Monday, January 20, 2025

Article 1, section 9, clause 8

Ummm…private business men can’t be bought? And Trump’s only a private business man until Monday at noon....๐Ÿ•›  At which time: Besides: Of course, Trump is a business man. He has no idea how government works.

Eh.
The Congressional GOP and the Supreme Court have truly created a monster: Trump knows he faces zero accountability from impeachment or prosecution, and now doesn’t even have to face voters again. It’s going to be kleptocracy on an unprecedented scale.
The utter failure to employ Article 1, section 3, clause 6; and Article 1, section 9, clause 8, is actually why Trump faces no accountability. Where were the criminal, even civil, charges for Trump’s grift the first time around? The failure to ever employ the emoluments clause against a President, or to ever remove one from office by impeachment, is entirely on we, the people, for not demanding it. Hell, we elected a convicted felon. Why do we keep expecting something or someone to save us from ourselves?

Isn’t that what children do?

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Entitlemints

What is the lowest common denominator here?

‘Tis a mystery…

๐Ÿ˜น๐Ÿ˜น๐Ÿ˜น๐Ÿ’ธ

Trump supported her memecoin:
Donald Trump over the weekend advertised the new coin for his wife, by sharing a post by Melania Trump's account on Truth Social.
Remember! Trump is a major entramanure! He’s a bidness gene-yus! Is this a great country, or what?

๐Ÿคฆ‍♂️ 

Reality Wins Again

 Will Stancil:

Watching the fringe online left rally with Trump around the TikTok thing is a reminder that they both the fringe online left and MAGA are basically movements built around the idea that going viral makes something true

Google:



And The People Say: “AMEN!”

Tom Homan Meets The Buzz Saw Of Reality

Well, now that we’ve publicized it:
Incoming "border czar" Tom Homan said large-scale raids as part of President-elect Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration are set to begin as soon as Tuesday. 
In an interview with Fox News on Friday night, Homan did not offer further details, but he did confirm that Chicago will be one of the cities targeted. 
"On Tuesday, ICE is finally going to go out and do their job. We're going to take the handcuffs off ICE," he said, referring to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
we’ll withdraw our endorsement of it.
In a Sunday interview on Fox News, Homan revealed that he was troubled by leaked details of the proposed deportations in Chicago. 
"I find it troubling to this day that any sanctuary city, any elected official, does not want public safety threats removed from their communities," Homan said. "Let us into the jail. Cause if you let us in the jail, we can arrest a bad guy in the jail, right?" 
"Washington Post says you, as of yesterday, talking about reconsidering a raid in Chicago this coming week," host Bill Hemmer asked. "There was a leak in Chicago," Homan admitted. "So we're looking at that leak and find out how does it affect officer safety concerns. Chicago's not off the table, but we're reconsidering when and how we do it." 
"So would it benefit you, based on your objective there, not to talk publicly so much about your plans?" Hemmer pressed.  
"Specific plans," Homan clarified. "What was leaked in Chicago was more specific what was happening, and that raises officer safety concerns." 
"So we're looking at it. What was leaked? What's actually in there? And how is it going to affect us moving forward?"
So now we’re clear on why Trump chose Chicago (aside from its Democratic Party roots). He wanted to make an example of a sanctuary city.

Sanctuary cities don’t obstruct federal law enforcement. They simply don’t endanger their own efforts by making themselves agents of ICE. They have their own law enforcement issues, and being seen as extensions of ICE just make that job harder.

And now Homan is crawfishing; probably because they can’t do what they promised to do. He can’t even punish Chicago (he never could have). 

Wimp. ๐Ÿ˜ˆ

I Really Don’t Think He’s Capable Of Irony, So…

A) He really means it.

B) He knows it will get attention.

C) These are not mutually exclusive explanations.

This, OTOH:
(I understand computers better than Elmo does.)  Is Trump saying Elmo hacked the Pennsylvania computer system? White man (billionaire) strong, right, Elmo? The only person who can make Trump sound like he knows what he’s talking about.

๐Ÿฟ

Our story so far:
Politico reporter Christine Miu wrote, "According to the law, Trump would need to certify to Congress that there is a path to divestiture, 'significant progress' toward it, and the 'relevant binding legal agreements' are in place. None of those conditions appear to be in place yet, as ByteDance has resisted a sale."
You mean a tweet from a private citizen isn’t the same thing as a Supreme Court decision?
TikTok went back online in the U.S. shortly after Trump's proposal, posting, "In agreement with our service providers, TikTok is in the process of restoring service. We thank President Trump for providing the necessary clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no penalties providing TikTok to over 170 million Americans and allowing over 7 million small businesses to thrive. It’s a strong stand for the First Amendment and against arbitrary censorship. We will work with President Trump on a long-term solution that keeps TikTok in the United States." 
According to the report, there are major risks involved in just taking Trump's word for it. 
"Likewise, it’s questionable whether the other companies can legally rely on verbal promises from the president to protect them from potentially bankruptcy-inducing fines, if they help bring TikTok back. App stores and service providers face a daily $5,000 fine for every user who can still access TikTok, and those penalties easily add up to billions of dollars," Politico is reporting.
If I’m the guy responsible at Apple (or Google), I don’t think I take Trump’s tweet as the rule of law. If I was advising Apple or Google, I wouldn’t tell them they could. If I’m a service provider, I’d keep TikTok dark for now, thank you very much. “But Private Citizen Trump tweeted about it!” is not the legal defense you might think it is.

Even Turley thinks so:
That seems to answer my question about who can enforce this law....

So TikTok is "back."  But do IP's continue to carry it, and app stores continue to provide it?  Maybe Trump can straighten that out with a tweet.

๐Ÿฟ

Disrupting The Narrative

It is interesting that entrepreneurs have "disrupted" so many industries that don't really need disrupting while car dealerships just carry on as always.
He’s commenting on this:*
I just have to say: it remains *insane* that, in the year of our lord 2025, you can't just go on the internet, customize the car you want, and order it delivered to your door. There is zero practical reason not to do this, but auto dealers have written the shitty dealership experience into law.
That guy seems to unironically think this is a great populist issue. 

