Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Gaza Cease-Fire

The Gaza War is coming to an end at long last.  President Biden announced the deal earlier today.  The deal will take effect on Sunday.
Also, the Israeli and American hostages are set to be released.
President Biden deserves all of the credit due to him.
Too bad some other guy has to try to steal it. 😡

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

America Should Never Have Been a Superpower

I've told this joke before.  There are only two reasons the United States became the leader of the free world after the Second World War.  The first is that the United States was one of only two major countries that were not partially or completely destroyed by the war.  The second is that Canada didn't want the job.

Quite frankly, ascendancy by default is the only way that the U.S. could have become a superpower.  The United States in 1945 was no different the the United States before 1945 - that is, it was still a country where literature was defined by dime-store novels, where not one college or university had have produced a great mind equal to that of Darwin of Freud,  where prayer was still practiced in schools, where banning alcohol to strengthen morality had been tried only to lead to a violent crime wave,  and where the teaching of science outside the urban Northeast and Great Lakes was still virtually nonexistent.

America simply doesn't have the wisdom and the maturity to be a world leader, let alone the world leader.  As Paul Fussell once noted, America, having not had an age of antiquity, a medieval period, or a Renaissance, was missing many if not most of the historical and cultural experience to sustain a civilized society.  I would add that one could argue the same about Canada and Australia, but those countries at least retained a connection with the British Crown.  Not even our connections to the Old World via immigration have given us a sense of history, philosophy or culture.  The average American of Italian origin knows no more about Dante than the average American of Chinese origin knows about Confucius, while the average American of German origin is . . . Donald Trump.   The biggest European or East Asian influences in American civilization tend to be culinary, as the preponderance of pizzerias and Chinese take-out joints suggest.  (Sometimes I think that the only ethnic groups in America that have a genuine appreciation for their deep cultural heritages are us Irish and the Jews, but only because our food is so terrible. 😉)  Also, the romanticization of immigration flies in the face of one inconvenient truth.  The immigrants who came to this country, all the way back to the Englishmen who settled it in the seventeenth century, were not the best and brightest from their lands but the dumbest and the dimmest; they were folks who couldn't make it back in the Old Country, so they came here were all things were equal and no one was better than anyone else.

It is all good and fine to say that, for all of of the differences between Americans based on race, ethnicity, gender or religion, our experiment in representative government is what unites us, but the real entity that brings is together is money.  We all believe in the American Dream, the belief that we can get as far as out talents will take us, which usually means making lots of money.  We always applaud the plucky immigrant who comes here with nothing and makes something of himself by making lots of money - even Elon Musk, who came here with lots of money already and ended up making lots more money.  We celebrate pop stars and movie stars who come from nowhere with nothing and make lots of money - so what if their music or movies suck?  So what if we've had few authors, composers, artists, or filmmakers who compare to those of more intellectually endowed nations?  Especially when those few have never made a lot of money?  As the Israeli-born American philosopher Chaim Witz  - his childhood pals from Queens knew him as Eugene Klein - once said, no aesthetics exist aside from what people buy.  You know him as heavy-metal star Gene Simmons.    

A country that celebrates people known for making money - like Donald Trump - is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country with creationist theories based on the idea that humans and dinosaurs co-existed like on "The Flintstones" is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country that ranks 36th in literacy is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country where speaking aggressively into a microphone to a computerized beat is considered music is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country that celebrates James Patterson while real authors starve is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country known for producing moves based on comic-book characters is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country that lets its cities rot and fall apart and builds soulless, ugly, autocentric suburban sprawl in their place is not worthy of being a world leader.  A country that values style over substance is not worthy of being a world leader. And a country that declares its values and worth by electing and then, after a four-year hiatus, re-electing Donald J. Trump as its President is definitely not worthy of being a world leader.  

Like so many aspects of American history, World War II is badly taught in our schools, with many Americans coming away with the idea that this country saved Europe from itself and then assumed its rightful place as the world's most powerful nation because Europeans had fought each other into oblivion.  World War II - at least the European theater, the Pacific theater being another issue entirely - was the result of a thousand years of bitter rivalries between the various nationalities and alliances based on religious affiliations and familial disagreements over scarce land and scarcer resources.  Incidentally, all of this is what produced artists like Michelangelo, architecture like the Notre Dame Cathedral, philosophers like Descartes, and also the fairy-tale-reminiscent castles American tourists fall in love with and tightly knit villages and towns with streets as narrow as an office-building corridor that Americans find so charming.  Americans didn't just parachute into Europe and take over everything; D-Day was a collaboration with the British, and the liberation of France - which was accomplished in part by the French themselves, through the Resistance and the Free French forces - was augmented by the Soviet Red Army advancing to and entering Berlin from the east. And even as the United States was able to fight a war without any attack on the homeland, the British had to deal with air raids and V-2 rockets against their home ground, while the Soviet Union suffered a greater loss of civilian lives and property than any other nation in the war.

It would have been for the benefit of the United States and the entire world if American GIs in Europe had returned home with some knowledge and understanding of the Old World they fought to help (help) save and had wiped the American slate clean and started over with European cultural assumptions, just as Western Europe started over with American democratic assumptions, but American cultural assumptions persisted in the decades following the war in the form of Joe McCarthy, the John Birch Society, Levittowns, a racial caste system, a suppression of socialistic ideas, and the hypocritical addition of the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.  The rise of evangelical politics and supply-side economics led to Ronald Reagan, Wall Street, neoliberalism, and materialism.  The late 1960s and early 1970s were an exception - America under Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon endured violence, anarchy, and anger toward the scandal that was the war in Vietnam.  But that period also produced Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Jimi Hendrix, Neil Simon, and Martin Scorsese.  Bill Clinton presided over a period of peace and prosperity in the 1990s, and what did that produce? Hootie and the Blowfish.

Allusions to The Third Man aside, it's worth noting that America is no more immune to the tragedies of humanity than other countries, but our shallowness, our venality, and our complete disdain for intellectualism and wisdom allow us collectively deny how tragic life is, and that is how a nation as intellectually impoverished and as morally bankrupt as ours is stumbling to the end of its first quarter millennium with no guarantee that we can make it through another 250 years.  A nation with a major political party that denies climate change, after all, is not worthy of being a world leader.  So, alas, it seems appropriate that Donald Trump should return to lead this nation once again, and likely lead it to its downfall.  And yet we will still believe that America is great, if only because we're a topographically diverse, 3.8-million-square-mile land mass, a continent-sized nation of nation-sized states.  A continental nation, but not a Continental nation.

As I said before, I can't leave America, but I don't have to.  America left me.

Monday, January 13, 2025

Biden's Achilles Heel

His name is Merrick Garland.

