The Ledes

Saturday, February 22, 2025

New York Times: “Pope Francis was in critical condition on Saturday night after having a long 'asthmatic respiratory crisis' earlier in the day that required 'high flows of oxygen' as well as a blood transfusion, the Vatican said, adding to concerns about the health of the 88-year-old pontiff.”

The Wires
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To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

Marie: Sorry, my countdown clock was unreliable; then it became completely unreliable. I can't keep up with it. Maybe I'll try another one later.

 

Public Service Announcement

Zoë Schlanger in the Atlantic: "Throw out your black plastic spatula. In a world of plastic consumer goods, avoiding the material entirely requires the fervor of a religious conversion. But getting rid of black plastic kitchen utensils is a low-stakes move, and worth it. Cooking with any plastic is a dubious enterprise, because heat encourages potentially harmful plastic compounds to migrate out of the polymers and potentially into the food. But, as Andrew Turner, a biochemist at the University of Plymouth recently told me, black plastic is particularly crucial to avoid." This is a gift link from laura h.

Mashable: "Following the 2024 presidential election results and [Elon] Musk's support for ... Donald Trump, users have been deactivating en masse. And this time, it appears most everyone has settled on one particular X alternative: Bluesky.... Bluesky has gained more than 100,000 new sign ups per day since the U.S. election on Nov. 5. It now has over 15 million users. It's enjoyed a prolonged stay on the very top of Apple's App Store charts as well. Ready to join? Here's how to get started on Bluesky[.]"

Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

Democrats' Weekly Address

Marie (Feb 23): As far as I can tell, there isn't any. I hope I'm wrong, but it looks like Democrats are so screwed up, they can't even put together a couple of minutes of video to tell us how screwed we are.

New York Times: “Joy Reid’s evening news show on MSNBC is being canceled, part of a far-reaching programming overhaul orchestrated by Rebecca Kutler, the network’s new president, two people familiar with the changes said. The final episode of Ms. Reid’s 7 p.m. show, 'The ReidOut,' is planned for sometime this week, according to the people, who were not authorized to speak publicly. The show, which features in-depth interviews with politicians and other newsmakers, has been a fixture of MSNBC’s lineup for the past five years. MSNBC is planning to replace Ms. Reid’s program with a show led by a trio of anchors: Symone Sanders Townsend, a political commentator and former Democratic strategist; Michael Steele, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee; and Alicia Menendez, the TV journalist, the people said. They currently co-host 'The Weekend,' which airs Saturday and Sunday mornings.” MB: In case you've never seen “The Weekend,” let me assure you it's pretty awful.

As we watch in horror the rapid destruction of our democratic form of government, it is comforting to remember there is life outside politics. I took a break a while ago to enjoy a brief lesson in the history of the moonwalk: ~~~

But it may go back even further:

And this chronological account is helpful:

New York Times: “Chuck Todd, the former 'Meet the Press' moderator and a longtime fixture of NBC’s political coverage, told colleagues on Friday that he was leaving the network. A nearly two-decade veteran of NBC, Mr. Todd said that Friday would be his last day at NBC.... Mr. Todd, 52, is the latest TV news star to step aside at a moment when salaries are being scrutinized — and slashed — by major media companies. Hoda Kotb exited NBC’s 'Today' show this month, and Neil Cavuto of Fox News and CNN’s Chris Wallace departed their cable news homes late last year.”

CNBC: “ CNN plans to lay off hundreds of employees Thursday [Jan. 23] as it refocuses the business around a global digital audience.... The layoffs come as CNN is rearranging its linear TV lineup and building out digital subscription products. The cuts will help CNN lower production costs and consolidate teams, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss nonpublic changes. Certain shows that are produced in New York or Washington may move to Atlanta, where production can be done more cheaply, said the people. For the most part, the job cuts won’t affect CNN’s most recognizable names, who are under contract, said the people. CNN has about 3,500 employees worldwide.... NBC News is also planning cuts later this week, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss nonpublic changes. While the exact number couldn’t be determined, the job losses will be well under 50....”

