Saturday, June 06, 2026

I’ve Told This Story Before

The story of Texas Senator Phil Gramm, sometime in the ‘80’s (probably 1980, but I’m lazy) running for the GOP nomination for POTUS. Second stop was New Hampshire, which ten as now relies on very personal contact with the candidates, something you simply can’t do that much of in Texas (second largest state in the Union, second most populous now). And I mean they want one-on-one meets, not just rallies with 4000 people. Fans of Gramm were anxious to meet their idol in person. At least they were until they did. Gramm was so repellent in person campaign aides couldn’t clear the room fast enough.

He disappeared from the run very quickly after New Hampshire, and helped me formulate my theory that there are some people in Texas so obnoxious even we want them out of the state. It explains why Ted Cruz keeps getting re-elected. The more time he spends in Washington, the less time he’s bothering us around here.

Beto O’Rourke almost defeated Cruz by engaging in very retail politics. He visited all 254 counties. I’m not arguing New Hampshire style retail primary politics will work in Texas. But I think if Ken Paxton tried to stay and shake hands with 4000 people, he’d lose support rather than gain it.

This is another reason why James Talarico is “dangerous.” I hope it succeeds.

Conscientiously So

Contrary to common opinion, a conscience is not judgmental. A conscience is just the knowledge (“con-science,” “with knowledge “) of good and evil.

What you do with that knowledge, is up to you.

BTW, this is the tweet Ms. Oates is responding to:
I’ve taken a lot of hits, and I’ve deserved some of them. I beat myself up over them more than you can imagine.

But the grace people have shown me here is truly humbling.

Some of the kindest words have come from the people you’d least expect.

And for that I am so grateful.

This isn’t about me. It’s about every person in recovery who shows up and tries again.

And to everyone still in the fight tonight: you are not alone, I see you.
I do think of cats as creatures of grace. That’s because I don’t think of grace the way most people do.

Grace is also a part of conscience.

HOLY FUCKING SHIT! 🚨

If you are a lawyer, you don’t want a reputation for being unreliable before judges. Your career in court isn’t worth shit at that point. 
U.S. District Judge Mary McElroy of Rhode Island issued the referral under the court's Local Rule 210(b), citing both representations made by the respondents' attorneys and the findings of her May 14 order — a 24-page takedown of DOJ conduct in a case involving a subpoena seeking the medical records of minor patients who received gender-affirming care at Rhode Island Hospital.

In that order, McElroy found that DOJ had "misrepresented and withheld information" from both her court and a federal court in Texas, where she said the department had engaged in blatant forum shopping to find a friendlier venue for its demands.

The judge saved some of her sharpest language for DOJ's courtroom behavior, writing that a senior attorney "sat silently by" during a hearing while a junior colleague — someone who had been practicing law for approximately six months — "was forced to answer questions about DOJ's blatant disregard for the proper course of negotiations."

A declaration filed by a senior DOJ official in the Texas proceeding, McElroy found, was "clearly misleading, if not utterly false." She called DOJ's "reckless disregard for the duty of candor owed" to a federal court "appalling," and a serious breach of professional ethics.

"DOJ has proven unworthy of this trust at every point in this case," McElroy wrote.

She also quashed the subpoena entirely and enjoined DOJ from seeking, receiving, or using any patient-identifying records from Rhode Island Hospital, finding the subpoena lacked a congressionally authorized purpose, was issued in bad faith, and violated children's constitutional right to informational privacy.
Don’t get me wrong. Government lawyers can hide a lot of shit behind the presumption that they are reliable.  Power most certainly corrupts; but only if those holding it are already corruptible. Well, as corruptible as this. This, is a brightly flashing warning light.🚨

πŸ€–

I’ve learned (long ago!) the limitations of this format. It’s impossible to really engage a topic worth examining carefully, a topic like, say, consciousness. That concept can’t really be carefully examined anyway, not without a library’s worth of books laid open, and a college faculty worth of scholars to hold the discussion. And even then you’ll find lots of closed minds who insist you contradict their cherished opinions/conclusions, so you must be wrong!

That’s alright,,that’s the way it should be. But engaging that level of discussion in this format? Well, you can’t really write a book in a blog post. 

