(Those are my record reviews for 2025. See you in 2026.)
Sunday, December 21, 2025
Madonna - GHV2 (2001)
Saturday, December 20, 2025
When (and When Not) To Secede
Friday, December 19, 2025
Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 19, 2025
"It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" by Andy Williams (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Surrender
So many things are happening faster than I can comment on them, I figure I'd rather wait until next week just before Christmas and wrap up what will have happened up to and including Christmas Eve, because everything is turning against Trump in an accelerated fashion. (I wanted to comment on the failure of Congress to renew Affordable Care Act subsidies, but it turns out that that story isn't over quite yet.) And even that may not be sufficient, as Trump will likely continue committing atrocities right up to the moment the ball drops in Times Square on New Year's Eve and start committing new atrocities in 2026 without missing a beat or taking a break.
But in the meantime, there are a few stories and topics that I must address before then. Like the issue involving the band Cheap Trick.
"We were asked to perform at this year’s Kennedy Center Honors ceremony to pay tribute to our lifelong brothers in Kiss, and to support artists and the arts," the band explained in a message posted on Cheap Trick’s X social-media accounts. "We agreed to do it for those reasons, and no others."
I am not one of those people who will never listen to Cheap Trick again or who will boycott their shows to protest their appearance at the Kennedy Center Honors ceremony, as I take them at their word. But this flap just proves how wrong it is for the Kennedy Center to award honors to rock bands, and this of course is an issue that predates either of Trump's two nonconsecutive terms. Rock and roll has long been about sticking it to the Man with the proverbial finger, and as an establishmentarian institution meant to support mainstream and highbrow performing art, the Kennedy Center is the Man in all his grandiose glory. The fact that not only Kiss got a Kennedy Center honor but also several other rock acts in the past - including Led Zeppelin, who weren't even American - shows how respectable rock has become in the recent past. Because Led Zeppelin, though regarded as the founding fathers of heavy metal, were based in American blues and also added touches of English folk and Jamaican reggae to their music, the Kennedy Center was able to provide an explanation - a tenuous explanation at best, but still an explanation - for why they were being honored for their contributions to the arts. There is no obvious explanation or excuse to give a Kennedy Center honor to a band known for distorted, flamboyant noise, singing about the overt sexiness of young women (sample lyric from "Rock and Roll All Nite": "You show us everything you got / Ooh baby baby, that's quite a lot"), and generally being loud and stupid.
But, even the best rock and roll is inappropriate for a stage designed for "serious" musical performances, be it the National Symphony Orchestra's concerts or an opera, the stage being massive enough to, as Paul Fussell wrote, support a production of Verdi's Aida with "immense heroic processions and herds of real elephants and camels, with everyone speaking - nay, singing - the best possible Italian." Then again, maybe rock and roll isn't inappropriate for the Kennedy Center; as I've noted before, and as Fussell noted long before I did, the Kennedy Center mostly stages lowbrow entertainments, to the point where the Aida you'll see on its stage is not the Verdi opera but the Elton John-Tim Rice Broadway musical based on it. (And, given the political correctness that permeates our culture these days, the only acceptable Continental language in this country is Spanish, the language of Latin jazz, mariachi and salsa - all of which I happen to like, by the way - whereas Italian opera is the stuff that DWEAMs - dead white European and American males - are made of. French? Nah, that's for pompous twits!) Implicit in the choice of rock and rollers for Kennedy Center honors is that all art, even subversive lower-middle-class art meant as a revolt against the classical, intellectual music of the educated and overeducated classes, is worthy of equal recognition, even if the lowbrow music honored, like Kiss, is crass and vulgar, or even if the highbrow music honored is pretentious and empty. The performing arts in general and music in particular are all democratically created in America, and thus democratically honored . . . and democratically dismal.
And it's going to get worse at the Kennedy Center if a Democrat is ever President again. A Democratic administration will overcorrect Trump's Kennedy Center honor choices of metal meatheads and action-movie actors by honoring pop singers whom the Democratic Party's hip progressive base listens to - mostly disco divas who go by single names - and more hip-hop stars who both rap and act. Like the rapper legally known as Dana Owens, who got a Kennedy Center honor a couple of years ago. (Aside: I think Owens' CBS show, the "Equalizer" reboot, got canceled because, in the age of Trump, airing an action series that shows a heavy-set black woman beating up white guys in rapid succession - at least that's what my mother said the show basically was - could get you in trouble with MAGA. And right after that, CBS happily welcomed Bari Weiss to run its news department.)
