Wednesday, June 03, 2026

“A Penny For The Old Guy…”

 Pope Leo:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Serious Question

How many voters under 60 know who Alfred E Neumann is? Or care? Says the guy whose most famous picture is him dragging a suitcase through Bush Airport while Texans freeze to death in the worst winter storm in memory. And that one didn’t have to be generated by AI.

Honestly, Ted; if this is all you’ve got:
I really like our chances.

Grandpa Wanders Down The Street Again

Maybe this is why: What the fuck is he even talking about? I’ve seen more concern over Scott Pelley being fired from CBS.* Time for Grandpa to go back to his room for “executive time.” Nixon’s “mad man” theory was predicated on the fact Nixon knew what he was doing; and that he was crazy enough to start a nuclear war.  It wasn’t a tactic he used to negotiate with North Vietnam; because he actually knew what he was doing. 

Well, better than Trump does.  Nixon had, God help us, Kissinger. Trump has J.D. Vance and Jared Kushner.
DEVINE: What do you say to people who claim Bibi Netanyahu tricked you into going into Iran?

TRUMP: They're just the enemy. They're dumocrats. They want transgender mutilization of our children. He tricked me? I'm the one that started it. I'll tell you what -- if there wasn't me, there would be no Israel right now.
He really thinks “mutilization” is a word. Good thing we have more important matters to worry about, like Scott Pelley and Bari Weiss. It’s not even newsworthy, anymore. Speaking of which: (Yes, the IRS “settlement” was complete bullshit. Yes, this is why Blanche won’t talk about it.) The doctors also told him he weighs 238 pounds. Was the alternative to write an EO to force them to perform? I’m sure the OLC would draft a legal opinion about how such an EO doesn’t conflict with the 13th amendment.


 *Honestly, I don’t care. Reality is finally catching up with Paddy Chayefsky 50 years later. I gave up on TV journalism decades ago. Even a “60 Minutes “ story was never more than a squib. I can get more information from a print story than from an entire season of TV news shows.  When did TV news, especially national news, cover Trump’s blatant corruption and incompetence? Even the NYT finally reported on Trump’s cabinet meetings that would embarrass North Korea, and seems to have noticed Trump sleeps on camera. When was the last time “60 Minutes” broke a story on anything? It gave a story more than 12 minutes airtime?

I Wish This Meant Something

But the Senate can’t do it alone. There are 38 scheduled legislative days on the House calendar between now and Election Day, and House members don’t want to waste that time in D.C. doing bupkis, so the odds of enough GOP members showing up are zip and none. Leadership doesn’t want them back because it can’t guarantee the votes it needs. Members want to save their jobs. It’s not a scenario ripe for legislative action.

And even if Congress put a stake through the slush fund:
[Sen. Lindsey] Graham had proposed threading the needle on the dead fund. While acknowledging Blanche's announcement, he argued that "there are many victims of the weaponized Biden Justice Department" and proposed routing claims through the existing Federal Tort Claims Act process instead of creating a new system.
Graham made that proposal in a tweet. AAG  Stanley E. Woodward, Jr., responded “We’re on it.” And then thought “Did I say that out loud?,” and deleted his tweet.

More and more I’m beginning to think removal from office is the only cure, here.

I’m Old Enough To Remember The ‘80’s

When the received wisdom was that government should be run like a business (nobody thought of Trump as a politician in those days; nor as a businessman), because business was ruthlessly efficient; and effective.

Nobody stopped to consider governments couldn’t file for bankruptcy.

Business could not fail, it could only be failed.

And now we must have AI data centers because we cannot fall behind…something.

And in Texas, at least, that means screwing rural areas blind.

"You must accept this! It is the future! You cannot stop.. THE FUTURE!”

Even though you’re going to have to rehire all those people when AI doesn’t bring about the commerce millennia.

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

Why Hasn’t This Man Been Confirmed Already?

MENG: Are you going to issue a new memo in writing rescinding the weaponization fund?

BLANCHE: I'm not committing to putting anything in writing. What would the purpose be?

MENG: You established it in writing, so it makes sense to rescind it in writing

BLANCHE: Ok. I'm not committing to doing anything in writing.
The purpose would be to make it enforceable. Blanche knows that. It’s a parol contract, to leave it oral, only. With few exceptions that don’t apply here, that makes the promise unenforceable. 

