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

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

IHIP News

Did you hear that Vladimir Putin appeared in the latest batch of Epstein files THOUSANDS of times? Seems that Epstein and Vlad were often in touch. Epstein would help Vlad manipulate Trump, Vlad would send Jeffrey some young Russian girls to traffic to powerful people to use as kompromat, Brexit was involved...the video below is worth your 17 minutes.

IHIP News was created in 2024 deep in a red state. Progressive podcasters Jennifer Welch and Angie “Pumps” Sullivan share how they *really feel* about political news. Their comedic, feel-good takes will drop twice weekly, possibly more, if sh*t really hits the fan.

Monday, February 2, 2026

Taylor Rehmet

Texas has elected Taylor Rehmet to a deep red US House seat in the Ft Worth area. This represents a 31-point swing from Trump winning the district by 17 points, and Rehmet taking it by 14. Good news for Democrats. Even many Republicans are pissed off or disillusioned by what the Orange Piggy is doing. This bodes very well for the midterm elections this coming November, unless Trump and his goon squad figure out how to rig it.


Why is this man celebrating? 

Because everything is bigger in Texas, including electoral upsets 


Taylor Rehmet celebrating his upset win in a race for a Texas state Senate seat. Credit: Texas AFL-CIO

You may have missed the political earthquake that shook Texas on Saturday night.

A special runoff election for a state Senate seat saw Democrat Taylor Rehmet trounce his Republican challenger, Leigh Wambsganss. Not only did Rehmet flip the seat blue, winning by 14 points, he did so in a district Trump won by 17 points in the 2024 election.

That’s a 31-point swing. In Texas.

Now, one special election with low voter turnout cannot fully predict the future, but there are a lot of reasons why Republicans should be worried and Democrats should be looking for takeaways. Here are a few:

  • National Republicans didn’t ignore this race. They poured money into it — millions more than Democrats.

  • Donald Trump posted about Wambsganss three times, calling her “a GREAT Candidate and has my Complete and Total Endorsement.” He also encouraged Texans to get out and vote. Though after the loss, he told reporters, “I’m not involved in that. That’s a local Texas race.”

  • Wambsganss is a well-known, well-connected Republican activist. Rehmet is a machinist, a union leader, and an Air Force veteran who had never run for elected office.

  • The district is in deep red Tarrant County. It is known as a MAGA stronghold and epicenter of Christian nationalism. It has not been represented by a Democrat since the 1980s.

  • The district, just outside Fort Worth, is bigger than a U.S. congressional district, representing about a million people, with a sizable Latino population.

The race didn’t qualify for exit polling, so we don’t know exactly why Rehmet won. But Trump’s continued antagonism of his newfound friends in the Latino voting community surely added to Saturday night’s drubbing.

In the 2024 election, Trump made significant inroads with Latino voters, winning 48%, more than any previous Republican presidential candidate. The swing to Trump was mainly driven by his promise to fix the economy.

One year in, and many Latinos are souring on the president. On January 13, Navigator Research conducted a focus group of seven Latinos who voted for Trump in 2024. They all identify as independents.

The participants, who requested anonymity, cited his inability to bring down inflation, tariffs, his sudden international interventionist tack, and his aggressive immigration enforcement as reasons for their dissatisfaction.

They believe his deportation policies disproportionately affect Latino Americans. “You’re not just deporting people and ripping families apart, you are also creating an environment of hatred and feeding racism,” one woman said.

“He’s created his own Gestapo,” said a man. “He’s going after Hispanics now, but when he gets done with Hispanics, you know who’s next.”

The most recent national poll of Latinos was conducted back in October by the Pew Research Center. The poll found that 70% of Latinos “disapprove of the way Trump is handling his job as President,” while 65% disapprove of his handling of immigration, and 61% believe his economic policies have made things worse.

Republicans may say they’re shocked and surprised by the results in Texas, but they shouldn’t be. The perpetual footage of a masked police force rounding up people, including children, is not playing well in Peoria or Fort Worth. Maybe, just maybe, the country has had enough.

It wasn’t supposed to be like this. Trump campaigned on arresting criminals who live here illegally. That is not what he is doing and not what we are seeing.

This strategy — if you can call it that — is disrupting everyday life. It is disrupting the lives of Americans, native-born and immigrants, but especially immigrants who do the work that most Americans can’t or won’t do, immigrants woven into the social, economic, and cultural fabric of our country.

Trump’s immigration policies and the worsening U.S. economy are interconnected. About 19% of the American workforce is made up of immigrant labor. That is down a percentage point since Trump took office. The U.S. lost more than a million immigrant workers between January and July 2025, according to the most recent Census data available.

