2026-01-08
Everything you need to know about today’s GOPpers in one headline: “House fails to override Trump’s vetoes of 2 bills that passed unanimously.”
Not every GOPper voted against overriding the veto, but quite enough to generalize. Craven weaklings unworthy of public office.
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2026-01-09
ICE has become little more than an armed, masked, secret police, increasingly populated with Tonton Macoute wannabes.
If we’re not going to have open borders (which I do think is an arguable position*) we have to have some kind of border control and some way to enforce it, roles for which both ICE in particular and DHS in general have proven incapable of fulfilling in a humane or even Constitutional manner.
Thus my new slogan, deliberately intended to tweak the MAGAs:
“ICE: Repeal and Replace!”
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2026-01-09
[Background: An attorney was fined $400,000, upheld on appeal, for informing a school that one of their staff was previously involved in sex with a minor on the grounds that it violated a confidentiality agreement regarding a bankruptcy case. The judge said the fine was based on the cost of the investigation.
The question was are the courts at in any way at fault for what seems to be an injustice or were they just constrained by the law.]
Of course both the district and appeals courts at least potentially bear some of the blame.
Is there a law saying that the fine must be based on the “cost of the investigation?” If so, the courts should have required a proof of that cost - meaning receipts, detailed accounts, and not vague items like “hours billed.” If there is not such a law, the court should have ignored that cost as a basis for the fine. In either event, the district court could have withheld judgment for the moment while encouraging the sides to negotiate a lesser amount.
So unless there is both a law specifically stating that the fine is to be based on the cost of the investigation and a detailed proof of those costs, then either court could have at the least found the fine excessive and even included in their rulings (even if it didn’t affect the judgment) some reference to the potential harm avoided by [attorney Richard] Trahant’s actions.
I’m reminded yet again of Joni Mitchell’s lyric (in “Sex Kills”): “Is justice just ice/Driven by greed and lust?/Just the strong doing what they can/And the weak suffering what they must?”
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2026-01-12
I will not forward, “like,” or discuss memes or vids or whatever that do not source the claim made.
I’ve had more than enough experiences of asking for a source (which you’d think the poster had) only to be told some version of “find it yourself” to have confidence in the conclusion that they don’t have one, they either just made it up or, more likely, are just reposting something that itself had no source.
==
2026-01-12
[Background: Responding to Congressional Democrats failing to oppose an anti-trans law, someone asked “Do they still expect trans people to vote for them despite this harm they’re causing us?”]
The answer to your question is yes.
This, bluntly, is SOP, par for the course, choose your cliché, but in any case long-standing policy for the institutional Democratic Party. It’s not just trans rights, it’s a range of issues where they figure that as long as they can be or at least present themselves as any degree to the left of the GOPpers, it’s “Hey, whadda you gonna do? Vote for that crowd? It’s us or nuthin’.” They see no downside to taking the left flank of voters for granted.
And if you dare to mutter phrases like “won’t vote” or worse yet “third party,” you’ll be treated as a child to be scolded and shamed rather than an adult to be engaged.
==
2026-01-14
In discussing oral arguments before SCOTUS on two suits relating to bans on transgender students in sports, Chris Geidner (Law Dork) suggested they revealed a shift in tone toward avoiding a wide-ranging decision with Constitutional implications, so that while the bans in question would be upheld, it would be done in a manner that it only applied to those particular cases and would leave open the option for other jurisdictions to allow students to participate according to their gender. That is, states could have such a ban but allowing participation based on gender would not violate Title IX, despite the plaintiff's claims.
Now, this of course was oral arguments so is no guarantee of the shape of the ultimate ruling, but according to Geidner the Justices seemed interested in avoiding basic questions about trans rights under the Title.
Which leaves me feeling if there is such a word quasi-optimistic, which is about as good as it gets on this topic these days. There are undoubtedly hard - make that even harder - times ahead but I still believe in the line about the arc of the moral universe.
