Friday, May 08, 2026

❄️

Justice Barrett joins the Chief Justice, whining “Why’s everybody always pickin’ on me?”

You have this phenomenon where at the beginning of the term. You know, the media will say, here are the cases to watch, and you know they'll list a couple big cases and then if one of those big cases turns out to be unanimous or turns out to be 7-2 or to have a scramble all of a sudden it falls out of the narrative and it wasn’t really one of the big cases. Because then the narrative will be like, well, but all the big cases came out by party of appointing president, right? So it’s, it’s really a numbers game, and I think you have to read very critically about the Court. I think it gets maybe more clicks or more people worked up if the Court is portrayed that way, but it’s just not consistent with the data.

Professor Vladeck has the analysis  if you’re interested (and if that link doesn’t work, there’s a gift link here). The tl:dr on his analysis is: who decides what’s big?

That’s not a small thing, because it calls into question Justice Barrett’s acumen. Granted, this is not her field, but she does offer her analysis, and that opens it to critique. And the fundamental problem here is: who gets to make the final judgment? Final judgement is, after all, an artificial construct invented to provide closure in legal matters. But outside the courtroom? Well, as Justice Barrett complains, even judicial opinions are subject to interpretation and evaluation. The decision may be final; the judgment on the reasoning never is.

Justice Barrett may argue her reasoning for why the cases she identifies are not “big,” except in the eyes of the media, but it’s not really for her to say. Because it’s really not a sensible argument; it’s just a whine. She doesn’t defend the reasoning of the cases, she just complains about how they are treated. Which, fair enough, she can have an opinion on. But scrutiny and disagreement and even criticism, go with the lifetime tenure and the power only 9 other people at a time have. Complaining about how people don’t talk about you the way you want them to is really pretty…childish.

And not really a good example of your ability to be a judge. I mean, people are still paying attention; and here you are, worried about what they’re thinking.

Thursday, May 07, 2026

⛽️ ⬆️⬇️⏫

Apparently that was preceded by this: Question for the house: is that supposed to make sense? Clearly, he thought he needed to refute the premise after that word salad. But the long form of that answer is even worse:
Mr. President, we are here against the backdrop of a war in Iran," Scott said. "Why focus on all these projects as gas prices soar?"

"You know why? Because I want to keep our country beautiful and safe. Beautiful also," said Trump. "This place was a disgusting place. It was, Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial, and we had a terrible, disgusting, I don't know, you probably don't see dirt, but I do. And you walk down this pond, if you were to walk down, they'll tell you better than anybody. They had to take 11 or 12 truckloads of garbage out of that lake, out of that water, it sat there for years like that. And that's not what our country is about, our country's about beauty, cleanliness, safety, great people, not a filthy capital."

"Such a stupid question," Trump raged. "We're fixing up the reflecting pond to the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, and you say, 'Why are you fixing it up?' Because you can understand dirt, maybe, better than I can, but I don't allow it."

"This is one of the worst reporters, she's with ABC Fake News, and she's a horror show," Trump said, turning away. "She's saying, 'Why would you bother fixing this up?' Why would I bother taking 11 or 12 truckloads of filth out of the water in front of the Lincoln Monument? That's what made our country great. Beauty made our country, people made our country great, a question like that is a disgrace to our country."
Now my brain hurts. It was never any better: Which money we can’t put in our gas tanks or jets. And gas we can’t put in our tanks, either. By the way: who’s this “we”? This is how he knows the polls are fake. Okay, now I’m worried. It never got better. Remember what I said about being worried? He’s already forgotten about nuking Iran, and besides, Biden didn’t recognize Clooney once. Maybe. 🤔  Meanwhile: Trump doesn’t know that, because he doesn’t want to know that. Coda: I am shocked, SHOCKED, to learn MAGA is all about the money. 💰 

Burning Bridges

U.S. President Donald J. Trump has said on his Truth Social app that he spoke to the president of the European Commission, Ursula Von der Leyen on topics including Iran and tariffs. Notably, President Trump has said that he has agreed to give the EU until July 4, 2026 to “cut their tariffs to zero,” or U.S. tariffs on EU goods will be hiked yet again.
Or, you know, not: I’m assuming the same law is involved in both situations, because there aren’t that many laws for Trump to use. Subject to correction, of course. 

