fed less likely back to basics (and foxholes) for today’s ... 04, 2016 · c m y k...

1
REDDING, Calif. When Mathew Gonzales, a Latino musi- cian from San Jose, heard that Donald J. Trump was coming to town, he knew he had to do some- thing. Unwilling to let the presump- tive Republican nominee’s visit pass quietly, he created an event page on Facebook to organize a protest titled “Manda A Donald Trump A La Chingada” — Spanish for “Send Donald Trump to Hell.” Two days later, Mr. Gonzales, and more than 100 other pro- testers who visited his page, ar- rived at the arena in San Jose where Mr. Trump would speak and jeered his supporters through a megaphone. The taunting at Thursday night’s rally turned vio- lent, with some of Mr. Trump’s backers beaten and “Make Amer- ica Great Again” hats set on fire. “I saw he was coming and thought, ‘We got to go out and speak against him,’” said Mr. Gon- zales, 31, who avoided the violence that ensued. “He’s obviously not representing what we’re all about here in San Jose. San Jose is very based on immigrants and stuff like that.” While Mr. Trump has blamed paid “disrupters” and operatives from Hillary Clinton’s and Senator Bernie Sanders’s campaigns for such protests in the past, the vio- lence at this rally and the protest that inspired it appeared sponta- neous and not directed by Democrats or other groups. In- stead, it was more the product of independent local efforts that caught fire through social media. Such episodes, like a protest in April in Burlingame near San Francisco and at an abruptly can- celed March rally in Chicago, rep- resent some of the most signifi- Trump Rallies Attract Passion And Violence By ALAN RAPPEPORT and NICK CORASANITI Continued on Page A13 A Trump hat burned at a rally Thursday in San Jose, Calif. JOSH EDELSON/A.F.P. — GETTY IMAGES Days after several of his col- leagues were awakened in their hotel rooms by the police and ar- rested on corruption charges last year, Sepp Blatter, the longtime president of FIFA, made an im- portant decision. He decided he deserved a raise. With soccer in crisis and an un- precedented scandal beginning to boil, Mr. Blatter — who had just won re-election to a record fifth four-year term — signed a new employment contract that in- creased his salary to $3 million a year and guaranteed him a $12 million bonus if he completed his mandate. That arrangement, completed just as FIFA was plunging into or- ganizational chaos, was one of many instances in which three of FIFA’s top officials arranged over five years to pay themselves more than $80 million, according to an internal investigation of world soccer’s governing body by the American law firm Quinn Eman- uel. It was the latest in a series of jaw-dropping accusations about a culture of corruption pervading FIFA. For years, top soccer offi- cials have been accused of using bribes and payoffs to profit from their roles overseeing the billions of dollars FIFA and other govern- ing bodies generate through tour- naments like the World Cup. But in the past year, dozens of soccer FIFAOfficials Took Huge Raises As Scandal Grew, Inquiry Finds By SAM BORDEN and ANDREW DAS Continued on Page A3 WASHINGTON — Donald J. Trump’s blustery attacks on the press, complaints about the judi- cial system and bold claims of presidential power collectively sketch out a constitutional world- view that shows contempt for the First Amendment, the separation of powers and the rule of law, legal experts across the political spec- trum say. Even as much of the Republican political establishment lines up behind its presumptive nominee, many conservative and libertar- ian legal scholars warn that elect- ing Mr. Trump is a recipe for a con- stitutional crisis. “Who knows what Donald Trump with a pen and phone would do?” asked Ilya Shapiro, a lawyer with the libertarian Cato Institute. With five months to go before Election Day, Mr. Trump has al- ready said he would “loosen” libel laws to make it easier to sue news organizations. He has threatened to sic federal regulators on his critics. He has encouraged rough treatment of demonstrators. His proposal to bar Muslims from entry into the country tests the Constitution’s guarantees of religious freedom, due process and equal protection. And, in what was a tipping point for some, he attacked Judge Gon- zalo P. Curiel of the Federal Dis- trict Court in San Diego, who is overseeing two class action law- suits against Trump