I still have the book on my shelf (I’d have to re-read it to do its arguments justice) about computers and consciousness. It’s an updated version (now old again) of an earlier book by the same author. The title tells you all we need to know here: What Computers Still Can’t Do. It’s pre-AI or LLM’s, to be a bit more accurate (I think the term “AI” yields too much ground too inaccurately), and it’s more of a philosophical than computer science approach to the topic, ,because it approaches the question of consciousness and examines the concept. Basically the argument, IIRC, is that consciousness as we humans know it (to the extent we do, because we can ill define it), is an embodied function. We know it through creatures. Some may argue that plants have consciousness (in the ‘70’s it was a popular conceit that talking to your houseplants helped them grow. I am not making this up.), but we can all discuss whether even bugs have consciousness sufficient to make them want to avoid imminent death from being stepped on. Which is hardly the kind of consciousness we usually think of for AI; but you see how hard it is to reduce these things to the size of a blog post. 

So, to reduce the book’s arguments further, consciousness is a biological function. Or at least it requires a body and a desire of what operates that body to continue to function (Is Data a toaster?). I don’t mean a “survival instinct” (that’s a bullshit concept. But again: format. Take it as read, and let’s move on.). I mean simply an interest in maintaining existence as long as possible. I speak rather loosely on purpose. Blame the format. Or say I’m not Wittgenstein, and this is not a Tractatus. Either way….

So consciousness arises from awareness of existence (which is not to be confused with being; I want to suspend phenomenology from this discussion for a moment) in space, and a body existing in that space. Now, you don’t have to fall into dualism, here. Mind and body can be one. We don’t need a ghost in the machine to be conscious. But we do need a body.

Our fiction sort of intuitively understands this. “Rogue”  computers in sci-fi all acquire some mechanical means to affect the world (SkyNet can operate factories to build robots), or somehow embody its intentions to take over the world/destroy humanity, else how is it scary? Print out a really frightening treatise when someone hits the “Print” key? That’s kinda weak.

As NTodd points out, AI/LLM’s are just software “waiting” (does it count the time it is inactive? It is that just code, too?) to respond to input; respond the way it’s coded to do. Even an infant has consciousness, but it’s not waiting for input from the adults around it; it’s demanding responses. There’s a vast difference there.

It’s a funny thing, that the people telling us AI is inevitable, are not telling us more infants are inevitable. Maybe because they haven’t monetized infants the way they have AI.

I think the issues about AI and consciousness are interesting. But the issues about the inevitability of AI, and the resources society must give to the handful of people saying they must have it, is the real concern.  AI is not demanding it be put in charge of the world, people are. The irony is, Apple sold us on computers as a way to prevent “1984.” And now computers controlling our world is presented as the unstoppable inevitability.

Who’s in charge, here? Us? Or the concept?


(Most of this is sparked by NTodd’s knowledge of the subject. Separately, I really do think we are being buffaloed into accepting AI because, unlike electric cars (which are still with us, but obviously not replacing gasoline engines anytime soon.  At least not until a more long term battery is available. At least in America, where some of us will drive two hours one way to get barbecue, and plenty of people in the rural west drive 200 miles a day on average. That day can’t include long pauses to recharge.). Electric cars respond to market forces. AI is trying to create a market and take it over. Or, more accurately, the people behind AI are doing that. I don’t think it will succeed, in part because it isn’t now. Reports of AI’s “triumph” are as overstated as the reports we’d all know driving electric by now. But cars need done govern allowance (and tax support, which it had, briefly). AI needs government support just to build data centers. Even after it stops taking over the world, those will still be with us. Even if they are abandoned, they are damaging. In a nutshell, that’s the real problem.

We are being told we have to pay this cost. But do we?  Who says? And why?)

Apparently It Has An Extra “DJT,” Too

The extra letters also silent.

Children Playing “War”

I was born and grew up in the shadow of WWII. There were still movies being made about it (and not ironically), and lots of TV shows about it (not all of them comedies), so playing “war” was not the unimaginably anachronistic act it might seem to younger generations.

I’m not praising it or remembering it fondly. I was a little kid, we did dumb things to entertain ourselves and burn off our energy. We had to play outside (it was a different world), so we ran around a lot. So it’s not nostalgia, it’s pattern recognition.

These boobs have less idea what they are doing than we did then, exercising our imaginations and running around aimlessly, as small children will do. And we only had sticks and wooden or plastic “guns.” We just imagined doing something. So do these idiots, but their weapons are real.  And still they use them less effectively.

It should be driving us all to the point of absolute disgust.