Nothing would stop Trump plunging forward with the statute he hasn’t been told he can’t use, either. So probably this is the court telling him he can’t threaten Europe.

Which means somebody in this government is standing up for some common sense on diplomacy. Lord knows Trump is burning as many of our bridges as he can find matches for.

🎶Vacation, all I ever wanted/Vacation, got to get away…”🎶

The Lovely Wife has been looking forward to a vacation this year, the first since she retired (a year, or was it two, after I did). Delayed for various reasons, and now she’s ready to get started.

And then I told her about the Chevron CEO warning about the future. She remembers the ‘70’s, too. So we’re reconsidering. We aren’t planning to fly, and it’s not a vacation if you can’t get enough gas to get home.

Our consideration has nothing to do with the Orange Idiot tearing up the JCPOA and leading us to this debacle. 

BTW, SOS Rubio said the war with Iran will be over when the Strait is open again. Nothing about a nuclear Iran was said. Why is this administration so blitheringly incoherent?

I look at the POTUS, and I have to ask?

Do Not Misunderstand Me. I Am Reading Kurt Vonnegut.

Abraham Lincoln, 1848, inveighing on Polk’s war with Mexico:

Trusting to escape scrutiny, by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness of military glory—that attractive rainbow, that rises in showers of blood—that serpent’s eye, that charms to destroy—he plunged into war.

Plus ce la change….

Vonnegut, in 2005:

Killing industrial quantities of defenseless human families, whether by old-fashioned apparatus or by newfangled contraptions from universities, in the expectation of gaining military or diplomatic advantage thereby, may not be such a hot idea after all.

Does it work?

Its enthusiasts, its fans, if I may call them that, assume that leaders of political entities that we find inconvenient or worse are capable of pity for their own people. If they see or at least hear about fricasseed women and children and old people who looked and talked like themselves, maybe even relatives, they will be incapacitated by weepiness. So goes the theory, as I understand it.

Anyone who believes that might as well go all the way and make Santa Claus and the tooth fairy icons of our foreign policy.

Also Vonnegut, also in 2005:
By saying that our leaders are power-drunk chimpanzees, am I in danger of wrecking the morale of our soldiers fighting and dying in the Middle East? Their morale, like so many lifeless bodies, is already shot to pieces. They are being treated, as I never was, like toys a rich kid got for Christmas.

Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without A Country, 20th Anniversary Edition, Seven Stories Press, 2005. pp. 74, 76.

“Boy, I Blew That!”—Leo Kottke 🤖

 I am posting this quote from NTodd (at Thought Criminal):

I work extremely closely with AI these days in my job (nature of the beast, and I'm working hard to resolve philosophical/ethical tensions, don't at me). Dawkins is a fucking idiot if he thinks a goddamned fancy calculator (that cannot do actual math) is conscious. I could show him what LLMs actually are, mere probability engines, and there's no goddamned way they are conscious. In fact, the tools I've built would be the first to tell him so. Dude still must fall for "I got your nose," too.
...because he better explains my objection to LLM’s than I ever have.

As I’ve said, I’ve seen this before, in human beings.

When I was teaching English the first time, in the late ‘70’s as a TA, I had a student who was the strongest writer I’d ever encountered. She had a very large vocabulary, but she equally seemed to have no idea what the words meant; or how to use them effectively. 50 years later, she reminds of an LLM. She used words like a probability engine, trying not to clarify, but to be as impressive as she could. It was dazzling; but it was empty. She wasn’t saying anything, but was using a lot of extraordinary words to say it. Thinking is hard, but that’s why we teach writing: to teach you how to think. She could write. She didn’t want to learn to think about what she was writing.

I’ve done an enormous amount of reading (most of it garbage, frankly. That’s not a condescending remark, it’s true. I have shockingly low taste.). That gives me some experience in recognizing writing produced by humans, and writing produced by… well, “probability engine” is a good term. I have a somewhat analytical mind, but it never works as well as I want it to; and I struggle to clarify my thoughts, seldom really doing so. Which is to say, I can see crap when I encounter it. And LLM’s don’t “think.” They aggregate words based on patterns of usage, not unlike a child learning language. My daughter invented phrases when she was young; the family favorite was “I’m full of hands,” when she meant her hands were already full. Right words, right concept, but not the right cliche. (We do talk by familiar phrases. It’s what distinguishes the native speaker from the student of a new language. It’s what ST:NG was getting at in the episode where the “aliens” spoke English, but conversed entirely in references to their literature. We do that, too. “To illustrate my last remark/Jonah and the whale/Noah and the Ark.” I taught high school students who missed those Biblical references. So it goes.) My daughter soon learned the correct phrase, and an LLM would pick it up from data. But does autocorrect “learn” not to change some words? Or does it just accept a change in programming? Sometimes….

