calmly“, and tell me this description of how the threat of Hitler was down-played and underestimated in 1933 doesn’t sound like what we are seeing play out these last two weeks.

I guess what it comes down to, for me, is this question: is the story of how we got to this point a necessary component of forming a viable resistance, or is the threat so immediate there’s no time for any awkward histrionics that includes Democrats as complicit in the rise of overt Fascism in America?

George Ochenski is asking essentially the same thing in his column today when he asks what now, collaborators? It’s a good question for the table-scrap enablers of Tester’s shady legislative attempt to mandate logging, and it’s a good question for any cheerleading partisan who provided cover these last 8 years as a smooth talking Democrat in the White House continued consolidating the power grab, post-9/11, enacted by Bush.

I don’t know how to effectively respond to the growing constitutional crisis Trump represents as he tweets attacks on judges who rule against his executive orders, but I do think the story of how we got here is important, because without that understanding this resistance is going to get cut-off at the knees by self-serving Democrats who can’t be trusted to represent anyone outside their donor circles.

So, for those of you not bought in to this corrupt political duopoly, here is a little Krieger to let you know you are not alone:

I think the U.S. citizenry is being afflicted by a sort of mass insanity at the moment. There are no good outcomes if this continues. As a result, I feel compelled to provide a voice for those of us lost in the political wilderness. We must persevere and not be manipulated into the obvious and nefarious divide and conquer tactics being aggressively unleashed across the societal spectrum. If we lose our grounding and our fortitude, who will be left to speak for those of us who simply don’t fit into any of the currently ascendant political ideologies?

I’ve always prided myself in having and maintaining a very diverse readership. Many of you are Trump supporters, and many of you are Sanders supporters. Very few of you are Hillary Clinton supporters. This is how it ought to be, considering that I advocate that the current paradigm is broken, unethical and needs replacing. I don’t pretend to have the answers of what needs to be done on every policy issue, but I do know for sure that we can’t continue along with the current model any longer. As such, my intent is to have a discussion with all of you who want something new, even though we will invariably disagree on all sort of topics. This is healthy and normal.

What isn’t healthy is cheerleading your preferred political candidate once he is in power. I see this all over the place when it comes to Trump, and I find it pretty sickening. I can begrudgingly accept the cheerleading during an election, after all, the entire point of an election is to win. I cannot accept it after victory has been achieved, however. Trump is now the President and wields a grotesque amount of executive power thanks to the precedents established by all of the horrible individuals who came before him. Trump didn’t create this mess, but he now holds the ring of power and that is something to be feared, not cheered.