Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Clarence Thomas

Here we have Clarence Thomas, one of the original "DEI" hires, denouncing the very movement that enabled his rise to the Supreme Court of the United States. You begin to wonder how anyone as educated as Thomas could be so fucking stupid and blind. To me, it's another indication that conservatism is really struggling these days. If we are lucky, the whole GOP will be smashed and shamed. They should probably try to start a new conservative party, because this one is bankrupt philosophically, morally, and every other way that matters. Proceed, Robert Reich.

The Worst Justice Ever

His attack on progressivism last week was the last straw

APR 18, 2026

Friends,


I’ve long assumed that Samuel Alito was the worst. 


Alito — who authored the majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (2022), the case that ended constitutional abortion rights by merely asserting that the high court’s prior opinion in Roe v. Wade (1973) was wrongly decided; who accepted a 2008 luxury fishing trip to Alaska, including private jet travel, from hedge fund billionaire and GOP donor Paul Singer yet failed to disclose it on Alito’s financial forms and didn’t even recuse himself from decisions involving Singer’s subsequent business before the Supreme Court; who hoisted an inverted American flag outside his Virginia home shortly after the January 6 Capitol riot, a symbol of support for Trump’s false claims of a stolen 2020 election — has the moral and intellectual stature of a poisonous toad. 


But I’ve come to revise my view of the court’s worst Justice.


Clarence Thomas is 77 years old. He has now served on the Supreme Court for over 34 years, making him the longest-serving member of the court. He is a bitter, angry, severe hard-right, intellectually dishonest ideologue. After reading his latest thoughts on America, I’ve concluded Thomas is even worse than Alito.


Last Wednesday, Thomas gave a rare public address at the University of Texas in Austin that began as a banal tribute to the Declaration of Independence before degenerating into a misleading screed against progressivism. 


“At the beginning of the 20th century, a new set of first principles of government was introduced into the American mainstream,” Thomas intoned. “The proponents of this new set of first principles, most prominently among them the 28th president, Woodrow Wilson, called it progressivism.”


Thomas went on to blame progressives for the worst crimes of the 20th century, insisting that “Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, and Mao” were all “intertwined with the rise of progressivism,” as was “racial segregation,” “eugenics,” and other evils. 


This is pure rubbish. 


In reality, America’s Progressive era emerged at the start of the 20th century from the corruption and excesses of America’s first Gilded Age (we’re now in the second, if you hadn’t noticed) — its record inequalities of income and wealth, its “robber barons” who monopolized industries and handed out sacks of money to pliant legislators, its dangerous factories and unsafe working conditions, its violent attacks on workers who tried to form unions, its corporate control over all facets of government, its widespread poverty and disease, and its corrupt party machines. 


In many ways, the Progressive Era — whose most prominent leader was Republican president Theodore Roosevelt, not Woodrow Wilson, by the way — saved capitalism from its own excesses by instituting a progressive income tax, an estate tax, pure food and drug laws, and America’s first laws against corporate influence in politics.


Then, under Teddy Roosevelt’s fifth cousin (Franklin D.), came Social Security, the 40-hour workweek (with time-and-a-half for overtime), the right to form unions, and laws and regulations that limited Wall Street’s ability to gamble with other people’s money. 


Clarence Thomas got it exactly backward. Had we not had the Progressive Era and its reforms extending through the 1930s, America might well have succumbed to fascism — as did Germany under Hitler and Italy under Mussolini, or to communist fascism, as did Russia under Stalin. Progressive and New Deal reforms acted as bulwarks against the rise of fascism in America.


In fact, it’s been the demise of such reforms since Ronald Reagan that have opened the way to Trumpian neofascism. 


Over a third of American workers in the private sector were unionized in the 1950s, giving them bargaining leverage to get higher wages and better working conditions. Now, fewer than 6 percent are unionized, which has contributed to the flattening of wages, a contracting middle class, inequalities of income and wealth rivaling the first Gilded Age, and an angry and suspicious working class that’s become easy prey for demagogues. 


Wall Street has been deregulated — allowing it to go on gambling sprees such as the one that produced the financial crisis of 2008, which claimed millions of working peoples’ homes, savings, and jobs. 