I know a lot of people don’t see this flaw as clearly as I think I do. But to me it’s as clear as a flat note played on an instrument, or struck by an unfortunate singer. If you don’t hear it, I did (sometimes. Again, I’m not that good.).

So, insofar as I understand the concept of a “probability engine,” it seems an apt description of an LLM. Especially as it really doesn’t mean “thinking.” Something that’s not only hard to do, but hard to recognize. And yet now we’ve monetized the concept of thinking. Well, we did that with profession long time ago. A great deal of the reasoning of a doctor or a lawyer or someone trained in the sciences is opaque to the rest of us; if the professionals get paid to think, why not pay a computer to do the same? Or the people who say the computer is thinking, anyway. There’s more than a bit of sleight of hand there, which should make us all more skeptical of the people making money off of selling us in AI. Money talks; but that doesn’t mean AI does.

(And Dawkins has been an idiot for a long time. He’s a popular writer, appealing to people who don’t know the subject matter (zoology, evolutionary theory, genetics, religion/theology), and think Dawkins sounds like he does. He’s always been ignorant in philosophy (what is “consciousness” but a philosophical concept?). Now he’s ignorant in computer science, too. (Don’t look at me. I took one course in college (lots of electives to fill), and barely learned how to code in Fortran. In the days of keypunch, when only computer science majors could sit at screens; in their senior year. And I don’t remember a damned thing, except “Garbage in, garbage out.” Because my attempts at programming always produced garbage. I know my limitations. Dawkins is all limitations (but he doesn’t seem to know it.))

Shit Meets Fan

And what happens before four months have elapsed?
"We will start to see physical shortages,” Wirth said, noting that surplus supply in commercial markets, tankers in so-called shadow fleets avoiding sanctions, and national strategic reserves were all being absorbed, according to Reuters.

“Demand needs to move to meet supply,” he said. “Economies are going to have to slow.”

He also put the scale of the disruption in historical context. The overall effect of the Hormuz closure is “potentially as big as in the 1970s,” Wirth said. Two major supply disruptions in that decade led to fuel rationing and long lines at retail pumps across the Western world, Reuters confirmed.
Shit gonna get real:
The distinction he drew is also important. Oil markets often reprice quickly on geopolitical headlines. But physical shortages are a different problem. They are measured in tanker schedules, refinery throughput, and inventory drawdowns, not in futures positions. Wirth is saying the market has moved from the first category into the second.

The buffers that were keeping physical supply flowing are running out. Commercial stockpiles, shadow fleet capacity, and strategic reserves are all being drawn down simultaneously. That is the combination Wirth says will now start showing up in real shortages rather than just elevated prices.

Wirth was specific about the sequence. Asia is the most exposed region because it is most heavily dependent on Middle Eastern oil and gas. Japan, for example, sources approximately 95% of its oil imports from the region, according to OilPrice.com.
Mike Wirth is the CEO and Chairman of Chevron. He has more credibility than anyone in the Administration, on this topic.

So, it won’t be asking people to pay $10 a gallon for gas; it’ll be telling them they can’t have any, at any price. I remember the ‘70’s. People were in line because there wasn’t enough gas. 50 years later, here we go again.

And the oil from Venezuela won’t mean squat.

I’m Old Enough To Remember….

... when the GOP wanted to keep the federal government out of people’s lives as much as possible for precisely that nightmare scenario.

(And no, that is not an accurate description of legal government power. If it was, the GOP Administration would allow a full investigation, knowing it had a “King’s ‘X’”.)

Letting The Ladders Go By 🪜

Hopefully the ‘27 Congress will start barring construction in national parks (like Big Bend) and in ecologically sensitive areas, and especially in areas where the “wall” (it’s really a fence) is going to split communities.

And there’s still the problem of the ladders. 🪜 

Same as it ever was.

Inmates Running The Asylum

Feature, not bug.

