Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Who Wears These Shoes?
There is nothing necessarily wrong with Florsheim shoes. True, they are known for being cheap, stiff, and plebian, but they can be a reasonable and affordable choice to wear once in awhile, which sort of makes them the working man's dress shoes. A typical blue-collar guy probably has a pair of Florsheim shoes in his closet to go with the suit he wears to weddings, funerals, and lodge banquets.
But when Donald Trump wears them in the Oval Office, it only shows how cheap and tawdry the executive branch of the U.S. government has become. It is the footwear equivalent of the Chevrolet SUVs Trump has ridden in.
So why is every dude in Trump's Cabinet wearing them?
And so came the greatest footwear story in American politics since George Walker Bush was in Baghdad and had a pair of shoes thrown at them by an Iraqi national ticked off at Bush for starting the Iraq War.
Working for Trump is like taking a wedding vow. You must promise to love, honor and obey. That is, if you want to remain in Trump's good graces - or employment. And if he gives you Florsheims to wear, you wear them, if only to express your gratitude to the Dear Leader. Crockett & Jones? Bruno Magli? Paul Evans? No go, Joe - when you work for The Donald, you do what he says.
Especially if you're Marco Rubio, and you want to be Trump's heir apparent in 2028, even if the Florsheims your boss got you are three sizes too big, because Trump guessed your shoe size and was off by a country mile.
If you ask me, Trump's minions (despicable them) are acting their shoe sizes - certainly not their ages.
And so we now raise a toast to America's new war with Iran, and or wartime leader, Donald J. Trump!
Euch! Blecch! Blecch? Yuck! AUGHHHH!!!!!! GAGAGAGAAUGHHHH!!!!!!Saturday, March 14, 2026
Gas Up . . .
. . . before gas is up.
Trump's war on Iran has caused gasoline prices to start climbing, and the Iranians have closed the Strait of Hormuz that separates the Persian Gulf from the Arabian Sea. This strait, one of the narrowest maritime bottlenecks in the world, is the only way Arab oil can get out into the world because that's where the Persian Gulf is from where the Gulf states ship their oil exports.
Which is very inconvenient for people who own a Ford Expedition.
Friday, March 13, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - March 13, 2026
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
They Just Might
Former Vice President Kamala Harris is still considering a political comeback.
Asked if she would run for President in 2028, she said that she just "might" do so.
To those who think she should try for the Presidency again, let me refresh your memories.
How many primaries and caucuses did she win in her 2020 presidential campaign? Zero.
How many primaries and caucuses did she actually compete in in her 2020 presidential campaign? Zero. She had to end her candidacy in 2019.
How many swing states did she win in the 2024 general election? Zero.
How many Democratic presidential candidates other than Harris have lost the popular vote in the past twenty years? Zero.
Well, at least she has a perfect record.
Good luck with another run for the Presidency, Madam Former Vice President. The Democrats, as repeatedly noted here, are notorious for shunning and turning away failed presidential nominees. They don't get to make comebacks. They don't get a second chance. They don't even get a lousy speaking slot at the next Democratic National Convention. They are complete . . . losers.
And that certainly includes Harris. In fact, she's even less popular than Donald Trump. Seriously. In an NBC News poll released this week, Donald Trump - who has led the country into another unjust war in the Middle East, destroyed the economy, sicced ICE on native-born U.S. citizens - including journalists - suspended civil liberties, dismantled federal government services, and has taken away people's health insurance - had 41 percent of people surveyed respond favorably to him. Harris had a 36 percent favorable response.
Is it any wonder why advertising genius Donny Deutsch laughed at the Democrats on television two days after Trump forced Harris into early retirement?
Gavin Newsom is not the savior of the Democratic Party, people. He's a smooth-talking technocrat who takes superficially liberal positions and hopes his suave demeanor and his perfect hair will compensate for his lack of substance. In other words, he's the Gary Hart of California.
I hope Democrats don't get sold on Harris or Newsom in 2028 simply on name recognition alone - or because they're not Vance or Rubio (or Trump, who's already plotting on how to stand for a third term). As for whom the Democrats should nominate for President in 2028 - assuming there'll be two candidates for th3e office - they must remember Smokey Robinson's mother's advice.
They'd better shop around. Just not in California.
Monday, March 9, 2026
What Has Trump Done?
When I was a kid, my sister and I had to spend occasional weekends with my maternal grandmother, because my mother had to work overtime on Saturdays. It was not fun, because my maternal grandmother lived in an inner-city neighborhood in which there was no sign of grass. Even her entire backyard was paved. Anyway, one weekend there, I did something incredibly and spectacularly wrong. I won't say what it is, but when my grandmother called my mother and told her what happened, my mother demanded to speak to me. When I took the receiver and said hello, the first thing my mother said was, "What have you done?"
