Thursday, July 2, 2026
There Is No Conspiracy
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Out With a Whimper
The Supreme Court just ruled that Trump has the ability to fire and civil service agency director he wants to.
One hundred and forty-three years of the precedent of the Pendleton Civil Service Act - signed by President Chester Arthur, a one-time political hack - just went out the window.
But they did hold Trump accountable for raping Elizabeth Jean Carroll, even as they upheld birthright citizenship - by one vote!
And so ends the 2025-26 U.S. Supreme Court term.
I can't comment any further, except to say that the only thing I like about the Supreme Court . . .
Which, by the way, should have room for six more justices.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
The Great American Cancel Culture
It's hard for any American of any race, creed or color to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States when there are so many Americans who have been trying to cancel important figures in American history. I'm not talking about worthy initiatives like the 1619 Project to focus more on the evils of slavery or the effort to teach Americans that the greatest American leaders of the past - especially the Founding Fathers - were not as pure as Sir Galahad. I'm talking about efforts to expunge historical figures - white men, mostly, of course - from the historical record. It would be hard to find just one example of such cancelling that encapsulates the antipathy toward American historical figures that is a repudiation of the nation in general. Nevertheless, I feel that the renaming and recontextualizing of Washington Park in Newark, New Jersey comes close . . .
After the brutal murder of George Floyd and the peak of the Black Lives Matter movement, which led to the painting of the slogan on city streets in big capital letters in cities across America (including Newark, where it was painted on Halsey Street), so that people would Get It, Newark's mayor, Ras Baraka, son of black nationalist literary figure Amiri Baraka, decided that it was hideously inappropriate for a black-majority city like his to have a downtown park named for George Washington, despite the park's proximity to where Washington appeared while traveling through Newark and despite his integral role in creating and defining the Presidency as our first President, because, well, Washington was a slaveowner, and while many of his slaves were freed when his wife Martha died in 1802, three years after George died, many of them remained in the "care" of Martha's in-laws from her first marriage to Daniel Custis, including her grandson George Washington Parke Custis, the father-in-law of . . . Robert E. Lee.
To compliment the newly renamed Harriet Tubman Square, Mayor Baraka commissioned a monument to the Moses of her people. Good idea. But then you actually see the monument . . .
What the hell is this?Well, I'll let Mayor Baraka explain it:
"In a time when so many cities are choosing to topple statues that limit the scope of their people's story, we have chosen to erect a monument that spurs us into our future story of exemplary strength and solidity," Baraka said when the monument was unveiled.
Does that include a future that gives architects and sculptors an education in art in addition to training?
I mean, Harriet Tubman deserves a monument in a black-majority city - I can't emphasize this enough - but this is ugly. I mean, really ugly. But because it honors a black woman, was sculpted and designed by a black woman (Nina Cooke John), and features a recorded narration (that Disney influence again) by a black woman (the Newark-born rapper and actress legally known as Dana Owens), no one dares criticize or object to this monstrosity.
I, on the other hand, live for that sort of thing. Dangerously, I might add, as Bloomfield Avenue in Newark leads right up to where I live.
I know that my insistence that I'm not opposed to a monument to Harriet Tubman, and that I only think the one that actually got put up is godawful, isn't going to shield me from criticism from its defenders. But it is what it is. And, given that the monument occupies only a small portion of the triangular public space formerly known as Washington Park, I have just one question: Why didn't the mayor and city council simply name the immediate square footage around the monument Harriet Tubman Square and leave the rest of the space as Washington Park, Washington being the Father of Our Country and all?
Because that would have involve compromise. Anyone who knows anything about Ras Baraka and his dad is that a Baraka never compromises. A Booker, yes. A Baraka, no. (Aside: Amiri Baraka successfully led an effort to have an elementary school named for Robert Treat - the whitey who founded Newark - renamed for black nationalist Marcus Garvey. See what I mean? The school has since been demolished.)
However, I would be remiss (there I go, using that flowery whitey language again) if I did not express of my approval of Mayor Baraka's decision to remove the public sculpture that was there before - a statue of Christopher Columbus.
Of course, when the statue was first erected, it honored the city's Italian-American population, which is now down to maybe a block in the Forest Hill neighborhood. The inscription on the statue's base read:
TO CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
IMMORTAL GENOESE
ERECTED BY THE ITALIANS
IN THIS LAND
PERCEIVED THROUGH HIS GENIUS
IN THE YEAR 1492
Attempts to remove Columbus statues in Newark suburbs have met with resistance from the state's many Italian-Americans, who consider Columbus a symbol of pride in their heritage and culture.
Gee, why don't we put up statues of Benito Mussolini while we're at it?