I special ordered a car once. Set it up just the way I wanted. It took so long to deliver I finally bought another one from the dealership. I gave up and made a better deal for a car on their lot. 

I have a passing familiarity with the business of car dealerships. They buy the cars on “floor loans” from the factory, which keeps the factory filling orders (and the dealerships selling cars to keep up payments on the loan). This is why Tesla has Cybertrucks in the parking lot outside the Austin factory. No orders from individuals, no dealerships to take them. Not the way GM and Ford, etc,, want to do business. (They make a lot more cars than Tesla, who really isn’t “disrupting” the car industry.  There’s a market reason for that.) Tesla is proving to manufacturers and dealers that their system works just fine.

Now, if you want to “customize” your car, you can. Hire a mechanic and a body shop and go to town. You want the factory to do that for you? You can do that, too: if you’ve got the coin.  Here’s where I point out that cars in transit from factories to dealers used to be sheathed in white plastic (maybe still are?). This started because some guy ordered his car with a special paint job that was damaged in shipping. I. e., the condition it arrived in was not to his satisfaction. Lawsuits followed. and cars were more carefully protected after that. Probably raising prices for all of us, to boot.

So if you want your car customized to you from the factory, you’re gonna pay for that. And ordering it on the internet won’t make it any cheaper (Henry Ford made cars cheaper by mass production. What makes people think the internet reversed that basic rule?). Or make it any cheaper for Joe Average Guy, who already pays too much for his car. (The symbol of oil field economics was the expensive pickups oil field workers bought, then lost, as the boom and bust of oil field economics prevailed. Some of the people who can afford a new car, can’t afford a new car.) So this is a remarkably stupid idea.

And one reason tech bros haven’t really disrupted that many markets/industries. Football now regularly touts what technology has done for the game (or the people selling that technology do, in ads). But football remains football; just as education remains education. Computers are useful tools in business and education. But business still follows the market, and education is still the work of students and teachers.

Aside from the industries that are heavily regulated and so hard to “disrupt.” I still remember when “Ma Bell” controlled the phone lines.  MCI “disrupted” that with technology, but actually did it through the courts. Ma Bell was broken up by law, not by the market. That legal action changed the market, which allowed new technology, decades later, to reshape it. Sort of like TV replaced radio, which begat cable TV, which begat VHS and BetaMax, which begat video stores, which begat Netflix shipping DVD’s, which begat streaming services, first via Netflix. Except MCI had to legally change the market first.

And if you’re paying attention: MCI is barely a footnote in history (I still remember the “convenience” of dialing a local number, then entering my code and the number I was calling, all to save money and avoid using a long-distance operator. And then came “1-plus” dialing. Yeah, you don’t know what you missed.).  Blockbuster Video? Your own children won’t believe you. Cable TV is hanging on by its aging Boomer fingernails. Most of what got us here is now forgotten to all but history. This is the way it works. Disruption has a lot more to do with market acceptance of technology than with the genius of tech bros.

And the internet has no more made custom cars available to all of us than Amazon has given me access to books custom bound to my order.

*Having said all this, I have to note that post begins with his complaint that his wife wants a new car, and he always thought only rich people bought new cars. So…

And: what MarkS said. All three times.

Follow The Money

"I would like the U.S. government to buy ME a 50% interest in a joint venture. Or at least turn it into something where I could get a piece of the action. Maybe purchasable with my new crypto coin.”๐Ÿช™ 

๐ŸŒ€

Louisiana has systematically destroyed coastal wetlands to accommodate oil exploration and production. Which has removed the natural barriers that used to absorb the energy of hurricanes. Making hurricanes “exponentially” worse.

Tell you what, Mr. Speaker: next hurricane in Louisiana, don’t even ask.  ‘Cause we need to factor that in.

Asshole.

Governments Do JV’s, Right?

Again: what are the enforcement mechanisms if the statutory ban? Can the POTUS unilaterally suspend them?

And whose money is Trump spending? What agency is in charge of the U.S. end of this joint venture? Congress banned TikTok? Now they’re going to authorize this? And fund it? While eliminating the debt ceiling?

This is the usual shitshow on social media. None of this works the way he thinks it does. Or re-opens TikTok in 24 hours. Well, TikTok might reopen and take its chances. But none of this changes the fundamental nature of  TikTok any time soon.

And does China even give a shit? (Except maybe as a bargaining chip for Taiwan; or a few more new islands…)

“Let’s You And Him Fight”

I’m not so sure about that, because Trump’s rubes are not the ones on TikTok:
As T.W. Fuller, who claims, "Conservatism is moving America forward," wrote, "Save America first, then we can worry about what happens to TikTok. But if TikTok is to be saved, make it American owned, and make it safe for everyone who uses it." 
"Only if China doesn’t own it, I don’t want them to steal my information," added Rich Rhonda whose bio reads, "Jesus is my King.Trump is my President." 
"Please enforce the law. No mercy for TikTok. Red book, lemon 8, etc. should be banned, or forced to divest also," begged CedarRockSC who has praised Trump's alliance with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Kamala Harris critic GiaB, accused, "That tells the American people you’re kissing Chinese ass!" 
"Was @realDonaldTrump hacked?" asked Kristine.Thomas11. 
"LET TIKTOK BURN TO HELL IF CCP is NOT selling to USA Investors STOP BEING CHILDISH. TIKTOK IS AN EVIL DATA COLLECTION APP THAT IS DESIGNED TO DESTROY MIND & SOUL OF USA IDIOTS THAT USE IT WAKE UP & DONT MAKE THE MISTAKE Anything China is out to destroy USA," raged ChiefO, whose avatar is a shot of Trump pumping his fist after the Pennsylvania assassination attempt. 
Constitutional Conservative cinciclone agreed and added, "It's not Tiltok that needs saved... IT'S THE CONSTITUTION!!!"
I’m frankly unclear about the provisions of this law. I don’t know what the enforcement mechanisms are, or whether or not the Administration can ignore them. All I know is: he set this up: And he’s now a ham-handed ignoramus tasked with playing a Steinway at Carnegie Hall. And I have ear plugs. ๐Ÿ˜ˆ

Or, if you prefer, he’s trying to thread a needle with boxing gloves on. Some of Trump’s dumber rich friends think Trump can force China to sell TikTok, the way Trump thinks he can force Denmark to sell Greenland (as the Prime Minister of Denmark said, Trump can’t sell Florida anymore than Denmark can sell Greenland). This is what America voted for: four more years of chaos arising from complete incompetence.

