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  1. Wednesday Reads

    Good Afternoon!!

    Will there ever be another slow news day in the U.S.? Every day we see more stunning news–violent incidents, embarrassing, chaotic, and illegal behavior from our “president,” shocks to the economy from Trump’s tariffs and mass deportations, and more. We have to survive 3 more years of this insanity. There are some hopeful signs. Trump is very unpopular and his poll numbers are dropping rapidly. There are also signs that he is having health challenges. But I think he has changed our country long-term by inflaming his followers with lies and disinformation. There is definitely a core group of about 30 percent of the population that clings to him no matter what. And one of the biggest dangers is the behavior of the Trumpists on the Supreme court. Anyway, on to today’s news and comment.

    First, the breaking news. There has been a shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas.

    Bullet casings from the Dallas shooting.

    NBC News: Live updates: 2 dead, including suspect, in shooting at Dallas ICE facility.

    What we know about the shooting

     — Three people were shot at an ICE facility in Dallas this morning, an ICE spokesperson confirmed to NBC News.

    — Two people are dead, including the shooter, who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Dallas police said in a news conference. No ICE officers were hurt in the shooting.

    — Round found near the shooter, who was dead when police arrived, contained messages that were “anti-ICE in nature,” Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas FBI Joe Rothrock said at a news conference. He added that the attack was an act of “targeted violence.”

    — The victims’ identities will not be released at this time, but Rothrock said no law enforcement personnel were hurt during the attack.

    — The shooter fired multiple rounds from a nearby roof or an elevated position down into the field office’s sally port, an ICE spokesperson confirmed.

    — The motive behind the shooting, or what the shooter was targeting, is not immediately clear.

    According to FBI Director Kash Patel, “Anti-ICE” was written on one of shell casings. This story is still developing.

    Paul Krugman is the latest writer to argue that Trump’s fascist takeover can be thwarted. From his Substack: Is the Jimmy Kimmel Saga a Sign that the Tide is Turning?

    It’s irrefutable now: Trump is nakedly following the playbook of autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Viktor Orban. As his poll numbers fall, he is rushing to lock in permanent power by punishing his opponents and intimidating everyone else into submission. Craven congressional Republicans and a complicit Supreme Court have abetted Trump’s destruction of our democratic safeguards and norms.

    Yet Trump has a significant problem that neither Putin nor Orban faced. When Putin and Orban were consolidating their autocratics, they were genuinely popular. They were perceived by the public as effective and competent leaders. Just nine months into his presidency, Trump, by contrast, is deeply unpopular. He is increasingly seen as chaotic and inept. As David Frum says, this means that he is in a race against time. Can he consolidate power before he loses his aura of inevitability? Will those who run major institutions – particularly corporate CEOs – understand that we are at a crucial juncture, and that by accommodating Trump they have more to lose than by standing up to him?

    To put it bluntly, is the Jimmy Kimmel affair the harbinger of a failed Trumpian putsch?

    Krugman notes that Trump’s role models, Putin and Orban were popular during their takeovers, in contrast to Trump.

    Trump’s net approval, by contrast, turned negative within weeks after taking office and has just continued to fall.

    As G. Elliott Morris points out, his position looks even worse when you consider intensity. Almost half the public disapproves “strongly,” twice the share with strong approval.

    Jimmy Kimmel

    It’s clear that if Trump were subject to normal political constraints, obliged to follow the rule of law and accept election results, he would already be a political lame duck. His future influence and those of his minions would be greatly reduced by his unpopularity. But at this juncture he is a quasi-autocrat. He is the leader of a party that accommodates his every whim, backed by a corrupt Supreme Court prepared to validate whatever he does, no matter how clearly it violates the law.

    As a result, Trump has been able to use the vast power of the federal government to deliver punishments and rewards in a completely unprecedented way. He has arbitrarily cut off funding to universities, refused to spend Congressionally-mandated funds, threatened to take away broadcast licenses, fired officials who are supposed to have job security, pardoned J6 insurrectionists, defied the lower courts, retaliated against those who have tried to hold him accountable, and enriched his family. This has created a climate of intimidation, with many institutions preemptively capitulating to Trump’s demands as if he already had total power.

    But the fact is that Trump has not yet locked in his autocracy. Timid institutions are failing to understand not only how unpopular Trump is, but also how severe a backlash they are likely to face for surrendering without a fight.

    Disney figured it out; we’ll see what happens with Sinclair and NexStar. Read the entire post at the link.

    Politico Playbook on Kimmel’s return:

    An unbowed Jimmy Kimmel took aim at President Donald Trump and FCC Chair Brendan Carr last night in a blistering, emotional return to ABC. Kimmel tore into the Trump administration for its “dangerous … anti-American” bid to have him canceled, and heaped praise on the conservative politicians and commentators who spoke up for freedom of speech. “This show is not important,” Kimmel said. “What is important is that we get to live in a country that allows us to have a show like this.”

    Kimmel blended humor with invective. “I’m not sure who had a weirder 48 hours,” he deadpanned, “me or the CEO of Tylenol.” Robert De Niro made an appearance, playing a mafioso-style Carr issuing threats to ABC. And addressing the expected sky-high audience for last night’s show, Kimmel said: “You almost have to feel sorry for [Trump]. He tried his best to cancel me — instead he forced millions of people to watch the show … He might have to release the Epstein files to distract from this.”

    Kimmel came close to tears as he partially addressed his own comments — about Charlie Kirk’s suspected killer — which sparked the initial backlash from the right. “I want to make something clear,” he said, voice wavering. “It was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man.” Later, he hailed the words of forgiveness that Erika, Kirk’s widow, delivered at Sunday’s memorial. “It touched me deeply,” Kimmel said. “If there’s anything we should take from this tragedy to carry forward, I hope it can be that. Not this.”

    Catch-up service: Watch the whole opening monologue

    Naturally, Trump wasn’t happy that ABC brought Jimmy Kimmel back last night.

    Ed Mazza at HuffPost: Trump Loses It Over Jimmy Kimmel’s Return In Unhinged New Rant, Then Threatens ABC.

    President Donald Trump threw a fit on social media on Tuesday night as late night TV nemesis Jimmy Kimmel headed back to the airwaves.

    He said Kimmel should “rot in his bad Ratings,” called his show a “major Illegal Campaign Contribution” to the Democratic National Committee and threatened legal action against the “true bunch of losers” at ABC.

    “I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social website about an hour before Kimmel’s return to television. “The White House was told by ABC that his Show was cancelled!”

    Despite Trump’s claim, Kimmel’s show was suspended ― not canceled ― over comments the host made about the suspect in the public assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    “Why would they want someone back who does so poorly, who’s not funny, and who puts the Network in jeopardy by playing 99% positive Democrat GARBAGE,” he wrote. “He is yet another arm of the DNC and, to the best of my knowledge, that would be a major Illegal Campaign Contribution.”

    Then, he threatened ABC with another lawsuit after settling with the network last year in a defamation case.

    Maybe because Kimmel is more popular than crybaby Trump?

    Yesterday, Trump embarrassed himself and all Americans in an unbelievably bad speech to the U.N. It was truly horrifying, and a historic stain on our country.

    David Rothkopf at The Daily Beast: Trump’s UN Address Was a Tragedy of Shakespearian Proportions.

    Instead of a traditional public address from a world leader, U.S. President Donald Trump tilted back his badly-dyed hair-sprayed coif and howled at the moon for the better part of an hour during his speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday morning.

    Well, not the better part. Definitely not the better part.

    To describe the speech as insane, while accurate, would distract from just how extraordinarily packed with lies it was. How profoundly ignorant it was. How much damage it did to the United States’ standing in the world—it clearly marked a low point in America’s relationship with the United Nations and the international order we helped create in the wake of World War II.

    From a purely U.S. political perspective, emphasizing how haggard and low-energy our rapidly declining president was is key. He made a point to note that an apparent mechanical issue with a UN escalator was an insurmountable problem, for example—most of the rest of us who are in fairly reasonable shape might have noted a stalled escalator is actually just a stairway that we could have walked right up.

    But it would nonetheless, be a mistake, to ignore just how crazed the speech was. It was apparent from Trump’s opening moments when he railed about the UN’s broken teleprompter to the point later when he brought it up again in his broader condemnation of the UN as also broken, highlighting what he saw as its uselessness in not coming to his assistance in solving the famous seven global conflicts that we all know he did not solve. It was apparent in the fact that he argued that he deserves the Nobel Peace prize while noting he also takes great pride in discussing the attack he authorized on Iran, and those he has ordered against boats he claims without evidence were trafficking in drugs on the high seas.

    The speech contained the most extensive condemnation of green energy and what Trump considers the climate change hoax that we have ever heard from a public official since possibly the invention of the steam engine. Science be damned. Oligarchs love fossil fuels or what Trump noted that he demands White House staffers refer to as “beautiful, clean coal.” Windmills, windmills on the other hand, are the pinwheels of Satan. (Someday we will get to the bottom of Trump’s anemomenophobia. Clearly, he had a bad experience with something that blew him the wrong way as a child. Or more recently.)

    He defended his irrational, lose-lose global trading system destroying tariffs which in and of itself will soon be listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as an extreme symptom of economic psychosis. He downplayed civilian casualties in Ukraine and explained this war wouldn’t have happened if there had been good leadership in the country—in front of President Volodymyr Zelensky, no less.

    And there was so much more. He even claimed that he had settled 7 global conflicts and that everyone thinks he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. Read more at the link.

    Steve Benen at MaddowBlog: With bizarre remarks at the U.N., Trump embarrasses himself and the United States.

    Seven years ago this week, Donald Trump addressed the United Nations and began his remarks with an absurdity. “In less than two years,” the American president said, “my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.” The boast, of course, was plainly false.

    But just as important at the time was that everyone in attendance at the U.N. General Assembly recognized the rhetoric as silly — and some of the diplomats in the room started audibly laughing. The laughter caught the Republican off-guard and left Trump in a position he’d long hoped to avoid: the target of international ridicule.

    In some ways, the Republican’s address was a handy encapsulation of where Trump stands in the fifth year of his White House tenure.

    The Trumps struggle with a UN escalator.

    Over the course of his remarks, he told strange lies about foreign investments in the U.S. He generated murmurs in the hall by declaring, “Our message is very simple. If you come illegally into the United States, you’re going to jail or you’re going back to where you came from — or perhaps even further than that. You know what that means.”

    He pretended that he’s ended seven wars, while pointing to approval ratings that exist only in his mind. He renewed his pathetic lobbying for a Nobel Peace Prize, falsely claiming that “everyone” wants him to get one. He took pointless shots at ostensible U.S. allies in NATO and at the United Nations itself. He told unnamed officials that their countries are “going to hell.” He bragged about campaign swag sales. He attacked clean, renewable energy, while insisting that climate science is an elaborate “con job” and a “hoax” concocted by nefarious people with “evil intentions.”

    And for good measure, he claimed that unnamed “environmentalists” want to ban cows.

    Perhaps most importantly, Trump told one of his favorite lies, bragging that international respect for the U.S. has reached all-time highs now that he’s back in power.

    Read more at the MSNBC link.

    You might also want to check out this piece by Zachary B. Wolf at CNN: Trump’s ‘your countries are going to hell’ speech, annotated.

    One more from AP: After mechanical challenges, UN says Trump’s team to blame for nonworking escalator and teleprompter.

    President Donald Trump broke from his prepared remarks at the United Nations on Tuesday to bemoan an inoperable escalator and a defective teleprompter, using the incidents to portray the global body as dysfunctional.

    “All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle,” he mused, chopping the air with his hand.

    But it turns out the cause was closer to Trump.

    Stephane Dujarric, the U.N. spokesman, said a videographer from the U.S. delegation who ran ahead of him triggered the stop mechanism at the top of the escalator.

    “The safety mechanism is designed to prevent people or objects accidentally being caught and stuck in or pulled into the gearing,” Dujarric said in a statement. “The videographer may have inadvertently triggered the safety function.”

    On the Teleprompter:

    As he began his speech, Trump also noted that the teleprompter wasn’t working. He joked that whoever was running the teleprompter “is in big trouble.”

    A U.N. official speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue contributed that one to his side as well, saying the White House was operating the teleprompter for the president.

    The day before yesterday, Trump gave an insane “health” press conference with RFK Jr. and Dr. Oz. JJ, in which they claimed that Tylenol as well as vaccines are causes of autism. JJ covered it in yesterday’s post.

    Today, STAT has a response to Trump’s “medical” advice: Trump’s ‘tough it out’ to pregnant women meets wave of opposition by medical experts Doctors explain the medical consensus on autism, leucovorin, and Tylenol for fever.

    Federal health officials are telling Americans no, they shouldn’t take Tylenol during pregnancy for fear of autism and yes, they should try a drug used in cancer care to treat children who have developed autism. The medical world disagrees.

    “We were actually pretty alarmed by some of the output that was coming from the administration,” Marketa Wills, CEO and medical director of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview. At a remarkable White House briefing on Monday, President Trump and his top health and science officials said Tylenol use in pregnancy caused some cases of autism in children and said leucovorin, a form of vitamin B9, could treat the disease.

    RFK Jr. and Trump claim to have found causes for autism.

    The event has drawn a flood of pushback from medical societies, autism organizations, and pediatric experts through official statements, interviews, and social media. Much more research is needed on the claims about Tylenol and leucovorin in particular, experts emphasized.

    Until more research is conducted, Wills recommends that doctors rely on professional societies, peer-reviewed research in medical journals, and resources like UpToDate and the Washington Manual for guidance on how to talk with patients.

    John Whyte, CEO of the American Medical Association, pointed out that there were discrepancies between the bold statements from the president and other government guidance. “If I ignore the press conference, and I listen to what the FDA wrote to providers, I would say — you know what? It’s talking about the lowest dose for the shortest period of time, and that’s not a bad thing,” White said. “That’s different than what I heard at the press conference.” [….]

    While President Trump repeatedly told women to “tough it out” rather than take Tylenol for fever or pain during pregnancy, medical experts said there are good reasons to consider the medication.

    An untreated fever can cause serious harms in pregnancy, including neurodevelopmental injuries to fetuses such as spina bifida, they told STAT.

    “Brains are impacted by fever,” Joia Crear-Perry, an OB-GYN and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, told STAT.

    There are also studies suggesting fever is associated with the risk of autism spectrum disorder, but it’s unknown whether treatment decreases that risk, Brenna Hughes, interim chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University School of Medicine, wrote in an email to STAT.

    There’s much more information at the STAT link.

    The New York Times has published a shocking investigation about Elon Musk’s family, by Kirsten Grind and John Eligon (gift link): Elon Musk’s Father Accused of Child Sexual Abuse.

    Elon Musk has not been shy about putting much of his life on public display. The tech billionaire posts daily on his social network X, has cooperated with two biographies and often speaks on podcasts and at conferences.

    But there is one part of his life that he has not revealed much about — his longtime estrangement from his father, Errol Musk, who has become increasingly outspoken about his family and business ventures tied to the Musk name.

    Errol Musk

    A New York Times investigation found that a significant factor in Elon Musk’s rupture with his father stems from accusations against Errol Musk of child sex abuse. The allegations have repeatedly spilled over into Elon Musk’s life as relatives have contacted him for help and he has sometimes taken action to intercede, according to personal letters, emails and interviews with family members.

    The family’s troubles have entangled Elon Musk in a painful three-decade multigenerational saga that continues to trail him. The fallout has kept the 54-year-old mogul tethered to South Africa, where he was born and where Errol Musk lives, even as he has built a business empire in the United States and briefly ascended to political power as a close adviser to President Trump.

    The allegations against Errol Musk involve five of his children and stepchildren, whom he was accused of abusing in South Africa and California, according to police and court records, personal correspondence, social workers and interviews with family members.

    The earliest accusation was in 1993 when Errol Musk’s stepdaughter, then 4 years old, told relatives he had touched her at the family house. A decade later, the stepdaughter said she caught him sniffing her dirty underwear. Some family members have also accused Errol Musk of abusing two of his daughters and a stepson. And as recently as 2023, family members and a social worker attempted to intervene after his then 5-year-old son said his father had groped his buttocks.

    Three separate police investigations were opened, according to police and court records, as well as family members. Two of the inquiries ended, while it’s unclear what happened in the third. Errol Musk, 79, has not been convicted of any crime.

    The abuse allegations have caused strife within the Musk family, with some relatives turning to Elon Musk — who is Errol Musk’s eldest child — for help. Around 2010, one relative wrote Elon Musk a five-page letter about some of the accusations and implored him to intervene.

    “We really need your advice, help and guidance in these matters because we daily see these children suffer,” the relative wrote in the letter, which was viewed by The Times.

    Use the gift link to read the rest.

    Those are my recommended reads for today. What stories have you been following?

    #Autism #DallasICEShooting #ElonMusk #ErrolMusk #JimmyKimmel #leucovorin #Tylenol #UNGeneralAssembly #UnitedNations #vaccines

  2. Wednesday Reads

    Good Afternoon!!

    Will there ever be another slow news day in the U.S.? Every day we see more stunning news–violent incidents, embarrassing, chaotic, and illegal behavior from our “president,” shocks to the economy from Trump’s tariffs and mass deportations, and more. We have to survive 3 more years of this insanity. There are some hopeful signs. Trump is very unpopular and his poll numbers are dropping rapidly. There are also signs that he is having health challenges. But I think he has changed our country long-term by inflaming his followers with lies and disinformation. There is definitely a core group of about 30 percent of the population that clings to him no matter what. And one of the biggest dangers is the behavior of the Trumpists on the Supreme court. Anyway, on to today’s news and comment.

    First, the breaking news. There has been a shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas.

    Bullet casings from the Dallas shooting.

    NBC News: Live updates: 2 dead, including suspect, in shooting at Dallas ICE facility.

    What we know about the shooting

     — Three people were shot at an ICE facility in Dallas this morning, an ICE spokesperson confirmed to NBC News.

    — Two people are dead, including the shooter, who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Dallas police said in a news conference. No ICE officers were hurt in the shooting.

    — Round found near the shooter, who was dead when police arrived, contained messages that were “anti-ICE in nature,” Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas FBI Joe Rothrock said at a news conference. He added that the attack was an act of “targeted violence.”

    — The victims’ identities will not be released at this time, but Rothrock said no law enforcement personnel were hurt during the attack.

    — The shooter fired multiple rounds from a nearby roof or an elevated position down into the field office’s sally port, an ICE spokesperson confirmed.

    — The motive behind the shooting, or what the shooter was targeting, is not immediately clear.

    According to FBI Director Kash Patel, “Anti-ICE” was written on one of shell casings. This story is still developing.

    Paul Krugman is the latest writer to argue that Trump’s fascist takeover can be thwarted. From his Substack: Is the Jimmy Kimmel Saga a Sign that the Tide is Turning?

    It’s irrefutable now: Trump is nakedly following the playbook of autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Viktor Orban. As his poll numbers fall, he is rushing to lock in permanent power by punishing his opponents and intimidating everyone else into submission. Craven congressional Republicans and a complicit Supreme Court have abetted Trump’s destruction of our democratic safeguards and norms.

    Yet Trump has a significant problem that neither Putin nor Orban faced. When Putin and Orban were consolidating their autocratics, they were genuinely popular. They were perceived by the public as effective and competent leaders. Just nine months into his presidency, Trump, by contrast, is deeply unpopular. He is increasingly seen as chaotic and inept. As David Frum says, this means that he is in a race against time. Can he consolidate power before he loses his aura of inevitability? Will those who run major institutions – particularly corporate CEOs – understand that we are at a crucial juncture, and that by accommodating Trump they have more to lose than by standing up to him?

    To put it bluntly, is the Jimmy Kimmel affair the harbinger of a failed Trumpian putsch?

    Krugman notes that Trump’s role models, Putin and Orban were popular during their takeovers, in contrast to Trump.

    Trump’s net approval, by contrast, turned negative within weeks after taking office and has just continued to fall.

    As G. Elliott Morris points out, his position looks even worse when you consider intensity. Almost half the public disapproves “strongly,” twice the share with strong approval.

    Jimmy Kimmel

    It’s clear that if Trump were subject to normal political constraints, obliged to follow the rule of law and accept election results, he would already be a political lame duck. His future influence and those of his minions would be greatly reduced by his unpopularity. But at this juncture he is a quasi-autocrat. He is the leader of a party that accommodates his every whim, backed by a corrupt Supreme Court prepared to validate whatever he does, no matter how clearly it violates the law.

    As a result, Trump has been able to use the vast power of the federal government to deliver punishments and rewards in a completely unprecedented way. He has arbitrarily cut off funding to universities, refused to spend Congressionally-mandated funds, threatened to take away broadcast licenses, fired officials who are supposed to have job security, pardoned J6 insurrectionists, defied the lower courts, retaliated against those who have tried to hold him accountable, and enriched his family. This has created a climate of intimidation, with many institutions preemptively capitulating to Trump’s demands as if he already had total power.

    But the fact is that Trump has not yet locked in his autocracy. Timid institutions are failing to understand not only how unpopular Trump is, but also how severe a backlash they are likely to face for surrendering without a fight.

    Disney figured it out; we’ll see what happens with Sinclair and NexStar. Read the entire post at the link.

    Politico Playbook on Kimmel’s return:

    An unbowed Jimmy Kimmel took aim at President Donald Trump and FCC Chair Brendan Carr last night in a blistering, emotional return to ABC. Kimmel tore into the Trump administration for its “dangerous … anti-American” bid to have him canceled, and heaped praise on the conservative politicians and commentators who spoke up for freedom of speech. “This show is not important,” Kimmel said. “What is important is that we get to live in a country that allows us to have a show like this.”

    Kimmel blended humor with invective. “I’m not sure who had a weirder 48 hours,” he deadpanned, “me or the CEO of Tylenol.” Robert De Niro made an appearance, playing a mafioso-style Carr issuing threats to ABC. And addressing the expected sky-high audience for last night’s show, Kimmel said: “You almost have to feel sorry for [Trump]. He tried his best to cancel me — instead he forced millions of people to watch the show … He might have to release the Epstein files to distract from this.”

    Kimmel came close to tears as he partially addressed his own comments — about Charlie Kirk’s suspected killer — which sparked the initial backlash from the right. “I want to make something clear,” he said, voice wavering. “It was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man.” Later, he hailed the words of forgiveness that Erika, Kirk’s widow, delivered at Sunday’s memorial. “It touched me deeply,” Kimmel said. “If there’s anything we should take from this tragedy to carry forward, I hope it can be that. Not this.”

    Catch-up service: Watch the whole opening monologue

    Naturally, Trump wasn’t happy that ABC brought Jimmy Kimmel back last night.

    Ed Mazza at HuffPost: Trump Loses It Over Jimmy Kimmel’s Return In Unhinged New Rant, Then Threatens ABC.

    President Donald Trump threw a fit on social media on Tuesday night as late night TV nemesis Jimmy Kimmel headed back to the airwaves.

    He said Kimmel should “rot in his bad Ratings,” called his show a “major Illegal Campaign Contribution” to the Democratic National Committee and threatened legal action against the “true bunch of losers” at ABC.

    “I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social website about an hour before Kimmel’s return to television. “The White House was told by ABC that his Show was cancelled!”

    Despite Trump’s claim, Kimmel’s show was suspended ― not canceled ― over comments the host made about the suspect in the public assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    “Why would they want someone back who does so poorly, who’s not funny, and who puts the Network in jeopardy by playing 99% positive Democrat GARBAGE,” he wrote. “He is yet another arm of the DNC and, to the best of my knowledge, that would be a major Illegal Campaign Contribution.”

    Then, he threatened ABC with another lawsuit after settling with the network last year in a defamation case.

    Maybe because Kimmel is more popular than crybaby Trump?

    Yesterday, Trump embarrassed himself and all Americans in an unbelievably bad speech to the U.N. It was truly horrifying, and a historic stain on our country.

    David Rothkopf at The Daily Beast: Trump’s UN Address Was a Tragedy of Shakespearian Proportions.

    Instead of a traditional public address from a world leader, U.S. President Donald Trump tilted back his badly-dyed hair-sprayed coif and howled at the moon for the better part of an hour during his speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday morning.

    Well, not the better part. Definitely not the better part.

    To describe the speech as insane, while accurate, would distract from just how extraordinarily packed with lies it was. How profoundly ignorant it was. How much damage it did to the United States’ standing in the world—it clearly marked a low point in America’s relationship with the United Nations and the international order we helped create in the wake of World War II.

    From a purely U.S. political perspective, emphasizing how haggard and low-energy our rapidly declining president was is key. He made a point to note that an apparent mechanical issue with a UN escalator was an insurmountable problem, for example—most of the rest of us who are in fairly reasonable shape might have noted a stalled escalator is actually just a stairway that we could have walked right up.

    But it would nonetheless, be a mistake, to ignore just how crazed the speech was. It was apparent from Trump’s opening moments when he railed about the UN’s broken teleprompter to the point later when he brought it up again in his broader condemnation of the UN as also broken, highlighting what he saw as its uselessness in not coming to his assistance in solving the famous seven global conflicts that we all know he did not solve. It was apparent in the fact that he argued that he deserves the Nobel Peace prize while noting he also takes great pride in discussing the attack he authorized on Iran, and those he has ordered against boats he claims without evidence were trafficking in drugs on the high seas.

    The speech contained the most extensive condemnation of green energy and what Trump considers the climate change hoax that we have ever heard from a public official since possibly the invention of the steam engine. Science be damned. Oligarchs love fossil fuels or what Trump noted that he demands White House staffers refer to as “beautiful, clean coal.” Windmills, windmills on the other hand, are the pinwheels of Satan. (Someday we will get to the bottom of Trump’s anemomenophobia. Clearly, he had a bad experience with something that blew him the wrong way as a child. Or more recently.)

    He defended his irrational, lose-lose global trading system destroying tariffs which in and of itself will soon be listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as an extreme symptom of economic psychosis. He downplayed civilian casualties in Ukraine and explained this war wouldn’t have happened if there had been good leadership in the country—in front of President Volodymyr Zelensky, no less.

    And there was so much more. He even claimed that he had settled 7 global conflicts and that everyone thinks he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. Read more at the link.

    Steve Benen at MaddowBlog: With bizarre remarks at the U.N., Trump embarrasses himself and the United States.

    Seven years ago this week, Donald Trump addressed the United Nations and began his remarks with an absurdity. “In less than two years,” the American president said, “my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.” The boast, of course, was plainly false.

    But just as important at the time was that everyone in attendance at the U.N. General Assembly recognized the rhetoric as silly — and some of the diplomats in the room started audibly laughing. The laughter caught the Republican off-guard and left Trump in a position he’d long hoped to avoid: the target of international ridicule.

    In some ways, the Republican’s address was a handy encapsulation of where Trump stands in the fifth year of his White House tenure.

    The Trumps struggle with a UN escalator.

    Over the course of his remarks, he told strange lies about foreign investments in the U.S. He generated murmurs in the hall by declaring, “Our message is very simple. If you come illegally into the United States, you’re going to jail or you’re going back to where you came from — or perhaps even further than that. You know what that means.”

    He pretended that he’s ended seven wars, while pointing to approval ratings that exist only in his mind. He renewed his pathetic lobbying for a Nobel Peace Prize, falsely claiming that “everyone” wants him to get one. He took pointless shots at ostensible U.S. allies in NATO and at the United Nations itself. He told unnamed officials that their countries are “going to hell.” He bragged about campaign swag sales. He attacked clean, renewable energy, while insisting that climate science is an elaborate “con job” and a “hoax” concocted by nefarious people with “evil intentions.”

    And for good measure, he claimed that unnamed “environmentalists” want to ban cows.

    Perhaps most importantly, Trump told one of his favorite lies, bragging that international respect for the U.S. has reached all-time highs now that he’s back in power.

    Read more at the MSNBC link.

    You might also want to check out this piece by Zachary B. Wolf at CNN: Trump’s ‘your countries are going to hell’ speech, annotated.

    One more from AP: After mechanical challenges, UN says Trump’s team to blame for nonworking escalator and teleprompter.

    President Donald Trump broke from his prepared remarks at the United Nations on Tuesday to bemoan an inoperable escalator and a defective teleprompter, using the incidents to portray the global body as dysfunctional.

    “All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle,” he mused, chopping the air with his hand.

    But it turns out the cause was closer to Trump.

    Stephane Dujarric, the U.N. spokesman, said a videographer from the U.S. delegation who ran ahead of him triggered the stop mechanism at the top of the escalator.

    “The safety mechanism is designed to prevent people or objects accidentally being caught and stuck in or pulled into the gearing,” Dujarric said in a statement. “The videographer may have inadvertently triggered the safety function.”

    On the Teleprompter:

    As he began his speech, Trump also noted that the teleprompter wasn’t working. He joked that whoever was running the teleprompter “is in big trouble.”

    A U.N. official speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue contributed that one to his side as well, saying the White House was operating the teleprompter for the president.

    The day before yesterday, Trump gave an insane “health” press conference with RFK Jr. and Dr. Oz. JJ, in which they claimed that Tylenol as well as vaccines are causes of autism. JJ covered it in yesterday’s post.

    Today, STAT has a response to Trump’s “medical” advice: Trump’s ‘tough it out’ to pregnant women meets wave of opposition by medical experts Doctors explain the medical consensus on autism, leucovorin, and Tylenol for fever.

    Federal health officials are telling Americans no, they shouldn’t take Tylenol during pregnancy for fear of autism and yes, they should try a drug used in cancer care to treat children who have developed autism. The medical world disagrees.

    “We were actually pretty alarmed by some of the output that was coming from the administration,” Marketa Wills, CEO and medical director of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview. At a remarkable White House briefing on Monday, President Trump and his top health and science officials said Tylenol use in pregnancy caused some cases of autism in children and said leucovorin, a form of vitamin B9, could treat the disease.

    RFK Jr. and Trump claim to have found causes for autism.

    The event has drawn a flood of pushback from medical societies, autism organizations, and pediatric experts through official statements, interviews, and social media. Much more research is needed on the claims about Tylenol and leucovorin in particular, experts emphasized.

    Until more research is conducted, Wills recommends that doctors rely on professional societies, peer-reviewed research in medical journals, and resources like UpToDate and the Washington Manual for guidance on how to talk with patients.

    John Whyte, CEO of the American Medical Association, pointed out that there were discrepancies between the bold statements from the president and other government guidance. “If I ignore the press conference, and I listen to what the FDA wrote to providers, I would say — you know what? It’s talking about the lowest dose for the shortest period of time, and that’s not a bad thing,” White said. “That’s different than what I heard at the press conference.” [….]

    While President Trump repeatedly told women to “tough it out” rather than take Tylenol for fever or pain during pregnancy, medical experts said there are good reasons to consider the medication.

    An untreated fever can cause serious harms in pregnancy, including neurodevelopmental injuries to fetuses such as spina bifida, they told STAT.

    “Brains are impacted by fever,” Joia Crear-Perry, an OB-GYN and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, told STAT.

    There are also studies suggesting fever is associated with the risk of autism spectrum disorder, but it’s unknown whether treatment decreases that risk, Brenna Hughes, interim chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University School of Medicine, wrote in an email to STAT.

    There’s much more information at the STAT link.

    The New York Times has published a shocking investigation about Elon Musk’s family, by Kirsten Grind and John Eligon (gift link): Elon Musk’s Father Accused of Child Sexual Abuse.

    Elon Musk has not been shy about putting much of his life on public display. The tech billionaire posts daily on his social network X, has cooperated with two biographies and often speaks on podcasts and at conferences.

    But there is one part of his life that he has not revealed much about — his longtime estrangement from his father, Errol Musk, who has become increasingly outspoken about his family and business ventures tied to the Musk name.

    Errol Musk

    A New York Times investigation found that a significant factor in Elon Musk’s rupture with his father stems from accusations against Errol Musk of child sex abuse. The allegations have repeatedly spilled over into Elon Musk’s life as relatives have contacted him for help and he has sometimes taken action to intercede, according to personal letters, emails and interviews with family members.

    The family’s troubles have entangled Elon Musk in a painful three-decade multigenerational saga that continues to trail him. The fallout has kept the 54-year-old mogul tethered to South Africa, where he was born and where Errol Musk lives, even as he has built a business empire in the United States and briefly ascended to political power as a close adviser to President Trump.

    The allegations against Errol Musk involve five of his children and stepchildren, whom he was accused of abusing in South Africa and California, according to police and court records, personal correspondence, social workers and interviews with family members.

    The earliest accusation was in 1993 when Errol Musk’s stepdaughter, then 4 years old, told relatives he had touched her at the family house. A decade later, the stepdaughter said she caught him sniffing her dirty underwear. Some family members have also accused Errol Musk of abusing two of his daughters and a stepson. And as recently as 2023, family members and a social worker attempted to intervene after his then 5-year-old son said his father had groped his buttocks.

    Three separate police investigations were opened, according to police and court records, as well as family members. Two of the inquiries ended, while it’s unclear what happened in the third. Errol Musk, 79, has not been convicted of any crime.

    The abuse allegations have caused strife within the Musk family, with some relatives turning to Elon Musk — who is Errol Musk’s eldest child — for help. Around 2010, one relative wrote Elon Musk a five-page letter about some of the accusations and implored him to intervene.

    “We really need your advice, help and guidance in these matters because we daily see these children suffer,” the relative wrote in the letter, which was viewed by The Times.

    Use the gift link to read the rest.

    Those are my recommended reads for today. What stories have you been following?

    #Autism #DallasICEShooting #ElonMusk #ErrolMusk #JimmyKimmel #leucovorin #Tylenol #UNGeneralAssembly #UnitedNations #vaccines

  3. Wednesday Reads

    Good Afternoon!!

    Will there ever be another slow news day in the U.S.? Every day we see more stunning news–violent incidents, embarrassing, chaotic, and illegal behavior from our “president,” shocks to the economy from Trump’s tariffs and mass deportations, and more. We have to survive 3 more years of this insanity. There are some hopeful signs. Trump is very unpopular and his poll numbers are dropping rapidly. There are also signs that he is having health challenges. But I think he has changed our country long-term by inflaming his followers with lies and disinformation. There is definitely a core group of about 30 percent of the population that clings to him no matter what. And one of the biggest dangers is the behavior of the Trumpists on the Supreme court. Anyway, on to today’s news and comment.

    First, the breaking news. There has been a shooting at an ICE facility in Dallas.

    Bullet casings from the Dallas shooting.

    NBC News: Live updates: 2 dead, including suspect, in shooting at Dallas ICE facility.

    What we know about the shooting

     — Three people were shot at an ICE facility in Dallas this morning, an ICE spokesperson confirmed to NBC News.

    — Two people are dead, including the shooter, who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Dallas police said in a news conference. No ICE officers were hurt in the shooting.

    — Round found near the shooter, who was dead when police arrived, contained messages that were “anti-ICE in nature,” Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas FBI Joe Rothrock said at a news conference. He added that the attack was an act of “targeted violence.”

    — The victims’ identities will not be released at this time, but Rothrock said no law enforcement personnel were hurt during the attack.

    — The shooter fired multiple rounds from a nearby roof or an elevated position down into the field office’s sally port, an ICE spokesperson confirmed.

    — The motive behind the shooting, or what the shooter was targeting, is not immediately clear.

    According to FBI Director Kash Patel, “Anti-ICE” was written on one of shell casings. This story is still developing.

    Paul Krugman is the latest writer to argue that Trump’s fascist takeover can be thwarted. From his Substack: Is the Jimmy Kimmel Saga a Sign that the Tide is Turning?

    It’s irrefutable now: Trump is nakedly following the playbook of autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Viktor Orban. As his poll numbers fall, he is rushing to lock in permanent power by punishing his opponents and intimidating everyone else into submission. Craven congressional Republicans and a complicit Supreme Court have abetted Trump’s destruction of our democratic safeguards and norms.

    Yet Trump has a significant problem that neither Putin nor Orban faced. When Putin and Orban were consolidating their autocratics, they were genuinely popular. They were perceived by the public as effective and competent leaders. Just nine months into his presidency, Trump, by contrast, is deeply unpopular. He is increasingly seen as chaotic and inept. As David Frum says, this means that he is in a race against time. Can he consolidate power before he loses his aura of inevitability? Will those who run major institutions – particularly corporate CEOs – understand that we are at a crucial juncture, and that by accommodating Trump they have more to lose than by standing up to him?

    To put it bluntly, is the Jimmy Kimmel affair the harbinger of a failed Trumpian putsch?

    Krugman notes that Trump’s role models, Putin and Orban were popular during their takeovers, in contrast to Trump.

    Trump’s net approval, by contrast, turned negative within weeks after taking office and has just continued to fall.

    As G. Elliott Morris points out, his position looks even worse when you consider intensity. Almost half the public disapproves “strongly,” twice the share with strong approval.

    Jimmy Kimmel

    It’s clear that if Trump were subject to normal political constraints, obliged to follow the rule of law and accept election results, he would already be a political lame duck. His future influence and those of his minions would be greatly reduced by his unpopularity. But at this juncture he is a quasi-autocrat. He is the leader of a party that accommodates his every whim, backed by a corrupt Supreme Court prepared to validate whatever he does, no matter how clearly it violates the law.

    As a result, Trump has been able to use the vast power of the federal government to deliver punishments and rewards in a completely unprecedented way. He has arbitrarily cut off funding to universities, refused to spend Congressionally-mandated funds, threatened to take away broadcast licenses, fired officials who are supposed to have job security, pardoned J6 insurrectionists, defied the lower courts, retaliated against those who have tried to hold him accountable, and enriched his family. This has created a climate of intimidation, with many institutions preemptively capitulating to Trump’s demands as if he already had total power.

    But the fact is that Trump has not yet locked in his autocracy. Timid institutions are failing to understand not only how unpopular Trump is, but also how severe a backlash they are likely to face for surrendering without a fight.

    Disney figured it out; we’ll see what happens with Sinclair and NexStar. Read the entire post at the link.

    Politico Playbook on Kimmel’s return:

    An unbowed Jimmy Kimmel took aim at President Donald Trump and FCC Chair Brendan Carr last night in a blistering, emotional return to ABC. Kimmel tore into the Trump administration for its “dangerous … anti-American” bid to have him canceled, and heaped praise on the conservative politicians and commentators who spoke up for freedom of speech. “This show is not important,” Kimmel said. “What is important is that we get to live in a country that allows us to have a show like this.”

    Kimmel blended humor with invective. “I’m not sure who had a weirder 48 hours,” he deadpanned, “me or the CEO of Tylenol.” Robert De Niro made an appearance, playing a mafioso-style Carr issuing threats to ABC. And addressing the expected sky-high audience for last night’s show, Kimmel said: “You almost have to feel sorry for [Trump]. He tried his best to cancel me — instead he forced millions of people to watch the show … He might have to release the Epstein files to distract from this.”

    Kimmel came close to tears as he partially addressed his own comments — about Charlie Kirk’s suspected killer — which sparked the initial backlash from the right. “I want to make something clear,” he said, voice wavering. “It was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man.” Later, he hailed the words of forgiveness that Erika, Kirk’s widow, delivered at Sunday’s memorial. “It touched me deeply,” Kimmel said. “If there’s anything we should take from this tragedy to carry forward, I hope it can be that. Not this.”

    Catch-up service: Watch the whole opening monologue

    Naturally, Trump wasn’t happy that ABC brought Jimmy Kimmel back last night.

    Ed Mazza at HuffPost: Trump Loses It Over Jimmy Kimmel’s Return In Unhinged New Rant, Then Threatens ABC.

    President Donald Trump threw a fit on social media on Tuesday night as late night TV nemesis Jimmy Kimmel headed back to the airwaves.

    He said Kimmel should “rot in his bad Ratings,” called his show a “major Illegal Campaign Contribution” to the Democratic National Committee and threatened legal action against the “true bunch of losers” at ABC.

    “I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social website about an hour before Kimmel’s return to television. “The White House was told by ABC that his Show was cancelled!”

    Despite Trump’s claim, Kimmel’s show was suspended ― not canceled ― over comments the host made about the suspect in the public assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    “Why would they want someone back who does so poorly, who’s not funny, and who puts the Network in jeopardy by playing 99% positive Democrat GARBAGE,” he wrote. “He is yet another arm of the DNC and, to the best of my knowledge, that would be a major Illegal Campaign Contribution.”

    Then, he threatened ABC with another lawsuit after settling with the network last year in a defamation case.

    Maybe because Kimmel is more popular than crybaby Trump?

    Yesterday, Trump embarrassed himself and all Americans in an unbelievably bad speech to the U.N. It was truly horrifying, and a historic stain on our country.

    David Rothkopf at The Daily Beast: Trump’s UN Address Was a Tragedy of Shakespearian Proportions.

    Instead of a traditional public address from a world leader, U.S. President Donald Trump tilted back his badly-dyed hair-sprayed coif and howled at the moon for the better part of an hour during his speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday morning.

    Well, not the better part. Definitely not the better part.

    To describe the speech as insane, while accurate, would distract from just how extraordinarily packed with lies it was. How profoundly ignorant it was. How much damage it did to the United States’ standing in the world—it clearly marked a low point in America’s relationship with the United Nations and the international order we helped create in the wake of World War II.

    From a purely U.S. political perspective, emphasizing how haggard and low-energy our rapidly declining president was is key. He made a point to note that an apparent mechanical issue with a UN escalator was an insurmountable problem, for example—most of the rest of us who are in fairly reasonable shape might have noted a stalled escalator is actually just a stairway that we could have walked right up.

    But it would nonetheless, be a mistake, to ignore just how crazed the speech was. It was apparent from Trump’s opening moments when he railed about the UN’s broken teleprompter to the point later when he brought it up again in his broader condemnation of the UN as also broken, highlighting what he saw as its uselessness in not coming to his assistance in solving the famous seven global conflicts that we all know he did not solve. It was apparent in the fact that he argued that he deserves the Nobel Peace prize while noting he also takes great pride in discussing the attack he authorized on Iran, and those he has ordered against boats he claims without evidence were trafficking in drugs on the high seas.

    The speech contained the most extensive condemnation of green energy and what Trump considers the climate change hoax that we have ever heard from a public official since possibly the invention of the steam engine. Science be damned. Oligarchs love fossil fuels or what Trump noted that he demands White House staffers refer to as “beautiful, clean coal.” Windmills, windmills on the other hand, are the pinwheels of Satan. (Someday we will get to the bottom of Trump’s anemomenophobia. Clearly, he had a bad experience with something that blew him the wrong way as a child. Or more recently.)

    He defended his irrational, lose-lose global trading system destroying tariffs which in and of itself will soon be listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as an extreme symptom of economic psychosis. He downplayed civilian casualties in Ukraine and explained this war wouldn’t have happened if there had been good leadership in the country—in front of President Volodymyr Zelensky, no less.

    And there was so much more. He even claimed that he had settled 7 global conflicts and that everyone thinks he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. Read more at the link.

    Steve Benen at MaddowBlog: With bizarre remarks at the U.N., Trump embarrasses himself and the United States.

    Seven years ago this week, Donald Trump addressed the United Nations and began his remarks with an absurdity. “In less than two years,” the American president said, “my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.” The boast, of course, was plainly false.

    But just as important at the time was that everyone in attendance at the U.N. General Assembly recognized the rhetoric as silly — and some of the diplomats in the room started audibly laughing. The laughter caught the Republican off-guard and left Trump in a position he’d long hoped to avoid: the target of international ridicule.

    In some ways, the Republican’s address was a handy encapsulation of where Trump stands in the fifth year of his White House tenure.

    The Trumps struggle with a UN escalator.

    Over the course of his remarks, he told strange lies about foreign investments in the U.S. He generated murmurs in the hall by declaring, “Our message is very simple. If you come illegally into the United States, you’re going to jail or you’re going back to where you came from — or perhaps even further than that. You know what that means.”

    He pretended that he’s ended seven wars, while pointing to approval ratings that exist only in his mind. He renewed his pathetic lobbying for a Nobel Peace Prize, falsely claiming that “everyone” wants him to get one. He took pointless shots at ostensible U.S. allies in NATO and at the United Nations itself. He told unnamed officials that their countries are “going to hell.” He bragged about campaign swag sales. He attacked clean, renewable energy, while insisting that climate science is an elaborate “con job” and a “hoax” concocted by nefarious people with “evil intentions.”

    And for good measure, he claimed that unnamed “environmentalists” want to ban cows.

    Perhaps most importantly, Trump told one of his favorite lies, bragging that international respect for the U.S. has reached all-time highs now that he’s back in power.

    Read more at the MSNBC link.

    You might also want to check out this piece by Zachary B. Wolf at CNN: Trump’s ‘your countries are going to hell’ speech, annotated.

    One more from AP: After mechanical challenges, UN says Trump’s team to blame for nonworking escalator and teleprompter.

    President Donald Trump broke from his prepared remarks at the United Nations on Tuesday to bemoan an inoperable escalator and a defective teleprompter, using the incidents to portray the global body as dysfunctional.

    “All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle,” he mused, chopping the air with his hand.

    But it turns out the cause was closer to Trump.

    Stephane Dujarric, the U.N. spokesman, said a videographer from the U.S. delegation who ran ahead of him triggered the stop mechanism at the top of the escalator.

    “The safety mechanism is designed to prevent people or objects accidentally being caught and stuck in or pulled into the gearing,” Dujarric said in a statement. “The videographer may have inadvertently triggered the safety function.”

    On the Teleprompter:

    As he began his speech, Trump also noted that the teleprompter wasn’t working. He joked that whoever was running the teleprompter “is in big trouble.”

    A U.N. official speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue contributed that one to his side as well, saying the White House was operating the teleprompter for the president.

    The day before yesterday, Trump gave an insane “health” press conference with RFK Jr. and Dr. Oz. JJ, in which they claimed that Tylenol as well as vaccines are causes of autism. JJ covered it in yesterday’s post.

    Today, STAT has a response to Trump’s “medical” advice: Trump’s ‘tough it out’ to pregnant women meets wave of opposition by medical experts Doctors explain the medical consensus on autism, leucovorin, and Tylenol for fever.