America’s social safety nets have become so frayed that almost a fifth of the nation’s children are now in poverty. Yet Reagan, George W. Bush, and Trump have slashed taxes on the rich and on big corporations and have allowed giant corporations to merge into giant monopolies rivaling the trusts of the first Gilded Age. And Trump has ushered in an era of corruption the likes of which America hasn’t seen since that earlier disgraceful era.


Thomas claims that “the century of progressivism did not go well.” Baloney. It helped America create the largest middle class the world had ever seen, while also extending prosperity to millions of Black and brown people. 


The tragedy is that America turned its back on progressivism and on social progress in part because of the Supreme Court and Justice Clarence Thomas.


Flashback: I was in law school in 1973 when the Supreme Court decided Roe, protecting a pregnant person’s right to privacy under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. 


Clarence Thomas was in my law school class at the time, as were Hillary Rodham (later Hillary Clinton) and Bill Clinton.


The professors used the “Socratic method” — asking hard questions about the cases they were discussing and waiting for students to raise their hands in response, and then criticizing the responses. It was a hair-raising but effective way to learn the law.


One of the principles guiding those discussions is called stare decisis — Latin for “to stand by things decided.” It’s the doctrine of judicial precedent. If a court has already ruled on an issue (say, on reproductive rights), future courts should decide similar cases the same way. Supreme Courts can change their minds and rule differently than they did before, but they need good reasons to do so, and it helps if their opinion is unanimous or nearly so. Otherwise, their rulings appear (and are) arbitrary — even, shall we say, partisan.


In those classroom discussions almost 50 years ago, Hillary’s hand was always first in the air. When she was called upon, she gave perfect answers — whole paragraphs, precisely phrased. She distinguished one case from another, using precedents and stare decisis to guide her thinking. I was awed.


My hand was in the air about half the time, and when called on, my answers were meh.

Clarence’s hand was never in the air. I don’t recall him saying anything, ever.


Bill was never in class.


Only one of us now sits on the Supreme Court. And he has shown no respect for stare decisis.


Nor has he respected judicial ethics. 


A federal law — 28 U.S. Code § 455 — requires that “any justice, judge, or magistrate judge of the United States shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”


In the aftermath of the 2020 election, Thomas’s wife, Ginni, actively strategized with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows on overturning the election results. Between Election Day 2020 and the days following the January 6 attack on the Capitol, she exchanged 29 text messages with Meadows, in which she spread false theories about the election, urged Meadows to overturn the election results, and called for specific actions from the White House to help overturn the election. She also served as one of nine board members of a group that helped lead the “Stop the Steal” movement and called for the punishment of House Republicans who participated in the U.S. House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack. 


Yet Clarence Thomas has repeatedly participated in cases that have come to the high court directly or indirectly involving the 2020 election results, refusing to disqualify himself. 


In addition, he failed to disclose his wife’s income from her work at the Heritage Foundation, in violation of the Ethics in Government Act. 


Finally, there’s his speech last week in Austin. How can Americans be expected to believe in the impartiality of the Supreme Court in general and Clarence Thomas in particular when he condemns an entire philosophy of government — progressivism — and all the people who continue to call themselves progressives, in effect labeling them neofascists?


At the start of his speech last week in Austin, Clarence Thomas noted that “my wife Virginia and I have many wonderful friends and acquaintances here, and it is so special to have our dear friends Harlan and Kathy Crow join us today.”


He was, of course, referring to the Republican mega-donor who has spent the last 20 years lavishing Thomas with personal gifts, luxury yacht trips, fancy vacations, and funding for Ginni Thomas’s political organization. 


Small wonder that Clarence Thomas prefers the Gilded Age over the Progressive Era. He’s the living embodiment of the Gilded Age’s public-be-damned excesses. 


Hence, he’s my nominee for the worst justice in modern Supreme Court history.


Original.


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Dan Rather WHCA

Been struggling to format this one. I see that Trump says he is going to attend this coming weekend's White House Correspondents Dinner. Will anyone have the cojones to speak truth to Trump's face? Even at the possible cost of being ejected from the room? It's a rare opportunity to talk to Trump without him doing his insulting pushback. Will they? Kinda doubtful. I'm sure plenty of journalists have spines and would love to have the chance to get that close to Trump, but those probably won't even be in attendance.