New York Times: “The president of MSNBC, Rashida Jones, is stepping down from that position, the company said on Tuesday, a major change at the news network just days before ... Donald J. Trump takes office. Rebecca Kutler, senior vice president for content strategy at MSNBC, will succeed Ms. Jones as interim president, effective immediately. Ms. Jones will stay on in an advisory role through March.... MSNBC is among a bundle of cable channels that its parent company, Comcast, is planning to spin out later this year into a new company.” ~~~

~~~ MSNBC: “On Monday, Jan. 20, MSNBC will present wall-to-wall coverage of the inauguration of ... Donald Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance and will kick off special programming for the first 100 days of the new Trump administration.... On the heels of her field reporting during the last 100 days of the 2024 presidential campaign, Alex Wagner will travel the country to follow the biggest stories as they develop in real-time during Trump’s first 100 days in office, reporting on the impact of his early promises and policies on the electorate for 'Trumpland: The First 100 Days.'... During the first 100 days, Rachel Maddow will bring her signature voice and distinct perspective to the anchor desk every weeknight at 9 p.m. ET, offering viewers in-depth analysis of the key issues facing the country at the outset of Trump’s second term. After April 30, 'The Rachel Maddow Show' will return to its regular schedule of Mondays at 9 p.m. ET and Wagner will return to anchoring 'Alex Wagner Tonight' Tuesday through Friday.”

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Wednesday
Feb052025

The Conversation -- February 5, 2025

Gaza Riviera? Never Mind. From the New York Times' live updates Wednesday of developments in Israel's wars, also linked earlier Wednesday: “Top Trump administration officials on Wednesday walked back elements of ... [Donald] Trump’s proposal to 'take over' Gaza and drive out the Palestinian population, insisting that he had not committed to using U.S. troops to clear the territory and that any relocation of Palestinians would be temporary. Mr. Trump’s brazen proposal to move as many as two million Palestinians out of Gaza and seize and redevelop it as a U.S. territory met with immediate opposition on Wednesday from key American partners and officials around the world, with many expressing support for a Palestinian state, and experts calling the idea a breach of international law.... Speaking to reporters in Guatemala, Secretary of State Marco Rubio twice suggested that Mr. Trump was only proposing to clear out and rebuild Gaza, not claim indefinite possession of the territory. Steve Witkoff, the special envoy to the Middle East, told Republican senators at a closed-door luncheon that Mr. Trump 'doesn’t want to put any U.S. troops on the ground, and he doesn’t want to spend any U.S. dollars at all' on Gaza, according to Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri. And at the White House, the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said 'the president has not committed to putting boots on the ground in Gaza.'...” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Trump's handlers should tell the truth, beginning the walk-backs with, "Look, the guy is incredibly stupid and corrupt...."

Hannah Natanson & Laura Meckler of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that aims to ban transgender athletes from competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams by denying federal funds for schools that allow it.... It’s the latest salvo in Trump’s attack on transgender rights, adding to previous actions that are already ricocheting through school districts and college campuses across the country.... Trump’s orders represent a sharp assertion of presidential power, in particular his threat to pull federal funding from districts that teach about gender, as well as race, in ways he doesn’t like.”

David Sanger & Julian Barnes of the New York Times: “The C.I.A. sent the White House an unclassified email listing all employees hired by the spy agency over the last two years to comply with an executive order to shrink the federal work force, in a move that former officials say risked the list leaking to adversaries. The list included first names and the first initial of the last name of the new hires, who are still on probation — and thus easy to dismiss. It included a large crop of young analysts and operatives who were hired specifically to focus on China, and whose identities are usually closely guarded because Chinese hackers are constantly seeking to identify them.... One former agency officer called the reporting of the names in an unclassified email a 'counterintelligence disaster.'... Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, wrote in a social media post that the sharing of the officers’ names was 'a disastrous national security development.'”

David Nakamura & Silvia Foster-Frau of the Washington Post: “A federal judge Tuesday indefinitely blocked ... Donald Trump’s effort to curb birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants and foreigners with temporary visas, a decision that is likely to mean the executive order will not take effect as planned this month. U.S. District Judge Deborah L. Boardman issued a preliminary injunction after a court hearing in Greenbelt, Maryland, in a lawsuit brought by civil rights groups aiming to stop Trump’s order on the grounds that it violates the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment. The injunction applies nationally and will remain in place as the case is adjudicated. The Maryland lawsuit is one of at least six federal cases brought against Trump’s order by a total of 22 Democratic-led states and more than a half-dozen civil rights groups. A federal judge in Seattle previously issued a 14-day restraining order.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Marie: For the first time I can recall (though it might have happened during Nixon's tenure), the New York Times' headline implies the POTUS* is IN-sane. Not only that, the report's author is the famouly both-sides writer Peter Baker. ~~~

“With Gaza Plan, an Unbound Trump Pushes an Improbable Idea.” Peter Baker of the New York Times: Donald “Trump basked as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel praised his 'willingness to think outside the box.' But when it came to Gaza, Mr. Trump’s thinking on Tuesday was so far outside the box that it was not clear he even knew there was a box.Mr. Trump’s announcement that he intends to seize control of Gaza, displace the Palestinian population and turn the coastal enclave into 'the Riviera of the Middle East' was the kind of thing he might have said to get a rise on 'The Howard Stern Show' a decade or two ago. Provocative, intriguing, outlandish, outrageous — and not at all presidential. But now in his sequel term in the White House, Mr. Trump is advancing ever-more brazen ideas about redrawing the map of the world in the tradition of 19th-century imperialism. First there was buying Greenland, then annexing Canada, reclaiming the Panama Canal and renaming the Gulf of Mexico. And now he envisions taking over a devastated war zone in the Middle East that no other American president would want.” MB: I think this is a gift link. If not, I apologize. ~~~

~~~ Michael Shear, et al., of the New York Times: Donald “Trump declared on Tuesday that the United States should seize control of Gaza and permanently displace the entire Palestinian population of the devastated seaside enclave, one of the most brazen ideas that any American leader has advanced in years. Hosting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the White House, Mr. Trump said that all two million Palestinians from Gaza should be moved to countries like Egypt and Jordan because of the devastation wrought by Israel’s campaign against Hamas after the terrorist attack of Oct. 7, 2023. 'The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a job with it too,' Mr. Trump said at a news conference Tuesday evening. 'We’ll own it and be responsible' for disposing of unexploded munitions and rebuilding Gaza into a mecca for jobs and tourism.” An AP story is here.

~~~ Unbelievable! Here are the New York Times' live updates of Trump administration developments including Donald Trump's meeting with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu: ~~~

Michael Shear, et al.: “... [Donald] Trump proposed on Tuesday that the United States take over Gaza and that all Palestinians there — some two million people — should leave, describing a permanent relocation to one or more sites funded by 'countries of interest with humanitarian hearts.' As he hosted Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, for a joint news conference in the White House, Mr. Trump said that he has studied the conditions in Gaza and his idea to seize and develop it has gotten 'tremendous' support from the 'highest of leadership' as a viable plan to bring peace to the Middle East.”

Peter Baker: “Trump has now added Gaza to his growing list of territories that he wants to seize around the world, along with Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal.... Trump again takes full credit for a cease-fire deal that was first put on the table and painstakingly negotiated by Biden and his team. 'We weren’t helped very much by the Biden administration, I’ll tell you that,' Trump says.... Trump makes clear that he sees Gaza as a new U.S. territory, saying it would be a 'long-term ownership position.' He doesn’t answer the question about what legal authority would allow him to simply take over sovereign territory.... Trump seems to be picking up an idea advanced last year by Jared Kushner, his son-in-law who said that 'Gaza’s waterfront property could be very valuable.'” MB: Indeed, he said Gaza could become “the Riviera of the Middle East.”

Erica Green: “Since taking office, Trump has talked about Gaza more like a real estate developer than a world leader confronting a major conflict. Tonight, it’s become clear why. He just repeatedly referenced taking over the enclave, developing it and creating 'thousands and thousands of jobs.' It is unclear who would benefit from those jobs if the people who live there are forced to leave.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Marie: So the plan is that the Emperor Don will send U.S. troops to plant the U.S. flag in another country, that the soldiers will ethnically-cleanse that portion of the country, that the U.S. soldiers will force other countries in the region to absorb the approximately 2 million people the U.S. soldiers have dispossessed, and that the soldiers then will have secured this portion of a soverign nation for certain unnamed U.S. developers (Trump, Kushner??) to profit from developing beachfront properties in this new U.S.-owned “Riviera of the Middle East.” ~~~