    Federal health officials are telling Americans no, they shouldn’t take Tylenol during pregnancy for fear of autism and yes, they should try a drug used in cancer care to treat children who have developed autism. The medical world disagrees.

    “We were actually pretty alarmed by some of the output that was coming from the administration,” Marketa Wills, CEO and medical director of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview. At a remarkable White House briefing on Monday, President Trump and his top health and science officials said Tylenol use in pregnancy caused some cases of autism in children and said leucovorin, a form of vitamin B9, could treat the disease.

    RFK Jr. and Trump claim to have found causes for autism.

    The event has drawn a flood of pushback from medical societies, autism organizations, and pediatric experts through official statements, interviews, and social media. Much more research is needed on the claims about Tylenol and leucovorin in particular, experts emphasized.

    Until more research is conducted, Wills recommends that doctors rely on professional societies, peer-reviewed research in medical journals, and resources like UpToDate and the Washington Manual for guidance on how to talk with patients.

    John Whyte, CEO of the American Medical Association, pointed out that there were discrepancies between the bold statements from the president and other government guidance. “If I ignore the press conference, and I listen to what the FDA wrote to providers, I would say — you know what? It’s talking about the lowest dose for the shortest period of time, and that’s not a bad thing,” White said. “That’s different than what I heard at the press conference.” [….]

    While President Trump repeatedly told women to “tough it out” rather than take Tylenol for fever or pain during pregnancy, medical experts said there are good reasons to consider the medication.

    An untreated fever can cause serious harms in pregnancy, including neurodevelopmental injuries to fetuses such as spina bifida, they told STAT.

    “Brains are impacted by fever,” Joia Crear-Perry, an OB-GYN and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, told STAT.

    There are also studies suggesting fever is associated with the risk of autism spectrum disorder, but it’s unknown whether treatment decreases that risk, Brenna Hughes, interim chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University School of Medicine, wrote in an email to STAT.

    There’s much more information at the STAT link.

    The New York Times has published a shocking investigation about Elon Musk’s family, by Kirsten Grind and John Eligon (gift link): Elon Musk’s Father Accused of Child Sexual Abuse.

    Elon Musk has not been shy about putting much of his life on public display. The tech billionaire posts daily on his social network X, has cooperated with two biographies and often speaks on podcasts and at conferences.

    But there is one part of his life that he has not revealed much about — his longtime estrangement from his father, Errol Musk, who has become increasingly outspoken about his family and business ventures tied to the Musk name.

    Errol Musk

    A New York Times investigation found that a significant factor in Elon Musk’s rupture with his father stems from accusations against Errol Musk of child sex abuse. The allegations have repeatedly spilled over into Elon Musk’s life as relatives have contacted him for help and he has sometimes taken action to intercede, according to personal letters, emails and interviews with family members.

    The family’s troubles have entangled Elon Musk in a painful three-decade multigenerational saga that continues to trail him. The fallout has kept the 54-year-old mogul tethered to South Africa, where he was born and where Errol Musk lives, even as he has built a business empire in the United States and briefly ascended to political power as a close adviser to President Trump.

    The allegations against Errol Musk involve five of his children and stepchildren, whom he was accused of abusing in South Africa and California, according to police and court records, personal correspondence, social workers and interviews with family members.

    The earliest accusation was in 1993 when Errol Musk’s stepdaughter, then 4 years old, told relatives he had touched her at the family house. A decade later, the stepdaughter said she caught him sniffing her dirty underwear. Some family members have also accused Errol Musk of abusing two of his daughters and a stepson. And as recently as 2023, family members and a social worker attempted to intervene after his then 5-year-old son said his father had groped his buttocks.

    Three separate police investigations were opened, according to police and court records, as well as family members. Two of the inquiries ended, while it’s unclear what happened in the third. Errol Musk, 79, has not been convicted of any crime.

    The abuse allegations have caused strife within the Musk family, with some relatives turning to Elon Musk — who is Errol Musk’s eldest child — for help. Around 2010, one relative wrote Elon Musk a five-page letter about some of the accusations and implored him to intervene.

    “We really need your advice, help and guidance in these matters because we daily see these children suffer,” the relative wrote in the letter, which was viewed by The Times.

    Use the gift link to read the rest.

    Those are my recommended reads for today. What stories have you been following?

    #Autism #DallasICEShooting #ElonMusk #ErrolMusk #JimmyKimmel #leucovorin #Tylenol #UNGeneralAssembly #UnitedNations #vaccines

  4. From COINTELPRO to Project Esther: The Evolution of Domestic Counterinsurgency in the U.S.

    Counterinsurgency against U.S. social movements has evolved since the 1960s. What was once the exclusive domain of state agencies has now been privatized. This is seen perhaps most clearly in the ongoing campaign to neutralize the Palestine movement.

    By the time DHS agents showed up at Mahmoud Khalil’s door, a full-spectrum campaign had already marked him as a target. Columbia professor Shai Davidai had posted Khalil’s name and image online, called him a terrorist, and urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to deport him. The smear was picked up by a network of doxxing accounts like “Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus,” which publicly lobbied for the revocation of Khalil’s visa. Rubio repeated the call, Khalil received death threats, and the university stayed silent. Then, federal agents arrived. A professor’s tweet had become a trigger for federal enforcement. A tweet, a tag, a dossier — these were the new informant files. This time, professors, NGOs, and anonymous social media accounts were the new operators.

    This episode captures a defining feature of our current conjuncture: counterinsurgency is no longer the exclusive domain of state intelligence agencies. It has been privatized, digitized, and reframed as “civic action,” with Zionist nonprofits, right-wing law firms, and data-harvesting platforms organizing in concert with universities and police departments to neutralize Palestine organizing.

    Though today’s tactics may look different, they reflect a familiar story. The FBI’s Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) was a covert program aimed at surveilling, infiltrating, discrediting, and disrupting domestic political organizations deemed subversive. It is often remembered for its attacks on civil rights and Black liberation movements, but was also part of a broader Cold War strategy to suppress anti-imperialist, anti-Zionist, and internationalist movements in the U.S, especially among youth.

    Today, COINTELPRO’s framework has been rescripted in Project Esther, an initiative launched by the Heritage Foundation in October 2024 that frames pro-Palestinian advocacy as “terrorism” and seeks to dismantle the broader left by branding critics of Zionism as threats to national security. It calls for purging universities, defunding institutions, deporting foreign students, and weaponizing law enforcement to suppress dissent. Though marketed as an anti-antisemitism strategy, it ignores right-wing antisemitism and recycles antisemitic conspiracy theories in the service of political repression.

    Thus, while these tactics may appear new, putting COINTELPRO and Project Esther in conversation reveals a continuity of structure and intent, especially vis-à-vis the targeting of solidarity with movements abroad as a threat to national coherence. While COINTELPRO relied on federal secrecy and classified directives, today’s repression develops through public-private coordination, open-source surveillance, and layers of plausible deniability. The outcome is a more privatized, legally ambiguous, and digitally mediated mode of disruption that launders the violence of the state through university codes, NGO reports, and data-mining activism.

    This piece traces the throughlines between then and now — not to flatten their differences, but to expose the structural consistency of U.S. counterinsurgency across decades and geographies, and to show how it has adapted to new legal regimes, digital technologies, and ideological terrains. In doing so, it frames history not as a mirror, but as a weapon that reveals patterns, clarifies stakes, and helps us chart a way through.

    COINTELPRO’s campus war

    On February 21, 1967, the FBI sent a memorandum to all of its field offices, directing agents to enhance their counterintelligence capabilities at colleges and universities. From the late 1960s through the 1970s, university campuses became central sites of COINTELPRO operations designed to neutralize leftist campus politics. Identified as incubators of revolutionary consciousness, universities were surveilled, infiltrated, and manipulated by the FBI. At UCLA, the agency’s covert efforts to inflame tensions between the Black Panther Party (BPP) and the rival U.S. Organization culminated in the 1969 assassination of Panthers Bunchy Carter and John Huggins. The suppression of radical student alliances, particularly those linking local racial justice demands with global liberation movements, became a template for future state efforts to fragment and delegitimize youth-led political coalitions.

    COINTELPRO aggressively tried to infiltrate, discredit, and destroy the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which had grown into one of the most radical and influential youth organizations in the U.S. As SNCC aligned itself with Black Power ideologies and international liberation movements, U.S. intelligence agencies became increasingly alarmed. Amid concerns that SNCC might attend the 1965 World Youth Festival in Algiers, NSA staff proposed creating a private group to counter their potential impact.1 To destabilize SNCC from within, the FBI exploited tensions within SNCC’s leadership, pacified key figures through legal pressure, and sent forged letters to donors and community leaders, aiming to cut off financial support and damage the organization’s credibility.

    COINTELPRO also sought to sow division between groups. To capitalize on tension between the Panthers and SNCC, the FBI circulated a fake memo with text that reads, “According to zoologists, the main difference between a panther and other large cats is that the panther has the smallest head.”2 The FBI memo goes on to say that “[The statement] is biologically true. Publicity to this effect might help neutralize Black Panther recruiting efforts.” In 1968, the FBI began telling informants that Stokely Carmichael, a prominent SNCC leader who would later change his name to Kwame Ture, was a CIA informant and to spread the message accordingly. In one incident, FBI agents posing as concerned friends called Carmichael’s mother to inform her that Panther members wanted to kill him and that he needed to go into hiding. The decisive split between the groups was solidified by September 1970, when Huey Newton publicly announced that “We…charge that Stokely Carmichael is operating as an agent of the CIA.”

    Counterinsurgent invocations of antisemitism against Black radicals grew after SNCC became the first major Black organization to publicly adopt an anti-Zionist line. The FBI frequently accused SNCC and the Black Panthers of antisemitism to destroy their reputation among liberal sympathizers. The New York Office of the FBI proposed targeting Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, as the recipient of a fabricated letter from a supposed older Black veteran whose son had joined the Panthers. The letter falsely claimed the son and other Panthers planned to bomb Jewish stores and spread antisemitic propaganda in churches. The goal was to manipulate Kahane, whose media connections could amplify the disinformation, and incite him to act against the Panthers. The FBI planned to follow up with staged “evidence” like Panther publications and photographs to further bait Kahane into a confrontation. Kahane, a former member of the fascist-aligned Betar youth movement and ideological forefather to Israeli politicians like Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, led groups (Kach and Kahane Chai) that remained on the U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organization list for decades without a single prosecution — until they were quietly delisted in 2022, just ahead of Ben-Gvir’s rise to power.

    The New Left’s presence on college campuses made groups like SDS another prime target of COINTELPRO operations. As it holds today, Columbia’s visibility, location, and history put the campus at the forefront of both rebellion and repression. Columbia SDS emerged as the most influential student chapter in the country, playing a central role in the 1968 campus uprising that challenged university complicity with the Vietnam War and its occupation of Harlem. In response, the FBI launched a coordinated disinformation campaign to disrupt organizing and isolate student radicals from their families and communities. Field offices were directed to disseminate forged materials anonymously, taking “all necessary steps…to protect the Bureau as its source.” One fake letter, sent to the parents of students arrested during the 1968 Columbia uprising and signed “father of a ‘busted’ ex-student,” encouraged recipients to cut ties with SDS: “It’s your child and your money. Help throw SDS off the campus.” Another forged postcard advertised a fake event: “Attend the Cultural Bag of the Year—1968 SDS Crap Out. Do your thing. Bring your own grass, pot, whatever. Extra: Meet and gas with Mark Rudd!” These hoaxes aimed to discredit the movement through crude caricature, sow confusion among student ranks, and stoke moral panic among middle-class families already rattled by their children’s radicalism. Through psychological operations and manipulation of public perception, the state sought both to dismantle SDS and delegitimize the broader student movement at its most explosive and visible node.

    Yet even at the peak of its campaign, the Bureau recognized that its grip on campus life was incomplete. “In the recent past,” one report acknowledged, “informant coverage of New Left organizations, particularly SDS, has been limited to off-campus informants and sources.” Most on-campus sources were “limited to various college officials who cooperated with this Bureau.” The lack of direct access to student organizers posed a strategic roadblock. “The penetration of SDS chapters by high-quality informants who are in a position to report on the plans of student activists remains a different problem,” the memo continued.

    In response, the Bureau leaned even more heavily into counterintelligence like anonymous letters, fake publications, hoaxes, and provocations designed to provoke schisms and disillusionment. “The institution of instant counterintelligence programs,” one report notes, combined with “the certain disavowal of the New Left on the part of the vast majority of college students and officials,” was expected to increase informant access and turn the tide of campus sentiment. When direct infiltration fell short, the FBI relied on disinformation and sabotage to shape outcomes.

    Though campus-based counterinsurgency during the COINTELPRO era focused largely on the Black liberation struggle and the New Left, it also laid the foundation for the surveillance of internationalist movements that would heighten in the following decade. As the state pivoted to confront new forms of dissent shaped by anti-colonial and anti-Zionist politics, its counterintelligence strategies adapted, expanding beyond Black, Puerto Rican, Indigenous, and New Left radicals to include Arab and Palestinian organizers.

    The long arm of anti-Palestinian repression

    The aftermath of the 1967 war marked a turning point in the surveillance of Arab American political activity. As Palestinians and other Arabs in the diaspora began organizing more visibly in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle, they became immediate targets of federal surveillance. While Black, Puerto Rican, and Indigenous radicals had long been monitored under COINTELPRO, the state repression of Arab activists post-1967 added a layer of anti-Palestinian racism and Cold War geopolitics fused to conflate Arab dissent with foreign subversion.

    In the early 1970s, the Nixon administration launched Operation Boulder, a coordinated campaign of surveillance, interrogation, and intimidation targeting Arabs and Arab Americans, particularly students, under the guise of national security. While publicly framed as a response to the events in Munich in 1972, Boulder had roots in a longer history of repression that began years earlier, driven by Zionist lobbying in the wake of 1967.

    Surveillance of Arab students began in earnest after Palestinian immigrant Sirhan Sirhan assassinated Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. That same year, the FBI began monitoring the Organization of Arab Students (OAS) and the Association of Arab American University Graduates (AAUG). Flagging student support for Palestinian resistance and Third World anti-imperialist movements as cause for alarm, Congress member Gerald Ford stoked fears of “Peking-trained agitators from the Middle East.” The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) played a leading role in this counterinsurgency, often infiltrating the OAS conventions and meetings. One ADL intelligence report concedes that “The political activity of the Arab students in the United States will increase significantly in the coming school year (1969–70) with increasing effectiveness. They are beginning to display a much greater understanding of how to present their arguments to the various levels of the American public…and any successes are certain to increase their confidence and, hence, their activity.” As Arab organizers became more visible, the state’s response shifted from observation to preemptive disruption. The fact that Arab student politics were becoming more legible, compelling, and harder to dismiss provoked immense fear amongst intelligence agencies.

    Although both the CIA and FBI fell short on evidence, they continued to frame the OAS as a conduit for “fedayeen propaganda,” warning that their political organizing could accelerate. This speculative threat justified placing Arab students under the scope of COINTELPRO. By 1970, “potential Arab saboteurs” were officially added to the program’s targets, citing potential for future violence as grounds for surveillance.

    As the surveillance of Arab political activity escalated with COINTELPRO, Operation Boulder operationalized this intelligence framework into a formalized immigration enforcement campaign. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) began systematically interrogating thousands of Arab students under the pretense of checking visa compliance. They routinely asked invasive questions about political views, factional affiliation, and opinions on Zionism. Some were searched, surveilled, or referred to the FBI. Minor visa infractions, typically ignored for other students, became grounds for deportation if the student expressed pro-Palestinian sentiments. This repression was often carried out in coordination with Israeli intelligence and Zionist organizations, a long-term partnership that continues to this day.

    In tandem with state repression, far-right Zionist organizations attempted to physically intimidate and silence Palestinian organizing. Most notably, the Jewish Defense League (JDL) carried out a campaign of bombings and harassment throughout the 1970s and 1980s, targeting Arab American individuals and institutions across Los Angeles. These included the 1972 bombing of Palestinian immigrant Mohammed Shaath’s apartment, attacks on the Lebanese consulate, and the 1985 assassination of Alex Odeh, the West Coast director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), killed by a pipe bomb at his Santa Ana office. Despite strong suspicion of JDL involvement and public statements of support for the attacks by its leader, Irv Rubin, none of this vigilante violence was ever prosecuted.

    In the 1980s and 1990s, this repression expanded beyond individual targets into broader Palestinian communities. The Los Angeles 8 — a group of seven Palestinians and one Kenyan arrested in 1987 — were long-term residents and community organizers in Southern California. They were initially charged under the McCarran-Walter Act with “promoting world communism,” based on their alleged support for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). After successfully challenging these charges on constitutional grounds, the government pivoted to using immigration and anti-terrorism laws to continue pursuing them. At the same time, the Reagan administration proposed secret concentration camps to detain tens of thousands of Arabs in a hypothetical “national emergency.”

    One of the lesser-known FBI operations during this era was Operation Vulgar Betrayal, which focused on Bridgeview, Illinois, a predominantly Palestinian suburb outside of Chicago. Launched in the early 1990s and running for over a decade, the operation subjected mosques, community centers, and individuals to extreme FBI surveillance, often with no publicly stated basis beyond vague claims of “terrorism financing.” A central target was Muhammad Salah, a Palestinian Bridgeview resident, who in 1993 became the first U.S. citizen placed on a terrorist watchlist. He was later the first U.S. citizen designated as a Specially Designated National (SDN) by the Treasury Department, a designation that was ultimately withdrawn following a legal challenge.

    After the signing of the Oslo Accords, the FBI began to monitor and wiretap conversations of members of the Palestine Committee in the U.S., a network of Palestinians engaged in Islamic political organizing and community work, which, at the time, operated legally within the U.S. and predated the State Department’s formal terrorist designation system. When the Palestine Committee held a three-day meeting in Philadelphia later that year, the FBI placed wiretaps inside the Marriott hotel and later introduced these transcripts as evidence during the Holy Land Five trials in 2007 and 2008.

    During this period, federal agencies increasingly collaborated with private actors and entities engaged in surveillance and ideological warfare against Palestinian and Muslim communities. Chief among them was Steve Emerson, a self-styled terrorism expert and founder of the Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT). Emerson played a pivotal role in the 1990s targeting of the Palestine Committee and Sami al-Arian and has continued to work as a key purveyor of Islamophobic disinformation. In recent years, his operations have come under renewed scrutiny. In 2021, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) revealed that multiple individuals had been paid by Emerson and IPT to infiltrate Muslim organizations and secretly record prominent community leaders, one of whom was compensated over $100,000 across four years.

    This counterinsurgency was soon followed by far-reaching legislation designed to criminalize support for Palestinian political groups and factions. Although the 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act initially limited “material support” to traditional forms like money and arms, the 2001 PATRIOT Act greatly expanded this to include vague categories such as “expert advice” and “personnel.” The Supreme Court upheld this expansion in the 2010 decision Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, effectively criminalizing any advocacy in coordination with blacklisted groups. These laws have been used to target groups like Hamas, the PFLP, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ)—notably in the cases of Sami al-Arian and the Holy Land Foundation Five, whose leaders were imprisoned amid secretive and politically charged trials.

    The state’s surveillance and repression of anti-imperialist Arab and Palestinian political work, which gained traction in the wake of 1967 and expanded through operations like Boulder and Vulgar Betrayal, laid the foundations for what would become the post-9/11 security state. These earlier campaigns combined immigration enforcement, domestic intelligence, and foreign policy interests to proactively target political dissent. After 9/11, these tools were revived and vastly intensified. Practices that had once been exceptional or covert became normalized and institutionalized, as the program of campus surveillance and political suppression was reactivated under the mandate of counterterrorism. The War on Terror should be understood as a continuation of the domestic warfare of COINTELPRO, inheriting its toolkit and applying it with broader reach, deeper coordination, and the legitimizing language of national security.

    The War on Terror period

    U.S. intelligence agencies have long exploited university resources, global reach, and access to young people. During the height of COINTELPRO, FBI and CIA operatives surveilled foreign students, monitored leftist faculty, and infiltrated student organizations. Church Committee hearings in the 1970s exposed the scale of these operations, with hundreds of university personnel found to be collaborating with the CIA, some knowingly, many under the pretense of “national interest.”

    Though the public exposure of these programs temporarily forced agencies to scale back their operations, the groundwork remained largely intact. In the years following September 11, 2001, U.S. intelligence agencies strengthened their presence on college campuses, reinstating Cold War and COINTELPRO-era tactics under the banner of counterterrorism. However, unlike previous decades, when such action often sparked public scandal or internal pushback, the post-9/11 period saw the university increasingly reimagined as a willing partner in the project of domestic national security. Administrators formalized liaisons with intelligence and law enforcement agencies, launched degree programs in security, and competed for federal designations as “centers of excellence” in intelligence, cyber-operations, and surveillance technology. Entire research labs were devoted to government-funded projects with classified components, often hosted off-campus in facilities shielded from public scrutiny.

    In short, what changed after 9/11 was not so much the tactics but the terms of cooperation. Where there was once scandal and subterfuge, there is now formal partnership. Surveillance is no longer framed as exceptional, but as responsible management of an uncertain world.

    The NYPD’s infiltration of Muslim Student Associations (MSAs) across New York City illustrates a staggering expansion of this kind of surveillance into academic life. On the basis of “public safety,” the NYPD’s Intelligence Division, through its Cyber Intelligence, Demographics, and Terrorist Interdiction Units, undertook a dragnet surveillance program that treated religious identity itself as inherently suspicious. Between 2002 and the early 2010s, MSAs on at least 31 campuses were subjected to systemic surveillance, including the deployment of undercover officers, cyber monitoring, and the coercive recruitment of informants. Public campuses under the City University of New York (CUNY) system were a primary focus. These schools, often serving low-income and immigrant students, became saturated sites of observation, where ordinary student activities were reinterpreted through the lens of state paranoia. Accordingly, the NYPD logged paintball trips as paramilitary training exercises and religious expression, such as prayer or wearing a hijab, as radicalization indicators in government databases.

    The NYPD’s Cyber Intelligence Unit routinely monitored chat rooms, blogs, email listservs, and Yahoo groups, tracking content and interpersonal connections. In one case, an NYPD informant embedded himself so deeply in MSA activities that he slept over at fellow students’ homes, prayed with them, and was entrusted with spiritual guidance, only to be later revealed as an informant whose original recruitment stemmed from a minor drug charge. For many students, especially those from immigrant families for whom higher education represented opportunity and upward mobility, the risk of being labeled a suspect was enough to retreat entirely from campus life.

    Project Esther and the rise of civic counterinsurgency

    While government agencies have long surveilled and repressed dissent on campuses, today’s moment marks an evolution in the form of a network of privatized and semi-autonomous actors engaging in what could be called civic counterinsurgency.

    A rhizomatic anti-antisemitism industry emerged in the 2010s, composed of groups like Canary Mission, Betar USA, StopAntisemitism.org, JewBelong, and other donor-funded watchdogs and legal outfits. These organizations share a common objective of criminalizing and delegitimizing Palestine solidarity activism by portraying it as foreign-backed, antisemitic, and dangerous. They comb through social media, compile anonymous dossiers, and collaborate with law enforcement to surveil and suppress Palestine organizing, especially on campuses. Whereas the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) once served as the primary arbiter of acceptable political speech on these issues, that role has increasingly been assumed by this diffuse network of private actors engaged in a broader project of civic repression.

    The civic counterinsurgency model makes this repression harder to trace. We now see students surveilled, harassed, and disciplined not only by the state but by an entire ecosystem of privatized enforcers who disguise their repression using the language of safety, civility, and anti-extremism.

    Project Esther represents the newest cornerstone of the anti-antisemitism industry. Created by the Heritage Foundation, Project Esther declares its mission as identifying and dismantling what it calls a “highly organized, global Hamas Support Network (HSN).” This network, as they define it, includes “people and organizations that are both directly and indirectly involved in furthering Hamas’s cause in contravention of American values and to the detriment of American citizens and America’s national security interests.”

    In Project Esther’s framework, the HSN is both antisemitic and fundamentally “anti-American.” The threat is framed in explicitly civilizational terms. “For al-Qaeda and all others of their ilk, including Hamas,” its founding document declares, “there is never any distinction between the West, the United States and Christians, and Israel and Jews: all are targets.” From this premise follows the conclusion that “Project Esther cannot be a solely ‘Jewish’ effort — it must be an American effort.” This represents a notable shift from earlier iterations of anti-Palestine solidarity groups such as Canary Mission and others, which were largely assumed to be rooted within Jewish community networks. Project Esther, by contrast, explicitly frames itself as a broad national initiative, distancing itself from being solely a Jewish communal project and openly embracing a broader right-wing coalition.

    Project Esther relies on digital monitoring, facial recognition, AI-assisted data mining, and social media scraping to map associations between individuals, organizations, and actions. It uses behavioral modeling and predictive policing to repress resistance before it can coalesce. Surveillance is not limited to public behavior; it includes the collection of social media posts, protest footage, travel records, and group chats. These data are shared among campus police, university administrations, the Department of Homeland Security, and private security firms, creating a vertically integrated surveillance network.

    Fracturing the movement from within is central to Project Esther’s strategy. Drawing directly from counterinsurgency manuals, it aims to sow distrust among organizations, isolate so-called “radicals,” and generate internal divisions. As its founding document plainly states, the goal is to ensure that “HSOs do not trust each other.” This also indicates their clear knowledge that they are fabricating a narrative, as it would be far more challenging to foster such distrust among actual, closely knit organizations. In the wake of high-profile incidents like the Elias Rodriguez case, federal agencies are likely monitoring how groups respond and flagging differences in tone or language as indicators of political fault lines to exploit.

    Infiltration is a reality that cannot be ignored at this stage of the struggle. Student organizations have been secretly recorded and leaked to administrators and the police. In some instances, internal organizing materials have been circulated to media outlets within hours. In one leaked recording from a closed-door briefing, Jonathan Greenblatt of the ADL admits that “Our analysts are in their groups,” he said, referencing SJP and Jewish Voice for Peace. Beyond collecting intelligence, these tactics are meant to sow distrust and stall momentum.

    At the University of Michigan, the privatization counterinsurgency has enabled a new level of invasive, targeted repression against Palestine solidarity organizers. Between 2023 and 2025, the university spent over $3 million contracting a private security firm, City Shield, to infiltrate and monitor pro-Palestinian student groups. Undercover agents followed students across campus and into their neighborhoods, recorded them without consent, and in some cases faked disabilities or staged confrontations to provoke them. Surveillance footage collected by these agents was shared with law enforcement and used by the university in disciplinary proceedings. Multiple students were charged, some jailed, and at least one was sentenced based on City Shield’s fabricated or unverified claims.

    Legal repression forms another core component of Project Esther’s strategy. Project Esther advocates the use of racketeering statutes (RICO), the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), material support for terrorism laws, and selective enforcement of immigration law to target individuals and organizations associated with Palestine solidarity work. In particular, the initiative supports stripping tax-exempt status from nonprofit organizations deemed sympathetic to Palestinian liberation, an effort sometimes referred to as the “Nonprofit Killer Bill.”

    These legal tools are most aggressively used against non-citizens, as we have seen with the attempted targeted deportation of pro-Palestinian students based on political activity. The political function of Project Esther becomes even clearer when read alongside efforts by Republican attorneys general to investigate or revoke the visas of international students protesting the genocide in Gaza.

    This legal repression works in conjunction with discursive maneuvers that cast Palestine solidarity as a national security threat. In 2024, right-wing think tanks and Zionist legal groups launched a coordinated campaign to discredit National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP), accusing the organization of supporting terrorism and acting as an agent of a foreign power. These claims, heavily promoted by the Middle East Forum, the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP), and the Capital Research Center, try to materially connect the activities of SJP chapters to those of the Axis of Resistance, mainly Hamas. The aforementioned ADL leak alleges “a dramatic change in the language” in the rhetoric of student organizers, leading Greenblatt to the assertion that “something is happening with Iran,” whose “language and tactics seem to be bleeding into the American activist space.” These allegations operate less as claims of fact than as instruments of suspicion that racialize and securitize dissent by associating it with an external “enemy.”

    Much like COINTELPRO leveraged Cold War anti-communism, Project Esther uses the pretext of “foreign influence” to criminalize anti-imperialist organizing. Anti-communism has long served as an ideological framework and a rationale for the disruption of networks connecting radicals in the imperial core to the Global South. The American Indian Movement, the Young Lords, Brown Berets, SDS, SNCC, and the Black Panther Party were viewed as domestic threats specifically because they called U.S. sovereignty into question. Today’s rhetorical assault on NSJP invokes this equation of international solidarity with subversion, only now, Islamophobia and anti-terrorism are the primary vectors of legitimacy.

    The central allegation is that NSJP was founded by American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), a U.S.-based nonprofit that has long been subjected to Zionist lawfare for its advocacy. Critics of NSJP point to the fact that AMP’s founders were previously involved in organizations like the Holy Land Foundation and KindHearts, charities that were dismantled through protracted legal campaigns in the post-9/11 era after being accused of funneling money to Hamas. The attempt to tie AMP and NSJP to Hamas relies on tenuous connections — shared individuals, decades-old affiliations, ideological opposition to Israeli state policy, and speculative legal theories.

    Some of the more extreme claims suggest that Hamas provided advance notice of the October 7 attack to NSJP, an assertion so blatantly absurd that it exemplifies absolute impunity from truth. Given the extreme secrecy surrounding the operation, which was deliberately concealed even from key Axis of Resistance partners and other Hamas bureaus, the notion that such sensitive information would be shared with a U.S. student organization is entirely illogical and ludicrous.

    Columbia University: a case study in converging crackdowns

    During the 2024–2025 school year, Columbia University’s Palestine student movement faced intensified repression across physical, legal, and digital fronts. Social media platforms, acting as privatized arms of state surveillance, began systematically shutting down key nodes of communication: Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine’s Instagram account, with over 100,000 followers, was banned by Meta; the Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) account was disabled ahead of a planned protest at Barnard; and the Columbia Palestine Solidarity Coalition’s account was removed without warning in May 2025. These synchronized takedowns point to a pattern in which corporate platforms function as algorithmic enforcers of political orthodoxy, responding to pressure campaigns from alumni, donors, and Zionist NGOs embedded in the anti-antisemitism industry.

    This digital censorship was shaped by direct intervention from Jordana Cutler, Meta’s policy chief for Israel and a former senior Israeli government official, who has used her position to push for the removal of pro-Palestinian content under Meta’s “Dangerous Organizations and Individuals” policy. Cutler, who has publicly described herself as “a voice of the [Israeli] government” within the company, personifies the merging of platform governance and foreign policy interests that operate through byzantine, asymmetrical mechanisms. While Israelis are granted a dedicated liaison within Meta, no such representation exists for Palestinians.

    The Columbia administration created the Office of Institutional Equity (OIE) at the start of the 2024-25 academic year as a separate channel for handling discrimination and harassment complaints that bypasses standard student conduct procedures. Under an expansive interpretation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, the office treats generalized criticism of Zionism as “discriminatory harassment.” Dozens of students have been targeted through secretive proceedings initiated by anonymous complaints submitted via a public web portal. Columbia students familiar with the OIE report that the office frequently relies on complaints submitted by Zionist student groups or ideologically aligned individuals elsewhere in the university. Upon being notified they are under investigation, students are required to sign restrictive non-disclosure agreements to view the unredacted evidence against them. Former prosecutors staff the OIE and operate with little transparency or due process, enabling provisional punishments such as suspension or diploma holds even before any finding of misconduct. Students can also be punished for “failure to report” perceived discrimination.

    On March 7, 2025, the U.S. Departments of Justice, Education, Health and Human Services, and the General Services Administration jointly announced the termination of nearly $400 million in federal contracts and grants to Columbia. The order was issued by the Trump administration’s newly formed Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism, a multi-agency body with broad enforcement authority. Officials emphasized this was only the “first round” of revocations and floated the possibility of placing Columbia under a federal consent decree. University officials quickly passed the consequences down the line: over 180 employees whose positions relied on federal funds were laid off, which redirected public anger toward student organizers rather than the federal agencies and political actors engineering the crackdown. This redirection is a hallmark of counterinsurgency that seeks to fracture solidarity, isolate the movement, and mystify the source of repression.

    The counterinsurgency campaign extended beyond Columbia’s institutional sphere to target individual students, with Mahmoud Khalil emerging as the public face of this crackdown. In January 2025, Canary Mission, an anonymous blacklist site reportedly linked to Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs, created a profile on Khalil. Within days, Betar USA publicly named him as a deportation target and claimed to have shared his information with ICE. After a March 5 protest at Barnard, Columbia Business School professor Shai Davidai tagged Senator Marco Rubio in a tweet demanding Khalil’s deportation: “Illegally taking over a college in which you are not even enrolled and distributing terrorist propaganda should be a deportable offense, no? Because that’s what Mahmoud Khalil from @ColumbiaSJP did yesterday at @BarnardCollege.” The claim was false. Khalil is not a member of Columbia SJP, and Columbia SJP had no role in organizing the protest. However, it circulated widely and helped catalyze a broader smear campaign. The day before ICE detained him, with assistance from Columbia’s administration, Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus picked up Davidai’s framing on X. The sequence of events suggests a coordinated effort between federal agencies, online Zionist advocacy groups, and university collaborators to orchestrate Khalil’s targeting. On May 29, his legal team filed a FOIA request seeking records of communications between the Trump administration and figures in the anti-antisemitism industry, including Canary Mission, Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus, and affiliated individuals.

    In early 2025, the Department of Justice launched a sweeping investigation into CUAD and affiliated student organizers. Led by Trump appointee Emil Bove III, the probe sought membership lists, Instagram data, and explored coordination with ICE. A federal judge twice rejected search warrant requests, citing constitutional concerns. Nevertheless, the Department of Justice continues to press its case.

    On April 11, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a sealed motion asking the Southern District of New York to override a magistrate judge’s denial of a search warrant targeting the Instagram account @cuapartheiddivest. Prosecutors argued that a March 14 post from the account constituted a criminal violation of 18 U.S.C. § 875(c), which prohibits interstate threats to injure.

    The post featured a photo of Columbia President Katrina Armstrong’s residence marked with red paint, graffiti reading “FREE THEM ALL,” and a black inverted triangle. Its caption read in part: “The Columbia President’s mansion has been redecorated…Katrina Armstrong you will not be allowed peace as you sic NYPD officers and ICE agents on your own students for opposing the genocide of the Palestinian people.”

    According to the DOJ, the post met the legal threshold for a “true threat” and was not protected by the First Amendment. Prosecutors claimed there was “probable cause to believe” the post was made “with the intent to place the administrator in fear of bodily harm.”

    Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn had rejected three iterations of the warrant, ruling that the post likely constituted protected political speech. In its appeal, the DOJ faulted Netburn for narrowing her analysis to “the statement ‘you will not be allowed peace’ and the inverted triangle,” arguing she ignored the “full context” of CUAD’s rhetoric and actions. The filing reads: “An email reading simply ‘we plan to visit you soon’ has one meaning if the sender is a door-to-door sales agency, and quite another if it is the Ku Klux Klan.”

    The DOJ is now asking District Judge John Koeltl to find the denial “clearly erroneous” or to issue the warrant directly. If granted, Meta would be compelled to hand over account data for @cuapartheiddivest. A ruling is pending.

    On May 7, 2025, 81 students and community members were arrested by the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group after establishing the Basel al-Araj Popular University inside Columbia University’s Butler Library. In the days following the protest, Senator Marco Rubio called for a full review of the visa status of all students involved. Shortly after, the Columbia administration escalated its response, sending a questionnaire to students facing disciplinary action. The questionnaire asked pointed questions like, “How did you become aware of the planned demonstration?” “Did you make a conscious decision to remain in the room after being instructed to disperse? Please explain.” and “Did you bring any materials related to the protest on May 7, 2025 (e.g., banners, stickers, drums, megaphones) into the library? If yes, what materials did you bring, and how did you obtain these materials?” This line of questioning shows the administration’s effort to punish the students while also mapping political networks, assessing intent, and preempting future mobilizations.

    The convergence of state power and civil society proxies—university boards, tech platforms, media outlets, philanthropic foundations, donor-funded lawfare groups, consulting firms, and think tanks—brings to the fore counterinsurgency’s privatization. These forces are not only parallel but increasingly coordinated, as universities have hired private security, devised new codes of conduct, and shared student data with law enforcement. The anti-antisemitism industry has become a vehicle for ideological enforcement through financial coercion, reputational sabotage, and lawfare. In this feedback loop, civic actors generate the justification, and the state supplies the force.

    The domestic arm of Empire

    Repression reveals what the state fears most. If we understand the U.S. state as fundamentally imperial, then its domestic repression cannot be disentangled from its foreign policy. Counterinsurgency at home mirrors U.S. strategies abroad. COINTELPRO functioned as a domestic arm of imperial war, designed to neutralize liberation movements that posed a material threat to U.S.-led imperialism. Today, Project Esther attempts to do the same to the Palestine solidarity movement, this time with the help of civil society proxies.

    Project Esther’s preoccupation with “anti-Americanism” is noteworthy. Although it claims to target what it deems antisemitic, the deepest threat, in the eyes of the state, is anti-imperialism. The same fear that animated the FBI’s war on SNCC, SDS, and the Black Panther Party now animates its repression of students organizing for Gaza. Anti-imperialist internationalism is dangerous to the U.S. because it breaks the isolation on which repression depends.

    The accusations leveled against student organizers of foreign coordination, terrorist affiliation, or espionage are fabricated and politically motivated. But they also reflect an underlying truth that Palestine solidarity, in its more radical formations, poses a real threat to the legitimacy and continuity of U.S. empire. When students reject the settler logic of the Zionist state, they are also rejecting the broader scaffolding of U.S. military hegemony, settler colonialism, and permanent war. It is precisely this alignment with a global resistance to imperial power that renders such movements dangerous, not because they are orchestrated from abroad, but because they articulate a domestic refusal of the geopolitical status quo.

    Project Esther is not COINTELPRO 2.0. It is, however, part of the same infrastructure of counterinsurgency, updated for the age of digital repression. Recognizing these continuities helps us build a strategic response grounded in historical movement memory that refuses fragmentation, cultivates discipline, and sustains struggle across generations.

    In order to resist effectively, we must remember that we are not the first to be targeted. There is a lineage of struggle beneath our feet. Through understanding the script, we begin to uncover the means to resist it. We begin to remember how our elders fought back, and how we can as well.

    Carrie Zaremba
    Carrie Zaremba is a writer and organizer based in Brooklyn whose work focuses on student movements, internationalism, and counter-repression. She is a member of the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) Solidarity Network and a proud Students for Justice in Palestine alum.

    Notes

    1. p. 299 of Patriotic Betrayal: The Inside Story of the CIA’s Secret Campaign to Enroll American Students in the Crusade Against Communism ↩︎

    2. G.C. Moore to W.C. Sullivan, Oct. 10, 1968. also cited in Agents of Repression The FBI’s Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement Second Edition by Ward Churchill ↩︎

    Source: https://mondoweiss.net/2025/07/from-cointelpro-to-project-esther-the-evolution-of-domestic-counterinsurgency-in-the-u-s/

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=

    #antiImperialism #cointelpro #counterinsurgency #northAmerica #palestineSolidarity #projectEsther #repression #studentMovement #warOnTerror #zionism

  5. From COINTELPRO to Project Esther: The Evolution of Domestic Counterinsurgency in the U.S.

    Counterinsurgency against U.S. social movements has evolved since the 1960s. What was once the exclusive domain of state agencies has now been privatized. This is seen perhaps most clearly in the ongoing campaign to neutralize the Palestine movement.

    By the time DHS agents showed up at Mahmoud Khalil’s door, a full-spectrum campaign had already marked him as a target. Columbia professor Shai Davidai had posted Khalil’s name and image online, called him a terrorist, and urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to deport him. The smear was picked up by a network of doxxing accounts like “Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus,” which publicly lobbied for the revocation of Khalil’s visa. Rubio repeated the call, Khalil received death threats, and the university stayed silent. Then, federal agents arrived. A professor’s tweet had become a trigger for federal enforcement. A tweet, a tag, a dossier — these were the new informant files. This time, professors, NGOs, and anonymous social media accounts were the new operators.

    This episode captures a defining feature of our current conjuncture: counterinsurgency is no longer the exclusive domain of state intelligence agencies. It has been privatized, digitized, and reframed as “civic action,” with Zionist nonprofits, right-wing law firms, and data-harvesting platforms organizing in concert with universities and police departments to neutralize Palestine organizing.

    Though today’s tactics may look different, they reflect a familiar story. The FBI’s Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) was a covert program aimed at surveilling, infiltrating, discrediting, and disrupting domestic political organizations deemed subversive. It is often remembered for its attacks on civil rights and Black liberation movements, but was also part of a broader Cold War strategy to suppress anti-imperialist, anti-Zionist, and internationalist movements in the U.S, especially among youth.

    Today, COINTELPRO’s framework has been rescripted in Project Esther, an initiative launched by the Heritage Foundation in October 2024 that frames pro-Palestinian advocacy as “terrorism” and seeks to dismantle the broader left by branding critics of Zionism as threats to national security. It calls for purging universities, defunding institutions, deporting foreign students, and weaponizing law enforcement to suppress dissent. Though marketed as an anti-antisemitism strategy, it ignores right-wing antisemitism and recycles antisemitic conspiracy theories in the service of political repression.

    Thus, while these tactics may appear new, putting COINTELPRO and Project Esther in conversation reveals a continuity of structure and intent, especially vis-à-vis the targeting of solidarity with movements abroad as a threat to national coherence. While COINTELPRO relied on federal secrecy and classified directives, today’s repression develops through public-private coordination, open-source surveillance, and layers of plausible deniability. The outcome is a more privatized, legally ambiguous, and digitally mediated mode of disruption that launders the violence of the state through university codes, NGO reports, and data-mining activism.

    This piece traces the throughlines between then and now — not to flatten their differences, but to expose the structural consistency of U.S. counterinsurgency across decades and geographies, and to show how it has adapted to new legal regimes, digital technologies, and ideological terrains. In doing so, it frames history not as a mirror, but as a weapon that reveals patterns, clarifies stakes, and helps us chart a way through.

    COINTELPRO’s campus war

    On February 21, 1967, the FBI sent a memorandum to all of its field offices, directing agents to enhance their counterintelligence capabilities at colleges and universities. From the late 1960s through the 1970s, university campuses became central sites of COINTELPRO operations designed to neutralize leftist campus politics. Identified as incubators of revolutionary consciousness, universities were surveilled, infiltrated, and manipulated by the FBI. At UCLA, the agency’s covert efforts to inflame tensions between the Black Panther Party (BPP) and the rival U.S. Organization culminated in the 1969 assassination of Panthers Bunchy Carter and John Huggins. The suppression of radical student alliances, particularly those linking local racial justice demands with global liberation movements, became a template for future state efforts to fragment and delegitimize youth-led political coalitions.

    COINTELPRO aggressively tried to infiltrate, discredit, and destroy the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which had grown into one of the most radical and influential youth organizations in the U.S. As SNCC aligned itself with Black Power ideologies and international liberation movements, U.S. intelligence agencies became increasingly alarmed. Amid concerns that SNCC might attend the 1965 World Youth Festival in Algiers, NSA staff proposed creating a private group to counter their potential impact.1 To destabilize SNCC from within, the FBI exploited tensions within SNCC’s leadership, pacified key figures through legal pressure, and sent forged letters to donors and community leaders, aiming to cut off financial support and damage the organization’s credibility.

    COINTELPRO also sought to sow division between groups. To capitalize on tension between the Panthers and SNCC, the FBI circulated a fake memo with text that reads, “According to zoologists, the main difference between a panther and other large cats is that the panther has the smallest head.”2 The FBI memo goes on to say that “[The statement] is biologically true. Publicity to this effect might help neutralize Black Panther recruiting efforts.” In 1968, the FBI began telling informants that Stokely Carmichael, a prominent SNCC leader who would later change his name to Kwame Ture, was a CIA informant and to spread the message accordingly. In one incident, FBI agents posing as concerned friends called Carmichael’s mother to inform her that Panther members wanted to kill him and that he needed to go into hiding. The decisive split between the groups was solidified by September 1970, when Huey Newton publicly announced that “We…charge that Stokely Carmichael is operating as an agent of the CIA.”

    Counterinsurgent invocations of antisemitism against Black radicals grew after SNCC became the first major Black organization to publicly adopt an anti-Zionist line. The FBI frequently accused SNCC and the Black Panthers of antisemitism to destroy their reputation among liberal sympathizers. The New York Office of the FBI proposed targeting Rabbi Meir Kahane, leader of the Jewish Defense League, as the recipient of a fabricated letter from a supposed older Black veteran whose son had joined the Panthers. The letter falsely claimed the son and other Panthers planned to bomb Jewish stores and spread antisemitic propaganda in churches. The goal was to manipulate Kahane, whose media connections could amplify the disinformation, and incite him to act against the Panthers. The FBI planned to follow up with staged “evidence” like Panther publications and photographs to further bait Kahane into a confrontation. Kahane, a former member of the fascist-aligned Betar youth movement and ideological forefather to Israeli politicians like Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, led groups (Kach and Kahane Chai) that remained on the U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organization list for decades without a single prosecution — until they were quietly delisted in 2022, just ahead of Ben-Gvir’s rise to power.

    The New Left’s presence on college campuses made groups like SDS another prime target of COINTELPRO operations. As it holds today, Columbia’s visibility, location, and history put the campus at the forefront of both rebellion and repression. Columbia SDS emerged as the most influential student chapter in the country, playing a central role in the 1968 campus uprising that challenged university complicity with the Vietnam War and its occupation of Harlem. In response, the FBI launched a coordinated disinformation campaign to disrupt organizing and isolate student radicals from their families and communities. Field offices were directed to disseminate forged materials anonymously, taking “all necessary steps…to protect the Bureau as its source.” One fake letter, sent to the parents of students arrested during the 1968 Columbia uprising and signed “father of a ‘busted’ ex-student,” encouraged recipients to cut ties with SDS: “It’s your child and your money. Help throw SDS off the campus.” Another forged postcard advertised a fake event: “Attend the Cultural Bag of the Year—1968 SDS Crap Out. Do your thing. Bring your own grass, pot, whatever. Extra: Meet and gas with Mark Rudd!” These hoaxes aimed to discredit the movement through crude caricature, sow confusion among student ranks, and stoke moral panic among middle-class families already rattled by their children’s radicalism. Through psychological operations and manipulation of public perception, the state sought both to dismantle SDS and delegitimize the broader student movement at its most explosive and visible node.

