Bird Song of the Day
Brown Thrasher, Newnans Lake SF–East Trail (Pithlachocco Trail), Alachua, Florida, United States. Virtuosic!
In Case You Might Miss…
- Anti-Trump lawfare begins… but with far, far more solid cases.
- OMB memo RESCINDED. That was fast!
- A defense of slowness.
Politics
“So many of the social reactions that strike us as psychological are in fact a rational management of symbolic capital.” –Pierre Bourdieu, Classification Struggles
Trump Assassination Attempts (Plural)
They disappeared The Claims Adjuster too:
It’s been six months since the Butler assassination attempt and we still know nothing about the man who shot Donald Trump, much less why he was allowed to do it. That should make you nervous. Sean Davis explains.
(0:00) The Three Big Questions of the Trump Assassination Attempt… pic.twitter.com/Y6ZHachAut
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) January 17, 2025
Lambert here:
From my armchair at 60,0000 feet, here is how I see Trump’s executive orders and yesterday and today’s barrage of communiqués from the OMB. A first approximation, things can change!
First, the Democrat Party is like a rotten plank, and the Republicans were going to punch through it sooner or later. I feel sooner is better than later, because I have some optimism about a better outcome later if “we” take the punch now, what with the various approaching and inter-related crises that will be worse and worse later.
Because–
Second, the key point is not what the Republicans do (“You can trust the Republicans… To be Republicans”) but how Democrats react. After all, Trump is not that popular; his victory in 2024 was solid, but not spectacular; and “pausing” programs upon which the working class depends might not be the best way for Trump to pivot his party to make that same working class his base. This implies an enormous power vacuum in the Democrat Party leadership, and politics abhors a vacuum. Somebody will step up, almost by definition not from the tired, flaccid, corrupt, and dull-witted party leadership, but “out of nowhere.” My thought was a city councillor from, say, Minnesota (plain-spoken and media savvy are musts); Yves wondered where our Huey Long is. Perhaps the Skunk Party!
Third, the Medicaid shutdown fiasco (details to come below) shows some weaknesses in the Trump operation. Stoller is correct to say that Republicans want to govern, and Democrats shrink from it, but all the Republicans had to do to prevent the Medicaid shutdown when they wrote the OMB “pause” memo was to explicitly exempt Medicaid by name, as they did with Medicare and Social Security, in footnote 2. Everyone knows to read the footnotes, right? Well, apparently nobody in Stephen Miller’s OMB did. I don’t know how the screw-up happened — some reactionary dweeb thought Medicaid was part of Medicare? They hate poor people? Their AI had a hallucination? — but the same sort of thing happened with the Bush Administration, which discovered that you just can’t swap in Liberty University lawyers for Harvard lawyers (Christianists though they may be). Or when they tried to reconstruct Iraq with twenty-something Young Republicans. In other words, just because Republicans want to govern doesn’t mean they do it well.
P.S. I don’t want to imply that I’m wedded to the Democrat Party; after all, the Republican Party was in the White House after only two election cycles. I don’t take any of the existing alternative parties seriously; but that doesn’t mean a new second party couldn’t be created. My thought — blue sky though it is — is that Democrats 2.0 would be a dues paying party, an idea that worked so successfully for Labour in the UK that the spooks, the press, the Israeli Embassy, and the electeds all had to work hard to cripple it. So maybe Corbyn was onto something. Somebody more clever than I am would have to pencil it out, but dues might take the party out of the hands of the squillionaires. Enough dues, and you start offering member benefits, too. Why not? Blue skying wildly, the other major dues-paying institution in politics is… unions. Why not a Labor Party? Sounds crazy, but when you imagine the leverage that the Longshoreman, the railway workers, the truckers, and the airline stewardesses could exert if directed toward a single program at a single time… Well, “The power to destroy a thing is the absolute control over it.”
P.P.S. On the rescission of OMB memo M-25-13 (belowP: I don’t think the impulses behind the memo have changed. There seem to have been three drivers: (1) animus against “big gummint” generally; (2) animus against NGOs; (3) animus against DEI, but also other various “irritable mental gestures.” Taking these out of order: Big Gummint issues are also being handled at the personnel level (see the OPM material). Mental Gestures are not especially relevant — does anybody really believe that “Marxist equity” and “Green New Deal Social Engineering” are sufficiently conceptualized to be “identified” let alone “reviewed”? DEI is the exception since it has an institutional apparatus to support it, but frankly, if the Republicans manage to kill it off, they’ll be doing Democrats a favor. As for NGOs, I think they are the real target of the memo, which might rationally have been pared down to address them alone (and perhaps will be). Do recall, for example, that on the key Republican issue of immigration, the allocation of immigrants to towns and cities across the United States was handled, not by government, but by an invisible albeit well-funded network of NGOs, a policy that ought to be brought into the light of day and examined. So while the memo was poorly drafted, its rescission is a minor tactical victory.
* * * OMB memo M-25-13 -> Medicaid freeze-up -> reaction -> rescission. This link gives the best timeline and detail–
“As some Medicaid sites freeze up, White House acts to clarify pause on grants and programs” [Stat]. • Summarizing the discourse as it flowed across my feed: M-25-13 explicitly exempted Medicare and Social Security from the freeze (or “pause”) in footnote 2. Medicaid was not exempted. And from footnote 1, “assistance received directly by individuals” was exempted, but that doesn’t exempt Medicaid, which reimburses providers. Given the tenor of the memo (“career and political appointees in the Executive Branch have a duty to align Federal spending and action with the will of the American people as expressed through Presidential priorities”) it was rational for government officials to follow the letter of the memo as best they could and freeze the sites. Administration advocates framed this as “malicious compliance,” but putting attributed motives aside, I don’t think compliance was irrational. The text is the text, after all. Accidentally or not, “it’s pretty obvious they just threw a big breaker switch on the federal government” (though it would be nice to have reporting on the details of how the breaker switch was thrown). At this point, the memo was rescinded. I wonder if any heads will roll? For example, Stephen Miller’s:
Sure there are dumb media hoaxes but if you accidentally turn off Medicaid people notice. https://t.co/TbnipAgkBx
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) January 29, 2025
“[E]xplicitly excluded all aid and benefit programs” is wrong; Miller appears not to have read his own memo (see discussion of footnotes 1 and 2 above.)