Blanche is as crooked as a dog’s hind leg.

“…or your lyin’ eyes? πŸ‘€

According to a U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) press release, following the recent escalation in the Gulf by Iran, the U.S. conducted self-defense strikes on an Iranian ground control station on Qeshm Island, after Iran targeted their Gulf neighbors and U.S. bases and infrastructure. Per the release, 2 Iranian ballistic missiles fired at Kuwait fell short or broke apart in flight and 3 missiles launched at Bahrain were “immediately” intercepted by Bahraini and U.S. air defenses. Additionally, CENTCOM shot down 3 one-way attack drones launched at commercial vessels. No U.S. forces were injured in the strikes.
Funny. Rubio said the war is over.
Today’s spate of reciprocal strikes between the U.S. and Iran, which was far more intense than those of previous weeks, has cemented the new “ceasefire” dynamic, where Iran responds to U.S. actions by launching strikes on its neighbors and the U.S. responds with retaliatory strikes. This new dynamic is oddly reminiscent of the tit-for-tat strikes on the Houthis, that saw the U.S. ultimately backing down from its aims there to realize deescalation in the local region.
Maybe that’s what Rubio meant.

Well, Until They Decide To

They just don’t want Congress to quash it. Or act against the “Get out of IRS jail free” card, that Trump now keeps in his wallet.

Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before

Funny, he didn’t say anything about that yesterday.
EAMON JAVERS Do you think the negotiations are over now, or is this a bluff?

PRESIDENT TRUMP I don’t care if they’re over, honestly. I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less. If they’re over, they’re over. If they’re not, you know, I think they took too much time. Frankly, I thought they started to get very boring. They were giving us what we needed, but I think I think they handled the negotiations poorly. It took too long. I thought they were tapping us along that’s all. Yeah, they were.
Of course. Yeah, about that:
Iranian state-backed media outlets are now reporting that Iran has suspended ceasefire talks with the U.S. over the significant expansion of Israeli operations against Lebanese Hezbollah (LH) in Southern Lebanon. According to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, the success of U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks is contingent on Israel’s deescalation in Southern Lebanon, saying “a violation on one front is a violation of the ceasefire on all fronts.”
According to Iranian state-backed media outlet Fars, following Iran’s suspension of talks over Israel’s escalation in Southern Lebanon, the IRGC is now threatening to target Northern Israel if Israel expands their strike campaign to include Lebanese Hezbollah positions and infrastructure in the capital, Beirut.
According to Israel’s Kan News, U.S. President Donald J. Trump is on a call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu following Iran’s announcement that they suspended talks with the U.S. over Israel’s strikes and ground operations in Southern Lebanon. Earlier, President Trump said that he had not yet been made aware of the move by Iran.

This comes amidst reports that the U.S. pressured Israel to forego strikes on Lebanese Hezbollah in Beirut, Lebanon.
On the same day, Trump said he didn’t know Iran had broken off talks, said he didn’t care if they had, and said what he repeated today:
So, sure, maybe this is what Trump meant today (who knows what he meant yesterday?):
There is a pattern: And a curious feature: So: And he’s issuing tweets saying what he said yesterday.

πŸ€”

SNAFU.

FUBAR.

Counting The Scaramuccis

Based on what Project 2025 told them. Or a random bot on Truth Social. Same difference, really. When I was young and not on Medicare I hardly ever filled a claim BECAUSE I DIDN’T NEED TO! And it made no difference if I did because my doctor visits never got me close to the threshold of my deductible. But I still paid the insurance premiums. As do people on Obamacare (or on Medicare). WHAT THE FUCK KIND OF DUMB ASS FRAUD STANDARD IS THIS? I'm seeing a pattern here: Speaking of perceptions: Just off the top of my head, I can see this will be absolutely and completely unenforceable. First, it doesn’t have the force of law. Second, imagine the fun when financial institutions go “papers, please” on every account holder in America. (What authority does this give my financial institution to demand my passport as the basis for allowing continued access to my money?)

Mullin might as well go ahead and pull the CBP from the nation’s major international airports. That will affect fewer people.
Murphy: Can you commit to us that if judge finds that what DHS is illegal, that you will comply with the court order?

Mullin: If we didn't think courts were politicized, then I would probably be able to answer that

Murphy: You’re going to pick and choose what court orders you obey?