    Yet even at the peak of its campaign, the Bureau recognized that its grip on campus life was incomplete. “In the recent past,” one report acknowledged, “informant coverage of New Left organizations, particularly SDS, has been limited to off-campus informants and sources.” Most on-campus sources were “limited to various college officials who cooperated with this Bureau.” The lack of direct access to student organizers posed a strategic roadblock. “The penetration of SDS chapters by high-quality informants who are in a position to report on the plans of student activists remains a different problem,” the memo continued.

    In response, the Bureau leaned even more heavily into counterintelligence like anonymous letters, fake publications, hoaxes, and provocations designed to provoke schisms and disillusionment. “The institution of instant counterintelligence programs,” one report notes, combined with “the certain disavowal of the New Left on the part of the vast majority of college students and officials,” was expected to increase informant access and turn the tide of campus sentiment. When direct infiltration fell short, the FBI relied on disinformation and sabotage to shape outcomes.

    Though campus-based counterinsurgency during the COINTELPRO era focused largely on the Black liberation struggle and the New Left, it also laid the foundation for the surveillance of internationalist movements that would heighten in the following decade. As the state pivoted to confront new forms of dissent shaped by anti-colonial and anti-Zionist politics, its counterintelligence strategies adapted, expanding beyond Black, Puerto Rican, Indigenous, and New Left radicals to include Arab and Palestinian organizers.

    The long arm of anti-Palestinian repression

    The aftermath of the 1967 war marked a turning point in the surveillance of Arab American political activity. As Palestinians and other Arabs in the diaspora began organizing more visibly in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle, they became immediate targets of federal surveillance. While Black, Puerto Rican, and Indigenous radicals had long been monitored under COINTELPRO, the state repression of Arab activists post-1967 added a layer of anti-Palestinian racism and Cold War geopolitics fused to conflate Arab dissent with foreign subversion.

    In the early 1970s, the Nixon administration launched Operation Boulder, a coordinated campaign of surveillance, interrogation, and intimidation targeting Arabs and Arab Americans, particularly students, under the guise of national security. While publicly framed as a response to the events in Munich in 1972, Boulder had roots in a longer history of repression that began years earlier, driven by Zionist lobbying in the wake of 1967.

    Surveillance of Arab students began in earnest after Palestinian immigrant Sirhan Sirhan assassinated Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. That same year, the FBI began monitoring the Organization of Arab Students (OAS) and the Association of Arab American University Graduates (AAUG). Flagging student support for Palestinian resistance and Third World anti-imperialist movements as cause for alarm, Congress member Gerald Ford stoked fears of “Peking-trained agitators from the Middle East.” The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) played a leading role in this counterinsurgency, often infiltrating the OAS conventions and meetings. One ADL intelligence report concedes that “The political activity of the Arab students in the United States will increase significantly in the coming school year (1969–70) with increasing effectiveness. They are beginning to display a much greater understanding of how to present their arguments to the various levels of the American public…and any successes are certain to increase their confidence and, hence, their activity.” As Arab organizers became more visible, the state’s response shifted from observation to preemptive disruption. The fact that Arab student politics were becoming more legible, compelling, and harder to dismiss provoked immense fear amongst intelligence agencies.

    Although both the CIA and FBI fell short on evidence, they continued to frame the OAS as a conduit for “fedayeen propaganda,” warning that their political organizing could accelerate. This speculative threat justified placing Arab students under the scope of COINTELPRO. By 1970, “potential Arab saboteurs” were officially added to the program’s targets, citing potential for future violence as grounds for surveillance.

    As the surveillance of Arab political activity escalated with COINTELPRO, Operation Boulder operationalized this intelligence framework into a formalized immigration enforcement campaign. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) began systematically interrogating thousands of Arab students under the pretense of checking visa compliance. They routinely asked invasive questions about political views, factional affiliation, and opinions on Zionism. Some were searched, surveilled, or referred to the FBI. Minor visa infractions, typically ignored for other students, became grounds for deportation if the student expressed pro-Palestinian sentiments. This repression was often carried out in coordination with Israeli intelligence and Zionist organizations, a long-term partnership that continues to this day.

    In tandem with state repression, far-right Zionist organizations attempted to physically intimidate and silence Palestinian organizing. Most notably, the Jewish Defense League (JDL) carried out a campaign of bombings and harassment throughout the 1970s and 1980s, targeting Arab American individuals and institutions across Los Angeles. These included the 1972 bombing of Palestinian immigrant Mohammed Shaath’s apartment, attacks on the Lebanese consulate, and the 1985 assassination of Alex Odeh, the West Coast director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), killed by a pipe bomb at his Santa Ana office. Despite strong suspicion of JDL involvement and public statements of support for the attacks by its leader, Irv Rubin, none of this vigilante violence was ever prosecuted.

    In the 1980s and 1990s, this repression expanded beyond individual targets into broader Palestinian communities. The Los Angeles 8 — a group of seven Palestinians and one Kenyan arrested in 1987 — were long-term residents and community organizers in Southern California. They were initially charged under the McCarran-Walter Act with “promoting world communism,” based on their alleged support for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). After successfully challenging these charges on constitutional grounds, the government pivoted to using immigration and anti-terrorism laws to continue pursuing them. At the same time, the Reagan administration proposed secret concentration camps to detain tens of thousands of Arabs in a hypothetical “national emergency.”

    One of the lesser-known FBI operations during this era was Operation Vulgar Betrayal, which focused on Bridgeview, Illinois, a predominantly Palestinian suburb outside of Chicago. Launched in the early 1990s and running for over a decade, the operation subjected mosques, community centers, and individuals to extreme FBI surveillance, often with no publicly stated basis beyond vague claims of “terrorism financing.” A central target was Muhammad Salah, a Palestinian Bridgeview resident, who in 1993 became the first U.S. citizen placed on a terrorist watchlist. He was later the first U.S. citizen designated as a Specially Designated National (SDN) by the Treasury Department, a designation that was ultimately withdrawn following a legal challenge.

    After the signing of the Oslo Accords, the FBI began to monitor and wiretap conversations of members of the Palestine Committee in the U.S., a network of Palestinians engaged in Islamic political organizing and community work, which, at the time, operated legally within the U.S. and predated the State Department’s formal terrorist designation system. When the Palestine Committee held a three-day meeting in Philadelphia later that year, the FBI placed wiretaps inside the Marriott hotel and later introduced these transcripts as evidence during the Holy Land Five trials in 2007 and 2008.

    During this period, federal agencies increasingly collaborated with private actors and entities engaged in surveillance and ideological warfare against Palestinian and Muslim communities. Chief among them was Steve Emerson, a self-styled terrorism expert and founder of the Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT). Emerson played a pivotal role in the 1990s targeting of the Palestine Committee and Sami al-Arian and has continued to work as a key purveyor of Islamophobic disinformation. In recent years, his operations have come under renewed scrutiny. In 2021, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) revealed that multiple individuals had been paid by Emerson and IPT to infiltrate Muslim organizations and secretly record prominent community leaders, one of whom was compensated over $100,000 across four years.

    This counterinsurgency was soon followed by far-reaching legislation designed to criminalize support for Palestinian political groups and factions. Although the 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act initially limited “material support” to traditional forms like money and arms, the 2001 PATRIOT Act greatly expanded this to include vague categories such as “expert advice” and “personnel.” The Supreme Court upheld this expansion in the 2010 decision Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, effectively criminalizing any advocacy in coordination with blacklisted groups. These laws have been used to target groups like Hamas, the PFLP, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ)—notably in the cases of Sami al-Arian and the Holy Land Foundation Five, whose leaders were imprisoned amid secretive and politically charged trials.

    The state’s surveillance and repression of anti-imperialist Arab and Palestinian political work, which gained traction in the wake of 1967 and expanded through operations like Boulder and Vulgar Betrayal, laid the foundations for what would become the post-9/11 security state. These earlier campaigns combined immigration enforcement, domestic intelligence, and foreign policy interests to proactively target political dissent. After 9/11, these tools were revived and vastly intensified. Practices that had once been exceptional or covert became normalized and institutionalized, as the program of campus surveillance and political suppression was reactivated under the mandate of counterterrorism. The War on Terror should be understood as a continuation of the domestic warfare of COINTELPRO, inheriting its toolkit and applying it with broader reach, deeper coordination, and the legitimizing language of national security.

    The War on Terror period

    U.S. intelligence agencies have long exploited university resources, global reach, and access to young people. During the height of COINTELPRO, FBI and CIA operatives surveilled foreign students, monitored leftist faculty, and infiltrated student organizations. Church Committee hearings in the 1970s exposed the scale of these operations, with hundreds of university personnel found to be collaborating with the CIA, some knowingly, many under the pretense of “national interest.”

    Though the public exposure of these programs temporarily forced agencies to scale back their operations, the groundwork remained largely intact. In the years following September 11, 2001, U.S. intelligence agencies strengthened their presence on college campuses, reinstating Cold War and COINTELPRO-era tactics under the banner of counterterrorism. However, unlike previous decades, when such action often sparked public scandal or internal pushback, the post-9/11 period saw the university increasingly reimagined as a willing partner in the project of domestic national security. Administrators formalized liaisons with intelligence and law enforcement agencies, launched degree programs in security, and competed for federal designations as “centers of excellence” in intelligence, cyber-operations, and surveillance technology. Entire research labs were devoted to government-funded projects with classified components, often hosted off-campus in facilities shielded from public scrutiny.

    In short, what changed after 9/11 was not so much the tactics but the terms of cooperation. Where there was once scandal and subterfuge, there is now formal partnership. Surveillance is no longer framed as exceptional, but as responsible management of an uncertain world.

    The NYPD’s infiltration of Muslim Student Associations (MSAs) across New York City illustrates a staggering expansion of this kind of surveillance into academic life. On the basis of “public safety,” the NYPD’s Intelligence Division, through its Cyber Intelligence, Demographics, and Terrorist Interdiction Units, undertook a dragnet surveillance program that treated religious identity itself as inherently suspicious. Between 2002 and the early 2010s, MSAs on at least 31 campuses were subjected to systemic surveillance, including the deployment of undercover officers, cyber monitoring, and the coercive recruitment of informants. Public campuses under the City University of New York (CUNY) system were a primary focus. These schools, often serving low-income and immigrant students, became saturated sites of observation, where ordinary student activities were reinterpreted through the lens of state paranoia. Accordingly, the NYPD logged paintball trips as paramilitary training exercises and religious expression, such as prayer or wearing a hijab, as radicalization indicators in government databases.

    The NYPD’s Cyber Intelligence Unit routinely monitored chat rooms, blogs, email listservs, and Yahoo groups, tracking content and interpersonal connections. In one case, an NYPD informant embedded himself so deeply in MSA activities that he slept over at fellow students’ homes, prayed with them, and was entrusted with spiritual guidance, only to be later revealed as an informant whose original recruitment stemmed from a minor drug charge. For many students, especially those from immigrant families for whom higher education represented opportunity and upward mobility, the risk of being labeled a suspect was enough to retreat entirely from campus life.

    Project Esther and the rise of civic counterinsurgency

    While government agencies have long surveilled and repressed dissent on campuses, today’s moment marks an evolution in the form of a network of privatized and semi-autonomous actors engaging in what could be called civic counterinsurgency.

    A rhizomatic anti-antisemitism industry emerged in the 2010s, composed of groups like Canary Mission, Betar USA, StopAntisemitism.org, JewBelong, and other donor-funded watchdogs and legal outfits. These organizations share a common objective of criminalizing and delegitimizing Palestine solidarity activism by portraying it as foreign-backed, antisemitic, and dangerous. They comb through social media, compile anonymous dossiers, and collaborate with law enforcement to surveil and suppress Palestine organizing, especially on campuses. Whereas the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) once served as the primary arbiter of acceptable political speech on these issues, that role has increasingly been assumed by this diffuse network of private actors engaged in a broader project of civic repression.

    The civic counterinsurgency model makes this repression harder to trace. We now see students surveilled, harassed, and disciplined not only by the state but by an entire ecosystem of privatized enforcers who disguise their repression using the language of safety, civility, and anti-extremism.

    Project Esther represents the newest cornerstone of the anti-antisemitism industry. Created by the Heritage Foundation, Project Esther declares its mission as identifying and dismantling what it calls a “highly organized, global Hamas Support Network (HSN).” This network, as they define it, includes “people and organizations that are both directly and indirectly involved in furthering Hamas’s cause in contravention of American values and to the detriment of American citizens and America’s national security interests.”

    In Project Esther’s framework, the HSN is both antisemitic and fundamentally “anti-American.” The threat is framed in explicitly civilizational terms. “For al-Qaeda and all others of their ilk, including Hamas,” its founding document declares, “there is never any distinction between the West, the United States and Christians, and Israel and Jews: all are targets.” From this premise follows the conclusion that “Project Esther cannot be a solely ‘Jewish’ effort — it must be an American effort.” This represents a notable shift from earlier iterations of anti-Palestine solidarity groups such as Canary Mission and others, which were largely assumed to be rooted within Jewish community networks. Project Esther, by contrast, explicitly frames itself as a broad national initiative, distancing itself from being solely a Jewish communal project and openly embracing a broader right-wing coalition.

    Project Esther relies on digital monitoring, facial recognition, AI-assisted data mining, and social media scraping to map associations between individuals, organizations, and actions. It uses behavioral modeling and predictive policing to repress resistance before it can coalesce. Surveillance is not limited to public behavior; it includes the collection of social media posts, protest footage, travel records, and group chats. These data are shared among campus police, university administrations, the Department of Homeland Security, and private security firms, creating a vertically integrated surveillance network.

    Fracturing the movement from within is central to Project Esther’s strategy. Drawing directly from counterinsurgency manuals, it aims to sow distrust among organizations, isolate so-called “radicals,” and generate internal divisions. As its founding document plainly states, the goal is to ensure that “HSOs do not trust each other.” This also indicates their clear knowledge that they are fabricating a narrative, as it would be far more challenging to foster such distrust among actual, closely knit organizations. In the wake of high-profile incidents like the Elias Rodriguez case, federal agencies are likely monitoring how groups respond and flagging differences in tone or language as indicators of political fault lines to exploit.

    Infiltration is a reality that cannot be ignored at this stage of the struggle. Student organizations have been secretly recorded and leaked to administrators and the police. In some instances, internal organizing materials have been circulated to media outlets within hours. In one leaked recording from a closed-door briefing, Jonathan Greenblatt of the ADL admits that “Our analysts are in their groups,” he said, referencing SJP and Jewish Voice for Peace. Beyond collecting intelligence, these tactics are meant to sow distrust and stall momentum.

    At the University of Michigan, the privatization counterinsurgency has enabled a new level of invasive, targeted repression against Palestine solidarity organizers. Between 2023 and 2025, the university spent over $3 million contracting a private security firm, City Shield, to infiltrate and monitor pro-Palestinian student groups. Undercover agents followed students across campus and into their neighborhoods, recorded them without consent, and in some cases faked disabilities or staged confrontations to provoke them. Surveillance footage collected by these agents was shared with law enforcement and used by the university in disciplinary proceedings. Multiple students were charged, some jailed, and at least one was sentenced based on City Shield’s fabricated or unverified claims.

    Legal repression forms another core component of Project Esther’s strategy. Project Esther advocates the use of racketeering statutes (RICO), the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), material support for terrorism laws, and selective enforcement of immigration law to target individuals and organizations associated with Palestine solidarity work. In particular, the initiative supports stripping tax-exempt status from nonprofit organizations deemed sympathetic to Palestinian liberation, an effort sometimes referred to as the “Nonprofit Killer Bill.”

    These legal tools are most aggressively used against non-citizens, as we have seen with the attempted targeted deportation of pro-Palestinian students based on political activity. The political function of Project Esther becomes even clearer when read alongside efforts by Republican attorneys general to investigate or revoke the visas of international students protesting the genocide in Gaza.

    This legal repression works in conjunction with discursive maneuvers that cast Palestine solidarity as a national security threat. In 2024, right-wing think tanks and Zionist legal groups launched a coordinated campaign to discredit National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP), accusing the organization of supporting terrorism and acting as an agent of a foreign power. These claims, heavily promoted by the Middle East Forum, the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP), and the Capital Research Center, try to materially connect the activities of SJP chapters to those of the Axis of Resistance, mainly Hamas. The aforementioned ADL leak alleges “a dramatic change in the language” in the rhetoric of student organizers, leading Greenblatt to the assertion that “something is happening with Iran,” whose “language and tactics seem to be bleeding into the American activist space.” These allegations operate less as claims of fact than as instruments of suspicion that racialize and securitize dissent by associating it with an external “enemy.”

    Much like COINTELPRO leveraged Cold War anti-communism, Project Esther uses the pretext of “foreign influence” to criminalize anti-imperialist organizing. Anti-communism has long served as an ideological framework and a rationale for the disruption of networks connecting radicals in the imperial core to the Global South. The American Indian Movement, the Young Lords, Brown Berets, SDS, SNCC, and the Black Panther Party were viewed as domestic threats specifically because they called U.S. sovereignty into question. Today’s rhetorical assault on NSJP invokes this equation of international solidarity with subversion, only now, Islamophobia and anti-terrorism are the primary vectors of legitimacy.

    The central allegation is that NSJP was founded by American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), a U.S.-based nonprofit that has long been subjected to Zionist lawfare for its advocacy. Critics of NSJP point to the fact that AMP’s founders were previously involved in organizations like the Holy Land Foundation and KindHearts, charities that were dismantled through protracted legal campaigns in the post-9/11 era after being accused of funneling money to Hamas. The attempt to tie AMP and NSJP to Hamas relies on tenuous connections — shared individuals, decades-old affiliations, ideological opposition to Israeli state policy, and speculative legal theories.

    Some of the more extreme claims suggest that Hamas provided advance notice of the October 7 attack to NSJP, an assertion so blatantly absurd that it exemplifies absolute impunity from truth. Given the extreme secrecy surrounding the operation, which was deliberately concealed even from key Axis of Resistance partners and other Hamas bureaus, the notion that such sensitive information would be shared with a U.S. student organization is entirely illogical and ludicrous.

    Columbia University: a case study in converging crackdowns

    During the 2024–2025 school year, Columbia University’s Palestine student movement faced intensified repression across physical, legal, and digital fronts. Social media platforms, acting as privatized arms of state surveillance, began systematically shutting down key nodes of communication: Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine’s Instagram account, with over 100,000 followers, was banned by Meta; the Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) account was disabled ahead of a planned protest at Barnard; and the Columbia Palestine Solidarity Coalition’s account was removed without warning in May 2025. These synchronized takedowns point to a pattern in which corporate platforms function as algorithmic enforcers of political orthodoxy, responding to pressure campaigns from alumni, donors, and Zionist NGOs embedded in the anti-antisemitism industry.

    This digital censorship was shaped by direct intervention from Jordana Cutler, Meta’s policy chief for Israel and a former senior Israeli government official, who has used her position to push for the removal of pro-Palestinian content under Meta’s “Dangerous Organizations and Individuals” policy. Cutler, who has publicly described herself as “a voice of the [Israeli] government” within the company, personifies the merging of platform governance and foreign policy interests that operate through byzantine, asymmetrical mechanisms. While Israelis are granted a dedicated liaison within Meta, no such representation exists for Palestinians.

    The Columbia administration created the Office of Institutional Equity (OIE) at the start of the 2024-25 academic year as a separate channel for handling discrimination and harassment complaints that bypasses standard student conduct procedures. Under an expansive interpretation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, the office treats generalized criticism of Zionism as “discriminatory harassment.” Dozens of students have been targeted through secretive proceedings initiated by anonymous complaints submitted via a public web portal. Columbia students familiar with the OIE report that the office frequently relies on complaints submitted by Zionist student groups or ideologically aligned individuals elsewhere in the university. Upon being notified they are under investigation, students are required to sign restrictive non-disclosure agreements to view the unredacted evidence against them. Former prosecutors staff the OIE and operate with little transparency or due process, enabling provisional punishments such as suspension or diploma holds even before any finding of misconduct. Students can also be punished for “failure to report” perceived discrimination.

    On March 7, 2025, the U.S. Departments of Justice, Education, Health and Human Services, and the General Services Administration jointly announced the termination of nearly $400 million in federal contracts and grants to Columbia. The order was issued by the Trump administration’s newly formed Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism, a multi-agency body with broad enforcement authority. Officials emphasized this was only the “first round” of revocations and floated the possibility of placing Columbia under a federal consent decree. University officials quickly passed the consequences down the line: over 180 employees whose positions relied on federal funds were laid off, which redirected public anger toward student organizers rather than the federal agencies and political actors engineering the crackdown. This redirection is a hallmark of counterinsurgency that seeks to fracture solidarity, isolate the movement, and mystify the source of repression.

    The counterinsurgency campaign extended beyond Columbia’s institutional sphere to target individual students, with Mahmoud Khalil emerging as the public face of this crackdown. In January 2025, Canary Mission, an anonymous blacklist site reportedly linked to Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs, created a profile on Khalil. Within days, Betar USA publicly named him as a deportation target and claimed to have shared his information with ICE. After a March 5 protest at Barnard, Columbia Business School professor Shai Davidai tagged Senator Marco Rubio in a tweet demanding Khalil’s deportation: “Illegally taking over a college in which you are not even enrolled and distributing terrorist propaganda should be a deportable offense, no? Because that’s what Mahmoud Khalil from @ColumbiaSJP did yesterday at @BarnardCollege.” The claim was false. Khalil is not a member of Columbia SJP, and Columbia SJP had no role in organizing the protest. However, it circulated widely and helped catalyze a broader smear campaign. The day before ICE detained him, with assistance from Columbia’s administration, Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus picked up Davidai’s framing on X. The sequence of events suggests a coordinated effort between federal agencies, online Zionist advocacy groups, and university collaborators to orchestrate Khalil’s targeting. On May 29, his legal team filed a FOIA request seeking records of communications between the Trump administration and figures in the anti-antisemitism industry, including Canary Mission, Documenting Jew Hatred on Campus, and affiliated individuals.

    In early 2025, the Department of Justice launched a sweeping investigation into CUAD and affiliated student organizers. Led by Trump appointee Emil Bove III, the probe sought membership lists, Instagram data, and explored coordination with ICE. A federal judge twice rejected search warrant requests, citing constitutional concerns. Nevertheless, the Department of Justice continues to press its case.

    On April 11, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a sealed motion asking the Southern District of New York to override a magistrate judge’s denial of a search warrant targeting the Instagram account @cuapartheiddivest. Prosecutors argued that a March 14 post from the account constituted a criminal violation of 18 U.S.C. § 875(c), which prohibits interstate threats to injure.

    The post featured a photo of Columbia President Katrina Armstrong’s residence marked with red paint, graffiti reading “FREE THEM ALL,” and a black inverted triangle. Its caption read in part: “The Columbia President’s mansion has been redecorated…Katrina Armstrong you will not be allowed peace as you sic NYPD officers and ICE agents on your own students for opposing the genocide of the Palestinian people.”

    According to the DOJ, the post met the legal threshold for a “true threat” and was not protected by the First Amendment. Prosecutors claimed there was “probable cause to believe” the post was made “with the intent to place the administrator in fear of bodily harm.”

    Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn had rejected three iterations of the warrant, ruling that the post likely constituted protected political speech. In its appeal, the DOJ faulted Netburn for narrowing her analysis to “the statement ‘you will not be allowed peace’ and the inverted triangle,” arguing she ignored the “full context” of CUAD’s rhetoric and actions. The filing reads: “An email reading simply ‘we plan to visit you soon’ has one meaning if the sender is a door-to-door sales agency, and quite another if it is the Ku Klux Klan.”

    The DOJ is now asking District Judge John Koeltl to find the denial “clearly erroneous” or to issue the warrant directly. If granted, Meta would be compelled to hand over account data for @cuapartheiddivest. A ruling is pending.

    On May 7, 2025, 81 students and community members were arrested by the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group after establishing the Basel al-Araj Popular University inside Columbia University’s Butler Library. In the days following the protest, Senator Marco Rubio called for a full review of the visa status of all students involved. Shortly after, the Columbia administration escalated its response, sending a questionnaire to students facing disciplinary action. The questionnaire asked pointed questions like, “How did you become aware of the planned demonstration?” “Did you make a conscious decision to remain in the room after being instructed to disperse? Please explain.” and “Did you bring any materials related to the protest on May 7, 2025 (e.g., banners, stickers, drums, megaphones) into the library? If yes, what materials did you bring, and how did you obtain these materials?” This line of questioning shows the administration’s effort to punish the students while also mapping political networks, assessing intent, and preempting future mobilizations.

    The convergence of state power and civil society proxies—university boards, tech platforms, media outlets, philanthropic foundations, donor-funded lawfare groups, consulting firms, and think tanks—brings to the fore counterinsurgency’s privatization. These forces are not only parallel but increasingly coordinated, as universities have hired private security, devised new codes of conduct, and shared student data with law enforcement. The anti-antisemitism industry has become a vehicle for ideological enforcement through financial coercion, reputational sabotage, and lawfare. In this feedback loop, civic actors generate the justification, and the state supplies the force.

    The domestic arm of Empire

    Repression reveals what the state fears most. If we understand the U.S. state as fundamentally imperial, then its domestic repression cannot be disentangled from its foreign policy. Counterinsurgency at home mirrors U.S. strategies abroad. COINTELPRO functioned as a domestic arm of imperial war, designed to neutralize liberation movements that posed a material threat to U.S.-led imperialism. Today, Project Esther attempts to do the same to the Palestine solidarity movement, this time with the help of civil society proxies.

    Project Esther’s preoccupation with “anti-Americanism” is noteworthy. Although it claims to target what it deems antisemitic, the deepest threat, in the eyes of the state, is anti-imperialism. The same fear that animated the FBI’s war on SNCC, SDS, and the Black Panther Party now animates its repression of students organizing for Gaza. Anti-imperialist internationalism is dangerous to the U.S. because it breaks the isolation on which repression depends.

    The accusations leveled against student organizers of foreign coordination, terrorist affiliation, or espionage are fabricated and politically motivated. But they also reflect an underlying truth that Palestine solidarity, in its more radical formations, poses a real threat to the legitimacy and continuity of U.S. empire. When students reject the settler logic of the Zionist state, they are also rejecting the broader scaffolding of U.S. military hegemony, settler colonialism, and permanent war. It is precisely this alignment with a global resistance to imperial power that renders such movements dangerous, not because they are orchestrated from abroad, but because they articulate a domestic refusal of the geopolitical status quo.

    Project Esther is not COINTELPRO 2.0. It is, however, part of the same infrastructure of counterinsurgency, updated for the age of digital repression. Recognizing these continuities helps us build a strategic response grounded in historical movement memory that refuses fragmentation, cultivates discipline, and sustains struggle across generations.

    In order to resist effectively, we must remember that we are not the first to be targeted. There is a lineage of struggle beneath our feet. Through understanding the script, we begin to uncover the means to resist it. We begin to remember how our elders fought back, and how we can as well.

    Carrie Zaremba
    Carrie Zaremba is a writer and organizer based in Brooklyn whose work focuses on student movements, internationalism, and counter-repression. She is a member of the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) Solidarity Network and a proud Students for Justice in Palestine alum.

    Notes

    1. p. 299 of Patriotic Betrayal: The Inside Story of the CIA’s Secret Campaign to Enroll American Students in the Crusade Against Communism ↩︎

    2. G.C. Moore to W.C. Sullivan, Oct. 10, 1968. also cited in Agents of Repression The FBI’s Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement Second Edition by Ward Churchill ↩︎

    Source: https://mondoweiss.net/2025/07/from-cointelpro-to-project-esther-the-evolution-of-domestic-counterinsurgency-in-the-u-s/

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=

    #antiImperialism #cointelpro #counterinsurgency #northAmerica #palestineSolidarity #projectEsther #repression #studentMovement #warOnTerror #zionism

  6. Monday Reads: Drunken SCOTUS Rulings

    Sick, John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    Today’s Republican Decision-makers seem hell-bent on killing people. Considering so many of them are hyper-Christian, I find this very strange.  I’ve found instances of this in basically all three branches of government today. Steven Miller’s high deportment numbers sending everyday people to death zone countries can only be described as some kind of eugenics experience in trying to increase the percentage of wipipo in the country. The Big Bad Budget-Busting Bill, making its way to law in Congress, will definitely kill people. Then, there’s this SCOTUS ruling that almost made it past me. Imagine handing a lot more power to life-or-death situations to RFK, Jr? Well, that’s exactly what SCOTUS did with the drunk on the Court making the decision.

    Aren’t these the same people who scream at women trying to get Health Care over fertilized eggs? This is from USA Today, as reported 2 days ago by Adrianna Rodriguez. “What the Supreme Court Obamacare decision means for RFK Jr.” As if I wasn’t worried enough about ICE killing people and sending them to death zones and the Big Budget-Busting bill removing Medicaid from the neediest people and children. I still haven’t figured out how a 90-year-old in dementia care is going to manage to find a job to access private insurance, but that’s just Kellyanne Conway’s alternative facts coming back to haunt us.

    The U.S. Supreme Court preserved a key element of the Affordable Care Act that helps guarantee that health insurers cover preventive care at no cost to patients.

    The justices reversed a lower court’s ruling that the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which under the 2010 law has a major role in choosing what services will be covered, is composed of members who were not validly appointed.

    The suit started in Texas, where two Christian-owned businesses and individuals argued that health insurance plans they buy shouldn’t have to cover medical tests and drugs they object to on religious grounds, such as the HIV-prevention drug PrEP. But the legal question at the heart of the Supreme Court case was whether the task force is so powerful that, under the Constitution, its members must be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

    Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote for the 6-3 majority that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. can remove task force members at will and can review their recommendations before they take effect.

    “The Task Force members are removable at will by the Secretary of HHS, and their recommendations are reviewable by the Secretary before they take effect,” he wrote. “So Task Force members are supervised and directed by the Secretary, who in turn answers to the President preserving the chain of command.”

    Chain of Command? Are we bombing Iran again? I’m going to have to call Sister Helen PreJean CSJ for another one-on-one conversation about what life means again. Conway, Kavanaugh, and Kennedy need another set of Sunday School lessons. So that article is good for basic information, like, evidently, a certain type of Christians feel they can murder people if they just claim a method that’s in line with whatever their cult made up as a religious exception. Handing people over to RFK Jr. just seems beyond cruel. Mark Joseph Stern has this analysis in Slate. Again, it’s from 2 days ago. “The Supreme Court Just Handed RFK Jr. a New, Extraordinarily Frightening Power.” It’s just another example of SCOTUS and its idea of concentrated power in the Executive branch.

    The Supreme Court upheld a key plank of Obamacare against a constitutional attack on Friday by a 6–3 vote. But in the process, the majority wound up handing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. significantly more authority over American health care than Congress ever intended. Kennedy, the current secretary of health and human services, now has unquestioned power to hire and fire members of a key panel that mandates insurance coverage for preventive treatments, and to block its decisions about what insurers must cover. To save the panel, the court destroyed its independence.

    Friday’s case Kennedy v. Braidwood Management involved a challenge to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or PSTF. Congress designed this body to consist of medical experts who use their independent judgment to determine which preventive services provide a substantial benefit to patients. A provision of the Affordable Care Act made their decisions binding on insurers, meaning top-rated services must be covered at no cost to patients. Today, the PSTF has determined that more than 40 treatments qualify for mandatory coverage, including many cancer screenings, heart medication, and HIV prevention drugs.

    The Supreme Court upheld a key plank of Obamacare against a constitutional attack on Friday by a 6–3 vote. But in the process, the majority wound up handing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. significantly more authority over American health care than Congress ever intended. Kennedy, the current secretary of health and human services, now has unquestioned power to hire and fire members of a key panel that mandates insurance coverage for preventive treatments, and to block its decisions about what insurers must cover. To save the panel, the court destroyed its independence.

    Friday’s case Kennedy v. Braidwood Management involved a challenge to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or PSTF. Congress designed this body to consist of medical experts who use their independent judgment to determine which preventive services provide a substantial benefit to patients. A provision of the Affordable Care Act made their decisions binding on insurers, meaning top-rated services must be covered at no cost to patients. Today, the PSTF has determined that more than 40 treatments qualify for mandatory coverage, including many cancer screenings, heart medication, and HIV prevention drugs

    The problem with the PSTF is that its structure and operations are likely unconstitutional under the Supreme Court’s current precedents. And indeed, in a 2020 decision, the court hinted that this kind of scheme is unconstitutional. There are two main issues: First, it is not entirely clear from the law who is supposed to appoint its members and who, if anyone, has authority to fire them. Second, the ACA states explicitly that the panel “shall be independent and, to the extent practicable, not subject to political pressure.” Congress seems to have intended it to operate as an independent body with open-ended power to regulate the multibillion-dollar insurance market, subject to little or no political oversight. That setup clashes with the Supreme Court’s current interpretation of executive authority. Specifically, it would make the PSTF’s members “principal officers” who must be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. And because its officers are not currently appointed this way, Supreme Court precedent would render its decisions invalid and voluntary.

    This is extremely important as HIV Denialism is just one in a long list of RFK Jr’s hobgoblins. Read about Justice Thomas’ complaints about the Beer Guy’s logic at the link. It actually is worth the read. As for the Big Budget-Busting Bill, it’s speeding along to passage today. This is from the Washington Post and Jeff Stein. “Senate GOP tax bill includes largest cut to U.S. safety net in decades. The legislation would enact historic, possibly unprecedented, reductions in Medicaid and food stamps spending.”  What I can’t figure out is why they’re not concerned that the people who benefit the most live in Red States, concentrated in rural areas of the country, and are primarily white. Isn’t that their voter base? No wonder Bezos could afford to buy Venice for a day, and his wife could afford all those ugly clothes and that awful plastic-surgery ruined face. We live in a land of monsters.

    The Senate Republican tax bill speeding to passage includes the biggest reduction of funding for the federal safety net since at least the 1990s, targeting more than $1 trillion in social spending.

    Although the legislation is still estimated to cost more than $3 trillion over the next decade, the Senate GOP tax bill partially pays for its large price tag by slashing spending on Medicaid and food stamps, which congressional Republicans maintain are rife with fraud.

    The tax bill centers on making permanent large tax cuts for individual taxpayers, extending the cuts that Republicans first enacted under President Donald Trump’s first term. The bill includes an increase to the standard deduction claimed by most taxpayers, rate reductions for most U.S. households, and a partial version of Trump’s plan to end taxes on tipped wages, among many other provisions.
    But it offsets these expensive tax cuts in part through what several experts said may prove to be the most dramatic reductions in safety net spending in modern U.S. history. While last-minute changes to the bill text make precise estimates impossible, the legislation appears on track to cut Medicaid by about 18 percent and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by roughly 20 percent, according to estimates based on projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

    Previously, the biggest recent cut to food stamps was a roughly 14 percent cut approved by Congress during President Bill Clinton’s administration in the 1990s, according to Bobby Kogan, a senior policy analyst at the Center for American Progress, a center-left think tank. (Food stamp benefits also sharply increased, and then fell, after the expiration of COVID benefits.) The biggest prior cut to Medicaid was during President Ronald Reagan’s term in the 1980s, when Congress and the White House approved a roughly 5 percent reduction to the federal health insurance program that primarily benefits low-income households during his first two years in office, Kogan said.

    The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the Senate tax bill will lead to roughly 12 million fewer people receiving Medicaid and more than 2 million fewer people receiving food stamps.

    This New York Times article gets down to the nitty gritty if you’re interested (gifted). “A List of Nearly Everything in the Senate G.O.P. Bill, and How Much It Would Cost or Save.”  I bet the bills for Presidential golfing and loafing around Mar-a-Lago are bigger than any money saved by kicking small children off their daily meals.

    The tax and domestic policy bill nearing a vote by Senate Republicans includes hundreds of provisions, including extended and expanded tax cuts and significant cuts to Medicaid, food benefits and other programs. It would add more than $3 trillion to the national debt. To become law, it still needs to pass the Senate — where an extended “vote-a-rama” on amendments and rulings by the Senate’s parliamentarian could bring last-minute changes. Then it must gain a second passage through the House and be signed by the president to become law.

    Below is a table that lists how nearly every provision would affect the federal budget over 10 years, as estimated by the Congressional Budget Office in an analysis published Sunday. The budget office measured the legislation as it usually does, taking into account the cost of extending expiring tax cuts. This is a different approach than the one embraced by the Senate’s leaders. The C.B.O. evaluation does not include a handful of policy provisions that do not have direct effects on the federal deficit.

    This is from Jennifer Ruben writing at The Contrarian. “The worst bill in modern history. Democrats must make it a career-ender for Republicans.”  I can’t imagine Boudreaux and Thibodeaux getting up in their houseboat on the Atchafalaya Basin, not realizing they’ve just been had. But I may be wrong. I’m frankly suggesting that Senator Cassiday lose his license to practice medicine based on how much harm this does.

    Senate Republicans over the weekend decided to move forward on the big, ugly bill to rip healthcare coverage from 17 million peopledeprive millions of food assistance, and use that money to pay (only partially!) for gigantic tax cuts for the super-rich. Their version is far worse than the House’s handiwork; Senate Republicans want to cut more than $1 trillion from Medicaid. Apparently, they concluded the House’s $700 billion cut did not throw a sufficient number of people off their healthcare coverage. An estimated 17 million (including those priced out of the Affordable Care Act exchanges) would lose healthcare coverage

    Even those who mouthed concerns about the draconian cuts, including Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) fell into line, voting to move the bill forward. They are daring voters not to hold them accountable for their monstrous hypocrisy.

    Lawmakers are not in the dark. Their constituentsrural hospitalsstate and local officials, the Congressional Budget Officeconservative think tanks, the Wall Street Journal, and their Democratic colleagues have explained the bill’s horrid consequences. Republicans might parrot MAGA talking points, but when Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) distributes materials to fellow Republicans highlighting the devastation the bill will cause, only the truly deluded can imagine this is anything but horrid policy. (The Hill quoted a source familiar with the scene at Tuesday’s Senate Republican lunch: “Thom Tillis got up and he had a chart on what the Senate’s provider tax structure will cost different states, including his. His will lose almost $40 billion. He walked through that and said, ‘this will be devastating to my state.’”)

    Senate Republicans have been hammered from all sides. On the right, the Committee for a Responsible budget found it would add $3.5-4.2 trillion to the debt and move the Medicare and Social Security trust funds a year closer to insolvency. Meanwhile, Republican senators with Democratic governors (e.g., Josh Stein in North Carolina, Laura Kelly in KansasJosh Shapiro in Pennsylvania, and Janet Mills in Maine) got slammed daily on the consequences of Medicaid, SNAP, and other cuts back home.

    Aside from the disastrous policy objections, Republicans should not delude themselves about the political quicksand they stepped in. The reverse-Robin-Hood scheme is deeply unpopular in every recent public poll. A Fox News poll shows only 38% support it, while 59% oppose it. (Among independents, it is a stunning 22-73%.) Quinnipiac’s poll is even worse for MAGA (27-53%; among independents 20-57%.) KFF (35-64%; only 27% of independents support); Pew (49-29%) and The Washington Post and Ipsos (23-42%) are miserable as well.

    Perhaps the scariest poll for Republicans was one from Maine showing Collins sure has reason for “concern”: Her favorability is a miserable 14% with disapproval at 57%. Mills, the strongest potential 2026 challenger, has a 51-41% favorability rating. Come to think of it, maybe Collins should forget “concern” and zoom ahead to full-blown panic.

    Phillip Bump has these thoughts at the Washington Post. “This is what ICE is doing with the tax dollars you already provide it. Immigration and Customs Enforcement stands to see a sharp increase in its funding under the Republican budget bill.”  My understanding is that they have a bigger budget now than the Marines. Miller sure wants to deport him some POC.

    But there is another group of people who would also benefit enormously from the bill: staff and officers of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, an agency which stands to see tens of billions more in funding. An analysis of an earlier version of the bill indicated that “mass deportation would account for almost a quarter of the bill’s total price tag.” So it’s worth stepping back and considering what ICE is doing with the by-contrast modest (but still substantial) funding it currently gets.

    We should start by acknowledging that ICE’s hyperactive targeting of immigrants in the U.S. since President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January doesn’t exactly reflect current funding levels. Earlier this month, it was reported that ICE was already $1 billion over budget for the fiscal year, driven by the new administration’s focus on deploying the agency to arrest and deport as many immigrants as possible.

    What that’s meant, in practice, is a surge in arrests and detentions of immigrants who have not been convicted or even accused of any crime. The number of criminals and accused criminals who have been arrested by ICE and remain detained by ICE is up 128 percent over a year ago. But the number of immigrants with no criminal record arrested and detained by ICE is up more than 1,400 percent — there are more than 15 times as many now as there were then.

    In past years, it was generally Customs and Border Protection that arrested more noncriminals, since it was stopping and detaining people seeking to enter the U.S. without authorization. In mid-June 2024, for example, there were 30 times as many noncriminals in ICE detention who’d been arrested by CBP vs. ICE. Now, thanks in part to declining attempts to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, the ratio is almost 1 to 1.

    The grifting in this administration is astounding. This is from ProPublica. “Kristi Noem Secretly Took a Cut of Political Donations.”  This was investigated by Justin Elliott, Joshua Kaplan, and Alex Mierjeski.

    In 2023, while Kristi Noem was governor of South Dakota, she supplemented her income by secretly accepting a cut of the money she raised for a nonprofit that promotes her political career, tax records show.

    In what experts described as a highly unusual arrangement, the nonprofit routed funds to a personal company of Noem’s that had recently been established in Delaware. The payment totaled $80,000 that year, a significant boost to her roughly $130,000 government salary. Since the nonprofit is a so-called dark money group — one that’s not required to disclose the names of its donors — the original source of the money remains unknown.

    Noem then failed to disclose the $80,000 payment to the public. After President Donald Trump selected Noem to be his secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, she had to release a detailed accounting of her assets and sources of income from 2023 on. She did not include the income from the dark money group on her disclosure form, which experts called a likely violation of federal ethics requirements.

    Experts told ProPublica it was troubling that Noem was personally taking money that came from political donors. In a filing, the group, a nonprofit called American Resolve Policy Fund, described the $80,000 as a payment for fundraising. The organization said Noem had brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    I am silently screaming now. None of this is what should be happening in the United States of America.

    What’s on your Reading and Blogging list today?

    #JohnbussBskySocialJohnBuss #BigBadBudgetBustingBill #KristiNoemSociopathAndCunt #MurderousRepublicanChristofascists

  7. Monday Reads: Drunken SCOTUS Rulings

    Sick, John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    Today’s Republican Decision-makers seem hell-bent on killing people. Considering so many of them are hyper-Christian, I find this very strange.  I’ve found instances of this in basically all three branches of government today. Steven Miller’s high deportment numbers sending everyday people to death zone countries can only be described as some kind of eugenics experience in trying to increase the percentage of wipipo in the country. The Big Bad Budget-Busting Bill, making its way to law in Congress, will definitely kill people. Then, there’s this SCOTUS ruling that almost made it past me. Imagine handing a lot more power to life-or-death situations to RFK, Jr? Well, that’s exactly what SCOTUS did with the drunk on the Court making the decision.

    Aren’t these the same people who scream at women trying to get Health Care over fertilized eggs? This is from USA Today, as reported 2 days ago by Adrianna Rodriguez. “What the Supreme Court Obamacare decision means for RFK Jr.” As if I wasn’t worried enough about ICE killing people and sending them to death zones and the Big Budget-Busting bill removing Medicaid from the neediest people and children. I still haven’t figured out how a 90-year-old in dementia care is going to manage to find a job to access private insurance, but that’s just Kellyanne Conway’s alternative facts coming back to haunt us.

    The U.S. Supreme Court preserved a key element of the Affordable Care Act that helps guarantee that health insurers cover preventive care at no cost to patients.

    The justices reversed a lower court’s ruling that the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which under the 2010 law has a major role in choosing what services will be covered, is composed of members who were not validly appointed.

    The suit started in Texas, where two Christian-owned businesses and individuals argued that health insurance plans they buy shouldn’t have to cover medical tests and drugs they object to on religious grounds, such as the HIV-prevention drug PrEP. But the legal question at the heart of the Supreme Court case was whether the task force is so powerful that, under the Constitution, its members must be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

    Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote for the 6-3 majority that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. can remove task force members at will and can review their recommendations before they take effect.

    “The Task Force members are removable at will by the Secretary of HHS, and their recommendations are reviewable by the Secretary before they take effect,” he wrote. “So Task Force members are supervised and directed by the Secretary, who in turn answers to the President preserving the chain of command.”

    Chain of Command? Are we bombing Iran again? I’m going to have to call Sister Helen PreJean CSJ for another one-on-one conversation about what life means again. Conway, Kavanaugh, and Kennedy need another set of Sunday School lessons. So that article is good for basic information, like, evidently, a certain type of Christians feel they can murder people if they just claim a method that’s in line with whatever their cult made up as a religious exception. Handing people over to RFK Jr. just seems beyond cruel. Mark Joseph Stern has this analysis in Slate. Again, it’s from 2 days ago. “The Supreme Court Just Handed RFK Jr. a New, Extraordinarily Frightening Power.” It’s just another example of SCOTUS and its idea of concentrated power in the Executive branch.