“White House response adds to confusion on federal funding freeze” [PBS]. “The Office of Management and Budget has rescinded its call for a pause on federal assistance, according to the agency’s memo shared by Democracy Forward, which led a legal challenge over the effort. But the White House said that only the original memo calling for the freeze had been rescinded. The new memo says the heads of executive departments and agencies should contact their general counsels ‘if you have questions about implementing the President’s Executive Orders.’ But Karoline Leavitt, the White House spokeswoman, told reporters that the move simply meant a recession of the memo. She said efforts to ‘end the egregious waste of federal funding’ will continue. She said the OMB memo has been rescinded ‘to end any confusion on federal policy created by the court ruling and the dishonest media coverage.’ The administration expects that rescinding the memo will end the court case against it. After widespread confusion from the initially very broad memo calling for a halt in federal assistance, pending review, the White House tried Tuesday to further clarify which programs would not be affected, later specifying that it would not impact Medicaid and SNAP programs, for example. This latest statement from the White House is likely to add to the confusion rather than clarify it.” As for the power of the purse: “The order provided an early litmus test for just how willing Congressional Republicans would be to cede their power of the purse in deference to the leader of their party – even temporarily…. House Speaker Mike Johnson called it ‘an application of common sense,’ and said it would ‘be harmless in the end.'” • Is it possible to be a constitutionalist and a consequentialist at the same time? Johnson seems to think so, but I’m not so sure….
* * * Lawfare, but with far more solid cases:
“Lawsuit claims systems behind OPM governmentwide email blast are illegal, insecure” [FedScoop]. “A lawsuit filed in federal court Monday alleges that the Office of Personnel Management set up an on-premise server to conduct last week’s mass email blast to federal employees and store information it received in response without doing a privacy impact assessment on the system as required by law. Filed by two anonymous federal employees in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the class-action lawsuit calls for OPM to stop the use of the system until the agency can show that it’s lawfully conducted a privacy assessment. The two employees accuse OPM officials of deploying the new server — which is said to be ‘retaining information about every employee of the U.S. Executive Branch’ or potentially doing so through systems linked to it — in a ‘rapid’ manner without building proper security measures into it or assessing the privacy impacts as required by the E-Government Act of 2002. On Friday, OPM sent a mass email to employees across the federal government — though not every federal employee received it, including one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit — to test ‘a new distribution and response list,’ asking recipients to reply ‘yes.’ Over the weekend, federal employees received another test ‘to confirm that an email can be sent and replied to by all government employees.’ Some agency and department heads gave guidance to their employees that the emails from OPM could be trusted. The complaint goes on to say: ‘OPM has not conducted a PIA for this unknown email server or any system which collects or maintains Personally Identifiable Information (‘PII’) obtained from its use,’ nor has a chief information officer or equivalent agency official signed off on an assessment. Finally, such an assessment would need to be made publicly available for review. ‘OPM’s failure to take these steps constitutes agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed in violation of 5 U.S.C. § 706(1),’ the lawsuit states. ‘Plaintiffs are being materially harmed by this inaction because they are being denied information about how these systems — which will be rich in PII about every employee of the U.S. Executive Branch — are being designed and used.’ As a measure of relief, the plaintiffs call for an injunction of the systems involved in the matter until OPM conducts the required privacy assessment.” • Alternatively, Trump could have set up the servers in a bathroom at Mar-a-Lago…..
* * * “Trump Hit With New Lawsuit for Funneling Sensitive Info to Elon Musk” [The New Republic]. “Donald Trump’s administration has been hit with a lawsuit over allegedly collecting federal employee information and directing it to an employee of Elon Musk. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Monday, alleges that employee data is going to Amanda Scales, who, according to LinkedIn, works for xAI, a private corporation of which Musk is the CEO. This would violate federal laws on transparency and put the sensitive information of federal employees into the hands of a private corporation.” • Here is the filing.
“Elon Musk Lackeys Have Taken Over the Office of Personnel Management” [Wired]. “Sources within the federal government tell WIRED that the highest ranks of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM)—essentially the human resources function for the entire federal government—are now controlled by people with connections to Musk and to the tech industry. Among them is a person who, according to an online résumé, was set to start college last fall. Scott Kupor, a managing partner at the powerful investment firm Andreessen Horowitz, stands as Trump’s nominee to run the OPM. …. Amanda Scales is, as has been reported, the new chief of staff at the OPM. She formerly worked in talent for xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence company, according to her LinkedIn. Before that, she was part of the talent and operations team at Human Capital, a venture firm with investments in the defense tech startup Anduril and the political betting platform Kalshi; before that, she worked for years at Uber. Her placement in this key role, experts believe, seems part of a broader pattern of the traditionally apolitical OPM being converted to use as a political tool.” And: “According to the same sources, other people at the top of the new OPM food chain include two people with apparent software engineering backgrounds, whom WIRED is not naming because of their ages. One, a senior adviser to the director, is a 21-year-old whose online résumé touts his work for Palantir, the government contractor and analytics firm cofounded by billionaire Peter Thiel, who is its chair. (The former CEO of PayPal and a longtime Musk associate, Thiel is a Trump supporter who helped bankroll the 2022 Senate campaign of his protégé, Vice President JD Vance.) The other, who reports directly to Scales, graduated from high school in 2024, according to a mirrored copy of an online résumé and his high school’s student magazine; he lists jobs as a camp counselor and a bicycle mechanic among his professional experiences, as well as a summer role at Neuralink, Musk’s brain-computer interface company.” • Analytically, I don’t think “Musk’s lackeys” is correct framing. This is a Flex-Net centered on Silicon Valley. As for the 21-year-old…. One of Thiel’s blood bags?