When President Biden was selecting his Cabinet, the chief candidates were former acting Attorney General Sally Yates, who had stood against Trump at the beginning of his first presidential term, and Doug Jones, the half-term Alabama Democratic senator who lost his bid for a full six-year term to the insufferable Tommy Tuberville.  But Biden chose Garland in part because he had a reputation for being even-handed, fair-minded, and many other hyphenated adjectives, I'm sure, which made Garland the perfect man to restore integrity to the Justice Department.  Also, since Garland was a federal judge, making him U.S. Attorney General meant that Biden could replace him with a young woman of color on the bench.  (Garland's replacement on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, Ketanji Brown Jackson, would be elevated to the Supreme Court only a year after taking Garland's place; that seat is now occupied by another woman, Taiwanese-American Judge Florence Pan.) 

But Biden chose Garland for an additional reason; President Obama had nominated Garland to a vacancy on the Supreme Court, only to see Mitch McConnell deny Garland a hearing and hold the seat open until a Republican - Trump - was elected to fill the seat.  This was Biden's way of sticking it to Senate Republicans who had denied Judge Garland a seat on the Supreme Court five years earlier.  No one - not even President Biden - could have known how badly he had misjudged his man.  Having taken office so soon after the January 6 insurrection, Attorney General Garland began investigating the foot soldiers of the insurrection - the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, and other rabble-rousers on the verge of being pardoned.  Ominously absent from Garland's cross-hairs was the Chief Insurrectionist himself, Donald J. Trump. 

Garland explained his method as starting at the bottom and working his way up, but this obvious presumption of innocence toward Trump flew in the face of what Americans clearly saw and heard on their television screens on that day of congressional certification of the 2020 presidential election. Trump was clearly responsible for the insurrection, and the January 6 committee in the House clearly confirmed this in their hearings.  But because Garland didn't seek to have Trump investigated for January 6, he took his sweet time and waited until the hearings concluded.  Then all of those classified documents were found at Mar-a-Lago.  

Not until late 2022 did Garland finally move to appoint Jack Smith to investigate Trump for both the insurrection and the classified documents; by then, it was too late.  Trump and his lawyers took advantage of every opportunity, no matter how contrived, to delay the January 6 case (Judge Aileen Cannon helped delay the classified-documents case before dismissing it altogether on a technicality) to the point where it (like the classified-documents case) would never, ever go to trial.  All we get as a consolation prize is Smith's report on the insurrection case.

So Garland, by moving too slowly to prosecute Trump to avoid the appearance of being political and to restore the integrity of the Justice Department,  let politics take precedence over the rule of law and set up the Justice Department for a further erosion of integrity.  And President Biden was stuck with him.  He couldn't fire Garland because it would look . . . political. 

Especially when President Biden himself was investigated for having classified documents in his possession and when Hunter Biden was also investigated - both by Garland. 

Oh yeah, President Biden calls Garland his biggest regret.  As far as I'm concerned, he should have, if he wanted to name a black woman as his running mate, made Val Demings his vice presidential candidate and appointed Kamala Harris Attorney General.
As a result of Biden's personnel choices, Garland is going to go down in history as the worst Attorney General since John Mitchell - and Mitchell  went to prison for breaking the letter and the spirit of the law, whereas Garland ironically undistinguished himself by going by the book.  And, two black women in the Democratic Party are now hasbeens. 

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Meta MAGA

Meta, the parent company that started Facebook and bought Instagram (to eliminate competition), announced recently that it will no longer fact-check posts on its platforms.


But I still can't post links to my blog on them.

Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg claimed that it was a move to simplify platform standards and foster free speech, or some sort of soda water like that, but everyone knows the real reason for his changed stance.  It's to allow MAGA right-wingers to post whatever misinformation they want to no matter how dangerously misleading it is and not have to worry about anyone at Meta taking it down for fear of retribution by MAGA - or Donald Trump himself - against the company.  Any responsibility to curb misinformation on Facebook or Instagram falls to users who report misleading content to the bots that run the damn platforms.

It gets worse.  Meta is also getting rid of its "diversity, equity and inclusion" (DEI) program in the wake of other companies doing the same.  Now, I've had my problems with programs that promote "diversity," because the very term suggests that differences are more important than common standards and qualifications, so why bother with any of that?  But by adding equity and inclusion as goals, these programs have made standards and qualifications more integral in the effort to include more women and people of color in professional entities, be they colleges of corporations.  DEI is far more comprehensive than "affirmative action," which was really neither.  But after demonizing former future President Kamala Harris as a "DEI hire" - forget for a moment that Harris' standards and qualifications for executive office are just the sort of qualities that DEI seeks to inculcate - no one wants to offend MAGA leaders or Trump for fear of offending them to the point where Trump finds a way to undermine their businesses.  For Meta, that means regulations the Sugar Mountain Man (again, that's what I call Zuckerberg, because his name means "sugar mountain" in German) would prefer not to deal with.  For McDonald's, which also ended its DEI program, that means . . . what?  That Trump orders his meals from Burger King?   

In other words, companies will be run almost entirely by white men . . . which, as I already explained by pointing to rock and roll, inevitably means unmitigated disaster.

As a Jew with a Chinese-American wife, Zuckerberg should know better.

Saturday, January 11, 2025

That's The Ticket

The other day, a couple of friends of mine invited me to as gathering at a local bar and grille, where they expected to be until about six or six-thirty in the evening.  I couldn't leave  my house until half past five, and I didn't get there until a quarter to six - and sure enough, I couldn't find a parking space.  Eventually, I did find a place to park in a public lot and then rushed right in to the bar and grille nearby, figuring I could pay at the pay kiosk (there are no old-fashioned parking meters in this particular lot) later. 

I had a good time with my friends, but when I came out and went to my car, I found a parking ticket on my windshield.  I didn't get a ticket for parking without paying; I got a ticket for parking in an undesignated space.  That is, I didn't park in a legitimate space; I invented one.

As a result, I had to pay a fine that was $35 more than the fine Trump paid after he was sentenced the day after for his 34 fraud counts stemming from the hush-money case.   

How much was my fine? $35.

I had to pay thirty-five bucks for parking illegally, and Trump gets an "unconditional discharge" without having to pay a cent for committing a felony.

Nevertheless, the fraud counts are still on his record.  And instead of the first black female President taking the oath of office of President on January 20, the first convicted felon will do so.

Trump is appealing his conviction.

This country needs a colonic. 

Friday, January 10, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - January 10, 2025

"Stay With Me" by the Faces  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, January 9, 2025

The Middle of a Sentence

What's the difference between Adolf Hitler and Donald Trump?  Hitler went to prison.