    The Supreme Court upheld a key plank of Obamacare against a constitutional attack on Friday by a 6–3 vote. But in the process, the majority wound up handing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. significantly more authority over American health care than Congress ever intended. Kennedy, the current secretary of health and human services, now has unquestioned power to hire and fire members of a key panel that mandates insurance coverage for preventive treatments, and to block its decisions about what insurers must cover. To save the panel, the court destroyed its independence.

    Friday’s case Kennedy v. Braidwood Management involved a challenge to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or PSTF. Congress designed this body to consist of medical experts who use their independent judgment to determine which preventive services provide a substantial benefit to patients. A provision of the Affordable Care Act made their decisions binding on insurers, meaning top-rated services must be covered at no cost to patients. Today, the PSTF has determined that more than 40 treatments qualify for mandatory coverage, including many cancer screenings, heart medication, and HIV prevention drugs.

    The Supreme Court upheld a key plank of Obamacare against a constitutional attack on Friday by a 6–3 vote. But in the process, the majority wound up handing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. significantly more authority over American health care than Congress ever intended. Kennedy, the current secretary of health and human services, now has unquestioned power to hire and fire members of a key panel that mandates insurance coverage for preventive treatments, and to block its decisions about what insurers must cover. To save the panel, the court destroyed its independence.

    Friday’s case Kennedy v. Braidwood Management involved a challenge to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or PSTF. Congress designed this body to consist of medical experts who use their independent judgment to determine which preventive services provide a substantial benefit to patients. A provision of the Affordable Care Act made their decisions binding on insurers, meaning top-rated services must be covered at no cost to patients. Today, the PSTF has determined that more than 40 treatments qualify for mandatory coverage, including many cancer screenings, heart medication, and HIV prevention drugs

    The problem with the PSTF is that its structure and operations are likely unconstitutional under the Supreme Court’s current precedents. And indeed, in a 2020 decision, the court hinted that this kind of scheme is unconstitutional. There are two main issues: First, it is not entirely clear from the law who is supposed to appoint its members and who, if anyone, has authority to fire them. Second, the ACA states explicitly that the panel “shall be independent and, to the extent practicable, not subject to political pressure.” Congress seems to have intended it to operate as an independent body with open-ended power to regulate the multibillion-dollar insurance market, subject to little or no political oversight. That setup clashes with the Supreme Court’s current interpretation of executive authority. Specifically, it would make the PSTF’s members “principal officers” who must be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. And because its officers are not currently appointed this way, Supreme Court precedent would render its decisions invalid and voluntary.

    This is extremely important as HIV Denialism is just one in a long list of RFK Jr’s hobgoblins. Read about Justice Thomas’ complaints about the Beer Guy’s logic at the link. It actually is worth the read. As for the Big Budget-Busting Bill, it’s speeding along to passage today. This is from the Washington Post and Jeff Stein. “Senate GOP tax bill includes largest cut to U.S. safety net in decades. The legislation would enact historic, possibly unprecedented, reductions in Medicaid and food stamps spending.”  What I can’t figure out is why they’re not concerned that the people who benefit the most live in Red States, concentrated in rural areas of the country, and are primarily white. Isn’t that their voter base? No wonder Bezos could afford to buy Venice for a day, and his wife could afford all those ugly clothes and that awful plastic-surgery ruined face. We live in a land of monsters.

    The Senate Republican tax bill speeding to passage includes the biggest reduction of funding for the federal safety net since at least the 1990s, targeting more than $1 trillion in social spending.

    Although the legislation is still estimated to cost more than $3 trillion over the next decade, the Senate GOP tax bill partially pays for its large price tag by slashing spending on Medicaid and food stamps, which congressional Republicans maintain are rife with fraud.

    The tax bill centers on making permanent large tax cuts for individual taxpayers, extending the cuts that Republicans first enacted under President Donald Trump’s first term. The bill includes an increase to the standard deduction claimed by most taxpayers, rate reductions for most U.S. households, and a partial version of Trump’s plan to end taxes on tipped wages, among many other provisions.
    But it offsets these expensive tax cuts in part through what several experts said may prove to be the most dramatic reductions in safety net spending in modern U.S. history. While last-minute changes to the bill text make precise estimates impossible, the legislation appears on track to cut Medicaid by about 18 percent and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by roughly 20 percent, according to estimates based on projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

    Previously, the biggest recent cut to food stamps was a roughly 14 percent cut approved by Congress during President Bill Clinton’s administration in the 1990s, according to Bobby Kogan, a senior policy analyst at the Center for American Progress, a center-left think tank. (Food stamp benefits also sharply increased, and then fell, after the expiration of COVID benefits.) The biggest prior cut to Medicaid was during President Ronald Reagan’s term in the 1980s, when Congress and the White House approved a roughly 5 percent reduction to the federal health insurance program that primarily benefits low-income households during his first two years in office, Kogan said.

    The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the Senate tax bill will lead to roughly 12 million fewer people receiving Medicaid and more than 2 million fewer people receiving food stamps.

    This New York Times article gets down to the nitty gritty if you’re interested (gifted). “A List of Nearly Everything in the Senate G.O.P. Bill, and How Much It Would Cost or Save.”  I bet the bills for Presidential golfing and loafing around Mar-a-Lago are bigger than any money saved by kicking small children off their daily meals.

    The tax and domestic policy bill nearing a vote by Senate Republicans includes hundreds of provisions, including extended and expanded tax cuts and significant cuts to Medicaid, food benefits and other programs. It would add more than $3 trillion to the national debt. To become law, it still needs to pass the Senate — where an extended “vote-a-rama” on amendments and rulings by the Senate’s parliamentarian could bring last-minute changes. Then it must gain a second passage through the House and be signed by the president to become law.

    Below is a table that lists how nearly every provision would affect the federal budget over 10 years, as estimated by the Congressional Budget Office in an analysis published Sunday. The budget office measured the legislation as it usually does, taking into account the cost of extending expiring tax cuts. This is a different approach than the one embraced by the Senate’s leaders. The C.B.O. evaluation does not include a handful of policy provisions that do not have direct effects on the federal deficit.

    This is from Jennifer Ruben writing at The Contrarian. “The worst bill in modern history. Democrats must make it a career-ender for Republicans.”  I can’t imagine Boudreaux and Thibodeaux getting up in their houseboat on the Atchafalaya Basin, not realizing they’ve just been had. But I may be wrong. I’m frankly suggesting that Senator Cassiday lose his license to practice medicine based on how much harm this does.

    Senate Republicans over the weekend decided to move forward on the big, ugly bill to rip healthcare coverage from 17 million peopledeprive millions of food assistance, and use that money to pay (only partially!) for gigantic tax cuts for the super-rich. Their version is far worse than the House’s handiwork; Senate Republicans want to cut more than $1 trillion from Medicaid. Apparently, they concluded the House’s $700 billion cut did not throw a sufficient number of people off their healthcare coverage. An estimated 17 million (including those priced out of the Affordable Care Act exchanges) would lose healthcare coverage

    Even those who mouthed concerns about the draconian cuts, including Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) fell into line, voting to move the bill forward. They are daring voters not to hold them accountable for their monstrous hypocrisy.

    Lawmakers are not in the dark. Their constituentsrural hospitalsstate and local officials, the Congressional Budget Officeconservative think tanks, the Wall Street Journal, and their Democratic colleagues have explained the bill’s horrid consequences. Republicans might parrot MAGA talking points, but when Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) distributes materials to fellow Republicans highlighting the devastation the bill will cause, only the truly deluded can imagine this is anything but horrid policy. (The Hill quoted a source familiar with the scene at Tuesday’s Senate Republican lunch: “Thom Tillis got up and he had a chart on what the Senate’s provider tax structure will cost different states, including his. His will lose almost $40 billion. He walked through that and said, ‘this will be devastating to my state.’”)

    Senate Republicans have been hammered from all sides. On the right, the Committee for a Responsible budget found it would add $3.5-4.2 trillion to the debt and move the Medicare and Social Security trust funds a year closer to insolvency. Meanwhile, Republican senators with Democratic governors (e.g., Josh Stein in North Carolina, Laura Kelly in KansasJosh Shapiro in Pennsylvania, and Janet Mills in Maine) got slammed daily on the consequences of Medicaid, SNAP, and other cuts back home.

    Aside from the disastrous policy objections, Republicans should not delude themselves about the political quicksand they stepped in. The reverse-Robin-Hood scheme is deeply unpopular in every recent public poll. A Fox News poll shows only 38% support it, while 59% oppose it. (Among independents, it is a stunning 22-73%.) Quinnipiac’s poll is even worse for MAGA (27-53%; among independents 20-57%.) KFF (35-64%; only 27% of independents support); Pew (49-29%) and The Washington Post and Ipsos (23-42%) are miserable as well.

    Perhaps the scariest poll for Republicans was one from Maine showing Collins sure has reason for “concern”: Her favorability is a miserable 14% with disapproval at 57%. Mills, the strongest potential 2026 challenger, has a 51-41% favorability rating. Come to think of it, maybe Collins should forget “concern” and zoom ahead to full-blown panic.

    Phillip Bump has these thoughts at the Washington Post. “This is what ICE is doing with the tax dollars you already provide it. Immigration and Customs Enforcement stands to see a sharp increase in its funding under the Republican budget bill.”  My understanding is that they have a bigger budget now than the Marines. Miller sure wants to deport him some POC.

    But there is another group of people who would also benefit enormously from the bill: staff and officers of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, an agency which stands to see tens of billions more in funding. An analysis of an earlier version of the bill indicated that “mass deportation would account for almost a quarter of the bill’s total price tag.” So it’s worth stepping back and considering what ICE is doing with the by-contrast modest (but still substantial) funding it currently gets.

    We should start by acknowledging that ICE’s hyperactive targeting of immigrants in the U.S. since President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January doesn’t exactly reflect current funding levels. Earlier this month, it was reported that ICE was already $1 billion over budget for the fiscal year, driven by the new administration’s focus on deploying the agency to arrest and deport as many immigrants as possible.

    What that’s meant, in practice, is a surge in arrests and detentions of immigrants who have not been convicted or even accused of any crime. The number of criminals and accused criminals who have been arrested by ICE and remain detained by ICE is up 128 percent over a year ago. But the number of immigrants with no criminal record arrested and detained by ICE is up more than 1,400 percent — there are more than 15 times as many now as there were then.

    In past years, it was generally Customs and Border Protection that arrested more noncriminals, since it was stopping and detaining people seeking to enter the U.S. without authorization. In mid-June 2024, for example, there were 30 times as many noncriminals in ICE detention who’d been arrested by CBP vs. ICE. Now, thanks in part to declining attempts to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, the ratio is almost 1 to 1.

    The grifting in this administration is astounding. This is from ProPublica. “Kristi Noem Secretly Took a Cut of Political Donations.”  This was investigated by Justin Elliott, Joshua Kaplan, and Alex Mierjeski.

    In 2023, while Kristi Noem was governor of South Dakota, she supplemented her income by secretly accepting a cut of the money she raised for a nonprofit that promotes her political career, tax records show.

    In what experts described as a highly unusual arrangement, the nonprofit routed funds to a personal company of Noem’s that had recently been established in Delaware. The payment totaled $80,000 that year, a significant boost to her roughly $130,000 government salary. Since the nonprofit is a so-called dark money group — one that’s not required to disclose the names of its donors — the original source of the money remains unknown.

    Noem then failed to disclose the $80,000 payment to the public. After President Donald Trump selected Noem to be his secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, she had to release a detailed accounting of her assets and sources of income from 2023 on. She did not include the income from the dark money group on her disclosure form, which experts called a likely violation of federal ethics requirements.

    Experts told ProPublica it was troubling that Noem was personally taking money that came from political donors. In a filing, the group, a nonprofit called American Resolve Policy Fund, described the $80,000 as a payment for fundraising. The organization said Noem had brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    I am silently screaming now. None of this is what should be happening in the United States of America.

    What’s on your Reading and Blogging list today?

    #JohnbussBskySocialJohnBuss #BigBadBudgetBustingBill #KristiNoemSociopathAndCunt #MurderousRepublicanChristofascists

  8. AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup – May 2025

    Hi,

    Welcome to the AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup covering May 2025! Thanks for visiting my blog, and hope you’ll enjoy the read.

    At the time of writing it is now June 1st and a new month lies ahead of us. Who knows what it will bring to the world of the Amiga? Will we see development starting on bringing AmigaOS 4 to the Mirari board?

    Time will show.

    As of now, MorphOS is now booting and working to some degree on it. Whenever I visit Discord or forums, it looks like there are updates on their progress porting it.

    I’m very impressed by the work of the Mirari team, and also the MorphOS group, and look forward to following their work in the coming months. It will be very interesting to see what will happen in the AmigaOS 4 camp when boards are available to their developers.

    With that said, let us now move on to the news from May. 🙂

    Software News

    AmigaGPT is a versatile ChatGPT client for AmigaOS 3.x, 4.1, and MorphOS. It is being developed by Cameron Armstrong a.k.a. Nightfox. This powerful tool brings the capabilities of OpenAI’s GPT to your Amiga system, enabling text generation, question-answering, and creative exploration. AmigaGPT can also generate stunning images using DALL-E and includes support for speech output, making it easier than ever to interact with AI on your Amiga. Designed to integrate seamlessly with your system, AmigaGPT delivers modern AI technology while embracing the timeless Amiga experience. Version 2.6.0 is now available for download from OS4Depot.

    PolarPaint is an experimental paint program made in Hollywood by Anbjørn Myren. Version 1.057 was uploaded to OS4Depot and became available on May 7th. If you are interested in checking it out, please click here. Another version called PolarPaint Small can be downloaded via this link. A list of changes can be found on OS4Depot.

    Video Slot Machine is a game developed by Juan Carlos Herran Martin. An interesting addition is that you can customize the slot machine with your videos and watch them when you earn money from your spins. The latest version, 1.20, includes new background graphics and melodies, bug fixes, and Spanish language support.

    Fractal Nova is a real-time Mandelbrot / Julia fractal calculated by the GPU requiring the Warp3D Nova library version 54. It is being developed by Juha Niemimaki and version 1.1 is now available on OS4Depot.

    An update to Report+, a ReAction-based utility with nine functions, has been released by James Jacobs. It was made available on OS4Depot on May 19th. This tool can help you with generating Aminet- and OS4Depot-style readme files, performing batch processing on icons, and much more. Recent changes since 8.65 include miscellaneous improvements and bug fixes. More detailed information can be found on OS4Depot.

    Kjetil Hvalstrand has been working on improving the Classic Amiga emulation package E-UAE. Version 1.1.1 has been released and includes several improvements:

    • Fixed two issues with bdsocket.library
    • Fixed issue with stretching in 16-bit AGA screens
    • Created accelerator.library

    Download is available here.

    Maijestro of the Amiga Retro Channel on YouTube gave this one a run:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaCmVbtItOI

    RdrPrep is a program that prepares an ASCII file for submission to a Hercules virtual card reader. It reads the input file, and provides a mechanism to include other (ASCII or EBCDIC) files. It is being developed by James M. Morrison.

    TMSColor is a converter from BMP to TMS9928 format developed by Oscar Toledo G. Version 3.1 is now available on OS4depot.

    Steffen Häuser a.k.a. MagicSN is working hard on bringing RetroArch, a modular emulation system that can emulate a wide range of systems, to AmigaOS 4. On OS4Depot you can now find cores for the soon-to-be-released emulation package.

    There you’ll find the following cores:

    • PicoDrive
    • GenesisPlus GX
    • SNES9x 2010
    • MAME 2003

    The Amiga Retro Channel follows the development close and has recently published a video of the beta version:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJY5gWPYAtQ

    On May 29th, DRIDI released version 7.342Final of the Arabic Console Device, which contains a bug fix. It can be downloaded from OS4Depot.

    Version 2.5.2 of the WHD-Load front-end iGame was released in May. The AmigaOS 4 port is maintained by George Sokianos a.k.a. Walkero. This is a front-end application for launching WHDLoad games and demos. Changes are as follows:

    Fixed

    • Fixed the execution of whdload that broke on v2.5.1 for those that use an old icon library

    iGame 2.5.1 – [2025-05-29]

    Added

    • Added a file requester in the Properties window, which can be used to set a different WHDLoad slave file for an item. This is useful when a game/demo changed place on the hard disk. (#174)
    • Based on the selected file by the new field, the tooltypes text is updated, enabled/disabled, based if the selected file is a WHDLoad slave one.

    Changed

    • Moved the Properties window code to its own files
    • Added the “Open game folder” menu in the MorphOS version, that was missing
    • Disabled the gamepad usage on MorphOS because it was reported giving problems while playing a game

    Fixed

    • Fixed starting WHDLoad games in MorphOS using WHDLoadopener (#253)

    iGame 2.5.0 – [2025-05-12]

    Added

    • Added a new “Information” window that includes the “Released date”, the “Released by”, the “Chipset”, the links to external websites and most of the fields from the properties window.
    • Added the option to use repositories based on assigns (fixes #240)

    Changed

    • The “Properties” window has only the tooltypes of the selected item available to change.

    Fixed

    • Fixed a potential crash on exit, happening mostly on AmigaOS 3.1 systems (fixes #239)
    Screenshot from an older version.

    BreakHack is a small, roguelike game. It was developed by Linus Probert. You can find it for various platforms on Steam. This game was ported to AmigaOS 4 by George Sokianos, also known as Walkero. The new version contains the following changes:

    [4.2.1r1] – 2025-05-31

    Changed

    • Updated to the latest upstream code and now it uses SDL3

    FrozenAt is a utility developed by Kjetil Hvalstrand. It is a small command line tool to find out where a program is hanging. Version 1.1 is now available for download.

    Michael Trebilcock has uploaded a vast amount of updates to libraries and more to OS4Depot! It is a huge list, so I recommend you visit there and have a look. Here is the link.

    Screenshot from an older version.

    Version 34.2 of AmiArcadia for AmigaOS 4, a Signetics-based machines emulator, has been released by James Jacobs.

    According to the documentation, AmiArcadia supports the following systems:

    • Emerson Arcadia 2001 console family (Bandai, Emerson, Grandstand, Intervision, Leisure-Vision, Leonardo, MPT-03, Ormatu, Palladium, Poppy, Robdajet, Tele-Fever, Tempest, Tryom, Tunix, etc.) (c. 1982);
    • Interton VC 4000 console family (Acetronic, Cabel, Fountain, Hanimex, Interton, Prinztronic, Radofin, Rowtron, Soundic, Voltmace, Waddingtons, etc.) (c. 1978);
    • Elektor TV Games Computer (1979);
    • PIPBUG- and BINBUG-based machines (EA 77up2, EA 78up5, Signetics Adaptable Board Computer, Eurocard 2650, etc.) (1977-1978);
    • Signetics Instructor 50 trainer (1978);
    • Signetics TWIN minicomputer (1976);
    • Central Data 2650 computer (1977);
    • PHUNSY computer (c. 1980);
    • Ravensburger Selbstbaucomputer aka 2650 Minimal Computer trainer (1984);
    • Hofacker MIKIT 2650 trainer (1978);
    • Astro Wars, Galaxia, Laser Battle and Lazarian coin-ops by Zaccaria (1979-1981);
    • Malzak 1 and 2 coin-ops by Kitronix (c. 1981);
    • AY-3-8500/8550/8600-based Pong systems (Coleco Telstar Galaxy, Sheen TVG-201, etc.) (1976-1977);
    • VTech Type-right machine (1985)

    It is packed with features, far too many to list here. Examples include ReAction GUI, load/save snapshots, and windowed and fullscreen modes. Other features are CPU tracing, trainer, and drag and drop support. Additionally, it offers graphics scaling, PAL/NTSC modes, and frame skipping, among many other features!

    Here is a summary of the changes since the last version:

    Changes since V34.31:
    Summary:

    • TWIN, PHUNSY, Selbstbaucomputer: added “Settings|Input|Queue
      keystrokes?” toggle.
    • Miscellaneous improvements and bug fixes.

    Please click here to be taken to the download page.

    Amiga-news.de reports that that “The Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL) multimedia library is now available for AmigaOS 4 in versions 2.32.6 and 3.2.14.” More information is available on their website here.

    Miscellaneous News

    A new issue of Amiga Future has been released! This time it is number 174.

    More information is available here. You can order the magazine from your favorite Amiga shops or directly from the publisher.

    Trixie of the Rear Window blog has published a new post. It looks at the SATA PCI card from Rabbit Hole Computing.

    YouTube

    The Norwegian musician Helge Kvalheim has returned with two new songs for us to enjoy! He creates his music on an AmigaOne X5000.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy6i10WWl3g

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGQZvQGPWPM

    A video from CLASS 2025 features Robert Bernardo. He is the organizer of the show and leader of the Fresno Commodore User Group and the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network. The video shows AmigaOS 4 demos running on an AmigaOne 1222+.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_rvKvziBB8

    He also did a presentation of the A1222+:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeL2OKtxFLw

    Ghettofinger Gaming is back again and this time with a new unboxing video! From Relec in Switzerland comes his second A1222+ in form of The Red One. I must say that this computer looks very, very nice. 🙂

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAe5K1K4Qwg

    He also made a video showing his two systems:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QMlamwfkkE

    Anouk33 has created a video showing a comparison of AmigaOS 4.1 and MorphOS 3.19 on a Pegasos 2 in relation to Petunia and Trance.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L-bYMQvQnI

    AmigaWave episode 393 includes a comparison between AmigaOS 4.1 and MorphOS. It is in Spanish.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdtLk3bYk-A

    TheLostC is back with a new video, this time about updating UBoot on his Sam460cr.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ny0QfSqkgWY

    Until next time

    You’ve now reached the end of the AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup for May 2025.

    Thanks as always to all readers and supporters out there. Thanks for visiting my blog and see you in the next roundup! 🙂

    Best regards,

    Puni

    Rate this:

    #239 #240 #Amiga #AmigaNews #AmigaOne #AmigaOS4 #PowerPC #PPC

  9. AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup – May 2025

    Hi,

    Welcome to the AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup covering May 2025! Thanks for visiting my blog, and hope you’ll enjoy the read.

    At the time of writing it is now June 1st and a new month lies ahead of us. Who knows what it will bring to the world of the Amiga? Will we see development starting on bringing AmigaOS 4 to the Mirari board?

    Time will show.

    As of now, MorphOS is now booting and working to some degree on it. Whenever I visit Discord or forums, it looks like there are updates on their progress porting it.

    I’m very impressed by the work of the Mirari team, and also the MorphOS group, and look forward to following their work in the coming months. It will be very interesting to see what will happen in the AmigaOS 4 camp when boards are available to their developers.

    With that said, let us now move on to the news from May. 🙂

    Software News

    AmigaGPT is a versatile ChatGPT client for AmigaOS 3.x, 4.1, and MorphOS. It is being developed by Cameron Armstrong a.k.a. Nightfox. This powerful tool brings the capabilities of OpenAI’s GPT to your Amiga system, enabling text generation, question-answering, and creative exploration. AmigaGPT can also generate stunning images using DALL-E and includes support for speech output, making it easier than ever to interact with AI on your Amiga. Designed to integrate seamlessly with your system, AmigaGPT delivers modern AI technology while embracing the timeless Amiga experience. Version 2.6.0 is now available for download from OS4Depot.

    PolarPaint is an experimental paint program made in Hollywood by Anbjørn Myren. Version 1.057 was uploaded to OS4Depot and became available on May 7th. If you are interested in checking it out, please click here. Another version called PolarPaint Small can be downloaded via this link. A list of changes can be found on OS4Depot.

    Video Slot Machine is a game developed by Juan Carlos Herran Martin. An interesting addition is that you can customize the slot machine with your videos and watch them when you earn money from your spins. The latest version, 1.20, includes new background graphics and melodies, bug fixes, and Spanish language support.

    Fractal Nova is a real-time Mandelbrot / Julia fractal calculated by the GPU requiring the Warp3D Nova library version 54. It is being developed by Juha Niemimaki and version 1.1 is now available on OS4Depot.

    An update to Report+, a ReAction-based utility with nine functions, has been released by James Jacobs. It was made available on OS4Depot on May 19th. This tool can help you with generating Aminet- and OS4Depot-style readme files, performing batch processing on icons, and much more. Recent changes since 8.65 include miscellaneous improvements and bug fixes. More detailed information can be found on OS4Depot.

    Kjetil Hvalstrand has been working on improving the Classic Amiga emulation package E-UAE. Version 1.1.1 has been released and includes several improvements:

    • Fixed two issues with bdsocket.library
    • Fixed issue with stretching in 16-bit AGA screens
    • Created accelerator.library

    Download is available here.

    Maijestro of the Amiga Retro Channel on YouTube gave this one a run:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaCmVbtItOI

    RdrPrep is a program that prepares an ASCII file for submission to a Hercules virtual card reader. It reads the input file, and provides a mechanism to include other (ASCII or EBCDIC) files. It is being developed by James M. Morrison.

    TMSColor is a converter from BMP to TMS9928 format developed by Oscar Toledo G. Version 3.1 is now available on OS4depot.

    Steffen Häuser a.k.a. MagicSN is working hard on bringing RetroArch, a modular emulation system that can emulate a wide range of systems, to AmigaOS 4. On OS4Depot you can now find cores for the soon-to-be-released emulation package.

    There you’ll find the following cores:

    • PicoDrive
    • GenesisPlus GX
    • SNES9x 2010
    • MAME 2003

    The Amiga Retro Channel follows the development close and has recently published a video of the beta version:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJY5gWPYAtQ

    On May 29th, DRIDI released version 7.342Final of the Arabic Console Device, which contains a bug fix. It can be downloaded from OS4Depot.

    Version 2.5.2 of the WHD-Load front-end iGame was released in May. The AmigaOS 4 port is maintained by George Sokianos a.k.a. Walkero. This is a front-end application for launching WHDLoad games and demos. Changes are as follows:

    Fixed

    • Fixed the execution of whdload that broke on v2.5.1 for those that use an old icon library

    iGame 2.5.1 – [2025-05-29]

    Added

    • Added a file requester in the Properties window, which can be used to set a different WHDLoad slave file for an item. This is useful when a game/demo changed place on the hard disk. (#174)
    • Based on the selected file by the new field, the tooltypes text is updated, enabled/disabled, based if the selected file is a WHDLoad slave one.

    Changed

    • Moved the Properties window code to its own files
    • Added the “Open game folder” menu in the MorphOS version, that was missing
    • Disabled the gamepad usage on MorphOS because it was reported giving problems while playing a game

    Fixed

    • Fixed starting WHDLoad games in MorphOS using WHDLoadopener (#253)

    iGame 2.5.0 – [2025-05-12]

    Added

    • Added a new “Information” window that includes the “Released date”, the “Released by”, the “Chipset”, the links to external websites and most of the fields from the properties window.
    • Added the option to use repositories based on assigns (fixes #240)

    Changed

    • The “Properties” window has only the tooltypes of the selected item available to change.

    Fixed

    • Fixed a potential crash on exit, happening mostly on AmigaOS 3.1 systems (fixes #239)
    Screenshot from an older version.

    BreakHack is a small, roguelike game. It was developed by Linus Probert. You can find it for various platforms on Steam. This game was ported to AmigaOS 4 by George Sokianos, also known as Walkero. The new version contains the following changes:

    [4.2.1r1] – 2025-05-31

    Changed

    • Updated to the latest upstream code and now it uses SDL3

    FrozenAt is a utility developed by Kjetil Hvalstrand. It is a small command line tool to find out where a program is hanging. Version 1.1 is now available for download.

    Michael Trebilcock has uploaded a vast amount of updates to libraries and more to OS4Depot! It is a huge list, so I recommend you visit there and have a look. Here is the link.

    Screenshot from an older version.

    Version 34.2 of AmiArcadia for AmigaOS 4, a Signetics-based machines emulator, has been released by James Jacobs.

    According to the documentation, AmiArcadia supports the following systems:

    • Emerson Arcadia 2001 console family (Bandai, Emerson, Grandstand, Intervision, Leisure-Vision, Leonardo, MPT-03, Ormatu, Palladium, Poppy, Robdajet, Tele-Fever, Tempest, Tryom, Tunix, etc.) (c. 1982);
    • Interton VC 4000 console family (Acetronic, Cabel, Fountain, Hanimex, Interton, Prinztronic, Radofin, Rowtron, Soundic, Voltmace, Waddingtons, etc.) (c. 1978);
    • Elektor TV Games Computer (1979);
    • PIPBUG- and BINBUG-based machines (EA 77up2, EA 78up5, Signetics Adaptable Board Computer, Eurocard 2650, etc.) (1977-1978);
    • Signetics Instructor 50 trainer (1978);
    • Signetics TWIN minicomputer (1976);
    • Central Data 2650 computer (1977);
    • PHUNSY computer (c. 1980);
    • Ravensburger Selbstbaucomputer aka 2650 Minimal Computer trainer (1984);
    • Hofacker MIKIT 2650 trainer (1978);
    • Astro Wars, Galaxia, Laser Battle and Lazarian coin-ops by Zaccaria (1979-1981);
    • Malzak 1 and 2 coin-ops by Kitronix (c. 1981);
    • AY-3-8500/8550/8600-based Pong systems (Coleco Telstar Galaxy, Sheen TVG-201, etc.) (1976-1977);
    • VTech Type-right machine (1985)

    It is packed with features, far too many to list here. Examples include ReAction GUI, load/save snapshots, and windowed and fullscreen modes. Other features are CPU tracing, trainer, and drag and drop support. Additionally, it offers graphics scaling, PAL/NTSC modes, and frame skipping, among many other features!

    Here is a summary of the changes since the last version:

    Changes since V34.31:
    Summary:

    • TWIN, PHUNSY, Selbstbaucomputer: added “Settings|Input|Queue
      keystrokes?” toggle.
    • Miscellaneous improvements and bug fixes.

    Please click here to be taken to the download page.

    Amiga-news.de reports that that “The Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL) multimedia library is now available for AmigaOS 4 in versions 2.32.6 and 3.2.14.” More information is available on their website here.

    Miscellaneous News

    A new issue of Amiga Future has been released! This time it is number 174.

    More information is available here. You can order the magazine from your favorite Amiga shops or directly from the publisher.

    Trixie of the Rear Window blog has published a new post. It looks at the SATA PCI card from Rabbit Hole Computing.

    YouTube

    The Norwegian musician Helge Kvalheim has returned with two new songs for us to enjoy! He creates his music on an AmigaOne X5000.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy6i10WWl3g

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGQZvQGPWPM

    A video from CLASS 2025 features Robert Bernardo. He is the organizer of the show and leader of the Fresno Commodore User Group and the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network. The video shows AmigaOS 4 demos running on an AmigaOne 1222+.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_rvKvziBB8

    He also did a presentation of the A1222+:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeL2OKtxFLw

    Ghettofinger Gaming is back again and this time with a new unboxing video! From Relec in Switzerland comes his second A1222+ in form of The Red One. I must say that this computer looks very, very nice. 🙂

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAe5K1K4Qwg

    He also made a video showing his two systems:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QMlamwfkkE

    Anouk33 has created a video showing a comparison of AmigaOS 4.1 and MorphOS 3.19 on a Pegasos 2 in relation to Petunia and Trance.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L-bYMQvQnI

    AmigaWave episode 393 includes a comparison between AmigaOS 4.1 and MorphOS. It is in Spanish.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdtLk3bYk-A

    TheLostC is back with a new video, this time about updating UBoot on his Sam460cr.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ny0QfSqkgWY

    Until next time

    You’ve now reached the end of the AmigaOS 4 Monthly Roundup for May 2025.

    Thanks as always to all readers and supporters out there. Thanks for visiting my blog and see you in the next roundup! 🙂

    Best regards,

    Puni

    #239 #240 #Amiga #AmigaNews #AmigaOne #AmigaOS4 #PowerPC #PPC

  10. #Liberated from FB
    #ConnieWillis daily
    #Trump #Putin #Musk and too many to list here...

    Putin Rolls Trump in Ceasefire Talks
    March 19, 2025
    By Connie Willis
    The big news today was Trump and Putin’s call, which was supposed to result in a ceasefire and a Nobel Peace Prize for Trump:
    --Trump called Putin and Putin kept him waiting for over an hour. He was holding a meeting with oligarchs and when his advisor said, "Won’t you be late talking to Trump?" he (and the oligarchs) just laughed.
    --After the phone call, the US and Russia said different things about the ceasefire. The US said they’d agreed to an infrastructure ceasefire and a maritime ceasefire (both of which would be enormous advantages to Russia. That’s where they’re hurting most.) Russia said the key condition was the complete end of military aid by the US to Ukraine.
    --Garry Kasparov: "Russia’s weakest point is Ukraine attacking it s oil and gas factories, so of course Putin wants Trump’s help stopping it. Nothing on Russia murdering Ukrainian civilians. The Black Sea is another area Ukraine was kicking Russia’s ass, so one more item on Putin’s wish list. And restoring US relations with a war criminal dictator who offers the US nothing."
    --Trump focused on the fact that there would be "enormous economic deals" between the US and Russia and hockey games between Russia and the US.
    --Ron Filipkowski: "So we get hockey games and "enormous economic deals" with Russia for selling out Ukraine. Art of the Deal."
    --Karoline Leavitt said there’s a power plant on the border between Russia and Ukraine up for discussion. (No, there’s not.)
    --Trump said the quiet part out loud and admitted that the argument with Zelenskyy in the Oval Office was part of a strategy to pressure Ukraine into a peace deal.
    --Trump announced the US would take over the ownership of Ukraine’s power plants.
    --One hour after the ceasefire Russia bombed a power station in Ukraine. They also bombed Kyiv.
    --There’s also a rumor that Putin is the one who told Trump to shut down the Voice of America, which he did.
    --Not a word was said about those thousands of Ukrainians who’d been surrounded by the Russians and were about to be massacred. (Because they never existed.)
    --Michael MacKay: "Putin so completely humiliated his puppet during the phone call that Trump didn’t come out to face reporters afterward. The White House issued a statement," and Russia immediately bombed Ukraine’s infrastructure to show it had no intention of obeying the ceasefire."
    --The conservative’s National Review’s Jim Geraghty: "America’s negotiations with a former KGB officer are being handled by a President who is extremely naive and gullible...Putin played Trump like a fiddle, offering him platitudes and the mirage of a small concession, which Trump rushed to announce to the world as a great diplomatic breakthrough. Now Trump looks like a sucker, a man easily fooled by promises."
    --Rick Wilson: "Oh, look, the world’s greatest negotiator, Mr. Art of the Deal, got rolled like a cheap rug. Again."
    --Last night Rachel Maddow talked about how unpopular Trump’s position vis a vis Putin is (only 2% of Americans sympathize with Russia) and said, "For all the unpopular and failing things about this young Presidency, there’s one thing about this Presidency that is just unprecedented in how radically out of step it is with the American people. There’s such a difference between what Trump wants and what the American people want...that I actually think it is not sustainable in small-d democratic terms."
    --Zelenskyy rejected the ceasefire.
    In Trump defying/trying to weasel out of obeying the judge’s orders in the deportation case news:
    --Trump’s lawyers are trying to argue they were flying over international waters, so they weren’t under America’s and the judge’s jurisdiction. However, if they were flying over the Gulf of America (which Trump claims he owns all of) they were in American territory. So he has now changed his argument to "We would have run out of gas if we’d turned back."
    --Bill Kristol: "It did not have to dispatch the planes in the middle of a hearing. In custody, the men posed no threat. The administration’s claim of urgency is a fabrication...what we are witnessing is a setup. The goal is to brush off a court order and get away with it."
    --Trump is also trying to get fentanyl declared a WMD so he can declare war against it and deport anybody he wants to.
    --Aaron Rupar: "We’re patently NOT under invasion by a hybrid criminal state. But Trump needs it to be "true" as a precondition to invoke Revolutionary War-era emergency power to justify summary deportations."
    --Michael Luttig on Trump’s demand that the judge be impeached: "I know personally that the federal judiciary is shaken by these recent attacks by the President of the United States, but I also know that they are unshaken in their resolve to honor their oath to the Constitution. It’s the President who has wanted this war ever since his first time in office. Well, he’s going to get what he wanted."
    --Musk chimed in against the judge: "This is a judicial coup. We either have a President or we have rule by 677 bavel-wielding dictators. We need 60 senators to impeach the judges and restore rule of the people."
    --Note: It’s 67, actually, to make the 2/3 needed for impeachment. Gordita Brett: "Nice math, space engineer genius."
    --Many of the Venezuelan immigrants deported have not commited any crimes, not even trivial ones, even though Trump claimed they were all criminals. Trump’s lawyers are arguing that that’s because they have only been in the country a short time and that the very fact that they haven’t proves that they are a danger to the country. (No, I am not making this up.)
    --ICE field director Robert Cerna: "While it is true that many of the gang members removed under the Alien Enemies Act do not have criminal records in the US, that is because they have only been in the US for a short time. The lack of a criminal record does not indicate that they pose a limited threat...the lack of specific information about each individual action highlights the risk they pose."
    --Translation: They are claiming that the lack of evidence is not only not a barrier to prison but a justification for it.
    --Felix: "Tomorrow, if this practice is successful, it would be anyone the dictator decides to "disappear": Muslims, Quakers, Unitarians, Hindus, protest organizers, gays, union leaders, activists, journalists, opposition candidates, inconvenient judges or prosecutors or jury members, anyone that the dictator has a personal grudge against, people with assets coveted by powerful fascists, Democrats, "disloyal" Republicans."
    In town hall news:
    --GOP Rep Mike Flood held a town hall in Nebraska where attendees shouted "Tax the rich!" Flood asked, "So your proposal to solve the debt is to tax the rich?" and the Nebraska crowd cheered wildly. When he said, "I support Elon Musk and DOGE," huge boos erupted from the crowd. And it’s all on video--and all over the internet.
    --GOP Kevin Kelly held a tele-town hall. 25,000 people called in. He hung up on many and locked others out.
    --GOP Rep Michael Baumgartener held a town hall in eastern Washington. The first question was, what would he do to enforce the law if Trump ignores court orders? IN EASTERN WASHINGTON!
    --GOP Rep Andy Biggs is holding a town hall, but only registered Republicans are allowed. They’re checking party registration at the door, and no independents or Dems will be allowed in. (The way things are going, that might not help.)
    --GOP Rep Nancy Mace will not be holding any town halls due to "threatening constituents."
    --Indivisible held a town hall in Maine to call out Susan Collins. She hasn’t held one in 25 years.
    In other news:
    --Minnesota State GOP Senate Republican Justin Eichorn introduced a bill last week which would make "Trump Derangement Syndrome" a mental illness which could result in being institutionalized.
    --This week he was arrested for soliciting sex with a minor. (It was actually an undercover police officer.)
    --Republicans are, interestingly, demanding his immediate resignation. Question: will the bill go anywhere now?
    In good news:
    --The two astronauts who’d been on the space station for months splashed down safely. (Thank God!) A pod of dolphins welcomed them home.
    --The Voice of America and other radio stations are still up and running. Their leaders said they think Trump and Musk’s orders to shut down were illegal and they’re continuing to operate while they take legal action.
    --The Antlers Hotel in Colorado Springs canceled a dinner with a "white supremacist group." Steve Bannon was supposed to be the speaker.
    --When Trump took over the Kennedy Center, he cancelled a performance by the Marine Band because they were playing with a group of multi-ethnic kids. (The bastard!) Military band leaders couldn’t go ahead and play with the kids because they were under orders, so retired military musicians from all the branches of the service stepped up and arranged a concert. 60 Minutes flew all the kids to Washington, DC, and they filmed the whole performance.
    Two corrections:
    --The other day I said that Admiral Hirohito had said after Pearl Harbor, "I fear we have awakened a sleeping giant." That was wrong. Hirohito was the emperor. It was Admiral Yamamoto who said it. He had been educated in the States and understood Americans far better than most Japanese.
    --I also said that the movie THE QUIET MAN had been filmed in Ong, a name that didn’t strike me as Irish--and isn’t because it was filmed in Cong. We were still there, even though I got the name wrong, and it looked just like it does in the movie.
    To update you on the postcard effort:
    --People on Daily Kos were reporting that local post offices sold out of pre-stamped postcards and post card stamps.
    --I’ve gotten responses from a bunch of you after the ones I listed on Sunday. M sent 10 and 8 of her friends sent 10 each, another friend sent three, another 136, and another sent a bunch of pink slip postcards firing Trump. Thanks, everybody!
    Best headline of the day, from the New Republic: "There is No Method to Trump’s Madness. He’s Simply Insane."
    Best rumor of the day: Teslas are self-immolating in protest of Musk.
    Best comment of the day, from Cynthia Roseberry: "We, as criminal defense lawyers, are forced to deal with some of the lowest people on earth, people who have no sense of right and wrong, people who will lie in court to get what they want, people who do not care who gets hurt in the process. It is our job--our sworn duty--as criminal defense lawyers, to protect our clients from these people."
  11. Carcharodon and Cherd’s Top Ten(ish) of 2024

    By Carcharodon

    Carcharodon

    I’ve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, I’ve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, I’ve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.

    Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosity‘s life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.

    Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0—more of which below—which was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.

    Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. It’s been tolerable to welcome a few new staffers—some even raised up from the awful Place Below—to our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.

    And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.

    #ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera – A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Light’s style.

    #10. Seth // La France des Maudits – Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, they’re back and this year’s La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesn’t hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, it’s “downright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.”

    #9. The Vision Bleak // Weird TalesThe Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever ‘got’ me. Or perhaps, I’ve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps that’s because it’s not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird TalesType O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVB’s discography with newly-opened eyes.

    #8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal – The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretch’s black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.

    #7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition – Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion – After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning “The Damascene Conversions” sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.

    #6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and MireSpectral Wound just can’t miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. It’s hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesn’t take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.

    #5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence – I’m a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. It’s that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.

    #4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – Me and death metal don’t always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spoke‘s tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdict’s dissonant death well enough, it’s the sudden mood swings into what TS described as “lethally graceful restraint” that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.

    #3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of BloodMaddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. He’s a charlatan of the highest order. However, even I’m surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, I’m continually stunned by the reactions Julie—Can I call you Julie? No? Ok—extracts from me. I’m often on the edge of tears by the end of “The Lighthouse,” just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of “Not Enough” and “End of the World” (the latter with CoL’s Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.

    #2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire – Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sun’s stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sun’s latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2

    #1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe – Y’all know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so it’s no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. There’s not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieber’s sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved Menschenmühle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (“Panzerhenker” and “Ausblutingsschlacht”), anthemic (“Der Maulwurf” and “Menschenmühle”) and more. Crafted—and yes, that is the correct word—with huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you don’t speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to “Gott mit der Kavallerie”!

    Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:

    • 40 Watt Sun // Little WeightLittle Weight actually carries a lot of emotional weight. Melancholic, beautiful post-doom and shoegaze, rife with a rough honesty.
    • Anciients // Beyond the Reach of the Sun – Long-form (arguably too-long-form in some respects) progressive death, which is wonderfully ambitious and overblown in its scale and delivery.
    • Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Fantastic trad doom, channeling heavy doses of Candlemass. Early in the year, I thought this was top-5 material but it’s uneven, with the back half much stronger than the front, and I’ve cooled on it a touch.
    • Nyktophobia // To the Stars – Just great, stomping melodeath. As I said in my review, it’s not massively original but it’s tight and well written, and easy to just kick back to. Sometimes, I don’t need more.
    • Silhouette // Les Dires de l’​Â​me – This fantastic post-black album had a place on the list proper until Pillar of Light bulldozed its way in there very late in the day. Haunting, harrowing and beautiful, Silhouette’s debut is Great!
    • Sumac // The Healer – Nothing about The Healer makes it an easy listen but Sumac’s fifth record is curiously beautiful for all its wandering, free-form abrasiveness.
    • Vorga // Beyond the Palest Star – While it’s hard to disagree with Kenstrosity‘s criticism of the production on Beyond the Palest Star, what can I say? I still love it. It’s chunky, well written, well paced and powerful.

    Surprises o’ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:

    • Opeth // The Last Will and Testament – It’s been a long time since I was last genuinely interested in an Opeth album (2005’s Ghost Reveries, in case you were wondering). But, wouldn’t you just know it, Mikael Åkerfeldt and co are back (roars and all). I’m not ready to commit to a score for The Last Will (though I think El Cuervo‘s was possibly a smidge high) as I’ve not been able to spend enough time with it. But the fact I want to spend more time with it is, after 19 years of having no interest in Opeth’s output, a surprise. And a welcome one.
    • Grand Magus // Sunraven – Another Swedish favourite of old, which I’d all but given up on, Grand Magus roared back this year with Sunraven. As an equally surprised Steel Druhm said in his review, this was the album he “feverishly hoped to get from Grand Magus … a grand return to prime form with the fire firmly back in the Balrog … the best Magus outing since 2012’s The Hunt”.

    Disappointment o’ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:

    • Zeal & Ardor // GREIF – I’m not angry, or even very surprised, just disappointed.3 While I accept that this is the album of a band in transition, there’s no getting away from the fact that it was a hugely disappointing album from a band that has abandoned the sound that made it what it was. And for what? They have not transitioned to something new and exciting, but with kinks to be worked out. Rather, on this record, Zeal & Ardor became something so pedestrian that any number of post-rock bands could’ve written it and, probably, done a better job. I may have overrated it.

    Songs o’ the Year

    1. Julie Christmas – “The Lighthouse”
    2. Kanonenfieber – “Der Maulwurf”
    3. Selbst – “The Stench of a Dead Spirit”
    4. Panzerfaust – “The Damascene Conversions”
    5. Kanonenfieber – “Gott mit der Kavallerie”
    6. Devenial Verdict – “Garden of Eyes”
    7. Spectral Wound – “Aristocratic Suicidal Black Metal”
    8. Silhouette – “Les Dires de l’​Â​me”
    9. Blue Heron – “Everything Fades”
    10. Zeal & Ardor – “Hide in Shade”
    11. Glare of the Sun – “Rain”

    Cherd

    Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, I’ll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.

    On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my “need to see live” list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didn’t listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when I’d log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kid’s age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (I’ll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4

    (ish) Chat Pile // Cool World – This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a “mature” record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why it’s here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY God’s Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two best–if not most memorable–songs the band have written to date in “New World” and “Masc.” I’m a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.