If the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA) had the same directness and indignation as my mother had in that moment she spoke to me, they would be asking Donald Trump the same question about the war he started against Iran. But WHCA president Eugene Daniels, apparently, is a wuss, and so are the other correspondents, so no one is asking him that.
And as if that weren't enough, Christian nationalist commanders in the military, no doubt with Hegseth's tacit approval, have declared that this war is the prelude to the End Times, when Christ returns to judge the living, the dead, and likely the undead - including MAGA zombies.
Well, that's going to ruin my summer vacation plans!
And as if that weren't enough, Russian leader Vladimir Putin - supposed Trump's best bud - is giving intelligence on American military positions to the Iranians!
You know, when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, the war that began was, at first, a minor conflict over the status of Poland., with the Third Reich claiming it as living space and the British and the French fighting to help Poland preserve its independence. Unable to send troops to Poland, Great Britain and France occupied land along the German border with France, and both sides exchanged harmless volleys, leading to the war's original name, the "phony war." (The Winter War, which began with the Soviet invasion of Finland in November 1939, was a separate conflict.) In April 1940 the phony war became real as Adolf Hitler attacked and occupied Denmark and Norway, followed by a major blitzkrieg that result in the Nazi occupation of the Low Countries and the fall of France, prompting Italy to enter the war and prompting Japan, already at war with China, to join what then became known as the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis. By 1941, even before the Japanese attack on Peral Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt began referring to the conflict as "World War II."
My point - and I do have one - is that we are likely at the beginning of World War III, but it may take a year or two before that becomes apparent. Such a war will likely redraw national borders at least, ,and end millions of lives at worst, and possibly wipe currently existing countries off the map.
Like the United States.
Oh yeah, that horrible thing I did at my grandmother's house? It turned out to be no big deal in the end. My mother would later laugh about it, though, I remembering the terror I felt at the time, did not. And no one will look back in 2026 years from now and laugh. They won't even have the urge to chuckle.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
The 2026 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees Explained
There's a group of racial extremists who fellow a tenet of faith generally downplayed by mainstream media. This group believes that white men are the greatest villains on earth. They believe that white men were the result of a botched experiment from the days of creation, the experiment conducted by a wicked deity. They charge that the white man is guilty of cultural colonialism and they repeatedly declare that they find the white man guilty as charged. These people believe that white men were given domination of the earth but that a time would come when, after seventy years, the white men would lose their domination of the earth and be condemned to a richly deserved downfall and be forced to pay for their sins by being forced to accept everything that is anathema to them before they would be finally wiped from the face of the earth.
These people are called . . . pop-music critics.
Not an original thought, I concede - I read it in either Blender or Spin - but when you look at most of the non-rock-and-roll acts being nominated for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (and Jethro Tull have been snubbed again) and you recall that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's board is dominated by pop-music critics . . .
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Another One Bites the Dog
Dog-killer and and death-squad chief Kristi Noem was fired as Secretary of Homeland Security on Thursday.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - March 6, 2026
"Laughter in the Rain" by Neil Sedaka (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Iran: Armageddon It
I just returned from the bizarro universe in which Kamala Harris was elected President of the United States. Having spent her first year checking off her to-do list by helping first-time homebuyers afford a house and expanding child care, President Harris faced a new crisis when, in her effort to negotiate a new agreement with Iran to prevent further enrichment of uranium, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu started bombing Iran, causing the Iranians to suspend talks with the United States.
So you can bet your sweet candy bar that I was dismayed when, back in the real world, I learned that Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that, having been aware that Israel was going to attack Iran, he decided that, rather than try to convince Netanyahu not to go ahead with the attack, it was necessary that the United States attack Iran first before Iran attacked U.S. interests in the Middle East.
Marco Rubio is a diplomat like I'm a jet pilot.
Apparently that was the real reason - a reason that don't even make good nonsense - that Trump started bombing Iran, because I thought it was about causing the Islamic Republic to fall and for the Iranian people to gain their freedom. But that couldn't have been it, seeing as Trump hates freedom. More likely, some say, it's because Trump is paranoid about the Ayatollah Khamenei killing him in revenge for the 2020 American assassination of General Qasem Soleimani and so decided that he had to take Khamenei out first, so that's what he did. But he and Netanyahu are still bombing Iran.
So what is the reason we're bombing Iran? I think your answer is right here.
In America, anyone can become President. It's one of the risks we take. In America, anyone can become a military commander. That's another one of the risks we take. I'm only sorry we don't have an educated, highly trained Prussian-style officer class that reads of books of strategy instead of the Book of Revelations.