* * * “Federal judge temporarily blocks Trump administration freeze on federal grants and loans” [Associated Press]. “A federal judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked a push from President Donald Trump to pause federal funding while his administration conducts an across-the-board ideological review to uproot progressive initiatives…. U.S. District Judge Loren L. AliKhan blocked the funding freeze only minutes before it was scheduled to take effect. The administrative stay, prompted by a lawsuit brought by nonprofit groups that receive federal money, lasts until Monday afternoon. Another court hearing is scheduled that morning to consider the issue.” • Here is the docket. Here is the filing. NOTE This filing concerns the OMB memo now rescinded. BWA-HA-HA-HA! I picked the best posssible day to get a late start!
* * * 🚨 Trump’s White House OMB rescinds federal aid freeze. pic.twitter.com/u6lyLSQQhu
— Peter Alexander (@PeterAlexander) January 29, 2025
At least somebody in the White House has the strength of mind to cut their losses, even at the cost of allowing the Democrats a minor tactical victory!
“Trump’s Attempt to Usurp Congress’s Spending Power” [Reason]. The rescission of OMB memo M-25-13 aside: “As in his first term, Trump is again planning to deny federal funds to sanctuary jurisdictions unless they accept his dictates on immigration policy. Earlier, he suspended nearly all foreign aid programs, except those for Israel and Egypt. Trump also recently threatened to withhold disaster relief funds from California, unless they adopt his preferred changes to state election law. More generally, he and his underlings have far-reaching plans to ‘impound’ federal spending they disapprove of. In combination, this is a massive assault on Congress’ power over federal spending. The Spending Clause of the Constitution is clear in giving Congress, not the president, the power to allocate federal spending. When it comes to conditions imposed on grants to state and local governments, the Supreme Court has long made clear that they too must be imposed by Congress, and meet a number of other requirements, as well. Such conditions must, among other things, 1) be enacted and clearly indicated by Congress (the executive cannot make up its own grant conditions), 2) be related to the purposes of the grant in question (e.g. – grants for health care or education cannot be conditioned on immigration enforcement), and 3) not be ‘coercive.’ Thus, for example, even Congress could not condition disaster aid on changes in state election law, because the two issues are not related. Some might argue that many of the Administration’s actions on spending are no big deal because they are only “temporary.” But if the White House can ‘temporarily’ withhold congressionally allocated funds for a month, why not for two months, or for two years? There is no logical stopping point here.” • Massive triers, these guys. And a lot of parallel lines of attack. I’m a little amazed that the House — which I would think values having the power of the purse — is rolling over for this. What do these guys have on Mike Johnson, anyhow?
Nomination
RFK (1):
I absolutely agree with RFK Jr's critique of America's food supply. It urgently needs an overhaul
But he's nominated for HHS
NOT the U.S. Department of Agriculture
And his thoughts on health issues like HIV and vaccines are categorically undefendable and extremely dangerous
— Craig Spencer MD MPH (@Craig_A_Spencer) January 29, 2025
RFK (2):
RFK Jr says we need to more 'value based care' and more privatized insurance, claims Medicaid isn't 'working for anyone.' It's basically Cato style libertarianism. pic.twitter.com/Bt5zTpdOyq
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) January 29, 2025
RFK (3):
This is what oligarchy looks like. They’re not hiding it. https://t.co/vf149XiepE
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 29, 2025
2024 Post Mortem
I’m stealin’ back to my same old used to be:
Kamala Harris's husband Doug Emhoff just decided he'd like to represent giant private equity firms for the corporate law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher that once employed Robert Bork. Hooray! pic.twitter.com/GfQflAgG6r
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) January 27, 2025
“‘A 5 Alarm F-ing Fire’: Trump’s Federal Funding Freeze Is Jolting Some Dems Into Fight Mode” [HuffPo]. “Democrats on Capitol Hill are fuming about President Donald Trump’s Monday night announcement that he is freezing all federal grants and loans, a stunning action that appears as unconstitutional as it is harmful to millions of Americans…. Nearly two dozen Democrats on Tuesday opposed confirmation of Trump’s transportation secretary nominee, Sean Duffy, who is relatively noncontroversial. Some explicitly said their reason was because of the president’s freeze on federal money.” • I suppose it’s a step up from a sternly worded letter.
Please kill me now:
This is great. This crew has a pretty impressive track record of winning tough races with the kind of creative, working-class messaging that Dems need now https://t.co/722plAOx0r
— Jon Favreau (@jonfavs) January 27, 2025
We’re gonna pry that “fight” meme from their cold, dead hands….
Not such a bad idea:
I agree with Tim Snyder: it is time for Democrats to form a Shadow Cabinet just like they do in the United Kingdom
— Seth Abramson (@SethAbramson) January 29, 2025
The base is not happy (but is also completely addled by RussiaGate, Trump Derangement Syndrome, and too much brunch, so what do you do):
We are hearing this exact sentiment from so many of our members right now. https://t.co/oENCBAPvq0
— Leah Greenberg (@Leahgreenb) January 27, 2025
Syndemics
“I am in earnest — I will not equivocate — I will not excuse — I will not retreat a single inch — AND I WILL BE HEARD.” –William Lloyd Garrison
Covid Resources, United States (National): Transmission (CDC); Wastewater (CDC, Biobot; includes many counties; Wastewater Scan, includes drilldown by zip); Variants (CDC; Walgreens); “Iowa COVID-19 Tracker” (in IA, but national data). “Infection Control, Emergency Management, Safety, and General Thoughts” (especially on hospitalization by city).
