"Good Enough" by Bonnie Raitt (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Friday, November 21, 2025
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Trump Is a Dead Duck
It happened.
House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson was finally forced to swear in newly elected Representative Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ), who was the 218th signatory to the discharge petition to release the Epstein files. With that, the House had a vote on the issue, and, to everyone's surprise, the vote to release the Epstein files did not get 218 votes.
It got 427 votes. Of the eight House members who didn't vote for it, seven of them didn't vote. The only one who voted no was Representative Clay Higgins (R-LA), about as MAGA as MAGA gets.
With that overwhelming vote in favor of releasing the files, the Senate consented unanimously to have the files released. Trump - who suddenly said he wanted the Epstein files released - signed the bill authorizing their release. He vetoed it not because he has nothing to hide and wants to prove it after being harassed over the files for so long but because the vote in favor of releasing the files was so overwhelming that he didn't want to be humiliated by being overridden.
Now, just about everyone in the media is calling Trump a lame-duck President. I won't call him that, because to do so would grant that I should call him a President. But I do agree that he's living on borrowed time, and hopefully, the lease is up soon. Not on January 20, 2029 or on November 4 2026, but much, much sooner. Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution allows an entire presidential administration to be removed for . . . treason.
Feeling like a dead duck . . . spitting out pieces of his broken luck . . .
Monday, November 17, 2025
Kiss of Death
Sunday, November 16, 2025
The Ballad of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein
I've heard so many minute details about these e-mails to the point where my brain hurts. So let me boil it down for you:
Saturday, November 15, 2025
Imaginary Friends
In Marion, Ohio in 1967, two teenagers who had just graduated from high school were hanging out and listening to the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, enraptured by the groundbreaking arrangements in the band's latest work. The teenage boys, Robert Sims and Kevin McClaine, had been in a high school rock and roll band and had played numerous school dances and events before the band broke up in advance of taking their senior finals and graduating. Now, that summer, they had few prospects of their own. "Robbie," as Sims was called by his friends, was less academically accomplished than his two younger sisters, and his father, frustrated by Robbie's middling grades, wanted him to work in his walk-up insurance office downtown on West Center Street, and Kevin had no immediate plans for college. Sims, who played guitar and sang, and McClaine, who played guitar and bass and also sang, were working at part-time jobs wondering what to do next. The more they listened to Sgt. Pepper - and, when released in the U.S. later that year, Jimi Hendrix's debut album, Are You Experienced? - the more they were convinced that they should form a new band. Inspired by the new "power trio" concept epitomized by the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream, they found Eric Martin, a local drummer, and got him to join them. Soon they were headed for Cleveland to take part in the burgeoning rock scene that would eventually include the James Gang and the Raspberries.
Sims had been influenced by the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and folk and country music, while McClaine had drawn inspiration from the Rolling Stones, Motown, and bluesmen like Howlin' Wolf. "Kevin introduced me to the blues," Sims later recalled, "and listening to guys like Muddy Waters and Mississippi Fred McDowell shaped and inspired me as a guitarist." Eventually, they settled on a permanent name, the Streamers - "it was the only available name we could think of that we all hated the least," McClaine said - and with an expanded lineup that included keyboardist/vocalist Joe Wood (below) and second guitarist Tim Wright, they released their self-titled debut album on a small label in the spring of 1971.
Schumer completely made up these two constituents to represent the type of voters who are prevalent in the Long Island suburbs and elsewhere for his 2007 book "Positively American: Winning Back the Middle-Class Majority One Family at a Time," which was meant to be a lesson in how Democrats could remain competitive with swing voters who lean more Republican than Democratic. Schumer mentioned the Baileys 265 times in 264 pages - one mention a page, with at least one page mentioning them twice.
Friday, November 14, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - November 14, 2025
Thursday, November 13, 2025
MS Now? MS No!
As you may have heard ,the spinoff of MSNBC from NBC News and COmcast is just about complete, and what used to be called MSNBC for merely thirty years is to be known as MS NOW.
