This is a picture of Barack and Michelle Obama.
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Trump Goes Ape Over the Obamas
Saturday, February 7, 2026
Milan Meh and Cortina Ennui
So, how do I think Team USA is going to do in the 2026 Winter Olympics, which just opened officially? Quite frankly, I don't give a twit. Minneapolis is still under siege, Jeff Bezos' lack of business sense or ethics is destroying Hollywood and one of the nation's great newspapers simultaneously, Steve Bannon is promising voter intimidation to secure Republican victories in the midterm elections in November, it's so cold outside that I feel like I live closer to the Hudson Bay than the Hudson River, and my skin is so dry that my left heel feels like someone rammed a pickax through it!
But hearing how the Vice President of the United States got booed at the opening ceremonies at the Winter Olympics makes me feel a little bit better.
It's almost 11:30 in the morning on the American East Coast as I type this, and I haven't yet watched a moment of Winter Olympic coverage, but I plan to, given how bitterly cold it is outside and how I have no desire to go out except for a couple of necessary short trips. I just want to lie on the bed and cuddle up with my cats as I watch the downhill and slalom runs and the bobsled races (and some speed skating, please!). And this time I hope I don't fall asleep watching the events. But, given the raw sewage Steve Bannon and the rest of MAGA are flooding the zone with, I doubt I will be able to deliver in this space the sort of savagely witty commentary on these Games, because the whole Olympic movement, sadly, has gone a long way toward satirizing itself.
And no, I still haven't gotten a reply from International Olympic Committee president Kirsty Coventry about moving the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics to a city in another country, like, say, Toronto, but that Olympiad looks to be a major disaster - expect boycotts of American World Cup matches this year as a dry run for what could happen in 2028. Remember: The 2028 Olympics were awarded to Los Angeles back in 2017, when Trump was in the first year of his first term in the White House, and, given what the International Olympic Committee understood about American politics, people figured that Trump would be long gone by 2028 - either he'd be a one-term President who would be gone by 2021 or a two-term President who would step down by 2025. No one ever imagined Trump pulling a Grover Cleveland on everyone and possibly still being in office in 2028. Or maybe Vance will be President then, in which case, he'll be booed a second time if he shows up for those Games. Or maybe the United States will indeed split into separate countries by then, or maybe California will at least be an independent republic by then even if the U.S. doesn't split up, and then the opening ceremony of the Games will be officiated by California Republic President Eric Swalwell - yeah!
Ahh, who cares? I've gone past the point of caring myself, having just turned sixty and having seen the athletes of my generation retire from competitive sports and move on to other things. The Olympics aren't my Olympics anymore. They belong to a new generation. I call upon to the youth of the world to have a good time at the Games in Italy, and that includes fans as well as athletes.
Just remember that, if you're planning to attend both indoor events and outdoor events, it's a six-hour trip between the arena and the slopes. 😝
Friday, February 6, 2026
Music Video Of the Week
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Closed For Repairs?
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
More Epstein Files
Three million more documents from the Epstein files have been released.
At first glance - and maybe at subsequent glances - there doesn't seem to be much in this latest file drop that most of us don't already know or haven't already figured out. Why would anyone have had reason to believe that Steve Bannon wasn't involved with Jeffrey Epstein? The smoking gun that prove Trump's sex crimes is likely in the files - another three million - that haven't been released.
Monday, February 2, 2026
Independent Media Blackout
Two independent journalists were arrested in St. Paul, Minnesota recently.
Both of them are black, and one of them is gay. The other is a woman. Hardly a coincidence, you'll agree (and you'd better agree, punk!)
You've heard of one of them . . . former CNN newsman Don Lemon.
The other is local Minneapolis-St. Paul figure Georgia Fort.Sunday, February 1, 2026
Playing Post Office (And Other Games)
Saturday, January 31, 2026
The Triumph of the Whore?
Friday, January 30, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - January 30, 2026
Thursday, January 29, 2026
It's Only a Movie
At a time when ICE is murdering people in the streets of Minneapolis and threatening to take their road show elsewhere, Donald Trump is promoting the allegedly long-awaited documentary on his wife.
Melania Trump is particularly in a bad mood because of what is happening in Minneapolis, and not because two people have been brutally murdered. She's upset because all of the brouhaha there is overshadowing to the premiere of her documentary this week.
I've seen other examples of heartless callousness before, but this takes the kremšnita.
Melania, it must be remembered, is as much a grifter as her husband is. And like Donald, she only cares about herself and has only one purpose, to make as much money as she can before she dies. The only reason this documentary exists is because Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, looking to mend fences with her husband, offered $40 million to produce such a film. In exchange, Bezos expected from Trump - and got - relief from Trump's threats to raise postal rates that would affect Amazon's bottom line, and - more important to Bezos - a chance to get some really lucrative contracts (*cough cough*, Blue Origin, *cough cough*). Bezos ended up spending 75 million simoleons on the movie, with the additional $35 million for marketing.
