Tuesday, May 19, 2026

It’s Not Over ‘Til It’s Over

If this:
The Department of Justice has issued an order permanently barring the United States from pursuing any tax claims or other legal actions against President Donald Trump, his family, his trusts, and his companies, according to a Justice Department document signed Tuesday by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche.
...isn’t blessed by the court, it goes away in 2029; sooner, if the next Congress acts. (Congress could override a court order, too; but that’s another matter.)

And it can’t be blessed by the court if DOJ insists it has removed the case from the court’s docket. As I’ve said, that’s why the court set a hearing for tomorrow: because a case with a single party came before it to dismiss the case, pursuant to a settlement. And the court said: “Not so fast.” I still don’t think anything has changed.

We’ll see if the court agrees with me.
I just don’t think the court wants to tacitly bless this.

They Went And Threatened Me With A Good Time! πŸ₯³

Senate Republicans reacted with dismay to President Donald Trump’s endorsement of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s (R) primary campaign against Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), openly expressing their fears it would make it harder and more expensive for Republicans to keep the seat.
Yes, Cornyn beclowned himself; to no avail.
Oh, much more than that:
Multiple media outlets reported the president was initially expected to endorse Cornyn, but Paxton tweeted a Hail Mary that seems to have been effective in delaying an endorsement for his rival, pledging he would drop out if Senate leadership lifts the filibuster to pass the SAVE Act, a bill Trump vehemently supports. Cornyn had already expressed his support for the SAVE Act but soon publicly declared his willingness to ditch the filibuster to get it passed, a position he had not taken before. A week ago, Cornyn introduced a bill to name a federal highway after Trump.
I really do think Trump needs to start sodding over that hole on the east side: 😹
😹😹
πŸŽ‰πŸŽŠπŸ₯³πŸΎ 😎

This Is Gonna Be Fun

Because, of course they did. "Me no Alamo.”
NEW: Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD) tells @PabloReports that Congress must have "some say" over the Trump administration’s proposed $1.7 billion fund.

Rounds: "Most certainly, it would appear to me that Congress will have some say because there’s an appropriation of funds someplace along the line."

"We’re not talking a million. We’re talking a billion in this particular case. Even Congress pays attention to that."
So the federal treasury is NOT Trump’s piggy bank? The hell you say!

(This is starting to feel like the Saturday Night Massacre, when even my father turned against Nixon. For context, my mother found my “McGovern” button in my dresser drawer, probably in ‘73. think she’d have been less upset if she’d found a joint and a used condom. She was very concerned about how mad my father would be.  October 1973 wasn’t that long after November, ‘72. But by the Saturday Night Massacre, he was through.)
Warnock: To think that somehow taxpayers might have to pay for the attack on our Capitol—to call it beyond the pale is an understatement.

It’s the reason why we’ve got to do everything we can to show up and vote to take back our democracy from this kleptocratic administration that’s focused on enriching themselves, their families, and their corrupt friends.
Remember when people said Trump couldn’t do more for Putin if he was on the Russian payroll? Yeah, it’s beginning to feel like that. 
Elizabeth Warren: The whole idea that your taxpayer dollars are going to do what? Fund the guys that beat up police officers? Fund the guys that rioted to stop the transfer of power? Fund anybody that Donald Trump wants? This is corruption with capital letters and flashing lights and fireworks going off.
🧨

At this point, it’s all about November:
Another campaign ad written for the Democrats.

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡± MAGA

Premier of Greenland, Jens-Frederik Nielsen:

“–I will not attend the official opening of the American consulate”

Jens-Frederik Nielsen told Sermitsiaq that he will not attend the official opening of the new American consulate on Thursday.

He could not say whether other members of ministers might attend, but for his part, the answer is a clear no.

“We have not made a formal political decision, but I will not participate,” he said.

To mark the official opening, the consulate has invited guests to a large reception on Thursday at its new premises in central Nuuk.

According to Sermitsiaq’s information, a significant number of those invited have chosen to decline the invitation.

—Sermitsiaq
How is is NOT done:
When Donald Trump’s special envoy to Greenland, Jeff Landry, arrived in Nuuk on Sunday, he was accompanied by physician Joseph Griffin, who told Danish broadcaster TV2 News that he had traveled to gain insight into Greenland’s healthcare system.

However, Greenland’s Department of Health told Sermitsiaq that it had not been contacted regarding any planned meetings.

“The Department of Health and Persons with Disabilities is not aware of any plans for a meeting,” the department stated.

Greenlandic health minister: “Deeply problematic”

According to Griffin, he is in Nuuk as a volunteer and has no affiliation with the U.S. government.