THE WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENTS' ASSOCIATION
MUST SEND A FORTHRIGHT MESSAGE TO PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP
CONDEMNING HIS ATTACKS ON THE FIRST AMENDMENT

To the Officers, Board of Directors, and Members of the White House Correspondents'
Association (WHCA):

We, the undersigned, call upon the White House Correspondents' Association to use the occasion of the White House Correspondents' Dinner, to forcefully demonstrate opposition to President Trump’s efforts to trample freedom of the press.

The dinner has long served as a symbol of the vital and irreplaceable role of a free press in American democracy and a celebration of the First Amendment and the journalists who uphold it. President Trump's systematic, sustained, and unprecedented attacks on the free press (detailed below) render his presence at such an event a profound contradiction of its purpose.

The collective weight of the administration’s actions — retaliatory access bans, coercive
regulatory investigations, frivolous lawsuits against the press, defunding of public
broadcasting, dismantling of international broadcasting, physical restrictions on
journalists, personal verbal attacks on reporters, assaults on the media in official White House press releases and social media posts, the arrest of journalists, and the pardoning of those who committed violence against the press — represent the most systematic and comprehensive assault on freedom of the press by a sitting American president.

There is a long tradition of presidents attending the White House Correspondents
Association Dinner. But these are not normal times, and this cannot be business as usual with the press standing up to applaud the man who attacks them on a daily basis.

We understand that some journalists plan to wear pocket handkerchiefs or lapel pins
with the words of the First Amendment. And continuing in that spirit, we believe the
White House Correspondents Association should take stronger action by issuing – from the podium – a forceful defense of freedom of the press and condemnation of those who threaten that freedom, followed by a standing toast to the First Amendment and a pledge to continue upholding such a critical cornerstone of our democracy. Speak forcefully, in front of the man who seeks to undermine our country’s long tradition of an independent, strong, and free press.

We also urge the WHCA to reaffirm, without equivocation, that freedom of the press is
not a partisan issue and that the Association will not normalize this behavior but instead
fight back against any officeholder who has waged systematic war against the journalists whose work the dinner celebrates.

Trump Administration’s Attacks on Freedom of the Press

• In February 2025, the Trump administration banned Associated Press reporters from pooled press events at the White House and aboard Air Force One, after the AP declined to alter its longstanding editorial style guide to replace the internationally recognized name 'Gulf of Mexico' with the President’s preferred term 'Gulf of America.'

• In early 2025, the Trump administration stripped office space at the Pentagon from CNN, The Washington Post, The Hill, NBC News, The New York Times, NPR, Politico, and other outlets whose coverage the administration deemed unfavorable.

• The Trump administration implemented Pentagon press rules in September 2025
prohibiting reporters from reporting any information not cleared by the Defense
Department, a move a court ultimately ruled violated the First Amendment.

• President Trump has engaged in a sustained pattern of personal verbal attacks on individual reporters, including calling ABC reporter Mary Bruce 'a terrible person and a terrible reporter,' calling Bloomberg News reporter Catherine Lucey 'piggy,' calling CBS reporter Nancy Cordes a ‘stupid person’, calling New York Times reporter Katie Rogers ‘a third-rate reporter’ and ‘ugly both inside and out,’ calling CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins 'the worst reporter,' calling ABC reporter Rachel Scott 'obnoxious' and 'a terrible reporter,” a pattern disproportionately targeting women journalists. Trump also threatening to revoke ABC's broadcast license when the network’s reporters asked questions he disliked.

• In a speech at the Department of Justice on March 14, 2025, President Trump, publicly called CNN and MSNBC ‘corrupt’ and ‘illegal’ and broadly attacked the independent reporting of major American news organizations as ‘illegal’, using the bully pulpit of the presidency to delegitimize and intimidate the free press.

• In November 2025, the White House launched an official government webpage titled 'Hall of Shame,' naming and targeting individual journalists and news organizations for reporting that the administration disagreed with. 

• In December 2025, Trump publicly accused The New York Times of treason, labeling it 'the enemy of the people' — rhetoric that press freedom organizations worldwide have identified as characteristic of authoritarian governments.