Melania, by all accounts, is likely to win a Razzie award for playing herself. As for Jeff Bezos, he got what he wanted, and the $75 million he spent to get influence Trump is just pocket change for a multibillionaire like him. In the meantime, following a private screening at White House this past Sunday, Melania has its world premiere tonight at the Trump-Kennedy Center. A slew of D-list celebrities are attending, and this premiere is likely to have all of the glamour of a home movie being shown in the family den, but who cares when all that mattered is to provide an outlet for lower-middle-class entertainment for the undereducated to appreciate? That, of course, is nothing new for the Trump-Kennedy center, which was a second-rate showbiz venue long before Trump added his name to it.
All that notwithstanding, Melania is sure to close in the theaters faster than a storm window in the current brutal cold snap that is currently gripping the Northeastern states (which still haven't seceded like I'd hoped).
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Trump Is Our Own Damn Fault
Monday, January 26, 2026
Michael Cohen, Phony
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Alex Pretti
Say his name.
Alex Pretti, an intensive-care-unit nurse at the veterans' hospital in Minneapolis, was peacefully protesting Immigration and Customer Enforcement agents in the city when he saw about half a dozen of them beating up a female protestor. Pretti quickly moved to help her and shield her from the ICE agents, who noticed the holster on his person and disarmed him of his gun by force. Then they beat him up when he tried to shield the woman further and then shot him nearly eleven times. He may have already been dead from the blows he sustained before they fired a single bullet.
The Department of Homeland Security refused to let local law enforcement investigate the killing of Pretti and labeled the dead man a "domestic terrorist." Pretti, in an eerie coincidence, was the same age as Renee Nicole Good - 37.
If the killing of Renee Nicole Good was seen as an isolated incident, and if it didn't make clear to enough people that this the new reality in America, than this killing certainly did. If it wasn't obvious before, it's obvious now: Donald Trump has made dissent a capital offense. He's just foregoing the ritual of show trials and public hangings.
This has to end. Not just ICE killings, not just ICE itself, but the entire Trump administration. Alex Pretti was doing a very Christian act by coming to the aid of a stranger in the tradition of the Good Samaritan, and he was legally permitted to carry the gun he had on his person (a gun he never brandished), meaning he was illegally disarmed. He was brutalized and murdered with the sort of violence that is commonly associated with 1980s action movies. Now ICE hopes to go after the people who got the Pretti murder on video, because Homeland Security counts them as "domestic terrorists." Even the woman Pretti was trying to help fears for her life because she is afraid that she could be eliminated as a witness.
It's time for the Democrats to step up. Some of them already have. Several moderate Democrats in the U.S. Senate who had been considering ICE funding in the appropriations bills that need to be passed to avert a government shutdown are now planning to vote against . The seven House Democrats that already did vote for ICE funding are likely to regret it now - as they'll likely get primaried. If the Democrats don't join the people in fighting back against Trump, they'll live to have even greater regrets.
And, given what is happening now in Minneapolis and what unfolded in Davos last week, and given that so many people are outraged that Trump has even lost the National Rifle Association because his ICE storm troopers violated Alex Pretti's Second Amendment rights, it's clear that the United States cannot go on. Once again, I call for the dissolution of the United States. I remain a secessionist.
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Reason #235,278,384 to Secede From the Union
Well, it looks like we won't invade Greenland after all. Trump announced that a framework for a deal the benefits the United States was established with NATO that will make a war with Denmark over Greenland unnecessary, I guess that means that, for now at least, I can plan my next trip to Europe after all. But with every move Trump makes, it is becoming more likely that I will have to do what I should have done when I was in France and Germany last year - stay in Europe and send for my cats.
Trump didn't really want Greenland. He just wanted to upset the apple cart. As Rick Wilson of the Lincoln Project said, the mere power play Trump perpetrated against Denmark only ruptured NATO, which was what Trump wanted. It was never about Greenland. Just as likely Trump doesn't want to annex Canada. He wants to disrupt the relationship between Canada and the United States and sever the ties between the two nations. He doesn't want peace, although he campaigned for the Presidency against forever wars in other parts of the world. He wants more power over the Western Hemisphere, as his attack on Venezuela proved. He wants hegemony over as much of the globe as he can acquire. Quite, bluntly, he wants to do what Madonna (another Madge-Trump comparison) told Dick Clark on "American Bandstand" what she wanted to do - "Umm, I want to rule the world."
No sane politician at the state level, at least no sane Democratic politician at the state level, should want to be part of such a nation. As for what the United States used to be, well, I'd like to recall what Kamala Harris said a year and a half ago: "We're not going back." (Ironic, no?)
Oh yeah, don't forget Harris' post-election assurance that turned out to be a lie: "It's gonna be okay."
For my state and for several states in the Northeast, the Great Lakes region, and the Pacific Coast to remain in the Union is suicide. It's time to get out. And hopefully, a wave of secession can break up the U.S. into separate countries so that no one post-U.S. nation can ever achieve the hegemony that the U.S. has long since had. I am for the dissolution of the Union. I am a secessionist.