~~~ Frank Thorp & Raquel Uribe of NBC News: “Criticism and concern spread across both sides of the aisle Tuesday night after ... Donald Trump announced that the United States 'will take over the Gaza Strip.' Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called the proposal 'problematic,' adding that he does not think his constituents would be excited about sending U.S. soldiers to take control of Gaza.... Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., slammed the proposal as 'deranged' and 'nuts,' calling U.S. military presence in the region 'a magnet for trouble.'... Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., the only Palestinian American member of Congress..., called the proposal 'ethnic cleansing' and 'fanatical bull---' on X.” ~~~

     ~~~ But then there's supposed Democratic Sen. John Fetterman (Pa.) who told the New York Times "that he would support a potential American occupation of the Gaza Strip...." Paul Campos in LG&$: "This guy has turned into a complete disaster. It should be unnecessary to point out that a US occupation of Gaza would make Fallujah look like a Scout jamboree." (Link is to LG&$ post.) ~~~

     ~~~ The New York Times' live updates of developments Wednesday in Israel's wars are here: Donald “Trump’s brazen proposal to move all Palestinians out of Gaza and make it a U.S. territory met with immediate opposition on Wednesday from key American partners and officials around the world, with many expressing support for a Palestinian state and saying that the plan would breach international law. The proposal also threatens a U.S. ambition for normalized diplomatic relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia. In a statement issued before 4 a.m. local time, Saudi Arabia expressed its 'unequivocal rejection' of attempts to displace Palestinians and reiterated that it would not establish diplomatic ties with Israel in the absence of an independent Palestinian state. Egypt’s foreign ministry said in a separate statement that aid and recovery programs for Gaza must begin 'without the Palestinians leaving.... The Geneva Conventions prohibit the forcible relocation of populations. The United States and Israel have both ratified the conventions.” ~~~

     ~~~ Here are the Washington Post's live updates for Wednesday. ~~~

~~~ David Rising & Jon Gambrell of the AP: “... Donald Trump’s proposal that the United States 'take over' the Gaza Strip and permanently resettle its Palestinian residents was swiftly rejected and denounced on Wednesday by American allies and adversaries alike.... Egypt, Jordan and other American allies in the Middle East have already rejected the idea of relocating more than 2 million Palestinians from Gaza elsewhere in the region.... The prime ministers of Australia and Ireland, foreign ministries from China, New Zealand and Germany, and a Kremlin spokesman all reiterated support for a two-state solution.And so on.

~~~ In today's Comments, Akhilleus liken Trump's Gaza plan to that of one carried out by one of Trump's favorite former presidents. Marie: Akhilleus is wondering who will play Trump in the movie. I'd recommend the Welsh actor Mark Lewis Jones. It's true Jones is much better-looking that Trump, but he is very good at playing vile characters: ~~~

Mark Lewis Jones - Actor

Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: “Gaza peace protesters rallied Americans by the hundreds of thousands to oppose President Joe Biden and vote 'uncommitted' in Democratic primaries. They heckled Vice President Kamala Harris and disrupted her events. On Election Day, Donald Trump prevailed in the majority-Arab town of Dearborn, Michigan. And across the country, many young voters stayed home or even voted for Trump — likely because, in part, they were disenchanted that the Biden administration had been insufficiently tough on Israel. How’s that working out now?”

Zolan Kanno-Youngs of the New York Times: Donald “Trump said on Tuesday that he was open to an offer by El Salvador’s president to jail convicted criminals, including American citizens, in the Central American nation’s notorious 'megaprison.' 'If we had the legal right to do it, I would do it in a heartbeat,' Mr. Trump said. He almost surely does not have the legal right to do it, legal experts say, and any attempt to carry out President Nayib Bukele’s plan would probably be challenged in court. But Mr. Bukele’s proposal to essentially turn El Salvador into a penal colony for the United States showed how far he is willing to go to define himself as Mr. Trump’s primary ally in a region that the American president has disparaged. And for Mr. Trump, even musing over the proposal signaled his willingness to embrace extreme measures to show he is tough on crime and illegal immigration.... [Bukele's] proposal prompted praise from Marco Rubio, Mr. Trump’s secretary of state, as well as Elon Musk....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I don't think Trump will send U.S. prisoners to El Salvador. That's not because he is concerned about the "legality" of it, but because U.S. private prison owners are among his big campaign contributors, and obviously they want to house prisoners in their for-profit jails.

Charlie Savage of the New York Times: “Mr. Trump has opened the throttle on defying legal limits [to his authority]. 'We are well past euphemism about “pushing the limits,” “stretching the envelope” and the like,' said Peter M. Shane, who is a legal scholar in residence at New York Universit.... The array of legal constraints Mr. Trump has violated, Mr. Shane added, amounts to 'programmatic sabotage and rampant lawlessness.' Mr. Trump has effectively nullified laws, such as by ordering the Justice Department to refrain from enforcing a ban on the wildly popular app TikTok and by blocking migrants from invoking a statute allowing them to request asylum. He moved to effectively shutter a federal agency Congress created and tried to freeze congressionally approved spending, including most foreign aid. He summarily fired prosecutors, inspectors general and board members of independent agencies in defiance of legal rules against arbitrary removal.... Mr. Trump appears to have been basically operating with a philosophy that he will do whatever he wants despite any legal impediments, then fight in court if necessary.” Read on. Savage also covers Congressional Republicans' “meekness” (see also Jonathan Chait on this -- linked below).

Perfect. Trump Nominates Sharpiegate Accomplice to Head NOAA. Scott Dance of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump has named Neil Jacobs, an atmospheric scientist who was found to have violated scientific integrity policies during the 'Sharpiegate' scandal of the first Trump administration, to lead the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Jacobs led NOAA on an acting basis from February 2019 through the end of Trump’s first term, including when the president used a Sharpie marker to alter an official National Hurricane Center map to suggest that Hurricane Dorian would hit Alabama and parts of Florida outside its predicted path.... In response to Trump’s [false assertions about the projected path of Dorian], Weather Service forecasters in Birmingham, Alabama, clarified on social media that the state was probably not in Dorian’s path. The confusion prompted an unusual and unsigned NOAA statement in support of Trump’s warnings to Alabama. An investigation found undue political influence in the process of crafting that statement, in violation of NOAA’s standards for scientific integrity, but Jacobs defended the statement and admonished the Birmingham meteorologists.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Marie: It's been quite a long time since I've published one of my sports reports, but circumstances demand one now: ~~~

     ~~~ (1) Alayna Treene & Betsy Klein of CNN: “... Donald Trump is expected to attend Super Bowl LIX at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans on Sunday, a White House official told CNN.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ (2) Michael Silver of the New York Times' Athletic: “According to two [NFL] sources..., league officials recently changed one of the slogans expected to be stenciled in the back of an end zone from 'End Racism' to 'Choose Love.' The game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles will mark the first time since February 2021 that 'End Racism' is not included as a message in the back of a Super Bowl end zone.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ I'll bet you can put (1) and (2) together.

