"Another Rainy Day In New York City" by Chicago (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Friday, June 12, 2026
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.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Faith and Flag?
Saturday, May 23, 2026
Autopsy Dissection
A truncated version of the Democratic Party's autopsy of the party's 2024 election loss to Trump is out, and it essentially says that the party didn't relate to voters enough.
Thank you, Captain Obvious!
I have no hope in the Democratic Party learning from its mistakes, mainly because it never has - at least not in the past 45 years. Also, progressives and moderates see the failure of the party to communicate effectively with voters see the results of the autopsy - such as they are - and derive entirely different takeaways. Progressives say that Kamala Harris lost because the party wouldn't condemn Israeli atrocities in Gaza (which the autopsy did not mention) and threw marginalized groups under the bus while not talking enough about issues like climate change. Moderates - and sympathetic ex-Republicans like Rick Wilson - say that Harris lost because they were afraid to offend marginalized groups - hence the party's failure to respond to the Trump campaign's attack ads about transsexual issues - and talked too much about issues like climate change and not enough about the economy.
Both progressives and moderates have this much in common - they both despise DNC chairman Ken Martin.
The day after the election, I commented on one of Rosenberg's YouTube videos, saying, "I'd rather be them than us."
This division in the Democratic Party has been evident for a decade, from the divide between moderate Hillary Clinton and progressive Bernie Sanders in the 2016 presidential campaign to the 2025 DNC chairman election in which the chief contestants were the moderate Ken Martin and progressive Ben Wikler. In both contests, a third candidate offered a more unifying strategy to build up the party - Martin O'Malley. In both cases, he was ignored and came in third place - both times too distant a third place to matter. đŸ˜¡
Friday, May 22, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - May 22, 2026
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
The Spirit of $1.776 Billion
Donald Trump tried to sue the very government he allegedly leads for $10 billion, alleging that Internal Revenue Service allowed Trump's tax returns and the tax returns of his business to be leaked in 2020 - when he was also leading the government. In what is apparently a settlement out of court (you think?), Trump will not collect ten billion smackers for himself, but he will establish a $1.776 (get it?) billion slush fund to compensate Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol on January 6. 2021, paying them for their legal fees and any wages lost as a result of their prosecutions and the time and money spent on their court cases.
The fund is likely to be used to cover the expenses of any Trump supporters who commit transgressions to display their allegiance to him and his schemes So not only is Trump paying January 6 insurrectionists for committing violence and insurrection for him, he's planning to give out money to anyone who commits violence and insurrection in service to his regime. Service includes harassing immigrants, intimidating voters, shutting down protests, and all sorts of storm trooper-redolent stuff.
To think - you can get rich and get a pardon just by breaking the law for Donald John Trump himself!
And who's paying for all this? We are!
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Hanta Yo!
So, we have a new virus to contend with . . . the hantavirus.
Actually, the hantavirus isn't exactly new, like SARS-CoV-2 was in 2019. It's a virus that's been around quite awhile, and it's gotten attention recently due to numerous passengers on a cruise ship, some of whom have died. The bad news is that there is no vaccine for it. The good news is that it isn't as communicable as SARS-CoV-2 - far from it - and so the risk of catching hantavirus disease, which comes from rodent feces (which may lead Fox News "personalities" to refer to it as a Mickey Mouse disease), is as low as politicians in February 2020 thought that le covĂde was. You can catch le covĂde by merely breathing. You have to go out of your way to get hantavirus disease.
But none of that means, while we shouldn't take hantavirus as seriously as le covĂde, that we should take it seriously at all. And Trump isn't taking it seriously. I don't think he's even talked about it. He seems to think the situation will take care of itself. Because of all of the obvious differences between the hantavirus and le covĂde, he may be right this time. But his lackadaisical approach to the hantavirus - if it can be called an approach - revives nightmares of his similar attitude to le covĂde in early 2020.
And while all this in going on . . . Ebola is back in central Africa.
The United States ought to consult the World Health Organization for strategies on how to navigate all this.
You know, that's another reason for me to advocate secession and disunion. Trump tried to pull the U.S. out of the World Health Organization in 2020, but the Biden administration canceled the process of withdrawal as soon as President Biden took office. This time Trump has succeeded. As with the Paris Agreement, the United States will not be welcome back into the World Health Organization a third time when a Democratic President tries to undo Trump's action if there's a chance that a future Republican President withdraws the U.S. a third time later on. Better for an independent New England, a Middle Atlantic republic, or an independent California to join the World Health Organization and leave fascist American states like an independent Texas and a revived Confederacy (from which blacks will flee in another great migration northward) will stay out and fall by the wayside.
Sunday, May 17, 2026
I Bow to Rome, Not Washington
Today is a milestone in my life. After failing to get confirmed in the Roman Catholic Church, the church of my birth, when I was supposed to back when I was thirteen, I finally received the Holy Spirit and entered into fellowship with my fellow parishioners.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
No Answer
Would you trust Donald Trump. Jr. and his brother Eric with you cellular telephone service?