Lambert here: Readers, thanks for the collective effort. To update any entry, do feel free to contact me at the address given with the plants. Please put “COVID” in the subject line. Thank you!
Resources, United States (Local): AK (dashboard); AL (dashboard); AR (dashboard); AZ (dashboard); CA (dashboard; Marin, dashboard; Stanford, wastewater; Oakland, wastewater); CO (dashboard; wastewater); CT (dashboard); DE (dashboard); FL (wastewater); GA (wastewater); HI (dashboard); IA (wastewater reports); ID (dashboard, Boise; dashboard, wastewater, Central Idaho; wastewater, Coeur d’Alene; dashboard, Spokane County); IL (wastewater); IN (dashboard); KS (dashboard; wastewater, Lawrence); KY (dashboard, Louisville); LA (dashboard); MA (wastewater); MD (dashboard); ME (dashboard); MI (wastewater; wastewater); MN (dashboard); MO (wastewater); MS (dashboard); MT (dashboard); NC (dashboard); ND (dashboard; wastewater); NE (dashboard); NH (wastewater); NJ (dashboard); NM (dashboard); NV (dashboard; wastewater, Southern NV); NY (dashboard); OH (dashboard); OK (dashboard); OR (dashboard); PA (dashboard); RI (dashboard); SC (dashboard); SD (dashboard); TN (dashboard); TX (dashboard); UT (wastewater); VA (wastewater); VT (dashboard); WA (dashboard; dashboard); WI (wastewater); WV (wastewater); WY (wastewater).
Resources, Canada (National): Wastewater (Government of Canada).
Resources, Canada (Provincial): ON (wastewater); QC (les eaux usées); BC (wastewater); BC, Vancouver (wastewater).
Hat tips to helpful readers: Alexis, anon (2), Art_DogCT, B24S, CanCyn, ChiGal, Chuck L, Festoonic, FM, FreeMarketApologist (4), Gumbo, hop2it, JB, JEHR, JF, JL Joe, John, JM (10), JustAnotherVolunteer, JW, KatieBird, KF, KidDoc, LL, Michael King, KF, LaRuse, mrsyk, MT, MT_Wild, otisyves, Petal (6), RK (2), RL, RM, Rod, square coats (11), tennesseewaltzer, thump, Tom B., Utah, Bob White (3).
Stay safe out there!
Lambert here: Everything’s gone dark except for trusty New York State hospitalization (daily), Walgreen’s positivity (weekly), and the Cleveland Clinic? Readers, do you have any suggestions about alternatives at state level? Thank you! How I wish we had Biobot back….
Wastewater | |
This week[1] CDC January 13 | Last week[2] CDC (until next week): |
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Variants [3] CDC January 18 | Emergency Room Visits[4] CDC January 11 |
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Hospitalization | |
New York[5] New York State, data January 27: | National [6] CDC January 24: |
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Positivity | |
National[7] Walgreens January 27: | Ohio[8] Cleveland Clinic January 18: |
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Travelers Data | |
Positivity[9] CDC December 30: | Variants[10] CDC December 30 |
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Deaths | |
Weekly Deaths vs. % Positivity [11] CDC January 11: | Weekly Deaths vs. ED Visits [12] CDC January 11: |
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LEGEND
1) ★ for charts new today; all others are not updated.
2) For a full-size/full-resolution image, Command-click (MacOS) or right-click (Windows) on the chart thumbnail and “open image in new tab.”
NOTES
[1] (CDC) Seeing more red and more orange, but nothing new at major hubs.
[2] (CDC) Last week’s wastewater map.
[3] (CDC Variants) XEC takes over. That WHO label, “Ommicron,” has done a great job normalizing successive waves of infection.
[4] (ED) A little uptick.
[5] (Hospitalization: NY) Definitely jumped.
[6] (Hospitalization: CDC). Leveling out.
[7] (Walgreens) Leveling out.
[8] (Cleveland) Continued upward trend since, well, Thanksgiving.
[9] (Travelers: Positivity) Leveling out.
[10] (Travelers: Variants). Positivity is new, but variants have not yet been released.
[11] Deaths low, positivity leveling out.
[12] Deaths low, ED leveling out.
Stats Watch
There are no official statistics of interest today.
Manufacturing: “Boeing plans to wrap up rework in ‘shadow factories’ this year” [FlightGlobal]. “Boeing has made progress winnowing its once-massive inventory of undelivered 737 Max and 787s and is now preparing to shutter so-called “shadow factories” in which it has been completing rework on the aircraft.” Shadow factories. First I’ve head. More: “Many of Boeing’s stored 737s and 787s have required rework due to manufacturing issues. At one point, Boeing was sitting on some 450 undelivered 737 Max and 120 undelivered 787s. So far this year, Boeing has already delivered around 10 of the 55 737 Max 8s in its inventory at end-2024, says West. ‘We now expect to shut down the shadow factory mid-year, and to deliver all the remaining [Max 8s] to customers within the year.’ Boeing intends to complete rework on the 25 undelivered 787s in ‘early 2025’, though deliveries of those jets will run into next year, West adds. Several production quality issues, including those affecting 737 Max aft-pressure bulkheads and 787 fuselages, have forced Boeing to rework already produced aircraft. Boeing has been conducting the time-intensive and expensive work on 787s at its production site in Everett and on 737 Max aircraft at a site in Moses Lake, Washington.” • Oh. I think Deming would have had something to say about all this.