On Sunday, Greenlandic Health Minister Anna Wangenheim wrote on LinkedIn that she viewed the Americans’ approach as deeply problematic:

“It is deeply problematic when individuals with a political mission to make Greenland part of the United States send a so-called ‘volunteer doctor’ to Nuuk to ‘assess our needs.’”

“Greenlanders are not test subjects in a geopolitical project,” the minister wrote.

— Sermitsiaq
Winning friends and influencing people. Hello, you must be going.
President Trump’s special envoy to Greenland, Gov. Jeff Landry of Louisiana, came to the island this week on a self-proclaimed good will mission to “make a bunch of friends.” So far, he has not found many.

Within hours of landing on Sunday in Nuuk, Greenland’s capital, Mr. Landry was touring the town in a cold drizzle when one Greenlander gave his entourage the finger.

After he offered some MAGA hats to Greenlandic children, several shook their heads.

—NYT
Don’t go away mad. Just go away.
Premier of Greenland, Jens - Frederik Nielsen: “–We have our red lines,” he told DR, Denmark’s public broadcaster. “And no matter how many chocolate cookies we get, we are not going to change them.”

When later asked about it by a New York Times journalist, Mr. Landry said, ‘There’s only one line — and it’s red, white and blue.”

—NYT
Come back when you can’t stay so long.
Jeff Landry responds to the fear and anger in Greenland

Q: What do you think about the fear and anger your visit and the president’s rhetoric have sparked among Greenlanders?

“There was this huge backlash which, honestly, seemed to come more from Europe than from Greenland. Keep in mind that I was invited to a dog sled race.”

“If you want opportunities, you have to keep the door open. But it seems that Europe tries to close the door every single time.”

“I believe this could become a major opportunity for coexistence between Europe, Greenland, and the United States — with the U.S. taking the lead. And that’s not unfamiliar territory, because the United States led the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. It’s not as though Europe alone built the Europe we see today.”


Q: But would that require the United States to somehow bring Greenland into the fold?

“I don’t know. First and foremost, you have to have an open dialogue, and you have to have a conversation.”

“I’m sure the working group is having those kinds of discussions. I’m also sure they will present a possible framework to the president.”

“For me, it’s about making sure we do not miss opportunities that previous presidents clearly missed.”


—KNR (Greenlandic Broadcasting Corporation)
No means “no."
Jeff Landry: What he will tell Donald Trump about his visit

KNR followed up by asking Jeff Landry whether he — like his boss has previously said — believes Greenland is “a badly managed piece of ice” after visiting the country.

“What I can tell you is that what I will take back and report to the president is that we once had an opportunity that previous presidents squandered. Trump is not a failure like they were. He loves to win. He loves making deals.”

“He recognizes that Greenland is extremely important to national security — not only for the United States, but also for the Western Hemisphere, and, of course, for Greenland’s own security.”

—KNR
"Once had an opportunity.” Yes, we did. Truman declined it, almost 80 years ago. Try to keep up.
Jeff Landry responded to a question from KNR about whether he and U.S. President Donald Trump still want to take control of Greenland.

He said:

“The person best suited to answer that question is the President of the United States. But I think, first and foremost, what the President of the United States wants is to ensure that the Western Hemisphere is secure, and that the countries of the Western Hemisphere share in all the opportunities that the United States — the world’s largest economy — has to offer.”

However, he also emphasized that:

“There is no doubt that the President’s interest in creating opportunities for the people of Greenland is at a higher level than anywhere else in the world. The ambassador is here. I am here.”

—KNR
Can Landry answer the constitutional question of who has the power to add Greenland as a state, or even make it a U. S. protectorate? Because it doesn’t sound like he can.
Jeff Landry told KNR in the interview that he is leaving Greenland with a positive impression, although he regrets that successive American administrations have not done more in the region over the years.

“People deserve the opportunity to have a strong relationship with the United States. I do not believe that any other country truly has the ability to lift people from dependence on the state to self-reliance and independence.”

He says he sees a country rich in opportunities and a population that has welcomed him warmly and treated him kindly.

Regarding the opposition to his visit, he said:

“I do not know where the resistance comes from.”

He added:

“I believe that the resistance or concern that has been built up in the country is based on misunderstandings or narratives created by misinformation online or simply poor journalism.”

—KNR
Or Ugly Americanism. Yeah; just like that.

Worst American diplomat of at least this century.

Liberating People Through Theology

I have a book on my shelves that I’ve had since seminary: Mysterium Liberationis: Fundamental Concepts of Liberation Theology, by Ignacio Ellacuria, S.J., and Jon Sobrino, S.J. It was published in 1993, a fact attested to by the preface by Sobrino, who opens with acknowledging the martyrdom of Ellacuria, Juan Ramon Moreno, Amando Lopez, Segundo Monte’s, Ignacio Martin-Baro, Joaquin Lopez y Lopez, and their cook, Julia Elba, and her daughter, Celina. They were murdered in the residence of Archbishop Romero Center (now Saint, but this was in 1990) atCentral American University Jose Simeon Canas, on November 16, 1989.