Five hundred and ninety thousand people did.
About a year ago, Anastasio Trump Debayle (Don Jr.) and his brother Luis (Eric) came up with a plan to create a cell phone that would "outdo Apple" and provide excellent and personalized service that would have other cell phone companies eating its dust. Anastasio Debayle and Luis got 590,000 Trump supporters to pay a hundred dollars each, for a total of $59 million, to buy this mobile phone, and then . . . nothing. The phone was delayed for months and all of these MAGA people who bought it were left . . . on hold.
This past week, the phone finally materialized - a gold-colored (natch!) mobile phone that the Somoza - er, Trump - brothers ordered to avoid a lawsuit for failing to produce the product they promised to their customers. The phone itself was worth next to nothing - maybe about five cents, meaning that it was overpriced by about $99.95. The phone was rendered obsolete by newer products in the cell phone market. All Trump supporters got for a hundred bucks was the cheap color application and the Trump brand. Whereas Anastasio Debayle and Luis got $29.5 million each.
The phones finally ship out soon. Maybe they'll actually work.
Friday, May 15, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - May 15, 2026
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Pope Leo XIV - One Year On
The pope has spent the past year appointing new bishops and archbishops, particularly in the U.S., that are less confrontational and more belligerent in an effort to promote the humanity and the compassion taught in the Gospels as opposed to a more militant Christianity promoted by Catholic and evangelical rank-and-file believers alike. His biggest problem, however, remains Donald Trump. Trump is to Leo what Polish strongman Wojciech Jaruzelski had been to John Paul II, a political leader from the pontiff's homeland making trouble for his people that the pontiff must stand up against and react to. And, like Jaruzelski, Trump is being prompted by the Kremlin in Moscow.
Leo has had to deal with the slings and arrows from Trump, who has questioned his integrity as a religious leader and as a head of state (the Vatican papal state) and has tried to undermine his authority as the spiritual leader of his fellow American Catholics, many of whom inexplicably (unless you've heard of the word "hypocrisy") voted for Trump in 2024. Trump is to find out that he's met his match. Leo knows more about the Christian faith and the Gospels than Trump pretends to, and he leads a Church that has persisted for two thousand years, assembled by St. Peter and led in the wake of St Peter's martyrdom by St. Linus, who established the bishopric of Rome that is now the modern papacy. He's held off Trump quite well so far. He's in a good position to bring Trump down that way John Paul II brought down Communism in Eastern Europe.
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Kings and Knaves
Britain's King Charles III could have, as many people wished he would have, stayed home and not visited the United States to celebrate this sorry excuse for a nation for its semiquincentennial (doesn't that word make you want to throw up??). But it was good that he did.
Friday, May 8, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - May 8, 2026
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Dammit, Janet!
Maine governor Janet Mills dropped out of the 2026 U.S. Senate campaign in her state.
Saturday, May 2, 2026
The VRA Is DOA
Friday, May 1, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - May 1, 2026
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Pictures of Beautiful Women, The End - One Year On
It was a year ago today that I posted on my now-defunct beautiful-women picture blog for the last time, terminating it completely a month after. A year later, do I miss it?
Do I miss it? You mean, do I miss posting pictures that I did not own the rights to, risking the possibility of being called my violations of intellectual-property rights, fair use be damned, until it finally happened? Do I miss posting pictures of models no one had ever heard of from the also-defunct model comp-card site run by Peter Marlowe? Do I miss posting pictures of movie actresses young enough to be my daughters that I'd only heard of twenty minutes before to appeal to guys young enough to be my sons? Do I miss posting pictures of television actresses who would disappear from public view and/or become culturally irrelevant within five years? Do I miss posting pictures of dancers from dance companies whose performances I'd never seen? Do I miss posting pictures of local broadcast-news anchorwomen I'd never seen on TV in metropolitan-area markets I'd never been to, thinking I was celebrating their journalism careers when I was actually objectifying them for their looks? Do I miss posting pictures of actresses and athletes who turned out to have no inner beauty because they were Trump supporters? Do I miss posting pictures of national broadcast-news anchorwomen I had once idolized when they confronted Trump but failed to speak truth to power? Do I miss any of that?
In a word, no.
I still have pictures of the numerous fashion and beauty models I posted on that blog and saved them on a USB file, and I've even added to them, and had my blog continued longer, I would have certainly posted those added pictures there, like this gorgeous picture of model/actress Susan Hess.
Anyway, I still hope to put together a Web site with the pictures of models that I accumulated over nineteen years, and it would be challenging, though it also must be fun, and that's why I ended my beautiful-women picture blog last year - it was no longer fun. For now, though, my plans for such a site are on the back burner - and maybe off the stove - while I deal with more pressing manners. Like the evil clown occupying the White House.
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Correction: April 29, 2026
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Ballroom Blitz
It was staged. Or maybe it wasn't.