And at least for now, I don’t have a dog in this fight. ๐Ÿ˜ˆ

(Sidebar, but since I brought it up: according to Anne Applebaum (gift link at that link), Trump threatened Denmark with tariffs. Which, personally, I think go the way of the TikTok ban when they interfere with Ozempic and Legos. But now I think that’s true of all Trump’s tariff bluster…). But there’s that incompetence again. This is not a time for popcorn, but sweet Joseph, this man is an idiotic toddler with a shotgun.)

Saturday, January 18, 2025

In A Nutshell

Cold. ๐Ÿฅถ Windy. ๐ŸŒฌ️ That combover? Ever seen Trump in an overcoat? Bears would point and laugh. ๐Ÿ˜น 

(Cats, too.)
They bought access. They’ll be in the Rotunda, which I understand only holds 200 people.

Looks like the CEO of TIKTOK (Chinas spy operation) got The President of Mexicos (ally) seat at inauguration. 
Such a serious president

 


Panem et Circenses

Except the effort will require:

1) court hearings for every person detained.
2) detention until those hearings (or release…)
3) deportations to a country that will accept them.

Trump tried this last time and got exactly nowhere with it for those reasons.

And what does this have to do with the price of groceries? Except to raise them? Expect the latter as farm workers decide not to work, rather than risk detention/deportation.

This is why Trump said it’s hard to get prices to go down…

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Same As It Ever Was

They haven’t figured it out in over 200 years.

No reason they should start now.

There’s a reason “woke” was such a powerful metaphor, and why the GOP and the billionaires have worked so hard to demonize it.

“Letting the days go by/Letting the water hold me down.”

๐Ÿš€, Man

I’m sure people in the debris field are entertained. NASA rockets stopped blowing up at launch in the early’60’s*. Mark Cuban calls Elmo the entrepreneur of the century. I still don’t understand why. His rockets blow up; his cars blow up, his Cybertruck is dragging down Tesla, his Boring Company is building a “hyperloop” in Vegas that’s been reduced from pods to Teslas shuttling people underground. Which won’t solve anybody’s traffic problems.

And it was P.T. Barnum who said there’s a sucker born every minute. Or did he say “you’ll never go broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public”? I’m pretty sure it was Poor Richard who said “A fool and his money are soon parted.” Or none of the above. The point is, there’s nothing new about Elmo. Or remarkable. He just proves how gullible how many of us are. And the accuracy of those aphorisms.
I've been so blind:
I BET DEI DID THIS
The answer was staring me in the face.
Woke rocket science did this
Also probably true.

*Challenger is the exception that proves the rule.

The Special Ambassador To Hollywood, Ladies And Gentlemen!

And they commissioned the fires…because? And are the people who commissioned this in the room with you? Did they touch you? Can you show me on the doll where the people commissioned the fires? ๐Ÿ”ฅ 

Besides: Santa Ana winds and dry conditions? In LA, where the rainfall averages 12” a year? Have you ever been to LA?

Fruity as a nutcake.

The Mouth That Roared ๐Ÿ‘„

Do you think that there is a — I mean I know that he's been, apparently his dad pardoned him for all of this. But what should happen next from DOJ, when it comes to some of these, some of the heinous acts of the Bidens?" asked Johnson, putting up images and articles about Hunter Biden's scandals. 
"I mean, the sky's the limit," said Comer. "The pardon goes back to 2014. And that — the reason the pardon goes back to 2014 is, that's when we requested the bank records." 
As far as future investigations go, he continued, "You've been pardoned from 2014 to today. Well, let's look at 2013, 2012. We know he did stuff then... just didn't have bank records. We could get that if we want to set an example."

Two things: 

1) Statute of limitations (precisely why we have it).

2) You know Biden is still President, right? He can just pardon Hunter back to the moment of birth, now. I mean, because you had to shoot your mouth off. 

Or are you just trying to sell your book?

Hooray For…What The Hell?

A) Has Trump confused Hollywood with Vatican City?

B) Is Hollywood a foreign country?

C) Who is authorized to receive them as ambassadors?

D) And what the hell does this have to do with the constitutional duties of the Presidency?

E) Besides, is Atlanta, Georgia a foreign country? Too, I mean. 

F) Seriously. What the hell?

I Pity The Poor Tech Bro

 I blame Elmo. And Ramaswamy. And Bankman Fried. The Pharma Bro. Zuckerberg (just for being feckless). To name a few.

Honestly, except for Bill Gates, what Tech Bro ever acted like he’d even heard of Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth, much less read it? Bezo’s ex-wife is the only other tech-adjacent billionaire I know giving her money away, and she’s been excoriated for that.

Meanwhile her ex-husband, when he wasn’t spending money on rockets and space flight to keep up with Elmo and Richard Branson, or wrecking one of America’s great newspapers, built a clock buried in the mountains of the Trans-Pecos region of Texas.  Mostly just because he could. A clock on private property, that will tick once a year and chime once in… a thousand years? Where nobody will hear it or see it. The subject was philanthropy. I have no idea what a Long Clock or rockets have to do with philanthropy.

Carnegie built public libraries around the country, and established a charitable foundation. Elmo mostly seems intent on repopulating the earth with white children, single-handedly. I don’t see the similarities.

I also had no idea tech bros were such whiny cry babies. Or wait…maybe I did.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Question Time

Something he can tell people he did something about, without doing it.