That is from the preface to the Spanish edition of 1990. My copy is the English edition, 1993. I mean as a microcosm remembrance of the violence visited upon people in Central America in the late decades of the 20th century, violence condoned by the United States in the name of opposing communism. 

American-trained officers also directed the rape and murder of four American church women in El Salvador early in 1981. The heroic US ambassador who swore that the killers would never get away with their crime, Robert White, was fired days after Ronald Reagan assumed the presidency. Later Secretary of State Alexander Haig suggested that the women might have been killed in “an exchange of fire.” That was a signal to Salvadorans that the United States would help cover up the truth about such killings.

President Reagan steadfastly supported the Salvadoran military despite overwhelming evidence of its crimes. So did Haig and other senior officials in the Reagan administration. It is a parody of justice that their legacy remains honorable while triggermen who did their bidding are demonized.

Writing about one of the former Salvadoran officers now targeted by American justice, two former Reagan administration officials recently asserted, “He was there when the US needed him.” They know. One of them, Edwin Corr, was ambassador to El Salvador at the height of the killing campaign in the mid-1980s. The other, Elliott Abrams, was assistant secretary of state. Their commentary was insightful but did not go far enough.

The Salvadoran justice system has every right to prosecute Salvadoran officers who tortured and murdered during the 1980s. For the United States to feign outrage at their crimes, however, is unfair. Those officers were pawns in a game directed from Washington. True justice would target the people who conceived, blessed, and financed El Salvador’s counterinsurgency campaign. Executioners’ faces are always well hidden, but in this case, they speak English, worked in Washington during the 1980s, and remain respectable cocktail-party guests.

There is, of course, no real prospect that the American masterminds of El Salvador’s killing campaign will be brought to justice in this world. Next best would be for Americans to accept a measure of responsibility as a nation. That might lead us to pause before giving blank checks to regimes we know to be murderous.
Just to say, briefly, that it was in this context that liberation theology was born. If I need to tell you more, I would direct you to Didion’s Salvador. “The preferential option for the poor,” the phrase most associated with liberation theology, and thought to make more Marxism than Xianity, comes out of that context. No one in gov, from the U.S. on down, gave a wet snap for the poor; except that they not become communists. Not in this hemisphere, anyway. Cuba was already too much. And still is. 

The last decades of the last century are still with us, in other words. And liberation theology, supposedly expunged and extirpated by the twin forces of the CIA’s School of the Americas, where the worst monsters of Central America were trained, and Pope John Paul II, with his experience of communism and disgust with it, which led him to despise the economic message of liberation theology. But it persisted, even as it disappeared. It changed the conversation. It’s the conversation we’re all having now.

We are not all liberation theologians. But we are all still grappling with their ideas, whether we embrace them, or reject them, or are somewhere in between. We are having the conversation they started. I think if that as a very Christian kind of paradox. Jesus of Nazareth started a conversation the world is still having. Some ideas are like that; not t everybody likes them, but they can’t be ignored. It’s a peculiarity of the ideas that would improve us, if we let them.

I’m going to do some reading and reflecting. But can’t promise I’ll do the reflecting here; or ever be systematic about it all. I just wanted to mention the new thesis. Like most of my ideas, I’ll probably just let it drift into the background.

One never know, do one?

Trump’s War…

Israel has entered its highest level of alert since the since the start of the ongoing ceasefire with Iran, as U.S. and Israeli forces have now completed preparations for renewed military action against the Islamic Republic, with combat operations set to potentially resume soon, U.S. officials have told Israel’s Kann News.
... is just going to make him more and more popular. Hmmm... stronger support for Trump in Oklahoma than anywhere in Texas. And down in the Valley? πŸ’€ Republicans in the primary have been running hard on how MAGA they are. This is not good news from Texas, for them. (If Paxton wins next week, this analysis means Talarico can start picking curtains for his office.)

Stickin’ A Fork In It

NEWS ON THE BALLROOM -- The $1B for USSS is one of the most important things Republicans are dealing with right now.

It is the single provision that is standing in the way of ICE/CBP funding. Trump wants this on his desk by June 1. But that's all been complicated by the $1B for security, including Trump's ballroom.

Forget the House floor right now. it's irrelevant. all the action will begin when the Senate moves the reconciliation bill.

As @LauraEWeiss16 scooped last night, Senate is not only changing the $1B language, but they are also considering lowering the number from $1B.