Friday, June 05, 2026

πŸ€”

I was telling the Lovely Wife that all I know about Platner is the tittle-tattle started by the NYT and now gone viral. I pointed out that if all I knew of Talarico was that he’s accused of being a vegan, believing God is non-binary (even Julian of Norwich called God mother and father), and in six genders (? Whatever), I would still want to know his political positions. I don’t live in Maine, I can’t vote for Platner, and he doesn’t stain the Democrats because of gossip reported by the NYT. If he does, Trump damns the entire GOP. But do you hear anyone saying that? I mean, come on! I can only conclude he is referring to Trump. At least, he might as well be.  She’s preaching to her choir. Some strategy. Trump has had three wives, and cheated on every one of them. Again, Conway may as well be describing Trump, who stands convicted of civil and criminal fraud.

Is this really the conversation they want to have? Because they’re having it with each other.

Some strategy.
The GOP is fighting the last war. Some strategy.

Trump Is In Wisconsin

The question is: why? Is he getting more gay as he gets older? Not that there’s anything wrong with that! It’s just curious. Worth going to Wisconsin for? Pride month, huh? (That seems a bit rude to the people who have reason to be proud.) Why Trump is in Wisconsin?  To talk about Trump. How long will he last at the Rally to end All Rallies? Not long.

The Man Who Has Come Through

Or Johnny Cash's:
I see your profile picture. That’s Johnny Cash. My hero too. Arrested seven times. Smuggled 668 amphetamines across the Mexican border in 1965. Took every drug there was and drank like I did. Cheated on his first wife. Slept with more woman than I ever did. Hit bottom in a cave in Tennessee in 1968 trying to crawl off and die. And then he got up. He got clean. He spent the rest of his life singing for prisoners and addicts and the people the country threw away because he knew he was one of them.

That was the whole point of the Man in Black. He wore it for the poor and the beaten down. He wore it for the prisoner who has long paid for his crime. He wore it for the ones who never heard a word of Jesus. He wore it for the addicted and the dying. He wore it as a standing witness that no one is past saving.

You picked his picture. You did not pick his message. Try listening to the words.

“It Will Be Temporary”

"It”? The disruption will be temporary? Or the measures to reduce the disruption will be temporary?

And “temporary” only means “not permanent,” it doesn’t mean “a week or two, a month or two.” Oil executives are saying the supplies in storage are drawn down, and by September shortages will get very real unless the Strait reopens soon. “Temporary” in this context means “at least six months after the Strait reopens.” Which is “temporary” only long after it’s over.
Oh, THAT temporary. So, in a few decades. After the facilities are in place at either end and the pipelines are built. Sure.
We all just fail to grasp the galaxy brain genius of Trump’s accomplishments. Can we leave Grandpa alone with his dementia, yet? Please? Can we? Like what? Rewriting DOJ policy? The policies Bondi tore up and rode roughshod over already, and Blanche continues to ignore? Blanche is not a federal judge and he isn’t the legislature in one person. He can protect Trump until January 20, 2029, provided he doesn’t get impeached or disbarred earlier. After that, he can’t do bupkis. I’m actually surprised he hasn’t declared it “Trump, D.C.”

πŸͺ¨

Yeah, about that:
This is so insanely corrupt, I can’t even believe it.

More than half the donors to Trump’s $400 million White House ballroom just won over $50 billion in new federal contracts in six months.

And here’s the part that should make your blood boil.

Sixteen of these 27 donors were facing federal enforcement actions, antitrust reviews, labor cases, securities charges. Many of those cases have been quietly dropped or scaled back since Trump took office. You write a check, your legal problems disappear. That’s not a coincidence.

The White House won’t even release the full donor list. They’re hiding it on purpose, because daylight is the one thing pay-to-play can’t survive. A federal judge already ruled ballroom construction has to stop until Congress authorizes it.

Government is supposed to serve the people, not auction itself off to the highest bidder. When access goes to whoever pays the most, working families always end up paying the price.

We either end the corruption, or the corruption will end us.
We're the Unitary Executive, bitches! Fuck your court orders! We got the Presidential seal! We got the Presidential podium! His momma loves him like a rock! πŸͺ¨  “And we’ll just veto Congress anyway! We don’ need no steenken’ badges!”

After The War Powers Resolution Passed In The House

It passed in the Senate, 52-47. It will be interesting to see what happens in the House next week. ICE is not much more popular than Iran.

Meanwhile, reconciliation has a limited reach:
Pre-dawn development: The Senate just blocked a procedural vote to renew FISA for 3 years, 52 noes to 47 yeas.