Several industries — farming, construction, hospitality, and healthcare — are especially reliant on immigrants. Trump’s deportations are causing industry-shaking labor shortages. Immigrants who have remained in the country — those with legal status and those who are undocumented — are terrified to leave the house and go to work.

People are right to be afraid to simply walk the streets of American cities, particularly Democratic cities. Masked ICE agents have been patrolling and terrorizing people in Los Angeles, Chicago, New Orleans, Washington, New York, Minneapolis and now Portland, Maine for months.

Immigration enforcement in those cities is leading to an “ICE recession,” a phrase coined by Javier Cabral, editor-in-chief of L.A. Taco, a local news site that covers immigrant communities in Los Angeles.

“If you’re not directly affected because of your legal status, your morality and your soul and your general excitement to go out and try a new place is affected. It’s hard to compartmentalize and still have a glass of wine or beer. I’m seeing bars here just gasping for air,” Cabral told the SevenFifty Daily, a website that covers the food and beverage industry.

Chicago restaurant owner Mike Moreano said he has lost 50% of sales at his three locations. In Minneapolis, white workers are smuggling Latino co-workers to work under blankets in the back seat of their cars.

Trump’s extreme policies show no signs of abating. And there is every reason to believe they will continue to and through the midterm elections.

As stated above, one race does not make a revolution. But it isn’t just one race. Since Trump took office, Democrats have consistently and decisively outperformed Republicans in special elections and on Election Day.

In March, a Democrat flipped a Pennsylvania Senate seat that had been in Republican hands for a century. Democrats have won special elections in Kentucky and Iowa. They swept every major race in November. Though the Democratic candidate failed to flip a state House seat in Tennessee, the final tally in that special election was far closer than anyone predicted.

Momentum, optimism, and a desire for change are a powerful trifecta in American politics. Right now, Democrats have the upper hand in all three. And it does not appear that Trump is doing anything but doubling down on policies that alienate voters.

Original.


ICE rot

Is he dead yet? Ben Rhodes penned the column below, appearing in the New York Times. He gives a good history of our Department of Homeland Security going back to the terrorist attack of 9/11/01. It's good to review history now and then, lest it all falls down the memory hole.

The Rot Goes Deeper Than ICE

Mr. Rhodes, a contributing Opinion writer, is the author of the forthcoming “All We Say: The Battle for American Identity.” He served in the Obama White House.

The renewed calls to abolish ICE are an understandable reaction to an intolerable reality. ICE has become dangerous and unaccountable by design under the second Trump administration, with its deportation quotasdehumanizing rhetoric about immigrants and extrajudicial pronouncements that agents have “absolute immunity.” The assault on Minneapolis has demonstrated what can happen when that toxic mix of incentives is unleashed on a community. ICE has operated more like an invading army than a force for public safety.

But the rot goes deeper at the Department of Homeland Security, the behemoth that controls ICE, Customs and Border Protection (C.B.P.) and myriad other federal agencies, from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to the Secret Service. Since its founding in 2002, a combination of organizational flaws and mission creep has allowed D.H.S. to evolve into the out-of-control domestic security apparatus we have today, one that views the very people it is supposed to protect as threats, not humans.

The last time we had a true debate about how the U.S. government should be organized to protect Americans and to protect what it means to be American was almost a quarter century ago. After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, politicians sparred over how to balance security and liberty, as if they sat on opposite sides of a scale. Our obsession with security — aided by politicians determined not to appear “weak” and Supreme Court decisions that empowered the presidency — has obliterated that balance. As it has in other countries, the pursuit of security paved the way for the consolidation of power. Now, Minnesota has neither security nor liberty.

Unwinding this will take time and is unlikely during the Trump administration. But the time to start this debate is now, and there is one answer available if you look to the not-too-distant past: End immigration enforcement at the D.H.S. and return it to the Department of Justice so that it is embedded in the rule of law. This goes beyond abolishing ICE in its current form; we must fundamentally overhaul D.H.S. and end the securitization of American life if we are to have just and lasting peace in this country.


In February 2001, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld wrote a memo in which he quipped: “The word ‘homeland’ is a strange word. ‘Homeland’ defense sounds more German than American.” Then came 9/11. In the immediate aftermath, every aspect of the plot was scrutinized. Why wasn’t information about threats from Al Qaeda shared across intelligence agencies? How did the terrorists obtain visas? How did they board planes with knives and box cutters?