Monday, March 2, 2026
Texas Two-Step
Sunday, March 1, 2026
CBSNN
Netflix and Paramount-Skydance, as you might recall, had been in competition for taking over Warner Brothers-Discovery, the parent company of CNN, whose ratings have slipped dramatically since Trump returned to power in early 2025 - most likely because of Scott Jennings and Jake Tapper. Both companies expressed a desire to take over Warner Brothers-Discovery and CNN and seek to improve its stand in the increasingly irrelevant cable-news sweepstakes. Then Netflix capitulated and withdrew its bid for Warner Brothers-Discovery.
So? So, David Ellison and his father David - the benefactors of both Donald Trump - own Paramount-Skydance. Paramount-Skydance owns CBS, which is run by Ellison beneficiary Bari Weiss.
This news came out a day before Trump decided to blow up Iran. So of course not too many people noticed. But I did, and I credit former New York TV newswoman Sheila Stainback for bringing the news to my attention. Note the word "former." Sheila Stainback, who used to be an anchorwoman on the ten o'clock newscast on WPIX-TV in New York, quit the news business and turned to acting. I learned about this news from her because I follow her on both Instagram and Threads.
These days, of course, a former TV journalist has more credibility than current TV journalists, and even non-journalists like actress Andrea Thompson, who was a CNN Headline News "anchor" for nine months, have more credibility than noted non-journalist Bari Weiss, who will likely become the editor-in-chief for the entire CBS-CNN news enterprise. Given her inability to know the difference between reporting and editorializing (why else would CBS News anchor Tony Dokoupil verbally salute Marco Rubio on the air?), the potential for misinformation across two massive platforms (CBS News also included the CBS News 24/7 streaming channel) should be spectacularly gargantuan.
The combined news outlets will control, I have been led to understand, roughly two-thirds of news reporting on legacy media. And with a war between The U.S. and Israel and Iran well underway - which has led to the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei - you can expect the Ellisons, one of the country's most wealthy Jewish families, and that yenteh Weiss to slant the news in favor of Trump and Netanyahu, two septuagenarians who cling to power to avoid going to prison, and frame the narrative to present the two globally isolated leaders as being quite noble. I don't mean to be anti-Semitic in my characterizations of Weiss and the Ellisons, because, quite frankly, painting Trump and Netanyahu as the good guys in a war against a Muslim theocracy that is as wretched and as murderous as people say is not only a good way to rouse MAGA and Christian nationalists anticipating the Second Coming; it's also good for business. They would have covered the Troubles in Ulster with a bias toward the British if they'd thought they could make a profit from it.
Also, you can expect more favorable coverage of Trump's tariff policy and immigration policy, less coverage at all of the Epstein files, and plenty of shady deals in the Middle East. Oh yeah, did I happen to mention that the Ellisons are being supported by significant investment from Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds, including the Qatar Investment Authority? Everyone involved in this merger, like every defense contractor involved in this new war, is poised to make lots of money while the American people are poised to eat lots of crap. After all, the only people that get hurt in situations like these are the innocent.
I haven't been able to write or report for the hyperlocal news site I worked for until this past June, which suits me just fine, and I don't care if I never work as a straight reporter ever again. I'm comfortable mouthing off right here. And I am please to join my fellow Fourth Estate alum Sheila Stainback into early retirement.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
War With Iran
Friday, February 27, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - February 27, 2026
"Tuff Enuff" by the Fabulous Thunderbirds (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Tariff and SOTU Update
Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 is a U.S. trade law provision that gives the President temporary authority to address serious balance-of-payments deficits or significant declines in the value of the U.S. dollar. It is designed as a short-term economic safeguard tool, allowing the administration to respond quickly to international financial instability or trade imbalances.Unlike other trade enforcement mechanisms that target specific countries or unfair trade practices, Section 122 can be applied more broadly and is primarily focused on macroeconomic concerns rather than individual trade violations.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Winter Olympic Meltdown
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Trumpety Bumpety
Trump got a rude awakening when the Supreme Court rule 6 to 3 against Trump trying to establish tariffs unilaterally, based on a 1970s law that allowed tariffs to be established by the executive branch for national security reasons. Chief Justice John Roberts gave Trump a chance to dial back the tariffs, but Trump apparently found a loophole to declare a comprehensive 10 percent tariff on all imported goods. Hours later, he increased it to 15 percent.
Whatever. I'm sick and tired of following Trump's import-tax antics.
Monday, February 23, 2026
Oh, Are the Winter Olympics Over?
Even though the U.S. men's hockey team (below) won the Olympic gold medal for the first time since 1980, and even though Team USA won eleven Winter Olympic Gold medals at these just-concluded Games in Milan and Cortina in Italy, including Alysa Liu's figure-skating gold medal, one cannot deny - and some folks are certainly trying to - that these Winter Games were a snooze fest. The intimacy and the modesty of the Winter Games that existed when a bunch of college kids defeated the Soviet Union in ice hockey at Lake Placid 46 years ago has long since gone, and the Winter Olympics have just become one more Big Event in multimedia programming.