    #10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse – I’ve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tomb’s sophomore record, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still view this as one of the best things I’ve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. I’ve made a big deal about the one-three punch of “Voidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Host”, but it bears repeating since it’s my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.

    #9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality – If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, you’ll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, they’ve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so I’m glad our Kenfren wouldn’t shut his excitable yap about this one.

    #8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos – “Alright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. We’d like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. It’s time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. That’s right, it’s couples’ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each other’s empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voice’s death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!”

    #7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, I’ve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermon’s third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.

    #6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss – I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. It’s not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfit’s latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. I’ve told him to his cetacean face that he’s wrong and I’m likely to do so again because this is Full of Hell’s best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.

    #5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God – For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldn’t get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering it’s much larger on the inside.5

    #4. Thou // Umbilical – I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, “Like their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesn’t matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thou’s banner. Bryan Funck’s acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thou’s ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer for…hell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound they’ve forged isn’t the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. It’s certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.” If that doesn’t sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.

    #3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – I didn’t listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdict’s previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesn’t mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics they’ve come to be known for. It’s just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in “Solus.”

    #2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence – When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this list’s pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I don’t understand how this album didn’t gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, “…the material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the album’s taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.”

    #1. Inter Arma // New HeavenInter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album they’ve released going back to 2013’s Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, “They’re the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heaven’s shockingly concise 42 minutes…If being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, you’ve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.” What a record.

    Honorable Mentions:

    • Convulsing // Perdurance – I like this quote from Dear Hollow‘s review, so I’ll let him do the talking: “…Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion.”
    • Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire – Pound for pound, Spectral Wound are probably the most consistent no-frills black metal band currently in operation. Songs of Blood and Mire is another rager that’s as melodic as it is acidic.
    • Lord Buffalo // Holus Bolus – This record was one redundant instrumental away from landing higher on this list. Looking forward to where these gothic country rockers go next.

    Songs o’ the Year:

    In alphabetical order by band:

    Show 5 footnotes

    1. Apparently it was only 2021 but my goodness that feels a lifetime ago.
    2. Regrettably, I suspect this may be the perfect way to start a discussion. Sigh.
    3. Can you tell I’m a parent?
    4. How could anyone disagree? – AMG
    5. Like a TARDIS.

    #2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor

  12. Carcharodon and Cherd’s Top Ten(ish) of 2024

    By Carcharodon

    Carcharodon

    I’ve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, I’ve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, I’ve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.

    Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosity‘s life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.

    Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0—more of which below—which was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.

    Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. It’s been tolerable to welcome a few new staffers—some even raised up from the awful Place Below—to our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.

    And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.

    #ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera – A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Light’s style.

    #10. Seth // La France des Maudits – Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, they’re back and this year’s La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesn’t hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, it’s “downright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.”

    #9. The Vision Bleak // Weird TalesThe Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever ‘got’ me. Or perhaps, I’ve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps that’s because it’s not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird TalesType O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVB’s discography with newly-opened eyes.

    #8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal – The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretch’s black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.

    #7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition – Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion – After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning “The Damascene Conversions” sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.

    #6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and MireSpectral Wound just can’t miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. It’s hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesn’t take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.

    #5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence – I’m a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. It’s that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.

    #4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – Me and death metal don’t always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spoke‘s tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdict’s dissonant death well enough, it’s the sudden mood swings into what TS described as “lethally graceful restraint” that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.

    #3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of BloodMaddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. He’s a charlatan of the highest order. However, even I’m surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, I’m continually stunned by the reactions Julie—Can I call you Julie? No? Ok—extracts from me. I’m often on the edge of tears by the end of “The Lighthouse,” just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of “Not Enough” and “End of the World” (the latter with CoL’s Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.

    #2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire – Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sun’s stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sun’s latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2

    #1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe – Y’all know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so it’s no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. There’s not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieber’s sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved Menschenmühle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (“Panzerhenker” and “Ausblutingsschlacht”), anthemic (“Der Maulwurf” and “Menschenmühle”) and more. Crafted—and yes, that is the correct word—with huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you don’t speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to “Gott mit der Kavallerie”!

    Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:

    • 40 Watt Sun // Little WeightLittle Weight actually carries a lot of emotional weight. Melancholic, beautiful post-doom and shoegaze, rife with a rough honesty.
    • Anciients // Beyond the Reach of the Sun – Long-form (arguably too-long-form in some respects) progressive death, which is wonderfully ambitious and overblown in its scale and delivery.
    • Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Fantastic trad doom, channeling heavy doses of Candlemass. Early in the year, I thought this was top-5 material but it’s uneven, with the back half much stronger than the front, and I’ve cooled on it a touch.
    • Nyktophobia // To the Stars – Just great, stomping melodeath. As I said in my review, it’s not massively original but it’s tight and well written, and easy to just kick back to. Sometimes, I don’t need more.
    • Silhouette // Les Dires de l’​Â​me – This fantastic post-black album had a place on the list proper until Pillar of Light bulldozed its way in there very late in the day. Haunting, harrowing and beautiful, Silhouette’s debut is Great!
    • Sumac // The Healer – Nothing about The Healer makes it an easy listen but Sumac’s fifth record is curiously beautiful for all its wandering, free-form abrasiveness.
    • Vorga // Beyond the Palest Star – While it’s hard to disagree with Kenstrosity‘s criticism of the production on Beyond the Palest Star, what can I say? I still love it. It’s chunky, well written, well paced and powerful.

    Surprises o’ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:

    • Opeth // The Last Will and Testament – It’s been a long time since I was last genuinely interested in an Opeth album (2005’s Ghost Reveries, in case you were wondering). But, wouldn’t you just know it, Mikael Åkerfeldt and co are back (roars and all). I’m not ready to commit to a score for The Last Will (though I think El Cuervo‘s was possibly a smidge high) as I’ve not been able to spend enough time with it. But the fact I want to spend more time with it is, after 19 years of having no interest in Opeth’s output, a surprise. And a welcome one.
    • Grand Magus // Sunraven – Another Swedish favourite of old, which I’d all but given up on, Grand Magus roared back this year with Sunraven. As an equally surprised Steel Druhm said in his review, this was the album he “feverishly hoped to get from Grand Magus … a grand return to prime form with the fire firmly back in the Balrog … the best Magus outing since 2012’s The Hunt”.

    Disappointment o’ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:

    • Zeal & Ardor // GREIF – I’m not angry, or even very surprised, just disappointed.3 While I accept that this is the album of a band in transition, there’s no getting away from the fact that it was a hugely disappointing album from a band that has abandoned the sound that made it what it was. And for what? They have not transitioned to something new and exciting, but with kinks to be worked out. Rather, on this record, Zeal & Ardor became something so pedestrian that any number of post-rock bands could’ve written it and, probably, done a better job. I may have overrated it.

    Songs o’ the Year

    1. Julie Christmas – “The Lighthouse”
    2. Kanonenfieber – “Der Maulwurf”
    3. Selbst – “The Stench of a Dead Spirit”
    4. Panzerfaust – “The Damascene Conversions”
    5. Kanonenfieber – “Gott mit der Kavallerie”
    6. Devenial Verdict – “Garden of Eyes”
    7. Spectral Wound – “Aristocratic Suicidal Black Metal”
    8. Silhouette – “Les Dires de l’​Â​me”
    9. Blue Heron – “Everything Fades”
    10. Zeal & Ardor – “Hide in Shade”
    11. Glare of the Sun – “Rain”

    Cherd

    Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, I’ll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.

    On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my “need to see live” list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didn’t listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when I’d log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kid’s age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (I’ll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4

    (ish) Chat Pile // Cool World – This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a “mature” record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why it’s here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY God’s Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two best–if not most memorable–songs the band have written to date in “New World” and “Masc.” I’m a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.

    #10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse – I’ve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tomb’s sophomore record, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still view this as one of the best things I’ve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. I’ve made a big deal about the one-three punch of “Voidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Host”, but it bears repeating since it’s my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.

    #9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality – If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, you’ll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, they’ve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so I’m glad our Kenfren wouldn’t shut his excitable yap about this one.

    #8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos – “Alright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. We’d like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. It’s time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. That’s right, it’s couples’ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each other’s empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voice’s death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!”

    #7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, I’ve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermon’s third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.

    #6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss – I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. It’s not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfit’s latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. I’ve told him to his cetacean face that he’s wrong and I’m likely to do so again because this is Full of Hell’s best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.

    #5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God – For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldn’t get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering it’s much larger on the inside.5

    #4. Thou // Umbilical – I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, “Like their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesn’t matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thou’s banner. Bryan Funck’s acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thou’s ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer for…hell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound they’ve forged isn’t the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. It’s certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.” If that doesn’t sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.

    #3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – I didn’t listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdict’s previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesn’t mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics they’ve come to be known for. It’s just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in “Solus.”

    #2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence – When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this list’s pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I don’t understand how this album didn’t gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, “…the material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the album’s taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.”

    #1. Inter Arma // New HeavenInter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album they’ve released going back to 2013’s Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, “They’re the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heaven’s shockingly concise 42 minutes…If being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, you’ve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.” What a record.

    Honorable Mentions:

    • Convulsing // Perdurance – I like this quote from Dear Hollow‘s review, so I’ll let him do the talking: “…Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion.”
    • Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire – Pound for pound, Spectral Wound are probably the most consistent no-frills black metal band currently in operation. Songs of Blood and Mire is another rager that’s as melodic as it is acidic.
    • Lord Buffalo // Holus Bolus – This record was one redundant instrumental away from landing higher on this list. Looking forward to where these gothic country rockers go next.

    Songs o’ the Year:

    In alphabetical order by band:

    #2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor

  13. Carcharodon and Cherd’s Top Ten(ish) of 2024

    By Carcharodon

    Carcharodon

    I’ve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, I’ve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, I’ve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.

    Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosity‘s life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.

    Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0—more of which below—which was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.

    Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. It’s been tolerable to welcome a few new staffers—some even raised up from the awful Place Below—to our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.

    And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.

    #ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera – A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Light’s style.

    #10. Seth // La France des Maudits – Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, they’re back and this year’s La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesn’t hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, it’s “downright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.”

    #9. The Vision Bleak // Weird TalesThe Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever ‘got’ me. Or perhaps, I’ve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps that’s because it’s not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird TalesType O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVB’s discography with newly-opened eyes.

    #8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal – The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretch’s black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.

    #7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition – Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion – After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning “The Damascene Conversions” sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.

    #6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and MireSpectral Wound just can’t miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. It’s hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesn’t take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.

    #5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence – I’m a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. It’s that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.

    #4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – Me and death metal don’t always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spoke‘s tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdict’s dissonant death well enough, it’s the sudden mood swings into what TS described as “lethally graceful restraint” that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.

    #3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of BloodMaddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. He’s a charlatan of the highest order. However, even I’m surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, I’m continually stunned by the reactions Julie—Can I call you Julie? No? Ok—extracts from me. I’m often on the edge of tears by the end of “The Lighthouse,” just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of “Not Enough” and “End of the World” (the latter with CoL’s Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.

    #2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire – Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sun’s stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sun’s latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2

    #1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe – Y’all know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so it’s no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. There’s not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieber’s sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved Menschenmühle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (“Panzerhenker” and “Ausblutingsschlacht”), anthemic (“Der Maulwurf” and “Menschenmühle”) and more. Crafted—and yes, that is the correct word—with huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you don’t speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to “Gott mit der Kavallerie”!

    Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:

    • 40 Watt Sun // Little WeightLittle Weight actually carries a lot of emotional weight. Melancholic, beautiful post-doom and shoegaze, rife with a rough honesty.
    • Anciients // Beyond the Reach of the Sun – Long-form (arguably too-long-form in some respects) progressive death, which is wonderfully ambitious and overblown in its scale and delivery.
    • Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Fantastic trad doom, channeling heavy doses of Candlemass. Early in the year, I thought this was top-5 material but it’s uneven, with the back half much stronger than the front, and I’ve cooled on it a touch.
    • Nyktophobia // To the Stars – Just great, stomping melodeath. As I said in my review, it’s not massively original but it’s tight and well written, and easy to just kick back to. Sometimes, I don’t need more.
    • Silhouette // Les Dires de l’​Â​me – This fantastic post-black album had a place on the list proper until Pillar of Light bulldozed its way in there very late in the day. Haunting, harrowing and beautiful, Silhouette’s debut is Great!
    • Sumac // The Healer – Nothing about The Healer makes it an easy listen but Sumac’s fifth record is curiously beautiful for all its wandering, free-form abrasiveness.
    • Vorga // Beyond the Palest Star – While it’s hard to disagree with Kenstrosity‘s criticism of the production on Beyond the Palest Star, what can I say? I still love it. It’s chunky, well written, well paced and powerful.

    Surprises o’ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:

    • Opeth // The Last Will and Testament – It’s been a long time since I was last genuinely interested in an Opeth album (2005’s Ghost Reveries, in case you were wondering). But, wouldn’t you just know it, Mikael Åkerfeldt and co are back (roars and all). I’m not ready to commit to a score for The Last Will (though I think El Cuervo‘s was possibly a smidge high) as I’ve not been able to spend enough time with it. But the fact I want to spend more time with it is, after 19 years of having no interest in Opeth’s output, a surprise. And a welcome one.
    • Grand Magus // Sunraven – Another Swedish favourite of old, which I’d all but given up on, Grand Magus roared back this year with Sunraven. As an equally surprised Steel Druhm said in his review, this was the album he “feverishly hoped to get from Grand Magus … a grand return to prime form with the fire firmly back in the Balrog … the best Magus outing since 2012’s The Hunt”.

    Disappointment o’ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:

    • Zeal & Ardor // GREIF – I’m not angry, or even very surprised, just disappointed.3 While I accept that this is the album of a band in transition, there’s no getting away from the fact that it was a hugely disappointing album from a band that has abandoned the sound that made it what it was. And for what? They have not transitioned to something new and exciting, but with kinks to be worked out. Rather, on this record, Zeal & Ardor became something so pedestrian that any number of post-rock bands could’ve written it and, probably, done a better job. I may have overrated it.

    Songs o’ the Year

    1. Julie Christmas – “The Lighthouse”
    2. Kanonenfieber – “Der Maulwurf”
    3. Selbst – “The Stench of a Dead Spirit”
    4. Panzerfaust – “The Damascene Conversions”
    5. Kanonenfieber – “Gott mit der Kavallerie”
    6. Devenial Verdict – “Garden of Eyes”
    7. Spectral Wound – “Aristocratic Suicidal Black Metal”
    8. Silhouette – “Les Dires de l’​Â​me”
    9. Blue Heron – “Everything Fades”
    10. Zeal & Ardor – “Hide in Shade”
    11. Glare of the Sun – “Rain”

    Cherd

    Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, I’ll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.

    On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my “need to see live” list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didn’t listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when I’d log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kid’s age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (I’ll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4

    (ish) Chat Pile // Cool World – This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a “mature” record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why it’s here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY God’s Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two best–if not most memorable–songs the band have written to date in “New World” and “Masc.” I’m a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.

    #10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse – I’ve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tomb’s sophomore record, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still view this as one of the best things I’ve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. I’ve made a big deal about the one-three punch of “Voidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Host”, but it bears repeating since it’s my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.

    #9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality – If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, you’ll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, they’ve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so I’m glad our Kenfren wouldn’t shut his excitable yap about this one.

    #8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos – “Alright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. We’d like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. It’s time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. That’s right, it’s couples’ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each other’s empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voice’s death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!”

    #7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, I’ve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermon’s third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.

    #6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss – I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. It’s not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfit’s latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. I’ve told him to his cetacean face that he’s wrong and I’m likely to do so again because this is Full of Hell’s best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.

    #5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God – For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldn’t get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering it’s much larger on the inside.5

    #4. Thou // Umbilical – I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, “Like their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesn’t matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thou’s banner. Bryan Funck’s acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thou’s ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer for…hell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound they’ve forged isn’t the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. It’s certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.” If that doesn’t sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.

    #3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – I didn’t listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdict’s previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesn’t mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics they’ve come to be known for. It’s just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in “Solus.”

    #2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence – When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this list’s pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I don’t understand how this album didn’t gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, “…the material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the album’s taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.”

    #1. Inter Arma // New HeavenInter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album they’ve released going back to 2013’s Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, “They’re the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heaven’s shockingly concise 42 minutes…If being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, you’ve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.” What a record.

    Honorable Mentions:

    • Convulsing // Perdurance – I like this quote from Dear Hollow‘s review, so I’ll let him do the talking: “…Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion.”
    • Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire – Pound for pound, Spectral Wound are probably the most consistent no-frills black metal band currently in operation. Songs of Blood and Mire is another rager that’s as melodic as it is acidic.
    • Lord Buffalo // Holus Bolus – This record was one redundant instrumental away from landing higher on this list. Looking forward to where these gothic country rockers go next.

    Songs o’ the Year:

    In alphabetical order by band:

    #2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor

  14. Carcharodon and Cherd’s Top Ten(ish) of 2024

    By Carcharodon

    Carcharodon

    I’ve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, I’ve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, I’ve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.

    Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosity‘s life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.

    Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0—more of which below—which was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.

    Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. It’s been tolerable to welcome a few new staffers—some even raised up from the awful Place Below—to our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.

    And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.

    #ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera – A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Light’s style.

    #10. Seth // La France des Maudits – Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, they’re back and this year’s La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesn’t hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, it’s “downright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.”

    #9. The Vision Bleak // Weird TalesThe Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever ‘got’ me. Or perhaps, I’ve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps that’s because it’s not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird TalesType O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVB’s discography with newly-opened eyes.

    #8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal – The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretch’s black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.

    #7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition – Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion – After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning “The Damascene Conversions” sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.

    #6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and MireSpectral Wound just can’t miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. It’s hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesn’t take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.

    #5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence – I’m a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. It’s that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.

    #4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – Me and death metal don’t always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spoke‘s tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdict’s dissonant death well enough, it’s the sudden mood swings into what TS described as “lethally graceful restraint” that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.

    #3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of BloodMaddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. He’s a charlatan of the highest order. However, even I’m surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, I’m continually stunned by the reactions Julie—Can I call you Julie? No? Ok—extracts from me. I’m often on the edge of tears by the end of “The Lighthouse,” just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of “Not Enough” and “End of the World” (the latter with CoL’s Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.

    #2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire – Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sun’s stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sun’s latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2

    #1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe – Y’all know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so it’s no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. There’s not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieber’s sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved Menschenmühle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (“Panzerhenker” and “Ausblutingsschlacht”), anthemic (“Der Maulwurf” and “Menschenmühle”) and more. Crafted—and yes, that is the correct word—with huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you don’t speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to “Gott mit der Kavallerie”!

    Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:

    • 40 Watt Sun // Little WeightLittle Weight actually carries a lot of emotional weight. Melancholic, beautiful post-doom and shoegaze, rife with a rough honesty.
    • Anciients // Beyond the Reach of the Sun – Long-form (arguably too-long-form in some respects) progressive death, which is wonderfully ambitious and overblown in its scale and delivery.
    • Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Fantastic trad doom, channeling heavy doses of Candlemass. Early in the year, I thought this was top-5 material but it’s uneven, with the back half much stronger than the front, and I’ve cooled on it a touch.
    • Nyktophobia // To the Stars – Just great, stomping melodeath. As I said in my review, it’s not massively original but it’s tight and well written, and easy to just kick back to. Sometimes, I don’t need more.
    • Silhouette // Les Dires de l’​Â​me – This fantastic post-black album had a place on the list proper until Pillar of Light bulldozed its way in there very late in the day. Haunting, harrowing and beautiful, Silhouette’s debut is Great!
    • Sumac // The Healer – Nothing about The Healer makes it an easy listen but Sumac’s fifth record is curiously beautiful for all its wandering, free-form abrasiveness.
    • Vorga // Beyond the Palest Star – While it’s hard to disagree with Kenstrosity‘s criticism of the production on Beyond the Palest Star, what can I say? I still love it. It’s chunky, well written, well paced and powerful.

    Surprises o’ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:

    • Opeth // The Last Will and Testament – It’s been a long time since I was last genuinely interested in an Opeth album (2005’s Ghost Reveries, in case you were wondering). But, wouldn’t you just know it, Mikael Åkerfeldt and co are back (roars and all). I’m not ready to commit to a score for The Last Will (though I think El Cuervo‘s was possibly a smidge high) as I’ve not been able to spend enough time with it. But the fact I want to spend more time with it is, after 19 years of having no interest in Opeth’s output, a surprise. And a welcome one.
    • Grand Magus // Sunraven – Another Swedish favourite of old, which I’d all but given up on, Grand Magus roared back this year with Sunraven. As an equally surprised Steel Druhm said in his review, this was the album he “feverishly hoped to get from Grand Magus … a grand return to prime form with the fire firmly back in the Balrog … the best Magus outing since 2012’s The Hunt”.

    Disappointment o’ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:

    • Zeal & Ardor // GREIF – I’m not angry, or even very surprised, just disappointed.3 While I accept that this is the album of a band in transition, there’s no getting away from the fact that it was a hugely disappointing album from a band that has abandoned the sound that made it what it was. And for what? They have not transitioned to something new and exciting, but with kinks to be worked out. Rather, on this record, Zeal & Ardor became something so pedestrian that any number of post-rock bands could’ve written it and, probably, done a better job. I may have overrated it.

    Songs o’ the Year

    1. Julie Christmas – “The Lighthouse”
    2. Kanonenfieber – “Der Maulwurf”
    3. Selbst – “The Stench of a Dead Spirit”
    4. Panzerfaust – “The Damascene Conversions”
    5. Kanonenfieber – “Gott mit der Kavallerie”
    6. Devenial Verdict – “Garden of Eyes”
    7. Spectral Wound – “Aristocratic Suicidal Black Metal”
    8. Silhouette – “Les Dires de l’​Â​me”
    9. Blue Heron – “Everything Fades”
    10. Zeal & Ardor – “Hide in Shade”
    11. Glare of the Sun – “Rain”

    Cherd

    Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, I’ll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.

    On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my “need to see live” list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didn’t listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when I’d log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kid’s age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (I’ll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4

    (ish) Chat Pile // Cool World – This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a “mature” record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why it’s here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY God’s Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two best–if not most memorable–songs the band have written to date in “New World” and “Masc.” I’m a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.

    #10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse – I’ve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tomb’s sophomore record, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still view this as one of the best things I’ve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. I’ve made a big deal about the one-three punch of “Voidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Host”, but it bears repeating since it’s my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.

    #9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality – If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, you’ll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, they’ve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so I’m glad our Kenfren wouldn’t shut his excitable yap about this one.

    #8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos – “Alright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. We’d like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. It’s time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. That’s right, it’s couples’ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each other’s empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voice’s death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!”

    #7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, I’ve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermon’s third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.

    #6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss – I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. It’s not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfit’s latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. I’ve told him to his cetacean face that he’s wrong and I’m likely to do so again because this is Full of Hell’s best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.

    #5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God – For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldn’t get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering it’s much larger on the inside.5

    #4. Thou // Umbilical – I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, “Like their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesn’t matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thou’s banner. Bryan Funck’s acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thou’s ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer for…hell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound they’ve forged isn’t the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. It’s certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.” If that doesn’t sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.

    #3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – I didn’t listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdict’s previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesn’t mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics they’ve come to be known for. It’s just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in “Solus.”

    #2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence – When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this list’s pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I don’t understand how this album didn’t gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, “…the material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the album’s taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.”

    #1. Inter Arma // New HeavenInter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album they’ve released going back to 2013’s Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, “They’re the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heaven’s shockingly concise 42 minutes…If being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, you’ve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.” What a record.

    Honorable Mentions:

    • Convulsing // Perdurance – I like this quote from Dear Hollow‘s review, so I’ll let him do the talking: “…Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion.”
    • Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire – Pound for pound, Spectral Wound are probably the most consistent no-frills black metal band currently in operation. Songs of Blood and Mire is another rager that’s as melodic as it is acidic.
    • Lord Buffalo // Holus Bolus – This record was one redundant instrumental away from landing higher on this list. Looking forward to where these gothic country rockers go next.

    Songs o’ the Year:

    In alphabetical order by band:

    #2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor

  15. Carcharodon and Cherd’s Top Ten(ish) of 2024

    By Carcharodon

    Carcharodon

    I’ve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, I’ve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, I’ve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.

    Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosity‘s life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.

    Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0—more of which below—which was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.

    Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. It’s been tolerable to welcome a few new staffers—some even raised up from the awful Place Below—to our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.

    And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.

    #ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera – A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Light’s style.

    #10. Seth // La France des Maudits – Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, they’re back and this year’s La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesn’t hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, it’s “downright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.”

    #9. The Vision Bleak // Weird TalesThe Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever ‘got’ me. Or perhaps, I’ve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps that’s because it’s not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird TalesType O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVB’s discography with newly-opened eyes.

    #8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal – The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretch’s black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.

    #7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition – Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion – After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning “The Damascene Conversions” sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.

    #6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and MireSpectral Wound just can’t miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. It’s hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesn’t take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.

    #5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence – I’m a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. It’s that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.

    #4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – Me and death metal don’t always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spoke‘s tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdict’s dissonant death well enough, it’s the sudden mood swings into what TS described as “lethally graceful restraint” that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.

    #3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of BloodMaddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. He’s a charlatan of the highest order. However, even I’m surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, I’m continually stunned by the reactions Julie—Can I call you Julie? No? Ok—extracts from me. I’m often on the edge of tears by the end of “The Lighthouse,” just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of “Not Enough” and “End of the World” (the latter with CoL’s Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.

    #2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire – Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sun’s stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sun’s latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2

    #1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe – Y’all know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so it’s no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. There’s not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieber’s sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved Menschenmühle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (“Panzerhenker” and “Ausblutingsschlacht”), anthemic (“Der Maulwurf” and “Menschenmühle”) and more. Crafted—and yes, that is the correct word—with huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you don’t speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to “Gott mit der Kavallerie”!

    Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:

    • 40 Watt Sun // Little WeightLittle Weight actually carries a lot of emotional weight. Melancholic, beautiful post-doom and shoegaze, rife with a rough honesty.
    • Anciients // Beyond the Reach of the Sun – Long-form (arguably too-long-form in some respects) progressive death, which is wonderfully ambitious and overblown in its scale and delivery.
    • Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Fantastic trad doom, channeling heavy doses of Candlemass. Early in the year, I thought this was top-5 material but it’s uneven, with the back half much stronger than the front, and I’ve cooled on it a touch.
    • Nyktophobia // To the Stars – Just great, stomping melodeath. As I said in my review, it’s not massively original but it’s tight and well written, and easy to just kick back to. Sometimes, I don’t need more.
    • Silhouette // Les Dires de l’​Â​me – This fantastic post-black album had a place on the list proper until Pillar of Light bulldozed its way in there very late in the day. Haunting, harrowing and beautiful, Silhouette’s debut is Great!
    • Sumac // The Healer – Nothing about The Healer makes it an easy listen but Sumac’s fifth record is curiously beautiful for all its wandering, free-form abrasiveness.
    • Vorga // Beyond the Palest Star – While it’s hard to disagree with Kenstrosity‘s criticism of the production on Beyond the Palest Star, what can I say? I still love it. It’s chunky, well written, well paced and powerful.

    Surprises o’ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:

    • Opeth // The Last Will and Testament – It’s been a long time since I was last genuinely interested in an Opeth album (2005’s Ghost Reveries, in case you were wondering). But, wouldn’t you just know it, Mikael Åkerfeldt and co are back (roars and all). I’m not ready to commit to a score for The Last Will (though I think El Cuervo‘s was possibly a smidge high) as I’ve not been able to spend enough time with it. But the fact I want to spend more time with it is, after 19 years of having no interest in Opeth’s output, a surprise. And a welcome one.
    • Grand Magus // Sunraven – Another Swedish favourite of old, which I’d all but given up on, Grand Magus roared back this year with Sunraven. As an equally surprised Steel Druhm said in his review, this was the album he “feverishly hoped to get from Grand Magus … a grand return to prime form with the fire firmly back in the Balrog … the best Magus outing since 2012’s The Hunt”.

    Disappointment o’ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:

    • Zeal & Ardor // GREIF – I’m not angry, or even very surprised, just disappointed.3 While I accept that this is the album of a band in transition, there’s no getting away from the fact that it was a hugely disappointing album from a band that has abandoned the sound that made it what it was. And for what? They have not transitioned to something new and exciting, but with kinks to be worked out. Rather, on this record, Zeal & Ardor became something so pedestrian that any number of post-rock bands could’ve written it and, probably, done a better job. I may have overrated it.

    Songs o’ the Year

    1. Julie Christmas – “The Lighthouse”
    2. Kanonenfieber – “Der Maulwurf”
    3. Selbst – “The Stench of a Dead Spirit”
    4. Panzerfaust – “The Damascene Conversions”
    5. Kanonenfieber – “Gott mit der Kavallerie”
    6. Devenial Verdict – “Garden of Eyes”
    7. Spectral Wound – “Aristocratic Suicidal Black Metal”
    8. Silhouette – “Les Dires de l’​Â​me”
    9. Blue Heron – “Everything Fades”
    10. Zeal & Ardor – “Hide in Shade”
    11. Glare of the Sun – “Rain”

    Cherd

    Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, I’ll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.

    On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my “need to see live” list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didn’t listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when I’d log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kid’s age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (I’ll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4

    (ish) Chat Pile // Cool World – This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a “mature” record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why it’s here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY God’s Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two best–if not most memorable–songs the band have written to date in “New World” and “Masc.” I’m a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.

    #10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse – I’ve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tomb’s sophomore record, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still view this as one of the best things I’ve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. I’ve made a big deal about the one-three punch of “Voidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Host”, but it bears repeating since it’s my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.

    #9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality – If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, you’ll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, they’ve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so I’m glad our Kenfren wouldn’t shut his excitable yap about this one.

    #8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos – “Alright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. We’d like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. It’s time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. That’s right, it’s couples’ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each other’s empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voice’s death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!”

    #7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose – Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, I’ve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermon’s third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.

    #6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss – I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. It’s not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfit’s latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. I’ve told him to his cetacean face that he’s wrong and I’m likely to do so again because this is Full of Hell’s best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.

    #5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God – For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldn’t get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering it’s much larger on the inside.5

    #4. Thou // Umbilical – I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, “Like their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesn’t matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thou’s banner. Bryan Funck’s acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thou’s ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer for…hell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound they’ve forged isn’t the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. It’s certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.” If that doesn’t sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.

    #3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair – I didn’t listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdict’s previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesn’t mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics they’ve come to be known for. It’s just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in “Solus.”

    #2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence – When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this list’s pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I don’t understand how this album didn’t gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, “…the material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the album’s taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.”

    #1. Inter Arma // New HeavenInter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album they’ve released going back to 2013’s Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, “They’re the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heaven’s shockingly concise 42 minutes…If being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, you’ve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.” What a record.

    Honorable Mentions:

    • Convulsing // Perdurance – I like this quote from Dear Hollow‘s review, so I’ll let him do the talking: “…Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion.”
    • Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire – Pound for pound, Spectral Wound are probably the most consistent no-frills black metal band currently in operation. Songs of Blood and Mire is another rager that’s as melodic as it is acidic.
    • Lord Buffalo // Holus Bolus – This record was one redundant instrumental away from landing higher on this list. Looking forward to where these gothic country rockers go next.

    Songs o’ the Year:

    In alphabetical order by band:

    Show 5 footnotes

    1. Apparently it was only 2021 but my goodness that feels a lifetime ago.
    2. Regrettably, I suspect this may be the perfect way to start a discussion. Sigh.
    3. Can you tell I’m a parent?
    4. How could anyone disagree? – AMG
    5. Like a TARDIS.

    #2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor

  16. He’s anti-democracy and pro-Trump

    -- The obscure ‘dark enlightenment’ blogger influencing the next US administration

    -- #Curtis #Yarvin is hardly a household name in US politics.

    But the “neoreactionary” thinker and far-right blogger is emerging as a serious intellectual influence on key figures in Donald Trump’s coming administration
    -- in particular over potential threats to US democracy.

    Yarvin, who considers liberal democracy as a decadent enemy to be dismantled,
    is intellectually influential on vice president-elect JD Vance
    and close to several proposed Trump appointees.

    The aftermath of Trump’s election victory has seen actions and rhetoric from Trump and his lieutenants that closely resemble Yarvin’s public proposals for taking autocratic power in America.

    Trump’s legal moves against critics in the media,
    Elon Musk’s promises to pare government spending to the bone,
    and the deployment of the Maga base against Republican lawmakers who have criticized controversial nominees like Pete Hegseth
    are among the measures that resemble elements of Yarvin’s strategy for displacing liberal democracy in the US.

    One of the venues in which Yarvin has articulated the strategy include a podcast hosted by #Michael #Anton, a writer and academic whom Trump last week appointed to work in a senior role under secretary of state nominee Marco Rubio.

    Although Yarvin once described Vance as a “random normie politician I’ve barely even met”
    in a July Substack post, in October the Verge reported that “no one online has shaped Vance’s thinking more”.

    The growing parallels between the incoming administration’s actions
    – especially Vance’s views
    – and Yarvin’s suggestions raise questions about his influence.

    Robert Evans, an extremism researcher and the host of the podcast "Behind the Bastards", recorded a two-part series on Yarvin.

    “He didn’t fall out of a coconut tree. He emerged into a rightwing media space where they had been talking about the evils of liberal media and corrupt academic institutions for decades,” he said.

    “He has influenced a lot of people in the incoming administration and a lot of other influential people on the right.
    But a lot of the stuff he advocates is the same windmills Republicans have been tilting at for a while,” Evans continued.

    “What’s unique is his way of rebranding or repackaging old reactionary ideas in a way that appealed to libertarian-minded kids in the tech industry,
    and in eventually getting some of them to embrace a lot of far-right ideas,” he said.

    “That’s the novelty of Yarvin and that’s his real accomplishment.”

    -- Jason Wilson

    theguardian.com/us-news/2024/d

  17. Snow on the Way

    It’s going to snow tonight. Crap. I was going to see if Jen and Harry wanted to go for a drive to look at xmas lights, but now I just want to pull a blanket over my head and hide until the weather clears. I mean, winter officially starts at like 4:00am tomorrow morning. It’s bound to snow eventually. That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

    I did a couple of goofy things with this little bloggie today. This post will serve as a bit of a test for one of them. I added a couple of new share buttons. Bluesky and Threads (and Mastodon? Did I add that one too?) are new, and Tumblr was re-added after being removed at least once. I removed twitter/x as well because fuck that musk prick. Fuck him right in his fucking eye. I tested the Bluesky and Threads buttons and they work. I also set new posts to automatically post to Bluesky. When I publish this literary tome I will see if it worked.

    Another change, which is internal and should only be viewable by me, is that I think I hooked up to Google Analytics. I’ve had that option for ages now but I never did it. I am at heart a stats geek, so why didn’t I? It seems like I am too late as my engagement stats (the ones built into wordpress.com) are down something like 70% since they peaked back in February. Allow me to make the same caveat I make every time I mention this page’s stats… I really don’t care about the stats, I am just a numbers nerd and like to mess around with them. Also, and definitely most importantly, being down 70% from a very small, some might say microscopic, number is just another small, microscopic, number, dig it? This is not one of those blogs that sees a gajillion hits an hour. I consider myself lucky when I average one hit an hour and in my experience that would be a lot. In other words, I am in no way interested in drumming up business with insipid brain droppings, dig? Like I said twice before in this post, I just like playing with numbers. I have a Computer Science degree for cripes sake. Numbers are fun. Whatever, I am curious if linking up to Google Analytics a) worked, and b) will show me anything fun. I’ll probably write 100000 posts about it over the next few days (assuming it worked, of course).

    All of these changes are internal but they might be a hint that a bloggie shake up is coming, and you know what that means… that means I am probably going to start messing with the theme and the layout. Sometimes Robert just cannot stop himself, you know?

    What the hell was I talking about? I can’t remember. Oh yeah, it’s going to snow tonight. Doesn’t that suck? I think that sucks.

    Oh well. I am going to click Publish now. Here’s hoping we cross post over to the ol’ Bluesky Social. Wish the bloggie luck……….

    #autoSharing #blogStats #blogging #bluesky #crossPosting #googleAnalytics #mastodon #pageViewStats #shareButtons #Snow #socialMedia #socialMedia #threads #viewStats #Weather #winter #Writing

  18. Snow on the Way

    It’s going to snow tonight. Crap. I was going to see if Jen and Harry wanted to go for a drive to look at xmas lights, but now I just want to pull a blanket over my head and hide until the weather clears. I mean, winter officially starts at like 4:00am tomorrow morning. It’s bound to snow eventually. That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

    I did a couple of goofy things with this little bloggie today. This post will serve as a bit of a test for one of them. I added a couple of new share buttons. Bluesky and Threads (and Mastodon? Did I add that one too?) are new, and Tumblr was re-added after being removed at least once. I removed twitter/x as well because fuck that musk prick. Fuck him right in his fucking eye. I tested the Bluesky and Threads buttons and they work. I also set new posts to automatically post to Bluesky. When I publish this literary tome I will see if it worked.

    Another change, which is internal and should only be viewable by me, is that I think I hooked up to Google Analytics. I’ve had that option for ages now but I never did it. I am at heart a stats geek, so why didn’t I? It seems like I am too late as my engagement stats (the ones built into wordpress.com) are down something like 70% since they peaked back in February. Allow me to make the same caveat I make every time I mention this page’s stats… I really don’t care about the stats, I am just a numbers nerd and like to mess around with them. Also, and definitely most importantly, being down 70% from a very small, some might say microscopic, number is just another small, microscopic, number, dig it? This is not one of those blogs that sees a gajillion hits an hour. I consider myself lucky when I average one hit an hour and in my experience that would be a lot. In other words, I am in no way interested in drumming up business with insipid brain droppings, dig? Like I said twice before in this post, I just like playing with numbers. I have a Computer Science degree for cripes sake. Numbers are fun. Whatever, I am curious if linking up to Google Analytics a) worked, and b) will show me anything fun. I’ll probably write 100000 posts about it over the next few days (assuming it worked, of course).

    All of these changes are internal but they might be a hint that a bloggie shake up is coming, and you know what that means… that means I am probably going to start messing with the theme and the layout. Sometimes Robert just cannot stop himself, you know?

    What the hell was I talking about? I can’t remember. Oh yeah, it’s going to snow tonight. Doesn’t that suck? I think that sucks.

    Oh well. I am going to click Publish now. Here’s hoping we cross post over to the ol’ Bluesky Social. Wish the bloggie luck……….

    #autoSharing #blogStats #blogging #bluesky #crossPosting #googleAnalytics #mastodon #pageViewStats #shareButtons #Snow #socialMedia #socialMedia #threads #viewStats #Weather #winter #Writing

  19. Snow on the Way

    It’s going to snow tonight. Crap. I was going to see if Jen and Harry wanted to go for a drive to look at xmas lights, but now I just want to pull a blanket over my head and hide until the weather clears. I mean, winter officially starts at like 4:00am tomorrow morning. It’s bound to snow eventually. That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

    I did a couple of goofy things with this little bloggie today. This post will serve as a bit of a test for one of them. I added a couple of new share buttons. Bluesky and Threads (and Mastodon? Did I add that one too?) are new, and Tumblr was re-added after being removed at least once. I removed twitter/x as well because fuck that musk prick. Fuck him right in his fucking eye. I tested the Bluesky and Threads buttons and they work. I also set new posts to automatically post to Bluesky. When I publish this literary tome I will see if it worked.

    Another change, which is internal and should only be viewable by me, is that I think I hooked up to Google Analytics. I’ve had that option for ages now but I never did it. I am at heart a stats geek, so why didn’t I? It seems like I am too late as my engagement stats (the ones built into wordpress.com) are down something like 70% since they peaked back in February. Allow me to make the same caveat I make every time I mention this page’s stats… I really don’t care about the stats, I am just a numbers nerd and like to mess around with them. Also, and definitely most importantly, being down 70% from a very small, some might say microscopic, number is just another small, microscopic, number, dig it? This is not one of those blogs that sees a gajillion hits an hour. I consider myself lucky when I average one hit an hour and in my experience that would be a lot. In other words, I am in no way interested in drumming up business with insipid brain droppings, dig? Like I said twice before in this post, I just like playing with numbers. I have a Computer Science degree for cripes sake. Numbers are fun. Whatever, I am curious if linking up to Google Analytics a) worked, and b) will show me anything fun. I’ll probably write 100000 posts about it over the next few days (assuming it worked, of course).

    All of these changes are internal but they might be a hint that a bloggie shake up is coming, and you know what that means… that means I am probably going to start messing with the theme and the layout. Sometimes Robert just cannot stop himself, you know?

    What the hell was I talking about? I can’t remember. Oh yeah, it’s going to snow tonight. Doesn’t that suck? I think that sucks.

    Oh well. I am going to click Publish now. Here’s hoping we cross post over to the ol’ Bluesky Social. Wish the bloggie luck……….

    #autoSharing #blogStats #blogging #bluesky #crossPosting #googleAnalytics #mastodon #pageViewStats #shareButtons #Snow #socialMedia #socialMedia #threads #viewStats #Weather #winter #Writing

  20. Snow on the Way

    It’s going to snow tonight. Crap. I was going to see if Jen and Harry wanted to go for a drive to look at xmas lights, but now I just want to pull a blanket over my head and hide until the weather clears. I mean, winter officially starts at like 4:00am tomorrow morning. It’s bound to snow eventually. That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

    I did a couple of goofy things with this little bloggie today. This post will serve as a bit of a test for one of them. I added a couple of new share buttons. Bluesky and Threads (and Mastodon? Did I add that one too?) are new, and Tumblr was re-added after being removed at least once. I removed twitter/x as well because fuck that musk prick. Fuck him right in his fucking eye. I tested the Bluesky and Threads buttons and they work. I also set new posts to automatically post to Bluesky. When I publish this literary tome I will see if it worked.

    Another change, which is internal and should only be viewable by me, is that I think I hooked up to Google Analytics. I’ve had that option for ages now but I never did it. I am at heart a stats geek, so why didn’t I? It seems like I am too late as my engagement stats (the ones built into wordpress.com) are down something like 70% since they peaked back in February. Allow me to make the same caveat I make every time I mention this page’s stats… I really don’t care about the stats, I am just a numbers nerd and like to mess around with them. Also, and definitely most importantly, being down 70% from a very small, some might say microscopic, number is just another small, microscopic, number, dig it? This is not one of those blogs that sees a gajillion hits an hour. I consider myself lucky when I average one hit an hour and in my experience that would be a lot. In other words, I am in no way interested in drumming up business with insipid brain droppings, dig? Like I said twice before in this post, I just like playing with numbers. I have a Computer Science degree for cripes sake. Numbers are fun. Whatever, I am curious if linking up to Google Analytics a) worked, and b) will show me anything fun. I’ll probably write 100000 posts about it over the next few days (assuming it worked, of course).

    All of these changes are internal but they might be a hint that a bloggie shake up is coming, and you know what that means… that means I am probably going to start messing with the theme and the layout. Sometimes Robert just cannot stop himself, you know?

    What the hell was I talking about? I can’t remember. Oh yeah, it’s going to snow tonight. Doesn’t that suck? I think that sucks.

    Oh well. I am going to click Publish now. Here’s hoping we cross post over to the ol’ Bluesky Social. Wish the bloggie luck……….

    #autoSharing #blogStats #blogging #bluesky #crossPosting #googleAnalytics #mastodon #pageViewStats #shareButtons #Snow #socialMedia #socialMedia #threads #viewStats #Weather #winter #Writing

  21. Snow on the Way

    It’s going to snow tonight. Crap. I was going to see if Jen and Harry wanted to go for a drive to look at xmas lights, but now I just want to pull a blanket over my head and hide until the weather clears. I mean, winter officially starts at like 4:00am tomorrow morning. It’s bound to snow eventually. That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

    I did a couple of goofy things with this little bloggie today. This post will serve as a bit of a test for one of them. I added a couple of new share buttons. Bluesky and Threads (and Mastodon? Did I add that one too?) are new, and Tumblr was re-added after being removed at least once. I removed twitter/x as well because fuck that musk prick. Fuck him right in his fucking eye. I tested the Bluesky and Threads buttons and they work. I also set new posts to automatically post to Bluesky. When I publish this literary tome I will see if it worked.

    Another change, which is internal and should only be viewable by me, is that I think I hooked up to Google Analytics. I’ve had that option for ages now but I never did it. I am at heart a stats geek, so why didn’t I? It seems like I am too late as my engagement stats (the ones built into wordpress.com) are down something like 70% since they peaked back in February. Allow me to make the same caveat I make every time I mention this page’s stats… I really don’t care about the stats, I am just a numbers nerd and like to mess around with them. Also, and definitely most importantly, being down 70% from a very small, some might say microscopic, number is just another small, microscopic, number, dig it? This is not one of those blogs that sees a gajillion hits an hour. I consider myself lucky when I average one hit an hour and in my experience that would be a lot. In other words, I am in no way interested in drumming up business with insipid brain droppings, dig? Like I said twice before in this post, I just like playing with numbers. I have a Computer Science degree for cripes sake. Numbers are fun. Whatever, I am curious if linking up to Google Analytics a) worked, and b) will show me anything fun. I’ll probably write 100000 posts about it over the next few days (assuming it worked, of course).

    All of these changes are internal but they might be a hint that a bloggie shake up is coming, and you know what that means… that means I am probably going to start messing with the theme and the layout. Sometimes Robert just cannot stop himself, you know?

    What the hell was I talking about? I can’t remember. Oh yeah, it’s going to snow tonight. Doesn’t that suck? I think that sucks.

    Oh well. I am going to click Publish now. Here’s hoping we cross post over to the ol’ Bluesky Social. Wish the bloggie luck……….