He said he built the wall, but nobody ever asks him why it didn’t work.

Making Amends

One Constitutional Amendment: section 1: term limit for Supreme Court Justices; section 2: no presidential immunity. Period. I.e., the same criticism leveled at Roe v Wade. 

Second constitutional amendment: right to privacy extends to the protections of Griswold, Roe, and Obergefell. (Not that language, but that purpose.)
The subtlety of a rapier.

We Will Not Soon See Its Like Again

Biden smiled and answered, "Well, you know, this is the exact framework of the deal I proposed back in May. Exact. And we got the world to endorse it. Secondly, it's America's support for Israel that help them badly weaken Hamas and its backers and create the conditions for this deal. And thirdly, I knew this deal would have to be implemented by the next team, so i told my team to coordinate closely with the incoming team to make sure we're all speaking with the same voice, because that's what American presidents do."
Presidents worth a shit, anyway:
"This EPIC ceasefire agreement could have only happened as a result of our Historic Victory in November, as it signaled to the entire World that my Administration would seek Peace and negotiate deals to ensure the safety of all Americans, and our Allies," Trump posted on Truth Social. "I am thrilled American and Israeli hostages will be returning home to be reunited with their families and loved ones."
Honestly, reporters are dumb as shit:
As Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Secretary of State Antony Blinken turned to leave the podium, another reporter shouted, "Who gets credit for this, Mr. President? You or Trump?" "Is that a joke?" Biden responded before leaving.


Commentary on  MSNBC pointed out it remains to be seen if the hostage swap will happen, based on the history of such announcements and ceasefire attempts.

I hope it works. I’m sure if it doesn’t, Trump will blame Biden.

The devil is in the details: And suddenly I am less sanguine about its success: And there it is. The point of failure, and the point of refusal to accept responsibility for that failure.

๐Ÿšจ๐Ÿšจ๐Ÿšจ

AG Nominee Pam Bondi declines to confirm that she won't countenance White House interference in criminal investigations. 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/live-blog/pam-bondi-up-for-grilling?entry=1509980
Which would be upsetting, except Bill Barr did allow the White House to interfere in criminal investigations. 

He just knew how to cover his tracks. Bondi probably won’t be as adept. Which is why she’s not denying, now, that she’ll do it.

Small mercies. “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” Some are just better at hiding it. That doesn’t make them “better.”

There was a lot Pam Bondi said in her hearing today which make it clear she's WILDLY unsuited to be AG -- tho she's sure to be confirmed. 
The worst, tho, is she believes AND MAKES LEGAL JUDGEMENTS (abt the cases v Trump, abt looting in LA) based on what she sees on TV.
Barr wasn’t any better:
In response to Adam Schiff's Q if there's reason to investigate Jack Smith, Bondi says, "what I've seen on TV is horrible." 
Pickling in bullshit Fox News propaganda is the most charitable explanation for Bill Barr's false beliefs about Mueller investigation.
He was just better at hiding it.

Saving Rudy (?)

So, we already knew that happened. On Friday, this is scheduled to happen:
1/ In 2 days (1/16), Judge Liman will hold a bench trial on 2 Rudy Giuliani issues: 
1. Did Giuliani effectively make his Florida condo his primary residence before 8/5/24, which would allow him to shield it under Florida's Homestead exception? 
2. Did Giuliani gift his World Series Rings to Andrew?
What’s the over/under on those tweets having any effect on the court at all?

What Does This Have To Do With The Price Of Groceries?

Literally tilting at windmills. Already.
Writing on his Truth Social platform, the president-elect declared that the purported reign of terror Americans have suffered from having clean energy produced by windmills would soon come to a close. 
"Windmills are an economic and environmental disaster," Trump declared without citing any evidence to back up this claim. "I don’t want even one built during my Administration. The thousands of dead and broken ones should be ripped down ASAP. Most expensive energy, only work with massive government subsidies, which we will no longer pay!" 
According to statistics provided by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, wind power is currently the third-largest source of renewable energy in the United States, following biofuels and wood. Additionally, multiple studies have found that onshore wind projects are less expensive renewable energy sources than solar wind projects as measured by cost per kilowatt hour.

Texas has some of the largest wind farms in the country. I don’t think Panhandle ranchers want to lose that lease income. ๐Ÿค” 

Pretty sure Congress is going to maintain those “massive subsidies,” too.

I’m Old Enough To Remember When…

 Trump was going to:

-Buy Greenland 

-Invade Panama

-Annex Canada

And the J6 report was not coming out fast enough.

Oh, and all these things were setting the world on fire and bringing an end to civilization as we know it.

And now people are surprised that Pete Hegseth and Pam Bondi are actually going to be confirmed. Having lived through John Mitchell and Bill Barr and Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, all I can say is: incompetent evil is better than competent evil every time.

And stay away from the headlines; they’ll make you crazy.


๐Ÿ˜ Silly me! I also forgot we’re going to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico! America Firstly! MAGAt! (I still favor the one proposed on local TV when viewers were asked to make suggestions: “Gulf of What Does This Have To Do With The Cost of Groceries?”)



I had no doubt that the Republicans would confirm anyone he appoints. That's how corrupt things are but as you've pointed out, they've been corrupt for a long time. Roberts and Alito were confirmed even as everyone in their hearings knew they were lying over and over again. Not to mention Thomas, Kavanaugh, Goresuch, etc. It's going to be a shit show.
I’ve come to think of Thomas as the hole in the dyke that no one stuck their finger into.

And here we are, knee deep in the consequences. “They’re tryin’ to wash us away.”

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

๐Ÿด‍☠️

I guess this means we won’t have to do it for Trump, when the time comes.

Which is alright with me. Trump doesn’t deserve the recognition in death that Richard Nixon got.

I ❤️ El “A”

In August, 2017, a category four hurricane stretching down almost the entire Texas Gulf Coast parked itself inland and dumped rain solidly for days. It flooded cities up and down the coast, scrubbing one almost entirely off the map. Trump didn’t say one word against Texas, a ruby red state.