FUBAR

Sometimes the old terms are the only ones that work.

In Light Of The Chief Justice’s Latest Whinge

Maybe we should keep an eye on this:
In a Tuesday filing, Assistant U.S. Attorney General Brett Shumate said the government would seek to use the Westfall Act to swap Trump for the U.S. as the defendant in the lawsuit. That would require dismissal of the case because the federal government can’t be sued for defamation. A panel of appeals court judges previously denied the U.S.’s effort to insert itself as the defendant.

The act gives federal employees immunity from some civil damages when they are found to have been acting within the scope of their employment. While Trump was president when he made the comments at issue in Carroll’s lawsuit, it would be highly unusual for the government to intervene on the president’s behalf at this stage, post trial and verdict.

The Justice Department’s filing comes as Trump is seeking to avoid paying the judgment while the Supreme Court decides whether to review the case — an effort in which he is virtually certain to succeed because Carroll doesn’t oppose the pause in payment as long as he increases the bond to account for interest. Last week, the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals denied Trump’s request to reconsider a panel’s ruling upholding the defamation verdict.
This is, IOW, the ultimate Hail Mary. And how unusual would it be to allow this motion?
A spokesperson for Carroll’s lawyer declined to comment on the Justice Department’s Tuesday filing, but noted the 2nd Circuit said last year in rejecting the government’s Westfall argument that “both Trump and the government waived any right to now move for substitution” by failing to request it when the case was originally sent back to the district court.
I don’t know the law on the application of the Westfall Act,  but the decision of the Second Circuit means it’s a use it or lose it defense, and Trump didn’t use it at the right time. So I don’t expect the Sinister Six to give Trump a “King’s ‘X’” on this.  But: never say “never again.”

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

How Dare People Understand Precisely What The Supreme Court Is Doing…

 …and criticize it accordingly? Right, Chief Justice?

Speaking at a conference for lawyers and judges in Hershey, Roberts said the Supreme Court is required to make decisions that are not popular and bemoaned that there is not a better understanding among the public of how the court operates.

“I think at a very basic level, people think we’re making policy decisions, [that] we’re saying we think this is what things should be as opposed to this is what the law provides,” Roberts said. “I think they view us as truly political actors, which I don’t think is an accurate understanding of what we do. I would say that’s the main difficulty.”

While he conceded that people have a right to criticize the court and its decisions, he added that there is a tendency to focus too much on politics.

“We’re not simply part of the political process, and there’s a reason for that, and I’m not sure people grasp that as much as is appropriate,” Roberts said.
Turning the clock back 70 years and overturning decades of precedent because “We’re the Supreme Court, bitches!”, is just calling balls and strikes, isn’t it?

Isn’t the job of the Supreme Court to determine cases according to ideology instead of precedent and stare decisis?  I mean, what’s the point of being an ideologically driven Supreme Court, otherwise?

Doesn’t everyone understand that? And if they don’t, I’m sure whiningly scolding more people will get the point across.

“WE’RE THE SUPREME COURT, BITCHES!”
We live in a time dominated by deeply unserious people making deeply unserious arguments in support of tragically serious results that serious people would have both avoided and known to avoid.
Now I’m wondering if the Chief Justice follows Professor Vladeck’s account:
Two different technical, procedural moves from #SCOTUS yesterday have one thing in common:

The Court is behaving differently in otherwise similar cases based upon the ideological/partisan valence of the dispute.

Via "One First," me on why, results aside, that's a serious indictment of the Court:

What’d I Miss?

I like to end the day trying to figure out what happened today.

If Iran had submitted, the Strait would be open. So…

Trump’s connection to reality ended several weeks ago. At least.
By “market” he means DJIA. All other economic metrics (i.e., the real ones) are irrelevant. See? Um...okay. Panem et circenses. With all of us trapped in it. What in the name of all that’s holy…?

Is that an egg? With tiny hairs? And fins? And legs?
Is this supposed to be what happens when you read about MAGA? You’re turned into a chimera?
The guy you move away from in the bar.

And the latest news in the ceasefire:
Color me shocked.

I guess this means Operation Enduring Nightmare is still ongoing.
Of course he does. Although I have to say, this is how you win.