Mullin: Don’t put words in my mouth.

Murphy: You just said you may not follow court orders—

Mullin: Don’t put words in my mouth.

Murphy: Will you implement court orders?

Mullin: You're making an assumption on court orders I haven't seen

Murphy: If you're a Republican or a Democrat on this committee, you should be really, really freaked out—

Mullin: We should be really concerned about the rulings that come out of the courts.
Even the DOJ said it would follow the order on the slush fund, though they complained loudly about it.

What’s the over/under on how many Scaramuccis Mullin has left?
Fewer and fewer, methinks.
Really? What does he do with all that “executive time”? Sound familiar? Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action. —Ian Fleming We’ll see to it. That’s gonna leave a mark. 😈

Strong Intel Infrastructure Is Not About Buildings

U.S. President Donald J. Trump has announced that he is appointing Bill Pulte, the Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), to serve as Acting Director of National Intelligence (DNI), following the recent resignation of Tulsi Gabbard. Unlike Gabbard, Pulte has never served in the military or in any aspect of the U.S. Intelligence Community.
In December 2025, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) announced that it had launched an investigation into Bill Pulte for his alleged use of his position as Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to target political opponents of President Trump. Pulte had previously referred several of Trump’s largest critics, including California Democrats Rep. Eric Swalwell and Sen. Adam Schiff, New York Attorney General Letitia James and Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook, for “mortgage-fraud investigations” to the Justice Department.
Clearly he deserves the highest security clearance possible.  How could he ever be compromised? Or qualified? Rude. But he doesn’t seem approving.  Pulte can do it during his “executive time.”

I Know NOTHING About Senate Reconciliation Rules

A few updates just now from Thune:

—When asked if they’d be risking a Trump veto if they address the weaponization fund in the bill itself, Thune says yes

—“To be determined” whether reconciliation could still move forward this week. “We’ll know by tomorrow.”

—“Still sorting through” whether DOJ statement is enough to satisfy enough R’s, but “the message we’re getting” is that more clarity is needed from WH.

—When he said he wanted to return to “original intent” of reconciliation (ICE/CBP), Thune said that includes scrapping the pot of DOJ funding in the bill.
So I’m dubious any language about the slush fund or the IRS amnesty will make it through reconciliation. And as it would take 60 votes to pass without reconciliation, that would only require a handful of GOP Senators to put their money where their mouth is.
 
Or maybe there aren’t 14 GOP senators who would vote for it (I’m discounting Fetterman), in which case we should find out who they are.

The courts can’t end this, but they can slow it down. I don’t expect the courts cases 
to be resolved before January. The almost inevitable new Congress can deal with it decisively in 2027. The way things are going, I’m beginning to believe Trump could be the first President removed from office by impeachment, and this slush fund could be one if many reasons why.

🎢 I Ammmmmm An Innocent Maaaaan🎢

Michael Cohen whined that nobody loves him anymore, and he was “coerced” into testifying in Trump’s criminal trial. That led Trump to call Cohen up and curse him out. 

Oh, wait; it didn’t:

Referring to Cohen as a “Star Witness,” Trump wrote, “When a Star Witness totally recants, and in every way reveals that he was pressured and coerced to give testimony, and when the Prosecutor admits that this Witness was the single reason that the case was brought, there was no other, how can that Case not be immediately dismissed? That is exactly what happened in the Democrat New York Attorney General and Manhattan District Attorney’s Hoaxes against me. Michael Cohen has come out and unequivocally stated that the Radical Left Prosecutors, Tish James and Alvin Bragg, pressured and coerced him to testify against your favorite President, ME, when they made him the key player in their Political Witch Hunts.”

Incorrectly asserting, “Now that his testimony is wiped away,” he added, “and the unAmerican, Political Charade ‘Cases’ are even further discredited, they should be put out of their misery, and dismissed, once and for all. Our Constitution, and the Rule of Law, demand immediate and swift dismissal, as well as for the Perpetrators of the Radical Left Lawfare and Weaponization to be held criminally responsible for their terrible misdeeds. We have to restore Confidence and Honor in our Justice System. I am an innocent man who has been horribly treated. Hopefully the Courts will do what everyone knows should be done. Thank you! President DONALD J. TRUMP.”
Yeah, that’s not what happened at all. The civil case took weeks, the criminal case took almost as long, and Cohen was a minor witness in both. Trump was up at 1 AM whining like a child about how unfair it was that he was held responsible for what he did. This is how Trump talks. It’s always about “ME.” He’s always the victim. And he always punches down. Or attacks his “opponents” from a safe distance, and never face to face. Trump is never braver than when he’s by himself.