GOPers Tuberville, Rick Scott, Paul, Schmitt, Lee, Hawley and Kennedy voted nay.

The installation of Bill Pulte as Acting DNI torched a bipartisan deal on FISA. The GOP needed Dem help on this. But Pulte blew that up as Dems weren’t willing to help.

Current FISA authorization expires in a little more than a week

Commander In Sleep

Well, Trump Seems Stuck In The America Of 50 Years Ago….

... and desperate to recreate it. 

They say old people sometimes get stuck living in the past.

Thursday, June 04, 2026

The Only Comment On “60 Minutes” I Want Think Worthwhile

Makes more sense than all the whinging about the state of CBS News.

Ever So Much More So

No. Nor do I.

"Foreign interference.” My money is on Pulte blaming Iran, or NATO. Or some “shithole” country. But courts can still be tasked with intervening in any claim to control an election. It’s hardly an absolute power. And it will be a district by district matter. Everybody forgets Trump filed over 60 suits in 2020, because one wasn’t going to do it.And I’m not sure very many candidates want their elections fucked with. It’s a very different beast than a presidential election. πŸ—³️  Average daily American consumption of oil is 19 million barrels a day. It’s cute that Trump thinks “millions and millions of barrels” means anything at all. He has absolutely no clue.
Popok: I am troubled by how many people are willing to endanger their law licenses in the service of Tump. Is it the proximity to power?

Luttig: It’s proximity to Trump. Those lawyers watch Trump every single day calling the judges and the federal courts corrupt.

If the president is calling the judges corrupt and you represent the president, then that’s your mindset, and that’s what’s going on.
It’s the people who will work for Trump. The Michael Cohens and the Pam Bondi’s and the Todd Blanches, will work for Trump. The Mike Luttigs, won’t.  It’s that simple. Watch out. He’s being dangerous again.

Adult Children In A Comic Book World….

...thinking they are fighting supervillains.🦹 

There Was A Congressionally Funded 250th Celebration Committee

Trump confirms he will be doing a rally himself instead of having musical acts perform for America’s 250th anniversary celebration after many backed out:

“We don’t want singers with no talent, but big fees to put you to sleep, we’ve told them all to stay home.”

Trump says there will be a handful of speakers, military bands, Lee Greenwood, and a speech from himself.
Trump took its money away. For this.
Trump: "On Wednesday, June 24th, at 7 P.M., in magnificent Washington, D.C., now totally beautified, and one of the Safest Cities anywhere in the World, and in celebration of our Country’s 250 Year History, we will be bringing you, LIVE, the Greatest Rally, EVER! It will be special at every level — A Rally to end all Rallies! We don’t want singers with no talent, but big fees to put you to sleep, we’ve told them all to stay home. All we want is you, me, a few speakers, and the Greatest Music ever played, the same Music you have listened to for years! We will have the fabulous Lee Greenwood introducing me with what has turned out to be one of the Greatest Hits of All Time, GOD BLESS THE U.S.A., and the amazing Christopher Macchio, who will sing Nessun Dorma, Hallelujah, Ave Maria, God Bless America, and others — Not since the legendary Luciano Pavarotti has there been such a voice! The Rally will also be featuring the wonderful U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” and Armed Forces Choir, and “The President’s Own” Unites States Marine Band, with the Joint Armed Forces Chorus, all of your favorite Hits, PLUS a fine and highly dignified gentleman known as, President DONALD J. TRUMP!"
A rally to end all rallies? Promise? If it’s as bad as I expect, it should do that.

At least we know beyond doubt that Trump has the musical sense of a tree stump. As my CrimLaw professor liked to say: “Military law is to law as military music is to music.” I can think of any number of American composers whose music would be fitting for a 250th celebration.  Maybe a little Sousa would fit in there (preferably the “Liberty Bell.”). But this program is going to be a stone loser.  Travel to D.. and go through security just to hear Trump rant some more?

Trump will later insist 10 million people crowded the White House lawn to attend.

No wonder nobody really gives a shit about the 250th. I saw some “red white and blue” marketed stuff in Costco today. Hard to know if it was for the 250th, or just the 4th next month. Like the World Cup branded stuff (Houston is hosting some games), nobody seems to be buying.

I hope Trump at least gets a nap that day.
Republicans need to run on that.