So I take hope in the shift in tone represented by Kavanaugh’s remark that “one of the themes of your argument has been the more people learn, the more they’ll agree with you.“ I do it both because that is true and because perhaps that, again, shift in tone is the result of some members of the Court starting to think “um this whole business is more complicated than I originally thought.”
And consider that in the period 1998-2008, 26 states added to their state Constitutions provisions banning same-sex marriage at tine when opposition to those rights ran at about 60%. They did it because support was slowly rising and the reactionaries, aware of that fact, pushed these amendments to lock in their bigotry at a time when they could still get people worked up over it.
Despite that, it continued to be an issue, support continued to rise, in 2015 SCOTUS struck all of them down, and polls over the past two years show 67-69% of the public supporting same-sex marriage.
It’s unclear who originated the saying “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes” (no, it wasn’t Mark Twain). No matter; with some recent polls saying that a clear majority of Republican voters think their party is way too concerned with trans rights issues, I don’t feel it remiss to listen for the perhaps faint but still perceptible sound of rhyming chimes.
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2025-01-14
The Democratic-controlled New Jersey legislature has broken a promise to enact a trans shield law in the post-election session, generating a sense of betrayal.
It's a well-justified reaction, yet we should for the moment recall that NJ has an Executive Order in place that functions as a shield and that stays in force until it's overturned or superseded by law.
I have urged [out-going] Gov. [Phil] Murphy to call on the legislature to turn his EO into law without success, so now we have to push [Governor-elect Mikie] Sherrill to do it.
I rather suspect the lack of post-election action arises from a feeling of “We’ve got the shield EO, why raise what might be a contentious issue?” More specifically, I suspect the reason for the idea of a post-election vote was intended as a backstop against the possibility of a win in the governor’s race by Trump-lover Jack Ciattarelli, who certainly would have revoked Murphy’s EO. Since the moderate Mikie Sherrill, who has a pretty good record on LGBTQ+ (including transgender) issues, won, the members of the legislature felt no urgency to deal with it.
None of which changes the fact that there should be a law, not just an EO, and we should be pressing for that.
==
2026-01-16
[Background: In response to a 2015 TikTok from John Cena about what makes an "average American," someone asked "WTF happened?"]
WTF happened is that we got lazy, we thought those issues were pretty much settled, that the bastards, bigots, and buffoons had shrunk far enough away that we could coast to the finish line, ignoring or ignorant enough of the fact that the diverse America we saw emerging that was so pleasing to us - one with a “non-majority majority” in which no racial/ethnic group is a majority of the population - was instead terrifying to many of the existing majority whose internal conception of what it means to be “American” is being undermined by that reality.
*See, for example, https://whoviating.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-erickson-report-page-4-longer-look.html
Saturday, January 17, 2026
So I said - bits and pieces
Votes: cast vs. counted
Writing for the majority, Chief Injustice John Roberts offered a comparison to a foot race in which the length was changed from 100m to 105m while the race was going on, describing that as clearly unfair. But despite being (very) superficially clever, instead of supporting his argument the image reveals its hidden and fundamental weakness. It’s like, in an old saying, a house built on a foundation of stubble and straw.
That's because no one to my knowledge is talking about changing the length of the election campaign in the middle of it. No one, that is, is suggesting changing the date of an election during the campaign, which is what would be the equivalent of Roberts’ example.
What’s involved, rather, is counting mail-in ballots arriving after election day. That is, after the race is over. Every entrant knew the rules going in, knew the dates, knew what they had to do in what time frame, a time frame that ended on election day. Whatever the number of days allowed for mail-in ballots to arrive after that, they must have been posted, that is, cast, by then.
Which reveals the underlying failure of Roberts’ analogy: He is equating when a vote is counted with when it was cast. Which is both nonsense on its face and contrary to previous decisions, which have held that when that mail-in ballot is put in the mail, it is as that point cast.