    #autoSharing #blogStats #blogging #bluesky #crossPosting #googleAnalytics #mastodon #pageViewStats #shareButtons #Snow #socialMedia #socialMedia #threads #viewStats #Weather #winter #Writing

  22. Mostly Monday Reads: President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks readies the Enemies List

    “And just like that, America is respecting on the world stage once again.” John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    I’m going down a very dank, dark rabbit hole today because one of the things that concern me the most are the ongoing threats that President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks against people who make him feel bad about himself or correct his story weaving for the sake of reporting reality.  We keep seeing the lists and hearing direct attacks on what he considers “enemies.”  This ranges from politicians of past and present to members of the press.  It is the true sign of a despot, and one of the major things the U.S. Constitution and our form of government were designed to toss in history’s trash heap. The other is the feudal tradition of bending or taking the knee.  That is why public servants take an oath to uphold and protect the Constitution and not to a cult of personality.

    It is evident during this transition period that these feudal and dictatorial aspirations are a serious part of the vetting of Cabinet officers and the oncoming attempt to prosecute and persecute outspoken critics of the tremendous number of unfit, immoral cretins, loyal to an insane and craven political figure.  King George was the Mad King we had to dethrone to gain independence.  What do we do with a Mad Politician chosen by the Electoral College and many voters who live in states with more livestock than people? He’s an obvious threat to democracy, but he managed to Pied Piper, a bunch of rubes.

    An interview this weekend shows how obsessed he is with ensuring his warped reality rules the day and the country.

    Let me share a few headlines that are giving me some severe heartburn. This is from CNN and is reported by Aaron Pellish.  “Trump lays out sweeping early acts on deportation and January 6 pardons, says Cheney and others ‘should go to jail.’”

    President-elect Donald Trump in a television interview that aired Sunday previewed a sweeping agenda for his first days in office, outlining how his administration will prioritize deporting migrants with criminal records, vowing to pursue pardons for January 6 defendants on his first day, and raising the possibility that former Rep. Liz Cheney and other political opponents could face jail time.

    Trump said he would not seek “retribution” against President Joe Biden and against his political enemies, but he repeatedly left room for his appointees to decide whether to go after specific people. He suggested members of Congress who led the investigations into his conduct during the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol should be put in jail and that he’ll look on his first day at issuing pardons to supporters involved in the riot.

    “These people have been there, how long is it? Three or four years? You know, by the way, they’ve been in there for years, and they’re in a filthy, disgusting place that shouldn’t even be allowed to be open,” he said. Nearly 1,200 people either have pleaded guilty or were found guilty at trial for crimes connected to the January 6 attack, according to the Justice Department. More than 645 defendants were ordered to serve some jail time.

    Trump said he would not direct his Justice Department to investigate members of Congress and Biden administration officials who led the investigations into his role in January 6, but continued to suggest his DOJ would be justified in deciding to launch investigations without his input.

    When asked about the possibility of investigating special counsel Jack Smith, who brought the two since-dropped federal cases against him, Trump said he wants his pick for attorney general, Pam Bondi, to “do what she wants to do.”

    “She’s very experienced. I want her to do what she wants to do. I’m not going to instruct her to do it,” he said.

    Trump was more direct when speaking about the members of Congress who led the January 6 committee, telling Welker that the co-chairs of the committee — Republican Cheney, who has since left Congress, and Democrat Bennie Thompson — should “go to jail.”

    “Cheney was behind it. So is Bennie Thompson and everybody on that committee,” he said. “For what they did, honestly, they should go to jail.”

    Trump also suggested that committee members might do well to receive preemptive pardons from Biden to protect themselves from criminal prosecution. CNN reported last week that Biden White House aides, administration officials and prominent defense attorneys in Washington were discussing potential preemptive pardons or legal aid for people who might be targeted by Trump.

    “Biden can give them a pardon if he wants to,” Trump said. “And maybe he should.”

    In a statement later Sunday, Cheney said, “Donald Trump’s suggestion that members of Congress who later investigated his illegal and unconstitutional actions should be jailed is a continuation of his assault on the rule of law and the foundations of our republic.”

    Republican former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who served on the committee, told CNN’s Manu Raju on Sunday he’s “not worried” about the Trump administration investigating him or his fellow committee members.

    The Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause protects lawmakers from certain law enforcement actions targeted at their legislative duties.

    CNN has reached out to Thompson for comment.

    The problem is mostly  with “political enemies.”  However, it does go deeper than that. This is from Phillip Bump’s column today at the Washington Post.”Trump sees the investigators, not the rioters, as the Jan. 6 criminals. It’s not just that he seeks to avoid accountability. It’s that he hopes to invert it.”  So, the criminals arrested by law officers, prosecuted in courts, and found guilty in the process by a duly appointed Judge or Jury are the law breakers here?  How horrifying is that?

    History will tell the story of the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in direct terms. President Donald Trump, increasingly desperate to block Joe Biden’s inauguration to replace him, summoned his supporters to Washington for a “wild” protest. Tens of thousands came, including members of violent, fringe-right groups.

    As legislators convened to formalize Biden’s victory, angry throngs of Trump supporters pushed toward the building, some engaging in violent altercations with law enforcement in an effort to stop Congress from counting electoral votes. Hundreds were injured, including more than 100 police officers.

    Congress tried to hold Trump accountable for his role in the riot twice, first by impeaching him — enough Republican senators sided with Trump to prevent conviction — and then by launching a high-profile investigation of his broad effort to retain power. Meanwhile, the justice system went to work arresting and imprisoning those who had engaged in the riot. Special counsel Jack Smith brought federal charges against Trump.

    Pressed whether he’d direct Bondi or Kash Patel, his pick to lead the FBI, to send them to jail, Trump said, “No, not at all,” before adding, “I think they’ll have to look at that.”

    Asked whether he plans to follow up on his frequent campaign promise to investigate Biden — whom he repeatedly labeled as “corrupt” and a “criminal” on the campaign trail — Trump said he doesn’t want to “go back into the past.”

    “I’m really looking to make our country successful. I’m not looking to go back into the past,” he said, adding, “Retribution will be through success.”

    When asked about previously saying he would direct his Justice Department to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Biden, Trump said he would not do that but left the door open for top DOJ officials to make their own determinations.

    “No, I’m not doing that unless I find something that I think is reasonable,” he said. “But that’s not going to be my decision. That’s going to be Pam Bondi’s decision, and, to a different extent, Kash Patel, assuming they’re both there, and I think they’re both going to get approved.” Trump has tapped Patel to lead the FBI, despite the current director, Trump appointee Christopher Wray, still having several years left in his 10-year term.

    Throughout the interview, Trump at times struck a more temperate tone toward his political opponents and appeared to prioritize uniting the country over exacting vengeance. He said he plans to make unity a central theme of his inauguration address and expressed confidence that his administration will achieve a level of success that will bring the country together.

    But Trump invoked similar calls for unity at various points throughout his campaign — including in the wake of the first assassination attempt against him — before often reverting to bitter, divisive rhetoric and personal attacks. During the NBC interview, Trump again refused to concede that he lost the 2020 presidential election.

    President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks rejects reality for a version that suits his malignant narcissism and purposes. The New Republic’s Greg Sargent interviews Brian Beutler about this on his PodCast.  “Transcript: Trump’s Private Rage at “Traitors” Reveals Dark 2025 Plans. An interview with Brian Beutler, author of the “Off Message” Substack, who explains how Democrats can and must do more to alert the public to the dangers of a second Trump term.”  Dangers, indeed.

    The New York Times reports that Donald Trump is telling advisers that his biggest regret from his first term was that he appointed “traitors.” Not traitors to the country, of course; traitors to him. As a result, his transition team is grilling prospective officials to gauge their loyalty to Trump; that is, loyalty to the person. Is there some way for Democrats to explain how absurd and dangerous all this is in a manner that gets through to the public? We’re talking about this today with Brian Beutler, author of the excellent Substack Off Message, who’s been arguing that Dems need to get more aggressive with their communications about all this right now before Trump takes office. Thanks for coming back on, Brian.

    Brian Beutler: It’s always good to be with you.

    Sargent: The New York Times reports that he’s privately telling advisors that his biggest first-term regret was appointing traitors. Importantly, traitors are those who came to see Trump accurately as a threat to the system: Chief of Staff John Kelly, Defense Secretaries Jim Madison, Mark Esper, and even Attorney General William Barr, who was relentlessly loyal up to the very last minute. That’s his regret, appointing people who describe the threat he poses accurately. Brian, in some sense, this isn’t a surprise, but it’s rarely reported quite this clearly. Your thoughts?

    Beutler: It’s inauspicious. And it probably portends some conflict between him and the Senate insofar as the people that he’s vetting are going to be appointed to positions that require Senate confirmation. That’s because, as I understand, the loyalty test as reported in the article is not just, Do you support Donald Trump? Do you support the MAGA movement? Do you support its policy goals?—it’s really, Do you believe Donald Trump won or lost the 2020 election? If they acknowledge the truth that he lost, they’re out, they’re not going to get the nomination.

    And similarly, with questions like, Do you think January 6 was good or bad? Do you think it was something that Donald Trump is responsible for? Are these patriots or are they insurrectionists?, if you answer that the wrong way, you’re not getting the job. And insofar as anyone who answers the way Trump wants them to answer has to go before the Senate. Well, it’s going to raise questions for both Democrats and Republicans in different ways.

    Democrats are going to have to decide whether those are red lines for them that they won’t cross. If Trump finds somebody who’s qualified as in their resume is good, that they’re credentialed to do the job he’s appointed them to, but they’re also supportive of the Big Lie or they think that the insurrection was OK, will Democrats look past that to say, Well, at least you’ll know how to do the job that you’re being appointed to do? I would like Democrats to say there will be zero Democratic votes for any nominees who take that loyalty test. And if they do that, then it will fall to Republicans.

    Are 50 out of 53 Republican senators willing to take that vote? An ancillary benefit of Democrats drawing a hard line here is that’ll be really tough for them because there are still at least a handful of Senate Republicans who don’t support the Big Lie, who won’t repeat it, and who think the people who peddle it are real threats to democracy. Then we’ll find out whether they just decided, You know what, Trump won, so it’s revisionist history all the way down now.

    Sargent: His use of the term traitors in his conversations with his advisors, which shows that he’s still seething with anger about those who refuse to go along with his rewritten history: This is one of the keys to understanding what he really intends with current picks like Pete Hegseth as defense secretary, Kash Patel as FBI director, and Pam Bondi as attorney general. It won’t be that hard for all Democrats to oppose Pete Hegseth and Kash Patel, but I’m not sure all Democrats will oppose Pam Bondi.

    We do have precedent for politicizing the FBI.  I remember all of this very well, as well as the entire setup with AG John Mitchell. I had thought laws were put into place to prevent this from happening again. I also was aware that many Republicans at the time thought those laws went too far. Aaron Rupar and Thor Bensure, writing for Public Notice, share this headline. “The J. Edgar Hoover precedent for weaponizing the FBI. “Yes, we could have a repeat of that,” Frank Figliuzzi tells us.”

    After serving in the FBI for more than two decades, in 2011 Frank Figliuzzi became the assistant director of the FBI’s counterintelligence division, where he worked alongside FBI Director Robert Mueller. Suffice it to say he saw a lot in his career.

    So it should be taken seriously that Figliuzzi, now an MSNBC senior national security and intelligence analyst, describes Trump’s picks to run what are sometimes referred to as the power ministries — among them the DOJ (including the FBI) and the defense department — as a “hijacking of the entire national security structure.”

    “My chief concern is this single characteristic that seems to run through these nominees — blind allegiance to Donald Trump,” Figliuzzi told us.

    We recently connected with Figliuzzi to get his insight on Trump’s picks and what they signal about how the federal government will operate over the next four years. He warned that “we could be heading toward tremendous abuses of power, with the FBI going after Trump’s political enemies.” And he noted that a previous FBI director provided the president-elect and his choice to run the bureau, Kash Patel, with a blueprint.

    Benson interviewed Figluzzi.  It went like this.

    Thor Benson

    As someone who’s focused on national security and has a background there, what are your top concerns with Trump’s choices for national security roles?

    Frank Figliuzzi

    Sadly, we’ll have to rank order them.

    It’s not just that many of Trump’s nominees are remarkably unqualified for the jobs, and they are — from the DNI pick with Tulsi Gabbard to the DHS with Kristi Noem to Hegseth at DOD and now Kash Patel. But the lack of competence is not my chief concern anymore.

    My chief concern is this single characteristic that seems to run through these nominees — blind allegiance to Donald Trump. Yes, there are national security issues with someone like Gabbard or Hegseth — I say national security with Hegseth, particularly, because similar to the concerns about Matt Gaetz, we don’t know what we don’t know. Is there more coming with Hegseth? Is it extortion and blackmail?

    He’s already written a check to a woman in California. What else do we not know about? According to the latest reporting, he appears to have an alcohol problem. He’s had to physically be carried out of events he attended because he was drunk. That’s not good with someone who’s running things at the Pentagon. Are there more women and incidents out there? According to the New Yorker, he also yells “kill all the Muslims” when he gets drunk.

    Out of all of the nominees, Kash Patel lacks the capacity to have his own independent thoughts and ideology. His record is replete with nothing but kissing Trump’s ass. That’s it. You don’t have to take my word for it. Look at his public statements about persecuting the “deep state,” prosecutors, the media, for christ’s sake. Combine that with Pam Bondi’s almost identical comments, and we’ve now got a Trump hijacking of the entire national security structure.

    Thor Benson

    So where does that take us?

    Frank Figliuzzi

    Well, we could be heading toward tremendous abuses of power, with the FBI going after Trump’s political enemies.

    So, my hair is on fire again, although it never really goes out, to be honest. There are warning signs all over the place, and only a small segment of the American populace appears to be aware of all of this.  You can read Figliuzzi’s discussion of Nixon’s tricks at the link.  The other headline grabber today is how a set of unelected and affirmed idiot billionaires will be going after our Social Security.  This is from Truth Out. “DOGE Heads Musk and Ramaswamy Signal Social Security Cuts Are Coming. Trump vowed to “not cut one penny” from Social Security, but his other statements and actions suggest that he plans to.” Chris Walker has the lede and the story.

    On Sunday, president-elect Donald Trump sought to assuage concerns that he will make cuts to Social Security and other safety net programs after Republicans signaled last week that Social Security could be targeted by Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) initiative, managed by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy.

    Asked by host Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program whether the DOGE initiative would include cuts to Social Security, Trump said “no,” other than perhaps cuts related to allegations of “abuse” or “fraud” associated with the program.

    Notably, such fraud happens at extremely low rates — by one estimate, fraud equals around just $0.40 out of every $100 in benefits Social Security doles out yearly.

    “We’re not touching Social Security, other than — we might make it more efficient,” Trump said about the national insurance program that helps retirees, disabled people, widowers and children of deceased parents. “But the people are going to get what they get.”

    “We’re not raising ages or any of that stuff,” he added.

    Trump’s comments echo talking points from his “Agenda 47” platform during his presidential campaign, which stated that he would “not cut one penny from Medicare or Social Security.” However, he and his allies have repeatedly suggested that cuts to both programs are possible.

    Musk and Ramaswamy have made it evident that cuts to Social Security will be considered. After the two met with Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill last week about the DOGE initiative, House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Scalise (R-Louisiana) said they had expressed sentiments that contradicted Trump’s comments on Sunday.

    “Nothing is sacrosanct. Nothing. They’re going to put everything on the table,” Scalise told reporters after the meeting, with Fox Business elaborating that cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid would be discussed.

    In September, when the idea of DOGE was first being discussed, vice president-elect J.D. Vance also indicated that there could be cuts to Social Security. A DOGE-type commission is “going to look much different in, say, the Department of Defense versus Social Security,” Vance said during a podcast interview, insinuating that cuts were going to be considered for the latter agency.

    In March, Trump himself said that cuts to the program were a possibility.

    “There is a lot you can do in terms of entitlements — in terms of cutting — and in terms of also the theft and the bad management of entitlements,” Trump said in a statement starkly different from his comments over the past weekend.

    Perhaps most importantly, Trump attempted to make drastic cuts to Social Security and other programs in his first term as president. In one of his later proposed budgets (which didn’t go on to pass in the then-Democratic-controlled Congress), the president-elect sought to cut Social Security by $25 billion — despite promising in the 2016 presidential campaign that he wouldn’t make any cuts to the agency, just as he promised this last election cycle.

    Nothing is Sacred in Trumplandia except Trump and his money.   You can read more about the proposed cuts at these links.

    And, in the latest from Corruption and Kleptocracy Central, we have this headline inPolitico. “Lara Trump leaves RNC amid Senate chatter. In announcing her resignation the president-elect’s daughter-in-law said “the job I came to do is now complete.” I wonder if she can Senator better than she can sing?

    Lara Trump is stepping down as co-chair of the Republican National Committee, a role she has held since March, as some of Donald Trump’s allies continue to push for her to replace Florida Sen. Marco Rubio on Capitol Hill.

    In announcing her resignation on X, Lara Trump, who is the president-elect’s daughter-in-law, said “the job I came to do is now complete,” touting the RNC’s fundraising records, election integrity efforts and voter turnout.

    She’s expressed openness to replacing Rubio, the president-elect’s pick to be secretary of State, in the Senate, telling The Associated Press it’s a role she “would seriously consider.”

    “If I’m being completely transparent, I don’t know exactly what that would look like,” she told the AP in an article published Sunday. “And I certainly want to get all of the information possible if that is something that’s real for me. But yeah, I would 100% consider it.”

    Among those supporting her as a potential Rubio replacement is billionaire Elon Musk, a close ally of the incoming president, and his mother, Maye Musk.

    When did all these tacky people get a say in stuff like this?  The Trump Boys will be in charge of the Merch and Grift Wing of the White House while the Kushners milk what they can from the State Department and foreign nations. We are definitely headed to a Nepocracy.  Just watch out for that Douche Commission headed by First Lady Elonia and DIE hire Vivek.

    What’s on your reading and blogging list?

    #Repeat1968JohnBuss #Doge #kakistocracy #kleptocracy #LaraTrump #Musk #Nepocracy #Nepocrats #SocialSecurity #TrumpSTraitorList #Vivek

  23. Mostly Monday Reads: President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks readies the Enemies List

    “And just like that, America is respecting on the world stage once again.” John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    I’m going down a very dank, dark rabbit hole today because one of the things that concern me the most are the ongoing threats that President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks against people who make him feel bad about himself or correct his story weaving for the sake of reporting reality.  We keep seeing the lists and hearing direct attacks on what he considers “enemies.”  This ranges from politicians of past and present to members of the press.  It is the true sign of a despot, and one of the major things the U.S. Constitution and our form of government were designed to toss in history’s trash heap. The other is the feudal tradition of bending or taking the knee.  That is why public servants take an oath to uphold and protect the Constitution and not to a cult of personality.

    It is evident during this transition period that these feudal and dictatorial aspirations are a serious part of the vetting of Cabinet officers and the oncoming attempt to prosecute and persecute outspoken critics of the tremendous number of unfit, immoral cretins, loyal to an insane and craven political figure.  King George was the Mad King we had to dethrone to gain independence.  What do we do with a Mad Politician chosen by the Electoral College and many voters who live in states with more livestock than people? He’s an obvious threat to democracy, but he managed to Pied Piper, a bunch of rubes.

    An interview this weekend shows how obsessed he is with ensuring his warped reality rules the day and the country.

    Let me share a few headlines that are giving me some severe heartburn. This is from CNN and is reported by Aaron Pellish.  “Trump lays out sweeping early acts on deportation and January 6 pardons, says Cheney and others ‘should go to jail.’”

    President-elect Donald Trump in a television interview that aired Sunday previewed a sweeping agenda for his first days in office, outlining how his administration will prioritize deporting migrants with criminal records, vowing to pursue pardons for January 6 defendants on his first day, and raising the possibility that former Rep. Liz Cheney and other political opponents could face jail time.

    Trump said he would not seek “retribution” against President Joe Biden and against his political enemies, but he repeatedly left room for his appointees to decide whether to go after specific people. He suggested members of Congress who led the investigations into his conduct during the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol should be put in jail and that he’ll look on his first day at issuing pardons to supporters involved in the riot.

    “These people have been there, how long is it? Three or four years? You know, by the way, they’ve been in there for years, and they’re in a filthy, disgusting place that shouldn’t even be allowed to be open,” he said. Nearly 1,200 people either have pleaded guilty or were found guilty at trial for crimes connected to the January 6 attack, according to the Justice Department. More than 645 defendants were ordered to serve some jail time.

    Trump said he would not direct his Justice Department to investigate members of Congress and Biden administration officials who led the investigations into his role in January 6, but continued to suggest his DOJ would be justified in deciding to launch investigations without his input.

    When asked about the possibility of investigating special counsel Jack Smith, who brought the two since-dropped federal cases against him, Trump said he wants his pick for attorney general, Pam Bondi, to “do what she wants to do.”

    “She’s very experienced. I want her to do what she wants to do. I’m not going to instruct her to do it,” he said.

    Trump was more direct when speaking about the members of Congress who led the January 6 committee, telling Welker that the co-chairs of the committee — Republican Cheney, who has since left Congress, and Democrat Bennie Thompson — should “go to jail.”

    “Cheney was behind it. So is Bennie Thompson and everybody on that committee,” he said. “For what they did, honestly, they should go to jail.”

    Trump also suggested that committee members might do well to receive preemptive pardons from Biden to protect themselves from criminal prosecution. CNN reported last week that Biden White House aides, administration officials and prominent defense attorneys in Washington were discussing potential preemptive pardons or legal aid for people who might be targeted by Trump.

    “Biden can give them a pardon if he wants to,” Trump said. “And maybe he should.”

    In a statement later Sunday, Cheney said, “Donald Trump’s suggestion that members of Congress who later investigated his illegal and unconstitutional actions should be jailed is a continuation of his assault on the rule of law and the foundations of our republic.”

    Republican former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who served on the committee, told CNN’s Manu Raju on Sunday he’s “not worried” about the Trump administration investigating him or his fellow committee members.

    The Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause protects lawmakers from certain law enforcement actions targeted at their legislative duties.

    CNN has reached out to Thompson for comment.

    The problem is mostly  with “political enemies.”  However, it does go deeper than that. This is from Phillip Bump’s column today at the Washington Post.”Trump sees the investigators, not the rioters, as the Jan. 6 criminals. It’s not just that he seeks to avoid accountability. It’s that he hopes to invert it.”  So, the criminals arrested by law officers, prosecuted in courts, and found guilty in the process by a duly appointed Judge or Jury are the law breakers here?  How horrifying is that?

    History will tell the story of the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in direct terms. President Donald Trump, increasingly desperate to block Joe Biden’s inauguration to replace him, summoned his supporters to Washington for a “wild” protest. Tens of thousands came, including members of violent, fringe-right groups.

    As legislators convened to formalize Biden’s victory, angry throngs of Trump supporters pushed toward the building, some engaging in violent altercations with law enforcement in an effort to stop Congress from counting electoral votes. Hundreds were injured, including more than 100 police officers.

    Congress tried to hold Trump accountable for his role in the riot twice, first by impeaching him — enough Republican senators sided with Trump to prevent conviction — and then by launching a high-profile investigation of his broad effort to retain power. Meanwhile, the justice system went to work arresting and imprisoning those who had engaged in the riot. Special counsel Jack Smith brought federal charges against Trump.

    Pressed whether he’d direct Bondi or Kash Patel, his pick to lead the FBI, to send them to jail, Trump said, “No, not at all,” before adding, “I think they’ll have to look at that.”

    Asked whether he plans to follow up on his frequent campaign promise to investigate Biden — whom he repeatedly labeled as “corrupt” and a “criminal” on the campaign trail — Trump said he doesn’t want to “go back into the past.”

    “I’m really looking to make our country successful. I’m not looking to go back into the past,” he said, adding, “Retribution will be through success.”

    When asked about previously saying he would direct his Justice Department to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Biden, Trump said he would not do that but left the door open for top DOJ officials to make their own determinations.

    “No, I’m not doing that unless I find something that I think is reasonable,” he said. “But that’s not going to be my decision. That’s going to be Pam Bondi’s decision, and, to a different extent, Kash Patel, assuming they’re both there, and I think they’re both going to get approved.” Trump has tapped Patel to lead the FBI, despite the current director, Trump appointee Christopher Wray, still having several years left in his 10-year term.

    Throughout the interview, Trump at times struck a more temperate tone toward his political opponents and appeared to prioritize uniting the country over exacting vengeance. He said he plans to make unity a central theme of his inauguration address and expressed confidence that his administration will achieve a level of success that will bring the country together.

    But Trump invoked similar calls for unity at various points throughout his campaign — including in the wake of the first assassination attempt against him — before often reverting to bitter, divisive rhetoric and personal attacks. During the NBC interview, Trump again refused to concede that he lost the 2020 presidential election.

    President Eject Incontinentia Buttocks rejects reality for a version that suits his malignant narcissism and purposes. The New Republic’s Greg Sargent interviews Brian Beutler about this on his PodCast.  “Transcript: Trump’s Private Rage at “Traitors” Reveals Dark 2025 Plans. An interview with Brian Beutler, author of the “Off Message” Substack, who explains how Democrats can and must do more to alert the public to the dangers of a second Trump term.”  Dangers, indeed.

    The New York Times reports that Donald Trump is telling advisers that his biggest regret from his first term was that he appointed “traitors.” Not traitors to the country, of course; traitors to him. As a result, his transition team is grilling prospective officials to gauge their loyalty to Trump; that is, loyalty to the person. Is there some way for Democrats to explain how absurd and dangerous all this is in a manner that gets through to the public? We’re talking about this today with Brian Beutler, author of the excellent Substack Off Message, who’s been arguing that Dems need to get more aggressive with their communications about all this right now before Trump takes office. Thanks for coming back on, Brian.

    Brian Beutler: It’s always good to be with you.

    Sargent: The New York Times reports that he’s privately telling advisors that his biggest first-term regret was appointing traitors. Importantly, traitors are those who came to see Trump accurately as a threat to the system: Chief of Staff John Kelly, Defense Secretaries Jim Madison, Mark Esper, and even Attorney General William Barr, who was relentlessly loyal up to the very last minute. That’s his regret, appointing people who describe the threat he poses accurately. Brian, in some sense, this isn’t a surprise, but it’s rarely reported quite this clearly. Your thoughts?

    Beutler: It’s inauspicious. And it probably portends some conflict between him and the Senate insofar as the people that he’s vetting are going to be appointed to positions that require Senate confirmation. That’s because, as I understand, the loyalty test as reported in the article is not just, Do you support Donald Trump? Do you support the MAGA movement? Do you support its policy goals?—it’s really, Do you believe Donald Trump won or lost the 2020 election? If they acknowledge the truth that he lost, they’re out, they’re not going to get the nomination.

    And similarly, with questions like, Do you think January 6 was good or bad? Do you think it was something that Donald Trump is responsible for? Are these patriots or are they insurrectionists?, if you answer that the wrong way, you’re not getting the job. And insofar as anyone who answers the way Trump wants them to answer has to go before the Senate. Well, it’s going to raise questions for both Democrats and Republicans in different ways.

    Democrats are going to have to decide whether those are red lines for them that they won’t cross. If Trump finds somebody who’s qualified as in their resume is good, that they’re credentialed to do the job he’s appointed them to, but they’re also supportive of the Big Lie or they think that the insurrection was OK, will Democrats look past that to say, Well, at least you’ll know how to do the job that you’re being appointed to do? I would like Democrats to say there will be zero Democratic votes for any nominees who take that loyalty test. And if they do that, then it will fall to Republicans.

    Are 50 out of 53 Republican senators willing to take that vote? An ancillary benefit of Democrats drawing a hard line here is that’ll be really tough for them because there are still at least a handful of Senate Republicans who don’t support the Big Lie, who won’t repeat it, and who think the people who peddle it are real threats to democracy. Then we’ll find out whether they just decided, You know what, Trump won, so it’s revisionist history all the way down now.

    Sargent: His use of the term traitors in his conversations with his advisors, which shows that he’s still seething with anger about those who refuse to go along with his rewritten history: This is one of the keys to understanding what he really intends with current picks like Pete Hegseth as defense secretary, Kash Patel as FBI director, and Pam Bondi as attorney general. It won’t be that hard for all Democrats to oppose Pete Hegseth and Kash Patel, but I’m not sure all Democrats will oppose Pam Bondi.

    We do have precedent for politicizing the FBI.  I remember all of this very well, as well as the entire setup with AG John Mitchell. I had thought laws were put into place to prevent this from happening again. I also was aware that many Republicans at the time thought those laws went too far. Aaron Rupar and Thor Bensure, writing for Public Notice, share this headline. “The J. Edgar Hoover precedent for weaponizing the FBI. “Yes, we could have a repeat of that,” Frank Figliuzzi tells us.”

    After serving in the FBI for more than two decades, in 2011 Frank Figliuzzi became the assistant director of the FBI’s counterintelligence division, where he worked alongside FBI Director Robert Mueller. Suffice it to say he saw a lot in his career.

    So it should be taken seriously that Figliuzzi, now an MSNBC senior national security and intelligence analyst, describes Trump’s picks to run what are sometimes referred to as the power ministries — among them the DOJ (including the FBI) and the defense department — as a “hijacking of the entire national security structure.”

    “My chief concern is this single characteristic that seems to run through these nominees — blind allegiance to Donald Trump,” Figliuzzi told us.

    We recently connected with Figliuzzi to get his insight on Trump’s picks and what they signal about how the federal government will operate over the next four years. He warned that “we could be heading toward tremendous abuses of power, with the FBI going after Trump’s political enemies.” And he noted that a previous FBI director provided the president-elect and his choice to run the bureau, Kash Patel, with a blueprint.

    Benson interviewed Figluzzi.  It went like this.

    Thor Benson

    As someone who’s focused on national security and has a background there, what are your top concerns with Trump’s choices for national security roles?

    Frank Figliuzzi

    Sadly, we’ll have to rank order them.

    It’s not just that many of Trump’s nominees are remarkably unqualified for the jobs, and they are — from the DNI pick with Tulsi Gabbard to the DHS with Kristi Noem to Hegseth at DOD and now Kash Patel. But the lack of competence is not my chief concern anymore.

    My chief concern is this single characteristic that seems to run through these nominees — blind allegiance to Donald Trump. Yes, there are national security issues with someone like Gabbard or Hegseth — I say national security with Hegseth, particularly, because similar to the concerns about Matt Gaetz, we don’t know what we don’t know. Is there more coming with Hegseth? Is it extortion and blackmail?

    He’s already written a check to a woman in California. What else do we not know about? According to the latest reporting, he appears to have an alcohol problem. He’s had to physically be carried out of events he attended because he was drunk. That’s not good with someone who’s running things at the Pentagon. Are there more women and incidents out there? According to the New Yorker, he also yells “kill all the Muslims” when he gets drunk.

    Out of all of the nominees, Kash Patel lacks the capacity to have his own independent thoughts and ideology. His record is replete with nothing but kissing Trump’s ass. That’s it. You don’t have to take my word for it. Look at his public statements about persecuting the “deep state,” prosecutors, the media, for christ’s sake. Combine that with Pam Bondi’s almost identical comments, and we’ve now got a Trump hijacking of the entire national security structure.

    Thor Benson

    So where does that take us?

    Frank Figliuzzi

    Well, we could be heading toward tremendous abuses of power, with the FBI going after Trump’s political enemies.

    So, my hair is on fire again, although it never really goes out, to be honest. There are warning signs all over the place, and only a small segment of the American populace appears to be aware of all of this.  You can read Figliuzzi’s discussion of Nixon’s tricks at the link.  The other headline grabber today is how a set of unelected and affirmed idiot billionaires will be going after our Social Security.  This is from Truth Out. “DOGE Heads Musk and Ramaswamy Signal Social Security Cuts Are Coming. Trump vowed to “not cut one penny” from Social Security, but his other statements and actions suggest that he plans to.” Chris Walker has the lede and the story.

    On Sunday, president-elect Donald Trump sought to assuage concerns that he will make cuts to Social Security and other safety net programs after Republicans signaled last week that Social Security could be targeted by Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) initiative, managed by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy.

    Asked by host Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program whether the DOGE initiative would include cuts to Social Security, Trump said “no,” other than perhaps cuts related to allegations of “abuse” or “fraud” associated with the program.

    Notably, such fraud happens at extremely low rates — by one estimate, fraud equals around just $0.40 out of every $100 in benefits Social Security doles out yearly.

    “We’re not touching Social Security, other than — we might make it more efficient,” Trump said about the national insurance program that helps retirees, disabled people, widowers and children of deceased parents. “But the people are going to get what they get.”

    “We’re not raising ages or any of that stuff,” he added.

    Trump’s comments echo talking points from his “Agenda 47” platform during his presidential campaign, which stated that he would “not cut one penny from Medicare or Social Security.” However, he and his allies have repeatedly suggested that cuts to both programs are possible.

    Musk and Ramaswamy have made it evident that cuts to Social Security will be considered. After the two met with Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill last week about the DOGE initiative, House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Scalise (R-Louisiana) said they had expressed sentiments that contradicted Trump’s comments on Sunday.

    “Nothing is sacrosanct. Nothing. They’re going to put everything on the table,” Scalise told reporters after the meeting, with Fox Business elaborating that cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid would be discussed.

    In September, when the idea of DOGE was first being discussed, vice president-elect J.D. Vance also indicated that there could be cuts to Social Security. A DOGE-type commission is “going to look much different in, say, the Department of Defense versus Social Security,” Vance said during a podcast interview, insinuating that cuts were going to be considered for the latter agency.

    In March, Trump himself said that cuts to the program were a possibility.

    “There is a lot you can do in terms of entitlements — in terms of cutting — and in terms of also the theft and the bad management of entitlements,” Trump said in a statement starkly different from his comments over the past weekend.

    Perhaps most importantly, Trump attempted to make drastic cuts to Social Security and other programs in his first term as president. In one of his later proposed budgets (which didn’t go on to pass in the then-Democratic-controlled Congress), the president-elect sought to cut Social Security by $25 billion — despite promising in the 2016 presidential campaign that he wouldn’t make any cuts to the agency, just as he promised this last election cycle.

    Nothing is Sacred in Trumplandia except Trump and his money.   You can read more about the proposed cuts at these links.

    And, in the latest from Corruption and Kleptocracy Central, we have this headline inPolitico. “Lara Trump leaves RNC amid Senate chatter. In announcing her resignation the president-elect’s daughter-in-law said “the job I came to do is now complete.” I wonder if she can Senator better than she can sing?

    Lara Trump is stepping down as co-chair of the Republican National Committee, a role she has held since March, as some of Donald Trump’s allies continue to push for her to replace Florida Sen. Marco Rubio on Capitol Hill.

    In announcing her resignation on X, Lara Trump, who is the president-elect’s daughter-in-law, said “the job I came to do is now complete,” touting the RNC’s fundraising records, election integrity efforts and voter turnout.

    She’s expressed openness to replacing Rubio, the president-elect’s pick to be secretary of State, in the Senate, telling The Associated Press it’s a role she “would seriously consider.”

    “If I’m being completely transparent, I don’t know exactly what that would look like,” she told the AP in an article published Sunday. “And I certainly want to get all of the information possible if that is something that’s real for me. But yeah, I would 100% consider it.”

    Among those supporting her as a potential Rubio replacement is billionaire Elon Musk, a close ally of the incoming president, and his mother, Maye Musk.

    When did all these tacky people get a say in stuff like this?  The Trump Boys will be in charge of the Merch and Grift Wing of the White House while the Kushners milk what they can from the State Department and foreign nations. We are definitely headed to a Nepocracy.  Just watch out for that Douche Commission headed by First Lady Elonia and DIE hire Vivek.

    What’s on your reading and blogging list?

    #Repeat1968JohnBuss #Doge #kakistocracy #kleptocracy #LaraTrump #Musk #Nepocracy #Nepocrats #SocialSecurity #TrumpSTraitorList #Vivek

  24. [Read in full on NHAM]

    Nativity Holy Advent Mashup – NHAM Mixtape 7

    Welcome to the Christmas mixtape – Nativity Holy Advent Mashup! 12 festive-themed tunes to jingle our bells. 🔔🎄🤶☃️☀️

    As always more info including song and artist links below the mixtape.

    [If viewing from the Fediverse you need to click here to listen to the mixtape on NHAM]

    If you’d prefer you can listen to the tracks as a radio show initially aired on Radio Free Fedi (click me).

    Lo-Fi OrchestraThe Carol of the Bells
    Microcontrollers and boards in place of humans and their orchestral instruments. Each board connected to a central MIDI distribution aided by Raspberry Pis and another nano-tech. Sound complex? It’s all explained in a lot more detail here. Lo-Fi Orchestra has performed many classical pieces including The Flight of the Bumblebee and Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture but if you watch the Peertube video I’m sure you’ll agree that this Christmas piece is even more perfectly suited to this set up as the boards flash bright lights when their sound plays, creating a fitting festive lighting effect.
    @diyelectromusic

    Mans1Freezing Rain
    Another one found on Peertube, this is a reworking of the original that Mans1 released with Hometaping on the Hip-Hop Taoists Album. It features Oliver H on lead vocals with Mans1 bringing the smooth French rap. The video has some lovely stop motion in the snow.
    @mans1

    FutzleWeeping Melaleuca
    Let’s not kid ourselves that Christmas is all about snow and cold weather. Far from it as Christmas comes just days after the summer solstice for the Southern Hemispherites. This song from Futzle centres around a type of tree native to Australia called a Melaleuca – whose red flowers fall like tinsel on the ground in the heat of the Christmas hols. Although not a true story in it’s entirety Futzle says the lyrics are still meaningful and informed by her life. Indeed the tree itself did exist until it’s life was brutally cut short in 2023. Its memory though lives forever in this beautiful song.
    @futzle

    SiveDon Oíche Úd i mBeithil
    From the red of the Melaleuca to the green of the Emerald Isle. Performed beautifully this traditional Irish carol translated as ‘That Night in Bethlehem’ sings of the night in the West Bank when Jesus was born. Sive has cleverly interwoven parts of a Palestinian folk song in to this rendition.
    @sivemusic

    LAGRANGE POINT 6God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
    Another traditional Christmas carol, this version was composed with the juxtaposition of utilising synths to create a medieval approach, and to great effect.
    @jimdonegan

    CURXES (Robert Fidora)I BELIEVE IN FATHER CHRISTMAS
    They said there would be peace on earth. This is Roberta’s electronic cover version of Greg Lake’s classic protest song at the commercialisation of Christmas. What’s not commercialised eh? Peace I guess. Shit! -That’s the answer! -If we can find a way to commercialise peace we might yet find a way to make capitalism work. (We’ll need a way to commercialise degrowth too, mind).
    @RobertaFidora

    XylanderHow Glad They Were
    The sad albeit understandable announcement of the sunsetting of Radio Free Fedi hit us all pretty hard. One thing for sure is that the community we are all now part of thanks to RFF will live on. For the electronic music section of the community Pete Xylander has already begun putting together some shows for an electronic-based online station called @audiointerface so check that out if you are that way inclined. Meanwhile here is his Christmas tune from last year. Welcome the reindeer. How glad they were at the sound…
    @xylander

    Wanda & Nova deViatorWrappings
    You know those jokes you get in Christmas crackers? Here’s mine:
    Q: What do you get when you cross an electronic musician and a contemporary dancer, performer and choreographer who both take influences from breakbeat, trip-hop, dub, idm, electro, noise and other bass genres?
    A: Presents! And this is one of them, nicely wrapped.
    (It wasn’t supposed to be funny! Christmas cracker jokes never are. At least this one has substance.)
    @luka

    Eugene Kthe angel
    I love the atmospheric build up in this and the way it merges in to a prog rock performance. Eugene K is a poet and artist who has created a brilliant telling of William Blake’s poem.
    @eugenek

    The L Plate Players – I’m Staying Home This Christmas
    Written for her found Fediverse family, Deborah Pickett penned a country-Christmas song and asked many of those friends to collaborate on it. Deborah says that sixths feel festive to her, and so filled the chorus with them, excluding all thirds, fourths and fifths in the process – clever as ever, as are the lyrics!
    @futzle, @herzleid, @jimbob, @nein09, @pelagikat, @philsawa, @pilum, @raaahbin, @sknob, @virtualwolf

    toadliliesthree stars each
    We’ve got to have a bit of shoegazey pie for Christmas! From the ursa major album released in May this year ‘three stars each’ is a lovely song from the Nebraskans. There may be nothing explicitly Christmasy about it but the twinkly jingles combined with the stars in the title make it sit well in this mix.
    @toadlilies

    BonkWave AllStars – We Wish You A Merry Bonksmas
    2024 has been described the year of the bonk and 2025 is set to be even more bonky so we could play out with nothing else. I wish you a VERY MERRY BONKSMAS indeed!
    @gullfot, @Traiken, @venya, @johann, @axwax

    #mixtape #NHAM #NHAMmixtapes

  25. Finally Friday Reads: Your Cassandra Daily

    Nothing says Thanksgiving to me more than the WKRP Turkey Drop! Thank you, John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    My first short story remains in my scrapbook in its purply blue mimeograph ink. It has my drawing of Cassandra and my interpretation of my favorite Greek Character, who was dedicated to the Greek God Apollo but was fated to make true prophecies no one ever believed.  I was drawn to her in my 5th-grade mythology class.  I remember my mother listening to me once and starting to question me before she interrupted herself by telling me this. “I don’t know why I question you; you’re almost always right.”  I usually don’t believe everything I read, but I remember it. Prognostication is less godly and more mathematical these days, but when you know what’s likely to happen when you do that S-VAR model based on solid theory and a new hypothesis, you don’t always want to welcome the results.

    I’ve been running around with my hair on fire since the Orange Demon started obsessing about tariffs again.  He tried them during his last Reign of Terror and nearly drove our farmers out of business.  Congress had to rescue them with huge subsidies that paid them for not selling their crops or livestock. Trump started a Trade War with China. He needed a visit from Herbert Hoover’s Ghost and to listen to the huge chorus of economists who warned him, but he persisted.  Luckily, it didn’t take out the U.S. economy, but it ran up the deficit and jeopardized the Agriculture sector.

    This warning is from the AP. “Trump’s tariffs in his first term did little to alter the economy, but this time could be different.”   Trump’s misunderstanding of tariffs could wreck the economies of North America.  This analsyis comes from Josh Boak.

    Donald Trump loved to use tariffs on foreign goods during his first presidency. But their impact was barely noticeable in the overall economy, even if their aftershocks were clear in specific industries.

    The data show they never fully delivered on his promised factory jobs. Nor did they provoke the avalanche of inflation that critics feared.

    This time, though, his tariff threats might be different.

    The president-elect is talking about going much bigger — on a potential scale that creates more uncertainty about whether he’ll do what he says and what the consequences could be.

    “There’s going to be a lot more tariffs, I mean, he’s pretty clear,” said Michael Stumo, the CEO of Coalition for a Prosperous America, a group that has supported import taxes to help domestic manufacturing.

    The president-elect posted on social media Monday that on his first day in office he would impose 25% tariffs on all goods imported from Mexico and Canada until those countries satisfactorily stop illegal immigration and the flow of illegal drugs such as fentanyl into the United States.

    Those tariffs could essentially blow up the North American trade pact that Trump’s team negotiated during his initial term. But on Wednesday, Trump posted on social media that he had spoken with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and she had agreed to stop unauthorized migration across the border into the United States.

    Trump also posted on Monday that Chinese imports would face additional tariffs of 10% until Beijing cracks down on the production of materials used in making fentanyl.

    President Sheinbaum immediately denied Trump’s characterization of their conversation.  This headline from HuffPo says it all. “Trump Mocked After Mexico’s President Blows Up His Brag About Their Call.” Josephine Harvey reports on the response.

    Donald Trump seemed to offer alternative facts on Wednesday about his recent call with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and was swiftly rebutted by the leader herself, prompting mockery on social media.

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, the U.S. president-elect declared that Sheinbaum had “agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.”

    Shortly afterward, Sheinbaum shared a Spanish-language message about the conversation, writing, “We reiterate that Mexico’s position is not to close borders, but to build bridges between governments and communities.”

    Both leaders characterized the call as positive. The two spoke after Trump on Monday threatened to impose a 25% tax on all products entering the country from Canada and Mexico as soon as he takes office. Trump said, “This Tariff will remain in effect until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!” He also threatened to put an “additional 10%” tariff on goods from China.

    This week’s news was somewhat reminiscent of Trump’s claim ahead of the 2016 election that he would make Mexico pay for “100%” of a proposed wall at the U.S. border. Enrique Peña Nieto, Mexico’s president at the time, disagreed. Mexico did not pay.

    Social media users sarcastically celebrated Trump’s fictional victory this week.

    “All it took was one call. Donny deals,” journalist Sam Stein posted online.

    Mike Nellis, a former aide to Vice President Kamala Harris, said, “Trump thinks he convinced the President of Mexico to stop all migration across the border LOL.”

    Olivia Troye, who was a White House official in Trump’s first term, offered a “Translation” of the president-elect’s comments about Mexico.

    Just had a conversation with the President of Mexico who didn’t allow me to bully her, which left me confused about my charm…she pointed out that this is very bad…very bad for me if I do these tariffs…” Troye wrote.

    China and Canada were also blunt about DonOld’s mischaracterizations of his conversations with their leaders.  USA Today‘s Kim Hjelmgaard reported it this way. “‘Counter to facts and reality’: China, Mexico, Canada respond to Trump tariff threats.”

    Officials in China, Mexico and Canada criticized Tuesday a pledge made by President-elect Donald Trump on social media to impose new tariffs on all three of the United States’ largest trading partners on the first day of his presidency.

    Trump said the move, which appears to violate the terms of a free-trade deal Trump signed into law in 2020, is aimed at clamping down on drugs − fentanyl especially − and migrants crossing into the U.S. illegally.