“The Constitutional Crisis Is Here.” Jonathan Chait of the Atlantic: “Elon Musk, to whom Donald Trump has delegated the task of neutering the congressional spending authority laid out in Article I of the Constitution, could hardly be more obvious about his intentions if he rode into Washington on a horse trailed by Roman legions. 'This is the one shot the American people have to defeat BUREAUcracy, rule of the bureaucrats, and restore DEMOcracy, rule of the people,' Musk wrote at 3:59 a.m. today [Tuesday] on his social-media platform. 'We’re never going to get another chance like this. It’s now or never. Your support is crucial to the success of the revolution of the people.'... The Founders, famously, failed to anticipate the rise of political parties. They assumed that each branch of government would jealously guard its own powers, and thus check the others.... Not even the most committed small-government-conservative lawmaker would design a process like the one now occurring: a handful of political novices, many of them drinking deep from the fetid waters of right-wing conspiracy theorizing, tearing through the federal budget, making haphazard decisions about what to scrap.” Thank you to laura h. for this gift link. ~~~

~~~ Even Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post Gets It: “No president in history has caused more damage to the nation more quickly. As we enter Week 3 of ... Donald Trump’s second term, the chaos and disruption of his first look quaint by comparison. The country survived Trump 1. Now, it faces a real threat that the harm he inflicts during his second term will be irreparable. The United States’ standing in the world, its ability to keep the country safe, the federal government’s fundamental capacity to operate effectively — all of these will take years to repair, if that can be achieved at all.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Paul Campos in LG&$ republishes a signficant portion of a firewalled Wired story: “A 25-year-old engineer named Marko Elez, who previously worked for two Elon Musk companies, has direct access to Treasury Department systems responsible for nearly all payments made by the US government, three sources tell Wired. Two of those sources say that Elez’s privileges include the ability not just to read but to write code on two of the most sensitive systems in the US government: the Payment Automation Manager and Secure Payment System at the Bureau of the Fiscal Service (BFS). Housed on a top-secret mainframe, these systems control, on a granular level, government payments that in their totality amount to more than a fifth of the US economy. Despite reporting that suggests that Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) task force has access to these Treasury systems on a 'read-only' level, sources say Elez ... has many administrator-level privileges. Typically, those admin privileges could give someone the power to log in to servers through secure shell access, navigate the entire file system, change user permissions, and delete or modify critical files. That could allow someone to bypass the security measures of, and potentially cause irreversible changes to, the very systems they have access to.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I can't figure out if Josh Marshall wrote the following post or if one of his readers did. In any event, Josh seems confident enough in its accuracy to publish it: ~~~

     ~~~ Josh Marshall of TPM, publisher: “A 25-year-old DOGE operative named Marko Elez in fact has admin privileges on these critical systems, which directly control and pay out roughly 95% of payments made by the U.S. government, including Social Security checks, tax refunds and virtually all contract payments. I can independently confirm these details based on conversations going back to the weekend. I can further report that Elez not only has full access to these systems, he has already made extensive changes to the code base for these critical payment system.... Phrases like 'freaking out' are, not surprisingly, used to describe the reaction of the engineers who were responsible for maintaining the code base until a week ago. The changes that have been made all seem to relate to creating new paths to block payments and possibly leave less visibility into what has been blocked. I want to emphasize that the described changes are not being tested in a dev environment (i.e., a not-live environment) but have already been pushed into production.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Alan Rappeport of the New York Times: “The Treasury Department said on Tuesday that it was not stopping or rejecting federal expenditures and that it was committed to safeguarding the nation’s payment system following widespread backlash after Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency was granted access to the system. In a letter to members of Congress [from Jonathan Blum, a legislative affairs official at the Treasury Department], the Treasury Department said that it was conducting a review of the system to 'maximize payment integrity' for agencies and the public. It described the initiative as an expansion of a review that had gotten underway during the Biden administration.... The letter was sent as what appeared to be hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Treasury Department building to express their opposition to Mr. Musk’s involvement in the federal payments system. Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrats on the banking and finance committees, called on the Government Accountability Office on Tuesday to begin an investigation into Mr. Musk’s access to the payment system.”

Faiz Siddiqui, et al., of the Washington Post: “The assistant commissioner of a division of the General Services Administration told staff early this week that layoffs across the federal government are 'likely' after the deferred resignation offer expires Thursday, according to an email obtained by The Washington Post — the sharpest move yet toward forcibly removing many of the 2.3 million civilian federal employees.... The email was the latest sign that administration officials fear few career civil servants will take their offer to quit.... Musk’s allies are also now running GSA, which manages real estate and some procurement and information technology across the federal government.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Spies on the Loose. Katie Bo Lillis & Kaitlan Collins of CNN: “The Central Intelligence Agency on Tuesday became the first major national security agency to offer so-called buyouts to its entire workforce, a CIA spokesperson and two other sources familiar with the offer said, part of  Donald Trump’s broad effort to shrink the federal government and shape it to his agenda. The offer — which tells federal employees that they can quit their jobs and receive roughly eight months of pay and benefits — had up until Tuesday not been made available to most national security roles in an apparent cognizance of their critical function to the security of the nation. CIA Director John Ratcliffe personally decided he also wanted the CIA to be involved, one of the sources said.... Still, even as the offer was sent to the entire workforce at the agency, it was not immediately clear whether all would be allowed to take it.”