The overwhelming instinct in Washington was to do something, lest we be caught unprepared again. In just over a year, Congress codified the largest reorganization of the federal government since the creation of the national security state after World War II. The agencies most responsible for preventing attacks — the F.B.I. and the C.I.A. — were strong enough to evade this reform. Instead, lawmakers created the alphabet soup of agencies that became D.H.S. They took the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the Border Patrol away from the Justice Department and put them under the umbrella of the newly formed Department of Homeland Security.

When President George W. Bush signed the legislation, he framed D.H.S. as a counterterrorism enterprise. Because of this new cabinet department, he said, “America will be better able to respond to any future attacks, to reduce our vulnerability and, most important, prevent the terrorists from taking innocent American lives.” He said nothing about immigration enforcement.

It was an odd marriage from the beginning. The only connective tissue among D.H.S.’s component parts was that they could hypothetically play a role in preventing — or responding to — terrorism. An ICE officer could deport a potential terrorist; FEMA personnel could respond to an attack; the Secret Service could rush the president to a secure location.

By the time Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005, it was clear that this mega-counterterrorism wing of the government was going to be defined by other issues. Ever since, D.H.S. has been in search of a reason to exist, shifting its priorities to suit whichever president or political challenge was predominant: from terrorism to hurricane response, to cybersecurity, to counternarcotics, to border security and immigration enforcement.


The department’s one constant has been the DNA inherited from the war on terror. Any Americans who have taken off their shoes to board a plane understand this intuitively, even if they don’t know that the Department of Transportation used to oversee security screening at airports. All that inconvenience is due to a single individual’s trying (unsuccessfully) to ignite a bomb in his shoes in 2001. Yet by creating D.H.S., we chose to view all people and goods as potential threats. And by moving so many functions of government under its umbrella, we chose to make them — by design — part of fighting a war.

At first, the most visible and acute aspects of that war took place abroad in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. Each of those efforts morphed quickly into lengthy counterinsurgency campaigns with elements of mass surveillance, intelligence fusion centers, military patrols and targeted operations against threats — real or perceived.

That mind-set embedded itself at home. D.H.S. helped build the plumbing of a domestic security state, with its own fusion centers and expanding missions. A 2012 Senate report found that these centers produced little of value while endangering civil liberties. Alongside the PentagonD.H.S. also helped funnel the huge surplus of military equipment generated to fight the war on terror to local police forces and federal agencies — the armored vehicles, drones, body armor and assault weapons once used to fight insurgencies abroad.

ICE has become a poster child for this mission creep. Removed from the Justice Department, it was decoupled from the Immigration and Naturalization Service’s adjudication and naturalization functions. The result: a security force untethered from prosecutorial norms, judicial oversight or a culture that protects rights. After Congress failed to pass immigration reform, it plowed resources into enforcement — in the Obama years, we saw this as a down payment on legislation that would create a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. We were wrong.

As D.H.S. built out its intelligence and surveillance capabilities, ICE became a consumer of ever more sophisticated data to support a higher operational pace. In those operations, it used its growing stockpile of military hardware. As the hiring of agents surged, ICE unsurprisingly turned to veterans of post-9/11 wars to fill out its force.


Minneapolis has resembled a counterinsurgency campaign more than a law enforcement operation because that’s what it is — complete with tactics, equipment and legal authorities derived from the war on terror. Mr. Trump may have been the one who ordered the crackdown we’re living through, but it’s possible only because of the architecture of D.H.S. “homeland defense,” which is now beginning to feel German in the ways Rumsfeld feared.

Democrats have already proposed sound reforms for how ICE should operate: No masks. No operations at schools, churches and hospitals. Enhanced vetting of recruits and training in de-escalation. Focusing, as Mr. Trump promised, on people convicted of crimes. Prohibiting arrests without judicial warrants, which simply reinforces the law that ICE should be following in the first place.

The very need for those reforms makes the case for deeper structural change. By returning the functions of ICE and Citizenship and Immigration Services to the Justice Department, we can once again embed immigration enforcement and naturalization in the part of the government responsible for both enforcing and adhering to the law. This would end ICE as it is, without abandoning the necessity of immigration enforcement.

Of course, this change is hard to imagine during the Trump administration. Nor is the current version of the Department of Justice fit for this purpose. Under Mr. Trump, the Justice Department acts as an extension of the president’s prerogatives — policy and personal. But Americans are hungry for alternatives, and the current reality need not become permanent. Putting forward ideas for reform rejects the sense of inevitability that a strongman tries to create, and gives Democrats blueprints for how to rebuild when the opportunity presents itself.