Tech: “OpenAI says it has evidence China’s DeepSeek used its model to train competitor” [Financial Times]. • Somebody call a w-h-a-a-a-mbulance! OpenAI ripped off the entire internet — the Bearded One calls this “original accumulation” — and know they’re whinging about theft?
Tech: If you think it’s worth it:
Motherboard: Gigabyte MZ73-LM0 or MZ73-LM1. We want 2 EPYC sockets to get a massive 24 channels of DDR5 RAM to max out that memory size and bandwidth.https://t.co/GCYsoYaKvZ
— Matthew Carrigan (@carrigmat) January 28, 2025
Today’s Fear & Greed Index: 46 Neutral (previous close: 44 Fear) [CNN]. One week ago: 42 (Fear). (0 is Extreme Fear; 100 is Extreme Greed). Last updated Jan 29 at 1:05:03 PM ET.
Musical Interlude
The only band the mattered:
“#1 You have the right not to be killed.” That song is a propos, but I accidentally had autoplay on, and so this came up, actually my favorite:
One of the better anti-war songs….
Zeitgeist Watch
“A defence of slowness at the end of the world” [Sarah’s Substack]. Contradicts the above a bit, I suppose. Ah well, nevertheless. “Spencer Greenberg of Clearer Thinking recently wrote that believing you only have one option is dangerous. Grasping to preserve what you believe is your sole choice can lead to poor decision-making, like tolerating abuse in a relationship or staying in the wrong job. I think this argument extends to believing you have very little time. To live in the shadow of an impending singularity can make every opportunity appear as one of an ever-dwindling number. It can end in money you wish you hadn’t spent, sex you wish you hadn’t had, or nights you wish you hadn’t drunk so much. It can obscure opportunities whose benefits might take longer to manifest. Staying in the Slow World can guard against impulsivity. It can expand your menu of options, and make you more likely to take bets that will pay off in longer timelines (which we might be lucky enough to get!). It’s ok to comfort yourself with age-old adages meant to stave off myopicism – that you’re still young, that you’ve got your whole life ahead of you and that there’s always next year. It’s ok to really believe these adages and to live as if they are true.” • I think the “singularity” is Silly Valley foofrah bred from too much stupid money sloshing about. But slow (as in Slow Food) is still good.
All bets are off” [Cory Doctorow, Pluralistic]. “When unions are outlawed, only outlaws will have unions. Unions don’t owe their existence to labor laws that protect organizing activities. Rather, labor laws exist because once-illegal unions were formed in the teeth of violent suppression, and those unions demanded – and got – labor law. Bosses have hated unions since the start, and they’ve really hated laws protecting workers. Dress this up in whatever self-serving rationale you want – ‘the freedom to contract,’ or ‘meritocracy’ – it all cashes out to this: when workers bargain collectively, value that would otherwise go to investors and executives goes to the workers. I’m not just talking about wages here, either. If an employer is forced – by a union, or by a labor law that only exists because of union militancy – to operate a safe workplace, they have to spend money on things like fire suppression, PPE, and paid breaks to avoid repetitive strain injuries. In the absence of some force that corrals bosses into providing these safety measures, they can use that money to pay themselves, and externalize the cost of on-the-job injuries to their workers.” • Worth reading in full.
Taking the Frecciarossa 500 set from Reggio Calabria to Turin, Italy’s longest high-speed rail journey:
— @nonstopeurotrip.com on 🦋 (@nonstopeurotrip) January 29, 2025
The video shows that Italy puts up glass anti-noise barriers, so you can still see the view. Not concrete blocks!
“Watch the path of a raindrop from anywhere in the world” [River Runner Global].• Fun!
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We need to start a lottery. Kick in a buck. Closest pick to the date the Dems start impeachment proceedings on Trump wins the pot.
I’m going with March 3.
I don’t have a buck to spare, but I’ll go with February 3. The Democrats will do anything to avoid governing, their funders will rejoice.
April 2nd would be apt and highly appropriate….one day after April Fools!
Impeachment Lottery. I go with April 1, 2026 because the Dems will keep their “dry powder” until they can use it for pulling in campaign contributions for the 2026 election cycle. Remember The Daily Kos?
Based on prior experience, I would bet that the Dems will run on impeaching Trump but needing the House for the midterms. Once they control the House, Nancy’s boy toy Hakeem is speaker and they chair the relevant committees it will still be up for grabs. If the Democratic donor class and spooks are happy they will never manage to do it for the third time. If not, then try January 20th 2027.
The most unlikely scenario will be if enough rice bowls are going to be broken and/or the base gets disillusioned in the next year or so which splits the Republicans and allows it to become a bipartisan effort. Which would add another historic first to Trump’s record, third impeachment. And with the third one being the charm making him the second President removed from office.
I added the initial ort: A rather hopeful rant on our current plight under “Trump Administration.” More to come.
The article by Cory Doctorow at Pluralistic is definitely worth your while.
Labor organization precedes the laws regulating it. Because we work.
Ironically, much of the oh-so-holy markets derives from government regulating the marketplace. Things like coinage. Weights and measures. Contracts.
So things are topsy-turvy.
From Doctorow’s article: “Remember: labor militancy created the NLRA, not the other way around. When workers didn’t have the legal means to organize, they organized by illegal means. When they didn’t have legal ways of striking, they struck illegally. The result was pitched battles, even bloodbaths, as cops beat and even killed labor organizers. Bosses hired thugs who committed mass murder – literally.”
Or work creates wealth. The bosses and “the market” want to exploit and control wealth, or work. Hmmm. I must be leaning toward that dreaded “Marxist equity” that is being bruited about in Magalandia.