Michael Sainato of the Guardian: “Staffers with Elon Musk’s 'department of government efficiency' (Doge) reportedly entered the headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) in Silver Spring, Maryland, and the Department of Commerce in Washington DC today, inciting concerns of downsizing at the agency. 'They apparently just sort of walked past security and said: “Get out of my way,” and they’re looking for access for the IT systems, as they have in other agencies,' said Andrew Rosenberg, a former Noaa official.... 'They will have access to the entire computer system, a lot of which is confidential information.'... Rosenberg noted it had been a longtime goal of corporations that rely on Noaa data to prevent the agency from making the data public, instead of giving it directly to private corporations that create products based on it, such as weather forecasting services.”

Josh Campbell, et al., of CNN: “FBI officials have complied with demands to provide the Justice Department with details of thousands of employees who worked on investigations related to the January 6, 2021, US Capitol riot, according to people familiar with the situation.... More than 5,000 employee details were submitted, including employee ID numbers, job titles and their role in the January 6 investigations, sources said, but not their names. There are more than 13,000 agents and 38,000 total FBI employees. Meanwhile, officials dispatched by Elon Musk have been seen at FBI headquarters.” MB: Needless to say, it would be childsplay for the little Muskovites to match ID numbers to names. (Also linked yesterday.)

Karoun Demirjian, et al., of the New York Times: “Nearly the entire global work force of the main American aid agency, known as U.S.A.I.D., will be put on leave by the end of Friday, according to an official memo the agency posted online Tuesday night. The notice said only a small subset of 'designated personnel responsible for mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programs' would be exempt. Employees designated as direct hires will be put on paid leave, and those posted abroad will be expected to return to the United States within 30 days, the notice said, adding that the agency would 'arrange and pay for return travel.'” Contractors will be laid off if they are not deemed essential. The notice was posted on the agency’s website, which had been dark since Saturday.” An NPR story is here.

USPS Abides by Trump Tariffs on China. Jacob Bogage & Jaclyn Peiser of the Washington Post: “The U.S. Postal Service abruptly suspended inbound package shipments from China and Hong Kong on Tuesday as President Donald Trump’s trade war began in earnest. The vast majority of goods shipped from China arrive outside the mail system, but Trump’s order specifically eliminated a 'de minimis' tariff exemption for small quantities of items and low-value items, including those shipped through a postal service. That exemption covered items worth less than $800. The mail agency’s move may block or delay, at least temporarily, parcels from retailers including Shein and Temu and some from Amazon. It could also pose significant delays for items mailed from China to the United States and drive up shipping costs.... Temu and Shein are responsible for an estimated 30 percent of packages shipped daily into the United States....” ~~~

     ~~~ Update. CBS/AFP: "The U.S. Postal Service on Wednesday halted an order to suspend incoming shipments from China that threatened to severely disrupt trade between the two major economies. A day after announcing the suspension in the wake of ... [Donald] Trump's tariffs on China, the postal service said in an online update that it would 'continue accepting all international inbound mail and packages from China and Hong Kong Posts.' It added it was working to 'implement an efficient collection mechanism for the new China tariffs to ensure the least disruption to package delivery.' Letters and flats were not included in the suspension, the postal service said."

Aah, Nothin' to Worry About, After All. Matt Dixon, et al., of NBC News: “Tech billionaire and newly minted 'special government employee' Elon Musk has received quiet White House reminders in recent days that while he has wide, nearly unprecedented latitude to slash spending and reorient the federal government at a breakneck pace, his power is not unchecked. Trump has suggested publicly, and aides have signaled behind the scenes, that Musk is still a staffer and needs to report to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles. 'I’m not sure it was his preferred direction, and it did not seem like he was expecting it,' a Trump aide told NBC News of Musk’s being told he needed to answer to Wiles. 'But it has been reiterated to him in ways that, yes, he reports to the chief of staff.'”

Hannah Knowles, et al., of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump’s administration launched one of its most brazen challenges yet to Congress’s authority this week when officials led by billionaire Elon Musk gutted and threatened to abolish the U.S. Agency for International Development and suggested that other agencies should brace for overhauls. But Republican lawmakers have raised few objections about the push to ax USAID, alarming Democrats who say the GOP is ceding power to the White House.... Even as Democrats warned of a 'constitutional crisis,' it was business as usual on Republican-controlled Capitol Hill on Tuesday....”