I expect to see this, verbatim, in pleadings before the New York Court of Appeals, soon. I think both cases are still there. I’m sure it will be a winning legal argument.

Third Time’s The Charm

Opinions differ: (Levin is not confirming what happened on that phone call. He’s upset that reports are Trump didn’t kiss Bibi’s ass. Which Trump has been doing at least since January 20, 2025. Trump hasn’t changed that much. But Levin can’t stand to hear otherwise.) (There’s also that.)

Monday, June 01, 2026

It’s Simply Amazing…

...how much the Republicans sound like Democrats when Biden was in office. 

Except Biden cleaned up Trump’s disaster and wasn’t getting credit for doing it fast enough. While Trump is responsible for throwing the entire planet’s economy in the shitter, and giving China a huge boost at the same time.

All Shall Be Well, And All Shall Be Well

And COVID will just go away.

And the Strait of Hormuz will just automatically open. 

And the importing countries will pay the tariffs.

And tariffs will replace the income tax.

And we’ll all live happily ever after as the world pays us to take their goods.

Of All The Things That Didn’t Happen….

... this didn’t happen the most.  The clue is in the outlet reporting it:
"You're fucking crazy. You'd be in prison if it weren't for me. I'm saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this," Trump told Netanyahu, according to one U.S. official's summary of the remarks.

A second source said Trump was "p---ed" and at one point shouted: "What the f--- are you doing?"

The president's fury was reportedly driven by Netanyahu's escalation, threatening to derail his administration's delicate negotiations with Iran, which include a demand that Israel halt its bombardment of Lebanon. Trump warned Netanyahu that bombing Beirut would further isolate Israel internationally and pointed to his support during Netanyahu's corruption trial, telling the prime minister he'd helped keep him out of jail.

Israel abandoned its plans to strike Hezbollah targets in Beirut, an Israeli official told Axios. Trump later posted on Truth Social that the Iran talks were "continuing, at a rapid pace."

One U.S. official told Axios this was among Trump's worst calls with Netanyahu since returning to office. Another said Trump objected to Israel demolishing entire buildings to take out a single Hezbollah commander and was disturbed by the high civilian death toll.
And the blunt fact Trump is a coward who would never speak harshly to another person to their face. Even his tag line on “The Apprentice” was staged and an act. He has other people deliver the bad news when someone needs to be dismissed from his employment. He wouldn’t dream of cursing out an equal. He might be frustrated with Netenyahu. He’d take that out on an underling.

And a man who has repeatedly threatened to destroy an entire civilization is not noticing what Israel is doing in Lebanon, anymore than he noticed what Israel did in Gaza.

This is a story Trump would like told about himself. It’s not something he would ever do.

Consider the source. And I don’t mean the usual unnamed “officials”.

Just So We’re All Clear

 Axios, a/k/a The Mouth of Sauron:

The Trump administration plans to drop its controversial $1.8 billion "weaponization" fund the president sought to compensate alleged victims of prosecutorial conduct under his predecessor, two senior administration officials told Axios.

"It's dead for now," one of the sources said.
As they say in those annoying ads about leaving property to someone after your death without a will: “Doesn’t count.” Pay attention to the DOJ, not some “anonymous source” in the administration.
The Department of Justice disagrees strongly with the decision on the Anti-Weaponization Fund put forth by the United States District Court Judge in the Eastern District of Virginia, wherein the Court stated that, under no circumstances, may the Department of Justice proceed with the Anti-Weaponization Fund recently established in order to make up for the tremendous abuse, harm, and hate unfairly shown to so many people. This Fund was open to anybody who was so weaponized, targeted, or persecuted, whether they were Democrat, Republican, Conservative, Independent, or otherwise. The Department will abide by the Court’s ruling.
Does that sound like it’s over? As emptywheel points out:
Neither order tells the government that they can’t set up a Terrorist Slush Fund (though Williams could find that Woodward and Epshteyn engaged in fraud by even attempting to do so).