Given that most Americans get their health insurance from the workplace, would current discontent also be labor related? Why not think of it that way?
And doesn’t that make Saint Luigi the Adjuster a labor agitator?
PS: Don’t expect the Democratic Party to do any favors for workers. When was the last time you saw either of the Clintons at a union meeting or union function?
> PS: Don’t expect the Democratic Party to do any favors for workers. When was the last time you saw either of the Clintons at a union meeting or union function?
Famously, at Yale the Clintons crossed a picket line on their first date. “When they tell you who they are, believe them.”
Thanks. I was going to mention la Clintons crossing the line but you beat me to it. / ;)
“When they tell you who they are, believe them.”
Interesting. I had family tell the same about Trump to explain their belief that the President is a dictator who is going to go after them and arrest and imprison them because they are in the media. The fear is very real and intense. So intense I worry about the fear affecting the children. It’s too bad that the Blue PMC Resistance didn’t happen twenty years earlier, but the Professional Managerial Class seems to believe that reality is only in what they see and believe, not in anything that the majority of the people outside their enbubbled world experience and believe. If it’s good for the PMC then all is well with the world. They are the Good People after all.
They are all in the Democratic ecosphere (not that they believe in neoliberalism, which is something that we can agree on) If I was on better speaking terms with them, I would ask why they believed that Trump won as in how the Democratic Party’s abandonment of the working class has anything to do with it. I think that would agree with me that this abandonment is a cause of Trump’s victory, but they are looking at Trump as THE existential threat to our wellbeing instead of the reasons for his presidency’s existence. This inability to see that the Democratic Party itself is responsible for the rise of President Trump is a remarkable blind spot. The inability to see that they are responsible for their greatest fear.
In the future, historians will have a remarkable chance to study how a society goes insane and so slowly it is hard to see or believe it. I have read about the societies of the Germans, Spanish, Chinese, and worst of all, the Cambodians went insane. I could add the fall of the Roman Republic is another example. All entertaining and interesting, but still horrifying to see the nightmare arising even from the pages of a book. For all the horror of my country’s descent into insanity with its death, suffering, and slow decay, seeing it happens is very interesting. Maybe I will live long enough to read the earliest history books of the subject. It’s unlikely, but multiple members of my family have lived over a century, so maybe.
Grace Slick wasn’t so pessimistic about what happens when the Empire goes down:
“Greasy Heart,” Grace Slick
There’s some pain and chaos coming, but most may feel the same way as the Wicked Witch’s guards felt as their boss went up in flames. Self-organization in the absence of effective central authority, already popping up at disasters, may rise to save the day. Necessity may be the mother of invention.
I think that’s a more plausible route to a better future than reform of the Democrat Party or wishing Republicans would grow a heart.
That incident almost certainly did happen but I think that they used it to establish their “credentials” with the political establishment when they were younger.
Life finds a way.
Some links for fans of the Slow World –
The Clock of the Long Now – built by the slow thinking Long Now Foundation and designed to last 10,000 years. I hadn’t checked the website in many, many years until today and it looks like the clock is now operational!
The Pitch Drop Experiment – this was started in 1927 and it takes about 8-10 years for each drop. The link to the actual camera on the experiment showed as not secure, but you can access it from the link I included. The last drop was in 2014 so another is due to fall any day now!
And finally, John Cage’s composition As Slow as Possible which began in 2001 and is expected to run for 639 years. Apologies for the wikipedia link on this one – at one point I had a link to the live performance so you could listen to it, but when I checked my old blog, the link is now dead, and a quick search didn’t turn up a new one. Gold star for anyone who can find a current one!
Hell has unfrozen:
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/01/29/us/trump-federal-freeze-funding-news#federal-freeze-grants
Thanks. See comment below and addendum to rant above.
re: RM writes: “Mushrooms encircling the base of dead and burned ponderosa pine.”
And therein lies a hope, imo. Quoting that Shakespeare guy, (how old fashioned):
‘There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.’
The OMB just rescinded the order. BWA-HA-HA-HA! (I just added another ort to that effect.)
I certainly picked the best possible day to get a late start. OTOH, I had the case all teed up and the screen dumps made so I could on my yellow waders. Another missed advantage from not being slow, ha ha.
More scraps to come.
Looks like the press sec is saying the funding freeze EO is still on in spite of the OMB action?
Here
Not sure what this changes, honestly.
And then:
“A federal judge said Wednesday he intends to issue a new block on President Donald Trump’s effort to freeze an enormous swath of federal spending, citing the White House’s contradictory signals about the policy.
U.S. District Judge Jack McConnell said a bid by the White House to rescind a “hugely ambiguous” order implementing the freeze appeared to be undercut by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s subsequent statement that the freeze was still in effect.”
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/01/29/spending-freeze-blocked-trump-judge-00201341
(There are 2 cases, one brought by NGO’s and one by several states. This references the one by the states, who presented the press secretary’s tweet as evidence that the freeze was still active)
https://bsky.app/profile/kyledcheney.bsky.social/post/3lgvronvd6s2t
Thanks
They will not change the policy direction, for sure.
So the rescission is a minor tactical victory (and in a case brought by an NGO, at that!). Not that any kind of victory is good for Democrats right now. But if they think this is an excuse to coast to the mid-terms… Well, that won’t fill the power vacuum, now will it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZw23sWlyG0&ab_channel=theclashVEVO
The Clash are good
The Clash, Give ‘Em Enough Rope, London Calling, and Sandinista in 1977 – 1980. That’s quite a run!
Ivan meets G.I. Joe – one of my favorites.
Whenever Kamala was talking about her opportunity economy, The Clash and this song sprang to my mind:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihPenaGJ6P4
Don’t B-
As for the 21-year-old…. One of Thiel’s blood bags?