Tyler McBrien of Lawfare in a New York Times op-ed: “The full picture of the government overhaul has yet to come into focus, and the contours of [Elon] Musk’s role and mission in that transformation remain sketchy.... Who exactly is running the federal government?... The possibility [is] that the actual answer is Mr. Musk — the world’s richest man — and other unaccountable, unelected, unconfirmed allies cozy with the president. Political economists have a name for that: state capture.... Revelations of this especially pernicious, widespread form of corruption have occurred in other countries — a striking example occurred in the country of Mr. Musk’s birth, South Africa — and they offer cautionary tales for democratic governments everywhere.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Chait reminds us that the founders failed to foresee the development of political parties and how those parties would undermine the checks & balances the founders wrote into the Constitution. But here's something they did not overlook: the president must be "a natural-born citizen ... of the United States." As it turns out, the current president* meets that particular Constitutional standard, but he has ceded a good deal of control to a foreign-born billionaire. So what we have is a corrupt president*, a corrupt Congress and a corrupt Supreme Court all working in service of a corrupt foreign billionaire who is making wantonly illegal decisions, no doubt some to his particular advantage. We are officially a gigantic banana republic.

Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: “A power-mad president possessed of radical theories of executive authority and convinced of his own royal prerogative has given de facto control of most of the federal government to one of the richest men on the planet, if not the richest, whose own interests are tangled up in those of rival governments and foreign autocracies as well as the United States.... Even if anyone had elected Elon Musk to anything, the last week would still be one of the most serious examples of executive branch malfeasance in American history.... No one in the executive branch has the legal authority to unilaterally cancel congressional appropriations. No one has the legal authority to turn the Treasury payments system into a means of political retribution. No one has the authority to summarily dismiss civil servants without cause. No one has the authority to take down and scrub government websites of public data, itself paid for by American taxpayers. And no private citizen has the authority to access the sensitive data of American citizens for either information gathering or their own, unknown purposes.... The president’s opponents, whoever they are, cannot expect a return to the Constitution as it was. Whatever comes next, should the country weather this attempted hijacking, will need to be a fundamental rethinking of what this system is and what we want out of it. Anything less will set us up for yet another Trump and yet another Musk.”

Shania Shelton & Morgan Rimmer of CNN: “The Senate voted Tuesday night to confirm Pam Bondi as attorney general.... The vote was 54-46. The vote was mostly along party lines though Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania joined Republicans in supporting Bondi. Fetterman told reporters after the vote that he decided to support Bondi because of her qualifications, even though she is not his 'ideal' choice. 'I’m saying that she’s, she’s qualified, and it’s not my ideal pick, but it turns out that (former Attorney General) Merrick Garland wasn’t anyone’s ideal one either,' he said.” MB: “Merrick Garland sucks, too,” might not be the greatest excuse for confirming another crappy AG.

Early Tuesday, Senate Chickenshits Came Home to Roost. Amanda Seitz & Stephen Groves of the AP: “Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vocal vaccine skeptic and activist lawyer, appeared on track to become the nation’s health secretary after winning the crucial support of Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy, a doctor who says Kennedy has assured him he would not topple the nation’s childhood vaccination program. In a starkly partisan vote, the Republican-controlled Senate Finance Committee advanced Kennedy’s nomination 14-13, sending his bid to oversee the $1.7 trillion U.S. Health and Human Services agency for a full vote on the Senate floor. A full Senate vote has not yet been scheduled, but with Cassidy’s vote no longer in doubt Kennedy’s nomination is likely to succeed absent any last-minute vote switches.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Beatrice Peterson of ABC News: "The Senate Intelligence Committee voted to advance former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard's nomination for director of national intelligence in a closed-door session on Tuesday afternoon. Gabbard advanced in a 9-8 vote along party lines, according to senators leaving the meeting. All Republicans voted in favor of Gabbard while all Democrats opposed her, according to a source familiar with the vote.... Gabbard, a former Democratic Hawaii member of Congress turned Republican, picked up three key Republican votes on Monday from Sens. Susan Collins, James Lankford and Todd Young. They had previously been critical of her past statements on Snowden and her opposition to government surveillance programs.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Shaila Dewan of the New York Times: “A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the Bureau of Prisons from enacting ... [Donald] Trump’s executive order to house transgender women with male inmates and stop medical treatment related to gender transitions. Judge Royce C. Lamberth, of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, said that three transgender prisoners who brought a suit to stop the order had 'straightforwardly demonstrated that irreparable harm will follow' if their request for a restraining order were to be denied. Judge Lamberth was appointed by former President Ronald Reagan. The lawsuit was one of a barrage of legal actions seeking to stop ... [Mr.] Trump’s agenda, including several brought on behalf of transgender prisoners, military service members and young people under 19.” MB: Judge Lamberth is an 80-year-old, white conservative and he is married to a woman, so I'm guessing he's straight. Yet he didn't have any trouble seeing that Trump's attacks on transgender people were unlawful.

The Resistance, Ctd. Mattathias Schwartz & Charlie Savage of the New York Times: “Workers from across the federal government set off a legal counteroffensive against ... [Donald] Trump and Elon Musk on Tuesday, challenging the legality of efforts to raze their agencies, single them out publicly or push them out of their jobs. The raft of lawsuits, filed by F.B.I. agents, public sector unions, representatives of older Americans and liberal-leaning legal groups, hinges on fine points of law that deal with matters ranging from the privacy of taxpayer data to intricacies of federal rule-making. But together, they amount to the opening shots in an emerging legal battle over the constitutional order, checks and balances and the founders’ vision of the separation of powers. It will be up to the courts to decide whether the president has the power to not only direct the executive branch, but also to forcefully recast it in his own image. It may also be up to the judicial branch of government to find a way to ensure that its own decisions are enforced.” ~~~