Judge Juan Merchan is scheduled tomorrow to sentence Donald Trump in the so-called "hush money" case in which Trump was found guilty on 34 counts.  Trump is trying to get the MAGA-friendly Supreme Court to delay the sentencing indefinitely.  As I type this, I do not know how that worked out, though a New York appeals court has already denied his request.  But if the sentencing goes through as planned, I know what Trump will not get - prison time.  He'll either get a suspended jail sentence or a fine that would seem enormous to the average person but would be pocket change to Trump.  It won't even be a slap on the wrist - it will be a tap on the wrist.

Of course, the voters sentenced Trump to four years of hard labor by electing him to another presidential term, but he'll just let his chief of staff Susie Wiles do the work for him while he luxuriates in the White House and Mar-a-Lago.  She's probably the only thing that stands between Trump and an invasion of Canada and Greenland. 

Even if Trump leaves office in January 2029 (note that I said "if") and the other three indictments against him should somehow be revived, Trump still won't do prison time, because he'll likely get clemency for his age.  Trump won't serve any time in jail.

His opponents will.  Well, the lucky ones, anyway.  

Merchan will roar like a tiger when he sentences Trump, but his sentence will be like the bite of a kitten.  But incoming FBI director Kash Patel, looking to prosecute anti-Trump politicians and media figures, not only has the roar of a tiger but the appetite of one. And he's ready to bear his claws.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

The Rename Game

I actually agree with Trump and other MAGA conservatives that some places should have their names changed back to what they were, and I don't mind being associated with such an opinion.

For example, I would prefer to see the name of Muhammad Ali Avenue in Newark changed back to Waverley Avenue because Ali had as much to do with Newark as my Uncle Huey, who grew up in Newark, has to do with Ali's hometown of Louisville.  I have said this before on this blog.

I also would like to see the name of Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem changed back to Mount Morris Park because Garvey was a black nationalist who encouraged black Americans to emigrate to Africa.  Why name a park in America after someone who tried to get people to leave America?  

Lest you think my opinions have a racist subtext, I also think it would probably be a good idea to change the name of John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens back to Idlewild, mainly because John F. Kennedy had nothing to do with New York City, and besides, why associate his memory with such a horrible airport? 
As for places whose original names I'd like to see changed, well, there are all of those bases named after Confederate generals that should be renamed after black war heroes, and the Defense Department is working on that (at least until Pete Hegseth takes over), and Dulles International Airport in northern Virginia should be renamed, if only because the Dulles brothers were right-wing sons of bitches who loved to destabilize democratically elected leftist governments in Third World countries, and that airport should be named for Dwight D. Eisenhower - or John F. Kennedy.

But Trump's suggestion that the Gulf of Mexico be renamed the Gulf of America?

No, I don't think so.  

Even renaming Fifth Avenue in Manhattan Donald Trump Boulevard is a better idea than that, or maybe I shouldn't give him any ideas! 

It's going to be a long four years . . ..

Monday, January 6, 2025

Rubin It In

On a recent podcast, political commentator Jennifer Rubin advised her listeners not to watch any more cable newscasts.  Cable news, she said, is all about chasing the latest trendy story or click-bait tidbit, and it never gives us the real news - just a bunch of people talking about this and/or that.

I can only assume that Rubin,  a frequent guest on cable news channels herself, has given up appearing on these channels.  Talk about biting the hand that feeds! 

Rubin can knock cable news easily, because she's a print journalist with her own column.

Unfortunately, that column is written for the Washington Post, whose owner, Jeff Bezos, has chilled reporters and columnists who might be inclined to criticize Donald Trump to the point where they're frozen solid.

I'll bet Jen already has a Substack feature.

Sunday, January 5, 2025

A Female President? PAH!

Tomorrow is the day that Kamala Harris, as the president of the United States Senate, presides over the counting of the Electoral College ballots and the certification of her own presidential-election defeat, the fifth Vice President since 1836 to do so.

She had hoped to make history be becoming the first black woman and the first woman overall to take the presidential oath of office - on Martin Luther King Day, in a nice bit of coincidental symmetry.  (This is only the second time Martin Luther King Day has coincided with a presidential inauguration since it became a holiday in 1986.)  The fact that a racist and misogynistic bastard will be returning to the Oval Office instead makes the holiday seem sadly ironic.

Courtney Subramanian of BBC News has said that the reason Harris lost to Trump was because that the former and future President "has proven that his message and style appeals to a huge cross-section of Americans," citing his gains among black men, white women and Hispanics.  I don't buy it.  People may have voted for Trump in part because of inflation and illegal immigration, but I doubt they voted for tariffs,  tax cuts for the rich, trashing of the environmental laws, weaponization of the Justice Department, pardons for insurrectionists, jailing Liz Cheney and the two Adams, Kinzinger and Schiff, for investigating the Donald, or executing Mark Milley for treason.  

But they likely did vote against Harris because she's a woman.

I think it's time that we accept the idea that this is a patriarchal country where a Margaret Chase Smith cannot get elected President, as opposed to Great Britain, where a Margaret Thatcher can become prime minister.   Americans still can't get used to a woman in charge of the country's defense and national security, and they can't imagine a woman making the call on whether or not to use force and when to pivot to the complexities of diplomacy.  Chris Matthews recently suggested that maybe a center-left female leader isn't right for this country and that a woman like Thatcher, who leans more to the right, would have a better chance of winning the White House.  When I heard him say that, I thought he was possibly trying out a new career as a stand-up comic.  As the right-leaning party in the American-leaning two-party system, the Republican Party has less than zero interest in putting a woman at the top of its presidential ticket, as the failed candidacies, of Elizabeth Dole, Carly Fiorina, and the aforementioned Margaret Chase Smith (who ran for President in 1964) proved.  And even if a woman did win the Republican presidential nomination, feminist voters would not support her, mainly because they would see her conservative policy proposals as anti-woman, but also anti-poor, anti-middle class, and pro-business.  

The clearest evidence that Americans aren't ready for a female President and never will be is the fact that there have only been two female presidential nominees of major political parties - Harris and Hillary Clinton.  And Donald Trump defeated both of them.   

In other words, nominating Gretchen Whitmer for President in 2028 is the surest way the Democrats can hand the Presidency over to one James David Vance.  That, of course, is assuming there even is a presidential election in 2028 that has more than one candidate. And if there is only one candidate, it won't be Vance.   

As for tomorrow's electoral-vote certification, it promises to go much more smoothly with a lot less drama than last time.