Houston flooded in Harvey. Virtually all of Houston. The parts that Harvey didn’t get directly were inundated by flood control. No, really. Reservoirs built in the ‘30’s to provide flood control for farmland (and the then far away city of Houston. Those reservoirs are now well inside the city limits) worked as designed and, when rising water required they be drained, they drained exactly as designed. The problem was, what was farmland in the early decades of the last century is some of the most valuable residential real estate in town in the first decades of this century. And the water went through it, in George C. Scott Patton’s memorable phrase, “like crap through a goose.”๐Ÿชฟ 

People died in Harvey. Neighborhoods were wiped out. Almost 8 years later, we still haven’t fully recovered from it. Although we learned one thing from it. Flood control in Houston sucks. 

This was a feature, not a bug, before Harvey. I had a friend whose parents’ house started flooding after new development built up around them, and runoff that once soaked into the ground, ran across impervious cover down to them. The county promised to do something about it, did nothing, and allowed even more development upstream. Eventually the county just bought out the downstream neighborhood. Easier than building storm drains. Better than dissuading development with the burden of more costs or higher taxes. Can’t impede progress.

The flooding from the reservoirs was predicted decades before it happened. A city engineer wrote a report on it, warning of the inevitable disaster. He warned that development around the reservoir, and between it and the creek it was designed to drain to, would cause flooding and property destruction. The report was put in the warehouse with the Ark of the Covenant. Can’t get in the way of progress…

Houston has terrible storm drainage. The street near me still relies on the open ditches had when it was a rural road.  My street had two inlets, one at either end of the block. They backed up regularly. Even an inch of rain could cause street flooding. The East Texas town I grew up in was only 50,000 population at the time, but it had better drainage. I don’t remember the streets ever flooding there. Even before Harvey, street flooding was as common as 100F days in August.

Which is to say, a lot of the flooding in Harvey was caused by government inaction. Far more than any government failures in Los Angeles. The proof of that is not just in Harvey, but in the years since. Local government undertook a huge civil engineering project and actually improved storm drainage across the city. Since the work was done here, the street hasn’t flooded once. “Normal” was water curb to curb; “bad” was when it hopped the curb. Normal now is wet streets in the rain; bad is water covering the streets; at all. We could have done that anytime. We finally did.

But if another Harvey comes? All bets are off. You can’t design a system robust enough to handle that much water at once. Houston only sits 50 feet above sea level. There were suggestions we build giant drains that would carry the water to the Gulf. The only problem was, by the time the pipes got there (with the required drop per mile), they’d be about 50 feet below sea level.

Oops.

All of which is to say, LA can’t engineer its way out of fire danger, either. Firefighters have said no amount of equipment or personnel can control an entire neighborhood aflame simultaneously. And systems break down. Some reservoirs in the hills ran dry because of the drain by water hoses, but also because the pumps couldn’t operate to refill them (no electricity). We had that problem in a memorable winter storm when a statewide power failure took out no only heat, but water (no pumps, no water pressure). Again, local government was responsible; but nobody discussed cutting off federal aid to Texas. Not that it wasn’t discussed loudly:
The federal government is encouraging and subsidizing people to live in harm’s way,” he said. “I just went to Houston, I visited with some of the survivors, I mean, people whose homes have flooded three times in eight years.” 
Hensarling did not mention the role of climate change in making hurricanes more intense and destructive, and instead placed the burden for dealing with the aftermath of hurricanes solely on individual homeowners. 
“At some point, God is telling you to move,” he said. “If all we do is force federal taxpayers to build the same home in the same fashion in the same location and expect a different result, we all know that is the classic definition of insanity.”
So we should have abandoned the city by now? All 4 million of us? ๐Ÿ™„

Pretty damned sure flood control was a better answer. Give Hensarling credit: he came to Houston. Once. Talked to a few people. That made him an expert. Trump hasn’t so much as crossed the Mississippi since the fires started. And Elmo hasn’t so much as spent 20 minutes handing out food. But they’re experts, too. ๐Ÿคท๐Ÿป‍♂️

It’s only been seven years since. Anybody even remember Hensarling? 

The Greatest Deliberative Body In The World

(They sound like wimps to me.) Uh.... "Sen. Markwayne Mullin." Meanwhile, in the other body... White person privilege. You’re never too old for schoolyard taunts. ๐Ÿ™„ Los Angeles didn’t run out of water.

Los Angeles isn’t in the middle of a forest. Or anywhere near a forest, for that matter. 

Don’t even know how you could grow a forest on 12” rainfall a year.

At The Hegseth Hearing

 


Is DEI in the hearing room right now? Did DEI make this poster for you? Is DEI the reason your staff can’t spell? Or proofread?

I mean, aside from the fact that people in the military say you don’t know what you’re talking about;

 “Who’s going to replace them? Men? And we’re having trouble recruiting men into the Army right now,” said Lory Manning, a retired Navy captain who works with the Service Women’s Action Network. 
The military services have struggled for years to meet recruiting goals, facing stiff competition from companies that pay more and offer similar or better benefits. And a growing population of young people aren’t interested in joining or can’t meet the physical, academic and moral requirements. 
Removing women from contention for jobs, said Manning, could force the services to lower standards to bring in more men who have not graduated high school, have criminal records or score too low on physical and mental tests.
(Hegseth is an outspoken opponent of women in the military.) Perhaps you prefer numbers:
Women serving in special operations 
Navy Special Warfare combat crew: 2 
Air Force special operations: 3 
Green Berets: Fewer than 10 
Completed the Army Ranger course: More than 150 
Total serving in Army Special Operations Command as special forces, civil affairs, psychological operations and helicopter pilots, including in the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment: 260 to 270 
Artillery, infantry and armor units 
Thousands of women have served or currently are in jobs that until 2015 were male-only. 
Marines: 
Officers in job categories previously restricted to men, including infantry, artillery and combat engineers: Nearly 192 
Enlisted Marine in those jobs: 410 That number has steadily increased since 2018. 
Army: 
Serving in Army infantry, armor and artillery jobs: Nearly 4,800 
Field artillery roles: More than 2,020 
Infantry: More than 902 
Armor: 864 
The number of women in those jobs also has increased over the years.
By the way:
Last year marked the first time in several years that the Army achieved its ambitious recruiting goals -- primarily due to an increase in female recruits, according to internal service data reviewed by Military.com. 
Nearly 10,000 women signed up for active duty in 2024, an 18% jump from the previous year, while male recruitment increased by just 8%, the data shows. The hike comes as the service continues to struggle with recruiting men, who have traditionally filled the bulk of its ranks but have become more of a challenge to enlist in recent years. 
The numbers mark the continuation of a trend reported in a Military.com investigation that found a yearslong Army recruiting slump was centered around men, while female recruiting numbers have remained relatively strong. They also point to young women as an increasingly vital recruiting pool, especially as young men are struggling to meet the Army's eligibility requirements.
(The rest of that article is worth reading for the reporting on that last sentence.)