• President Trump, through FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, launched politically motivated
investigations into major broadcast media organizations, including ABC, NBC, CBS, and
San Francisco radio station KCBS, for matters ranging from their coverage of immigration enforcement to editorial decisions, using the coercive power of broadcast licensing as a weapon to threaten and suppress unfavorable journalism.

• In January 2025, FCC Chairman Carr launched an investigation into NPR and PBS over their underwriting practices, threatening the federal funding of public broadcasting which serves more than 99 percent of the American population, including rural communities that rely on public media for emergency and disaster information.

• The Trump administration filed a lawsuit against The Des Moines Register, its parent
company Gannett, and pollster J. Ann Selzer over a pre-election poll, and the Pulitzer
Center, using personal and governmental litigation as instruments of pressure and intimidation against news organizations. The President has also sued the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal for billions of dollars for alleged defamation.

• President Trump filed a lawsuit against ABC News and anchor George Stephanopoulos, which Disney — ABC's parent company — settled for $15 million directed to the future Trump Presidential Library, plus $1 million in legal fees, a settlement that legal scholars warned would produce a chilling effect on network journalism.

• President Trump filed a lawsuit against Paramount, the corporate parent of CBS News, over the editing of a '60 Minutes' interview. Paramount settled, paying $16 million to the future Trump Presidential Library — despite legal experts characterizing the suit as frivolous and predicting CBS would prevail at trial. The settlement came as Paramount sought FCC approval for a multibillion-dollar merger.

• Trump's FCC Chairman threatened Disney and ABC with their broadcast license if they
didn’t suspend Jimmy Kimmel after comments that conservatives took issue with. ABC took Kimmel off the air for a week.

• In early 2026, FBI agents raided the home of a Washington Post reporter, seizing her
phone and computers — a move the Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press described as endangering confidential sources and undermining investigative journalism, and which PEN America called evidence of 'a growing assault on independent reporting'.

• In 2026, federal agents arrested journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort while they were covering a news event, with two separate federal judges refusing to sign arrest warrants for lack of evidence of any crime, before the Justice Department obtained a grand jury indictment — a prosecution that press freedom advocates characterized as an assault on the First Amendment right to cover matters of public interest.

• The Trump Administration acted against two-foreign born journalists. Mario Guevara, an Emmy Award-winning Spanish-language journalist originally from El Salvador, had lived in the United States for nearly two decades. He was deported by ICE after he was arrested while covering a No Kings rally. Estefany Rodriguez Florez, a Colombian-born journalist who was seeking asylum, was arrested by ICE a day after reporting on ICE raids in Nashville. She was held for two weeks before being released on bail.

• On May 1, 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14290, titled 'Ending
Taxpayer Subsidization of Biased Media,' directing an end to all federal funding for NPR and PBS through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — with the White House accusing the media outlets of receiving “tens of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds to spread radical, woke propaganda disguised as ‘news’.” In July 2025 he signed legislation revoking $1.1 billion in already-appropriated federal funding for public broadcasting, causing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to shut down and placing over 180 public radio and television stations at risk of closure.

• The Trump administration moved to dismantle the U.S. Agency for Global Media
(USAGM), , silencing Voice of America — a journalistic institution with 83 years of history — and terminating several US news services that broadcast to those living under
authoritarian regimes.

• Within the first hours of his second term, President Trump suspended hundreds of
millions of dollars in foreign aid specifically designated to support press freedom
overseas.

• On January 20, 2025, President Trump issued a blanket pardon to more than 1,500
individuals charged or convicted in connection with the January 6, 2021 attack on the
United States Capitol, including at least eight individuals convicted or charged with
violent crimes against journalists present at the scene, and three convicted for destroying media equipment — crimes that were documented on video and prosecuted by the Department of Justice —sending an message that attacks on the press will be forgiven.

• President Trump has publicly expressed personal support for media owners who have demonstrated favoritism toward his administration — including praising Skydance CEO David Ellison (whose company acquired CBS/Paramount under Trump's watch), hosting Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison at the White House for business announcements, and praising Fox News and its leadership — creating a system of rewards for compliant media and punishment for independent journalism that fundamentally corrupts the relationship between government and a free press.