Friday, January 3, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - January 3, 2025

"It Doesn't Matter" by Stephen Stills and Manassas  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, January 2, 2025

We'll Never Have Paris

With Trump set to return to the White House two weeks from Monday,  the United States will likely be out of the Paris Agreement again two weeks from Tuesday.  And this time, to quote former future President Kamala Harris, we're not going back.

A few years ago, President Biden's then-climate envoy John Kerry said that Biden's successor - likely assuming at the time that it wouldn't be Biden's predecessor - would not be able to pull the U.S. out of the climate agreement because it would be bad for American business.  There's money to be made in alternative energy sources and in green-energy-generated electricity, Kerry said, and not even a die-hard Trumpist would want to get in the way of profits for companies dedicated to these new business opportunities, especially when the Chinese are hoping to dominate the green-energy field. 

Anyone who thinks that any of that is going to satisfy Trump must also think that Steve Bannon - who also hates the Paris Agreement - is going to take a bath.  Trump has already received a ton of cash from the fossil-fuel industry, and companies that invest in green energy might very well be asking from trouble with an administration that sees them as a threat to to Big Oil's and Big Coal's hegemony over the energy sector.   Besides, I'm certain that companies investing in electric-vehicle chargers and solar panels have investments in other sectors to fall back on, and they wouldn't want to see those ventures get threatened, would they?

I want to make it clear that my take on why Trump would want to quit the Paris Agreement again is based mostly on conjecture and speculation.  But given Trump's - and the conservative movement's - historically cozy relationships with the fossil-fuel industry, it does make a ton of sense. 

I suppose it's possible that we stay in the climate accord nominally, at least to save face internationally, if only to avoid the appearance of going back and forth on it, which is what I imagine incoming Secretary of State Marco Rubio would tell Trump.  But Rex Tillerson made the argument to Trump that it was important to stay in and abide by the Paris Agreement when he was Secretary of State, and he was an oilman - and we know how that turned out.  Also, I'd cite all of the other international agreements the United States has deliberately refused to be party to on the basis of preserving "national sovereignty," but I don't have enough bandwidth for that.

And don't expect Elon Musk (above) to make the case for the Paris accord, either, even though he's Trump's biggest benefactor and best buddy.  He's too busy trying to convince Trump to cancel tax credits for electric-vehicle purchases.  Now why would the owner of the world's largest EV maker advocate for that?

There are quite a few reasons, actually.  The most obvious reason is the plethora of EV startups such as Lucid and Rivian, that are just as scrappy and hungry as Tesla once was and benefit from such tax breaks.  Musk doesn't want the competition.  Also, there's Tesla's long-accrued brand equity.  Tesla has such a strong reputation with a growing sense of history and heritage that people would still buy a Tesla even without the tax credit.  Also, Lucid and Rivian don't have as big an amount of cash reserves to get through periodic slumps in the auto market.  As the world's richest man by a wide margin, Musk can lose tons of money on every vehicle he produces and still have gobs of dough left over.

I was going to say that Musk wants to have EV tax credits discontinued to discourage EV offerings from legacy automakers like Ford and Volkswagen, but that's hardly an issue.  EV sales tanked in 2024 across the board, and Ford even halted production of its F-150 Lightning (above), with the big pickup failing to change the image of EVs as being for latte liberals who live in Montclair, New Jersey or Ann Arbor, Michigan.  Meanwhile, Fisker went bankrupt, and the Vietnamese EV company VinFast has delayed the opening of its North Carolina factory until 2028.  Tesla also saw its sales fall in 2024, but remember, this would hardly affect Elon Musk's bottom line.  (One exception to the EV sales slide is Hyundai's Ioniq cars, which, like Teslas, are cars people actually want.   Hyundai likely hopes that consumers will still want them without the tax credit. And as a brand with a 39-year history in the United States, Hyundai probably has more brand equity than Tesla.)

Some states will continue to pursue environmentally friendly policies such as solar-generated or wind-generated power, and they'll likely strengthen regulations for sustainable construction of houses and buildings.   But at the federal level . . . war's over, the polluters won.  Even if a Democrat somehow gets elected President in 2028 - highly questionable at this point, especially given the possibility of Trump being the only candidate allowed next time - it will look really silly if we re-enter the Paris Agreement a second time, and given American inconsistency on the issue, the rest of the world probably won't want us back.  Not that they're doing any better - the number of countries that made significant cuts to greenhouse gas emissions in 2024 can be counted on zero fingers.

If I were still on MySpace, I'd be telling people that I don't want kids.  Because I don't.  Not with the way this planet is going.    

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Kamala's To-Do List For 2025

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris said that while Trump had an enemies list he was working on, she was working on a "to-do" list for 2025.
And here is the outgoing Vice President's to-do list for the new year.  It's, uhh, rather short. 


Trump's to-do list for 2025 is even shorter.  It has only one task - make those who oppose him wish they'd never done so.
My New Year's wish for my readers is the simplest wish I could wish for anyone . . . that Kash Patel's goon squads never knock upon your doors.

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2024 and All That

For a couple of brief, shining moments, it looked as if Kamala Harris would make history by being elected the first female President of the United States.  It turns out that the woman who ends up achieving that distinction hasn't been born yet.  Neither have her parents.

On the other hand, Mexico elected its first female president, and Claudia Sheinbaum is also Jewish and a climate scientist.  But north of the Rio Grande, being a woman, a Jew, or a climate scientist - not two or all of the above, just one of the above - is a liability for one's presidential ambitions, and for climate scientists that goes double.

Meanwhile, Jimmy Carter just died, and even though he was a hundred years old, I'm still bummed over it.  Not only was he a good and decent man, he voted for Harris hoping to see history be made and came up short.  I mean, he literally lived to be a hundred, and even he didn't see a woman get elected President!

He didn't see high-speed rail in America, either.

Back in 2022, I said I was giving up on causes or social involvement, as well as personal fulfillment.  Going forward, I am giving up on America completely.  I don't even want to acknowledge my neighbors.  As I said, I don't have to leave America; America left me.  True, I appear to finally be closing in on one long-frustrated goal - traveling abroad - but I won't believe it until my plane touches down on foreign soil.  And given how things look with the new old administration coming in, I wouldn't be surprised if the executive branch does issue a crackdown on Republikflucht.

Bearing all that in mind . . . I am not wishing anyone a happy new year.  Not now, not next year, not until New Year's Ever 2028 - and maybe not even then, if Peter Thiel's puppet gets elected to succeed POTUS #47.  There will be no happiness in These States or just about anywhere else in the world for the next four years.  I can't wish anyone a happy new year; I have no heart to be deceitful.  