Moving ICE and Citizenship and Immigration Services back into the Justice Department is not a radical idea; it would simply restore longstanding constitutional governance of our immigration system. Immigration laws would be enforced within a culture comfortable with judicial oversight, prosecutorial norms and the protection of civil and human rights. It would also locate these functions within the department already responsible for the judges who determine whether an immigrant should be removed from the United States. Yes, the Justice Department is susceptible to politicization, but it has built-in paths to transparency and accountability that the Department of Homeland Security clearly lacks.


Customs and Border Protection could stay within a smaller D.H.S., but it should focus on securing our borders — not enforcement operations within them. D.H.S. should not have domestic policing, enforcement, detention or intelligence-gathering functions. Let the Justice Department do that.

None of this diminishes real threats — from terrorism to hackers, from fentanyl to pandemics. But the lesson from past failures, including 9/11, is about the need for effective coordination by the government; instead, we have lived through the consolidation of power within it. D.H.S. should focus on working with others to secure the border, cyberspace, infrastructure and transportation — not on being part of a war or building fiefs like ICE.

Twenty-five years into it, the war on terror has become a war against ourselves. That forever war must come to an end. Enough with the military gear. Enough with the mass surveillance. Enough with the constant fear of an ever-shifting Other.

Democrats should not be afraid to make the case for this, or other, structural changes to D.H.S. and an immigration system in desperate need of comprehensive reform. Yes, Americans want a secure border. But most of us are also tired of war, wary of an intrusive militarized government, welcoming of immigrants, and protective of our core freedoms. Mr. Trump’s administration should be the period that concludes the post-9/11 era.


Original.


Thursday, January 29, 2026

Marc Elias

We live in confusing times, "led" by a liar, thief and conman that encourages cruelty and evil on his behalf. Far too many are far too willing to accommodate. But we have seen even more stand up and say NO to Trump. Is all this bullshit just an extension of "owning the libs?" or is there something even more sinister going on? I'm not a "conspiracy theorist" per se but something fishy has been going on between Trump and Putin for a long time. "Rusher, Rusher, Rusher" was not a hoax. Oops, off topic. Below is a column from Election Lawyer Marc Elias, who has done as much as anyone to slow and stop the encroaching ooze from Trump and the GOP. Marc is a real-life hero. Don't give up. Don't give in.


AMERICAN ELECTION LAWYER MARC ELIAS WARNS THAT IT'S NOT OVER IN MINNESOTA (OR ANYWHERE ELSE) - AND MAKES AN APT COMPARISON BETWEEN TRUMP AND CALIGULA
From Marc:
January 27, 2026
After weeks of attacks on the citizens of Minnesota and the rule of law, there are signs that Donald Trump is ready to scale back — or at least make changes to — his assaults on the Twin Cities.
Sadly, after all of the death and destruction, there will likely be no justice. Pam Bondi is still the attorney general. The Department of Homeland Security continues to be run by Kristi Noem. Both agencies — and indeed the entire federal government — are under the direct control of the White House.
Despite all of the hopes, what we are seeing is nothing more than a tactical pause, not a reconsideration of a failed policy. The damage Trump has done to the people of Minnesota and to our collective understanding of American democracy is incalculable. And it is certainly not over.
Trump does not distinguish between what is good for him and what constitutes good government. He rewards his friends and punishes his enemies. As long as it benefits him, he will excuse even the most egregious transgressions by his supporters while falsely vilifying his opponents.
A few weeks ago, it meant smearing a mother who was killed by federal agents, with stuffed animals in her glove compartment and her family dog in the back seat. More recently, it meant spreading vile lies about a man who was trying to protect a woman from being pepper-sprayed when he was tackled, beaten and shot 10 times by a gaggle of federal officers.
If the question that broke McCarthyism in the 1950s was "Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last?” then Trump’s answer today would surely be, “No, none at all.”
In that key exchange, McCarthy was accused of “reckless cruelty.” Yet, within Trump’s orbit, recklessness is a virtue. Cruelty is celebrated.
Trump’s supporters like to suggest that he is a modern-day Caesar. In truth, he more closely resembles Caligula, the cruel sadist whose motto was oderint dum metuant — “Let them hate me, as long as they fear me.”
Caligula reigned over Rome for four years. We are only entering the second year of Trump's four-year term. His campaign of fear is not over. Indeed, it is likely to get much worse.
Trump has always used setbacks as opportunities to regroup and escalate. After he lost the 2020 election, he attacked the results in court. When that failed, he escalated to violence on Jan. 6.
Having been cast out of office, Trump did not moderate. He grew more strident and extreme. Indeed, one of the most notable aspects of his second term has been how much worse it was than the first.
He started his term by firing government workers. A year later, he is using the expanded workforce of government employees as a paramilitary force against our nation’s cities and their residents.
Of course, many large institutions of our society surrendered from the start. Large law firms forfeited their moral and ethical obligations to their clients and to the rule of law. Corporate titans debased themselves and betrayed their legacies. Legacy media outlets reduced themselves to cheerleaders and apologists for the administration.
Over the weekend, while government law enforcement was terrorizing the population of Minneapolis, the richest and most powerful men in the country feted Trump at a White House showing of a movie about his wife.
Having tamed the country’s most powerful elites, Trump must have thought that conquering the citizens of blue states would be easy. His sycophants no doubt assured him that liberals were weak and would never have the guts to stand up to him.
Yet, one by one, the citizens of these states proved him wrong. They stood tall. They showed resolve. And they refused to blink.
When he ordered the National Guard into Los Angeles, Trump no doubt thought he would soon run the place. When he went into Chicago, he fancied himself a liberator of a city under criminal siege. His plans for Portland assumed the citizenry would celebrate the order that federal troops would bring to the chaotic city.
All of these assumptions turned out to be wrong. After weeks of humiliation, he was looking for a way out. In December, when the Supreme Court ruled that his entire theory of deployment violated the law, he quietly retreated.
But none of this made Trump more cautious. Instead, his rage led him to take aim at Minnesota. And rather than using disciplined military forces, he turned to brutal paramilitaries instead. We all witnessed the horrors of what happened next.
Trump’s plan appears to have failed — for now. Greg Bovino has been deposed. But the danger has not passed. In fact, I fear that the worst is still ahead.
In 40 CE, Caligula marched his soldiers to the coast of modern-day France. His intent was to conquer Britain. When, for whatever reason, the invasion was called off, Caligula ordered his men to wage war on the sea and collect seashells as spoils of war. Early the next year, his rule was over.
Caligula’s reign did not end because he suddenly lost his appetite for domination. It ended because those around him finally refused to sustain his madness.
In the United States, the way we curtail an authoritarian leader is at the ballot box. Donald Trump has three more years in office.
But we have elections in 10 months that will either curtail his power or expand it. For the sake of our democracy and its citizens, we need to do everything we can to remind people of Trump’s hate while ensuring that they can vote without fear.