As for my opposition to Columbus monuments, the fact that he was a genocidal maniac is only one of the reasons for my opposition. Another reason is the fact - which I've mentioned here before - that the story that Columbus proved the world was round was invented by Washington Irving in his biography of Columbus. (The ancient Greeks proved that the world was round because of how the earth casts a shadow on the moon.) A third reason is that Columbus died thinking he had reached what we now called Indonesia, completely ignorant of the fact that he had reached a heretofore uncharted land. But there's the fatal fourth reason - no one really knows what Columbus looked like. Sculptors who create statues of him can only guess his features.
Mayor Baraka ran for governor of New Jersey in 2025 and made a strong showing in the primary, coming second behind Mikie Sherrill. Had he been the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, he would certainly have lost to the Republican gubernatorial nominee, Giachino "Jack" Ciattarelli, who would have used Baraka's antipathy for the Italian Navigator as a cudgel against him.
That said, however, as someone who is part Italian, I'm glad that statue is gone. But removing George Washington's name from the downtown park now named for Harriet Tubman and redesignated a square (it's a triangle!) is a bridge to far for me. And I am not changing my mind about the Tubman monument - it's ugly. Really ugly. It's Newark's equivalent to the giant bust of Benjamin Franklin covered with pennies in Philadelphia. The only way I could ever justify Washington's name removed from a park in Newark or anywhere in New Jersey is if the state secedes and becomes part of Canada or part of a new country that is ready to make history of its own.
That, of course, is my fondest hope.
Monday, June 29, 2026
The Great American Wet Blanket
Saturday, June 27, 2026
The Great American Ripoff
Friday, June 26, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - Hiatus
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Just Junk All Across the Horizon
Trump came back to Washington, D.C. last year and, once ensconced in the White House a second time, decided to remake the egalitarian architectural composition of Washington in his image. First came the East Wing demolition for the ballroom. Then came his appendage of his name on the Kennedy Center (the Third Reich architecture of which I already explained), though his name had to come off and he put tarps over where his name used to be. Now, the algae in the reflecting pool.
Trump then arranged for the National Park Service add hydrogen peroxide to the water, which didn't do much to kill the algae but did break up the paint on the pool floor and brought it up in chunks of various sizes. But I think the Trump brothers have a solution for that.
But while it's an abomination to see what Trump is doing to Washington, one thing I cannot tolerate is how white bourgeois liberals complain about the desecration of the national capital's landscape but is totally unmoved by the desecration of the nation's landscape. They have a lot of damn gall to complain about how Trump is making Washington D.C. ugly when they drive to the local big-box chain store, pass strip shopping centers, large, loud illuminated signs and cartoonish fast-food eateries, and probably pass through - or live in - a subdivision of bland houses and sidewalks that lead nowhere (assuming they have sidewalks) . . . and don't think twice of how ugly and degrading this all is. They don't like what Trump is doing to Washington, D.C. yet they don't mind an America that has become one big Breezewood, Pennsylvania.
Monday, June 22, 2026
Clive, We Hardly Knew Ye
But while Clive Davis was a great man, he was not always a good man. Black women - you know where this is going, right? - have taken to social media to set the record straight about how he handled the careers of artists of their race and their sex. As the head of Arista, he tried to push Phyllis Hyman into recording more contemporary pop and disco in the late seventies when she insisted on remaining true to her jazz roots, and when he brought Angela Bofill to Arista, he promoted her at Hyman's expense, causing an immediate rift between the two women. He had even more success with promoting Whitney Houston, but her own records were a disappointment to many critics who found her a formidable virtuoso who recorded the blandest, weakest songs ever conceived. In Essex County, New Jersey, where Whitney Houston was born and raised (and where I was born and have lived for fifty of my sixty years, so I know a thing or two about this), the disappointment bordered on disgust, where black listeners familiar with Houston's gospel chops were incensed at how watered down her pop sound was.
And the disgust many people felt with Davis goes beyond black women. Kelly Clarkson called Davis a bully and said his handling of her recording career was toxic, and Kelly Clarkson is one of America's pop sweethearts, so her take on Davis ought to be taken more seriously. One didn't need to be a music-business outsider to note Davis's commercial and artistic missteps throughout the years. He signed Barry Manilow to Columbia in 1973, then brought him to Arista a year later when he and Columbia parted ways, and he chose to guide Manilow into a weird Tin Pan Alley-pop-rock bombast sound for much of Manilow's career. He managed to sign the one supergroup of the eighties that had potential - the KBC Band, a band comprised of Jefferson Airplane alumni Paul Kantner, Marty Balin, and Jack Casady - only to give them inadequate promotion, leading to their swift dissolution, even as Davis signed the short-lived GTR, whose only album you already know about.