~~~ The Resistance, Ctd. Jeremy Roebuck & Perry Stein of the Washington Post: “Two groups of FBI agents sued the Justice Department on Tuesday in an attempt to block it from maintaining or publicly releasing a list of thousands of bureau employees who worked on investigations tied to ... Donald Trump or the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Attorneys for nine of the plaintiffs, who filed their suit anonymously in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, said the compilation of the list was retaliatory and a possible precusor for unlawful firings. Using case assignment information as a basis to terminate FBI employees would violate civil service protections, they said. The lawsuit also raises concerns that Trump administration officials might make public the names of the agents who were assigned to work on the cases, exposing them and their families to retribution from now-pardoned defendants charged in the Jan. 6 attack.” (Also linked yesterday.)

~~~ The Resistance, Ctd. Brad Reed of the Raw Story: "Federal workers have filed an emergency lawsuit demanding that courts mandate that Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency shuts down the server it has set up at the US Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM) headquarters. Wired reports that an attorney representing two unidentified government workers is alleging that 'the server’s continued operation not only violates federal law but is potentially exposing vast quantities of government staffers’ personal information to hostile foreign adversaries through unencrypted email.' The complaint alleges that the DOGE server was installed 'without OPM — the government’s human resources department — conducting a mandatory privacy impact assessment required under federal law,' writes Wired." (Also linked yesterday.)

The Resistance, Ctd. Sort Of. Jeff Stein, et al., of the Washington Post: “The chaotic blitz by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has triggered legal objections across Washington, with officials in at least a half-dozen federal agencies and departments raising alarms about whether the billionaire’s assault on government is breaking the law.... Internal legal objections have been raised at the Treasury Department, the Education Department, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the General Services Administration, the Office of Personnel Management, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the White House budget office, among others. 'So many of these things are so wildly illegal that I think they’re playing a quantity game and assuming the system can’t react to all this illegality at once,' said David Super ... [of Georgetown Law School.... At a ... fundamental level, several legal experts and government officials expressed alarm over how Musk’s team appears to operate as a strike team, outside typical agency rules and constitutional checks on executive power.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Greenland. Kelsey Ables of the Washington Post: “Greenland on Tuesday passed a law banning foreign contributions to political parties, an assertion of self-governance amid concern over ... Donald Trump’s calls for the United States to acquire the island.”

News Lede

New York Times: “Search crews on Tuesday recovered the final remains of 67 people who died in Washington last week after a collision between a passenger jet and a U.S. Army helicopter. The authorities said that all but one of the bodies had been identified.”

Reader Comments (24)

Marie: Thank you for wading through the mountain of idiocy out there and posting the lowlights. Lawrence O'Donnell's first segment last night, including the sharp rebuke from Saudi Arabia on the Palestinian homeland statement by the president*, was a concise rundown.

I talked yesterday with a government employee I know. After the first memo she received, "rat out anyone who is doing anything DEI or you will be fired", followed by what they are calling the "Fork" memo, "You have reached a fork in the road. Go get a private job where you can be productive...", she and her colleagues are hunkered down in their closed office doing their work. She said they don't agree on many things (which I take to mean Rs and Ds) but it is clear to all that the current mismanagement is insane. Some of the actions being taken, like closing consulates, are rooted in a true need to re-evaluate what those offices need to do in a more connected world, but to shutter an office and then find out what services in that location are necessary is brutal and wasteful.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterNiskyGuy

Fat Hitler’s Trail of Tears

Yes, as a Hitler manqué, the Orange Monster is both fat and stupid, but just like his idol Adolf, he is also showing himself to be an inhuman beast.

FH has a well known admiration for Andrew Jackson. It’s highly unlikely that this idiot has any factual knowledge of Jackson outside of his mythologized image (as played in the movies by right-wing gun knobber and hero Charlton Heston) as a tough guy who didn’t care fuck all about laws. Oh yeah, he has asserted that Jackson was no fan of the Civil War, a conflict that didn’t start until fifteen years after he died, but there ya go, so much for actual knowledge.

One thing he has likely been told, by admiring Heritage nativists and white nationalists, is the story of how Old Hickory got rid of them pesky injun savages, the forced relocation of over 60,000 native Americans from the lands their tribes had inhabited for perhaps thousands of years. Maybe someone told Jackson they could have a Riviera on the Alabama River. Nonetheless, the ethnic cleansing opened up tens of thousands of acres of developable land for “enlightened” white settlers.

The Native Americans? Oh, those guys. Yeah, well, almost a third died along the Trail of Tears, but no biggie.

Now Fat Hitler wants his own Trail of Tears, only in a foreign country. He wants to send over two million Palestinians packing, off to some patch of desert somewhere, he don’t know where exactly, that’s for the peons to figure out. He’s the stable genius who redraws the world map according to his personal whims, and of course, real estate deal making ideas. Kick ‘em all out, clean up the mess, build luxury condos on the Mediterranean coast, and voila! Another genius plan by the greatest ever.

Aside from the insanity of this entire idea, there’s the astonishing lack of interest in what would happen to two million Palestinians who now, after being bombed, shot, murdered, and displaced by Bibi and his SS, now have to contend with some bloated idiot drunk on his own sense of world changing power, taking what little land they have left.

So it’s off to Fat Hitler’s Trail of Tears.

And US taxpayers can foot the bill for demolition and reconstruction that would benefit the Trump real estate business. (Reconstruction, by the way, that Israel should pay for.)

No conflict there, right?

He must be wondering who’ll play him in the movie version telling the story of his great genius. I’m guessing that’s probably number one on the minds of the starving, homeless, battered Palestinians he plans to shove into the desert.

Hey, all you Palestinian voters in Michigan who picked this guy instead of Biden (who actually created and negotiated the peace plan Fat Hitler is now taking full credit for…). Happy now?

You knew this was the most aggressive, Muslim hating racist in America. But you helped put him back in charge.

Happy now? Because if this pig gets his very own Trail of Tears, sending your people off to die in the desert, you own it.

Good job.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

The New York Times…I gotta tell ya, kids, they’re right on top of things. Peter (Both Sides) Baker calls Trump’s plan to march two million Palestinians into the desert then build TrumpLand on the Gaza Strip “improbable”. Improbable, Pete? How about Fucking Nuts! How ‘bout that? Look it up. “Improbable” means unlikely, which means not impossible.

Is this psycho nightmare possible in this particular universe?

Then, in the Michael Shear, et al article, this barking mad scheme is described as the “most brazen by a leader in years”. Yeah. Like how many years? 100? 200? How about “stupidest idea by an American President, ever?” How ‘bout that? Sure, American presidents have had brazenly stoopid ideas before (Dubya’s War of Choice, anyone?). Andy Jackson’s Trail of Tears being one. But that viciously inhumane idea was still restricted to this country and its territories. Fat Hitler announced that he wants to takeover foreign territories and forcibly remove the people living there.

Improbable my ass.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

“We will fight back”, Elizabeth Warren speaking at Treasury Department protest Tuesday.

https://youtu.be/qSXeUISCCgE?si=i9RML6r4hQCFs0cp

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterJulie in MA

Wait, wait…I just had a vision of the future…

Fat Hitler, with Bibi’s blessing (getting rid of two million Palestinians? How could he not love that?), clears out Gaza. The Trump-Kushner Gaza resort opens and rich tenants flock to the New Riviera. Suddenly, a missile attack from Iran wipes out a whole city block. As wealthy residents (including Elon Musk, who has his own private tower) race out into the streets, a tunnel missed by the Trump Construction Company opens up and 2,000 Hamas fighters emerge with automatic weapons to, um…welcome the newcomers.

Another successful Trump-Kushner venture

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