And going into these next four years, don't expect to see me at Independence Day parades or cookouts or any other patriotic leisure activities, because not only am I timing my trip to Europe this coming summer to ensure that I'll be out of the country on July 4, I'm going to plan three more foreign trips at the same time of the year for the rest of this coming presidential term.

I'm not even celebrating New Year's Eve tonight.  No watching the ball drop, no countdown, no chips and carbonated cider . . . nothing.  I'm just going to do a few things around the house tonight, read for awhile, maybe listen to a CD, and go to bed.  That's it.  That's all.  Besides, I saw the Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown (which was excellent) earlier today, so I've had my fun.
Good luck in 2025, people.  You're going to need it.

Monday, December 30, 2024

Fight the Matriarchy!

So many progressives want to do away with patriarchy.  Why not do away with matriarchy as well?

We can start with Nancy Pelosi.

As the Democrats, once again as in 2016 faced with the spectre of Donald Trump when they thought they were going to see one of their own become the first female President in history, Pelosi, Capitol Hill's dowager empress, continues to throw sand in in the gears while the House Democratic caucus tries to find a way forward.  
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) tried for a bid to become the ranking minority member on the House Oversight Committee, which would have allowed her to stick it to Trump's cronies in hearings and garner a lot of positive attention for the party.   Pelosi, still in Germany while recovering from a fall she sustained in Luxembourg,  put her thumb on the scales was able to get House Democrats instead to elect Representative Gerry Connelly of Virginia to assume the position instead.  Connolly is 74 and dealing with esophageal cancer.
Now, I've had my disagreements and issues with AOC in the past, but no one can deny that she is an inspiring leader with excellent communication skills and an ability to make Republicans squirm.  The only trouble is, she's able to make Democrats squirm as well.  In addition to having threatened to have moderate House Democrats in other districts primaried, she offended Pelosi first by defeating Joseph Crowley, whom Pelosi was grooming for leadership in the House, for his House seat and then second by camping out in front of her office door.  At 84, Nancy Pelosi appears to suffer from a uniquely Italian strain of Alzheimer's disease; she remembers only vendettas. 
It's more than personal slights Pelosi punishes Democrats for, however.  She is committed to an increasingly outdated seniority system that rewards old folks like Connolly for time well-served and keeps young'uns like AOC patiently and interminably waiting their turn at leadership posts.  Pelosi has famously trusted the counsel of only her generational peers, and she has long frozen out younger members who seek positions of greater power and responsibility; those who actually make a grab for such positions ultimately commit political suicide.  Ask Tim Ryan.  
To respond to the inevitable point that there is new leadership in the House Democratic caucus, ask yourself this - why is Pelosi, not House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, calling the shots on ranking committee memberships?  Why does she hold the title of "Speaker Emerita," when no former Speaker of the House ever before held a title like "Speaker Emeritus" after stepping down from party leadership while retaining his House seat?  Why was she still strategizing House elections in the 2024 cycle and proclaiming that Democrats would retake the House based on her own count?  Why did people take Pelosi seriously about that?  Why do I have a feeling that she shared a beer and a chuckle with Peter Thiel, the maliciously craven Geppetto behind James David Vance, when Vance defeated Tim Ryan for a Senate seat?  I think you know the answer. 
Nancy Pelosi is still, in the wake of Kamala Harris's defeat, the most powerful woman in Washington, and she intends to keep it that way through her influence over Jeffries and his team even if it means shunning newer voices over people who, like Pelosi, have been in Congress too long.  It leaves the party run by a gerontocracy that refuses to acknowledge the younger generation and preserves the status quo even as the Democrats need fresh ideas for taking on Trump.  And Trump is a problem Pelosi is partially responsible for.  Not only did she use her influence to knock President Biden back down when he was still trying to pick himself up after his debate with Trump, she advocated for an open convention because she did not like Harris.  She lost that fight, but Harris's loss has returned Pelosi to the catbird seat.  She is trying to be the power behind the throne on Capitol Hill.  Except that the Democrats have no power to speak of and may not have any recourse if the Democratic old guard sticks around.
AOC hugged Connolly and congratulated him after losing her bid for ranking minority member on the House Oversight Committee, and she will still serve on that committee in the new Congress, where she still promises to be an effective anti-Trump firebrand.  But a party's younger members are only as strong as its leadership allows them to be, and if Pelosi doesn't get out of the way and let the new House Democratic leadership team actually, well, lead, she's going to get the Democrats - and the country - in big trouble.        

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Tiger Dad

Former presidential candidate and shifty entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, the co-chair of the mythical Department of Government Efficiency with noted robber baron Elon Musk, has, along with Musk, advocated for more H1B visas for foreign workers to take jobs in the tech sector.  Many if not most of these workers would be South Asian like Ramaswamy himself.

This created a serious rift in MAGA between the tech right and the alternate right over American identity and American values.  Ramaswamy specifically said that foreign workers are needed to work in the tech sector because native-born Americans are not smart enough, which is what one must expect when we have a culture that values the prom queen over the "mathlete" and the jock over the valedictorian.  Ramaswamy could have stopped there, but he said that the culture also lauds intellectually impoverished TV sitcom characters over their brainier counterparts in shows like "Boy Meets World," "Saved by the Bell," and "Family Matters."  He also suggested that parents should get their children to stop watching such sitcoms and spend more time hitting the books.

I don't know enough about those sitcoms to comment on that observation - I rarely if ever watched them - but on the former point, I would have to say that Ramaswamy is absolutely right.  High schools are supposed to prepare teenagers for adulthood and also help them succeed to the best of their intellectual ability, yet the students with the best brains and the most serious commitment to their studies are often ostracized and even ridiculed for their intellectual fortitude.  High school culture values the most popular kids, the athletes over the mathletes - and this is just a microcosm of the general popular culture in America overall, where intellectuals are rejected in favor of "folksy" or "populist" figures.  How far back do you want to go?  The presidential election of 1828 was framed by supporters of Andrew Jackson as a contest between President John Quincy Adams, who could write, and Andrew Jackson, who could fight.  We all know who won.  (If you don't, you're part of the problem.)

Obviously, the alternate-right wing of MAGA doesn't like Ramaswamy's characterization of their nation and themselves as morons, and they feel betrayed by Ramaswamy's (and Musk's) support for increased immigration from places like India.  The alternate right, after all, wants to keep America white and keep brown people out (although South Asians are actually members of the Caucasian race, George Carlin once having called them dark brown white people).  The ensuing fight between the two factions had splintered MAGA and set the stage for a period of inaction come 2025, and liberals are enjoying the show, sitting back and eating popcorn as they watch.

Don't get too giddy over this internal MAGA feud, fellow anti-MAGA people.  They're still basically united on making America a nation of toxically masculine virtues that persecutes anyone who has a problem with that.