So unless he is claiming both that all mail-in ballots must be received before election day and (to be consistent) that all counting of votes must stop at midnight (otherwise they would be counted after election day and so invalid), his argument is -
- well, I started to say vapor, but it does have substance in its impact: It empowers those with the contacts and cash needed to pursue suits intended to push the courts to embrace election rules tailored to a particular candidate's own selfish advantage. More broadly, it could result in tangling election rules to the point where not only are tens of millions of voters disenfranchised but, ultimately, no election outcome can be trusted, an idea decidedly not beyond the reactionaries' hopes.
But since Roberts hasn’t shown a lot of interest in fair elections - consider his gradual dismantling of the Voting Rights Act - I doubt he cares.
Footnote: A reply referred to Roberts’ “ridiculous” analogy in his confirmation hearings about “calling and balls and strikes,” saying the Court was instead narrowing the strike zone.
I replied that I think my favorite dumb Roberts’ aphorism was when he justified smacking down affirmative action by saying (as best as I can quote from memory) “The best way to stop discriminating by race is to stop discriminating by race,” which I at the time likened to saying “The best way to get from point A to Point B is to pretend you’re already there.”
I added that as for “balls and strikes,” that wasn’t just ridiculous, it was a flaming lie. But I did enjoy their use of the narrowed strike zone image.
Tuesday, January 13, 2026
A step toward the nightmare

It was regarded as among the most brutal such forces in the entire world and its criminality extended beyond suppressing any and all opposition: Its members were effectively a law unto themselves, able to steal, murder, torture, and rape as they pleased both because resisting or objecting was a death sentence and Duvalier didn't give a damn as long as he was in his palace and the grift kept rolling.
Well, it appears our own masked secret police is a step closer to achieving its dream.
Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon has decided not to investigate Jonathan Ross, the ICE good who murdered repeat murdered Renee Good.
Not only will he not be prosecuted, not only will he not even be charged, he will not even be investigated. The regime can't even be bothered to, indeed refuses to, look at what happened because they are terrified of the meaning of what they would see, what they already have seen, what they already know. Better to evade the knowledge he would be - and through that their embrace of thuggery would be - convicted. Better to pretend it didn't happen the way they know it did, better to smear accuse and blame and investigate the victim (Renee Good - say her name) on some impossibly vague charge of being "involved with the activist groups that have been protesting Trump’s immigration agenda," better to try to turn "the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances" into "domestic terrorism."
Better to put Ross - whose name, interestingly, is pretty much absent from news coverage, where he is just "the ICE agent" - beyond the law, the better to ignore what he represents, let him be answerable, it seems, only to the Orange Overlord - who, like Duvalier, just doesn't give a damn as long as he is in his palace and the grift keeps rolling.
And the ghost of Papa Doc smiles "Now you're getting it."
Sometimes pushback works
The board of the Adelaide [Australia] Festival runs as part of the overall event Adelaide Writers Week, the nation’s largest free literary festival .
On January 8 the board announced that they had disinvited Australian-Palestinian writer Dr. Randa Abdel-Fattah from the event. They cited “her previous statements" and the "cultural sensitivities“ surrounding the antisemitic mass shooting at Sydney’s Bondi Beach - even as they admitted her writings don't “have any connection with the tragedy.”
They didn’t cite any specific statements by Abdel-Fatah, but we can safely assume they are to referring to her support for Palestinian rights and her denunciation of the Israeli genocide in Gaza, especially given that her exclusion came as the result of lobbying by the Jewish Community Council for South Australia and South Australia state premier Peter Malinauskus.
The upshot? By January 13, 180 speakers - amounting to about 70% of those invited - had withdrawn as had some sponsors of the event, the Festival’s director had quit, the whole event had been canceled, remaining board members were to resign, and the future of the wider Adelaide Festival was in question.
There is to be a new board, hoping to keep the wider festival, now in its 40th year and a major draw for the state of South Australia, going.
Footnote: The statement announcing the cancellation offered Abdel-Fattah a non-apology apology referring not to the actual decision but only to “how the decision was represented” while claiming "this is not about identity or dissent."
Yeah, sure. Whadevah you say, Mac.
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Kennedy Center to support art by suing artist. It's not political. Really.