To be fair, here's a list of all the great things this new "government"
has done for us since Jan 20th:
____

End of list.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterForrestMorris
February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

After seeing how FH, Elon, Rubio, Bessent, etc have behaved and the damage they have already done to our government to willingly throw more Molotov cocktails into our healthcare and intelligence communities shows how none of these Republicans care about anything but themselves, and even then barely. I guess most of them believe they are old enough that our healthcare won't completely fall apart before they pass away and don't need it anymore. They think that things will hold together just long enough to get theirs. Though their families will have to fend for themselves. But as they toss accelerant in every single corner of our society things could easily combust much quicker than they anticipate. No checks, no guardrails, no cares for the fates of all us plebeians forced to deal with the full fallout of society's collapse. Though now if we cause too much noise they can send us to rot in El Salvador where I'm sure all US Constitutional protections will still be afforded us, lmao. Deep breaths.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS
February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

Truth in advertising
White Washing

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

Not a single one of these Republicans actually took the oath of office to be sworn in to their government job. They had no intention of protecting or defending the Constitution or seeing to faithfully discharging their duties. Therefore they were never officially sworn in and that half of Congress should not be allowed inside the Capitol Building. And everything the Republicans have done should be null and void. Democrats and Independents who took their oaths should get on with doing the people's business. That includes impeaching Fat Hitler for his many crimes, Musk and his cronies, and then our criminals on the Supreme Court. Without the traitors around to run interference we could start realizing the Founding Fathers' dreams of a government working for the people. I mean crazier things have happened, just look at the news from any day of the last two weeks. A man can dream

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS
February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

Norm Ornstein

"Fighting the Putsch
Democrats need to throw every possible wrench into the plans of Trump, Musk, and their GOP cultists in Congress

Doing so will also underscore how serious the threat is to our system, thereby forcing media to cover it. Here are some of the ways to use the rules to delay and discomfit the GOP majority; no easy action or votes."

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

What a Coincidence!

With multiple fire hoses of illegal, unconstitutional, and downright criminal shit gushing 24/7 from the Bleak House and the MuskRat’s Bond Villain bunker 18 floors beneath the Opioid Office from which emanate the Mein Kampf edicts currently stripping the flesh off the Federal government, it’s easy to miss the everyday, garden variety grifts and cozy cronyism that works like calcium building the warped bones of Trumpism.

I missed this one entirely.

As Shady Vance was being sworn in (a joke, really, since oaths of office mean nothing to these monsters) by Beery Bart O’Kavanaugh, just behind VP Couch Diddler was his wife, Usha Vance, who had previously clerked for both Beery Bart, and Little Johnny Roberts. A two-fer! Such a coincidence. I mean, it’s just scurrilous to imagine that the Trumpy Bleak House would lose no opportunities to cozy up to the Supine Court that will soon be flooded with cases that will give this bunch of Casuistry Clowns a chance to support the Constitution and the rule of law, or MAGA authoritarianism. Right?

They’ve already signaled that the 14th amendment is optional, so no surprise if rule of law is as well, but why take chances?

I’m gonna way out on a limb here and suggest that Eightball Junior didn’t know about the Vance-Supreme Court connection, but I’m sure the Project 2025 Heritage vipers whispering nasty evil into Fat Hitler’s ear knew all about it and pointed out that such a connection couldn’t hurt.

These fucking people don’t miss a single slimy trick. But there’s so much slime that small rivulets of the stuff get missed sometimes.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

The Normalizing NYT headline above:
"These are the Major Obstacles to T****'s Gaza Plan"

It goes on to mention, if it's not too much trouble, that it "would be time-consuming, extraordinarily costly, and probably a violation of international law."

It should be:
T****'s Illegal Plan to Ethnically Cleanse Gaza Will Destroy the Lives of Gazans and Make Us Less Safe

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterNiskyGuy

And while I’m thinking of the Supine Court, I recently read about the eruption of MAGA magma over the necklace worn by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson at Fat Hitler’s coronation.

This particular accessory, actually a cowrie shell collar, dates back to In African folklore, it was believed that the shells could ward off evil and protect its wearers from being enslaved. Once the history of this collar came out, MAGA mental cases hit the roof.

“She’s disrespecting der Führer! The nerve of that darkie!”

(So wait…they’re pissed because Jackson wants to ward off evil? I guess they’re Pro Evil. But what am I saying? Of COURSE they are. They’re MAGAts!)

This sensible, moderate response was quickly followed with demands that Brown recuse herself from any future case involving Fat Hitler or his many unconstitutional eggzecutive orders.

Because recusal is only for Democrats.

Anyway, more hair on fire screeching from the anal cysts who run everything now but want even more.

Hmm…I might have to get me some’a them cowrie shells for myself. Couldn’t hurt.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus
February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

Ross Andersen, in The Atlantic, is alarmed because
DOGE Could Compromise America’s Nuclear Weapons
"The employees at DOGE are reportedly working seven days a week, on very little sleep. This slumber-party atmosphere isn’t a great fit for the sober and secretive world of nuclear weapons, where security lapses are hugely consequential....Nuclear-security lapses don’t need to be intentional to cause lasting damage....
Even the mere perception that DOGE was not minding proper security protocols could hinder the NNSA’s relationships with other countries, which are essential to its nonproliferation work. These countries may not feel like they can trust the U.S. during a security breach or other kinds of emergencies.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered Commenterlaura hunter

Is John Fetterman still having a stroke? What is with this guy? Democrats of all stripes lined up to support him, even as Fat Hitler’s choice, Dr. Snake Oil Oz, was attacking him for a medical condition. But now he’s sucking up to the MAGA Dork Lord and lecturing Democrats about being nice to the MAGAts??

Jesus. And enough with the hoodies and the high school shorts. We get it. You’re cool. Now why not act like a person with a brain?

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Fat Hitler walking back his latest Big Idea to grab Gaza?

To quote Gomer Pyle. “Surprise, surprise, surprise!”

I guess one of his testicle cozies worked up enough gumption to inform Red Chief (apologies to O Henry) that his stable genius idea was stoopid, stoopid, stoopid, and no “wealthy Middle East country was gonna take in two million refugees from Fatty’s Trail of Tears.

Still, his PoT ‘enablers and the Heritage “Trump Whisperers” who ordered extra shots at their favorite bar last night, must love that Fat Hitler’s most insane babblings send millions around the world wasting time and effort trying to figure out what fresh hell had just been unleashed.

“He’s an idiot, but he’s our idiot. Just keep him signing our executive orders and get him another Big Mac.”

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Job Requirements

"The chair of the Libertarian Party's National Committee suddenly resigned last month as embezzling allegations swirled around her — and she quickly accepted a job in Donald Trump's administration.

Angela McArdle stepped down from the national organization on January 24, three days after Jack Porter, a former Libertarian candidate for Iowa governor, went public with his investigation into a company called Freedom Calls LLC. He claims the party chair had used it to direct more than $45,000 in party funds to her domestic partner Austin Padget, who had apparently set up the company, reported Reason."

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

DEI

"The United States Military Academy has just eliminated all Cadet clubs and activities for POC."

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterRAS

RAS,

So, my wife asks, will the academies retain all their Muslim and Jewish clubs?

Seemed like a good question to me.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

I see over at The Guardian the headline, “Senate Democrats pledge to hold floor all night in protest of T$$$$ budget pick - live”. That would be Vought brain child of Project 2025. I don’t see this on NYT.

February 5, 2025 | Unregistered CommenterJulie in MA
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