But I need to return to my original point - it is totally and completely inappropriate to honor rock and roll at the Kennedy Center when rock and roll was and remains a street rebellion against the highbrow conventions of serious music. But reversing course and honoring only cellists and classical pianists, especially East Asian child prodigies, is decades too late. Hey, Bob Dylan received a Kennedy Center honor despite having famously sung that "even the President of the United States must sometimes have to stand naked."
Dylan got the honor in 1997, the first year of President Bill Clinton's second term and the year before the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Yeah . . .
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Donald Trump, Evil Meathead
I wanted to write in this space about actor and director Rob Reiner and how, as a director, he made some of the most heartfelt and engaging films of the past forty years, such as Stand By Me and When Harry Met Sally . . . , as well as some of the funniest, like the legendary rock documentary parody This Is Spinal Tap, and how catchphrases from his movies - "Turn it up to 11!" - "You can't handle the truth!" - "Going to Paris is on my bucket list!" - have entered our popular-culture lexicon. I also wanted to write how horrible it was that he and his own wife were killed this past Sunday, most likely by their own son.
Trump started out okay enough.
A very sad thing happened last night in Hollywood.
Not surprisingly, things went downhill almost immediately:
Rob Reiner, a tortured and struggling, but once very talented movie director and comedy star, has passed away, together with his wife, Michele, reportedly due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME, sometimes referred to as TDS.
He was known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump, with his obvious paranoia reaching new heights as the Trump Administration surpassed all goals and expectations of greatness, and with the Golden Age of America upon us, perhaps like never before. May Rob and Michele rest in peace!
In other words, Trump was saying that Reiner and his wife were killed because Reiner's persistent criticism of Trump drove his son to madness and caused Reiner and his wife to meet their grizzly end.
Trump is saying that karma came back to destroy the Reiners just as harm and misfortune always come to people who cross him. This shows just what a sick mind he has. Trump's corpulent body is big enough for the world to revolve around, and so he apparently has convinced himself that it in fact does. The world in general and America in particular, as far as the current White House occupant is concerned, has benefitted magnificently because of and due to being molded by and to the genius of Donald J. Trump, and anyone who questions his motives and his leadership will pay for not recognizing what a great leader he is.
If anyone had doubts at Trump being as self-obsessed as Hitler or Mussolini, or perhaps Mao or Mohammed bin Salman, those doubts, like Rob and Michele Reiner, have been laid to rest.
As always with Trump, it could have been worse. Trump could played up a couple of Reiner's less-well-received movies left unmentioned in Reiner's obituaries, such as 1994's North - which Roger Ebert famously began his review of with the sentence, "I hated this movie. Hated hated hated hated hated this movie. Hated it." Trump could have brought North up to show what a true failure Reiner was and how Reiner's attacks on him were expressions of jealousy of real greatness. I'm surprised he didn't, actually, because one of Trump's most devastatingly unique talents is to diminish an individual's stellar reputation by highlighting the egregious mistakes of said individual.
(Aside I must include: After offering up what many critics still consider one of the worst movies of all time with North, Reiner quickly rebounded in 1995 with The American President, an enjoyable comedy-drama starring Michael Douglas in the title role with Annette Bening as his leading lady. It was a hit with both the press and the public, proving that esteemed artists can be human and make mistakes that can quickly besmirch their reputations but can recover from those mistakes just as quickly, something Trump never seems to understand. I now return to my blog post, still in progress.)
Trump is, ever more so than before, the by-product of a nation whose mass-media popular culture celebrates the outrageous at the expense of the tasteful and the subtle. I have cited before on this blog the (very) disturbing parallels between Donald Trump and Madonna, from their rise to fame and fortune in the terminally vapid 1980s based on showmanship and scam artistry to their rabid fan bases intolerant of criticism of their idols. Another parallel is their common narcissism. For decades, pop-culture pundits and consumers had long found the self-absorption of these two individuals to be entertaining and even charming, even when their self-absorption reached toxic levels. And like Trump, Madonna has been no stranger to making someone else's death about her. When Gianni Versace - whom Madge modeled for in print ads (what's this about her career being all about music again?) - was murdered in 1997, she wrote for Time magazine (which just so happened to be owned by the same media conglomerate that distributed her record label) an remembrance of the Italian fashion designer that contained no fewer than 35 references to herself. When Aretha Franklin - best known for her cover of Otis Redding's "Respect" - died in 2018 on the same day Madge turned sixty, Madge eulogized Franklin with a story about "respect" that had nothing to do with Franklin or with Redding's song and everything to do with . . . Madge. (It was about an audition she had before she became famous.)