Senate is engaged in a lot of Trump management right now. They know Trump wants the money but they also know that, in its current form, they cant pass it. The parliamentarian is a side show, for the most part. Because if the language ends up on the floor, it could easily come out during vote-a-rama.

And here's the real kicker: The House is even trickier. Absences and opposition will kill this provision in the House. Johnson has been warned by rank and file. This won't fly.
2/3rds of the Senate is not up for reelection, and even they don’t like this price tag. All of the House faces a very angry electorate, and the Administration is giving them this:
Reporter: The price tag for this doj fund, $1.8 billion, you have people that can't afford groceries. Gas is high. People are making sacrifices in their personal lives to accommodate for this rise in prices. People are telling us that they feel financially worse off. They're very concerned about the uncertainty. How can you justify that amount of taxpayer money for that fund when people are struggling? What do you say to Americans who wonder why this fund is getting all this money and I can't afford basic life amenities?

Vance: Thanks to Donald Trump's leadership and the working families tax cut, we put $40 billion into a rural health care fund
That ballroom is never going to be more than a hole in the ground, and a pile of semi-toxic waste on a DC golf course. It’s all but guaranteed the next Congress will vote to ban construction. 🚧  

I’m just gonna slip back in, and stick this in here.
Is our children learning?

Election Day For The Primary Runoff Is May 26

Early voting has already started. 

Trump had better hurry and get ICE down here if he wants to be sure the “right people” vote.
I guess we’ll be spared that, now.

Still Going…. πŸ™ˆπŸ™‰πŸ΅

"Who, me?”
Reed: You talked to Ghislaine Maxwell. A few days later, she was transferred from a high security prison to a very comfortable—

Blanche: That’s not true. She was not in a high security prison. She was transferred from a low security prison to a low security prison.

Reed: I don't think at the other prison she had her own room. She had access to a private shower. She could have pet therapy. Why did Trump send you down to talk to her.

Blanche: You think President Trump called and asked me to go interview a witness in federal prison?

Reed: Yes, I do. He needed somebody to talk to her and find out what would she say if she was asked about Jeffrey Epstein, and you were the perfect choice. And you went down there and suddenly Shazam, she's out
Maybe if you quit acting like the President’s private attorney…. They had to edit out the fire extinguisher, because his tongue kept bursting into flames.πŸ”₯  Some people say $1.776 billion…. Speaking of $1.776 billion:
REED: How many taxpayers' returns were leaked by the IRS in the 2020 breach?

BLANCHE: Excuse me?

REED: 405,427. One of them was Donald Trump, correct?

BLANCHE: Donald Trump and his family.

REED: And Donald Trump was president at the time. So it was his IRS that allowed this breach of privacy
πŸ™ˆπŸ™‰πŸ΅

“Well, it’s been very well received….”

So, this guy...
VAN HOLLEN: An individual who was pardoned by Trump went on to molest two children, and he tried to buy their silence by saying he would give them funds from your slush fund. Can you commit to not making that person eligible for a payout?

BLANCHE: You're obviously lying in your question

VAN HOLLEN: I am reporting what he said
...but not his victims?  That was reported two weeks ago. Raising the question:  how did Johnson know?

Rest assured, the process will be fair, impartial, and transparent. Said no one, ever.
Van Hollen: Will individuals who assaulted Capitol Hill police officers be eligible for this fund?

Blanche: Anybody in this country is eligible to apply.

Van Hollen: Are there going to be rules that say that if you've assaulted a Capitol Hill police officer or committed a violent crime, you will not be eligible?

Blanche: I'm not one of the commissioners

Van Hollen: You’re appointing the members!
Although it is, already, clear as crystal. And if there aren’t, we’ll pretend there are. We’re the Department of Justice, bitches! But the committee makes the decisions. Right? What could go wrong? The committee will clearly be impartial and will act without fear or favor. Just like the Senate Parliamentarian Trump wants fired. And it just gets better: I don’t know the technical details of what got Trump, et al., into court on the first settlement, but I continue to expect the same circumstances still apply. Which means the judge is acting on the court’s authority to question the validity of this suit (there is no opposing party), and is going to be VERY interested in this testimony. Because I can’t imagine what legal claim Trump donors have to this proposed settlement fund. Well, that explains this question: Regardless, the idea is being very well received: That’s pretty much what’s going on while this has been going on.

The President Explains His Own Criminal Behavior

Grandpa needs a nap. 😴 

Focused Like A Laser Beam

So he’s going to add a concrete dome, Γ  la the Parthenon? πŸ›️  And lands on the White House? Ummmm.... Are they? You still won’t; he’s coming in a few months. But Joe Biden didn’t recognize George Clooney. Now THAT was a problem! (And Jake Tapper hasn’t written a book about Trump yet, so…) The Ballroom Of What’s Happening Now. (And I had understood the court reviewed the security measures around this construction in camera because they are classified national security measures. So why is Trump babbling about them on live TeeVee?)