MS Now? Nah, not now. Maybe later . . .
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
A Golden Farewell
Born in 1940 to an Italian family in Baltimore, moved to California, developed incredible skills to convey a statement . . .What can I say? This American original is one of the most influential people of the past century.
But enough about Frank Zappa . . .
Once Pelosi got the Affordable Care Act passed, she should have prepared the next generation of House Democrats for leadership, but like her ex-friend Joe Biden, she held onto power too long, freezing out House Democrats young enough to be her children (and when one of them, Mikie Sherrill - my congresswoman, now governor-elect of New Jersey - was first sworn into the House, she voted for another House Democrat to be Speaker). Her lieutenants were also oldsters, James Clyburn of South Carolina and Steny Hoyer of her native Maryland - hardly an indication of trust in the younger generations. Her handling of Joe Biden's plans to stand for re-election to the Presidency in 2024 - refusing to take his yeses for an answer when he answered the question as to whether he was staying in the campaign - may have been justified when it became apparent that Biden would have to step down, but that doesn't excuse her ungraceful method of getting to change his mind, which was about as subtle as a pie in the face.
Her last great act came in 2024, after she stepped down as leader of the House Democrats when she used her power to deny Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York the chance to serve as ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee after Trump was returned to power and instead pushed (successfully) for Gerry Connelly of Virginia, who was 74 and dying of esophageal cancer, because it was "his turn." (A few months later, the Grim Reaper also decided it was Connelly's turn.) Pelosi remained adamant against a generational change not on her terms to the very end, deciding her successor and leaving the keys to her fiefdom to Hakeem Jeffries, the one guy from Brooklyn that's as feckless and as malleable as Chuck Schumer.
Anyway, I hope Nancy enjoys the winter of her life when she goes into retirement. Just one tip, Madam Speaker Emerita - watch out where those Huskies go, and don't you eat the yellow snow! 😝
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Book Review: "107 Days" by Kamala Harris
Monday, November 10, 2025
Eight Turncoats
Sunday, November 9, 2025
No, No, Norah
I am so glad I ended my beautiful-women picture blog.
It gets worse. In going over the full transcript of the interview, voting-rights attorney and activist Marc Elias found that O'Donnell had not only failed to challenge Trump in the footage that was actually broadcast, she had not challenged Trump in the parts of the interview that weren't included in the on-air version. "When I read the full transcript of the interview," Elias wrote on his own Web site Democracy Docket, "I realized there had been no pushback, no corrections, no challenging follow-ups. The entire interview had been an open-ended opportunity for Trump to tell rambling lies, only to have them cleaned up into a more polished product."
Saturday, November 8, 2025
I Am Still a Secessionist
A lot of pundits are hailing Tuesday's election results - in which the Republicans got slaughtered - as a sign that America has bottomed out and advocates of democracy are fighting back. Well, that's as may be. I still say that the United States should be broken up into smaller countries.
Why?
Well, for one thing, this guy is still President.
And even if the military overthrew Trump and his gang of MAGA morons tomorrow, too much damage has already been done. The United States is the most distrusted and most despised nation in the world because of Trump's foreign policy - USAID gone, NATO weakened, deference to Putin - and the U.S. would not be welcome if it ever tries to re-enter the Paris Agreement or the World Health Organization. At home, he has eviscerated social services and destroyed the the law enforcement and national security apparatuses, and these systems will take generations to rebuild - if they can be rebuilt. And what Trump and Project 2025 didn't decimate, the ongoing government shutdown did. Heck, since the government is shut down with no hope of reopening it, why don't we just terminate it right now by dissolving the damn Union?
What has been done to this country is irreparable. The 2026 midterms aren't for another year, yet it is already too late to undo the damage that's been done. It is all in smoldering ruins. Which is why I still believe it is time to break up the U.S. into separate countries.