(BTW, all praise to NPR for consistently referring to it as "the Kennedy Center," not the "Trump-Kennedy Center.")
Sounding like a petulant 6-year-old screeching “You’re mean!” Center rep Roma Daravi called Reed “selfish” and “intolerant” and as having “failed to meet [his] basic duty” as an artist, which apparently is performing when and where Daravi wants him to.
For his part, Center President Richard Grenell sniveled quite non-politically that the cancellation was a political stunt in a way that renaming the Center obviously was not. He called it an example of “sad bullying by certain elements on the left,” and pouting that it’s all happening because “the Left is mad” that the Orange Overlord “is supporting the arts” in some no doubt special and impressive yet invisible manner. The Arts are indeed magic.
Grenell said “we will not let them” - we can assume he means those “elements of the Left” - “cancel shows without consequences.” The Center says the suit will come after the holidays.
Interestingly, no basis for the suit was mentioned and it doesn’t appear that any suits were filed against other artists - including Issa Rae, Rhiannon Giddens, Peter Wolf, Low Cut Connie, the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington, DC, and the production company of “Hamilton” - who previously canceled appearances in protest over the name change. Apparently, this one hurt their fee-fees more than usual.
Footnote: In late November, Democrats on the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works announced an investigation into “cronyism [and] corruption” involving “millions in lost revenue, luxury spending, and preferential treatment for Trump allies.” The investigation is being undertaken at a time of, NPR reports, “declining audiences, artist cancellations, layoffs and resignations at the Kennedy Center.”
Monday, December 29, 2025
So I said - something about, well, a bunch of stuff.
2025-12-26
One point I wish people would make, indeed emphasize, is that the Orange Overlord’s toady hit man Marco Rube is decrying supposed “suppression of free speech” (i.e., consumer protection rules) in Europe at the same time that his demented boss is demanding various people be fired and
outlets have their broadcast licenses be stripped for saying things he doesn’t like.
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2025-12-26
I’m reminded of that by RF “My father would be ashamed of me” Kennedy’s assertion that gender affirming care is “neither safe nor effective” despite multiple decades of experience and studies showing otherwise. It is a blatant assertion untethered to facts and just as accurate as “all horses are black.”
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2025-12-26
I’d like to share others’ vision of appropriate retribution being meted out to the grifters and ghouls of the court of the Orange Overlord for their various crimes and cruelties, but I have a genuine fear that come 2027 for Congress and 2029 for the White House, we will be hearing from the Dem misleaderhip a chorus of “We must look forward, not backward!” coupled with official amnesia.
They did it in 2009. They did it in 2021. It will be up to the mass of us to stop it from happening again - because we can’t depend on the leaders of the institutional Democratic Party to do it on their own.
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2025-12-26
So redactions in the Epstein files can be removed because the incompetent bozos of the White House didn’t use the right version of Acrobat.
So WHERE ARE THEY?
No one publishing them can be accused of wrongdoing; those documents should have been released unredacted (save info IDing victims) on 12/19.
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2025-12-27
[one person suggested SCOTUS would strike down a proposed Shadow Docket Sunlight Act]
I would argue that a law saying that SCOTUS must explain the basis for its decisions, including those on the shadow docket, is well within the authority of Congress.
The Constitution gives Congress a fair degree of latitude to regulate the courts, including SCOTUS. Article III, Section 2, Clause 2 says:
“In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be a Party, the Supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all other Cases before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.”
A law that doesn’t in any way impact the powers of the Court but only requires that it explain the reasoning for its actions cannot by any rational argument be said to be outside the limits of “Regulations as the Congress shall make.”
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2025-12-28
[A comment raised two versions of a “forced outing” law of transgender students by schools: A)employees must notify parents or B)they can notify or not at their discretion with no requirement either way.]
Bluntly, it doesn’t matter. Either way puts trans students at significant risk of unwanted outing and strips them of privacy rights.