DEI that, motherfucker! 

MAGA really means “Make America (Openly) Racist (And Stupid) Again!”

Just Sayin…

 Yup.

We live in a society that is deliberately designed to allow more powerful people to abuse less powerful people w/ impunity. Always horrifying and enraging to learn of yet another abuser who’s used the power their talent and/or success has unlocked to avail themselves of the open invitation to abuse.
In a truly Christian society that took the words of Jesus literally (hem-hem),m*, the first of all would be last of all and servant of all.

A “race to the bottom” which would benefit everyone, equally.

*Feel free to apply this observation liberally. And literally.

Because I Don’t Disagree…

But I am left wondering about all the attention this report is getting. Is it because it is new and noteworthy, for the moment? Or is it because the election has passed, and the discussions of this report today could have been held during the campaign (there’s nothing new here, little the J6 committee didn’t already reveal), but would have been criticized as “ELECTION INTERFERENCE!”?

Inquiring minds want to know!

Elmo, Corrected



Uh, no.
The largest wildfire in Texas history just happened eleven months ago and destroyed thirty times more area than the one in Los Angeles
Elmo is referring to East Texas, which is heavily forested. The region is classified as a humid, subtropical climate where the average rainfall is 60 inches per year. The average rainfall in Los Angeles is 12” per year.

The Texas fire last year was a grass fire in the Panhandle. About the only tree out there is the mesquite, and they are few and far between. The average rainfall in the Panhandle, btw, is 22 inches. Contrary to popular belief, Texas has a large number of varied climate regions. But that’s another story.

Elmo, once again, is simply lying.

Oh, and “fire breaks”? What, fewer houses per block per neighborhood? Maybe leave every other street a series of vacant lots?

These people are morons.


Nothing New Under The Sun

Uhhh...
"One of the things that he points out in many, many examples is how Trump knew that the election was not stolen in 2020, that there was not widespread fraud that could have delivered him a victory, and that he continued to lie to his supporters," she said. 
She then pointed to a specific example that she said illustrated this point. 
"In one point of this report, Smith goes into detail about how Trump was speaking to Mike Pence, the vice president," she recounted. "Pence called him directly minutes before Donald Trump went to the Ellipse and said, 'I do not think it is my power to overturn the result of this election in Congress.' And then Trump, still knowing he had that conversation with Pence, went before his supporters and told them, 'Let's rally, let's try and get Mike Pence to overturn the election.' The depth of the lies is quite significant."
Absolutely nothing that wasn’t known FROM THE TELEVISED J6 HEARINGS. At least. 

Trump responds:
"Deranged Jack Smith was unable to successfully prosecute the Political Opponent of his 'boss,' Crooked Joe Biden, so he ends up writing yet another 'Report' based on information that the Unselect Committee of Political Hacks and Thugs ILLEGALLY DESTROYED AND DELETED, because it showed how totally innocent I was, and how completely guilty Nancy Pelosi, and others, were," Trump posted, repeating several falsehoods about the case. 
"Jack is a lamebrain prosecutor who was unable to get his case tried before the Election, which I won in a landslide. THE VOTERS HAVE SPOKEN!!!" 
The special counsel's report, issued after he dropped the case against Trump as the accused prepared to enter the White House, states that prosecutors believed they had enough evidence to obtain a conviction. Trump successfully appealed — and thus delayed — the case through the 2024 election, which the former president won over vice president Kamala Harris. 
“To show you how desperate Deranged Jack Smith is, he released his Fake findings at 1:00 A.M. in the morning," Trump posted. "Did he say that the Unselect Committee illegally destroyed and deleted all of the evidence." 
"MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" Trump added, completing his middle-of-the-night tirade.
If the J6 committee destroyed all the evidence, where did Jack Smith get the evidence to put before the grand jury and put in his report?

For Me, But Not For Thee

 Still unclear about the concept:

In Nebraska, where 58 percent of voters broke for Trump, cattle ranchers are expressing hesitation over the plan due to the impact it would have on their workforce. 
“Feeding, cleaning pens, walking pens, pulling sicks, processing, whatever it is,” Jerry Kuenning told Nebraska TV. 
Kuenning said he supports many pieces of Trump's MAGA agenda, including enforcing immigration laws, but said the deportations are poised to wreak havoc on agriculture. 
“I'm of the opinion we'll create a real void if they're sent home,” he told the station. “Addressing that they need to be legal but [the] problem is where's the line to go to be legal.” 
Gov. Jim Pillen along with more than two other governors signed a letter promising to cooperate with the Trump administration and use state law enforcement and National Guard to enforce immigration laws.
There’s an old joke I can’t repeat in the original, about competing football teams where “our black boys” are “gettin’ beat up by their n——-s.”

I don’t repeat it to be offensive, but to underscore the sentiment of the Nebraska rancher. Immigrants should be rounded up and deported, but our immigrants should get visas (“get legal”) because Nebraska ranchers need these immigrants.

Irony? What’s that? 