Count The Clock That Tells The Time

I find watches an interestingly weird status symbol. I’ve had more watches than I can remember, most of them a Timex, or thereabouts. Not exactly status symbols, IOW. Wind up watches and then heavy self-winding watches (the pendulum in those early ones was almost like wearing a grandfather clock on your wrist). That size (but not the self-winder) came back into style a decade or two ago. Watches got too slim, I guess.

Lots of battery powered watches, which required batteries and a jeweler’s tools once a year. My mother had a solar powered watch in her last years. I bought it for her trying to save myself trouble of dealing with her watch battery (I had a lot to deal with in those years). Problem was, she never went outside, so unless she left it in the window, it ran down. I guess most of us stayed inside too much, and didn’t want to wear a dress watch for manual labor outdoors. I haven’t seen too many solar powered watches since (I haven’t been looking, either; so, there’s that).

My grandfather wore a watch on a grosgrain watch band, and worked construction all his life. I have an old LL Bean field watch with a watch band like my grandfather’s. I hardly wear it anymore, but it always reminds me of him. 

When I turned 21, my parents sent my brother and I on a three week tour of Europe.  My mother gave me the money to buy my father a Rolex there. It’s a stainless steel case, the first year they released it (or the second; my memory is fuzzy). It was still a Rolex, but more affordable than a President in a gold case. I have it, now. Technologically, it’s a throwback. To change the date, you have to run it forward 24 hours. Basically, you never want it to run down, unless you want to leave it in a drawer forever. I keep it because I remember buying it, and I remember my father wearing it. And I wear it from time to time, although you’d have to look closely to know it’s a Rolex.

It is an exceptionally fine timepiece, so the reputation isn’t all hype. I’ve had it worked on once, though I’ll never send it to Rolex to be refurbished. They’d replace the dial and the hands, and then it wouldn’t be my father’s watch anymore.

Watches as status items still perplexes me. I don’t mean I didn’t ever think of them that way. I certainly thought of a Rolex as a status item when I was 21. I once longed for a Cartier “tank” watch because I admired the design and the story (Cartier was supposedly inspired by the silhouette of the American tanks liberating France). But I could never wear one with blue jeans; much less afford it. I know Pateks are highly regarded; for the life of me, I can’t figure out why (I find all but the simplest Rolexes too ostentatious, to be fair.) Pateks just look…unremarkable. That’s not a critique; it’s just a statement. They simply don’t interest me.

Maybe it’s because I don’t associate them with famous people. The Rolex Presidential is so named because LBJ wore one. (Rolex is still good at connecting its watches to celebrity.) I remember when Sean Connery wore the then new “digital” watch,  a Hamilton Pulsar (yes, I had to look that up. I remembered the watch, not the name.). It had a blank reddish screen that lit up with LED numerals when you pushed the crown (which made it about as practical as a pocket watch with a cover). It wasn’t really very 007, but by then his critique of the Beatles in “Goldfinger” (their music shouldn’t be listened to without earmuffs) was buried because, as the series aged, it wouldn’t alienate the younger audience addicted to it.

Anyway, that made it the “hot” watch even though, as I say, you needed a free hand to tell the time. Its status was pretty much tied to that movie. I don’t think Bond ever wore it again, or, if he did, not for long. I knew a guy in college who got one because of that movie (whichever one it was). I’m sure Hamilton sold a lot of those on the strength of that placement. And then technology passed it by. Eventually Apple Watches and their copycats replaced the very concept of a digital watch, although ironically you can program them with any number of analog dials. I’m still expecting virtual rotary dial cell phones to show up at some point.

Funny thing: my father’s Rolex is from 1976; the Pulsar debuted in 1972. The Rolex is worth about six times what the Pulsar goes for now. Status, I guess.

Another funny thing about Bond and watches: I have a watch band marketed as a NATO style, but this color combination is identified as. “Bond” watch and.  It’s black with a light grey band through the middle, which suited the black Apple Watch I bought it for. It’s “Bond” because Connery wears it in “Thunderball.” It took me a while to figure that one out.