I thought he used newborns?
“President Trump said he is signing an executive order on Wednesday to prepare a massive facility at Guantánamo Bay to be used to house deported migrants.”
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5113897-trump-guantanamo-bay-migrants/
RFK Hearing Reaction
I guess the about 20 minutes of this today that I saw with Warren and Wyden were probably the most humiliating 20 minutes of my life as a Democrat. The realignment is so far along now that I do not know how much longer I am going to keep that “Democrat” position for myself. It really is quite embarrassing. I had been holding on to it as a memento and appreciation for my New Deal elders – but I think even they would be vomiting about right now.
Truly, the mask is off. When you listen to the Dems – it is clearly not about the health of the American people – it is all about the health of Big Pharma. They could not have made the contrast more clear. And Bernie – my God – I am not even sure what to say. Just dreadful.
My friendly general surgeon colleague was sitting right next to me. Dem to the core. Looked up around the room and said – “Well they obviously do not understand what it means to prepare. And they just seem lost. They no longer stand for the things that we all thought they did.”
It was that bad.
Warren and Wyden vs family farmers raising whole foods clean beef, poultry, and pork.
Farmers and Ranchers Demand RFK, Jr’s Confirmation
https://merylnass.substack.com/p/farmers-and-ranchers-demand-rfk-jrs
> Farmers and Ranchers Demand RFK, Jr’s Confirmation
And RFK does what for them as head of HHS? (Personally, I’d give consideration to the idea that Trump didn’t nominate RFK for something MAHA-related, like Secretary of Agriculture, exactly because he might have been confirmed and have done a good job. Unlike HHS.
Wait. Are you saying that cdc, nih, and fda are not “MAHA-related”?
I don’t know. Against Roundup (glyphosate) and other things?
If enough pro-MAHA Americans think of “the” government as” class-enemy-occupied” territory and think in terms of conquering it and making it into “our” government again, they might bring themselves to think of doing things designed to achieve that goal.
” Our” government as in ” Us’s” government, as in NOT “Thems’s” government.
In the meantime, groups of Americans who want to MAHA will have to try to MOHA ( Make Ourselves Healthy Again) in the teeth of the establishment’s Prime Directive of KASL ( Keep America Sick Longer).
And as for Bernie, who I once supported wholeheartedly, it turns out he’s taken big big donations from ye olde drug companies. Who knew? It’s a thing in national politics, I guess.
If we are going to be truthful, I would say that Bernie can be written off not only as a political force in the country but also as a politician. And you can only run on brand fumes for so long. He’s done. But what will he tell himself on his death bed. That at least he was not isolated socially on the DC circuit like Ralph Nadar was by ‘cooperating’?
Oh, well, I am somewhat less cynical about Bernie’s 2016 run. I think he believed his 2016 campaign would swing the Dem estab toward the 99%’s thinking. When it did not happen per the DNC demands, he caved. Was he a sheep dog? Imo, not in 2016. But in 2020? i don’t know. That is the great tragedy of Sander’s political life, imo.
The political drive boosting the earlier Sanders’ campaigns is still here, imo.
The big tell for me was when a group of his activist went to him in his 2016 campaign to complain how the guy he appointed to run his campaign was actually undermining it and wrecking it and needed replacing if they were going to win. Money from donations was being wasted like crazy.
So Bernie sided with ‘his guy’ and fired the activists. The rest is history.
wrt Bemie’s 2016 campaign, they dismissed Matt Oralea’s work as not wole enough based on Orafea’s much earlier work. / Oy
Jimmy Dore. utube, ~6+ minutes;
“THIS Is What Got Me Fired From Bernie’s Campaign!” – Matt Orfalea
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQiKDxMpOEQ
Did Bernie know what his subordinates were doing? I don’t know.
I suggest that Bernie will be continually sent back to DC from our Green Mountain State, even after he has gone full on “Weekend at Bernie’s”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCTgcZ6ImsQ&pp=ygUTd2Vla2VuZCBhdCBiZXJuaWUncw%3D%3D
There has been nothing to suggest otherwise from the voters around here.
And on his deathbed he will probably declare, ” If only if it wasn’t for those awful Republicans, It’s an OUTRAGE!!”
“it turns out he’s taken big big donations from ye olde drug companies”
Flora, this is news to me. Do you have a link to support your claim?
Thanks!
Warren is really worried about the Big Pharma corporations-
https://xcancel.com/5149jamesli/status/1884701742304223505#m
Holy dooley. She really gets big money from Big Pharma but look who easily gets far more-
https://xcancel.com/SaraNajmaii/status/1884704395725603236#m
Isn’t this money to Sanders and Warren 99% comprised of individual contributions organized by profession ? A nurse or a doctor making an individual donation to a campaign can not sensibly be equated with dark PAC money from billionaires and corporations.
The link is to a website I don’t recognize and seems to be a video. That’s beyond my interest level, but there’s a big number of about $1.4M from pharma for 2020 for Sanders, that shows up on social media. Reporting about campaign contributions is almost always from FEC data and includes employees.
The first link below is about his 2020 pledge, and some analysis of contributions that didn’t meet his criteria.
The second link has additional detail on a few contributions, and a link to a report that all of the Dem candidates said they weren’t accepting contributions from PACs.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/18/politics/bernie-sanders-donations-return-health-insurance-drug-companies/index.html
https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2019/07/20dems-are-taking-money-healthcare/
I added the last ort and scrap.
>>>Massive triers, these guys. And a lot of parallel lines of attack. I’m a little amazed that the House — which I would think values having the power of the purse — is rolling over for this. What do these guys have on Mike Johnson, anyhow?