Perhaps Davis's most egregious blunder, apart from promoting Sean Combs by giving him tons of money (and I prefer not to talk about what happened to him!), was issuing Milli Vanilli's only album on Arista in the United States at the end of 1988, which became the biggest selling-album of 1989 and probably the biggest-selling album of the 1980s apart from Michael Jackson's Thriller. Milli Vanilli's LP sold ten million copies and spawned four huge hit singles. When it turned out that Robert Pilatus and Fabrice Morvan, the Vanilli boys in question, weren't the real singers on the record, Davis responded with a defense commonly used by President Ronald Reagan through the last years of his administration - he knew nothing about it.
But even if Pilatus and Morvan weren't the real singers - and I don't want to dump on the duo because they've been shamed enough already - the fact that Arista used all sorts of promotional hijinks to push ten million copies of a record with lifeless vocalizing and soulless performances suggests a real lack of ethics at the label, as well as disregard for a scandal which Davis, even if he didn't know about the deception, should have been on top of.
The Reagan reference notwithstanding, Clive Davis may very well have been the Richard Nixon of the music business - he had the power to do good, he had the power to do evil, and he did both. It's a complicated legacy, yes, but if the results of Davis's career include giving Graham Parker the opportunity to record Squeezing Out Sparks - an album I love and haven't written about on this blog yet - I'm not going to be too judgmental.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Washington As the New St. Petersburg
Friday, June 19, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - June 19, 2026
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Iran Over It
Trump apparently signed a deal regarding fourteen points for peace with Iran to end what has been the shortest lost war in American history with consequences that will last a long time.
Mr. Trump and his fourteen points bore me. Even God Almighty has only ten.
Under the deal, Iran gets to keep its ballistic missiles, continues to enrich uranium, gets $300 million for reconstruction of areas destroyed in the war, and can close the Strait of Hormuz any time it wants. Plus, it gets fees for its usage. In the memo of "understand" that Trump endorsed, the issue of funding terrorism in Lebanon and Yemen remain unresolved. These topics are for discussion later.
Much later.
To recap:
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Not Feeling It
I understand the U.S. men's national soccer team won its first game in the 2026 World Cup, defeating Paraguay 4-1 in spectacular fashion. Yeah, I didn't see it.
I'm not really interested in to the World Cup this time around. I haven't found the time to follow the tournament, mainly because I've been busy with other things.
Likewise, I barely got excited with schadenfreude when I saw that Trump's eightieth birthday party turned out to be a dud, with Trump falling asleep during the UFC fight on the White House lawn while the winner of the fight - executed in oppressive heat and humidity under a severe thunderstorm watch - was calling Michelle Obama a man. Maybe if there had been a severe thunderstorm that had struck the cage and electrocuted people who deserved it, I might have felt a spring in my step. Instead, I was like, "whatever."
And the 250th anniversary of American independence? No interest in celebrating it, which is why I'll be in London on the Fourth. That's another post, though.
Trump has pretty much managed to suck the life out of everything in These States, and it's a wonder I can drum up enough enthusiasm to go to the supermarket.
As Van Morrison once said . . .
Friday, June 12, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - June 12, 2026
"Another Rainy Day In New York City" by Chicago (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, June 11, 2026
World Flop
Am I going to watch the games of the World Cup, which commenced today? Ahh . . . probably not.
The good news? The hotels and the stadiums charging top dollar for their rooms and their tickets, respectively, are going to lose their shirts, which means that their greedy efforts to fleece the fans will go unrewarded. People outside the North American mainland are going to the Canadian and Mexican matches and ignoring the U.S. matches even as the teams playing in the States are establishing bases of operation right over the borders in Canada and Mexico. Even Americans don't want to go to the American matches. And why would Americans want to root for the home team?
Our team still sucks. It sucks now, it has always sucked, and it will suck for eternity.
Our team sucks as if it can't suck enough. It sucks so much, it didn't even qualify for the 2018 World Cup tournament in Russia. Hmm, who was President then?
Everything Trump touches dies.
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
El Ocho Vocho
Monday, June 8, 2026
And Of Course, There Will Be Sport
Trump meant it when he said their would be an Ultimate Fighting Championship mixed-martial arts event on the White House South Lawn for the 250th anniversary of the nation's founding, and he has gone one better by having the most vulgar arena on the lawn for people's enjoyment.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Sweet Home Albania
While Trump wreaks havoc over what's left of our government (and making it that much easier to break up the country into smaller independent states, as there won't be much of a government left) and remodels and destroys the White House beyond recognition (another reason it will be easier to dissolve the Union), Ivanka Trump is making her own little investment in real estate (sorry, I have no parenthetical clause to offer here about breaking up the country).