I’m old enough to remember when children would be told that if there was trouble at home they should find an authority figure to talk to - including, specifically, “a trusted teacher.” Now, amid all the pushing for outing laws, that advice should be “except a teacher - unless you can be absolutely certain they will never mention to anyone at any time, even in passing, even at the risk of their career.”
The only acceptable version I can see is (B) with the word “their” replaced with “the student’s.”
Thursday, December 04, 2025
Remigration - the one word to rule them all
I left with a pacemaker and (due to wrestling with that damn hospital bed while wearing a heart monitor) a pinched nerve with the result that I can only work for about 10 minutes before my shoulder hurts so much I can't concentrate and have to take a break. Hope it was worth the wait....]
I’m surprised that more people have not emphasized the fact that the references have moved from bizarrely false claims about “illegal” immigrants to being about immigrants, period, claims given an exclamation point by Steven Miller’s goose-stepping.
No more the fig leaf of “if only they’d do it legally, there would be no problem.” No more the differentiation of the “bad hombres” from the “good hombres.” Just naked hatred for and irrational fear of any and all among “the other.”
This is fascism fulfilled, paranoia as policy, systematized xenophobia.
2 Clarence Darrow during the Scopes Trial, Dayton, Tennessee (July 13, 1925). (Yes, the movie used an actual trial quote.)
3 In May, Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution classified the AfD as a “confirmed right-wing extremist endeavor” that “threatens democracy.” The classification was suspended a week later, awaiting a final court decision.
4 If you want to see the video, it’s here.
5 Because she keeps getting tied up in legal knots trying to make sense of the regime’s legal arguments.
6 Good last name for him because, y’know, it’s almost human.
Friday, November 28, 2025
So I said - something about AI in healthcare
In this case, I took a YouGov survey related to public perceptions about the use of AI in healthcare. Three of the questions asked for general responses rather than picking from among multiple choices.
-
November 26, 2025
What ethical considerations are most important to think about when adding AI tools to healthcare?
I
was told by my surgeon some years ago “You treat the patient, not the
X-ray.” The more we use AI, the more that adage is reversed.
Is there anything else about AI in healthcare that you would like to share with us?
AI
is good for, indeed excellent at, analyzing large amounts of data,
producing results that can be viewed and considered mathematically because that’s what they are
- mathematical derivations from mathematical data.
But healthcare in general and medicine within that reach involves more than mere data but also includes personalities and foibles and trust and other human interactions along with unavoidable judgment calls driven by such non-mathematical considerations, all of which are beyond its capabilities.
Which, by the way, makes the use of chat boxes by consumers for health information advice fraught with risk and worse as shown by recent suits against various companies whose chat boxes are accused of having encouraged teenager users to commit suicide. AI simply is not up the task to which the health care industry is trying to set it in pursuit of profit.
Monday, November 17, 2025
Liars figuring
Start with the fact that the peak year-over-year (YOY) inflation rate during Biden’s term was 9.1% in June 2021.*
In 1974, YOY inflation was 12.3%.
In 1979, it was 13.3%.
In 1980, it was 12.5%.
The highest in any year since 1929 was 18.1% in 1946.
Okay, next: For the year 2022 as a whole, (based on December end of year figures, the standard method) YOY inflation was 6.5%.
In the period 1941-2024, there have been 12 years with YOY inflation rates above 6.5%.**
Third: Over the course of his presidency, average YOY inflation under Biden was 4.95% - lower than under Nixon (6.10%), Ford (8.11%), or Carter (9.85%) and just a bit higher than Bush the elder (4.8I).
Has inflation been a struggle recently? Is it still a struggle, especially with slow growth and stalled real income growth? Absolutely freaking yes.
But “the highest in the history of our country?” Not even close. And dammit, some one of the White House reporters should have the guts to say it out loud to his face.
I may be considered old, but I damn well can remember 1974. And so can the Orange Overlord - unless his dementia has erased that part of his memory. Either that or he’s just a damned liar.
Actually, I suspect it’s both.
*All data via Investopedia.com.