And There You Have It

And there you have it! Once again Trump ‘leaks’ his propaganda to an Axios reporter, who dutifully spreads it before the market opens:

“A spokesman for Iran's parliamentary national security committee pushed back on a report in Axios that the United States and Iran were nearing a one-page memorandum to end the war, calling it "more a list of American wishes than a reality."”
BREAKING: Someone placed a $920 million crude oil short at 3:40 AM.

70 minutes later Axios reported the US and Iran were close to a deal.

Oil dropped 12%.

The trade made $125 million in profit.

Minutes after that Iran launched the “Persian Gulf Strait Authority” and oil surged 8%.

$760 million placed before Trump’s last announcement.

$920 million placed before this one.

Every major announcement in this war has been front-run by someone who knew it was coming.

What kind of war is this?

This is more like a trading desk with an army.

Never stop connecting the dots.
It’s okay, we're the oil supplier to the world. The wish that this gets better by November seems like a vain one.

China Rising

Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Yi met with Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi in Beijing, amidst the ongoing tensions between Iran and the U.S. in the Middle East and the current deadlock in the Strait of Hormuz. Per a Chinese MOFA release, Foreign Minister Araghchi briefed his Chinese counterpart on the ongoing U.S.-Iran talks process, reiterated Iranian support of China’s One China policy, and discussed continued bilateral cooperation. In turn, China has reiterated its support for Iran’s actions, saying “China supports Iran's safeguarding of national sovereignty and security,” and that China “believes that Iran has a legitimate right to use nuclear energy peacefully.”
Additionally, per the Chinese release, China called on Gulf nations to enact their own regional security framework. Presumably bereft of U.S. influence. Co-signing past Iranian calls to enact a regional security, economic, and trade framework without the involvement of outside state-actors.
And Trump wants to tear down NATO. 

Nature, and nations, abhor a vacuum. This is what Trump has wrought. All part of this:
Following reporting on the potential 14-point U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding, Iranian officials have told state-affiliated news outlets that portions of the U.S. proposal remain unrealistic to Iranian decision-makers and officials have also told news outlets that parts of Axios’ original story on the matter are “speculative.”
IOW, Iran has heard it before. They’ve heard it repeatedly since April 8. 

Trump thinks it’s leverage. China, meanwhile….

And yes, Congress could stop him. Congress is a blunt instrument. But Trump isn’t an instrument of any kind. He’s just an agent of chaos. So we need a blunt instrument, to stop him. Bluntly. Forcefully. With the authority of Art. I.

Whistling Past The… 🪦

(This is my representative. He ran for Senate, came in 3rd. So he’s out for now. He still wants to run for office again. Someday.)

Whistling past the graveyard:
"I'm not worried at all because voters remember that we had $9 gas in some places and we've now brought prices down," [RNC Chairman Richard] Hudson said on the NOTUS podcast. "It's a question of, 'Do you want to continue down this path of recovery, or do we want to go back to artificially inflated gas prices?'"

Hudson's strategy relies on framing the 2026 House elections as a choice between Republican policies under Trump versus memories of the Biden administration — a gamble that appears increasingly risky given the ongoing economic pain from the Iran war, Ed Deamria of NOTUS wrote.

"We're still on a rescue mission," Hudson said. "Remember how bad it was before? Give us a chance to continue to make your lives better."
Well, what else have they got? 🎶 And it’s 1,2,3, what’re we fightin’ for?”🎶

🥁

Post 👆 Replies 👇 Yeah, I don’t think it’s the algorithm that’s making people do things. (Those are not the best arguments with the original post, but they sure seem “enraged.” I blame the algae rhythm.🥁 )

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

“This Is A Favor To The World”

 Mary Trump:

"The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is not just disrupting energy markets. It is disrupting fertilizer flows that determine future harvests. That disruption is setting the stage for a delayed but potentially catastrophic global food shortage," Mary Trump wrote.

"The Strait’s closure is now threatening the planting season for farmers across South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North America," she added. "Those farmers are going to produce less food as a result, and that food scarcity is going to drive prices up globally. The people who will feel it first and be hit the hardest are the people who are already struggling to survive."

"It is a debacle. It is a catastrophe. There is no immediate solution. There is no agreed framework. There is no clear timeline for resolution. And Donald does not appear to be in any rush," she continued.
What did the world do to need this favor?

MAHA!