Nevertheless, Trump’s minions got Marc Caputo and Jake Sherman to claim that the judges’ rulings were the reason Trump decided to halt, “for now,” the Terrorist Slush Fund.
What they’re saying: “We’re planning to respect the courts,” one of the administration officials said.

“This has become a distraction,” a second administration official said. “The president believes government was weaponized against people — it wasn’t just him. But this isn’t the time and vehicle for it.”
So: not dead. This is just a head fake to get the Senate through reconciliation.
And once Trump has his brownshirts funded for the next several years, he’ll revert back to paying off terrorists, as an update to Caputo’s post describes he might do.
“The plan right now is to halt it. But the president likes the fund, he believes in it. So nothing is final until it’s final,” one of the sources said.
The lesson is: don’t rely on the courts, or Axios, or the Administration. Tell Congress to stop this shit. Vote ‘em out if they won’t.

"Maybe you have some information about what Speaker Mike Johnson might have said to the president when he was at the White House a little bit earlier today," Tur asked Sherman, referring to the recent meeting on the status of the reconciliation bill, which Republicans have debated updating with language limiting the fund.

Sherman acknowledged he didn't know exactly what was discussed there about the fund, but that his sources tell him "the administration is going to announce through DOJ that they are going to comply with the court order ... but the administration plans to say they plan to take no further action."

Despite that, he argued, this "is not going to be an immediate salve for Capitol Hill" because Trump could simply decide at a later date to restart it up again when the court order expires. "They're going to want to put language in ... the reconciliation legislation, which funds ICE and CBP, to make sure that the administration can't, at some point, return and do this again."

In other words, he said, Republicans will take a "trust, but verify" attitude and "put teeth into legislation to make sure that the administration doesn't, in a couple of months, say, actually, we've changed our minds. We're going to go back and set up this $1.8 billion fund."

Ultimately, though, he said, this is probably good news for Republicans because the administration's surrender means they can move forward with the broader reconciliation bill.

"This was the only path, Katy, to get this done," he said. "The administration would have been frozen up here for weeks, if not months ... if this weaponization fund was put in place, they would have had to deal with this on every single bill that the House and Senate were looking to pass." As a result, Trump had "no other option" but to throw in the towel on the slush fund.
I’ll believe it when it passes into law.

“It Was Boring”

EAMON JAVERS Do you think the negotiations are over now, or is this a bluff?

PRESIDENT TRUMP I don’t care if they’re over, honestly. I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less. If they’re over, they’re over. If they’re not, you know, I think they took too much time. Frankly, I thought they started to get very boring. They were giving us what we needed, but I think I think they handled the negotiations poorly. It took too long. I thought they were tapping us along that’s all. Yeah, they were.
The President of the United States is a five year old child with attention deficit disorder. Let us do that for you, Grandpa. Always has his finger on the pulse, huh?
EAMON JAVERS Have you talked to anybody in NATO about that? I mean, have they changed their tune on the strait?

PRESIDENT TRUMP They would, if I wanted them to, but they would. I want them to. We don’t need them. We don’t need NATO. They were very, very weak and very sad. What they said, they said we’ll help you as soon as the war is over. NATO, Europe has lost its way. They have a tremendous immigration problem, and they have a tremendous energy problem, because all they want to do is build windmills all over the place, so anyway.

Well, call me. You can call me tomorrow, and I’ll talk to you about it. Let’s see what’s going on - okay?
NATO will have a response if they can get that statement translated into coherence.

The point of getting Israel to stop bombing Lebanon was to get Iran back to the negotiations. But now Trump is bored. So, what next? Congress? Or more of the same into the foreseeable future?

Three guesses; first two don’t count.

Remain Calm! All Is Well!

No, no, it’s (finally!) peace in our time! If you’re paying attention, Iran broke off talks. And Trump doesn’t say here that he’s spoken to Iran recently: Meanwhile: Wishing does not make it so. 

The Art Of The Squeal

Iranian state-backed media outlets are now reporting that Iran has suspended ceasefire talks with the U.S. over the significant expansion of Israeli operations against Lebanese Hezbollah (LH) in Southern Lebanon. According to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, the success of U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks is contingent on Israel’s deescalation in Southern Lebanon, saying “a violation on one front is a violation of the ceasefire on all fronts.”
According to Iranian state-backed media outlet Fars, following Iran’s suspension of talks over Israel’s escalation in Southern Lebanon, the IRGC is now threatening to target Northern Israel if Israel expands their strike campaign to include Lebanese Hezbollah positions and infrastructure in the capital, Beirut.
Trump needs to tell the IRGC that they don’t have the cards.
According to Israel’s Kan News, U.S. President Donald J. Trump is on a call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu following Iran’s announcement that they suspended talks with the U.S. over Israel’s strikes and ground operations in Southern Lebanon. Earlier, President Trump said that he had not yet been made aware of the move by Iran.