To those who think Trump's post about Rob Reiner is an example of narcissism . . . no, no, no, no, no. Madonna's "eulogies" of Gianni Versace and Aretha Franklin are examples of narcissism. Trump's post about Rob Reiner is an example of self-loving, self-aggrandizing viciousness and of hostility against the common decencies. And worse. As for Madge, her only saving grace (if it can be called that) is this. When Whitney Houston - who beat out Madge for the lead female role in the 1992 movie The Bodyguard and whose acting Madge trashed uncharitably - died in 2012, Madge could have made a cold, heartless remark about a woman she clearly considered a rival in the pop-diva sweepstakes. But thankfully, she remembered the rule not to say anything about the deceased if she couldn't say anything nice.
Trump, on the other hand, follows no such restraint. Ever. And that's what makes him more infinitely evil than any other human being. And I consider Madge to be infinitely evil as well.
Monday, December 15, 2025
Hostility To Free Speech
Sunday, December 14, 2025
Madonna - The Immaculate Collection (1990)
This teeming piece of crud documents all of Madge's hit singles from the 1980s - you know the titles, I won't repeat them - that made that decade far worse than it already was. They all have the same distinguishing characteristics that make them so unlistenable - overdone synthesizers, asinine lyrics, occasional parodies of the Roman Catholic Church's lexicon, and annoying, electronically treated, squealing vocals. Nearly forty years after these singles first appalled us, we scratch our heads wondering how they could have possibly made their perpetrator the female performer to, as of 1990, compile more consecutive top-five hits than any other female recording artist in history - until we remember the shamelessly sleazy promotional videos, those churlish, kinky vignettes she concocted to get people to pay attention to her instead of musicians and singers with real talent. There are also two bonus tracks, one of them the single with the promotional video that was too X-rated for MTV; you know the title, and I won't repeat that one either.
Everything you remember about the 1980s is encapsulated in this spoiled crap cake - vapidity, style over substance, empty glitz and glitter, and big hair. It's a victory lap for the performer, celebrating her unexpected longevity in popular music and avoiding the fate that befell far better eighties recording artists like the Go-Go's and Men at Work - only having three or four hits that might show up on a various-performers anthology using the eighties as a theme. That she had fifteen hits in the eighties (not counting the two bonus tracks, one of which was also a hit) was proof that something went horribly wrong with popular music in that decade, and what was even worse is that she would have enough hits in the following decade to warrant a second greatest-hits compilation at the turn of the millennium.
Oh yeah, I ought to tell you about the special edition of this record, The Royal Box, which featured not only the record but also a one-hour video compilation of her offensive promo clips, a two-by-three foot poster (in color!) and an assortment of picture postcards featuring the performer herself. All for a hefty increase in the retail price that parents in 1990 were willing to pay to give their teenage daughters something to hug and kiss them for on Christmas morning (doesn't that want to make you throw up?). Those teenage girls today are in their fifties and are now dealing with their own daughters' obsession with Taylor Swift. Only their daughters probably have better taste in pop than they ever did. And if Steely Dan hadn't used the title first, this box set could have been called The Royal Scam.
Madge got to where she is largely on slick self-promotion and cheap showbiz theatrics. In that way, she's much like Donald Trump, as I noted before on this blog. And as with Trump, no one in the press, least of all those who knew better (in Madge's case, music critics), ever bothered to call out her scams and her lightweight work as a recording "artist," preferring instead to document and praise her every move because they knew it sold newspapers or attracted eyeballs to the TV set. Far worse, like Trump, Madge represented and still represents today the phony opulence, the most shallow elements of popular culture, and, yes, the greed and avarice that defined the eighties and led to everything rotten with America now. If you believed her when she said that her "career" was "all about the music," you're just as stupid as MAGA cultists.
I wrote and published this review on the day before a colonoscopy, which involves drinking awful laxative solutions, abstaining from real food, and crapping one's guts out. But doing all of that is preferable to listening to this fetid compilation album even once.
Saturday, December 13, 2025
They Got Pics
Friday, December 12, 2025
Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 12, 2025
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Political Football
When Donald Trump received the first-ever FIFA Peace Prize (relax, I'll get to the absurdity of that moment in a couple of paragraphs), he said something logical to the assembled audience. No, really.