Also restarting the clock on the War Powers Act. Because only Trump can do that: Future’s so bright…

🎶 Ain’t That America?🇺🇸 🎶

Is it as bad as attacking a country without provocation (after tearing up an agreement that was keeping Iran from enriching uranium), and forcing them into this defensive posture everyone knew they’d adopt? Just how “legal” was bombing Iran and threatening to destroy their civilization? And it got us, what? Severely depleted munitions, 80% of our bases in the region damaged or destroyed, and oil at $102 a barrel and rising? Not such a substantial achievement from this side of the ledger. Which is rapidly coming to an end. If we’re filling the world’s oil gap, that’s less for us, right? The kids in the Oval Office this morning are smarter than this. And the shooters are whisked away and the evidence is destroyed and all attempts at a proper criminal investigation are blocked, and…

Oh, he’s not talking about America, is he?
What country does he think he’s the SOS of? The imaginary land of Trumpistan? And having caused the problem, we’re doing the world a favor by what? Pissing on the fire we started? Irony is in the corner, drunk off her ass. It’s a coping mechanism. Rubio is too busy playing press secretary this week. Again, are we sure he’s not talking about America?  Because it sure sounds like he is. Defending themselves the only way they know how? Against the pre-eminent military force on the planet? (How’s that working out, by the way?) I’m sure you will see multiple places around the world doing the same, if Trump isn’t reined in by Congress.

🎶 Little pink houses for you and me! 🎶

Do You Believe?

And: Also, too, as well: So did the Nazis.

He Could Be An Astronaut, You Know 👨‍🚀

He could also be a pro golfer. 🏌️‍♂️ 

🏳️

I am reminded of one of Vonnegut’s stories, where America in the future is Balkanized by the world, so it will no longer be a danger to the nations.

For a guy who doesn’t buy his own gas, $102 bbl is a small price indeed.

And does he understand, if people are buying oil from us, it means less oil is available to…us? And that $102 bbl is the price for WTI, which is… our oil?

Oh, forget it.
Yeah, that was good, too. The ceasefire cannot be violated. It can only continue until: 🏳️

Truth Is The First Casualty

“Well Below The Threshold”

“Possible” seems to be doing a lot of heavy lifting there.
According to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine, Iran has attacked U.S. forces 6 times since the beginning of the nominal ceasefire, and noted that all these attacks, presumably including strikes against their Gulf neighbors, are "below the threshold" of resuming combat operations against Iran.
Q: Will this administration be seeking congressional approval for any further military operations if the ceasefire breaks down?

Hegseth: Our view is with the ceasefire, the clock stops. If it were to restart, that would be the president's decision. That option is always there. The president retains the opportunity and the capabilities to restart major combat operations if necessary.
But Donald Trump is NOT a king!
Q: New U.S. Intelligence reports suggest that the timeline for the war in Iran to get a nuclear weapon has not changed since last summer, still at 9 to 12 months. How can this be after so much bombing? The president recently said that the blockade is even more effective than bombing. So why didn't we start the campaign with a blockade?

Hegseth: I can't confirm or deny whether that is indeed correct speculation as far as I'm concerned, coming coming from you
😬 Wait a minute….
When asked about the involvement of Indo-Pacific nations, particularly South Korea, following the Iranian strike on a South Korean vessel, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said the “we hope” that Indo-Pacific partners, including Japan, South Korea, and Australia would be interested in getting involved in securing the Strait of Hormuz.
They know we can hear them, right? So another two to three weeks of ceasefire. Got it.

Monday, May 04, 2026

Status Quo Ante

And how many months will it take for the oil market to recover?
Lindsey Graham says he knows that gas prices are high but he says the military action against Iran is worth it and if you doubt that Iran was trying to get a nuke, you shouldn’t be allowed to drive anyway. Graham: To the American people, I know gas prices are high and I know WE’RE suffering right now. But you pay now or you pay later. They tried to get a nuclear weapon. If you don't believe that, you shouldn't be allowed to drive.
The campaign ad writers are going to be unemployed this year. (Does Lindsay think this makes him sound butch?) Didn’t Trump say that already? Did it work?  Mighty big “if” there, fella. I don’t think he’s this stupid. But he clearly thinks the voters of South Carolina are. And he could be right. (My brother in law was Green Beret in Vietnam. His task was to act as a force multiplier, recruiting people as the French were recruited for the resistance in WWII. It wasn’t a matter of being a gun runner. The IRG is trained. Handing guns to people would be as effective as “militia” members going up against the U.S. military. If you could hand guns to everyone in Iran. And if they wouldn’t just turn them on each other. This could be a stupider idea, but it’s hard to say how.) There’s gotta be a cost free (in terms of American lives) solution to this, right? Besides, Trump said he’s gotten regime change. And that his blockade would do the trick. Oh, and that he’s won the war. How did that happen?