This comes amidst reports that the U.S. pressured Israel to forego strikes on Lebanese Hezbollah in Beirut, Lebanon.
Saying you don’t know what’s going on is not the art of negotiation.
In a post on Truth Social, President Donald J. Trump stated that he had a "very productive" conversation with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the situation in Lebanon, adding that any troops en route to Beirut have been recalled. President Trump also revealed he spoke with Hezbollah, who agreed to a potential ceasefire.
"Potential”. Is that a concept of a ceasefire?

My considered opinion is still that we fold our tents and leave. That’s the only way out of this.
Rinse, repeat. Until it finally gets through to Congress.

Truth Is The First Casualty Of War

The BBC reports that at least 20 U.S. bases in the region around Iran were hit by Iran.
The US has sought to limit satellite analysis of the conflict by requesting Planet, a major provider, to impose an "indefinite" restriction on new images of Iran and most of the Middle East. The company justified the move, saying that it wanted to ensure its images were not used "by adversarial actors to target allied and Nato-partner personnel and civilians".

BBC Verify has used satellite imagery from other international providers combined with older images from Planet to track the damage caused by Iranian attacks. The facilities are in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Bahrain and Oman. The actual figure could be higher, with some analysts placing the number of bases hit as high as 28.
What was hit is perhaps more consequential:
Among the valuable hardware damaged were three state-of-the-art anti-ballistic missile batteries systems at the Al Ruwais and Al Sader airbases in the UAE and Muwaffaq Salti Airbase in Jordan.

The US is only known to operate eight of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries, which are deployed at bases around the globe and cost around $1bn (£766m) to manufacture. Each battery needs a crew of about 100 troops to operate it while the interceptors it fires cost around $12.7m per round.

Vice-Admiral Mark Mellett, the ex-head of the Irish Defence Forces, told BBC Verify that the batteries are at the core of a "highly complex" regional defence network that cannot be "quickly or easily replaced".
One more factor in the equation of the extended ceasefire. Iran also has “the cards”:
The extent of damage caused to US facilities is difficult to quantify, but a May estimate by the Pentagon put the total cost of Operation Epic Fury at $29bn - with much of that likely to be spent on "repair or replacement costs for equipment" destroyed in the conflict. Democrats say this is likely an underestimate.

The report also found that at least 42 aircraft - including F-15 and F-35 fighter jets, 24 MQ-9 Reaper drones and an A-10 attack plane - have been destroyed or damaged since February.

By comparison to the expensive hardware used by the US military, Iran has reportedly made use of cheap, easily replaceable drones in its attacks on targets across the Middle East.
And the other unlearned lesson from Vietnam; call it the “little brown men in black pajamas” fallacy:
An analyst at MAIAR told BBC Verify that the US military "appears to have been guilty of a degree of early-war complacency" in failing to move aircraft out of the range of Iranian drones and missiles as Tehran's tactics evolved.

They said that in the case of Prince Sultan airbase the facility had previously come under fire before the aircraft were destroyed.
Really curious about why that THAAD facility wasn’t better protected, for one.

This doesn’t all speak solely to Trump’s stupidity in attacking Iran. Although maybe it speaks to the corruption of the chain of command, and Hegseth’s assault on it. Though I’m beginning to think the “sanctity” of the Joint Chiefs is more hagiography than biography, too.

πŸ¦—πŸ¦—Everything Old Is New Again

It was the Vietnam War that got people yelling “AMERICA!  LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT!” at the war protesters. Guess what: we finally walked away from that war. And the national manhood didn’t fall off or shrivel up.

And we didn’t do that so Stephen Miller could decide who stays in America, and who leaves.
Rep. Rick Crawford: "The War Powers Act is flawed in and of itself. If we're gonna address the president's authorities, we need to probably create another war powers act from whole cloth that does not impede his ability to continue to do what's necessary to defend this nation. We can't hobble the president."
Iran and Israel are doing a good enough job at that already, huh? Iran still seems to think they have a vote. I’d hate to see what “lack of control” looked like.