University. Mr. Trump accused the judge of bias, falsely said he was Mexican and seemed to issue a threat. “They ought to look into Judge Curiel, because what Judge Curiel is doing is a total disgrace,” Mr. Trump said. “O.K.? But we will come back in November. Wouldn’t that be wild if I am president and come back and do a civil case?” David Post, a retired law profes- sor who now writes for the Volokh Conspiracy, a conservative-lean- ing law blog, said those comments had crossed a line. “This is how authoritarianism starts, with a president who does not respect the judiciary,” Mr. Post said. “You can criticize the judicial system, you can criticize individ- ual cases, you can criticize indi- vidual judges. But the president has to be clear that the law is the law and that he enforces the law. That is his constitutional obliga- tion.” “If he is signaling that that is not his position, that’s a very serious constitutional problem,” Mr. Post said. Beyond the attack on judicial in- dependence is a broader question Trump Declarations Seen As Threat to Rule of Law Scholars Find Disregard for Constitutional Rights in Remarks That Raise Alarm By ADAM LIPTAK Continued on Page A12 A man sleeping near Waikiki Beach. Honolulu is trying to rid its streets of the homeless. MONICA ALMEIDA/THE NEW YORK TIMES HONOLULU — Anna Sullivan is prohibited from sitting on a sidewalk. She cannot wander off to find food without worrying that the police might seize her shop- ping cart. She cannot sleep on Waikiki Beach without fear of be- ing rousted. Ms. Sullivan, 45, has been homeless for eight years since she got out of prison. But these days — after run-ins with the police over where she sleeps, sits or leaves her belongings — she tries to keep away from Waikiki, the bustling tourist district whose sidewalks and beaches she once used as her home. “Tickets, tickets, tickets,” she said, already looking weary at the start of her morning, sipping a cup of iced coffee as she sat on a bench by the beach. “The cops give you a ticket to keep you moving. And then you have to pay the ticket for sleeping in the park. It gets to you.” Two years ago, Honolulu, for all its opulence and appeal to tourists, was a nationally known hub of homelessness: people sprawling on benches and side- walks, panhandling, guarding piles of tents and clothes, sleeping in doorways and moving around aimlessly. Business leaders de- scribed the atmosphere as a fun- damental threat to the tourist- based economy. But these days, the homeless who had crowded large parts of Aloha, and Welcome, Unless You’re Homeless By ADAM NAGOURNEY Continued on Page A10 Honolulu’s Crackdown Shows That Tourists Come First U(DF463D)X+$!@!.!#!] The federal judge who has been accused of bias by Donald J. Trump was once wanted by a Mexican drug cartel. Page A12. Judge Was Targeted Before MARKUS SCHREIBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Staff at the Louvre scrambled Friday to move artworks to higher floors as Paris experienced its worst flooding in 30 years. Page A4. Safe and Dry FORT STEWART, Ga. — When Staff Sgt. Chris Brown headed into the swamplands of Georgia for a military training exercise early this spring, he found himself miss- ing his time in Iraq and Af- ghanistan — and the relative com- forts he had enjoyed there at the height of both wars. Without running water, he now had to bathe with baby wipes and shave without a mirror. He had no idea how his favorite basketball team, the Golden State Warriors, was faring in the playoffs. And the food was so bad that he relied on peanut butter crackers and lost 10 pounds. “When we were out there, they tasted amazing,” said Sergeant Brown, who went to the gym twice a day when he was overseas to make sure he did not put on too much weight from the dining hall and its honey buns and muffins. While some American military personnel, in particular Special Operations forces and a number of Marine and conventional Army units, operated out of small, spar- tan outposts in Iraq and Af- ghanistan, the bulk of Army troops lived on bases that had run- ning water, electricity and hous- ing units. Some larger bases even had wireless internet, televisions, gyms and coffee shops. Civilian contractors guarded the bases, cooked meals and transported ammunition, food and fuel. But now that the American foot- print in Iraq and Afghanistan is far smaller, the Army has begun planning for its next conflict. No matter where and when