🛫 Flights Of Fancy 🛬

Spirit was in its second bankruptcy. Jet Blue isn’t doing that well anyway. Aside from the (former) employees of Spirit, and the people stranded by its closure (and the creditors): who gives a shit?

In a world where gas is simply getting more expensive (as is jet fuel), farmers are going bankrupt, and inflation is rising, who is supposed to give a shit about a badly run airline finally going out of business? Is this all the Secretary of Transportation has to do? Talk about this?
Yeah, that’s gonna take everybody’s mind off their problems; and who’s to blame for them.

Meanwhile, from the top:
Worse: Nobody can believe a word you say. Because we’re living in reality; and none of us are that stupid. For whom?
Trump on Oil Prices:

Everybody was wrong. They thought energy would be at $300. It’s at like 100. And I think it’s going down. There's a lot of energy out there on ships all over the world that are loaded up with it. They can't do much with it because they got, uh, kidnapped by a pretty evil place, but we're taking care of it.
As I write, WTI is at $105 bbl. It opened at $104, closed yesterday at $106. Not being at $300 (yet) is not really a flex. The rest of what he said? All I can say is: does reality have any claim on his attention any more? That answers that question. And  now we do a little detour: That would be this Nick Fuentes? Trump doesn’t understand a word that says.

The Guy Who Peddles Quack Remedies …

... is discerning fraud based on…the population of the LA area? Oh, no, wait , he didn’t mention that at all. 

Clearly he thinks we’re all as stupid as he is.

Although, what the actual fuck?
Justices have appeared on fairly nonpartisan programs for book tours before. It's a bit iffy ethically, and I'll criticize the liberal justices too (Sotomayor, Jackson more recently). But a sitting justice appearing on a partisan Fox News opinion program basically has no precedent.

Gorsuch does not fear any consequences for signaling his partisan alliances, and is abusing public trust. They are simply drunk with power. Ethics reform for these brazen justices needed ASAP.
Long past time to yank their chain. Hard. Pertinent to that, the 8 ways (per Professor Vladeck) the Congress can do that. His explanations are worth reading, but I’m just going to give you the topics:

1)  The Court’s calendar. Put it this way: The Court starts its term on the first Monday in October because Congress told them to: in 1915. Congress also stopped the Court from sitting in 1801 by changing its calendar.

2) Where the Court sits. Let me put it this way 
Opposition to funding and construction of the current Supreme Court Building (a home for which Chief Justice Taft had aggressively lobbied since running for President in 1908) was usually pitched on exactly these terms—that giving the Court its own physical plant would give it too much power and separation from the democratically elected branches of government. Justice Brandeis, who would never use his office in the new building, objected that what he called the “Marble Palace” would turn the justices into “‘the nine black beetles of the Temple of Karnak’ and would cause them to have an inflated vision of themselves.” As Paul Freund would later put it, Brandeis “opposed the new Supreme Court building on the ground that it might tend to cause the justices to lose whatever sense of humility they had theretofore possessed.”
Until 1935, the Court met in the Capitol.  In the basement, until 1810.

Maybe we should close the Supreme Court building.

3)  Circuit riding.

Keeping the court in its place, and small “d” democratic, was once a thing.
As then-Representative James Buchanan (yeah, that Buchanan) put it in an 1826 debate, “[i]f the Supreme Court should ever become a political tribunal, it will not be until the Judges shall be settled in Washington, far removed from the People, and within the immediate influence of the power and patronage of the Executive.”
Are you seeing a pattern here?