• The United States has fallen to a ranking of 57th out of 180 countries in the 2025
Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index — its lowest ranking since the index was first compiled in 2002 — a dramatic and historic decline that reflects the documented and measurable deterioration of press freedom under President Trump's administration.


SIGNATORIES- ORGANIZATIONS

SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BLACK JOURNALISTS
NATIONAL PRESS PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS FOUNDATION
COALITION FOR WOMEN IN JOURNALISM
RADIO TELEVISION DIGITAL NEWS ASSOCIATION

I don't have a link to this letter. You can find it if you look enough. I also deleted the signers of this letter because that would have taken up this entire blog space.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Big Bad Obama

On a side note: How many times have we heard Republicans complaining about Barack Obama? Oh, he was the worst! Oh, how we suffered under Obama! Oh, the corruption under Obama! Right? Well, 50% of that ugliness was because Obama was black, and most Republicans are racist AF. And 99% of it is just bullshit projected on others. Republicans have this stupid habit of blaming everything bad that is happening on previous presidents, when we all know it is the Republicans themselves who continually fuck shit up as soon as they get in office. Amazingly, none of them have the ability to look in a mirror and be honest. That's a fucking sad statement.

What follows is an Editorial in the Lexington Herald-Leader by Teri Carter, who sets the record straight, which of course will not stop the haters from trashing Obama, but it might help you push back on them a bit.


"Trump supporters say, 'We suffered 8 years under Barack Obama.'
The day Obama took office, the Dow closed at 7,949 points. Eight years later, the Dow had almost tripled.

General Motors and Chrysler were on the brink of bankruptcy, with Ford not far behind, and their failure, along with their supply chains, would have meant the loss of millions of jobs. Obama pushed through a controversial, $80 billion bailout to save the car industry. The U.S. car industry survived, started making money again, and the entire $80 billion was paid back, with interest.

While we remain vulnerable to lone-wolf attacks, no foreign terrorist organization has successfully executed a mass attack here since 9/11.

Obama ordered the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden.

He drew down the number of troops from 180,000 in Iraq and Afghanistan to just 15,000, and increased funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs.

He launched a program called Opening Doors which, since 2010, has led to a 47 percent decline in the number of homeless veterans.

He set a record 73 straight months of private-sector job growth.

Due to Obama’s regulatory policies, greenhouse gas emissions decreased by 12%, production of renewable energy more than doubled, and our dependence on foreign oil was cut in half.

He signed The Lilly Ledbetter Act, making it easier for women to sue employers for unequal pay.

His Omnibus Public Lands Management Act designated more than 2 million acres as wilderness, creating thousands of miles of trails and protecting over 1,000 miles of rivers.

He reduced the federal deficit from 9.8 percent of GDP in 2009 to 3.2 percent in 2016.

For all the inadequacies of the Affordable Care Act, we seem to have forgotten that, before the ACA, you could be denied coverage for a pre-existing condition and kids could not stay on their parents’ policies up to age 26.

Obama approved a $14.5 billion system to rebuild the levees in New Orleans.

All this, when Mitch McConnell famously asserted that his singular mission would be to block anything President Obama tried to do.

While Obama failed on his campaign pledge to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, that prison’s population decreased from 242 to around 50.

He expanded funding for embryonic stem cell research, supporting ground breaking advancement in areas like spinal injury treatment and cancer.

Credit card companies can no longer charge hidden fees or raise interest rates without advance notice.

Most years, Obama threw a 4th of July party for military families. He held babies, played games with children, and served up barbecue.

Welfare spending went down: for every 100 poor families, just 24 receive cash assistance, compared with 64 in 1996.

Obama comforted families and communities following more than a dozen mass shootings.

He was the first president since Eisenhower to serve two terms without personal or political scandal.

He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

President Obama was not perfect, as no man and no president is, and you can certainly disagree with his political ideologies. But to say the USA suffered?

If that’s the argument, if this is how we suffered for 8 years under Barack Obama, I have one wish: may we be so fortunate as to suffer 8 more."

by Teri Carter, Lexington Herald-Leader

So just shut the fuck up and take some responsibility for your own fuck-ups.


remember

remember

deja vu

deja vu

indeed

indeed

Delete Fox "News"

Delete Fox "News"

Applies to Trump

Applies to Trump

Probably

Probably