When does Congress do its Article I duties and say it’s time to cut our losses and leave? When we’ve got a new one that didn’t let Trump fail so disastrously?

Or, can we put Zelenskyy in charge of the war? He seems to have the cards:
Today, I presented state awards of Ukraine to the people without whom Operation “Spiderweb” would not have happened. We have no right to name them – everything remains absolutely classified and will remain so for a long time. This is already a historic operation by the Security Service of Ukraine, one that was carefully prepared, and on this very day one year ago, it entered its final stage – striking Russian military equipment. Farther than Ukrainian long-range capabilities had ever reached before. As precisely as no one in Russia expected. And as justly as the enemy’s strategic aviation deserves.

“Spiderweb” destroyed or at least damaged 41 aircraft. Never before had Russia lost such equipment, in such numbers, and as a result of strikes by drones that were incomparably cheaper. Ukraine has once again proved that it knows how to act asymmetrically, that it defends itself actively and truly creatively, and that Russia has no chance of overcoming Ukrainian courage. Ukraine will always be one step ahead – in technology, in bravery, and in the ability to capture the world’s attention and rally the support of millions of human hearts.

Ukraine is now applying long-range sanctions against Russia for this war literally every day. We did not start this war, we did not provoke it, and the only thing we wanted for Ukraine and Ukrainians was peace. But as long as the Russians choose the opposite, and as long as Russia does everything to drag out this war and expand it, Ukrainians will continue to find responses that will definitely work. I thank all our warriors for their precision! I thank the Security Service of Ukraine for its long-range leadership! I thank everyone who helps us! Glory to Ukraine!
Wait! As he says, they didn’t start that war. Better we just take the lesson of Vietnam, and leave.

Yeah, About That πŸ¦—

Yeah, about that: Chirp chirp.

πŸ¦—πŸ¦—πŸ¦—

“It just shows that it’s all a question of priorities.”

"...it’s not a question of what’s possible.”

 Source:

“Chirping”? πŸ¦—

This is what’s bothering the President of the United States? The sound of crickets? πŸ¦— 

Man, if you can’t stand the heat, get the fuck outta the kitchen.

More Leaner And More Meaner

Rule changes for the SpaceX $SPCX IPO:

Index providers waived the profitability requirement and cut the seasoning window from 90 days to 5.

This forces over $30 trillion in passive 401k and retirement money to buy SpaceX at IPO valuations.

Bloomberg Intelligence estimates S&P 500 funds must absorb 19% of SpaceX's float within 6 months.

Russell 1000 and Nasdaq 100 funds will absorb 24%.

The rules built to protect passive investors:

1. S&P 500 has required 12 months of trading and 4 quarters of GAAP profitability since 2002. Both waived.

2. Nasdaq cut its inclusion window from 90 trading days to 15.

3. FTSE Russell cut its to 5.

All three benchmarks are now structured to buy SpaceX at IPO pricing.
Fuck your feelings. And your 401k.
Let's be clear about what this actually is. Index providers didn't change their rules out of goodwill. They changed them because SpaceX is too big and too politically connected to exclude. A $1.5 trillion company going public and not landing in passive funds immediately would be embarrassing for the index industry.

But the consequence is real: $30 trillion in retirement money gets forced into SpaceX at whatever valuation Elon and the bankers set. No price discovery. No earnings track record requirement. No seasoning period to let the market find fair value.

The rules that protected passive investors since 2002 were waived in weeks.

If SpaceX is overvalued at IPO, every 401k in America owns it at the top.
The world's richest centi-billionaire oligarch used his power to change the rules, so he could dump his garbage company (which is cartoonishly overvalued, unprofitable, and incinerating cash) on retail investors, using trillions of dollars in retirement funds as exit liquidity, all in order to become the first trillionaire.

This is the perfect metaphor for the US economy as a whole, which is entirely based on bubbles and scams.
From the people who sold you on 401k’s in the first place. (The Lovely Wife had a 403b through her employer (a school district). Fortunately she also had a pension through the state of Texas. She actually put more in the 403b than it had when she retired. She rolled it into an IRA, where it is gaining value through prudent investment. Which will never include SpaceX. We won’t die rich, but it isn’t wasting away any more.)