Using the power of the purse means being responsible for the use of that power and that makes them vulnerable to attacks by their opponents (and donors, never forget them), which they try to avoid at all costs. Our collective leadership is a bunch of gutless, egotistical, greedheads lacking in responsibility, integrity, or in being adults.
Mike Johnson has about as much power as Nancy Pelosi’s chauffeur. Maybe less.
I was working at the Chicago Tribune years ago when, in a panic over plunging revenues due to the blasted internet, the Tribune Co. was basically sold to billionaire Sam Zell (in a deal enabled by a mass plunder of employees’ ESOP, but I digress).
At the Tribune itself, Zell installed a bunch of AM radio shock-jock creatures who commenced to trash the place, beginning with wave after wave of layoffs (of the very employees whose retirement ESOP had been plundered, leaving nothing, but I digress). I got washed out with either the fourth or fifth layoff wave, as I recall. Today, the Tribune is a thin, brittle shell of what it once was, now owned, thanks to the genius of the company’s rotten-hearted board of directors, by the notorious Alden Capital.
In any event, the early days of the Trump administration — particularly the drunken, sweeping semi-layoffs — are causing vivid and lizardly surreal flashbacks for me. Scratch the surface of some of these creatures installed by a flaky, Zellish billionaire (is “flaky” redundant with “billionaire?) and you’ll find shock jocks, I vow.
RE: Fight Agency video-
To me, John Fetterman is not a good look, but I guess he did run a good campaign.
I think the Dems would be better off if they found the two guys that ran Mike Gravels 2020 presidential campaign twitter account.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/06/gravel-teens-who-ran-2020-campaign-remember-mike-gravel.html
‘JUST IN: Billionaire Nicole Shanahan vows to fund primary challengers of 13 specific U.S. Senators who don’t support RFK Jr’s confirmation, calls them out by name.’
President Abraham Lincoln: ‘that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.’
President Donald Trump: ‘that this nation, under Trump, shall have a new birth of conservatism and that government of the billionaires, by the billionaires, for the billionaires, shall not perish from the earth.’
Tales from the great CRE meltdown:
Local mall closed for not paying their power bill:
https://archive.ph/J0EPn
This particular edifice wreck is about a 20-minute drive from my house and it used to be our go-to mall. It got foreclosed on in 2020 when Simon Property Group walked away from the mortgage, and Duetsche Bank took it over. They then sold it to a private property management group who is notorious for not paying the utilities, deferring maintenance, and basically milking it until the cow drops dead.
The 2nd anchor store bailed last week along with a zombie Sears store that has been vacant for at least 5 years. Most of the food court is desolate and the carpet is worn. The bathrooms aren’t clean.
It will probably become a private nuisance and require lots of money to redevelop the site into something useful.
Isn’t late-stage capitalism great?
Lambert what are we going to do without you
Gunna leave behind some big yellow waders to fill.
Indeed, he even picked up the tweet detailing the hw configuration costing 6K to run Deep seeker Impressive. I had picked it up and added it to my 30 bookmarked tweets about deepseeker that i need to study deeply.
Unfortunately, the glass barriers are bird killers unless they are patterned correctly. Just like glass windows.
“Republicans want to govern….” Well, yes, but the real question is, what is their philosophy of government?
“Free enterprise” and “free markets” “free” of government “interference” is indeed part of the (anti)Republican philosophy of government, but it is entirely divorced from historical reality. The modern basis of industrial mass production was developed in the national armories in the early 19th century, and deliberately spawned into the rest of the economy by the Army. Placing steam power on a scientific basis was accomplished by a very small number of US Navy officers investigating the principles of engine design. The curriculum they created for the Naval Academy created the profession of mechanical engineering. Robert Morris’ development of the telegraph was directly funded by Congress. The development of radio was funded and directed by the Navy, the Lifesaving Service, and the Army Signal Corps. The creation of the wheat and corn belt in the Plains states was a specific USDA program. Even frozen foods required incubation in USDA labs. The creation of computers is traced to the World War 2 programs of the Army and the Navy. Modern aerodynamics and modern aircraft design are entirely based on the research work of NACA and its successor NASA, especially their wind tunnels.
Shutting down government research programs will cripple the future development of the national economy for several generations. Trump and the conservatives and libertarians who support him have no clue about any of this. They cling to the MYTH of heroic entrepreneurs.
Bad news out of America right now-
‘A regional passenger jet operated by the American Airlines’ subsidiary has collided midair with a US military helicopter near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) on Wednesday night, prompting the suspension of all flights and a large-scale emergency response.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirmed that a PSA Airlines Bombardier CRJ700, operating American Eagle Flight 5342 en route from Wichita, Kansas, was on approach to Runway 33 at Reagan National when it collided with a Sikorsky H-60 helicopter around 9pm local time.’
https://www.rt.com/news/611864-plane-helicopter-collide-washington/
I don’t think that anyone should consider that leaving Medicaid off the exception list was unintentional or from confusing Medicare and Medicaid. And not just because it kicks the poors much as both parties love that. The majority of the states that took the expanded Medicaid program are blue to purple. And that includes every state that went for Harris. They knew this would decimate the budgets, and they went for it.
What I do think was the surprise was that most of America knows what a sh*t show our healthcare system so it ended up looking stupid and petty. There were no groups cheering kicking off the welfare queens getting plastic surgery on the government dime because people know it isn’t happening.
I think we have to assign some of the blame to the Democrats for structuring Medicaid expansion the way they did.
The 90% federal match was always at risk of a rug-pull but I believe they just didn’t care. Getting media headlines took precedence over good public policy.
Whatever happened to Medicare for All? Did that die with Sanders campaign in 2016? Medicaid was intended to be a stop-gap for the indigent, not a blanket health insurance program.