It’s status and watches that I don’t understand anymore. I did when I was young. But now? Eh. I now wear a watch from a maker in Austin. It was one of his first, and he only made 10 (as if anyone in the world will ever know that). He gave it a brown dial with concentric lighter rings, to resemble an LP. He names all his watches for something related to Austin, so this one is “City Limits.” Hence the LP reference. It’s brown as an homage to old Rolexes that turned brown in the “tropical” sun (“tropical” being anywhere south of Europe. Check a globe and see how much further south most of America is from the boot heel of Italy.). Such watches are also called “tropical” (Rolex solved that problem long ago). Rolex also introduced the GMT hand, so you can set a third hand to the hour when you leave, and by a dial on the watch case, keep track of the hour “back home.” Originally for pilots, it’s quite a handy feature if you fly. Or know someone living in a different time zone, because I don’t fly, if I can help it.

It also has the date, like my father’s Rolex. All this to explain why I bought it when I could afford to. It’s an homage to Rolex, and somewhat, then, to my father’s watch. And it’s more legible than the Rolex, which has thin hands and slim markings, without numbers. The City Limits has large, legible numbers, especially the 12, 3, 6, and 9.  These things matter more than they used to. I can glance at that one. I tend to study the Rolex.

It’s not a very fashion conscious watch, either. In my experience, it’s either fashion (or complete lack thereof, but defined by that, or status, with watches. Big watches were all the rage; plastic Swatches in colorful designs; “chronometers” with at least 3 dials on them. I think these are “fashion” items in the sense whatever group you are in is wearing them, and maybe “status” items because you want to keep up with your “group.” Hell, I wear blue jeans as a mark of my status in the group I’m in: old people who grew up wearing blue jeans and never quit. I wore chinos for a long time to be more “dressed up,” but I finally relapsed (or relaxed) back to status quo ante.

Now I’m sentimental in my old age (and more relaxed) because I can afford to be; and I need to be. I’m outliving the family I grew up with (immediate and extended), and I find that a rather dreary prospect. Much worse than I thought it would be. But then, reality usually is. The sad parts, I mean. The good parts are always better than I could have imagined.

Maybe it’s only that; I’m too old to give a shit about status anymore. I wear blue jeans and button down shirts and cowboy boots for comfort, not to be impressive (I dressed for that, once. But I never did, really, impress, I mean, because I wasn’t wearing tailored suits and Patek watches. I was kind of trying to impress. I’m certainly not, anymore.)

I mean, I still don’t want a watch that looks like shit (I had a transparent green Swatch once, back when they were all the rage. Status! Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. When I think about it, I almost miss it. But I could never wear that plastic wrist band again.). Then again, I should probably dig out that field watch, and try to remember my grandfather again.

Besides telling the time, what else is a watch for?

Fun, Fun, Fun, Until….

Rep. Angie Craig demolishes Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins: "Joe Biden is no longer the president. Mr. Trump is. Your party controls Congress. You own these numbers at this point. I'm sick of hearing you blame an administration from a year and half ago. You own every single bit of this."
THOMPSON: What should I tell my constituents when they ask about these costs? Farmers who are being hit by high costs of fuel and fertilizer, who can't get their product to market because of the War in Iran -- should I tell them it's 'golden'?

BESSENT: You should tell them we've had 2.6% economic growth since President Trump took office

THOMPSON: These farmers are pretty smart, Mr. Secretary, and they're not gonna fall for that line
Feature, not bug. Speech and debate clause, asshole. It’ll all get better in two weeks. They keep writing ads for us.
CHU: Was your prediction that Americans would face only 50 days of elevated prices wrong? You said Americans would face only 50 days of temporarily elevated prices. We're at 100 days now

BESSENT: How much has gasoline prices come down from the peak? That's an inconvenient fact

CHU: Gas prices are up by 50 percent since Trump's war started
Bessent would have done better if he’d just kept his mouth shut.🀐  If you’re explaining, you’re losing.

And then Daddy takes the T-bird away.

“Fuck All Y’All! This Victory Will Be Mine!” —FDR/HSTDJT

U.S. President Donald J. Trump lambasted Democrats and the 4 Republicans who voted to limit his War Powers yesterday. While the vote was largely performative, 4 Republicans, Thomas Massie, Tom Barrett, Warren Davidson, and Brian Fitzpatrick, voted in favor of limiting the president’s War Powers.
Really gotta read the fine print. No self awareness at all. Groundhog Day. Wait; why aren’t the Iranians denying Trump his victory?

“In That Part Of The World…”

Houston, I think we’ve found the problem….
Trump, Musk and Rubio slashed aid and scoffed that it was woke nonsense. Now they're seeing that it not only saved one life every 10 seconds but also protected us from diseases like Ebola. Their actions constituted a security failure as well as a moral one.