Friday, January 23, 2026
Music Video of the Week - January 23, 2026
"Golden Years" by David Bowie (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Trump's Greatest Hits
Monday, January 19, 2026
Governor Sherrill
Rebecca Michelle "Mikie" Sherrill will be inaugurated as the fifty-seventh governor of the state of New Jersey, and she plans to hit the ground running with an energy emergency declaration to cut utility rates, invest more in solar energy, make housing more affordable, and improve the motor vehicle office.
It doesn't take much for something to happen in New Jersey to give Trump an excuse to send federal troops or agents to New Jersey, particularly our cities, most of which have been down on their heels for so long that there are generations of New Jerseyans who don't remember a time when Newark or Camden were places people wanted to go to. Trump sending troops to our cities, where brown people are a majority, would be a calamity. U.S. Representative LaMonica McIver, who is black, was arrested for trying to investigate an ICE detention center in Newark that housed Hispanic migrants, as was Mayor Baraka; McIver has since been charged and three felony counts of assaulting, resisting, impeding and interfering with a federal officer, and the case is still set to go to trial. What better way for Trump to divide the mostly black and Hispanic cities against the white suburbs and rural areas (yes, we have some)?
You know where I'm going with this. As a secessionist, I feel compelled to promote my arguments for secession whenever and with whomever I can. Therefore, once Governor-elect Sherrill is sworn in, I am writing a letter to her to advocate for New Jersey to secede from the Union and hopefully encourage other Democratic states - like Minnesota - to follow. (Personally, I hope that Minnesota secedes first, and I have not ruled out writing Governor Walz to say that Minnesota to do so.) I am making the argument to Sherrill that a soft secession - withholding New Jersey's federal tax revenue, for example - is not enough and that it is time for the United States to split into separate countries. I am also making the argument to her that if enough states pull out of the Union, it can lead to a negotiated national divorce that effectively dissolves the Union and creates new countries without a shot being fired.
I still support the dissolution of the Union. I am still a secessionist.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Yes, Virginia, There Is a Joe Shlabotnik
Saturday, January 17, 2026
Ein Führer
Friday, January 16, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - January 16, 2026
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Fed Up
Sunday, January 11, 2026
Neil Diamond - Moods (1972)
Moods is crafted like a song cycle, and it shows a great deal of care and ambition with some beautiful orchestral arrangements and intricate acoustic guitar riffs, but too many of the songs are burdened by simplistic lyrics and asinine subject matter. Tunes like "Porcupine Pie," which imagines a dinner of the roadkill main course complemented by vanilla soup (a double scoop, please, and don't forget the chicken ripple ice cream!), and "Gitchy Goomy," a bit of nonsense Neil wrote for his then two-year-old son with aimless words that don't make sense but are meant to sound fun (but only do sound fun if you're a two-year-old), don't even have memorable melodies. (And there's nothing really cute about the Native American name for Lake Superior.) Diamond's attempts at soul and gospel are equally inept; "High Rolling Man" and "Walk On Water" don't benefit from the choirs backing Diamond's lead vocals, as the words to both ditties are thinner than the paper they were written on. Ain't it right? I said, ain't it right? Ain't it right? (And the less said about his bilingual "Canta Libre," the better.)
Geez, what does it say about an LP whose best cuts include a pair of brief instrumentals, "Theme" and "Prelude in E Major," the latter being the lead-in into the aforementioned "Morningside?" It's easy to understand, after listening to Moods, while everyone thought Clive Davis was crazy to spend $4 million to bring Diamond over to Columbia.
There are two standouts in the middle of this LP. "Captain Sunshine" takes advantage of the neo-classical music around which Moods is centered to create a dreamy ballad worthy of comparison to Rodriguez's "Sugar Man," and the much-maligned "Play Me" - forever cursed to be identified as the song about the songs she sang to him and "brang" to him - is actually a charming number that looks at the yin-yang of human relationships through the metaphor of composing music. The music itself is an irresistible repetitive acoustic guitar riff (provided by session man Richard Bennett) supporting a beautiful string section. If Diamond had changed the words or the verb tenses and maybe hadn't sweetened the sound so much, "Play Me" would rank as one of his greatest achievements. Because even though Neil Diamond got and may still get derision for inventing a new past-tense word that no Delta bluesman would be given a hard time for (critics would have celebrated a blues lyric like "She done brung me a song" as profound), he's even had fans come up to him and say they wish he'd worked more on the song's words.
While Moods has its defenders, the best evidence of Neil Diamond as a pop singer-songwriter with classical flourishes can be found elsewhere. In fact, it can be found on his follow-up album, his Columbia debut - the eponymously titled soundtrack for the movie Jonathan Livingston Seagull, which was successful as the movie itself was not, vindicating Davis' then record-setting $4 million deal with Diamond. And despite some fine moments, Moods is still a weed in Neil Diamond's underrated and impressive career. Bob Dylan had Self-Portrait, Elton John had Blue Moves, Neil Young had Everybody's Rockin' . . . every garden grows one.
(This is my last review for awhile, as there's too much going on in the world right now for me to bother with record reviews. I just hope we're not at war with Denmark by the time you read this.)



