Wednesday, January 28, 2026

David Jolly

David Jolly is running for Governor of Florida as a Democrat. He was elected to Florida's 13th US House district in 2014 as a Republican and got re-elected once. But then Donald Trump regurgitated upon the scene and Trump and Jolly never got along. David was one of the few Republicans with enough integrity to see that Trump was bad news. In 2018, Jolly officially left the GOP and was popular on political shows, especially since he was a bit of a maverick rejecting Trump. Last year, he decided to run for Governor of Florida as a Democrat. 

David recently gave a pretty good speech response to what ICE has been doing in Minneapolis. He needs to work on his physical presence a bit, but he's got the passion. It would be some kinda sweet thing to have Jolly replace DeSantis this coming November. Keep the faith.


Wednesday, January 21, 2026

immigration

America has been a "melting pot" of people from all races and nations practically since it was founded. Indeed, many of our Founding Fathers were not born in the new World. Immigrants have helped build this nation from the beginning (think slavery), and it is disgusting and sad to see today's GOP forcibly and brutally ejecting (and occasionally killing) immigrants from our shores. Under Obama and Biden, millions of immigrants were also removed from this country, but it was done in an orderly fashion, without trashing due process and personal freedom. There is no real need for present-day ICE to dress up as heavily armed thugs, with masks and tear gas at the ready. But this is Trump's style: cruelty. Right out of the tyrant's playbook.


A serious question for this New Breed of Americans who believe chaos and cruelty are “necessary” for immigration enforcement and who revel and celebrate at the sight of all of the unnecessary violence:
How did President Obama deport millions of people without the country tearing itself apart?
Simple. He followed the law.
There was due process. There were court hearings. Habeas corpus rights were respected. People were not snatched up, beaten down and secretly shipped to foreign detention camps with no regard for their rights or humanity as is happening now.
Law enforcement was not turned into a political theater designed to intimidate and terrorize entire communities.
Immigration enforcement happened—at scale—without nonstop rhetoric, manufactured outrage, or treating human beings as disposable enemies.
This isn’t about defending Obama or attacking Trump. It’s about recognizing a basic truth:
Our nation can enforce immigration law without abandoning the rule of law, human rights, or basic decency. People don't have to be brutally attacked, beaten down, dragged away into concentration camps and thoroughly robbed of their humanity.
If it was done before—more quietly, more effectively, and more lawfully—then the current chaos isn’t “necessary.”
It’s a conscious choice.