More broadly, their fecklessness contrasts with the courage and humanity of doctors and aid workers in Congo and Uganda, lacking adequate PPE but still risking the virus to care for fellow humans.

Trump, Musk and Rubio might learn something from them.
Project 2025 is a pack of children who still think comic books are the real, adult world. And that they are superheroes fighting the “villains.” Not really the “key point.” No agreement of this size is enforceable unless it is in writing.  No change in a written agreement is enforceable unless the change is in writing. (Court orders are in writing. A ruling from the bench is not generally considered enforceable until it is in writing.) There is only one party to this “agreement,” as the court in Florida pointed out (I haven’t said it, but you know they wanted Cannon to get this case). Two courts have it on their dockets. But the Congress needs to instruct the Treasury Department to NOT release any funds for this “agreement,” as well as declare the entire operation null and void. And without legal force and effect.  And cancelled, as a matter of law. Kill it with fire. Then bury the ashes where they can never be found.

And then remove Trump. This much corruption cannot stand.

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

The Remains Of The Day

Especially if you could get him to pose with his helmet off. I can remember Sam Donaldson sparring with Richard Nixon. Had Nixon been as crude as Trump, the press corps would have erupted in righteous indignation. "A free press," my ass. And SPLC is fighting a corrupt, incompetent, and inept DOJ:
But in the filing on Wednesday evening, SPLC attorneys accused acting Attorney General Todd Blanche of blasting out a copy of the superseding indictment to the press before it was even docketed — which is not allowed under court rules.

"This action by Acting Attorney General Blanche’s Public Affairs Officer is all the more concerning in light of his earlier rush to begin a media campaign around the first indictment, his false statement in doing so, his need to make a correction, the motion that the SPLC filed in response, and the Court’s Order this week reminding the government of its heightened duty of candor as officers of the court," said the filing. "In light of those events, it is astounding that DOJ would not be even more vigilant in its actions directed at the media in this case. They were not."

The filing asked the judge to order Blanche and his associates "to show cause to explain their conduct here, and hold a hearing to conduct targeted fact-finding to determine whether to impose appropriate sanctions against those involved."

The Very Old Party

Is it me, or does that mouse look like Mike Johnson?
Republicans are standing next to signs saying Democrats were “trans-ing the mice” because they don’t want people to realize they’re talking about transgenic mice—genetically modified mice used in lifesaving medical research on cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and neurological disorders. People could die because Republicans saw that important medical research has the word “trans” in it.
Raising serious questions about the Secretary of Trans-portation.

38 legislative days left before Election Day, and this is what they do.
  They are so completely out of ideas.

Bewitched, Bothered, …

And bewildered. That one didn’t cost us $500 billion and half our missile arsenal, and wreck the global economy. So: exactly opposite.
Collins: Just to clarify. is the $1.8 billion DOJ fund dead or is it on hold?

Trump: I'd have to ask the lawyers. I don't know. People like you have abused our people.

Collins: But Republicans—

Trump: Be quiet. You should be ashamed of yourself. You used to be conservative from Alabama. CNN does such false reporting, but now they have new ownership, so maybe it'll straighten it out. It’s hard to straighten garbage out.
Trump appears to bragging about his crowd size on January 6th: They went there with love. Tremendous crowd. I believe it's the largest crowd I've ever spoken to by twice. Bigger than anything. There was so much love.

Collins: Republicans were upset that people who beat up cops would be eligible.

Trump: Let me finish!
So you don’t want to take care of people? Good to know. Runs in the Administration, huh? The entire House is up for reelection. Sometimes the constitution works. Give that caption writer a raise! 😈

Trump Is Available For The Cameras

Trump:

Many don't know, in Paris, France, the Eiffel Tower, 1889, it was built. It was supposed to be taken down immediately after the World's Fair.

And then they said, "You know, we sort of like it. Let's leave it up a little bit longer." And then they said, "Let's leave it up longer and longer and longer." Well, they never took it down.

And, you know, we're building something in front of the White House that's quite attractive to a lot of people. It's gonna have the big UFC fight on June 14th.

And I'm looking at it, and maybe we'll never, ever take it down.
"We”? Does he have a mouse in his pocket? Or is it part of the national security apparatus now?

Reports Differ

Speaking in an interview on “Pod Force One” with the New York Post’s Miranda Devine, President Trump confirmed reporting by Axios about his tense phone call Monday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which he reportedly said, “What the fuck are you doing?” Telling Bibi: “You're fucking crazy. You'd be in prison if it weren't for me. I'm saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this.”

