Archive for December, 2018

The Science Writer at Forbes and Mr. Trump’s Wall

December 23, 2018 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

This morning’s news reports from Indonesia are devastating.

It appears that the United States isn’t a big help.  From the science writer at Forbes …

Normally when something like this happens, I turn to the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and their excellent post-earthquake/tsunami reports to get much of my information. Unfortunately, as you may have noticed, the US government is partially shut down, which means none of their employees can update the system to explain what’s going on.

And Jess Phoenix …

 

 

So, you know, Merry Christmas and Screw Trump.

Thanks COmtnLady for the heads up.

Today’s NY Daily News Cover

December 22, 2018 By: El Jefe Category: Shutdown, Trump

Weaponizing the Government Shutdown

December 22, 2018 By: El Jefe Category: Shutdown

Yes, I’m weary with it.  Most people are numb to it because it doesn’t affect them directly.  Government workers hate it, and business persons should be marching in the streets to demand that it stop being used as a political weapon.  I’m talking about the now frequent use of the government shutdown as a bludgeon to override democracy.  It started in the 70s after passage of the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 in response to Nixon impounding funds (refusing to spend) funds appropriated by Congress.  The Congress reasserted its control over federal spending after Nixon (and other presidents) had sought greater autonomy over federal spending.  What this set up, though, was budget showdowns that pitted the Congress against the White House.

The shutdown-as-weapon started in 1976 under Ford when he vetoed a funding bill for the departments of education and labor that had just been established by splitting the old department.  It didn’t last long when Democrats overrode the veto.  The next 4 out of 5 shutdowns were over abortion funding under Carter.  Reagan was the one who started playing brinksmanship with the shutdown, furloughing hundreds of thousands of federal employees, mostly demanding deep spending cuts.  He shut down the government eight times, an average of once a year during his terms.  HW Bush shut down the government once in 1990 over deficit spending.

Then came Newt.  After taking the house and becoming speaker, Gingrich used the shutdown to assert control over the entire government.  His shutdowns in November of 1995 and again from December to January of 1996 shattered Americans’ confidence in government and the Republicans.  Clinton’s popularity soared, and he cruised to reelection that year.  Gingrich was hounded out of the speaker’s office not long after.

Gingrich’s stupidity weighed on the Republicans so heavily that they didn’t dare to shut the government down again until 2013, when Ted Cruz used the shutdown in an attempt to strip healthcare from over 20 million Americans who were finally getting it as a result of the Affordable Care Act.  That shutdown lasted 16 days after the Republicans finally caved, but not before costing the US economy an estimated $24 billion dollars.  In between these shutdown attempts, Republicans started playing brinksmanship with the debt limit until finally S&P downgraded the US federal debt rating citing the instability of congressional Republicans and their brinksmanship.

Immune to learning anything from history, Trump has stupidly used the government shutdown to please his base of mouth-breathers, who hate everyone not white and every program that might help them.  This is the third shutdown in a YEAR, and this time during Christmas because Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh demanded their stupid border wall that won’t work.  This one won’t end well for Trump and his merry band of cronies.  The Dems take the House on January 3, and will make Trump’s life a living hell, especially after he has blundered into what is likely his largest mistake (among a legion of mistakes) he’s made since infesting the White House in 2017.  Pelosi and Schumer are going to use this move to their greatest advantage, and will be happy to just sit there and stare at him until the pressure on him becomes so great that either his head explodes or he caves.

If this shutdown wasn’t so destructive it would be entertaining, but Trump’s stupidity will will cost tens of billions of dollars, thousands of jobs, and will wreck the holidays for millions of Americans.  I just hope it hurts more Trumpists than it does normal people.

Holy Crap.

December 20, 2018 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

 

Trump first announced that Mattis is  retiring in February through a damn tweet. Too late – Mattis sends a letter and quits.  You can read the letter here.

From his resignation letter:

“My views on treating allies with respect.. are strongly held…Because you have the right to a Secretary of Defense whose views are better aligned with yours on theses and other subjects, I believe it is right for me to step down from my position.”

Trump, you have no Secretary of State, no Attorney General, no Chief of Staff, no Secretary Defense, no border wall, and you probably don’t have a winkie. All you have left is the little Nazi-guy with the spray on hair.

 

 

Mens Rea

December 20, 2018 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

Mens rea is a Latin phrase meaning “guilty mind.”  It’s the part of an offense that means the person knew for a fact that he was committing a crime.  (If I am light on here, you lawyers jump in and explain more.)

When Rudy Giuliani said that Trump did not commit a crime when he paid off the adult film stars, he’s lying.  So then Giuliani tried to say that Trump did not realize that paying off the women with campaign funds was a campaign violation.

Oops.

… Trump gave sworn statements years ago that indicate he has an extensive knowledge of campaign finance laws, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, a key factor in whether or not prosecutors could successfully pursue a case against him over certain payments during the 2016 election.

This is a big damn deal.

It has not been a good week for Giuliani.  He is dancing on the head of a pin today.

… Donald Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani said on Wednesday he was “wrong” to say Trump had not signed a letter of intent for a Trump Tower in Moscow.

“I was wrong if I said it,” Giuliani told CNN’s Dana Bash. “I haven’t seen the quote, but I probably meant to say there was never a deal, much less a signed one.”
IF I said that?  There’s no crying in baseball and there’s no if in lying.

Thanks to Alfredo over at the Dairy Queen for the heads up.

Paul Ryan

December 20, 2018 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

All Paul Ryan had to do was be just a little bit better than John Boehner.  Just a little bit. That’s all he had to do not go down as the worst Speaker of the House ever.

Nope. Couldn’t do it.

He leaves behind a mess. A damn mess, I tell you.

On the Truth-O-Meter, he scores in the negative numbers, which is hard to do when Trump’s around seeking that title for himself.

Vanity Fair says, “Ryan Laments Not Screwing Over More Poor People On His Way Out the Door.”

John Nichols reports, “Paul Ryan sends a shiver down Scrooge’s spine.”

Ezra Klein saddles Paul Ryan with giving us massive debt with his tax cuts for the rich.

Vox’s Ezra Klein says that retiring House Speaker Paul Ryan’s legacy can be summed up in one number: $343 billion. “That’s the increase between the deficit for fiscal year 2015 and fiscal year 2018— that is, the difference between the fiscal year before Ryan became speaker of the House and the fiscal year in which he retired.”

Richard North Patterson, in the Boston Globe, offers an explanation.

Ryan’s big ideas ossified in college — that heady time of imbalance between intellectual self-confidence and one’s actual experience of life. Most of us recover; Ryan did not. Thus his distressingly attenuated enthusiasm for the novels of Ayn Rand.

My friend Thelma sums it all up, “that boy is meaner than ten acres of snakes.”

All he had to do was be just a little bit better than John Boehner. That’s not a high bar.