While a lot of MAGA Republicans have nothing wrong with Ivanka buying an island off the coast of Albania in the Gulf of America near Mobile (see what I did there?) the Albanian people are livid, as the island, Sazan, is a former military installation in the Soviet satellite area, with many tunnels and pillboxes still intact, that is now a wildlife refuge. The prime minister of Albania, elected on a promise to rid the government of corruption, approved the deal for this proposed resort, which is being spearheaded by Affinity Partners, the investment firm founded by . . . Jared Kushner.
Ivanka vowed not to get involved in politics after her father set out to regain the White House, but her husband's deal with a corrupt leader, which has sparked demonstrations all across Albania, and her own enthusiasm for this project have landed her dead center in what has already become a global controversy. Benito Mussolini may have actually caused less consternation when he invaded Albania in April 1939. The resort is bound to cause a great deal of environmental destruction on Sazan Island, undermining its significance as a marine sanctuary, and the jobs it will create will mainly be jobs in which Albanian domestic workers tend to the whims of wealthy American real-estate con men, a third of which will be named Trump, a third of which will be named Kushner, and a third of which are likely to be an assortment of other names from the Epstein files.
There's only one thing Ivanka and Jared can do to stop this controversy - give up the project. Don't even scale it down to a respectable size. Just give up on this Albania getaway. The only way for them to please Albanians is to just get down and leave and walk away.
Friday, June 5, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - June 5, 2026
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Time's Up
It did, and in just the past several days. After CNN's Anderson Cooper chose not to continued reporting for "60 Minutes" as a sideline - and, given that CNN is about to be acquired by the same power-hungry Zionist family that owns CBS, the Ellisons, he's not long for that network either - CBS reported that "60 Minutes" correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi, whose story on the Salvadoran concentration camp for undocumented migrants apprehended in the U.S. was shelved by CBS News dominatrix Bari Weiss but then aired after massive protests against her decision, learned that management had rendered to nullify her contract after careful consideration of her state of employment. In other words, she was sacked. Then the last hired was the second fired - Cecilia Vega, the new girl on the "60 Minutes" on-air staff, was also let go, as was the program's producer, Tanya Simon, who had been on the job for only one year.
I'd be happy to see Alfonsi, Vega and Pelley start a YouTube channel together and join the independent-media bandwagon, but if such a channel materializes, don't expect them to produce investigative journalism like they did on television. Stories of the sort these three correspondents did on "60 Minutes" require deep pockets and a cadre of lawyers to back them up, and YouTube channels usually have neither. Thanks to Trump and his oligarch allies, we won't see much in the way of news stories that calls out corruption and scandal, and outlets like ProPublica, which do that sort of work, will become more important. But one must remember that legacy media, even CBS News, don't have a legacy that's always worth celebrating. How far back do you want to go? Bear in mind, that after Edward R. Murrow exposed Joe McCarthy as a fraud, CBS quietly reassigned him to "interview" celebrities on the chat show "Person to Person," which included an "interview" with Harpo Marx, in which the quiet Marx brother stayed in character and mimed his answers to Murrow's perfunctory questions. And you don't have to go back to far at CNN to remember how the news channel fired Soledad O'Brien - who, being white, black and Hispanic, as well as a woman, was a walking DEI program - because she asked too many people too many tough questions. Fired for doing one's job, what is the world coming to? She won the admiration of Stephen Colbert, but not much else.
Speaking of Colbert, his CBS late-night talk show just ended with a bang, and Bryon Allen's stand-up compilation show, which replaced Colbert, began with a whimper. And even though late-night talk shows are going out of style like neighborhood bars and front porches, Colbert's show was the highest-rated of the late-night talk shows by a wide margin, and the two Jimmys, Fallon at NBC and Kimmel at ABC, still dull respectable ratings of their own. Colbert was a dwindling return on investment due to falling ad revenue, to be sure, and he was allowed to remain on the air until the end of his contract, but it's becoming obvious that the only reason he's no longer on the air is because Trump wanted him off the air due to Colbert's anti-Trump political satire. If dwindling revenue from advertisers were the only reason for Colbert to leave television, Fallon and Kimmel would have joined him in exile.
And to those who find it unprecedented that a President forced a comedian off CBS, you can ask Dick Smothers about that, as he and his brother Tom (who died in 2023) saw their Sunday night variety show canceled because of their political satire against President Nixon. Ask Dick Smothers how he and his brother had also lampooned President Johnson, but be sure to also ask him about the letter that Johnson sent the Smothers Brothers after he left office, which the brothers read aloud at the end of their final show in 1969, in which the thirty-sixth President lauded them for their clever satire and said that the right to make fun of political figures was necessary to preserve freedom of speech in America. Nixon clearly didn't agree.