Noting how FIFA is the international governing body of soccer, the sport the rest of the world calls "football," Trump said that it doesn't make sense why we call that game the NFL governs football, when soccer is really football, a game where the players move the ball with their feet. He has a point. American football, by contrast, isn't a game where you advance the ball with your feet. You only kick the ball to score an extra point after a touchdown or a field goal. Apart from the kickoff, the players advance the ball holding it in an arm, because the ball's odd, pistachio-like shape makes impossible to kick without a tee.
And that mean be a problem for Infantino. Newsweek reports that the human rights group FairSquare is requesting that FIFA's executive committee investigate Infantino for a breech of the association's ethics code by so blatantly kissing it to Trump.
"FIFA's credibility hinges on its commitment to political neutrality, a principle designed to keep global soccer free from partisan influence," Newsweek's Daniel Orton wrote. "If its president is found to have breached this rule by honoring a sitting U.S. president, it could undermine trust in the organization's independence and raise questions about whether FIFA's leadership is susceptible to political favoritism."
The U.S. games in next year's North America World Cup are going to be an absolute disaster, with foreign visitors shunning the matches out of fear of being arrested by ICE and with the U.S. men's national team being booed on American soil - by American fans. It will be a dark moment in international sports, the darkest at least until the 2028 Olympics open in Los Angeles.
P.S. You know those letters I wrote to 2028 Olympic official Janet Evans and International Olympic Committee president Kirsty Coventry saying that the 2028 Games ought to be held in some other country? Neither swimming champion has responded to me.
One good thing has come from this prize. At least an American male won something from FIFA.
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Fall Out Girl
Monday, December 8, 2025
Social Media Disease
I turned my Instagram page into a repository for anti-Trump memes - two posts of anti-Trump memes with every third post a picture of a beautiful woman to provide relief from MAGA. (Instagram pages show posts in rows of three.) I posted pictures in threes twice, sometimes thrice a day at times, because the memes bashing Trump and MAGA were too clever to resist. I was going overboard and spending way too much time on Instagram, but hey, it was fun.
Then two embarrassing things happened. One was that I reposted the original post of a friend who also posts on Instagram - that is, it was an image my had created himself - and he was a tad miffed by my failure to credit him. (I credited Go-Go's rhythm guitarist Jane Wiedlin for reposting memes on her Instagram page that she had likely not created herself, even though I don't know her from Eve, but not my friend. Embarrassing indeed.) The other embarrassing thing was this meme I posted not on Instagram, but on Facebook. And I had found it on BlueSky.
And so I have decided to stop posting anything on Instagram - for the time being. It might be a long time being. Because, after these two faux pas, posting anti-Trump, anti-MAGA memes on Instagram - or anything else - stopped being fun. And I don't think I was enlightening any Republican-leaning voters with my posts.
I'm not big on social media these days. I still go on Facebook and I'm active there because, well, that's still fun. Instagram, Facebook's sister platform, has become a grind. Threads is just boring. And if not for the ability to post links to my blog on LinkedIn, Mastodon, and BlueSky, I wouldn't bother with any of those platforms. (Yes: Meta platforms still won't let me post links to my blog there.) So I'll just wait until I really want to post something on Instagram before I do so again. And with all the time I save not going on platforms not named Facebook, I have more time to write blog posts here.
Not that I will. I need more time to enjoy being with my cats.
Sunday, December 7, 2025
Lou Reed - Metal Machine Music (1975)
Lou Reed's 1975 album Metal Machine Music is a single composition stretched out over four sides of a double album, much like Yes's infamous 1973 release Tales From Topographic Oceans had been. But unlike Yes's album, which at least had real instruments and vocals, Metal Machine Music is a collage of feedback, interference, white noise, and elements of static that recall what would happen when an analog television set was tuned to a channel that local stations didn't broadcast on. You remember the TV-screen image you'd get from that - "snow." Metal Machine Music is a snow job.
Lou Reed seemed to be responding to the modicum of commercial success he'd received with Transformer and "Walk On the Wild Side" by deliberately trying to scare away listeners in places like northern New Jersey and Long Island, two suburban locales that represented everything Reed hated about mainstream America. He overreached. He scared away part of his core fan base, listeners who had been with him since the days of the Velvet Underground. Avant-garde music made with electronic backwashes had been common in the New York underground scene, to be certain, but I doubt no such experimental music has ever been less tuneful, less engaging, and less, well, musical than this.