it occurs, it will almost certainly be fought under more austere conditions. To prepare for this, nearly all Army units are refocusing their training on being self-sustaining, or “expe- ditionary,” as their commanders put it. What that means is that a gen- eration of soldiers with more bat- tlefield experience than any since World War II is getting back to ba- sics: learning how to cook their own meals, cover their faces in camouflage paint, dig foxholes and latrines, lay concertina wire and live out of their rucksacks. The training, known as Deci- sive Action Training Envi- ronment, or DATE, is designed to prepare units for a variety of con- tingencies, ranging from humani- tarian missions to traditional com- bat. The Army created the pro- gram in 2012, shortly after the United States pulled its last troops out of Iraq, to replace its counter- insurgency training, known as COIN. But the Army’s training cy- cles take several years, and in part Back to Basics (and Foxholes) for Today’s Army By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT Continued on Page A11 More Spartan Life as Military Prepares for Its Next Mission The government reported on Friday that employers added just 38,000 workers to their payrolls in May, a sharp slowdown in hiring that is expected to push back a de- cision by the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. The latest snapshot suggested that the economic recovery might have stalled this spring, at least temporarily. Despite the anemic job gains, the official unemployment rate, (which is based on a separate sur- vey of households), fell to 4.7 per- cent, its lowest point in nearly a decade. But the decline was pri- marily a result of Americans drop- ping out of the labor force rather than finding new jobs. “Boy, this is ugly,” said Diane Swonk, an independent economist in Chicago. “The losses were deeper and more broad-based than we expected, and with the downward revision to previous months, it puts the Fed back on pause.” “The only good news is that wages held,” Ms. Swonk said. Av- erage hourly earnings rose again, 0.2 percent for the month, for a gain of 2.5 percent for the last 12 months, an encouraging sign that Fed Less Likely To Raise Rates After Jobs Data By PATRICIA COHEN and BINYAMIN APPELBAUM Continued on Page B4 Officials in Chi- cago released videos from 101 cases in which police officers fired weapons or otherwise used force against civilians. PAGE A9 NATIONAL A9-14 Light Shed On Shootings A candidate chosen on a popular televi- sion show is the closest Palestinians have come to an elected leader in more than 10 years. PAGE A7 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 ‘The President’ as Reality TV Andy Warhol crossed paths with the unknown Ai Weiwei and took no notice. But their work, seen side by side in Pittsburgh, tells a different story. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-5 Warhol And Ai An experiment in Southern California employs high-efficiency technology to create homes that produce as much electricity as they use. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 A Test of Zero Net Energy Accompany a renowned climber to the top of the tallest building in the Western Hemi- sphere. Visit the highest studio apartment in New York City. The New York Times Maga- zine explores life at 800 feet and above. THIS WEEKEND The High Life In New York Three friends from Minnesota’s large Somali community were found guilty of charges that they tried to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State. PAGE A9 Convictions of 3 Linked to ISIS France held talks on the Middle East peace process, which were attended by diplomats from 29 countries. PAGE A6 France Hosts Peace Talks A photograph of a crying Michael Jor- dan has turned into a seemingly un- stoppable internet meme to highlight any humiliation or defeat. PAGE C1 The Crying Jordan Treatment Gail Collins PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED PAGES A18-19 Olympic organizers may not view the virus as a serious threat, but the cyclist Tejay van Garderen sees things differ- ently. Sports of The Times. PAGE B7 SPORTSSATURDAY B7-13 Skipping Rio Over Zika VOL. CLXV . . . No. 57,253 © 2016 The New York Times SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2016 Bob Stackowitz escaped from prison in 1968. He was forgotten until he filed for Social Security benefits. PAGE A16 NEW YORK A16-17 He Was a Fugitive for 48 Years