Monday, May 18, 2026

It Would Be Irresponsible Not To Speculate

He’s not from aroubd here, is he? Clearly their racial pride was imported from another country. We don’t have that kinda stuff ‘round here.
San Diego police say they received a call from a mother reporting a runaway juvenile, missing weapons, and her car was also missing. She told police that her son was with a companion and that they were dressed in camo. They dispatched police to a local mall and notified school police at a local high school.

“We were trying to zero in on where these individuals were at, we received the call at approximately 1143 that there was an active shooter at the islamic center”
Can’t let the facts get in the way of a good story.
Patel: Because these people are pure evil. These people wish to target Americans based on their faith because they are intolerant of the way America operates. They are jealous of the American democracy that we have here and they choose to be cowards and target us from afar based on our institutions and our houses of worship and our faith.
San Diego isn’t that far away. So? It’s his Oklahoma accent.

They Were “Horribly Treated”

He’s trying to use our money to enrich his loyalists, his own ass, and his family.”

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill reacted to the Trump administration dropping its $10 billion IRS lawsuit in exchange for the Justice Department officially establishing a $1.776 billion "Anti-Weaponization Fund," which critics and Democratic lawmakers have widely denounced as a taxpayer-backed political slush fund for allies and January 6 insurrectionists.

Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna defended the fund, agreeing with reimbursing those she called “innocent” victims of what she believes were politically motivated lawsuits under the Biden administration.

Drop Site’s Julian Andreone also pressed Democrats on whether taking corporate PAC money undermines their credibility in opposing Trump’s corruption. New York’s Rep. AOC said corporate money “corrupts the whole system,” while Delaware Rep. Sarah McBride agreed but stressed Democrats must “fucking win” before putting the House in order.
A slight correction: they were prosecutions, not lawsuits. And they started under Trump, after January 6.  They were "horribly treated." We'll see if the court lets the plaintiffs dismiss their suit and enter into a settlement with the government under these circumstances. And especially this settlement. My money is in the court not allowing itself to be used this way (since the judgement fund is only legally accessible through litigation or settlement of litigation); but I’ve been wrong before. πŸ˜‘

A National Jubilee of Prayer, Praise & Thanksgiving

 Leviticus 25 (NIV):

The Lord said to Moses at Mount Sinai, 2 “Speak to the Israelites and say to them: ‘When you enter the land I am going to give you, the land itself must observe a sabbath to the Lord. 3 For six years sow your fields, and for six years prune your vineyards and gather their crops. 4 But in the seventh year the land is to have a year of sabbath rest, a sabbath to the Lord. Do not sow your fields or prune your vineyards. 5 Do not reap what grows of itself or harvest the grapes of your untended vines. The land is to have a year of rest. 6 Whatever the land yields during the sabbath year will be food for you—for yourself, your male and female servants, and the hired worker and temporary resident who live among you, 7 as well as for your livestock and the wild animals in your land. Whatever the land produces may be eaten.

The Year of Jubilee

8 “‘Count off seven sabbath years—seven times seven years—so that the seven sabbath years amount to a period of forty-nine years. 9 Then have the trumpet sounded everywhere on the tenth day of the seventh month; on the Day of Atonement sound the trumpet throughout your land. 10 Consecrate the fiftieth year and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee for you; each of you is to return to your family property and to your own clan. 11 The fiftieth year shall be a jubilee for you; do not sow and do not reap what grows of itself or harvest the untended vines. 12 For it is a jubilee and is to be holy for you; eat only what is taken directly from the fields.

13 “‘In this Year of Jubilee everyone is to return to their own property.


14 “‘If you sell land to any of your own people or buy land from them, do not take advantage of each other. 15 You are to buy from your own people on the basis of the number of years since the Jubilee. And they are to sell to you on the basis of the number of years left for harvesting crops. 16 When the years are many, you are to increase the price, and when the years are few, you are to decrease the price, because what is really being sold to you is the number of crops. 17 Do not take advantage of each other, but fear your God. I am the Lord your God.

18 “‘Follow my decrees and be careful to obey my laws, and you will live safely in the land. 19 Then the land will yield its fruit, and you will eat your fill and live there in safety. 20 You may ask, “What will we eat in the seventh year if we do not plant or harvest our crops?” 21 I will send you such a blessing in the sixth year that the land will yield enough for three years. 22 While you plant during the eighth year, you will eat from the old crop and will continue to eat from it until the harvest of the ninth year comes in.

23 “‘The land must not be sold permanently, because the land is mine and you reside in my land as foreigners and strangers. 24 Throughout the land that you hold as a possession, you must provide for the redemption of the land.