And as proof that Ramaswamy is right about American intelligence . . . who won the presidential election last month? 

Friday, December 27, 2024

Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 27, 2024

"Ding Dong, Ding Dong" by George Harrison  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, December 26, 2024

The Missing Starlink?

Now that the Electoral College has voted, all that's left is to confirm Donald Trump's 312-226 vote victory over Kamala Harris, all that's left is for the Republican Congress, in the presence of Vice President Harris, by a ceremonial count of the votes.  

And yet, many Harris fans claim, still, that Trump stole the election, because they refuse to believe that a majority of people could not be so vile as to vote for someone so horrible (Altjho0ugh Trump won a 49 percent plurality of the electorate representing 35 percent of all Americans of voting age).  They suspect that surrogate president Elon Musk rigged the vote with his Internet system Starlink, siphoning votes for Harris and changing some Harris votes to Trump votes, and maybe even using technology to  suppress the vote in precincts of color. 

All this proves is what I said before . . . mainly, that progressives can be just as stupid as MAGA conservatives.   There is literally no municipality, county, or parish (in deference to Louisiana) where the voting booths and the tabulation machines have connections to the World Wide Web.  In short, there's no way Starlink could rig the system.  And the system is so decentralized.  Musk certainly helped Trump by promoting him on X after he bought it, but he didn't rig the vote.  And when progressives claim that the election was stolen through vote rigging and suggest some sort of conspiracy, they're proving that they're no smarter than MAGA people are.    

And to those of you who are promoting false conspiracy theories about how MAGA stole the election by rigging the ballot count . . . just stop.  Just . . . stop.

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Facepalm

Recently, I accidentally posted a link to one of my entries on this blog to Facebook, and it went through, much to my pleasant surprise.  I hadn't been able to post a link to my blog on Facebook since May 2021.  I was intrigued to resume posting links to my blog on Facebook, though I had planned to do it slowly.  In the meantime, I post one or two links here and there on different group pages, and they went through as well.  I thought that perhaps Facebook no longer considered my blog spam.
El wrongo!  As soon as Facebook - the administrators, the bots, whatever - realized that it had let links to my blog pass through, it quickly reverted to form and removed them, giving my the customary six months to contest it, which I did.  Among the links that Facebook removed was a link to one of my posts about actress Roberta Collins that I posted in a Facebook fan group page for . . . Roberta Collins.
The nameless, faceless, soulless folks who ruin Facebook and program the bots have long memories and short tolerance levels.  It's been nearly four years now, and Facebook still thinks my blog is toxic.  Even when I post an appropriate link to a group page, it removes my content because someone got annoyed that I was always posting links to my blog all over the place on the platform and had me flagged.  And it continues even now.  Someone apparently reported my blog as spam, but I don't know how or why. 
Ahh, who cares?  I now post links to this blog on LinkedIn, Mastodon, and Bluesky . . . and I still get a respectable number of pageviews.  In fact, my previous post, about Trump seeking to annex foreign lands - a piece written on the fly that I wasn't too thrilled with - got 94 pageviews!
Geez, the worse your writing is, the more people like you.    
But that's as may be, Facebook's censorship isn't doing me any favors.

Monday, December 23, 2024

Conqueror Trump

I knew Trump had a lot in common with Hitler, such wanting all power over the people, rewarding his allies, punishing adversaries, and palling around with other fascist leaders, one thing I didn't think he had in common with Hitler was a desire to acquire more territory.
Then he started making threats against Panama.
Trump threatened to take over the Panama Canal - which the United States ceded to Panama when its lease ended because of Panama's closer ties with China - which Trump allowed to happen the last time he was President. 
And not only is he once again trying to annex Greenland from Denmark - likely to be able to build condos there once climate change melts enough of it.
Trump is also referring to Canada as the fifty-first state, suggesting that he wants to annex Canada so as to connect Alaska with the rest of the U.S.  
Meanwhile, he's indicated that he wants to emulate President James K. Polk and start another war with Mexico . . . 
. . . probably to acquire Acapulco.
😦

Saturday, December 21, 2024

President Musk?

Trump has managed to violate the Constitution by running for government office as a proven insurrectionist, so it makes sense that he would do it again by allowing a foreign-born citizen to serve as President.

Elon Musk, who bought Trump for over $200 million and violated the Thirteenth Amendment by owning someone, has stepped in and is calling the shots with Congress.  As soon as Democrats an d Republicans agreed on a bipartisan stopgap bill to und the government, Musk, the richest man in the world and a major government contractor, denounced the bill as wasteful and demanded that the bill be scrapped.  Trump, acting as his chief of staff, agreed.  The bill camethisclose to going down completely and causing a government shutdown right in the middle of the holidays.  But Democrats stepped in and rescued the bill when it became apparent that letting the GOP twist in the wind wasn't worth the pain that would inflict the country as a result of a shutdown.

Musk is in a position to get whatever he wants in negotiations over the budget simply by telling Trump his demands and using his social-media platform to browbeat congressional Republicans.  He can also direct foreign policy by using his influence for his own personal gain not just with Trump but with other foreign leaders - why else would he have sat in on a telephone conversation between Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky?  

This is why the Founders put all of those restrictions in the Constitution - the emoluments clause, the prohibition on foreign-born citizens in the Presidency, the check and balance on the executive branch by giving power to the legislative branch - and it's also why the location of the national capital was based on the approximate center of population (as it existed in 1787) and was placed as far away from business interests as possible.  Technology and the westward centering of the population made Washington, D.C.'s location irrelevant, but Musk, through flattering Trump while flattening his own wallet, has managed to render the constitutional guardrails against his (Trump's) use of power ineffective as well.

Musk and Trump lost this round on the budget, but the outsize influence Musk exhibited means that more chaos is to come.     