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Page 1: Fed Less Likely Back to Basics (and Foxholes) for Today’s ... 04, 2016 · C M Y K Yxxx,2016-06-04,A,001,Bs-4C,E2 REDDING, Calif. — When Mathew Gonzales, a Latino musi-cian from

C M Y K Yxxx,2016-06-04,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

REDDING, Calif. — WhenMathew Gonzales, a Latino musi-cian from San Jose, heard thatDonald J. Trump was coming totown, he knew he had to do some-thing.

Unwilling to let the presump-tive Republican nominee’s visitpass quietly, he created an eventpage on Facebook to organize aprotest titled “Manda A DonaldTrump A La Chingada” — Spanishfor “Send Donald Trump to Hell.”

Two days later, Mr. Gonzales,and more than 100 other pro-testers who visited his page, ar-rived at the arena in San Josewhere Mr. Trump would speakand jeered his supporters througha megaphone. The taunting atThursday night’s rally turned vio-lent, with some of Mr. Trump’sbackers beaten and “Make Amer-ica Great Again” hats set on fire.

“I saw he was coming andthought, ‘We got to go out andspeak against him,’” said Mr. Gon-zales, 31, who avoided the violencethat ensued. “He’s obviously notrepresenting what we’re all abouthere in San Jose. San Jose is verybased on immigrants and stufflike that.”

While Mr. Trump has blamedpaid “disrupters” and operativesfrom Hillary Clinton’s and SenatorBernie Sanders’s campaigns forsuch protests in the past, the vio-lence at this rally and the protestthat inspired it appeared sponta-neous and not directed byDemocrats or other groups. In-stead, it was more the product ofindependent local efforts thatcaught fire through social media.

Such episodes, like a protest inApril in Burlingame near SanFrancisco and at an abruptly can-celed March rally in Chicago, rep-resent some of the most signifi-

Trump Rallies

Attract Passion

And Violence

By ALAN RAPPEPORTand NICK CORASANITI

Continued on Page A13

A Trump hat burned at a rallyThursday in San Jose, Calif.

JOSH EDELSON/A.F.P. — GETTY IMAGES

Days after several of his col-leagues were awakened in theirhotel rooms by the police and ar-rested on corruption charges lastyear, Sepp Blatter, the longtimepresident of FIFA, made an im-portant decision. He decided hedeserved a raise.

With soccer in crisis and an un-precedented scandal beginning toboil, Mr. Blatter — who had justwon re-election to a record fifthfour-year term — signed a newemployment contract that in-creased his salary to $3 million ayear and guaranteed him a $12million bonus if he completed hismandate.

That arrangement, completedjust as FIFA was plunging into or-ganizational chaos, was one of

many instances in which three ofFIFA’s top officials arranged overfive years to pay themselves morethan $80 million, according to aninternal investigation of worldsoccer’s governing body by theAmerican law firm Quinn Eman-uel.

It was the latest in a series ofjaw-dropping accusations about aculture of corruption pervadingFIFA. For years, top soccer offi-cials have been accused of usingbribes and payoffs to profit fromtheir roles overseeing the billionsof dollars FIFA and other govern-ing bodies generate through tour-naments like the World Cup. Butin the past year, dozens of soccer

FIFAOfficials Took Huge RaisesAs Scandal Grew, Inquiry Finds

By SAM BORDEN and ANDREW DAS

Continued on Page A3

WASHINGTON — Donald J.Trump’s blustery attacks on thepress, complaints about the judi-cial system and bold claims ofpresidential power collectivelysketch out a constitutional world-view that shows contempt for theFirst Amendment, the separationof powers and the rule of law, legalexperts across the political spec-trum say.

Even as much of the Republicanpolitical establishment lines upbehind its presumptive nominee,many conservative and libertar-ian legal scholars warn that elect-ing Mr. Trump is a recipe for a con-stitutional crisis.

“Who knows what DonaldTrump with a pen and phonewould do?” asked Ilya Shapiro, alawyer with the libertarian CatoInstitute.

With five months to go beforeElection Day, Mr. Trump has al-ready said he would “loosen” libellaws to make it easier to sue newsorganizations. He has threatenedto sic federal regulators on hiscritics. He has encouraged roughtreatment of demonstrators.

His proposal to bar Muslimsfrom entry into the country teststhe Constitution’s guarantees ofreligious freedom, due processand equal protection.

And, in what was a tipping pointfor some, he attacked Judge Gon-zalo P. Curiel of the Federal Dis-trict Court in San Diego, who isoverseeing two class action law-suits against Trump University.

Mr. Trump accused the judge ofbias, falsely said he was Mexicanand seemed to issue a threat.