25 “‘If one of your fellow Israelites becomes poor and sells some of their property, their nearest relative is to come and redeem what they have sold. 26 If, however, there is no one to redeem it for them but later on they prosper and acquire sufficient means to redeem it themselves, 27 they are to determine the value for the years since they sold it and refund the balance to the one to whom they sold it; they can then go back to their own property. 28 But if they do not acquire the means to repay, what was sold will remain in the possession of the buyer until the Year of Jubilee. It will be returned in the Jubilee, and they can then go back to their property.

29 “‘Anyone who sells a house in a walled city retains the right of redemption a full year after its sale. During that time the seller may redeem it. 30 If it is not redeemed before a full year has passed, the house in the walled city shall belong permanently to the buyer and the buyer’s descendants. It is not to be returned in the Jubilee. 31 But houses in villages without walls around them are to be considered as belonging to the open country. They can be redeemed, and they are to be returned in the Jubilee.

32 “‘The Levites always have the right to redeem their houses in the Levitical towns, which they possess. 33 So the property of the Levites is redeemable—that is, a house sold in any town they hold—and is to be returned in the Jubilee, because the houses in the towns of the Levites are their property among the Israelites. 34 But the pastureland belonging to their towns must not be sold; it is their permanent possession.

35 “‘If any of your fellow Israelites become poor and are unable to support themselves among you, help them as you would a foreigner and stranger, so they can continue to live among you. 36 Do not take interest or any profit from them, but fear your God, so that they may continue to live among you. 37 You must not lend them money at interest or sell them food at a profit. 38 I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt to give you the land of Canaan and to be your God.

39 “‘If any of your fellow Israelites become poor and sell themselves to you, do not make them work as slaves. 40 They are to be treated as hired workers or temporary residents among you; they are to work for you until the Year of Jubilee. 41 Then they and their children are to be released, and they will go back to their own clans and to the property of their ancestors. 42 Because the Israelites are my servants, whom I brought out of Egypt, they must not be sold as slaves. 43 Do not rule over them ruthlessly, but fear your God.

44 “‘Your male and female slaves are to come from the nations around you; from them you may buy slaves. 45 You may also buy some of the temporary residents living among you and members of their clans born in your country, and they will become your property. 46 You can bequeath them to your children as inherited property and can make them slaves for life, but you must not rule over your fellow Israelites ruthlessly.

47 “‘If a foreigner residing among you becomes rich and any of your fellow Israelites become poor and sell themselves to the foreigner or to a member of the foreigner’s clan, 48 they retain the right of redemption after they have sold themselves. One of their relatives may redeem them: 49 An uncle or a cousin or any blood relative in their clan may redeem them. Or if they prosper, they may redeem themselves. 50 They and their buyer are to count the time from the year they sold themselves up to the Year of Jubilee. The price for their release is to be based on the rate paid to a hired worker for that number of years. 51 If many years remain, they must pay for their redemption a larger share of the price paid for them. 52 If only a few years remain until the Year of Jubilee, they are to compute that and pay for their redemption accordingly. 53 They are to be treated as workers hired from year to year; you must see to it that those to whom they owe service do not rule over them ruthlessly.

54 “‘Even if someone is not redeemed in any of these ways, they and their children are to be released in the Year of Jubilee, 55 for the Israelites belong to me as servants. They are my servants, whom I brought out of Egypt. I am the Lord your God.
Nobody likes Leviticus, but as a lawyer, I’ve come to appreciate it. It’s from Leviticus that we get the concept of the Jubilee, and it’s in Leviticus 25 that the law of the Jubilee year is set out.

I know you’re not going to read all that, and I don’t blame you. So I highlighted every verse where the word appears. I’m not going to exegete Leviticus 25, but read the highlighted portions and it’s clear the Jubilee was meant to be a foundational concept. It’s rooted to the land, so every 50 years the land returns to its owners , meaning the families of the owners at the time Israel entered the Promised Land. Everything in Leviticus 25 dates from the year of the Jubilee. Essentially, every 50 years, all of Israel starts over. It’s a version of economic justice, a radical “Rule Against Perpetuities,” although the Jubilee is meant to be kept, not just honored in the breaching. Unlike the Rule Against Perpetuities, which is seldom really applied (or applicable), the year of the Jubilee…was never applied at all. There’s no evidence biblical Israel ever followed it at all. Today we’d find 50 years too much of a churn, although I still remember when “68” was considered elderly, and 80 was a rare accomplishment, indeed. So 50 years in the days of Moses would be almost generational, at best. It would probably affect your children’s children. In any case, it was too radical an idea.