    The president-elect said he would sign an executive order immediately after his inauguration introducing a 25% tariff on all goods coming from Mexico and Canada and a 10% tariff on goods from China.

    Trump takes office on Jan. 20.

    “Both Mexico and Canada have the absolute right and power to easily solve this long simmering problem,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social, a platform he owns. “It is time for them to pay a very big price!” He accused China in a separate post of failing to block smuggling of U.S.-bound fentanyl, a synthetic opioid.

    There was quick pushback to Trump’s comments from all three countries.

    Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said: “No one will win a trade war or a tariff war” and “the idea of China knowingly allowing fentanyl precursors to flow into the United States runs completely counter to facts and reality.”

    Mexico’s finance ministry said in a statement the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a trade pact Trump sponsored during his first term, provided “certainty” for investors. “The response to one tariff will be another, until we put at risk companies that we share,” Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum said, naming General Motors and Ford, among others. Sheinbaum said her comments, read aloud in a press conference, were sent in a letter to Trump.

    Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, said the tariffs would be “devastating to workers and jobs” in both the U.S. and Canada.

    A tariff is effectively a tax imposed by one country on the goods and services imported from another country. Oil is the top U.S. import from Canada, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The largest category of goods imported to the U.S. from Mexico is cars and components for cars. The U.S. imports a significant amount of electronics from China. Some goods are exempt from tariffs because of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

    Businesses are already responding to the tariff threats.  This will not be good for American Consumers. NBC News reports: “Here’s where consumers could feel the price pain if Trump’s tariffs go into effect. Trump has made threats about tariffs in the past. Businesses are nevertheless taking the latest threats seriously.”  This guy hasn’t even taken the oath of office, and he’s already acting like he’s sitting in the Oval Office.

    An estimate from The Budget Lab at Yale shared Wednesdaywith NBC News found that the cost to consumers from Trump’s proposed tariffs could reach as much as $1,200 in lost purchasing power on average based on 2023 incomes, assuming retaliatory duties on U.S. exports are put into place.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has already warned that any new tariffs imposed by the U.S. would be met with retaliatory ones by her country. Canada is similarly considering its own options, including possible tariffs on U.S. goods, according to The Associated Press.

    America’s biggest import from Canada is oil — and any increase in energy prices would likely be felt throughout the economy.

    “Another way to think about this is it’s 4 to 5 months of a normal year’s inflation in one fell swoop,” Ernie Tedeschi, The Budget Lab’s director and the former chief economist under the Biden administration, said in an email.

    The three countries Trump has selected for a new round of targeted tariff proposals — China, Mexico and Canada — represent nearly half of all U.S. import volumes.

    While Trump has insisted other countries end up paying the cost of tariffs, most economists agree those costs wind up getting passed on to shoppers. And at a time when rising prices remain a top concern, the types of goods that could see higher costs are the ones consumers interact with every day.

    Some companies are warning that particularly import-heavy parts of the economy could be hit hard. Best Buy CEO Corie Barry warned Tuesday that any added costs on U.S. imports “will be shared by our customers.” Electronic goods account for the largest share of U.S. imports from China as of 2023.

    “There’s very little in [the] consumer electronics space that is not imported. … These are goods that people need, and higher prices are not helpful,” Barry said.

    This is what happens when morons vote for a moron.  David R. Lurie of Public Notice has this analysis on other Trump plans. These endanger our National Security.  “Tulsi Gabbard and Trump’s scheme to gut the intel agencies. It’s hard to envision a less suited intelligence chief. That’s a feature, not a bug.”

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Marc Zuckerberg perfects his role as Surrender Monkey by dining with the Dotard at Mara Lardo. This is from the BBC.  “Mark Zuckerberg dines with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago.”  It was definitely a Baboon butt moment.

    Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg has visited Donald Trump at his resort in Mar-a-Lago, further evidence of the apparent thawing in their once frosty relations.

    The president-elect already has a close, high-profile relationship with another of the leading figures in tech, X owner Elon Musk.

    Historically, though, there has been no such closeness between Trump and Mr Zuckerberg – with Trump barred from Facebook and Instagram after the Capitol riots, and Trump threatening the Meta boss with jail if he interfered in the 2024 presidential election.

    However, there has recently been evidence those strained relations are improving, culminating in Mr Zuckerberg dining with the president-elect at his Florida mansion.

    “Mark was grateful for the invitation to join President Trump for dinner and the opportunity to meet with members of his team about the incoming administration,” a Meta spokesperson told the BBC.

    “It’s an important time for the future of American Innovation,” the statement added.

    The Detroit Free Press featured an Op-Ed by the AG of Michigan, Dana Nessel.  It is difficult not to notice the incredibly large number of Sexual Predators Trump has been appointing to his Cabinet and other leadership positions.  It seems like a feature and not a bug, “Michigan AG Nessel: Trump cabinet picks show disdain for victims of sex assault.”  We continue to see a parade of the stupid and the lawless.

    Every 68 seconds, an American is sexually assaulted.

    Only a third of the estimated 440,000 victims over the age of 12 each year will ever report, often due to negative emotions such as guilt, shame, and self-blame.

    Survivors feel they won’t be believed, so why bother reporting, opening themselves up to ridicule, judgment and shame?

    So what is it we are telling victims of these brutal, life-altering crimes, when our President-elect seeks to elevate alleged fellow perpetrators to cabinet positions and other high levels of power in our government?

    To lead the Department of Defense, Trump has nominated Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, who settled an accusation that he raped a woman and entered into a non-disclosure agreement with the victim. To lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he nominated Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who has been accused of groping a young woman who worked for him as a babysitter on several occasions.  For Secretary of Education – responsible for ensuring the schooling of our nation’s children – he nominated Linda McMahon, who has been sued for criminal negligence for enabling the grooming and sexual abuse of children by employees of her organization.  And as the nation’s top law enforcement officer, he nominated former Representative Matt Gaetz — who withdrew from consideration last week — the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation, following accusations he paid minors for sex. And Trump still has more nominations to make.

    With these nominations, we are telling survivors of sexual assault that they don’t matter, that their trauma is meaningless and that they should stay silent.

    And they will.

    The American Prospect calls them “The Rape Gang.”

    The presumptive Secretary of Education is married to a man whose former employee alleges he forced her to perform sex acts with his friend for an hour and a half after he defecated on her head. The presumptive Commerce Secretary preemptively sued his former assistant in 2018, after her lawyer threatened to publicize “not pretty” 2 a.m. text messages she’d received from him and his wife. The presumptive Health and Human Services director’s explanation for forcibly groping a former nanny’s breasts while holding her hostage in a kitchen pantry was that he “had a very, very rambunctious youth”; he was 46 at the time. The White House efficiency czar, currently a defendant in a putative class-action lawsuit filed by eight former employees who accuse him of perpetrating an “Animal House” work environment of “rampant sexual harassment,” and paid a quarter of a million dollars to a flight attendant who says he got naked and asked her to touch his erect penis in exchange for the gift of a horse.

    And of course the presumptive Defense Secretary was accused of raping a woman who was tasked with monitoring what she described to police as his “creeper vibes” after a Republican women’s conference at which he was a keynote speaker, just a month and change after the birth of his fourth child with a woman who was not his wife at the time. (Reader, she married him.)

    The aggressive rapeyness of the second Donald Trump administration is so tyrannical it’s almost enough to make a girl wistful for Matt Gaetz, the Florida congressman who withdrew his name from attorney general contention yesterday (to make way for the despicable Pam Bondi) amid an orgy of leaks from two investigations into his sexploits with a 17-year-old procured by a convicted sex trafficker friend. Multiple witnesses testified that Gaetz did not actually know the 17-year-old was underage, you see, and that he ceased having sex with her when he found out.

    We definitely have a kakistocracy coming our way.  We can see the incompetence, the total lack of knowledge of policy, and the complete inappropriateness of every candidate for Cabinet.  It comes from the ultimate dotard.  The only thing we have going for us now is our resolve and the fact that the Republican Majority in both Houses is narrow. Both houses have also had lots of experience in gumming up the works for Trump. Trump’s so-called mandate is a bald-faced lie.  The LA Times asks, “As Trump’s lead in popular vote shrinks, does he really have a ‘mandate’?”  Of course, Trump will be oblivious to all that, so he’s relying heavily on executive mandates that may or may not be legal.” Jenny Jarvis has the details.

    • Though Trump overwhelmingly won the electoral college vote, his tally in the popular vote is hardly a landslide.

    • In the last 75 years, only three other presidents had popular-vote margins that were smaller than Trump’s.

    • When Trump exaggerates his presidential mandate, he is not an outlier but drawing from bipartisan history.

    In his victory speech on Nov. 6, President-elect Donald Trump claimed Americans had given him an “unprecedented and powerful mandate.”

    It’s a message his transition team has echoed in the last three weeks, referring to his “MAGA Mandate” and a “historic mandate for his agenda.”

    But given that Trump’s lead in the popular vote has dwindled as more votes have been counted in California and other states that lean blue, there is fierce disagreement over whether most Americans really endorse his plans to overhaul government and implement sweeping change.

    The latest tally from the Cook Political Report shows Trump winning 49.83% of the popular vote, with a margin of 1.55% over Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The president-elect’s share of the popular vote now falls in the bottom half for American presidents — far below that of Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson, who won 61.1% of the popular vote in 1964, defeating Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater by nearly 23 percentage points.

    In the last 75 years, only three presidents — John F. Kennedy in 1960, Richard Nixon in 1968 and George W. Bush in 2000 — had popular-vote margins smaller than Trump’s current lead.

    “If there ever was a mandate, this isn’t it,” said Hans Noel, associate professor of government at Georgetown University.

    There is a slim majority margin in the US House of Representatives.  There is no mandate radical change there.  This is from Politico, “Where the slim House margin might matter most.”  The analysis is by Anthony Adragna.

    Republicans are vowing an all-out war in the opening days of the next Congress against Biden administration regulations in areas as varied as energy, financial, housing and education policy.

    They’re hoping for a redux of 2017 and 2018, when Republicans used their unified control of government and the powers of the Congressional Review Act to ax 16 regulations. With a coming 53-47 majority, GOP senators say they’re again primed to use the CRA, one of their most potent tools to undo Democratic policies — and one that tends to unite the often fractious Republican conference.

    But — and it’s a major but — an extremely narrow House margin could make things hard to pull off, at least for the first couple of months of the Trump administration. While the GOP could lose as many as three votes in the Senate with Vice President-elect JD Vance (R-Ohio) casting tie-breakers, the House very well be at a one-vote margin until early April (more on that math below).

    Still, that hasn’t dampened Republicans’ enthusiasm around the CRA.

    “We’re going to want to go and evaluate everything that fits into the jurisdiction” of the 1996 review law, incoming Senate Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) told Inside Congress. Invoking it involves passing simple-majority votes in both chambers plus a presidential signature, no filibusters allowed.

    President Joe Biden’s administration recognized this looming threat and prioritized early completion of rulemakings to shield them from congressional challenge. Still, dozens of regulations were finalized after Aug. 1, 2024, leaving them vulnerable to the CRA, according to Public Citizen, which closely tracks the potential use of the law. (That corresponds to the date identified by the Congressional Research Service after which rules might be vulnerable to revocation.)

    Barrasso’s hardly alone with vows of aggressive use of the tool, which had only been successfully used once before Trump’s first term.

    “We’ll do every possible regulation we can get to,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said. “It’s a wonderful tool for undoing the bureaucratic excess of the Biden administration.”

    “On some of these crazy policies we ought to just get rid of them as fast as we can,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), who said he’d instructed his staff to find regulations that may be good targets for challenges.

    “This is the only time the Congressional Review Act actually has teeth, otherwise it’s a messaging vehicle,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said, referring to the first months of a new trifecta, since using the CRA effectively requires one party to control the presidency and both chambers of Congress, a relatively infrequent occurrence in modern politics.

    Hopefully, this turns into a Can’t Do Anything Congress.

    Have a good weekend!  Hope you had a great day for feasting! I’m off to eat a turkey sandwich!

    What’s on your reading and blogging list today?

     

    #JohnbussBskySocial #Repeat1968JohnBuss #DonnyDotardAndTheChaosCult #TrumpCabinetRapeGang

  26. Finally Friday Reads: Your Cassandra Daily

    Nothing says Thanksgiving to me more than the WKRP Turkey Drop! Thank you, John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    My first short story remains in my scrapbook in its purply blue mimeograph ink. It has my drawing of Cassandra and my interpretation of my favorite Greek Character, who was dedicated to the Greek God Apollo but was fated to make true prophecies no one ever believed.  I was drawn to her in my 5th-grade mythology class.  I remember my mother listening to me once and starting to question me before she interrupted herself by telling me this. “I don’t know why I question you; you’re almost always right.”  I usually don’t believe everything I read, but I remember it. Prognostication is less godly and more mathematical these days, but when you know what’s likely to happen when you do that S-VAR model based on solid theory and a new hypothesis, you don’t always want to welcome the results.

    I’ve been running around with my hair on fire since the Orange Demon started obsessing about tariffs again.  He tried them during his last Reign of Terror and nearly drove our farmers out of business.  Congress had to rescue them with huge subsidies that paid them for not selling their crops or livestock. Trump started a Trade War with China. He needed a visit from Herbert Hoover’s Ghost and to listen to the huge chorus of economists who warned him, but he persisted.  Luckily, it didn’t take out the U.S. economy, but it ran up the deficit and jeopardized the Agriculture sector.

    This warning is from the AP. “Trump’s tariffs in his first term did little to alter the economy, but this time could be different.”   Trump’s misunderstanding of tariffs could wreck the economies of North America.  This analsyis comes from Josh Boak.

    Donald Trump loved to use tariffs on foreign goods during his first presidency. But their impact was barely noticeable in the overall economy, even if their aftershocks were clear in specific industries.

    The data show they never fully delivered on his promised factory jobs. Nor did they provoke the avalanche of inflation that critics feared.

    This time, though, his tariff threats might be different.

    The president-elect is talking about going much bigger — on a potential scale that creates more uncertainty about whether he’ll do what he says and what the consequences could be.

    “There’s going to be a lot more tariffs, I mean, he’s pretty clear,” said Michael Stumo, the CEO of Coalition for a Prosperous America, a group that has supported import taxes to help domestic manufacturing.

    The president-elect posted on social media Monday that on his first day in office he would impose 25% tariffs on all goods imported from Mexico and Canada until those countries satisfactorily stop illegal immigration and the flow of illegal drugs such as fentanyl into the United States.

    Those tariffs could essentially blow up the North American trade pact that Trump’s team negotiated during his initial term. But on Wednesday, Trump posted on social media that he had spoken with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and she had agreed to stop unauthorized migration across the border into the United States.

    Trump also posted on Monday that Chinese imports would face additional tariffs of 10% until Beijing cracks down on the production of materials used in making fentanyl.

    President Sheinbaum immediately denied Trump’s characterization of their conversation.  This headline from HuffPo says it all. “Trump Mocked After Mexico’s President Blows Up His Brag About Their Call.” Josephine Harvey reports on the response.

    Donald Trump seemed to offer alternative facts on Wednesday about his recent call with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and was swiftly rebutted by the leader herself, prompting mockery on social media.

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, the U.S. president-elect declared that Sheinbaum had “agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.”

    Shortly afterward, Sheinbaum shared a Spanish-language message about the conversation, writing, “We reiterate that Mexico’s position is not to close borders, but to build bridges between governments and communities.”

    Both leaders characterized the call as positive. The two spoke after Trump on Monday threatened to impose a 25% tax on all products entering the country from Canada and Mexico as soon as he takes office. Trump said, “This Tariff will remain in effect until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!” He also threatened to put an “additional 10%” tariff on goods from China.

    This week’s news was somewhat reminiscent of Trump’s claim ahead of the 2016 election that he would make Mexico pay for “100%” of a proposed wall at the U.S. border. Enrique Peña Nieto, Mexico’s president at the time, disagreed. Mexico did not pay.

    Social media users sarcastically celebrated Trump’s fictional victory this week.

    “All it took was one call. Donny deals,” journalist Sam Stein posted online.

    Mike Nellis, a former aide to Vice President Kamala Harris, said, “Trump thinks he convinced the President of Mexico to stop all migration across the border LOL.”

    Olivia Troye, who was a White House official in Trump’s first term, offered a “Translation” of the president-elect’s comments about Mexico.

    Just had a conversation with the President of Mexico who didn’t allow me to bully her, which left me confused about my charm…she pointed out that this is very bad…very bad for me if I do these tariffs…” Troye wrote.

    China and Canada were also blunt about DonOld’s mischaracterizations of his conversations with their leaders.  USA Today‘s Kim Hjelmgaard reported it this way. “‘Counter to facts and reality’: China, Mexico, Canada respond to Trump tariff threats.”

    Officials in China, Mexico and Canada criticized Tuesday a pledge made by President-elect Donald Trump on social media to impose new tariffs on all three of the United States’ largest trading partners on the first day of his presidency.

    Trump said the move, which appears to violate the terms of a free-trade deal Trump signed into law in 2020, is aimed at clamping down on drugs − fentanyl especially − and migrants crossing into the U.S. illegally.

    The president-elect said he would sign an executive order immediately after his inauguration introducing a 25% tariff on all goods coming from Mexico and Canada and a 10% tariff on goods from China.

    Trump takes office on Jan. 20.

    “Both Mexico and Canada have the absolute right and power to easily solve this long simmering problem,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social, a platform he owns. “It is time for them to pay a very big price!” He accused China in a separate post of failing to block smuggling of U.S.-bound fentanyl, a synthetic opioid.

    There was quick pushback to Trump’s comments from all three countries.

    Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said: “No one will win a trade war or a tariff war” and “the idea of China knowingly allowing fentanyl precursors to flow into the United States runs completely counter to facts and reality.”

    Mexico’s finance ministry said in a statement the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a trade pact Trump sponsored during his first term, provided “certainty” for investors. “The response to one tariff will be another, until we put at risk companies that we share,” Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum said, naming General Motors and Ford, among others. Sheinbaum said her comments, read aloud in a press conference, were sent in a letter to Trump.

    Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, said the tariffs would be “devastating to workers and jobs” in both the U.S. and Canada.

    A tariff is effectively a tax imposed by one country on the goods and services imported from another country. Oil is the top U.S. import from Canada, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The largest category of goods imported to the U.S. from Mexico is cars and components for cars. The U.S. imports a significant amount of electronics from China. Some goods are exempt from tariffs because of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

    Businesses are already responding to the tariff threats.  This will not be good for American Consumers. NBC News reports: “Here’s where consumers could feel the price pain if Trump’s tariffs go into effect. Trump has made threats about tariffs in the past. Businesses are nevertheless taking the latest threats seriously.”  This guy hasn’t even taken the oath of office, and he’s already acting like he’s sitting in the Oval Office.

    An estimate from The Budget Lab at Yale shared Wednesdaywith NBC News found that the cost to consumers from Trump’s proposed tariffs could reach as much as $1,200 in lost purchasing power on average based on 2023 incomes, assuming retaliatory duties on U.S. exports are put into place.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has already warned that any new tariffs imposed by the U.S. would be met with retaliatory ones by her country. Canada is similarly considering its own options, including possible tariffs on U.S. goods, according to The Associated Press.

    America’s biggest import from Canada is oil — and any increase in energy prices would likely be felt throughout the economy.

    “Another way to think about this is it’s 4 to 5 months of a normal year’s inflation in one fell swoop,” Ernie Tedeschi, The Budget Lab’s director and the former chief economist under the Biden administration, said in an email.

    The three countries Trump has selected for a new round of targeted tariff proposals — China, Mexico and Canada — represent nearly half of all U.S. import volumes.

    While Trump has insisted other countries end up paying the cost of tariffs, most economists agree those costs wind up getting passed on to shoppers. And at a time when rising prices remain a top concern, the types of goods that could see higher costs are the ones consumers interact with every day.

    Some companies are warning that particularly import-heavy parts of the economy could be hit hard. Best Buy CEO Corie Barry warned Tuesday that any added costs on U.S. imports “will be shared by our customers.” Electronic goods account for the largest share of U.S. imports from China as of 2023.

    “There’s very little in [the] consumer electronics space that is not imported. … These are goods that people need, and higher prices are not helpful,” Barry said.

    This is what happens when morons vote for a moron.  David R. Lurie of Public Notice has this analysis on other Trump plans. These endanger our National Security.  “Tulsi Gabbard and Trump’s scheme to gut the intel agencies. It’s hard to envision a less suited intelligence chief. That’s a feature, not a bug.”

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Marc Zuckerberg perfects his role as Surrender Monkey by dining with the Dotard at Mara Lardo. This is from the BBC.  “Mark Zuckerberg dines with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago.”  It was definitely a Baboon butt moment.

    Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg has visited Donald Trump at his resort in Mar-a-Lago, further evidence of the apparent thawing in their once frosty relations.

    The president-elect already has a close, high-profile relationship with another of the leading figures in tech, X owner Elon Musk.

    Historically, though, there has been no such closeness between Trump and Mr Zuckerberg – with Trump barred from Facebook and Instagram after the Capitol riots, and Trump threatening the Meta boss with jail if he interfered in the 2024 presidential election.

    However, there has recently been evidence those strained relations are improving, culminating in Mr Zuckerberg dining with the president-elect at his Florida mansion.

    “Mark was grateful for the invitation to join President Trump for dinner and the opportunity to meet with members of his team about the incoming administration,” a Meta spokesperson told the BBC.

    “It’s an important time for the future of American Innovation,” the statement added.

    The Detroit Free Press featured an Op-Ed by the AG of Michigan, Dana Nessel.  It is difficult not to notice the incredibly large number of Sexual Predators Trump has been appointing to his Cabinet and other leadership positions.  It seems like a feature and not a bug, “Michigan AG Nessel: Trump cabinet picks show disdain for victims of sex assault.”  We continue to see a parade of the stupid and the lawless.

    Every 68 seconds, an American is sexually assaulted.

    Only a third of the estimated 440,000 victims over the age of 12 each year will ever report, often due to negative emotions such as guilt, shame, and self-blame.

    Survivors feel they won’t be believed, so why bother reporting, opening themselves up to ridicule, judgment and shame?

    So what is it we are telling victims of these brutal, life-altering crimes, when our President-elect seeks to elevate alleged fellow perpetrators to cabinet positions and other high levels of power in our government?

    To lead the Department of Defense, Trump has nominated Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, who settled an accusation that he raped a woman and entered into a non-disclosure agreement with the victim. To lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he nominated Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who has been accused of groping a young woman who worked for him as a babysitter on several occasions.  For Secretary of Education – responsible for ensuring the schooling of our nation’s children – he nominated Linda McMahon, who has been sued for criminal negligence for enabling the grooming and sexual abuse of children by employees of her organization.  And as the nation’s top law enforcement officer, he nominated former Representative Matt Gaetz — who withdrew from consideration last week — the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation, following accusations he paid minors for sex. And Trump still has more nominations to make.

    With these nominations, we are telling survivors of sexual assault that they don’t matter, that their trauma is meaningless and that they should stay silent.

    And they will.

    The American Prospect calls them “The Rape Gang.”

    The presumptive Secretary of Education is married to a man whose former employee alleges he forced her to perform sex acts with his friend for an hour and a half after he defecated on her head. The presumptive Commerce Secretary preemptively sued his former assistant in 2018, after her lawyer threatened to publicize “not pretty” 2 a.m. text messages she’d received from him and his wife. The presumptive Health and Human Services director’s explanation for forcibly groping a former nanny’s breasts while holding her hostage in a kitchen pantry was that he “had a very, very rambunctious youth”; he was 46 at the time. The White House efficiency czar, currently a defendant in a putative class-action lawsuit filed by eight former employees who accuse him of perpetrating an “Animal House” work environment of “rampant sexual harassment,” and paid a quarter of a million dollars to a flight attendant who says he got naked and asked her to touch his erect penis in exchange for the gift of a horse.

    And of course the presumptive Defense Secretary was accused of raping a woman who was tasked with monitoring what she described to police as his “creeper vibes” after a Republican women’s conference at which he was a keynote speaker, just a month and change after the birth of his fourth child with a woman who was not his wife at the time. (Reader, she married him.)

    The aggressive rapeyness of the second Donald Trump administration is so tyrannical it’s almost enough to make a girl wistful for Matt Gaetz, the Florida congressman who withdrew his name from attorney general contention yesterday (to make way for the despicable Pam Bondi) amid an orgy of leaks from two investigations into his sexploits with a 17-year-old procured by a convicted sex trafficker friend. Multiple witnesses testified that Gaetz did not actually know the 17-year-old was underage, you see, and that he ceased having sex with her when he found out.

    We definitely have a kakistocracy coming our way.  We can see the incompetence, the total lack of knowledge of policy, and the complete inappropriateness of every candidate for Cabinet.  It comes from the ultimate dotard.  The only thing we have going for us now is our resolve and the fact that the Republican Majority in both Houses is narrow. Both houses have also had lots of experience in gumming up the works for Trump. Trump’s so-called mandate is a bald-faced lie.  The LA Times asks, “As Trump’s lead in popular vote shrinks, does he really have a ‘mandate’?”  Of course, Trump will be oblivious to all that, so he’s relying heavily on executive mandates that may or may not be legal.” Jenny Jarvis has the details.

    • Though Trump overwhelmingly won the electoral college vote, his tally in the popular vote is hardly a landslide.

    • In the last 75 years, only three other presidents had popular-vote margins that were smaller than Trump’s.

    • When Trump exaggerates his presidential mandate, he is not an outlier but drawing from bipartisan history.

    In his victory speech on Nov. 6, President-elect Donald Trump claimed Americans had given him an “unprecedented and powerful mandate.”

    It’s a message his transition team has echoed in the last three weeks, referring to his “MAGA Mandate” and a “historic mandate for his agenda.”

    But given that Trump’s lead in the popular vote has dwindled as more votes have been counted in California and other states that lean blue, there is fierce disagreement over whether most Americans really endorse his plans to overhaul government and implement sweeping change.

    The latest tally from the Cook Political Report shows Trump winning 49.83% of the popular vote, with a margin of 1.55% over Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The president-elect’s share of the popular vote now falls in the bottom half for American presidents — far below that of Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson, who won 61.1% of the popular vote in 1964, defeating Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater by nearly 23 percentage points.

    In the last 75 years, only three presidents — John F. Kennedy in 1960, Richard Nixon in 1968 and George W. Bush in 2000 — had popular-vote margins smaller than Trump’s current lead.

    “If there ever was a mandate, this isn’t it,” said Hans Noel, associate professor of government at Georgetown University.

    There is a slim majority margin in the US House of Representatives.  There is no mandate radical change there.  This is from Politico, “Where the slim House margin might matter most.”  The analysis is by Anthony Adragna.

    Republicans are vowing an all-out war in the opening days of the next Congress against Biden administration regulations in areas as varied as energy, financial, housing and education policy.

    They’re hoping for a redux of 2017 and 2018, when Republicans used their unified control of government and the powers of the Congressional Review Act to ax 16 regulations. With a coming 53-47 majority, GOP senators say they’re again primed to use the CRA, one of their most potent tools to undo Democratic policies — and one that tends to unite the often fractious Republican conference.

    But — and it’s a major but — an extremely narrow House margin could make things hard to pull off, at least for the first couple of months of the Trump administration. While the GOP could lose as many as three votes in the Senate with Vice President-elect JD Vance (R-Ohio) casting tie-breakers, the House very well be at a one-vote margin until early April (more on that math below).

    Still, that hasn’t dampened Republicans’ enthusiasm around the CRA.

    “We’re going to want to go and evaluate everything that fits into the jurisdiction” of the 1996 review law, incoming Senate Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) told Inside Congress. Invoking it involves passing simple-majority votes in both chambers plus a presidential signature, no filibusters allowed.

    President Joe Biden’s administration recognized this looming threat and prioritized early completion of rulemakings to shield them from congressional challenge. Still, dozens of regulations were finalized after Aug. 1, 2024, leaving them vulnerable to the CRA, according to Public Citizen, which closely tracks the potential use of the law. (That corresponds to the date identified by the Congressional Research Service after which rules might be vulnerable to revocation.)

    Barrasso’s hardly alone with vows of aggressive use of the tool, which had only been successfully used once before Trump’s first term.

    “We’ll do every possible regulation we can get to,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said. “It’s a wonderful tool for undoing the bureaucratic excess of the Biden administration.”

    “On some of these crazy policies we ought to just get rid of them as fast as we can,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), who said he’d instructed his staff to find regulations that may be good targets for challenges.

    “This is the only time the Congressional Review Act actually has teeth, otherwise it’s a messaging vehicle,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said, referring to the first months of a new trifecta, since using the CRA effectively requires one party to control the presidency and both chambers of Congress, a relatively infrequent occurrence in modern politics.

    Hopefully, this turns into a Can’t Do Anything Congress.

    Have a good weekend!  Hope you had a great day for feasting! I’m off to eat a turkey sandwich!

    What’s on your reading and blogging list today?

     

    #JohnbussBskySocial #Repeat1968JohnBuss #DonnyDotardAndTheChaosCult #TrumpCabinetRapeGang

  27. Finally Friday Reads: Your Cassandra Daily

    Nothing says Thanksgiving to me more than the WKRP Turkey Drop! Thank you, John Buss, @repeat1968

    Good Day, Sky Dancers!

    My first short story remains in my scrapbook in its purply blue mimeograph ink. It has my drawing of Cassandra and my interpretation of my favorite Greek Character, who was dedicated to the Greek God Apollo but was fated to make true prophecies no one ever believed.  I was drawn to her in my 5th-grade mythology class.  I remember my mother listening to me once and starting to question me before she interrupted herself by telling me this. “I don’t know why I question you; you’re almost always right.”  I usually don’t believe everything I read, but I remember it. Prognostication is less godly and more mathematical these days, but when you know what’s likely to happen when you do that S-VAR model based on solid theory and a new hypothesis, you don’t always want to welcome the results.

    I’ve been running around with my hair on fire since the Orange Demon started obsessing about tariffs again.  He tried them during his last Reign of Terror and nearly drove our farmers out of business.  Congress had to rescue them with huge subsidies that paid them for not selling their crops or livestock. Trump started a Trade War with China. He needed a visit from Herbert Hoover’s Ghost and to listen to the huge chorus of economists who warned him, but he persisted.  Luckily, it didn’t take out the U.S. economy, but it ran up the deficit and jeopardized the Agriculture sector.

    This warning is from the AP. “Trump’s tariffs in his first term did little to alter the economy, but this time could be different.”   Trump’s misunderstanding of tariffs could wreck the economies of North America.  This analsyis comes from Josh Boak.

    Donald Trump loved to use tariffs on foreign goods during his first presidency. But their impact was barely noticeable in the overall economy, even if their aftershocks were clear in specific industries.

    The data show they never fully delivered on his promised factory jobs. Nor did they provoke the avalanche of inflation that critics feared.

    This time, though, his tariff threats might be different.

    The president-elect is talking about going much bigger — on a potential scale that creates more uncertainty about whether he’ll do what he says and what the consequences could be.

    “There’s going to be a lot more tariffs, I mean, he’s pretty clear,” said Michael Stumo, the CEO of Coalition for a Prosperous America, a group that has supported import taxes to help domestic manufacturing.

    The president-elect posted on social media Monday that on his first day in office he would impose 25% tariffs on all goods imported from Mexico and Canada until those countries satisfactorily stop illegal immigration and the flow of illegal drugs such as fentanyl into the United States.

    Those tariffs could essentially blow up the North American trade pact that Trump’s team negotiated during his initial term. But on Wednesday, Trump posted on social media that he had spoken with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and she had agreed to stop unauthorized migration across the border into the United States.

    Trump also posted on Monday that Chinese imports would face additional tariffs of 10% until Beijing cracks down on the production of materials used in making fentanyl.

    President Sheinbaum immediately denied Trump’s characterization of their conversation.  This headline from HuffPo says it all. “Trump Mocked After Mexico’s President Blows Up His Brag About Their Call.” Josephine Harvey reports on the response.

    Donald Trump seemed to offer alternative facts on Wednesday about his recent call with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and was swiftly rebutted by the leader herself, prompting mockery on social media.

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, the U.S. president-elect declared that Sheinbaum had “agreed to stop Migration through Mexico, and into the United States, effectively closing our Southern Border.”

    Shortly afterward, Sheinbaum shared a Spanish-language message about the conversation, writing, “We reiterate that Mexico’s position is not to close borders, but to build bridges between governments and communities.”

    Both leaders characterized the call as positive. The two spoke after Trump on Monday threatened to impose a 25% tax on all products entering the country from Canada and Mexico as soon as he takes office. Trump said, “This Tariff will remain in effect until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!” He also threatened to put an “additional 10%” tariff on goods from China.

    This week’s news was somewhat reminiscent of Trump’s claim ahead of the 2016 election that he would make Mexico pay for “100%” of a proposed wall at the U.S. border. Enrique Peña Nieto, Mexico’s president at the time, disagreed. Mexico did not pay.

    Social media users sarcastically celebrated Trump’s fictional victory this week.

    “All it took was one call. Donny deals,” journalist Sam Stein posted online.

    Mike Nellis, a former aide to Vice President Kamala Harris, said, “Trump thinks he convinced the President of Mexico to stop all migration across the border LOL.”

    Olivia Troye, who was a White House official in Trump’s first term, offered a “Translation” of the president-elect’s comments about Mexico.

    Just had a conversation with the President of Mexico who didn’t allow me to bully her, which left me confused about my charm…she pointed out that this is very bad…very bad for me if I do these tariffs…” Troye wrote.

    China and Canada were also blunt about DonOld’s mischaracterizations of his conversations with their leaders.  USA Today‘s Kim Hjelmgaard reported it this way. “‘Counter to facts and reality’: China, Mexico, Canada respond to Trump tariff threats.”

    Officials in China, Mexico and Canada criticized Tuesday a pledge made by President-elect Donald Trump on social media to impose new tariffs on all three of the United States’ largest trading partners on the first day of his presidency.

    Trump said the move, which appears to violate the terms of a free-trade deal Trump signed into law in 2020, is aimed at clamping down on drugs − fentanyl especially − and migrants crossing into the U.S. illegally.

    The president-elect said he would sign an executive order immediately after his inauguration introducing a 25% tariff on all goods coming from Mexico and Canada and a 10% tariff on goods from China.

    Trump takes office on Jan. 20.

    “Both Mexico and Canada have the absolute right and power to easily solve this long simmering problem,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social, a platform he owns. “It is time for them to pay a very big price!” He accused China in a separate post of failing to block smuggling of U.S.-bound fentanyl, a synthetic opioid.

    There was quick pushback to Trump’s comments from all three countries.

    Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said: “No one will win a trade war or a tariff war” and “the idea of China knowingly allowing fentanyl precursors to flow into the United States runs completely counter to facts and reality.”

    Mexico’s finance ministry said in a statement the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a trade pact Trump sponsored during his first term, provided “certainty” for investors. “The response to one tariff will be another, until we put at risk companies that we share,” Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum said, naming General Motors and Ford, among others. Sheinbaum said her comments, read aloud in a press conference, were sent in a letter to Trump.

    Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, said the tariffs would be “devastating to workers and jobs” in both the U.S. and Canada.

    A tariff is effectively a tax imposed by one country on the goods and services imported from another country. Oil is the top U.S. import from Canada, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The largest category of goods imported to the U.S. from Mexico is cars and components for cars. The U.S. imports a significant amount of electronics from China. Some goods are exempt from tariffs because of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

    Businesses are already responding to the tariff threats.  This will not be good for American Consumers. NBC News reports: “Here’s where consumers could feel the price pain if Trump’s tariffs go into effect. Trump has made threats about tariffs in the past. Businesses are nevertheless taking the latest threats seriously.”  This guy hasn’t even taken the oath of office, and he’s already acting like he’s sitting in the Oval Office.

    An estimate from The Budget Lab at Yale shared Wednesdaywith NBC News found that the cost to consumers from Trump’s proposed tariffs could reach as much as $1,200 in lost purchasing power on average based on 2023 incomes, assuming retaliatory duties on U.S. exports are put into place.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has already warned that any new tariffs imposed by the U.S. would be met with retaliatory ones by her country. Canada is similarly considering its own options, including possible tariffs on U.S. goods, according to The Associated Press.

    America’s biggest import from Canada is oil — and any increase in energy prices would likely be felt throughout the economy.

    “Another way to think about this is it’s 4 to 5 months of a normal year’s inflation in one fell swoop,” Ernie Tedeschi, The Budget Lab’s director and the former chief economist under the Biden administration, said in an email.

    The three countries Trump has selected for a new round of targeted tariff proposals — China, Mexico and Canada — represent nearly half of all U.S. import volumes.

    While Trump has insisted other countries end up paying the cost of tariffs, most economists agree those costs wind up getting passed on to shoppers. And at a time when rising prices remain a top concern, the types of goods that could see higher costs are the ones consumers interact with every day.

    Some companies are warning that particularly import-heavy parts of the economy could be hit hard. Best Buy CEO Corie Barry warned Tuesday that any added costs on U.S. imports “will be shared by our customers.” Electronic goods account for the largest share of U.S. imports from China as of 2023.

    “There’s very little in [the] consumer electronics space that is not imported. … These are goods that people need, and higher prices are not helpful,” Barry said.

    This is what happens when morons vote for a moron.  David R. Lurie of Public Notice has this analysis on other Trump plans. These endanger our National Security.  “Tulsi Gabbard and Trump’s scheme to gut the intel agencies. It’s hard to envision a less suited intelligence chief. That’s a feature, not a bug.”

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Donald Trump has selected Tulsi Gabbard, former congresswoman and notorious Putin stooge, as his nominee for director of the office of national intelligence.

    It’s difficult to imagine a candidate less suited to carry out the DNI’s mission, and that’s very likely just the reason that Trump chose her. Gabbard has virtually none of the experience or expertise required to competently assume DNI’s weighty responsibility of marshaling the information and analyses gathered by the nation’s intelligence agencies and coordinating their work.

    Gabbard’s longstanding association with a shadowy rightwing cult, her history of suspicious uses of campaign funds, her habitual conspiracism and advocacy for the interests of bloodthirsty dictators (including Syria’s Bashar al-Assad as well as Putin) all raise a multiplicity of red flags.

    But, as Donald Trump made clear during his first term in office, national security is hardly at the top of his list of priorities. In fact, hobbling the nation’s intelligence agencies is one of his principal goals.

    Marc Zuckerberg perfects his role as Surrender Monkey by dining with the Dotard at Mara Lardo. This is from the BBC.  “Mark Zuckerberg dines with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago.”  It was definitely a Baboon butt moment.

    Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg has visited Donald Trump at his resort in Mar-a-Lago, further evidence of the apparent thawing in their once frosty relations.

    The president-elect already has a close, high-profile relationship with another of the leading figures in tech, X owner Elon Musk.

    Historically, though, there has been no such closeness between Trump and Mr Zuckerberg – with Trump barred from Facebook and Instagram after the Capitol riots, and Trump threatening the Meta boss with jail if he interfered in the 2024 presidential election.

    However, there has recently been evidence those strained relations are improving, culminating in Mr Zuckerberg dining with the president-elect at his Florida mansion.

    “Mark was grateful for the invitation to join President Trump for dinner and the opportunity to meet with members of his team about the incoming administration,” a Meta spokesperson told the BBC.

    “It’s an important time for the future of American Innovation,” the statement added.

    The Detroit Free Press featured an Op-Ed by the AG of Michigan, Dana Nessel.  It is difficult not to notice the incredibly large number of Sexual Predators Trump has been appointing to his Cabinet and other leadership positions.  It seems like a feature and not a bug, “Michigan AG Nessel: Trump cabinet picks show disdain for victims of sex assault.”  We continue to see a parade of the stupid and the lawless.

    Every 68 seconds, an American is sexually assaulted.

    Only a third of the estimated 440,000 victims over the age of 12 each year will ever report, often due to negative emotions such as guilt, shame, and self-blame.

    Survivors feel they won’t be believed, so why bother reporting, opening themselves up to ridicule, judgment and shame?

    So what is it we are telling victims of these brutal, life-altering crimes, when our President-elect seeks to elevate alleged fellow perpetrators to cabinet positions and other high levels of power in our government?

    To lead the Department of Defense, Trump has nominated Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, who settled an accusation that he raped a woman and entered into a non-disclosure agreement with the victim. To lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he nominated Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who has been accused of groping a young woman who worked for him as a babysitter on several occasions.  For Secretary of Education – responsible for ensuring the schooling of our nation’s children – he nominated Linda McMahon, who has been sued for criminal negligence for enabling the grooming and sexual abuse of children by employees of her organization.  And as the nation’s top law enforcement officer, he nominated former Representative Matt Gaetz — who withdrew from consideration last week — the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation, following accusations he paid minors for sex. And Trump still has more nominations to make.

    With these nominations, we are telling survivors of sexual assault that they don’t matter, that their trauma is meaningless and that they should stay silent.

    And they will.

    The American Prospect calls them “The Rape Gang.”

    The presumptive Secretary of Education is married to a man whose former employee alleges he forced her to perform sex acts with his friend for an hour and a half after he defecated on her head. The presumptive Commerce Secretary preemptively sued his former assistant in 2018, after her lawyer threatened to publicize “not pretty” 2 a.m. text messages she’d received from him and his wife. The presumptive Health and Human Services director’s explanation for forcibly groping a former nanny’s breasts while holding her hostage in a kitchen pantry was that he “had a very, very rambunctious youth”; he was 46 at the time. The White House efficiency czar, currently a defendant in a putative class-action lawsuit filed by eight former employees who accuse him of perpetrating an “Animal House” work environment of “rampant sexual harassment,” and paid a quarter of a million dollars to a flight attendant who says he got naked and asked her to touch his erect penis in exchange for the gift of a horse.

    And of course the presumptive Defense Secretary was accused of raping a woman who was tasked with monitoring what she described to police as his “creeper vibes” after a Republican women’s conference at which he was a keynote speaker, just a month and change after the birth of his fourth child with a woman who was not his wife at the time. (Reader, she married him.)

    The aggressive rapeyness of the second Donald Trump administration is so tyrannical it’s almost enough to make a girl wistful for Matt Gaetz, the Florida congressman who withdrew his name from attorney general contention yesterday (to make way for the despicable Pam Bondi) amid an orgy of leaks from two investigations into his sexploits with a 17-year-old procured by a convicted sex trafficker friend. Multiple witnesses testified that Gaetz did not actually know the 17-year-old was underage, you see, and that he ceased having sex with her when he found out.

    We definitely have a kakistocracy coming our way.  We can see the incompetence, the total lack of knowledge of policy, and the complete inappropriateness of every candidate for Cabinet.  It comes from the ultimate dotard.  The only thing we have going for us now is our resolve and the fact that the Republican Majority in both Houses is narrow. Both houses have also had lots of experience in gumming up the works for Trump. Trump’s so-called mandate is a bald-faced lie.  The LA Times asks, “As Trump’s lead in popular vote shrinks, does he really have a ‘mandate’?”  Of course, Trump will be oblivious to all that, so he’s relying heavily on executive mandates that may or may not be legal.” Jenny Jarvis has the details.

    • Though Trump overwhelmingly won the electoral college vote, his tally in the popular vote is hardly a landslide.

    • In the last 75 years, only three other presidents had popular-vote margins that were smaller than Trump’s.

    • When Trump exaggerates his presidential mandate, he is not an outlier but drawing from bipartisan history.

    In his victory speech on Nov. 6, President-elect Donald Trump claimed Americans had given him an “unprecedented and powerful mandate.”

    It’s a message his transition team has echoed in the last three weeks, referring to his “MAGA Mandate” and a “historic mandate for his agenda.”

    But given that Trump’s lead in the popular vote has dwindled as more votes have been counted in California and other states that lean blue, there is fierce disagreement over whether most Americans really endorse his plans to overhaul government and implement sweeping change.

    The latest tally from the Cook Political Report shows Trump winning 49.83% of the popular vote, with a margin of 1.55% over Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The president-elect’s share of the popular vote now falls in the bottom half for American presidents — far below that of Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson, who won 61.1% of the popular vote in 1964, defeating Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater by nearly 23 percentage points.

    In the last 75 years, only three presidents — John F. Kennedy in 1960, Richard Nixon in 1968 and George W. Bush in 2000 — had popular-vote margins smaller than Trump’s current lead.

    “If there ever was a mandate, this isn’t it,” said Hans Noel, associate professor of government at Georgetown University.

    There is a slim majority margin in the US House of Representatives.  There is no mandate radical change there.  This is from Politico, “Where the slim House margin might matter most.”  The analysis is by Anthony Adragna.

    Republicans are vowing an all-out war in the opening days of the next Congress against Biden administration regulations in areas as varied as energy, financial, housing and education policy.

    They’re hoping for a redux of 2017 and 2018, when Republicans used their unified control of government and the powers of the Congressional Review Act to ax 16 regulations. With a coming 53-47 majority, GOP senators say they’re again primed to use the CRA, one of their most potent tools to undo Democratic policies — and one that tends to unite the often fractious Republican conference.

    But — and it’s a major but — an extremely narrow House margin could make things hard to pull off, at least for the first couple of months of the Trump administration. While the GOP could lose as many as three votes in the Senate with Vice President-elect JD Vance (R-Ohio) casting tie-breakers, the House very well be at a one-vote margin until early April (more on that math below).

    Still, that hasn’t dampened Republicans’ enthusiasm around the CRA.

    “We’re going to want to go and evaluate everything that fits into the jurisdiction” of the 1996 review law, incoming Senate Whip John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) told Inside Congress. Invoking it involves passing simple-majority votes in both chambers plus a presidential signature, no filibusters allowed.

    President Joe Biden’s administration recognized this looming threat and prioritized early completion of rulemakings to shield them from congressional challenge. Still, dozens of regulations were finalized after Aug. 1, 2024, leaving them vulnerable to the CRA, according to Public Citizen, which closely tracks the potential use of the law. (That corresponds to the date identified by the Congressional Research Service after which rules might be vulnerable to revocation.)