“They ought to look into JudgeCuriel, because what Judge Curiel

is doing is a total disgrace,” Mr.Trump said. “O.K.? But we willcome back in November. Wouldn’tthat be wild if I am president andcome back and do a civil case?”

David Post, a retired law profes-sor who now writes for the VolokhConspiracy, a conservative-lean-ing law blog, said those commentshad crossed a line.

“This is how authoritarianismstarts, with a president who doesnot respect the judiciary,” Mr. Postsaid. “You can criticize the judicialsystem, you can criticize individ-ual cases, you can criticize indi-vidual judges. But the presidenthas to be clear that the law is thelaw and that he enforces the law.That is his constitutional obliga-tion.”

“If he is signaling that that is nothis position, that’s a very seriousconstitutional problem,” Mr. Postsaid.

Beyond the attack on judicial in-dependence is a broader question

Trump Declarations Seen

As Threat to Rule of Law

Scholars Find Disregard for Constitutional

Rights in Remarks That Raise Alarm

By ADAM LIPTAK

Continued on Page A12

A man sleeping near Waikiki Beach. Honolulu is trying to rid its streets of the homeless.

MONICA ALMEIDA/THE NEW YORK TIMES

HONOLULU — Anna Sullivanis prohibited from sitting on asidewalk. She cannot wander offto find food without worrying thatthe police might seize her shop-ping cart. She cannot sleep onWaikiki Beach without fear of be-ing rousted.

Ms. Sullivan, 45, has beenhomeless for eight years since shegot out of prison. But these days —after run-ins with the police overwhere she sleeps, sits or leavesher belongings — she tries to keepaway from Waikiki, the bustling

tourist district whose sidewalksand beaches she once used as herhome.

“Tickets, tickets, tickets,” shesaid, already looking weary at thestart of her morning, sipping a cupof iced coffee as she sat on a benchby the beach. “The cops give you aticket to keep you moving. And

then you have to pay the ticket forsleeping in the park. It gets toyou.”

Two years ago, Honolulu, for allits opulence and appeal totourists, was a nationally knownhub of homelessness: peoplesprawling on benches and side-walks, panhandling, guardingpiles of tents and clothes, sleepingin doorways and moving aroundaimlessly. Business leaders de-scribed the atmosphere as a fun-damental threat to the tourist-based economy.

But these days, the homelesswho had crowded large parts of

Aloha, and Welcome, Unless You’re Homeless

By ADAM NAGOURNEY

Continued on Page A10

Honolulu’s Crackdown

Shows That Tourists

Come First

U(DF463D)X+$!@!.!#!]

The federal judge who has beenaccused of bias by Donald J.Trump was once wanted by aMexican drug cartel. Page A12.

Judge Was Targeted Before

MARKUS SCHREIBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Staff at the Louvre scrambled Friday to move artworks to higher floors as Paris experienced its worst flooding in 30 years. Page A4.

Safe and Dry

FORT STEWART, Ga. — WhenStaff Sgt. Chris Brown headed intothe swamplands of Georgia for amilitary training exercise earlythis spring, he found himself miss-ing his time in Iraq and Af-ghanistan — and the relative com-forts he had enjoyed there at theheight of both wars.

Without running water, he nowhad to bathe with baby wipes andshave without a mirror. He had noidea how his favorite basketballteam, the Golden State Warriors,was faring in the playoffs. And thefood was so bad that he relied onpeanut butter crackers and lost 10pounds.

“When we were out there, theytasted amazing,” said SergeantBrown, who went to the gym twicea day when he was overseas tomake sure he did not put on toomuch weight from the dining halland its honey buns and muffins.

While some American militarypersonnel, in particular SpecialOperations forces and a number ofMarine and conventional Armyunits, operated out of small, spar-tan outposts in Iraq and Af-ghanistan, the bulk of Armytroops lived on bases that had run-ning water, electricity and hous-ing units. Some larger bases evenhad wireless internet, televisions,gyms and coffee shops. Civiliancontractors guarded the bases,cooked meals and transportedammunition, food and fuel.