Though, Nixon did appear on CBS in October 1968 while campaigning for the Presidency to talk to a correspondent of this new CBS news magazine, on its second-ever episode, about his candidacy. The correspondent was Mike Wallace. The program was "60 Minutes."
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Free Dumb 250
It sounded good on paper. The Trump regime planned to have a series of concerts to lead to the big quarter-millennial anniversary of American independence next month. Except that the performers that Trump singed up were a bunch of undertalented, washed-up hasbeens from the early nineties. And Martina McBride.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Pax Texana
Ladies and gentlemen, meet Warren Kenneth Paxton.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - May 29, 2026
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Our Cup Doth Not Runneth Over
Infantino promised that the World Cup tournament would be an economic engine that would be the equivalent of 104 Super Bowls - 104 being the number of matches to be played in this tournament - but in the eleven U.S. host cities, that prediction has obviously turned out wrong. Most foreigners don't want to come here because of the restrictions on travel to the United States (and when enough Americans get wise to MAGA, that's when we'll see Trump implement restrictions on travel from the United States!) and because of Trump's hostility toward every country in the world not named Russia or Israel and not located on the Arabian Peninsula.
It gets worse. Meisalas has reported that bookings are even behind a typical summer vacation season. FIFA has even had trouble making a licensing deal with China and India, the two most populous nations in the world and about one-fourth of the world's population put together, to ensure World Cup broadcasts there. And tickets are not only expensive for the American games, but also for games in Canada and Mexico, and almost no one in Mexico can afford them. Here in These States, the U.S. men's team's opening match in Los Angeles, the U.S. men's national team versus Paraguay, can't have a sellout despite expectations of one.
Fortunately, that's not very serious. After all, this is the U.S. men's soccer team, the Colorado Rockies of international soccer.
Trump bragged about having the World Cup, the 250th anniversary of the United States' founding, and the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics all under his watch after he forced Kamala Harris into early retirement. But not only is the American semiquincentennial a meh-fest, the World Cup is collapsing before his and our eyes. Because Trump and Infantino turned what should have been a celebration of the three major nations of North America into a corrupted cash cow. And the Olympics? Oh, honey, that is going to be another great disaster. And the idea that Trump, not native Californian and Los Angeles resident Kamala Harris, will be presiding over the opening ceremonies with the governor of California of an Olympiad already redolent of Berlin 1936 is itself redolent.
At least, whoever the governor is, it won't be Eric Swalwell.
The Los Angeles 2028 organizing committee is already dealing with its chair Casey Wasserman having ended up being mentioned in the Epstein files, and Trump's inevitable efforts to make the Games all about him will make it worse. And yet the committee's chief athletics officer - a champion athlete you might have heard of, Janet Evans - is still convinced that these Games will turn out fine.
As for the rest of you reading this, I don't need to tell you again that the International Olympic Committee only awarded the 2028 Olympics to Los Angeles eleven years in advance because they apparently figured that Trump would be gone long before then; either he's be re-elected in 2020 and be an ex-President by 2025 at the latest or be voted out of office and not make a comeback, because no such thing had happened in American politics since 1892. Yeah, you can ask John Cornyn how that calculation turned out for him! (I'll have more on that later.)
Do I plan to watch any of the World Cup. I don't know. Maybe. I can't root for the home team, of course, because being an American these days is nothing to take pride in, and of course, the home team sucks anyway. Let's just say I plan to give the World Cup the same attention I gave to the Winter Olympics this past February.
You can now draw your own conclusions.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Primary News
I never got back to this story before now, but as you likely already know, Analilia Mejia is my congresswoman. She won the April 16 special election.
But the show's not over yet, this one's a double feature. Representative Mejia has to go through another Democratic primary a week ago from today against, as far as I know, three competitors to stand in November for the full two-year term that starts in January. And in November, is she wins the primary next week, she'll face the persistent Joe Hathaway on the Republican side once again, meaning I'll have to deal with more racist GOP flyers in the mail.
Meanwhile, the Texas Republican primary runoff to decide the GOP nominee for U.S. Senate is today, in which Republican voters have to choose between incumbent Senator John Cornyn and the Trump-backed, wholly corrupt state Attorney General Ken Paxton. The winner faces James Talarico, who's competing to be the first Democrat elected to the U.S. Senate from Texas since . . . 1988.
Wake me when it's over.




