But on the National Mall last Sunday someone declared  the event there: "Rededicate 250: A National Jubilee of Prayer, Praise & Thanksgiving." I know they meant to be biblical. But it was about anything other than a Biblical Jubilee.

And that makes all the difference.

Getting The Message

"Very well received” by…? But otherwise, he is extremely credible;
Q: The DOJ has a new fund that was announced today -- $1.7 billion. Why should taxpayers pay for the January 6ers?

TRUMP: Well, it's been very well received, I have to tell you. I know very little about it. I wasn't involved in the whole creation of it. This is reimbursing people that were horribly treated
He could get Congress to do that. It would at least be legal, then.
Q: Do you believe people who committed violence against Capitol police officer on January 6 should be eligible for compensation from this DOJ fund, and are you or your family members going to be seeking compensation from that fund?

TRUMP: Yeah. It will all be dependent on a committee
*wink wink knudge knudge* knowwutImean? I know it’s still in the courts, but the Congress really needs to weigh in on this proposed looting of the Treasury. Especially the GOP representatives and Senators up for reelection. As I said, only one plaintiff in this case has an interest in this fund and how it’s distributed. Which really undermines the legitimacy of the settlement, in the eyes of the court. How else do you get a message to Trump? Not to put too fine a point on it.

Well, I Was Wondering

This does  look like an end run on the trial court, because DOJ is presenting this as separate from Trump’s IRS claims, although the source of the funds (my big question) is the judgment fund. 

I’m not familiar with the statute or the case law around it, but my understanding is that the fund is for the payment of judgments won against the federal government, which would mean pursuant to a lawsuit taken to final judgment. The fund was established in 1952 (IIRC) to obviate Congress having to approve payment every time a situation like that arose. It would discourage settlements if it was limited to that, so the fund (I’m going off the Treasury’s explanation on their website) also allows payments for settlements of lawsuits or even threatened litigation (many settled disputes never cross the courthouse door. The courts actually prefer it that way.).

There is also a provision for administrative claims.  But which one of those two (litigation, real or threatened; administrative settlements) is this?

I don’t honestly know, and can’t presume. But $1.776 billion is certainly something Congress should take an interest in. They could stop it; they could, eventually, claw it back.

Stopping it is better.

I say it’s an end run, but I speak too soon:
The U.S. Department of Justice today announced that as a part of the settlement agreement in President Donald J. Trump v. Internal Revenue Service, the Attorney General established “The Anti-Weaponization Fund”to provide a systematic process to hear and redress claims of others who suffered weaponization and lawfare.

The plaintiffs in the case, President Donald J. Trump, Donald J. Trump, Jr., Eric Trump, and the Trump Organization, LLC, filed suit against the Treasury and IRS in Southern District of Florida federal court following the leak of their tax returns. Per the settlement, plaintiffs will receive a formal apology but no monetary payment or damages of any kind. They have agreed, in exchange for the creation of this fund, to drop their pending lawsuit with prejudice, and also withdraw two administrative claims including for damages resulting from the unlawful raid of Mar-a-Lago and the Russia-collusion hoax.
... blah, blah, blah. I read the excerpt from the press release (in the tweet above) and assumed this announced fund was wholly separate from the lawsuit. But apparently they think $1.776 billion is more palatable than $10 billion, and since the plaintiffs won’t be getting it, a group wholly unrelated to the litigation, can, and hey! presto, no more legal problems! Yeah, that’s not how this works. That’s not how any of this works. 

And the DOJ used to be the premier lawyers in the country who would understand that without any one having to tell them.

For one thing, the arguments against the settlement that I’m aware of, still stand, including whether the suit is even timely (statute of limitations), and whether the award is legally justified. I don’t mean the briefs of the amici are dispositive; I just mean those questions still stand. And since the trial court took on the issue of the $10 billion settlement of, it still has jurisdiction over this settlement. A different settlement doesn’t start a different lawsuit, or settle a claim that never reached litigation. If anything, this is even more preposterous than the first attempt at getting money from the government. This announcement isn’t analogous to announcing the “end” of Operation Epic Fury and restarting the War Powers Act clock. Congress will do what it’s going to do about that, but the court doesn’t lose its authority to rule on the legitimacy of this second proposed settlement of the same suit. This is 3 Stooges quality shit.πŸ’© 

I understand the outrage this announcement is generating, but my reaction is: is this a joke? 

I assume DOJ is doing this because it is only through legitimate litigation that it can it access the judgment fund. Except the court is still considering the question of whether or not this is legitimate litigation. This announcement doesn’t advance an advantageous argument for the plaintiffs by one jot. If anything, it reaffirms the court’s already announced belief that there aren’t two sides represented in court in this suit. Because aside from the POTUS, it’s hard to see what interest the rest of the plaintiffs have in this proposed fund. It’s clearly meant to be a political benefit for Trump; but beyond that?