Friday, December 20, 2024

Christmas Music Video Of the Week

"Ring Out, Solstice Bells" by Jethro Tull  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

One By One They All Fall

Not too long ago, ABC's George Stephanopoulos (below) showed how tenacious the press could be - "could" here is past tense - in telling the truth about Donald Trump. This past March, on the ABC News program "This Week," Stephanopoulos repeatedly said that Trump had been "found liable for rape" in the civil case brought forward by Elizabeth Jean Carroll.   Even though a jury did not find that Trump raped Carroll, it did decide that he did sexually abuse her, which allowed him to be held liable for battery, even though what he did is pretty much the same thing as rape.  Trump has denied any and all wrongdoing.
Trump responded with a lawsuit against ABC, which everyone believes ABC could have won had it actually gone to court.  Instead, ABC chose to settle, paying Trump $15 million (which will go to his, ahem, presidential library) for daring to tell the truth about him.  Media critic Brian Stelter wrote on CNN's Web site that while "some media law experts believed ABC had a good chance of beating him at trial, given the inherent challenge of proving Stephanopoulos acted with 'actual malice,'" he added that "trials also add uncertainty and a risk of severe reputational damage – factors that ABC’s parent company, Disney, is now avoiding."  Some lawyers have wondered if ABC and Disney have settled to avoid discovery, which might have unearthed documents that would cast the network and its news division in an unflattering light.
I hope Disney CEO Bob Iger was not involved directly in this, because it means that, once again, even the highest-ranking corporate officer prefers not to anger Trump as he prepares to retake power next month.  And I'm also sure that Willow Bay, dean of the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism - Iger's wife - would not approve.
Having come just a month after former newspaper editor Joe Scarborough and former CBS reporter Mika Brzezinski - who haven't practiced real journalism in over twenty years - went to Berghof-by-the-Sea to lick Trump's boots, this revolting development (as Chester Riley would have called it) is just a taste of what Trump plans as part of his campaign of retribution against the media.  He plans to sue CBS for what he calls a misleadingly edited "60 Minutes" interview that was intended to make him look bad.  The interview was with Kamala Harris.  Also, he plans to sue retiring Des Moines Register pollster Ann Selzer for election interference after she put out a poll showing Harris carrying Iowa by a narrow margin before Trump carried it by a wide one.  More media outlets will likely capitulate to Trump and play nice with him to avoid such lawfare.
It's all part of his plan to silence the media and prevent any negative stories about him during his second presidential term . . . and likely any negatives stories about him or MAGA beyond January 2029 as well.  Trump hopes to make it clear that if you criticize him, he'll sue you and force you into bankruptcy even if he ultimately loses the suit.   
And if that doesn't stop you, FBI director Kash Patel (below) will have the United States Secret Police (currently the Oath Keepers) arrest you.
Correction: The photo above is not of Kash Patel.  The photo above is of Stephen Miller.  I regret the error.

Monday, December 16, 2024

I Beg Your Pardon?

James Clyburn has to go.

 
Yes, he's a veteran of the civil rights movement of the 1960s, he's been a capable legislator in the U.S. House of Representatives, and he's been Joe Biden's right-hand man, as well as one of Nancy Pelosi's top lieutenants, but with Biden on his way out and Pelosi no longer Speaker or House Democratic leader (aside: best wishes to Nancy Pelosi for a speedy recovery from her fall), the days of Clyburn's own political relevance are numbered, and the number is very low.  It wouldn't be as low as it is but for all of the trouble he's caused.
What trouble?  Well, when Clyburn backed President Biden's bid for re-election even when more and more Democrats called for Biden to withdraw from the 2024 campaign, he added that it was only logical that Kamala Harris become the 2024 Democratic presidential nominee if Biden did step down because there was no way that Democrats could deny the nomination to the highest-ranking black woman in the federal government and insult black women, the most loyal base of the Democratic Party, and that she should be not only the first choice to replace Biden but the only choice.
Yeah, that worked out just fine.  
But it gets worse.  Now that Harris is a hasbeen (see my blog entry on that here),  Clyburn has suggested that, to clear the air after a toxic presidential campaign and eight years of tumult, perhaps President Biden should pardon Trump.
Pardon Trump?  Pardon me???
This is what happens when a member of the gerontocracy that runs the Democratic Party skips his meds for a day.
At least Biden is stepping down.  Why are Clyburn and Pelosi still in Congress?  

Friday, December 13, 2024

Christmas Music Video Of the Week - December 13, 2024

"Mistletoe and Holly" by Frank Sinatra  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Must Stop Normalizing Bad Cable

I'm done with MSNBC.

After Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski revealed to the world that they had made a journey to visit Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, I stopped watching their morning program, but I continued to tune in to Nicolle Wallace and Lawrence O'Donnell for awhile, as they kept - and keep - continuing to call out Trump effectively.  I also continued to watch some of their weekend programs.  But after a week or two, I got tired of even that, and I started seeking out more alternative independent media on YouTube but kept recording MSNBC programs in case I wanted to go back to them.

I never did.  In that time I was still recording (but not watching) MSNBC shows, I started contemplating how Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski had told viewers how Trump was a fascist and then tried to make nice with him,  how the prime-time hosts had conditioned viewers into expecting a Kamala Harris victory in November, how Lawrence O'Donnell had had Simon Rosenberg on repeatedly to mindlessly reassure us how Harris was winning - "I'd rather much be us than them" - how Michael Steele dismissed Bernie Sanders' call to get big money of of the Democratic Party as irrelevant, how David Frum was kicked off "Morning Joe" for his joke about Fox News, how the Reverend Al Sharpton's National Action Network received contributions from the Harris campaign before conducting with Vice President Harris a softball interview that was less of an interview than a conversation, how MSNBC pundits who had been praising the Democrats for a great campaign the day before the election suddenly started excoriating the Democrats for a lousy campaign the day after the election, how Scarborough, after having said in the spring that President Biden was at the top of his game, then, after Biden's early-summer debate with Trump, decided that Biden was through . . . and then I remembered that Jen Psaki, President Biden's first White House press secretary,  turned on her former boss after the debate and joined the decades-long Washington parlor game of always writing off Biden when he was at his low points instead of giving him the benefit of the doubt after he blew his debate with Trump.  

That was it.  I not only deleted the backlog of MSNBC shows I'd already recorded, I canceled all future recordings.  It also became apparent that I was not so much getting news from the cable news channel as I was getting commentary that was accurate in pointing out Trump's failings as a human being but dead wrong in conveying the progress of the 2024 presidential campaign and what the voters were concerned about.  Though, I do recommend MSNBC as a new source if you want to get your mind off foreign events.  In 2024, there was barely a mention of the strains in the British economy that led to the Tories' defeat in the elections in the U.K., no coverage of the issues in France that didn't involve Notre Dame Cathedral, and nothing about the economic struggles in Germany.  I also have a feeling that part of the reason I was so surprised by the fall of Assad in Syria was because there hadn't been much talk about Syria on MSNBC.

I've since returned to watching BBC World News America, having sworn off American mainstream legacy media - even the PBS NewsHour, whose arts and culture stories always seem to be about hip-hop and whose Monday pundit panel of Amy Walter and Tamara Keith can't stop laughing and joking about everything - and I get my commentary from YouTube channels like The Bulwark and Status Coup News.  I can't believe anything that American mainstream legacy media says - least of all MSNBC, which had me and others anticipating a politician (a politician that many in the Democratic Party didn't actually like!) making history in becoming the first black female President, only to see Trump become the first former President since Grover Cleveland and the first Republican former President ever to be returned to office . . . and anticipating a California Jew (Douglas Emhoff) becoming the first male presidential spouse to move into the White House only to see the likelihood of another California Jew (Adam Schiff) moving into the big house.