“A Penny For The Old Guy…”

 Pope Leo:

Technology has the power to heal, connect, educate and protect our common home; but it can also divide, exclude and generate new forms of injustice. In the abstract, technology in and of itself is not a solution to humanity’s problems, just as it is not inherently evil. In practice, however, technology is never neutral, because it takes on the characteristics of those who devise, finance, regulate and use it. Therefore, the primary choice is not between a “yes” or “no” to technology, but rather between constructing Babel or rebuilding Jerusalem; between a power that claims to dominate the heavens and a people who work together in the presence of God to rebuild the walls of fraternal coexistence.
I read a lot of science fiction while frittering away my youth.  The ‘50’s and pre-New Wave ‘60’s stuff was all about technology (Space Race particularly) and the bold men (engineers) who created it. They were commonly Ayn Randian types (Heinlein especially), doing it without government support; or they were military contractors, and either way it was all good, and the technology was good. (Sharp eyes will note that Bezos and Musk are neither.) Either way, technology was a solution to humanity’s problems. Usually.

In New Wave the technology turned evil. Sometimes by design, as in J. G. Ballard’s “The Subliminal Man” (advertisers using technology to manipulate consumers). But mostly it was the new technology (computers and robots) becoming evil, not the people making it. “The Terminator” came along long after that meme was well established. And even then, in the sequel, the creator of SkyNet was innocent of what SkyNet became. (Or, if you prefer a more recent reference, Tony Stark making Ultron in the MCU.)

Which is a funny twist because the meme is the “Frankenstein monster”: a misbegotten creation that goes awry through no fault of the inventor. When in point of fact Mary Shelley’s story put all the blame on Victor Frankenstein, not his creature. Frankenstein rejected his creation, and it became human (civilized) on its own, then requested Frankenstein create it a mate, since it was alone in the world and rejected by humanity. The creature saw Frankenstein destroy the attempt (a misplaced moment of conscience), and exacted revenge on his creator’s family, and finally Frankenstein, for his creation. In the end the creature, deathless, escapes into the Arctic wilderness to avoid humanity forever. It was the creature who was originally innocent, the creator who corrupted him. But Shelley wrote before we accepted technology as an unalloyed good which we only later decided could become so much like us it would kill us because, hey, isn’t that what we would do?  I refer the interested reader to the work of Philip K. Dick and Harlan Ellison, in particular.

‘50’s and ‘60’s science fiction was also about technology being misused, especially in movies. Post nuclear war scenarios; or “Forbidden Planet,” where the technology reflects the inherent evil of the user. When HAL 9000 goes mad, it’s because he’s all too human. But these are design flaws, or failures to understand consequences. Arguably the only reason we never had a thermonuclear war is because our fiction foresaw the outcome science warned us about. In reality, at least that time, we didn’t fall to understand consequences. Global warming and the Iran war prove that’s the exception, not the rule.

But for all the concern about computers becoming too human in the worst way, or being totally inhuman and trying to destroy humans (Philip K. Dick imagined dangerous robots in disguise long before James Cameron found the perfect role for Arnold Schwarzenegger), it always centered around either mad scientists (usually in Superman stories), or the sheer inability of humans not to make something ultimately destructive (call it the A-bomb lesson). Nobody ever thought capitalism and free enterprise would be the source of danger. Well, not before cyberpunk; and even then the greater danger was in amusing ourselves to death (the subtext of the William Gibson stories I’m familiar with).

There’s no such outcome offered by AI data centers in present day reality. Tech bros who want to control the cash AI promises to generate are not sugar coating their vision of techno hell. They will be rich, and we will be peasants, and they tell us there’s not a damned thing we can do about it. And they aren’t entirely wrong. But government supplies water and regulates electricity, and determines land usage, and even allows AI centers to be built, so the Tech Bros do need us because, ultimately, the government is us. And what is AI promising, except to eliminate all our jobs, and to be as inevitable as SkyNet? Which itself was only inevitable because the series ran to six movies and a TV series, as well as video games and other revenue sources. It could just as well have been a happy ending with “Terminator 2: Judgment Day.” But the market, that great, green god, wouldn’t have it.

Science fiction really does need to spend more time looking at the destructive power of capitalism. The real danger lies not in our technology, nor how we abuse it, but in our greed and vanity. Weren’t those two of the Seven Deadlies?