The irony is, the people who told that old, racist joke knew the irony of the joke. That’s what made it funny to them; or made the point of the jibe. It’s self-aware in a way that Nebraska rancher isn’t.

So many people think they alone deserve special dispensation.

By The Way

 No, probably not:


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-01-14/china-discusses-sale-of-tiktok-us-to-musk-as-one-possible-option

“That’s Where The Money Is”

Why the oligarchs are surrounding Trump. The same reason Willie Sutton robbed banks.

Of course, “egregious censorship” is in the eye of the beholder:
Is our MAGA learning? Sadly, no.

Monday, January 13, 2025

So It’s…Not For Sale?

What if Trump tells China he wants Elmo to buy it?

What It All Means ๐Ÿ‰

Professor Vladeck explains it for you:
Judge Cannon has just ruled that the January 6 volume of the Special Counsel's report *can* be released as early as tomorrow (when her injunction expires), but she is extending her bar on release of the Mar-a-Lago volume pending a hearing that she has scheduled for this Friday afternoon.
What that means:
This may seem technical, but what Trump would need from #SCOTUS to prevent the January 6 volume of the Special Counsel report from coming out tomorrow *isn't* a "stay"; as of midnight (ET) tonight, there's nothing to "stay." 
What he'd need is an *injunction,* which carries a much higher burden.
That’s been mooted by Cannon’s latest order, but we need to walk through this step by step. And to explain that:
If this sounds familiar, it's because this is the *exact* procedural technicality at the heart of the TikTok case before #SCOTUS — an "administrative stay" isn't viable because there's no lower-court ruling to "stay," so the only way to prevent things from happening is an injunction pending appeal.
Which leads him to conclude:
We're now in "Scenario 1" of the possibilities I laid out this morning: 
https://www.stevevladeck.com/i/154621642/the-one-first-long-read-mar-a-lago-palooza
What he’s referring to:
Scenario 1: Cannon does not extend the injunction today. Here, the path to the Court would be for Nauta and De Oliveira to seek emergency relief from the justices—asking them to do what the Eleventh Circuit declined to do on Thursday. Such an ask would be a longshot, but it’s at least a procedurally viable path to getting this dispute before the justices
Except, as I said, she did extend her injunction. As I’ll argue below, I think that shields the matter from the Supremes for now (because the 11th Circuit has to rule on this new order first). All of which means, I still have questions:

1)  Trump would need an injunction? Set aside the question of obtaining the injunction (as the Professor says, harder than getting a stay), how does Trump have standing here? 

The answer is, of course, he doesn’t. He’s not a party to this case anymore. He can’t get back in. I understand Professor Vladeck means Trump’s interest is served by an injunction, not that Trump must obtain it. But I need to get into these weeds, in order to explain, and critique, Scenario 1.

So…

Trump can’t get to the Supremes from here. He doesn’t have a case related to this report, or a chance of filing one that could conceivably leapfrog to the Justices before the report could be published (so basically, after noon on January 20th. Nor can he attach himself to the case in the 11th Circuit. He has no mechanism to put his case to the Supremes. EOD.

The only people with a direct interest in that report, because of the impact it could have on their possible criminal trial. I’m sure Alito could conjecture some reason why Trump should have a say in this matter (but not Biden in the release today of the Weiss report on Hunter, because…well, not Trump, duh! At oral arguments on the Tik-Tok case, Alito was leaning towards Trump’s argument to “stay” the statute so Trump could…do something. This is not a power the Court has, but…Alito! Nuff said.). But again, not soon enough. Nor is it likely Alito could get four more votes just to hear the case.

We’re narrowing down the options, here.

Now, one Justice (the one assigned to the 11th Circuit; Google tells me it’s Thomas, so there’s almost no point in going on) could reject the appeal without involving the whole Court (see?). But if I understand correctly, a majority of the court has to agree to take the case (the New York sentencing matter). I still take that, provisionally, as instructive. I don’t really think the fundamental legal question is any different here than there. Although one case involved intervention in a state proceeding, and this would involve intervention in a federal proceeding, the situation is the same in this: should the Court weigh in at this point?

“Loose” Cannon doesn’t have jurisdiction over this matter. Professor Vladeck is more circumspect on that point than me. But let me give you the background of this case:
Last week, Nauta and De Oliveira filed two emergency motions to block the release of both volumes—one in the Eleventh Circuit (as part of the government’s appeal of Cannon’s dismissal) and one with Judge Cannon. They’re also seeking to block the volumes from being shared, even in camera, with the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate judiciary committees. Even though Garland’s letter stipulates that he won’t publicly release the MAL volume so long as the case against Nauta and De Oliveira remains pending, the co-defendants (and Trump, who has filed as an amicus) have argued that both volumes should be blocked—because they are “inseverable.” DOJ, meanwhile, has represented to the Eleventh Circuit that the January 6 report “does not refer to either [of the co-defendants] or describe the evidence or charges against them.” Thus, the MAL defendants are trying to use the pendency of the case against them as an excuse to block release to the public or the relevant members of Congress not only of the MAL volume (which isn’t going anywhere), but also of the apparently unrelated January 6 volume. Last Tuesday, Judge Cannon granted Nauta’s and De Oliveira’s request to block the release of both volumes—while the Eleventh Circuit decided whether to block the release as part of the federal government’s appeal on the appointment issue. Cannon’s order, which came before the government had even had a chance to respond, enjoined any dissemination of both volumes outside the Department of Justice (including to the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate judiciary committees) until “three days” (more on this in a moment) after the Eleventh Circuit ruled on the co-defendants’ similar pending request. 
It’s not at all obvious that Cannon even had jurisdiction to provide that relief. It’s well-settled that a notice of appeal, especially after a final judgment, divests district courts of almost all of their jurisdiction over a dispute. None of the exceptions courts have recognized to this general rule (e.g., to stay or un-stay the ruling under appeal; to aid the appellate court’s consideration of the appeal; or to modify existing injunctions) seem to remotely encompass what Cannon did. In any event, at least initially, the stated justification for the district court’s intervention was solely to ensure that the Eleventh Circuit would have time to consider the matter. That’s now happened because… 
On Thursday, the Eleventh Circuit denied Nauta’s and De Oliveira’s request to block release of the volumes. In the same order, it declined (correctly, in my view) the government’s invitation to provide additional relief against Cannon—because the government hadn’t yet appealed Cannon’s order. That ruling started the three-day clock on Cannon’s injunction.
There’s an important point there I need to emphasize: in general, courts cannot do what they are not asked to do. The DOJ did not formally invoke the 11th Circuit’s authority to overrule Cannon last week when the court ruled, and after Cannon had ruled. The DOJ needed to notify Cannon of the appeal (which they did Friday). That appeal is now before the 11th Circuit.