The best I can say about Metal Machine Music is that listening to it in 2025 beats listening to anything currently on the pop charts, until I realize that some of its worst moments might have inspired rap, a form that relies on computerized and mechanical sounds supporting angry recitations of lyrics about the 'hood. Because, believe it or else, Metal Machine Music, though it did not chart (it may be in competition with Bloodstone's soundtrack album for their movie Train Ride To Hollywood as the worst-selling LP of 1975), created a cult following among fans who explain it as some sort of bold experimentation that was ahead of its time. Not that they have necessarily listened to the album from start to finish; Reed's liner notes explain that it's not meant to be. This of course files in the face of the large-scale compositions the British prog bands of the day were indulging themselves in, which are supposed to be listened to from beginning to end, and perhaps Reed, cynical New Yorker that he was, was parodying art rock the way the Ramones parodied the mainstream rock stars of the day. Except that with Metal Machine Music, Reed parodied himself.
I actually did listen to the whole thing from start to finish. How did I manage that? Simple - it was so awful, I laughed at its awfulness. The are records from lousy bands like Journey, Toto, and Uriah Heep, as well as any Rainbow album with Graham Bonnet on lead vocals, that make you lunge for the "off" switch on your stereo, but Metal Machine Music is not that type of record. The noises are so outrageous, you can't help but laugh - at the sound, at the concept, at the idea the RCA would even put this out. I was tidying up my house while listening to Metal Machine Music. I ran the vacuum cleaner; it was like singing along. In harmony. I was inspired to listen to all of Metal Machine Music because, in their book "The Worst Rock 'n' Roll Records of All Time," Jimmy Guterman and Owen O'Donnell suggested that Bob Ludwig, the album's engineer, is the only person without a history of substance abuse who has listened to all four sides of it. I accepted the challenge. And I prevailed.
Without even a single gummy.
Guterman and O'Donnell also declared Metal Machine Music to be the most unlistenable album ever recorded - including anything from Kenny Rogers. The reference to Rogers was in fact quite appropriate. Metal Machine Music, to describe the album in one sentence, is Lou Reed just dropping in to see what condition his condition was in.
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Megyn Kelly Is a Sadist
Megyn Kelly was always a jerk, as noted by the pretentious Welsh spelling her parents used for her first name. But recent comments from the inexplicably popular conservative talk show host reveal that she may have a brain worm far worse than what Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. dealt with.
And as if that weren't bad enough, Kelly, talking on her show to fellow discredited media personality Mark Halperin, said she wanted to see the alleged drug dealers on the Venezuelan boats that Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth have been blowing out of the water die slow and painful deaths for a crime they likely did not commit - namely, running drugs.
"So I really do kind of not only want to see them killed in the water," Kelly said to Halperin, "whether they're on the boat or in the water, but I'd really like to see them suffer. I would like Trump and Hegseth to make it last a long time so that they lose a limb and bleed out a little."
Why do I get the feeling that Kelly knows tortures that were banned during the Spanish Inquisition?
I used to think Kelly was just a mean bitch, but even female Rottweilers are kinder and gentler than this bottle-blonde harridan. She is happy to defend pedophilia and try to redefine it to make the late Jeffrey Epstein - and, by association - Donald Trump - look like they're being railroaded (well, she is a attorney), and she's also happy to suggest death-camp justice to Spanish-speaking mariners accused of drug running without even a fair trial or adherence to international law in sentencing the guilty parties. I'm trying to think of a female political commentator on the left who are as mean-spirited and as morally bankrupt as Kelly. Of course, I can't think of any as morally bankrupt as she is. Mean-spiritedness? A couple of ladies on the left, including Jennifer Welch ("We're not fans of the Catholics"), occasionally get close, but once female liberal commentators reach a certain level of viciousness (as when Joy Reid tried to gay-shame Charlie Crist and then denied it despite the evidence), they usually just stay there. Megyn Kelly, like her spiritual benefactor Donald Trump, moves heaven and earth to get progressively worse. If you think this is as bad as Megyn Kelly can get, you don't know Megyn Kelly.
It is for these transgressions of intelligence and taste on her Sirius XM show that many Sirius XM subscribers to cancel their subscriptions in protest, as there are no signs that Kelly's days at Sirius XM are numbered. That is a brave thing to do, as Sirius XM has no competition in satellite radio, and so-called terrestrial radio is virtually unlistenable. It is for those reasons - but for the latter reason, especially - that I remain a Sirius XM subscriber despite Kelly's presence on it. Because I don't listen to political commentary on Sirius XM. I subscribe strictly for the music channels, and I listen to it in my car more than I do on my laptop. I consider my car to be my refuge, as I consider music to be a refuge, and so I want to get away from politics when I'm driving. I listen to my favorite rock Sirius XM channels - which play records going back sixty years - while on the road. If I still listened to regular FM radio and tried to find a station that still played music made before Jimmy Carter left the White House, I wouldn't have much luck. And thanks to an oligarchical communications law passed nearly thirty years ago, I'd have to deal with stations owned by politically connected conglomerates such as iHeart Radio, which has done more damage to American radio than payola.
