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

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Easter Sunday

We are living in some strange times. We have a president that thinks it's up to him which civilizations get to exist or not. He believes he has the power, and authority, to totally destroy a country - Iran - that has been around for over 2,000 years. His brain is warped. It's possibly dementia. How not one single GOP Senator objects to this kind of crazy talk is beyond me. Oh wait, Thom Tillis, Republican Senator from North Carolina, has spoken up. And, of course, Tillis is giving up his seat and is not running for re-election, so he tends to (finally) speak his mind. All of the others ... crickets.

Trump is crazy enough to try to drop a nuke or two on Iran. If he does that, I think it will be the end of his presidency. Maybe we should extend the penalty to our entire country. A lot of people enabled Trump to get to where he is today. 

What follows was posted by Marjorie Taylor Greene recently in reaction to Trump's psycho post ("Open the fuckin' strait, you crazy bastards.") on Easter morning.


On Easter morning, this is what President Trump posted. Everyone in his administration that claims to be a Christian needs to fall on their knees and beg forgiveness from God and stop worshipping the President and intervene in Trump’s madness. I know all of you and him and he has gone insane, and all of you are complicit. I’m not defending Iran but let’s be honest about all of this. The Strait is closed because the US and Israel started the unprovoked war against Iran based on the same nuclear lies they’ve been telling for decades, that any moment Iran would develop a nuclear weapon. You know who has nuclear weapons? Israel. They are more than capable of defending themselves without the US having to fight their wars, kill innocent people and children, and pay for it. Trump threatening to bomb power plants and bridges hurts the Iranian people, the very people Trump claimed he was freeing. On Easter, of all days, we as Christians should be reminded that the son of God died and rose from the grave so that we can be forgiven once and for all of our sins. Jesus commanded us to love one another and forgive one another. Even our enemies. Our President is not a Christian and his words and actions should not be supported by Christians. Christians in the administration should be pursuing peace. Urging the President to make peace. Not escalating war that is hurting people. This NOT what we promised the American people when they overwhelmingly voted in 2024, I know, I was there more than most. This is not making America great again, this is evil.




Monday, April 6, 2026

All guns, no butter

Our president appears to be losing his mind. Losing his filters for sure. In addition to his profanity ("Open the fuckin' straight you crazy bastards!") I heard him again today proclaim, "I won (the 2024 election) in a landslide!" No you didn't you lying pathetic pig. 

Trump got barely over 31% of eligible voters. Harris got just under 31%, and 36% of eligible voters didn't even vote. 

Or, let's talk about those who actually voted. Trump got 49.8% and Harris got 48.3%. Where exactly is this landslide, you lying sack of shit? So many reporters have had the opportunity to push back on that simple-to-refute claim, and yet.....crickets. A massive failure of journalism. Everyone is scared of Trump and his "MAGA death-threat chorus." Oh, but, but, Trump might support a primary opponent to beat me in the next election. Let's see, lose your seat or lose your 250-year-old democracy. Tough choice. 

Never have I ever seen a Congress so cowed. And on the other hand, we must find out which Congresscritters actually support everything Trump is doing. They might belong in jail along with Trump. And his own cabinet is afraid to speak any truth to the president. Not a good situation.


More for Coercion, Less for Care


Reading Trump’s proposed budget as a statement of federal purpose.


TEAM COFFMAN CHRONICLE

On April 3, 2026, the Trump administration released its proposed federal budget for fiscal year 2027. On its surface, it reads like any other budget: numbers, cuts, increases, and a long list of programs reshaped or eliminated.

Taken as a whole, however, it is something more revealing. It is a statement about what this administration believes the federal government is for.

This is not primarily a budget built around making life more livable. It is not centered on reducing household strain, expanding opportunity, or strengthening the everyday foundations of American life. Instead, it suggests a federal government meant first to project force, police borders, and enforce order.

Read in buckets, the worldview becomes clear

Budgets are often presented as sprawling documents that resist easy interpretation. Line-by-line summaries can obscure more than they reveal. When grouped into a handful of functional buckets, however, the underlying philosophy comes into focus.

Viewed this way, the proposed budget consistently shifts resources toward force and enforcement, while pulling them away from care, prevention, opportunity, and stability.


More for force and enforcement

The most visible feature of the proposal is its scale. The administration is requesting roughly $1.5 trillion in total defense resources, a dramatic increase from already historic levels. That increase is paired with continued emphasis on immigration enforcement, including funding for border control, detention capacity, and deportation infrastructure.


Taken together, these priorities define the areas where the administration wants the federal government to grow.


Military spending projects power outward. Immigration enforcement projects control inward. One is about global dominance and deterrence. The other is about territorial control and internal order. In this budget, both are treated as central functions of the state.


This is not a case of shrinking government across the board. It is a case of selectively expanding the parts of government that can command, surveil, detain, deport, and fight.


Less for care and basic needs

The contrast becomes sharper when looking at what is being reduced or eliminated.