Figure skating is pretty much ruined, especially after ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates won only the silver medal in their event because a biased French judge underscored their performances to help a pair representing France win the gold. Any interest I had in seeing Amber Glenn skate was killed when I learned ahead of time that she would be skating to a Madonna song - and NBC aired the video message Madge sent to Glenn thanking her for choosing her song to skate to (typical of Madge to jump at every opportunity to promote her mere continued existence). So of course I didn't watch it. (Which song was it? Come on, they're all awful, does it really matter?) I didn't watch Alysa Liu either. Besides, the skaters' choice of music was so lame, I pined for the days when figure skaters all performed to the music of dead Austrian and Russian classical composers. The music they skate to today is almost enough to make me hate sound.
The U.S.-Canada gold-medal hockey game? Ahh, I didn't watch that either. But who cares? The college kids who used to comprise the men's national ice hockey team have been replaced by crack professionals who play for the teams of the National Hockey League, which shut down so that their pros could compete in Milan. Big deal.
And if I was bored with whatever event NBC was showing, like freestyle skiing (since when did skiing become an art form?), there was always its sister channle USA, which showed . . . curling.
Fiendish thingy.
Given the overcommercialism of the Winter Olympics, the empty nationalism, and the increasing scandal and tawdriness surrounding the athletes themselves, I don't care if I sound like an aging white guy cursing the elements, because, well, I am a sixty-year-old male Caucasian. And I have several reasons to curse the elements - I got over a foot of snow, I have no idea when the guy who's supposed to clear it will get here, and I'm in no condition to remove from my driveway entrance a snowbank longer and higher than the Dolomite Alps that Mikaela Shiffrin skied down to win the women's slalom at the just-concluded Winter Olympics (and I wanted to see that, but I missed it!). But, I guess my fellow Americans should still celebrate U.S. victories at these Winter Games.
After all, by the time the 2030 Winter Olympics open in France, there probably won't be a United States, thanks to Trump. But come 2030, Team New England and Team Cascadia should have a lot of potential gold-medal-caliber contenders.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Man of the People
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Blizzard and Blitzkrieg
I can't think straight tonight. Mainly because a run-of-the-mill snowstorm for my area forecast for tomorrow night is in fact going to be a blizzard.
Friday, February 20, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - February 20, 2026
Thursday, February 19, 2026
It's A Miracle!
Monday, February 16, 2026
Washington Post-Mortem
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Block the Vote: 2026 Edition
Friday, February 13, 2026
Music Video Of the Week - February 13, 2026
"My Wife" by the Who (Go to the link in the upper-right hand corner.)
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Polythene Pam
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
The Italian Job
The Winter Olympics in Italy? I'm not feeling it.
But so far - and I don't expect this to change, really - I haven't seen one moment or event worth satirizing, ridiculing, or even highlighting with wry commentary. The most trenchant comment I could make is that there are an astonishing number of American male figure skaters such as Malinin, as well as Canadian Stephen Gogolev, who are sons of emigre athletes from the former Soviet Union. Hardly earth-shattering news or relevant to the Winter Games, though I guess you could write a serious article about that. But no one's paying me to do that, so what?
Maybe it's because I just turned sixty, or maybe it's because my generation is so far removed from competing in the Olympics (Generation X more or less dominated the Games from 1984 to 2000), but I'm just not looking for satire. No, I'll qualify that. I never look for something to satirize; I let something worth satirizing present itself. You consciously look for something to make fun of, then it sounds forced. Perhaps I've gotten too old to recognize satire-worthy moments in sports. Or maybe it's the culture; with the Super Bowl having just concluded, I've heard plenty of commentary about the halftime show, starring one Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio, and the counterprogrammed half show staged by Turning Point USA, starring one Robert Ritchie. But the game itself? Not a word.
Also, there are more important things to talk about, like Jeff Bezos gutting the Washington Post, which I have to talk about, and will, as soon as I feel like it. Oy. I've recently been spending time correcting typos and factual errors on previous blog posts - what would be called "curing" in counting provisional election ballots - and I'm down about this whole writing thing right now. I'm on call at the news site I once wrote regularly for since a new editor took over, but in fact I haven't written for it since June. I think I'll just chill out for now (very easy to do in the bitterly cold Northeast) and enjoy thew Winter Olympics..
And as soon as these Games are over, I have to write the International Olympic Committee again to get them to move the 2028 Olympics out of the United States.
