I even listen to the jazz and classical channels on Sirius XM instead of the local public classical and jazz stations on the FM dial, mainly because the reception of these stations is so bad that I get interference on my receiver; the classical station gets cut out by a rock station from Scranton - over a hundred miles from where I live - that broadcasts on the same frequency. And sometimes I like to listen to Sirius XM's contemporary jazz (derided by its detractors as "smooth jazz") channel, Watercolors. I can't listen to the FM contemporary-jazz station in New York because it went off the air seventeen years ago.
It's all good and fine to stop subscribing to Sirius XM to protest Megyn Kelly's presence on it, but such a boycott is highly impractical when FM and AM radio are particularly awful these days and Sirius XM is the only place to go to listen to the sort of music you can't hear on the FM dial anymore and haven't been able to hear on the AM dial since at least the late 1980s. My advice to Sirius XM subscribers is simply not to listen to Megyn Kelly's show rather than quit the service. Sirius XM will likely still get the message that way. Why do you think 50s on 5 and 60s on 6 were moved from channels 5 and 6 to farther down the dial and renamed "50s Gold and "60s Gold"? Because Sirius XM found that it could get many more listeners on its channels at the top of the dial if there were more "current" music stations on channels 5 and 6. And I don't think it was in response to canceled subscriptions. It's because Sirius XM was responding to what its customers liked more as opposed to what they didn't like as much. And sticking it out and ignoring Megyn Kelly could possibly be more effective in not just pushing her show down the dial but getting it canceled entirely than just quitting the whole damn company.
Get that sadistic excuse for a human being out of your mind, tune in to Watercolors, and chill out.
Friday, December 5, 2025
Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 5, 2025
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Aftyn The Lovin'
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
War Crimes Against Humanity
I once noted that I thought that the idea of a war crime is a redundancy because all war is a crime. But what happened three months ago today is not only a crime, it would be inexcusable if it were a war exercise. The fact that it was likely perpetrated to provoke a war also makes it a crime.
On September 2, 2025, Secretary of War (or Defense) Pete Hegseth ordered a U.S. Navy strike on a Venezuelan boat that his office says was a drug-running boat bringing fentanyl to American shores. The boat was nowhere near Florida, the northern Gulf Coast, or Texas but in the Caribbean Sea, just north of Venezuela - a long way to bring a bunch of crates full of pills. Two survivors managed to emerge from the explosion, and Hegseth made it clear that both must be taken out. They were.
That way Hegseth can hold . . . his booze.
Hegseth can't drink his way out of this one. He cannot deflect blame for the murder of the two survivors to Admiral Bradley and all the boys back in the drink. The Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by Roger Wicker (R-MS) with Jack Reed (D-RI) as the ranking minority member, issued a statement vowing to conduct what they call "vigorous oversight" on the strikes in the Caribbean on . . . well, they likely weren't drug runners. They were more likely fishing boats, struck on orders from Hegseth with approval from Trump mainly to . . . provoke a war against Venezuela to get to its vast oil reserves?
I need a drink.
There's plenty of bipartisan disgust with Hegseth over this, but he does have his defenders . . . notably Megyn Kelly, who, having offered a quasi-defense of Jeffrey Epstein having sex with females who are almost women - that is, girls, spoke to Mark Halperin on her talk show and said that she would like nothing better than to see the survivors of the boar attack not just killed but tortured in the process so they can feel severe pain as punishment for running fentanyl to Americans, even though she has no more of an idea than anyone else as to whether or not these sailors were drug runners. (I'll deal with Kelly more thoroughly later.)
With Kelly a prominent voice in the media and with Hegseth having an outsized role over civilian administration of the military, the rest of the world is pretty much convinced that America has descended into lawlessness and cruelty and sees no reason to trust again for a long, long time, even after Trump and his minions are gone. And that is yet another reason why I keep advocating for the United States to be broken up into separate countries.
And by the way, forget Canada, which has a lot less oil than Venezuela . . . I think Trump wants Venezuela to be the fifty-first state. But, given Trump's record, I'll bet a lot of Venezuelans, given the choice would prefer to stick with Nicolas Maduro.






