    Barrasso’s hardly alone with vows of aggressive use of the tool, which had only been successfully used once before Trump’s first term.

    “We’ll do every possible regulation we can get to,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said. “It’s a wonderful tool for undoing the bureaucratic excess of the Biden administration.”

    “On some of these crazy policies we ought to just get rid of them as fast as we can,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), who said he’d instructed his staff to find regulations that may be good targets for challenges.

    “This is the only time the Congressional Review Act actually has teeth, otherwise it’s a messaging vehicle,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said, referring to the first months of a new trifecta, since using the CRA effectively requires one party to control the presidency and both chambers of Congress, a relatively infrequent occurrence in modern politics.

    Hopefully, this turns into a Can’t Do Anything Congress.

    Have a good weekend!  Hope you had a great day for feasting! I’m off to eat a turkey sandwich!

    What’s on your reading and blogging list today?

     

    #JohnbussBskySocial #Repeat1968JohnBuss #DonnyDotardAndTheChaosCult #TrumpCabinetRapeGang

  28. if you want to manage your money like the 1% I’m revealing the 75115 rule that would allow you to build wealth regardless of how much you earn it’s a system that adapts to your Income level whether you earn $10,000 or a million doll a year because no matter how

    much you earn you’re always going to follow these three steps first for every dollar that you earn 75% or 75 cents of it will be the maximum amount you can use to spend to buy things housing food vacations Mr Magic lamps if you can spend less than 75% of your Income

    that’s fantastic but the beauty of the 75% limit is it gives you flexibility and encourages you to do two key things first it forces you to look for cheaper alternatives premium gas or regular organic free range guacamole or regular Whole Foods or Aldi so most of the wealthy people that I

    know share this common trait which is what I noticed after starting my own business and networking with other entrepreneurs which honestly is a big deal for me because I’m naturally an introvert but the most unexpecting and revealing moment was when bu of us went out for dinner after an event

    and everyone was asking the waiter for happy hour specials and the cheapest wine they had and I kid you not when the bill came people literally pulled out their phones to calculate how to evenly split the bill so everyone only paid for exactly what they had down to the last set and keep in mind

    these people were all millionaires next the 75 limit forces you to focus on value you’ve probably heard countless times before to stop buying coffee and instead save and and invest that money but I believe that’s the wrong way to look at it instead before you make any purchase you

    should ask yourself how much do you value the thing that you’re buying if that $5 ice coffee makes you the happiest person in the world makes you more productive social and reduces your stress for the rest of the day then chances are the value you get from that cup of coffee is way more than

    the $5 it cost so go get it instead of grasping at the little purchases and attempting to save money it’s it’s more effective to focus on the bigger expenses a brand new car 100in TV or a cheese dispenser the thing with big purchases is it’ll make you happy for a temporary amount

    of time but after that initial honeymon period ends your happiness level is right back where it started then that 70k car just becomes a regular old car with the same functionality as every other car so if you manage to spend less than 75% of your Income like you only spend 60% of

    it then I need you to hold on to that 15% difference because I’m going to show you what you need to do with it in a bit next the 10 in the 75105 rule says that for every dollar you earn you should save at least 10% or 10 cents of it for this thing called a cushion fund a 2022 study found that

    as much as 56% of Americans can’t afford an unexpected $1,000 expense think of your cushion fund as a cash Reserve that’s specifically set aside for financial emergencies and emergencies don’t include a wild Night Out Vacations or fried chicken Cravings this money should only be

    used when pretty much all hell breaks loose when your house gets flooded when you get stranded in the middle of nowhere and have no other options basically when your life is Fubar so about 8 years ago I got into a really really bad car accident that pretty much destroyed the front of my car I was

    in a completely different state and I didn’t know anyone but the mechanic said that it was going to cost about $115,000 to fix and I was really stressed out because I had no idea how I was going to come up with this kind of money I even considered taking on a Loan even though

    I knew that the interest for it would easily cost way more than that amount of money but then I remember that I had my cushion fund saved for emergencies just like this the good news is determining how much you actually need in your cushion fund is simple open up a spreadsheet and take account of

    all your monthly expenses rent pineapple pizza bills multiply this total by five if your monthly expenses are $2,000 you generally want to save for 5 months of expenses so your cushion fund is $10,000 once you have your total you need to commit to saving this amount I built this

    Savings go tracker to help me save money a lot faster I just put in how much I want to save and then I can track my progress and Visually see where I’m at for a limited time I’m giving away my ultimate Savings goal tracker for free with the link below

    but what’s even more important is where you store your cushion fund While most people keep their Savings in a traditional Savings account like Chase or Bank of America there are much better places called high Yield Savings

    accounts or hyas because they give you much higher Interest Rates which allow you to grow your money a lot faster with traditional Savings accounts like Chase the national interest rate is .5% apy meaning if you put $10,000 in the account at the end of the year the

    bank is just going to give you $57 in interest leaving you with $10,000 57 on the other hand a high Yield Savings account can offer you 4% apy meaning at the end of the year they’ll give you $400 in interest leaving you with $10,400 I’ll leave some high

    Yield Savings accounts you can check out below but an even bigger problem is most people don’t know when to stop saving money the reality is you don’t always want to just save your money forever once you have your 5 months worth of cushion fund stop

    saving and just hold on to that 10% amount you were going to save and I’ll show you what you need to do with it next the 15 in the 7510 15 rule says that for every dollar you earn you should invest at least 15% or 15 cents of it for your future and there are two specific accounts you should

    start investing with to optimize your Taxes you basically want to funnel any extra funds that you have into this particular step because the whole point of the 15% rule is to put your money to work so you can build Assets and wealth because real wealth is built by

    owning Assets the problem is we were only taught how to make make money from our work in labor that’s pretty much what school teaches us how can you get a high-paying job but the wealthiest people in this country don’t make their money from their job they make their

    money from their Assets and after reading Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert kosaki I realize that you can be completely broke with a high-paying job but if you have Assets you can spend all your money today and still be wealthy next month but unfortunately like many

    people I never learned in school nor did our parents teach us this I pretty much had to go out of my way to learn this from reading and studying Finance with books like psychology of money

    and the intelligent investor but this is one of those things that once you learn it you can never unlearn it but if you don’t learn it you might never learn it and if you don’t learn it you’re never going to be able to build true wealth there are two specific investment accounts

    you should start investing with because of major tax advantages first is the Roth IRA which is an indiv idual retirement account the main advantage of having a Roth ra is that your earnings and Profits grow tax-free that means when you retire and withdraw all their earnings you

    won’t pay any Taxes on it at all for instance Peter theel famously grew his Roth ra account to5 billion and what’s Wild is that when he decides to withdraw from it he’s going to pay0 in Taxes on it the caveat is that you can only contribute money

    that has already been taxed meaning after you received your paycheck and the rothar benefit is so great that the government limits how much you can contribute to it in 2024 if you’re under the age of 50 you can only contribute $7,000 a year into a Roth IRA and if you’re over the age of

    50 you can contribute $8,000 a year it’s a pretty straightforward four-step process to both open and contribute to a Roth IRA first you need to have what’s called earned Income meaning that you need to get your Income working for someone else yourself

    or a business that you own second you want to go to any Brokerage website like Fidelity Schwab or Vanguard and select the option to open a Roth ra account third once you have your account open you want to transfer money from your regular bank account to your Roth IRA account fourth

    and please make sure you pay attention because many people completely miss this step and wonder why their Roth or a account hasn’t grown in 20 years and it’s because you actually need to purchase some investment ments in the account don’t worry about what you should invest in

    I’m going to share my favorite Investments later where I can basically just set it and forget it the second account you should invest with is the 401K which is an employer sponsored account meaning you can only have a 401k account if you work for an employer that offers it

    but thankfully many companies do unlike a Roth ra all your contributions to the 401K is made with pre-tax dollars meaning you’ll pay Taxes on the money later the idea is many people’s Income in will be lower when they retire so people are expecting to

    pay a smaller amount of Taxes on the money in the future compared to now you basically assign a portion of your paycheck to be contributed to the 401K and this account has a much higher contribution limit of $23,000 per year as of 2024 one of the biggest advantages of the 401K is

    that many employers offer an additional benefits where they match your contribution basically meaning they give you free money the most most common employer 401K match is a 100% match for the first 3% you contribute with a 50% match for the next 2% it sounds really confusing but basically if your

    salary is $65,000 and you maximize your contributions up to the employer’s match you would contribute 5% or $3,250 in a year and in return your employer would immediately match and give you another $2,600 for free no questions asked totaling $5,850 in your 401k and again it’s basically

    like free money for you and your retirement in the future so if your employer offers this this is an absolute no-brainer so after you have either one of these or both of these retirement accounts you need to figure out where to invest your money and before I tell you what I personally invest in

    here’s a practical reason that the wealthy invest in Assets if you invest just $100 every month for 50 years at a rate of return of 10% % at the end of the 5050 years you would have only contributed about $60,000 but from overtime in the Stock Market and

    returns your total Portfolio value will be $1.4 million also Mumu the Investment app that I personally used is giving away five free stocks valued up to $10,000 if you open a new account and deposit $100 with my link below anyways for most people investing in an index fund or ETF

    is all that you really need to do basically instead of investing in one stock that can either go up or down with an index fund or ETF you actually invest in hundreds of different stocks you automatically diversify your money and reduce your overall risk meaning you can pretty much just set it up

    and forget it for example if you were to buy an S&P 500 Index Fund by buying that one fund you would own a small percentage of every single stock in the S&P 500 thus you track the entire index that would automatically provide you with diversification because your investment is now spread

    across the top 500 companies in the US and by buying an index fund it’s actually a lot cheaper than buying into each of these 500 companies individually on their own index funds are usually a great safe beted in retirement account because based on the average over the course of the past 80

    years index funds have improved to return about 8% a year some years are naturally going to be higher than others but on average you can expect your money to grow and compound over time so with most of my money I invest in passively managed index funds like FX a or vo because it’s easy and

    really straightforward but you can invest in whatever you would like there are a ton of ETFs and index funds out there and if the funds that I choose AR available in your 401k you can just look

    for another type of index fund that invests in a lot of companies in the US and you should be pretty golden for the most part which leads me to something that you’ve got to start accepting and it’s that even if you’re trying your hardest to be better with money sometimes you might

    still feel like you’re not doing enough and that might be because you don’t know the 10 things you should never waste your money on click here to learn the 10 things you need to stop buying immediately

    Now that you’re fully informed, don’t miss this insightful video on How To Manage Your Money Like The 1%. With over 1334205 views, this video deepens your understanding of Finance.

    CashNews, your go-to portal for financial news and insights.

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  29. Cats of the Louvre, a graphic novel by Taiyo Matsumoto

    Happy Caturday!!

    There are just 37 days remaining until election day, November 5. While Trump continues to display his growing cognitive issues as well as his ignorance of public policy, Kamala Harris has been making substantive appearances in which she intelligently spells out what she will do as president. Earlier in the week she spoke about her economic plans. Yesterday she visited the border in Arizona and gave a speech outlining her proposed immigration policies and attacking Trump’s failures. 

    CNN: Harris goes to the border to take Trump to task for blocking bill to fix migration issues: ‘He prefers to run on a problem.’ 

    Vice President Kamala Harris went on the offensive against former President Donald Trump on immigration Friday during her visit to the southern border in Arizona as she tries to turn a political vulnerability on its head.

    Immigration has featured prominently in the 2024 presidential election, with polls showing voters placing more trust in Trump to handle the issue than Harris.

    Democrats, grappling with years of border crises, have tried to gain ground by pointing to the bipartisan border measure that congressional Republicans blocked earlier this year after Trump came out against it. Harris on Friday lambasted Trump for his role in stymying that bill.

    “It was the strongest border security bill we have seen in decades. It was endorsed by the Border Patrol union. And it should be in effect today, producing results in real time, right now, for our country,” she said at a rally in Douglas, a town on the US-Mexico border.

    “But Donald Trump tanked it. He picked up the phone and called some friends in Congress and said, ‘Stop the bill,’” she said. “He prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. And the American people deserve a president who cares more about border security than playing political games and their personal political future.”

    She said she would ask Congress to pass the measure if she is elected, and would sign it into law. She also laid out a series of proposals that she said were “not just about some rhetoric at a rally,” but would help stem the flow of migrants into the United States.

    A bit more:

    “Solutions are at hand if we focus on fixing a problem and not running on a problem,” Harris said.

    She said she’d work with Congress to create a pathway to citizenship for “hardworking immigrants who have been here for years, for years, and deserve to have a system that works,” as well as “Dreamers” – undocumented immigrants brought into the United States as children, who are allowed to live and work in the US under an Obama-era program but generally cannot become citizens under current law.

    “They are American in every way. But still, they do not have an earned pathway to citizenship. And this problem has gone unsolved at this point now for decades,” Harris said. “The same goes for farmworkers who ensure that we have food on our tables and sustain our agricultural industry – and they too have been in legal limbo for years because politicians have refused to come together and fix our broken immigration system.”

    Earlier this year, Biden announced an executive action severely limiting the ability of migrants to seek asylum at the US southern border if they crossed unlawfully – a departure from decadeslong protocol. Immigrant advocates have likened the executive action to Trump-era policies.

    The measure can be turned on and off and lifted when there’s a daily average of fewer than 1,500 encounters between ports of entry, among other criteria. It remains in place.

    Homeland Security officials have credited the action for driving down border crossings to the lowest point since 2020.

    The Washington Post: Harris, in visit to border, proposes new restrictions on immigration

    DOUGLAS, Ariz. — Vice President Kamala Harris and her campaign on Friday proposed new border restrictions that would go further than the emergency rules the Biden administration deployed in June, making the announcement during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border Friday in an effort to confront one of her biggest political vulnerabilities.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    Harris’s proposed executive action would build on President Joe Biden’s current policy of essentially closing the U.S. asylum system unless illegal border crossings stay below 1,500 daily crossings for a week. Harris would lower that threshold and extend the period it must be met, advisers said, although exact figures were not immediately available.

    The action might have a limited practical impact, at least in the short term, but the proposal appeared designed to send a message that Harris is taking a more assertive immigration posture than the administration in which she serves and that she is not ceding the issue to Donald Trump, who consistently scores higher marks among voters on border security and immigration.

    In what her campaign had billed as a major speech in this community, which sits on the border, Harris also emphasized her support for an enforcement-heavy border security bill crafted by a bipartisan group of senators earlier this year. She decried Trump’s central role in derailing it, noting that he had urged Republicans in Congress to oppose the legislation.

    “Donald Trump tanked it,” she said, standing amid six different signs that said in capital letters, “Border Security and Stability.”

    “Because, you see, he prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem,” she added. “And the American people deserve a president who cares more about border security than playing political games and their personal political future.”

    Read more details at the WaPo link.

    NPR: At the border in Arizona, Harris lays out a plan to get tough on fentanyl

    Vice President Harris walked along the U.S. border with Mexico on Friday alongside a stretch of border wall built during the Obama administration, talking with border officials about their work.

    It was a photo op meant to illustrate that she supports border security — one of the biggest concerns voters have about Harris — and to try to defang criticism from her Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump.

    Later, she embraced a mother whose son died of a fentanyl overdose, and made her most extensive remarks to date on how she would address border security and immigration reform.

    “I will reach across the aisle and I will embrace common sense approaches and new technologies to get the job done,” she said….

    She said her experience as a prosecutor and attorney general gave her experience to tackle the fentanyl problem.

    “I’ve seen tunnels with walls as smooth as the walls of your living room, complete with lighting and air conditioning, making very clear that it is about an enterprise that is making a whole lot of money in the trafficking of guns, drugs and human beings,” she said.

    “Stopping transnational criminal organizations and strengthening our border is not new to me, and it is a long standing priority of mine. I have done that work, and I will continue to treat it as a priority when I am elected president of the United States,” Harris said.

    Read more at NPR.

    Trump very much has not been focusing on policy, and if you’ve paid attention to his rallies and other public appearances, you know that he’s simply not capable of doing so. Even though he was “president” for four years, he has learned nothing about how the government works or about serious issues. He is incapable of learning, and why the media keeps propping him up is a mystery. Here are a couple of “issues” raised by the Trump camp over the past couple of days.

    The New York Times: Trump Threatens to Prosecute Google for Showing ‘Bad Stories’ About Him

    Former President Donald J. Trump threatened Friday to prosecute Google if he was elected to the presidency a second time, claiming that the tech company had been “illegally” showing only “bad stories” about him and only “good” ones about Vice President Kamala Harris.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    It was the latest instance of Mr. Trump threatening to prosecute his perceived opponents should he return to office. This month, he called for the prosecution of lawyers, political donors and operatives if they engaged in “unscrupulous behavior.”

    Mr. Trump said at a news conference on Thursday that the former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should be prosecuted in connection with the security lapses by which a mob of his own supporters attacked the Capitol during the transfer of presidential power on Jan. 6, 2021.

    And on Friday, in Michigan, he called for an attorney general “somewhere, like in a Republican territory” to investigate Ms. Pelosi and her husband over reports that Mr. Pelosi had sold Visa stock ahead of the Justice Department’s filing an antitrust lawsuit against the company.

    It was not immediately clear what prompted Mr. Trump to make the statement about Google on his social media website, Truth Social.

    “It has been determined that Google has illegally used a system of only revealing and displaying bad stories about Donald J. Trump, some made up for this purpose while, at the same time, only revealing good stories about Comrade Kamala Harris,” Mr. Trump wrote.

    “This is an ILLEGAL ACTIVITY, and hopefully the Justice Department will criminally prosecute them for this blatant Interference of Elections,” he added. “If not, and subject to the Laws of our Country, I will request their prosecution, at the maximum levels, when I win the Election, and become President of the United States!”

    Google said it did not manipulate search results to favor any candidate.

    “Both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of search for relevant and common search queries,” a Google spokesman said.

    The New Republic: Trump Is So Mad About His Bad Press That He’s Unleashed a New Threat

    The source of Trump’s claim appears to be the right-wing Media Research Center, which published a report on Wednesday covered this week by Fox News and The New York Post.

    MRC’s report “analyzed the Sept. 6 Google search results” for the terms “donald trump presidential race 2024” and “kamala harris presidential race 2024.” The group alleges that the results favored outlets with “a history of leftist bias,” and that, while Trump’s campaign website appeared sixth in his search results, Harris’s campaign website appeared third in hers.

    Dismissing MRC’s report, a Google spokesperson told Fox, “Both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of Search for relevant and common search queries. This report looked at a single rare search term on a single day several weeks ago, and even for that search, both candidates’ websites ranked in the top results on Google.”

    Trump’s Truth Social post recalls his previous claims that Google search results are biased against him, which Google has denied.

    It is also yet another example of Trump promising to prosecute his perceived political foes if he retakes the White House. Earlier this month, for example, Trump posted to Truth Social that, if he wins, “those people that CHEATED”—such as “Lawyers, Political Operatives, Donors, Illegal Voters, & Corrupt Election Officials”—“will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the Law, which will include long term prison sentences.”

    This is what Trump is preoccupied with a month before the November election.

    Oh, and JD Vance continues to say the quiet part aloud when it comes to women’s control over their own bodies and lives. Recently, close Trump adviser did it too.

    Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo: Trump Camp Says State Menstrual Surveillance Programs are A-OK

    One of the most toxic and politically explosive parts of the current abortion rights debate is tied the complexities and perhaps inanities of leaving national abortion policy up to individual states. And a comment yesterday from Trump spokesman Jason Miller put the question right back into the center of the campaign.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    It’s not enough for many anti-abortion stalwarts to ban the procedure in their state. They want to ban legal drugs designed to induce abortion. They want to surveil and block women traveling to other states to obtain an abortion. One of the most threatening dimensions of these programs is that they threaten to make doctors and other medical professionals — who might give counsel on or simply know about a woman’s plans to obtain an abortion — responsible for reporting her actions. If you visit your OB-GYN and discuss traveling to another state to get an abortion, does your OB have to report you to the local sheriff? It applies to third parties who might assist a woman either in traveling to get an abortion or getting FDA-approved medications to induce an abortion at home. The cases we’ve already seen range the gamut from sheriff’s departments wanting to pull medical and travel records for evidence of pregnancies that ended for unexplained reasons, gaps in menstruation, trips out of state that coincided with a pregnancy not brought to term….

    …[Y]esterday in an interview on Newsmax of all places, a host asked Trump spokesman Jason Miller whether Donald Trump supported or wouldn’t aim to prevent states from enforcing their own menstrual surveillance regimes. It was one of those Fox-like interviews in which the host seems to go out of his way to signal what the right answer is. You wouldn’t do this, right?

    “But he wouldn’t support monitoring pregnancies, even if a state decided to do that?” the host asked.

    Miller responded that “he’s [i.e., Trump’s] made it very clear that he’s not going to go and weigh in and push various states on how they want to go and set up their particular rules and restrictions. That’s going to be up to the states.”

    So he went there. It’s totally up to the states. Trump’s “leave it up to the states” approach applies to all these menstrual surveillance and travel restriction regimes as well. It’s a new opening for the Harris campaign to focus attention on an issue that hasn’t yet gotten enough attention — not just abortion rights as a general issue but states and county sheriffs’ effort to restrict women’s travel, access their medical records and current state of menstruation or gestation, and bar access to legal medications.

    What else is on Trump’s befuddled mind these days? He’s “obsessed” with Olivia Nuzzi/RFK Jr. story.

    The Daily Beast: Trump Is ‘Obsessed’ With RFK Jr.’s Sexting Scandal

    Donald Trump has become “obsessed” with the sexting scandal surrounding his new ally Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and New York magazine reporter Olivia Nuzzi, according to a report.

    The former president even called up the 70-year-old Kennedy—who’s married to Curb Your Enthusiasm star Cheryl Hines—to ask if the bombshell reports about him and the 31-year-old journalist were true, and if the relationship ever went beyond the sending of “demure” nudes, according to Puck News.

    “[Kennedy] denied the whole thing to Trump,” a source with direct knowledge told the outlet. “He said he hardly knows her. He said he met her one time.”

    Trump was also apparently close to making a public statement about the alleged digital dalliance, having “almost posted to Truth Social, his social media platform, ‘My condolences to Ryan Lizza…’” according to the Puck report. Lizza, a Politico journalist, ended his engagement to Nuzzi last month after learning of her relationship with Kennedy, according to Vanity Fair.

    Trump apparently exercised more restraint than his adviser, Corey Lewandowski, who tweeted and then later deleted his own post sharing the Kennedy gossip.

    Nuzzi had interviewed Trump for a piece published earlier this month which, in part, featured a detailed description of the GOP nominee’s ear bandaged up following the attempt on his life at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania in July.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    I’m sure he’s read the latest gossip about the scandal at Page Six. The Daily Beast: ‘Madly in Love’ Olivia Nuzzi Had ‘Incredible’ FaceTime Sex With RFK Jr: Report

    The forbidden love between New York magazine reporter Olivia Nuzzi and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been chronicled in a new report that reveals even more details of their dalliances.

    The Page Six report, which cites only anonymous sources, claimed Friday the 31-year-old Nuzzi fell “madly in love” with the Kennedy scion, 70, after he “love bombed” her and sparked a virtual relationship during his campaign.

    The two reportedly exchanged “I love yous” and had an affair that lasted nearly a year, complete with the duo having “incredible” FaceTime sex and speaking on “long calls.” The report also alleged that Nuzzi and Kennedy shared “endless texts” with each other.

    Page Six reported that Nuzzi and Kennedy’s supposed relationship kicked off as Nuzzi worked on a profile of the failed presidential candidate for New York.

    Nuzzi, who was engaged to Politico’s Ryan Lizza at the time, traveled to Los Angeles to interview Kennedy during a hike together in October 2023. It was on that hike that Kennedy, who has been married to the actress Cheryl Hines for 10 years, reportedly made his first pass at Nuzzi and grabbed her arm “as a romantic overture.”

    Page Six reported that Nuzzi and Kennedy’s relationship heated up after the journalist contacted Kennedy with follow-up questions as she wrote her profile. The relationship reportedly remained under wraps for months, but word of it had reached Lizza by August.

    Vanity Fairreportedthat Lizza had a “heated” call with Kennedy over the alleged affair upon learning of it. It remains unclear how Lizza caught wind of the reported fling, but the Daily Beast exclusively revealed this week that Kennedy had been bragging about receiving nude photos of Nuzzi.

    I hope this will be the end of Nuzzi’s career in journalism, but it probably won’t be. She could always go to Fox News.

    I’ve tried to keep this post light, because the news overall has been so depressing lately. In that spirit, I’m going to end with another hilarious, gossipy story about a Republican candidate.

    Rolling Stone: Childless GOP Candidate Borrows Friend’s Wife and Kids for Photo Ops

    Republicans have taken umbrage with the notion that they’re weird — specifically when it comes to accusations that they’re weird about people (usually women) who don’t have children. 

    The sentiment in Republican politics that childless Americans are — as JD Vance put it — disorienting and disturbing has become so prevalent that one GOP candidate has taken to borrowing his friends’ wife and children for photo ops.

    According to a Friday report from The New York Times, Derrick Anderson — a former Green Beret running for the House of Representatives in Virginia — has repeatedly featured a woman and her three daughters in campaign materials. 

    One photo features the group posing close together in an image that you could probably find framed on a grandmother’s mantle, the type of photo that your parents made your uncle with a DSLR camera take because “we never get nice pictures together.” https://twitter.com/JacobRubashkin/status/1839759803729752271

    In one campaign video, Anderson is seen walking side-by-side with the same woman. In another video, which was featured on the National Republican Campaign Committee’s website and on his YouTube channel, shows Anderson speaking to the woman and the three girls while seated in a home dining room. 

    According to the Times, the woman and girls are “the wife and children of a longtime friend.” Anderson’s campaign website does not mention a wife or children, but notes that he “lives in Spotsylvania County with his dog, Ranger, a Dalmatian.” The Republican candidate recently revealed on social media that he is engaged to his girlfriend, Maggie, and has posted pictures of her — she is decidedly not the woman featured in the photos and videos.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    You can see the “family photo” in this article at Mediaite: Anti-Abortion GOP Candidate Borrows Friend’s Wife and Daughters for Campaign Photo Op.

    A Friday article at The New York Times, headlined “G.O.P. Candidates, Looking to Soften Their Image, Turn to Their Wives,” reported how “male Republicans struggling to appeal to female voters concerned about their records on reproductive rights are unleashing their spouses to make the pitch on their behalf.”

    Male GOP candidates who are worried about getting dragged down by the abortion issue in November are putting their wives front and center in their campaign ads. That’s hardly a new phenomenon — candidates have showcased the stereotypical [husband + wife + at least two children + probably a dog or two] family photo for ages — but the Republican angst about Dobbs is so acute, at least one candidate resorted to faking an entire family for his ads.

    These GOP ads included anodyne images of “women in softly lit living rooms and pristine kitchens vouching for their husbands’ characters,” “a wholesome family gathering around the dining room table,” and moms “driving S.U.V.s with young children in the back seat as they stop for gas and groceries, talking about how their husbands are champions for their families, and can be champions for yours, too.” [….]

    So what do you do if you’re running for Congress with an R after your name but don’t have your own wife and kids?

    If you’re Derrick Anderson, a candidate running in an open race for Virginia’s seventh congressional district, you borrow a wife and daughters from a friend.

    From the Times report:

    The campaign of Derrick Anderson, a former Army Green Beret who is running in a competitive race for an open seat in Virginia’s Seventh District, has posted footage of him posing with a woman and her three daughters in what looks like a photo that might be used for an annual holiday card. In another scene filmed for potential use in a campaign ad, Mr. Anderson is seated around the dining room table with the same woman and three girls, chatting and smiling.

    But the people are not relatives. They are the wife and children of a longtime friend. Mr. Anderson, who announced this month that he was engaged, does not have any children of his own. His campaign website says he lives with his dog and does not display any of the photos.

    Isn’t it strange that Trump is never accompanied by his wife and family, but the media never mentions it?

    That’s it for me today. Please take care, especially if you are/were in the path of Helene.

    https://skydancingblog.com/2024/09/28/lazy-caturday-reads-179/

    #abortionRights #CatsOfTheLouvre #DerrickAnderson #fakeFamily #Google #immigrationPolicy #JapaneseManga #OliviaNuzzi #RobertFKennedyJr_ #TaiyoMatsumoto

  30. Cats of the Louvre, a graphic novel by Taiyo Matsumoto

    Happy Caturday!!

    There are just 37 days remaining until election day, November 5. While Trump continues to display his growing cognitive issues as well as his ignorance of public policy, Kamala Harris has been making substantive appearances in which she intelligently spells out what she will do as president. Earlier in the week she spoke about her economic plans. Yesterday she visited the border in Arizona and gave a speech outlining her proposed immigration policies and attacking Trump’s failures. 

    CNN: Harris goes to the border to take Trump to task for blocking bill to fix migration issues: ‘He prefers to run on a problem.’ 

    Vice President Kamala Harris went on the offensive against former President Donald Trump on immigration Friday during her visit to the southern border in Arizona as she tries to turn a political vulnerability on its head.

    Immigration has featured prominently in the 2024 presidential election, with polls showing voters placing more trust in Trump to handle the issue than Harris.

    Democrats, grappling with years of border crises, have tried to gain ground by pointing to the bipartisan border measure that congressional Republicans blocked earlier this year after Trump came out against it. Harris on Friday lambasted Trump for his role in stymying that bill.

    “It was the strongest border security bill we have seen in decades. It was endorsed by the Border Patrol union. And it should be in effect today, producing results in real time, right now, for our country,” she said at a rally in Douglas, a town on the US-Mexico border.

    “But Donald Trump tanked it. He picked up the phone and called some friends in Congress and said, ‘Stop the bill,’” she said. “He prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. And the American people deserve a president who cares more about border security than playing political games and their personal political future.”

    She said she would ask Congress to pass the measure if she is elected, and would sign it into law. She also laid out a series of proposals that she said were “not just about some rhetoric at a rally,” but would help stem the flow of migrants into the United States.

    A bit more:

    “Solutions are at hand if we focus on fixing a problem and not running on a problem,” Harris said.

    She said she’d work with Congress to create a pathway to citizenship for “hardworking immigrants who have been here for years, for years, and deserve to have a system that works,” as well as “Dreamers” – undocumented immigrants brought into the United States as children, who are allowed to live and work in the US under an Obama-era program but generally cannot become citizens under current law.

    “They are American in every way. But still, they do not have an earned pathway to citizenship. And this problem has gone unsolved at this point now for decades,” Harris said. “The same goes for farmworkers who ensure that we have food on our tables and sustain our agricultural industry – and they too have been in legal limbo for years because politicians have refused to come together and fix our broken immigration system.”

    Earlier this year, Biden announced an executive action severely limiting the ability of migrants to seek asylum at the US southern border if they crossed unlawfully – a departure from decadeslong protocol. Immigrant advocates have likened the executive action to Trump-era policies.

    The measure can be turned on and off and lifted when there’s a daily average of fewer than 1,500 encounters between ports of entry, among other criteria. It remains in place.

    Homeland Security officials have credited the action for driving down border crossings to the lowest point since 2020.

    The Washington Post: Harris, in visit to border, proposes new restrictions on immigration

    DOUGLAS, Ariz. — Vice President Kamala Harris and her campaign on Friday proposed new border restrictions that would go further than the emergency rules the Biden administration deployed in June, making the announcement during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border Friday in an effort to confront one of her biggest political vulnerabilities.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    Harris’s proposed executive action would build on President Joe Biden’s current policy of essentially closing the U.S. asylum system unless illegal border crossings stay below 1,500 daily crossings for a week. Harris would lower that threshold and extend the period it must be met, advisers said, although exact figures were not immediately available.

    The action might have a limited practical impact, at least in the short term, but the proposal appeared designed to send a message that Harris is taking a more assertive immigration posture than the administration in which she serves and that she is not ceding the issue to Donald Trump, who consistently scores higher marks among voters on border security and immigration.

    In what her campaign had billed as a major speech in this community, which sits on the border, Harris also emphasized her support for an enforcement-heavy border security bill crafted by a bipartisan group of senators earlier this year. She decried Trump’s central role in derailing it, noting that he had urged Republicans in Congress to oppose the legislation.

    “Donald Trump tanked it,” she said, standing amid six different signs that said in capital letters, “Border Security and Stability.”

    “Because, you see, he prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem,” she added. “And the American people deserve a president who cares more about border security than playing political games and their personal political future.”

    Read more details at the WaPo link.

    NPR: At the border in Arizona, Harris lays out a plan to get tough on fentanyl

    Vice President Harris walked along the U.S. border with Mexico on Friday alongside a stretch of border wall built during the Obama administration, talking with border officials about their work.

    It was a photo op meant to illustrate that she supports border security — one of the biggest concerns voters have about Harris — and to try to defang criticism from her Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump.

    Later, she embraced a mother whose son died of a fentanyl overdose, and made her most extensive remarks to date on how she would address border security and immigration reform.

    “I will reach across the aisle and I will embrace common sense approaches and new technologies to get the job done,” she said….

    She said her experience as a prosecutor and attorney general gave her experience to tackle the fentanyl problem.

    “I’ve seen tunnels with walls as smooth as the walls of your living room, complete with lighting and air conditioning, making very clear that it is about an enterprise that is making a whole lot of money in the trafficking of guns, drugs and human beings,” she said.

    “Stopping transnational criminal organizations and strengthening our border is not new to me, and it is a long standing priority of mine. I have done that work, and I will continue to treat it as a priority when I am elected president of the United States,” Harris said.

    Read more at NPR.

    Trump very much has not been focusing on policy, and if you’ve paid attention to his rallies and other public appearances, you know that he’s simply not capable of doing so. Even though he was “president” for four years, he has learned nothing about how the government works or about serious issues. He is incapable of learning, and why the media keeps propping him up is a mystery. Here are a couple of “issues” raised by the Trump camp over the past couple of days.

    The New York Times: Trump Threatens to Prosecute Google for Showing ‘Bad Stories’ About Him

    Former President Donald J. Trump threatened Friday to prosecute Google if he was elected to the presidency a second time, claiming that the tech company had been “illegally” showing only “bad stories” about him and only “good” ones about Vice President Kamala Harris.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    It was the latest instance of Mr. Trump threatening to prosecute his perceived opponents should he return to office. This month, he called for the prosecution of lawyers, political donors and operatives if they engaged in “unscrupulous behavior.”

    Mr. Trump said at a news conference on Thursday that the former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should be prosecuted in connection with the security lapses by which a mob of his own supporters attacked the Capitol during the transfer of presidential power on Jan. 6, 2021.

    And on Friday, in Michigan, he called for an attorney general “somewhere, like in a Republican territory” to investigate Ms. Pelosi and her husband over reports that Mr. Pelosi had sold Visa stock ahead of the Justice Department’s filing an antitrust lawsuit against the company.

    It was not immediately clear what prompted Mr. Trump to make the statement about Google on his social media website, Truth Social.

    “It has been determined that Google has illegally used a system of only revealing and displaying bad stories about Donald J. Trump, some made up for this purpose while, at the same time, only revealing good stories about Comrade Kamala Harris,” Mr. Trump wrote.

    “This is an ILLEGAL ACTIVITY, and hopefully the Justice Department will criminally prosecute them for this blatant Interference of Elections,” he added. “If not, and subject to the Laws of our Country, I will request their prosecution, at the maximum levels, when I win the Election, and become President of the United States!”

    Google said it did not manipulate search results to favor any candidate.

    “Both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of search for relevant and common search queries,” a Google spokesman said.

    The New Republic: Trump Is So Mad About His Bad Press That He’s Unleashed a New Threat

    The source of Trump’s claim appears to be the right-wing Media Research Center, which published a report on Wednesday covered this week by Fox News and The New York Post.

    MRC’s report “analyzed the Sept. 6 Google search results” for the terms “donald trump presidential race 2024” and “kamala harris presidential race 2024.” The group alleges that the results favored outlets with “a history of leftist bias,” and that, while Trump’s campaign website appeared sixth in his search results, Harris’s campaign website appeared third in hers.

    Dismissing MRC’s report, a Google spokesperson told Fox, “Both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of Search for relevant and common search queries. This report looked at a single rare search term on a single day several weeks ago, and even for that search, both candidates’ websites ranked in the top results on Google.”

    Trump’s Truth Social post recalls his previous claims that Google search results are biased against him, which Google has denied.

    It is also yet another example of Trump promising to prosecute his perceived political foes if he retakes the White House. Earlier this month, for example, Trump posted to Truth Social that, if he wins, “those people that CHEATED”—such as “Lawyers, Political Operatives, Donors, Illegal Voters, & Corrupt Election Officials”—“will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the Law, which will include long term prison sentences.”

    This is what Trump is preoccupied with a month before the November election.

    Oh, and JD Vance continues to say the quiet part aloud when it comes to women’s control over their own bodies and lives. Recently, close Trump adviser did it too.

    Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo: Trump Camp Says State Menstrual Surveillance Programs are A-OK

    One of the most toxic and politically explosive parts of the current abortion rights debate is tied the complexities and perhaps inanities of leaving national abortion policy up to individual states. And a comment yesterday from Trump spokesman Jason Miller put the question right back into the center of the campaign.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    It’s not enough for many anti-abortion stalwarts to ban the procedure in their state. They want to ban legal drugs designed to induce abortion. They want to surveil and block women traveling to other states to obtain an abortion. One of the most threatening dimensions of these programs is that they threaten to make doctors and other medical professionals — who might give counsel on or simply know about a woman’s plans to obtain an abortion — responsible for reporting her actions. If you visit your OB-GYN and discuss traveling to another state to get an abortion, does your OB have to report you to the local sheriff? It applies to third parties who might assist a woman either in traveling to get an abortion or getting FDA-approved medications to induce an abortion at home. The cases we’ve already seen range the gamut from sheriff’s departments wanting to pull medical and travel records for evidence of pregnancies that ended for unexplained reasons, gaps in menstruation, trips out of state that coincided with a pregnancy not brought to term….

    …[Y]esterday in an interview on Newsmax of all places, a host asked Trump spokesman Jason Miller whether Donald Trump supported or wouldn’t aim to prevent states from enforcing their own menstrual surveillance regimes. It was one of those Fox-like interviews in which the host seems to go out of his way to signal what the right answer is. You wouldn’t do this, right?

    “But he wouldn’t support monitoring pregnancies, even if a state decided to do that?” the host asked.

    Miller responded that “he’s [i.e., Trump’s] made it very clear that he’s not going to go and weigh in and push various states on how they want to go and set up their particular rules and restrictions. That’s going to be up to the states.”

    So he went there. It’s totally up to the states. Trump’s “leave it up to the states” approach applies to all these menstrual surveillance and travel restriction regimes as well. It’s a new opening for the Harris campaign to focus attention on an issue that hasn’t yet gotten enough attention — not just abortion rights as a general issue but states and county sheriffs’ effort to restrict women’s travel, access their medical records and current state of menstruation or gestation, and bar access to legal medications.

    What else is on Trump’s befuddled mind these days? He’s “obsessed” with Olivia Nuzzi/RFK Jr. story.

    The Daily Beast: Trump Is ‘Obsessed’ With RFK Jr.’s Sexting Scandal

    Donald Trump has become “obsessed” with the sexting scandal surrounding his new ally Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and New York magazine reporter Olivia Nuzzi, according to a report.

    The former president even called up the 70-year-old Kennedy—who’s married to Curb Your Enthusiasm star Cheryl Hines—to ask if the bombshell reports about him and the 31-year-old journalist were true, and if the relationship ever went beyond the sending of “demure” nudes, according to Puck News.

    “[Kennedy] denied the whole thing to Trump,” a source with direct knowledge told the outlet. “He said he hardly knows her. He said he met her one time.”

    Trump was also apparently close to making a public statement about the alleged digital dalliance, having “almost posted to Truth Social, his social media platform, ‘My condolences to Ryan Lizza…’” according to the Puck report. Lizza, a Politico journalist, ended his engagement to Nuzzi last month after learning of her relationship with Kennedy, according to Vanity Fair.

    Trump apparently exercised more restraint than his adviser, Corey Lewandowski, who tweeted and then later deleted his own post sharing the Kennedy gossip.

    Nuzzi had interviewed Trump for a piece published earlier this month which, in part, featured a detailed description of the GOP nominee’s ear bandaged up following the attempt on his life at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania in July.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    I’m sure he’s read the latest gossip about the scandal at Page Six. The Daily Beast: ‘Madly in Love’ Olivia Nuzzi Had ‘Incredible’ FaceTime Sex With RFK Jr: Report

    The forbidden love between New York magazine reporter Olivia Nuzzi and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been chronicled in a new report that reveals even more details of their dalliances.

    The Page Six report, which cites only anonymous sources, claimed Friday the 31-year-old Nuzzi fell “madly in love” with the Kennedy scion, 70, after he “love bombed” her and sparked a virtual relationship during his campaign.

    The two reportedly exchanged “I love yous” and had an affair that lasted nearly a year, complete with the duo having “incredible” FaceTime sex and speaking on “long calls.” The report also alleged that Nuzzi and Kennedy shared “endless texts” with each other.

    Page Six reported that Nuzzi and Kennedy’s supposed relationship kicked off as Nuzzi worked on a profile of the failed presidential candidate for New York.

    Nuzzi, who was engaged to Politico’s Ryan Lizza at the time, traveled to Los Angeles to interview Kennedy during a hike together in October 2023. It was on that hike that Kennedy, who has been married to the actress Cheryl Hines for 10 years, reportedly made his first pass at Nuzzi and grabbed her arm “as a romantic overture.”

    Page Six reported that Nuzzi and Kennedy’s relationship heated up after the journalist contacted Kennedy with follow-up questions as she wrote her profile. The relationship reportedly remained under wraps for months, but word of it had reached Lizza by August.

    Vanity Fairreportedthat Lizza had a “heated” call with Kennedy over the alleged affair upon learning of it. It remains unclear how Lizza caught wind of the reported fling, but the Daily Beast exclusively revealed this week that Kennedy had been bragging about receiving nude photos of Nuzzi.

    I hope this will be the end of Nuzzi’s career in journalism, but it probably won’t be. She could always go to Fox News.

    I’ve tried to keep this post light, because the news overall has been so depressing lately. In that spirit, I’m going to end with another hilarious, gossipy story about a Republican candidate.

    Rolling Stone: Childless GOP Candidate Borrows Friend’s Wife and Kids for Photo Ops

    Republicans have taken umbrage with the notion that they’re weird — specifically when it comes to accusations that they’re weird about people (usually women) who don’t have children. 

    The sentiment in Republican politics that childless Americans are — as JD Vance put it — disorienting and disturbing has become so prevalent that one GOP candidate has taken to borrowing his friends’ wife and children for photo ops.

    According to a Friday report from The New York Times, Derrick Anderson — a former Green Beret running for the House of Representatives in Virginia — has repeatedly featured a woman and her three daughters in campaign materials. 

    One photo features the group posing close together in an image that you could probably find framed on a grandmother’s mantle, the type of photo that your parents made your uncle with a DSLR camera take because “we never get nice pictures together.” https://twitter.com/JacobRubashkin/status/1839759803729752271

    In one campaign video, Anderson is seen walking side-by-side with the same woman. In another video, which was featured on the National Republican Campaign Committee’s website and on his YouTube channel, shows Anderson speaking to the woman and the three girls while seated in a home dining room. 

    According to the Times, the woman and girls are “the wife and children of a longtime friend.” Anderson’s campaign website does not mention a wife or children, but notes that he “lives in Spotsylvania County with his dog, Ranger, a Dalmatian.” The Republican candidate recently revealed on social media that he is engaged to his girlfriend, Maggie, and has posted pictures of her — she is decidedly not the woman featured in the photos and videos.

    By Taiyo Matsumoto

    You can see the “family photo” in this article at Mediaite: Anti-Abortion GOP Candidate Borrows Friend’s Wife and Daughters for Campaign Photo Op.

    A Friday article at The New York Times, headlined “G.O.P. Candidates, Looking to Soften Their Image, Turn to Their Wives,” reported how “male Republicans struggling to appeal to female voters concerned about their records on reproductive rights are unleashing their spouses to make the pitch on their behalf.”

    Male GOP candidates who are worried about getting dragged down by the abortion issue in November are putting their wives front and center in their campaign ads. That’s hardly a new phenomenon — candidates have showcased the stereotypical [husband + wife + at least two children + probably a dog or two] family photo for ages — but the Republican angst about Dobbs is so acute, at least one candidate resorted to faking an entire family for his ads.

    These GOP ads included anodyne images of “women in softly lit living rooms and pristine kitchens vouching for their husbands’ characters,” “a wholesome family gathering around the dining room table,” and moms “driving S.U.V.s with young children in the back seat as they stop for gas and groceries, talking about how their husbands are champions for their families, and can be champions for yours, too.” [….]

    So what do you do if you’re running for Congress with an R after your name but don’t have your own wife and kids?

    If you’re Derrick Anderson, a candidate running in an open race for Virginia’s seventh congressional district, you borrow a wife and daughters from a friend.

    From the Times report:

    The campaign of Derrick Anderson, a former Army Green Beret who is running in a competitive race for an open seat in Virginia’s Seventh District, has posted footage of him posing with a woman and her three daughters in what looks like a photo that might be used for an annual holiday card. In another scene filmed for potential use in a campaign ad, Mr. Anderson is seated around the dining room table with the same woman and three girls, chatting and smiling.

    But the people are not relatives. They are the wife and children of a longtime friend. Mr. Anderson, who announced this month that he was engaged, does not have any children of his own. His campaign website says he lives with his dog and does not display any of the photos.

    Isn’t it strange that Trump is never accompanied by his wife and family, but the media never mentions it?

    That’s it for me today. Please take care, especially if you are/were in the path of Helene.

    https://skydancingblog.com/2024/09/28/lazy-caturday-reads-179/

    #abortionRights #CatsOfTheLouvre #DerrickAnderson #fakeFamily #Google #immigrationPolicy #JapaneseManga #OliviaNuzzi #RobertFKennedyJr_ #TaiyoMatsumoto