I recount this tedious detail because the devil is truly in these details, as we’ll see.
Also on Friday, having lost in the Eleventh Circuit, Nauta and De Oliveira, rather than going to the Supreme Court, went back to Cannon and asked her to extend her Tuesday injunction—to prevent release of the report indefinitely, and to prevent it from being made available, even on an in camera basis, to anyone outside of the Department of Justice, including the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate judiciary committees. 
Overnight Friday/very early Saturday morning, the government asked the Eleventh Circuit to consolidate its new appeal (item #11) with its existing appeal of the dismissal of the whole prosecution (item #1)—so that the Special Counsel report dispute can be expeditiously and conclusively resolved by the same panel hearing the appeal in which it ostensibly matters. 
On Saturday, Cannon ordered the government, in conjunction with Nauta’s and De Oliveira’s request to extend the injunction, to provide additional information about what, exactly, is in the January 6 volume—and how, if at all, it relates to the case against Nauta and De Oliveira. The government complied with that request yesterday, and appears to have filed sealed material supporting its response. 
In other words, at least as of a little after 7:00 ET on Monday morning, (1) Cannon’s injunction is still in effect; (2) it is currently set to expire at midnight tonight; (3) Nauta’s and De Oliveira’s request to extend it remains pending before Judge Cannon; and (4) the government’s appeal of the injunction (in its current form) remains pending in the Eleventh Circuit. If your head is spinning, you’re not alone.
Which brings the timeline back to where we started; and we’ll probably be here tomorrow:
Well after 7 p.m., and no filing at #SCOTUS from Trump or the other Mar-a-Lago defendants. 
Looks like Volume I of the Special Counsel’s report (on the January 6 case) will be out in the world as soon as tomorrow.
At this point, this is screwy as shit. Cannon doubled down on her error by backing away from the DC report but reimposing an injunction on the MAL report. It seems to me that actually prevents Trump or the defendants from seeking relief from the Supreme Court, if only because Cannon has so badly muddled the record. That may be strategic on her part. The Court may well decline such a confused record, preferring to let the lower courts clean it up. (For one thing, somebody has to appeal Cannon’s new order and get a ruling from the 11th Circuit that the Supremes can review. The Supremes, or five of them, could decide to grab the case now, but the record is such a mess they’d spend an inordinate amount of time trying to straighten it out. I think they have enough to do.)

Now, will the circuit court overrule Cannon? The DOJ asked them to give that question and the question of the dismissal to the same panel. Will that delay the resolution? Probably. But that’s where the case is, and the chances of the Supremes stepping in are practically nil.

So what should happen?

The 11th should, IMHO, decide the injunction/jurisdiction issue as rapidly as they did before. Nothing has really changed except the party involved, and Cannon is running amok with a case that is no longer hers to adjudicate. She dismissed it, for pity’s sake!  If not for the appeal, that dismissal would have become final by now, ending her ability to act. The appeal ended her authority sooner, is all. She can’t reactivate a case she dismissed after the judgement becomes final anymore than she can after her dismissal is appealed.

Again, I emphasize this for a reason.

I am outraged that Cannon took these wholly unlawful actions which she has no authority to enforce. But court orders are lawful and enforceable until they are declared unlawful and unenforceable…by a superior court. That’s the system, and we can’t undo it for one circumstance we don’t like.

I’m referring to all the commentary that Biden should use the power Trump v US gave him to release the MAL report. But Biden releasing both reports on his own authority would not be a criminal violation of law. It wouldn’t even be criminal contempt, since it wouldn’t be done in the presence of any court (of competent jurisdiction). It might arguably be civil contempt, but no court is going to level that charge against a sitting POTUS. Especially when Biden could use the DOJ’s argument that Cannon had no  jurisdiction over the AG, the report itself, or, arguendo, the POTUS. Separation of powers, IOW. Biden would not be in contempt of court; but he would be showing contempt for the courts. Something we might expect Trump to do; if he had the balls to back up his mouth.

Biden can order Garland to release both reports, but he’d be doing so in defiance of a court order. I think the order is improper and unlawful, but my opinion and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. I can no more reverse that order than Biden can. All he can do is show contempt for it. And I don’t see the upside of that.

Trump will declare the report a sham and a hoax. And who will read it? I have a copy of the J6 Committee report, and I haven’t read it through. Most people will hear about these Special Counsel reports from Trump or news reports. And all indications are most Americans didn’t pay attention to any of the reporting on Trump’s campaign (that it was a complete farce obviously didn’t matter at all). Do they even know what happened on J6, and how involved Trump was in it? The media didn’t report on the J6 report enough to inform people of its conclusions. Do you think they’d do better with the Special Counsel reports? I can find out right now what the remaining defendants in Florida stand accused of, and why. Will the report tell me more?

I mean, I think it should be released. But I don’t think the courts should be treated with contempt, even when a judge’s behavior is contemptible. I think Alito’s opinion in Dobbs is absolutely indefensible; but that doesn’t mean Biden can reimpose Roe, or introduce a conflict between the states on whether or not it is still the state of the law. Nor can he pull these reports away from the courts and ask how many divisions the courts have.

This needs to work its way through the courts, and if it doesn’t by January 20th, that’s too bad. Those who fight dragons too long, become dragons themselves, Nietzsche supposedly said. This is not a matter worth releasing dragons over.