But now that the American foot-print in Iraq and Afghanistan is

far smaller, the Army has begunplanning for its next conflict. Nomatter where and when it occurs,it will almost certainly be foughtunder more austere conditions. Toprepare for this, nearly all Armyunits are refocusing their trainingon being self-sustaining, or “expe-ditionary,” as their commandersput it.

What that means is that a gen-eration of soldiers with more bat-

tlefield experience than any sinceWorld War II is getting back to ba-sics: learning how to cook theirown meals, cover their faces incamouflage paint, dig foxholesand latrines, lay concertina wireand live out of their rucksacks.

The training, known as Deci-sive Action Training Envi-ronment, or DATE, is designed toprepare units for a variety of con-tingencies, ranging from humani-tarian missions to traditional com-bat. The Army created the pro-gram in 2012, shortly after theUnited States pulled its last troopsout of Iraq, to replace its counter-insurgency training, known asCOIN. But the Army’s training cy-cles take several years, and in part

Back to Basics (and Foxholes) for Today’s Army

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

Continued on Page A11

More Spartan Life as

Military Prepares for

Its Next Mission

The government reported onFriday that employers added just38,000 workers to their payrolls inMay, a sharp slowdown in hiringthat is expected to push back a de-cision by the Federal Reserve toraise interest rates.

The latest snapshot suggestedthat the economic recovery mighthave stalled this spring, at leasttemporarily.

Despite the anemic job gains,the official unemployment rate,(which is based on a separate sur-vey of households), fell to 4.7 per-cent, its lowest point in nearly adecade. But the decline was pri-marily a result of Americans drop-ping out of the labor force ratherthan finding new jobs.

“Boy, this is ugly,” said DianeSwonk, an independent economistin Chicago. “The losses weredeeper and more broad-basedthan we expected, and with thedownward revision to previousmonths, it puts the Fed back onpause.”

“The only good news is thatwages held,” Ms. Swonk said. Av-erage hourly earnings rose again,0.2 percent for the month, for again of 2.5 percent for the last 12months, an encouraging sign that

Fed Less Likely To Raise RatesAfter Jobs Data

By PATRICIA COHENand BINYAMIN APPELBAUM

Continued on Page B4

Officials in Chi-cago releasedvideos from 101cases in whichpolice officersfired weapons orotherwise usedforce againstcivilians. PAGE A9

NATIONAL A9-14

Light ShedOn Shootings A candidate chosen on a popular televi-

sion show is the closest Palestinianshave come to an elected leader in morethan 10 years. PAGE A7

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

‘The President’ as Reality TV

Andy Warholcrossed paths withthe unknown AiWeiwei and tookno notice. But theirwork, seen side byside in Pittsburgh,tells a differentstory. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-5

WarholAnd Ai An experiment in Southern California

employs high-efficiency technology tocreate homes that produce as muchelectricity as they use. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

A Test of Zero Net Energy

Accompany arenowned climberto the top of thetallest building inthe Western Hemi-sphere. Visit thehighest studioapartment in NewYork City. The NewYork Times Maga-zine explores life at 800 feet and above.

THIS WEEKEND

The High Life In New York

Three friends from Minnesota’s largeSomali community were found guilty ofcharges that they tried to travel to Syriato join the Islamic State. PAGE A9

Convictions of 3 Linked to ISIS

France held talks on the Middle Eastpeace process, which were attended bydiplomats from 29 countries. PAGE A6

France Hosts Peace Talks

A photograph of a crying Michael Jor-dan has turned into a seemingly un-stoppable internet meme to highlightany humiliation or defeat. PAGE C1

The Crying Jordan Treatment

Gail Collins PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED PAGES A18-19

Olympic organizers may not view thevirus as a serious threat, but the cyclistTejay van Garderen sees things differ-ently. Sports of The Times. PAGE B7

SPORTSSATURDAY B7-13

Skipping Rio Over Zika

VOL. CLXV . . . No. 57,253 © 2016 The New York Times SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2016

Bob Stackowitz escaped from prison in1968. He was forgotten until he filed forSocial Security benefits. PAGE A16

NEW YORK A16-17

He Was a Fugitive for 48 Years