MSNBC can't be spun off from Comcast and wither away soon enough.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Health Karma

I have a health insurance policy managed by UnitedHealthcare, and for reasons too random and complicated to explain, I was already planning to leave the company and go with another provider before last Wednesday, when United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was assassinated by a disgruntled customer.

While I do not condone violence, I can understand why Thompson was killed, as his company has expanded exponentially over the years and has produced enormous profits by denying payment of claims at double the industry average, causing many policy holders to die from not being able to receive treatment or go broke from health care bills.  As many as 68,000 Americans die annually from being unable to receive care or being unable to pay for care.

So for Brian Thompson to be shot to death for making lots of money for a company that made a killing off people dying is karma in the truest sense of the word.

The suspect - and likely killer - is a fellow named Luigi Mangione (no relation to jazz musician Chuck Mangione), who apparently had a problem with UnitedHealthcare due to an injury to his spine.  He more or less apologized for making Thompson's kids fatherless (Thompson was separated from his wife), but said the shooting had to be done.
"Frankly," he wrote in a manifesto, "these parasites simply had it coming. A reminder: the U.S. has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy. "United is the [expletive deleted] largest company in the US by market cap, behind only Apple, Google, Walmart. It has grown and grown, but [h]as our life expectancy?  No, the reality is, these [expletive deleted] have simply gotten too powerful, and they continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it."
Progressives who have been striving for decades for the United States to adopt a single-payer health care system like Great Britain or Canada had been cheering on Mangione, and many people - including progressives - refused to help law enforcement on the manhunt for him, even though Mangione got his frustrations out with . . . a gun.  The biggest irony as that he's a far-right libertarian.
Karma biting back.
Meanwhile, radio host Stephanie Miller can't stop riffing off Luigi Mangione's name, pronouncing it in the most ridiculous Italian accent on her radio show, which only serves to remind me that Italian-Americans - I'm half-Italian - are the last white ethnic group you can make fun of.
Especially if you're a progressive.
And meanwhile, America's god-awful health care "system" goes on.

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

The Road From Damascus

The Syrian Civil War had been going on so long since it started in 2011 that no one outside Syria noticed it was still going on . . . except for those who noticed it and saw that it was a stalemate at best with President Bashar al-Assad having the upper hand.  

Then suddenly it flared up and the so-called experts said that it wouldn't affect Damascus.  Until the rebels entered Damascus and forced Assad to flee to Moscow.

And Tulsi Gabbard suddenly has a lot less currency. 😃

The Syrian people now have a chance to build the democratic republic that Iraq is still trying to be after twenty years.  The Iranians have lost their base of influence on the Mediterranean Sea.  And Vladimir Putin's sphere of influence, as of now, no longer includes countries that were not Soviet republics.  Putin now needs Donald Trump more than Trump needs Putin.

Then again, Trump might need Putin in the near future - when he's driven out of office by his own people.  I hope Vlad's dacha is big enough for two world ex-leaders!

Saturday, December 7, 2024

MessNBC

Just when you thought the freefall of Joe Scarborough's and Mika Brzezinski's MSNBC morning show couldn't get worse, the couple got themselves in hotter water when they found themselves apologizing to a competitor news channel known for its friendly coverage of Donald Trump.

Conservative author David Frum joked that Pete Hegseth, Trump's pick for Secretary of Defense and the weekend Fox News host with the spell-checker-unfriendly name, has been so drunk that he was too drunk even for Fox News' liking, which doesn't bode well for his fitness for leading the U.S. military.  A producer told Frum through an earpiece that his commentary was no longer necessary, and Mika Brzezinski apologized to Fox News for Frum's flippant remark.  

Since when does an MSNBC host feel a need to apologize to a rival network that's constantly ridiculing her own?  Uhh, when she knows that the incoming President will have your head if she dares let someone bash his favorite "news" channel?    

Frum, who's no dope, published a piece in The Atlantic suggesting that fear of retribution is driving editorial decisions at MSNBC these days, and he suggested that Brzezinski's apology was an extension of her and Scarborough's efforts to mend fences with Trump, which they did by going to Mar-a-Lago on November 15 to lick his boots out of fear.  Scarborough got upset, claiming that he and Brzezinski went to Mar-a-Lago to get a "read" of Trump as he prepares to return to power.

I think they got a read of how he would govern (or something like it) in a second nonconsecutive term by listening to him blather over the past four years. 
Neither Joe Scarborough nor Mika Brzezinski seem to be able to get the Mar-a-Lago debacle behind them, mainly because they can't admit that they did anything wrong.  Scarborough cited reporters from other news outlets - with Brzezinski coaching him by offering examples in a low-register voice, as if she were Nancy Reagan trying to give Ronald sotto voce coaching on what to tell the press - who spoke on background with Trump, but to this day neither he nor his wife have offered any transcript or videotape of them talking to Trump.  It wasn't a proper interview.  They went there to smooth his ruffled feathers, and now they're trying to stop anyone on their show from ruffling his feathers again by bashing his favorite news channel or his Cabinet selections.
And what about the fear factor that Frum pointed out?  "Let me tell you something," Scarborough said, "you can talk to anybody that's worked in the front office of NBC and MSNBC over the past 22 years tell you I'm not fearful. You talk to anybody who served with me in Congress, they will tell you - not fearful of leadership. Now? Not fearful." 
Paging Queen Gertrude.  Someone is protesting just a wee bit too much.
Anyway, I've given up on MSNBC largely because of these two.  Yes, there are some commentators on the channel who haven't given up on calling Trump to account, such as Nicolle Wallace, Rachel Maddow, and Lawrence O'Donnell, but as I said before, it's only a matter of time before either they get cancelled or MSNBC goes down swinging after it's spun off from Comcast as part of a separate company - something that would definitely not have happened if Kamala Harris had won the Presidency last month.  And the sooner Joe and Mika quit or get fired, the better it will be for everyone else involved.  They're dragging down the whole channel, what with other hosts furious with them and with ratings continuing to plummet like a stone.  Maddow is likely to come up with some groundbreaking reporting that exposes Trump as a bigger fraud than we already know he is, but who cares when MSNBC's ratings are so bad that her relatives are the only ones still watching her?
And after Michael Steele's ridiculing of Bernie Sanders on his (Steele's) own show for calling for the Democratic National Committee to root out corporate donors, I'm sort of glad I've found alternative political analysis on YouTube.