And, again, here's my map of what I think a post-Union central North America should look like.Friday, November 7, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - November 7, 2025
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Trump Trumped
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Election Day
But like I said, I was preoccupied with other things, most notably my life. While the Sherrill campaign was gearing up over the summer for the autumn season, I was in Paris, Berlin and Munich on my first European trip ever. When the Sherrill campaign got underway in earnest after Labor Day, I was walking through my neighborhood, going cycling once in awhile, and playing with my cats - but mostly taking care of my house. And as it entered the home stretch, I continued removing burning bushes from the community park in my neighborhood and preparing the park for spring. And now, with still more cuttings that need to be thrown out and collected this coming Thursday . . . there is the threat of a windstorm that could blow my garbage cans across town if I try to put the bush branches out that morning. Among other things.
I hope Mikie Sherrill wins tonight. But I've already been trying to condition myself to receive the news that her MAGA Republican opponent ekes out a victory. And my sixtieth birthday is tomorrow. Bummer . . . I took John Mellencamp's advice back in the day and tried to hold on to sixteen as long as I could, but I was only able to hold onto that age for a year.
And if our life goes on long after the thrill of living is gone, you must be in a terminal coma.
Right. As Sherrill could lose her bid for the New Jersey governorship tonight and I could lose my electricity tomorrow night, I'd better be prepared for anything. I'll be back later.
Monday, November 3, 2025
Let It Go
Friday, October 31, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - October 31, 2025
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Democratic Disarray - October 2025 Edition
Kamala Harris announced that she might run for President again in 2028.
The Republican Party, that is.
Kamala Harris ran the best campaign she could have run in 107 days, but her best wasn't good enough. That's because she wasn't good enough as a candidate. Voters and donors had made that clear during her first presidential campaign in 2019. (She didn't make it to 2020.) She likely wouldn't have been the nominee had Joe Biden announced his withdrawal as a candidate for re-election sixteen months earlier than she did, and, as Steve Schmidt recently pointed out, she saw Joe Biden up close and personal and should have intervened to get him to acknowledge his fragility and his decline before he set out to run again.
Again: Harris should not have been Vice President. She should have been Attorney General, not Merrick Garland. She would have been more aggressive in going after Trump than Garland was.
And just to show you how screwed up the Democrats are overall, consider their genius in fighting gerrymandered redistricting in Texas.
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
Turning Inward
As I write this, New Jersey is one week away from choosing its fifty-seventh governor. I went ahead and voted for Mikie Sherrill, my congresswoman, over Jack Ciattarelli, but the polls are scaring the crap out of me. Jack could very well be New Jersey's next governor, which means that MAGA values - now predominant nationally - will take over at the state level as well if that happens. I'm ready to concede that Mikie Sherrill has been a lackluster candidate, and lackluster Democrats usually don't win elections unless they have a far, far worse opponent - so long as it isn't Donald Trump. Jack's not quite at that level of awfulness anyway. He's awful, but not so awful that Mikie Sherrill could get elected governor just because she has a "D" next to her name.
I've gone past the point of caring. I'm going to turn sixty next week, and I'm turning inward toward taking care of my house, my cats, and my immediate surroundings - such as the community park I've taken more of a responsibility in taking care of, seeing ass no one else seems to have the time or the desire to do so. Waverly Park, as the park is known (it got its name from an adjacent side street), is pretty much my only interest in the public realm. I don't belong to the Waverly Park Conservancy. I am the Waverly Park Conservancy.
My latest project is a bold and ambitious one. Waverly Park was - the operative word here is "was" - distinguished by the large number of burning bushes growing in its natural, more wild side. (The park has a landscaped side on the western bank of the brook that runs through it; the wilderness side is on the eastern bank.) My late mother could see the bushes from a window in our house and enjoyed looking at the red and orange colors of the leaves of the bushes in autumn. Well, they won't be there for much longer. I have since found out that burning bushes are an invasive species from China and don't belong in a wilderness setting anywhere in North America. Inspired by what zoologist Jane Goodall, who just died recently, said about how each of us ought to help make the world a better place and how each of us has the ability to do so, I chose to cut them all down after a lot of thought about it.