The budget proposes cuts or eliminations affecting programs that help households manage the basic conditions of life: heating and cooling assistance through the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), community development funding through the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), fair housing initiatives, and worker protection agencies, among others.


These are not abstract bureaucratic functions. They are among the mechanisms through which the federal government reduces the day-to-day instability that many Americans experience. They help people keep the heat on, stay housed, navigate unsafe working conditions, and maintain some degree of economic footing.


A family that cannot afford rent, utilities, or basic stability is not secure in any meaningful sense. Yet this budget treats those forms of insecurity as secondary.


When the government expands its coercive capacities while shrinking its caregiving capacities, people begin to wonder whether they are being treated more as subjects to manage than as citizens to support.


Less for knowledge, prevention, and resilience

The proposed cuts are not limited to direct support programs. They extend to the government’s ability to understand and prevent problems before they become crises.


The budget calls for significant reductions to institutions such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which funds medical research; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which supports weather forecasting and climate science; and NASA's science programs. It also reduces funding for certain disaster preparedness and response grants administered through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).


These functions are often less visible than direct aid, yet they are central to a modern state’s capacity. They help prevent disease, anticipate extreme weather, respond to disasters, and expand scientific knowledge that underpins long-term economic and public health gains.


A government can invest in preventing suffering, or it can pay for the consequences later. This budget leans toward the latter.


It appears more comfortable funding response by force than prevention through knowledge, science, and public capacity.


Less for opportunity and mobility

Another set of cuts affects programs designed to help people move forward rather than simply get by.


Funding for Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs), which include Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and other institutions that serve large numbers of underrepresented students, is reduced by eliminating certain targeted programs. 

Workforce development efforts such as Job Corps are eliminated. Support for small business development and rural economic initiatives is also reduced.


These programs represent the federal government’s role in expanding opportunity: helping people gain skills, start businesses, and build economic independence.


Removing or shrinking them does not just reduce support in the present. It narrows the pathways available for upward mobility in the future.


A government that cuts ladders while expanding enforcement is making a statement about who it expects to succeed on their own, and who it is willing to leave behind.


Less for aid and non-military stability

The same pattern extends beyond U.S. borders.


The budget reduces humanitarian assistance and broader international aid programs that are often used to stabilize fragile regions, respond to crises, and prevent conditions that can lead to conflict or forced migration.


There is a long-standing tension in foreign policy between coercive power and preventive investment. Military capability can contain a crisis once it has begun. Aid, diplomacy, and development can sometimes prevent that crisis from emerging in the first place.


This budget tilts heavily toward the former.


You cannot coerce another nation into legitimacy or stability. Durable peace and governance have to be built internally, often with external support. Reducing that support while expanding military capacity suggests a preference for managing crises rather than preventing them.


Weapons can freeze a conflict. They rarely heal the conditions that produced it.


What this budget says government is for

Taken together, these buckets point to a coherent view of federal power.


This budget places its greatest emphasis on force, deterrence, border control, and enforcement. It assigns less priority to making daily life more stable, expanding opportunity, strengthening public health, or investing in long-term resilience.


It does not imagine the citizen primarily as someone whose life should be made more secure through public investment. Instead, it more often frames the role of government as protecting the citizen through strength or regulating behavior through enforcement, while leaving many aspects of daily life to states, markets, families, and private institutions.


This is not a vision of a minimal state. It is a vision of a selective state, one that is strongest where it can coerce.


Not a departure, but a trajectory

This proposal does not appear out of nowhere. It reflects patterns that have been visible throughout the administration’s first year.


The emphasis on immigration enforcement, the framing of certain domestic programs as ideological targets, and the preference for hard power over social investment have all been consistent themes. The budget consolidates those priorities into a single document.


In that sense, it is less a pivot than a culmination.


The accountability question

There is also a question of stewardship that sits beneath the numbers.


We have written previously about the Pentagon’s repeated failure to pass a full department-wide financial audit. That history matters here, even if it is not the focus of this piece. The administration is asking for a historic increase in defense spending from a department that has not yet met a basic standard of financial accountability.

See that reporting here:

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That context does not resolve the debate, yet it raises the threshold for justification. In any other industry, such a failure to address basic accountability would preclude any increase without sustained improvement.


What is the point of federal power?

Budgets force choices. They reveal what a government is willing to prioritize when it cannot do everything.


This one makes those priorities unusually clear.


It strengthens the parts of government that project force and enforce order. It weakens or reduces the parts that help make life more stable, more affordable, and more navigable for ordinary people.


A nation is not defended only by weapons. It is defended by sustaining a way of life worth living.


If the federal government is not using its discretionary power first to make that life more livable, then the question this budget leaves behind is a simple one: What, exactly, does this administration think the federal government is for?


Viewing this proposed budget, the answer is clearly enforcement, not quality of life.




remember

remember

deja vu

deja vu

indeed

indeed

Delete Fox "News"

Delete Fox "News"

Applies to Trump

Applies to Trump

Probably

Probably