4). The Court’s Docket 

Again, to keep the pattern clear (and cut to the chase):
I won’t rehash here the long debates over (or earlier writings about) the merits and demerits of certiorari. The relevant point is that everyone understood each of these statutory reforms as transferring power from Congress to the Court—power that no one questioned Congress had the constitutional authority to both exercise directly and to delegate to the justices. Put another way, whatever the policy wisdom of certiorari, it’s another powerful example of how Congress used to use its control over the Court as a lever—and has stopped doing so. And the consequences have been … striking.
5) The Court's Budget
I’ve written before about the different ways in which Congress historically used the budget as a lever. But perhaps the most meaningful recent example is a March 2001 House budget subcommittee hearing, where Rep. Jose Serrano (D-N.Y.) grilled Justice Kennedy about the Court’s ruling in Bush v. Gore (there’s video). The idea that the justices can and should be made to publicly defend some of their more controversial rulings in order to receive their annual fiscal allotment may seem entirely foreign in 2026; it wasn’t as recently as a quarter-century ago.
History can be so instructive.

7) The Justices Salaries and Pensions 

No, Congress can’t cut their salaries (Art. III), but…well, quotes are more concise here:
On the salary front, in 1964, when Congress gave just about every federal officer and employee a long-overdue pay raise, the nine recipients who got the least were the justices—reflecting Congress’s … pique … with the Court’s trilogy of major redistricting rulings. And on pensions, until 1937, Congress would sometimes use justice-specific pension statutes (like the one pictured above) to nudge justices off the Court.

Congress largely surrendered the latter power in 1937, when it created a permanent retirement mechanism for justices. But, again, here’s an example of how Congress used its unquestioned powers to check the Court both directly and indirectly.
Everything old is new again. What was done in 1937, can be undone in 2027.

7) The Court’s Ethics

Justice Abe Fortas was forced to resign in 1969; not because Congress had imposed ethics on the Court, but because it could:
But in a nutshell, in the midst of a relatively modest scandal over Fortas’s relationship with a sketchy financier (which is not to say Fortas had clean hands), Chief Justice Warren went to Fortas and told him he had to resign for the good of the Court—because, if he didn’t, Congress would come after the Court (including, Warren feared, Justice Douglas). It was the specter of congressional investigations (and potential impeachment proceedings) that forced Fortas’s hand. Suffice it to say, I don’t see a similar conversation happening today. That’s not just a reflection on the justices; it’s a reflection on Congress.
Congress doesn’t need to threaten impeachment (although Thomas and Alito are ripe candidates). It can easily pass a set of ethical rules for the Justices. Or just make them subject to the same rules the other federal judges answer to. Including the requirement they retire from the active bench after a certain age. Professor Vladeck doesn’t add that; I did.

 8) Congress has the final say in statutory interpretation 

TL:dr: Congress could "fix” the VRA and tell Alito and Roberts to stuff it. If we can change Congress.
As I noted in last Thursday’s bonus post, Matthew Christiansen and Professor Bill Eskridge published an exhaustive study in 2014 that identified more than 100 statutes Congress passed between 1980 and 2000 at least parts of which overturned Supreme Court statutory interpretations with which it disagreed. That number has dwindled into the single-digits in recent years—and virtually no high-profile cases. (The most recent example I can think of is the Ledbetter case from 2007, which the 111th Congress overruled in its second statute in 2009.) A Congress that was still asserting its control over statutes would presumably have responded quickly, for instance, to Shelby County—and its demand for an updated “coverage formula” for the Voting Rights Act’s preclearance regime. But this Congress? Crickets.

I don’t mean to overstate this point; the volume of examples in the Christiansen/Eskridge study are a testament to the fact that even dynamic interbranch dialogue didn’t prevent the Court from getting a bunch of statutory interpretation questions “wrong.” But it’s worth asking what the “major questions doctrine,” or the overruling of Chevron, or any number of other moves the Court has made in the last decade would’ve looked like in a world in which the Court was genuinely convinced that Congress would more directly and immediately respond to its rulings.
Well, a lot of things could be done if we change Congress. On that note, what are we looking for?
Back to one of my favorite quotes (again, from Paul Freund): We should aspire to a world in which the justices “are not, [or] at any rate should not be, influenced by the weather of the day, but they are necessarily influenced by the climate of the age.” A lot of folks may think that can happen with the right justices. My own view is that, in the long term, that can happen only if we get to a point in which it doesn’t matter whether we have the “right” justices, because any justice is being regularly pushed to look over their shoulder—and across First Street.
Bottom line: the Court should regularly be reminded that it is the last mentioned in the Constitution, and the least defined there. And aside from a few specific tasks mentioned in Art. III, the Court is mostly governed by Congress. Time to restore that authority.