This just makes their position weaker come Wednesday. Clowns 🀑 to the left of it, jokers πŸƒ to the right.
Irony is in the corner, getting blind drunk.

If You Saw This In A Movie…

Trump: "If Iran surrenders, admits their Navy is gone and resting at the bottom of the sea, and their Air Force is no longer with us, and if their entire Military walks out of Tehran, weapons dropped and hands held high, each shouting 'I surrender, I surrender' while wildly waving the representative White Flag, and if their entire remaining Leadership signs all necessary 'Documents of Surrender,' and admit their defeat to the great power and force of the magnificent U.S.A., The Failing New York Times, The China Street Journal (WSJ!), Corrupt and now Irrelevant CNN, and all other members of the Fake News Media, will headline that Iran had a Masterful and Brilliant Victory over The United States of America, it wasn’t even close. The Dumacrats and Media have totally lost their way. They have gone absolutely CRAZY!!! President DJT"
... it would be a black comedy.

In the meantime, he’s threatening to blow them up again. Why don’t I believe him this time?

"I HOPE EVERYBODY AT REDEDICATE 250 IS HAVING A GOOD TIME."

AP:
President Donald Trump read a passage of Scripture in a video shown at the rally. Filmed in the Oval Office, it was the same footage used during a marathon Bible-reading event last month. The verses from 2 Chronicles are often cited by those who believe America was founded as a Christian nation.
It made such a big impression the first time, nobody noticed he was using it a second time.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Follow The Clickbait

"We all need to take this very, very seriously," Elias said. "This is a five-alarm fire. This is an alarm in the middle of the night that is warning us that the arsonists are on the loose. They are pouring gasoline on the foundations, and they are lighting matches."

Trump has repeatedly refused to rule out sending federal agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement or the National Guard to monitor polling places across the country. Last week, Trump was asked again about his plans for the midterms, at which point he uttered his "do anything" comment.

At the same time, Elias noted Democrats appear to be relying too heavily on American institutions like the courts to thwart Trump's assault on democracy. Elias added that it shows Democrats "don't want to accept that things are as dire as they are."

"They want to assume that the institutions are strong," Elias said. "They want to assume that the guardrails will hold. And you and I have been doing this long enough to know that the guardrails are not holding. The institutions are not that strong, and some of them are in complete collapse because they've capitulated."
It has been six years. Every single "stolen election" theory — from 2,000 Mules to servers in Italy to Georgia suitcases — has been debunked, crushed in court, painstakingly explained, and none of these guys ever have the goods cause it's all nonsense to please POTUS. It's embarrassing for Bartiromo that she is still giving this airtime, and anyone who still falls for this chasing the next new reveal needs to get away from their computer.
60+ cases that never got anywhere in court, and an assault on the Capitol that didn’t change the outcome of the 2020 election, and yet “the guardrails aren’t holding”? 

I agree several states have surrendered voter rolls to the DOJ when that never should have happened, but there’s still that pesky matter of evidence. That’s where almost everyone of the 60 cases in 2020 ran aground. They never got past the challenge to the charges. Trump never had evidence of electoral fraud, and filed suit in order to fish for it. Anyone who’s ever been fishing knows why the metaphor is a “fishing expedition.” You drop bait into the unknown, hoping a fish is there. Civil suits don’t work that way. As Trump found out, over and over and over. 

So now what? Have the courts abandoned that principle? Will they let Trump challenge whatever race he chooses, after the fact? And then what? Order new elections in a crazy quilt pattern across the country, across House districts and state races?

Yeah, that’ll happen. Just like the National Guard and ICE will patrol every polling location in America: everybody everywhere all at once. Sure, Trump will do anything. Just like he’s going to wipe Iran off the map; or destroy its civilization. Or bomb the country into submission. Or send in special forces to recover nearly 1000 lbs of enriched uranium. You know, the way they do in the movies. 

Oh, wait, he may do that one. Or try to, anyway.
They will certainly try to use that one. But we all know the problem with trying to prove a negative. Blanche is promising to find evidence where evidence doesn’t exist. Sound familiar? And when he has it, or says he does, what will he do with it? Take it to court? Too late for that. Use it to get into court in 2026? Irrelevant and inapplicable in too many ways to count. Take it to social media? How’s that working out for Trump’s agenda and his approval? Or the polls? Trump’s minions go before the cameras every week, knowing the clips will show up in Twitter. They keep telling us everything is fine. Is that working?

Or maybe Blanche will just keep saying the truth is out there, but the deep state is very, very good at hiding it.
Or maybe Blanche and Trump are just full of shit, and the more people say so, the more obvious that will be.