I'm moving into the most ambitious phase of taking care of the park as I look toward 2026. I put wood filler in the picnic table I donated to the park and hope to re-stain the wood in the spring. I am also looking to plant flowers in a more regimented fashion, as I saw in gardens in Paris and Munich this past summer, and I am planning to install a birdbath in a small lawn area where the park meets the street. I want this park to be the best and the most gratifying community park in the region. Also, I hope to get trees planted to replace the burning bushes - in fact, the town, which owns the land, might plant some trees for me. Which m=sounds like a good idea, considering the impenetrable soil. I didn't realize how few trees there actually are in this part of the park until I began removing the burning bushes.
I no longer have any interest in an better, happier America. In fact, I still hope for a national breakup into separate countries. I also don't care about how my state could be a better place. I can't control or even help to control either of those things. But I can do something about this park.
Saturday, October 25, 2025
"Chuckles Bites the Dust" - Fifty Years
Friday, October 24, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - October 24, 2025
Thursday, October 23, 2025
The Sun Sets In the East
America's democratic and architectural heritage died with Trump's latest "remodeling" of the White House.
Unless, of course, tech moguls are considered "the public."
This is not going well with anyone. The East Wing was built in 1902, but the colonnades were installed by President Thomas Jefferson a century earlier. With two stories, it was practically a building onto itself, and it provided a stylish complement to the main building. It may have even been classier than its western counterpart, which is mostly office space and the site of the press briefing room.
And people are really, really mad at Trump for tearing down the East Wing. 😁
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Garden State Mess - The Sequel
Monday, October 20, 2025
No Kings. No Media.
The No Kings rallies across the country this past Saturday - were the biggest protests in American history since and except for environmentalist demonstrations on the first Earth Day in 1970.
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Don't Cry For Argentina
The economic recovery from 200 percent inflation when Milei took office in 2023 was short-lived, though, and now the Argentine economy is an freefall. Trump ans Scott Bessent, his Treasury Secretary, pledged $20 billion to bail out Argentina. They have since doubled that pledge with private donations from many of America's plutocrats. And I'm sure Trump would be doing this even if Bessent didn't hve friends with financial interest in Argentina.
Argentina is getting this $40 billion bailout even as Milei has come upon a little geopolitical luck. Thanks to Trump's tariff war with China, Argentina has inked a deal with the Chinese to sell them soybeans - a commodity that American farmers had a monopoly over with the Chinese before Trump intervened. This adds insult to injury, as the government remains shut down and the expired Affordable Care Act subsidies are not reinstated, and taxpayer money is being sent to Argentina - and not to Americans who need help, especially American soybean farmers who just lost their livelihoods to Argentine soybean farmers.
Maybe American soybean farmers - many if not most of whom voted for Trump - should take Michael Dukakis's 37-year-old advice and plant Belgian endives.
One U.S. House member has become an ardent critic of Trump's Argentina policy, decrying the fact that billions of dollars are being funneled all the way down to Tierra del Fuego and not being spent to aid Americans with medical insurance made possible by the Affordable Care Act. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez? Pramila Jayapal? Jim McGovern? My own congresswoman, New Jersey's Mikie Sherrill, who needs every issue she can to fend off a tough gubernatorial election opponent like Jack Ciattarelli (and so far seems to be holding him off enough to win the governorship of New Jersey)? No - Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Marjorie . . . Taylor . . . Greene.
I haven't watched Ian Bremmer's PBS show since Trump returned to power. I haven't really felt like watching it. I probably won't start watching it again. Trump may hve lost Marjorie Taylor Greene, but Bremmer, having hosted and toasted Javier Milei, has lost his credibility.






























