Sunday, July 27, 2025

Connect the dots

The president is a pedophile.

That's the first thing that came to mind when I heard a week or so ago after The Wall Street Journal (now my favorite newspaper. Who saw that coming?) ran a story that said Attorney General Pam Bondi informed convicted felon President Donald Trump that his name appeared "numerous times" in the Epstein files.

You, too? 

Jeffrey Epstein, we know, was the high falutin' financier who was convicted of child prostitution. He then mysteriously died in prison of suicide while awaiting trial for sex trafficking underage females to the rich and famous on a U.S. Virgin (oh, the ugly irony here) Island he owned called Little Saint James.

Suddenly, after years of MAGA world screaming for the Epstein files to be released, because, you know, high profile names of liberals like Clinton, Gates, Hanks, et al, would be revealed, embarrassed and prosecuted, we're now told there's nothing to see here.

Except for maybe Trump's involvement. For the first time ever, MAGA is furious with Trump. What? You mean you're the deep state? You lied to us? Release the files! What are you afraid of?

Trump's name appearing in the files is no proof of guilt of anything, and on the surface, that's true.

But when you start connecting the dots of his character...

• Like Trump's 34 convictions stemming from his attempt to illegally influence the 2016 election through hush money payments to a porn star (Stormy Daniels) who said they had sex. Dot connected.

• Like accusations of rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment by at least 25 women. Dot connected.

• Like being declared an adjudicated rapist by a federal judge. Dot connected.

• Like the hot mic capturing Trump telling interviewer Billy Bush that women like to be grabbed by their genitals when you are a star. That was during the 2016 presidential campaign, and why that wasn't a disqualifier for the presidency is beyond me. Trump got elected. Bush got divorced. Dot connected.

•  Like owning the Miss Universe pageant franchise, which he felt allowed him to walk into women's dressing rooms while they were changing clothes. Dot connected.

• Like Trump's early associations with Jeffrey Epstein that goes back to at least 1990. At one point, Trump is quoted as saying "I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side." Dot really connected. Holy crap.

There's more. I could fill today's blog with this stuff. but you get the point.

Trump, for his part, is predictably denying any of this because he is God's chosen angel and can do no wrong. In the past few weeks, sometimes on consecutive days, he's tried his favorite deflection tactics: like telling us that President Obama committed treason, or that Obama rigged elections (sounds like projection), the releasing of 200,000 pages of Martin Luther King Jr. files (but not the Epstein files?), Rosie O'Donnell, Harvard, tariffs, NPR and PBS, and even changing back the names of sports teams like the Guardians and Commanders back to their original Indians and Redskins. Please, lookit this and not this Epstein stuff. You still taking about him? He's been dead a long time.

It sounds like he doth protest too much. Dot connected. 

There are too many dots for me. There are too many connections. I could be wrong about where the dots lead me, but so far, Trump's not been able to talk himself out of the disgusting and distasteful deep-state swamp that he's created here. So for now, I have it in the back of my head: the president is a pedophile.

 

 

 

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Epstein

I never saw the backlash coming. And when it did come, I never expected its fury.

Finally. A cry for accountability.

In case I'm being too opaque, I'm talking about the Jeffrey Epstein situation here. Epstein, of course, was convicted of procuring a child for prostitution and who allegedly invited the privileged elite to his private Caribbean island for romps with underage females. Epstein supposedly kept an incriminating list of client names and flight logs that had everybody from Prince Andrew to Bill Clinton to Tom Hanks shaking in their boots.

And now perhaps even Donald Trump – himself a convicted felon as well as an adjudicated rapist, famous party boy and somehow the current president of the United States with that résumé – might be connected.

After all, Trump and Epstein were once close friends. There's video of Trump doing his fist-pumping white-boy boogie next to Epstein at a party, which kind of documents their friendship from more than 20 years ago.

Epstein was arrested again for sex trafficking of minors and was in prison in July 2019. A month later, he was found dead in his cell, apparently a suicide. But the circumstances of his death remain murky.

Meanwhile, since Epstein's death, MAGA has been clamoring for the release of the Epstein files, no doubt in hopes of embarrassing (and perhaps convicting) the privileged elite. Everything appeared to be headed in that direction until a couple weeks ago when Trump-appointed Attorney General Pam Bondi told MAGA world there was nothing in the files, that there's nothing to see here.

And thus the current outrage from Trump supporters who suddenly feel betrayed by their idol and are now screaming about a deep state cover up. "This is not what I voted for!" bellows MAGA. Given ICE arrests and deportation of immigrants, passage of the Big Bad Bill that will take health care away from millions, the deconstruction of the Department of Education that will send millions of children into poverty if not hunger, illegal tariffs that are just now raising inflation numbers, just what the hell did you vote for?

How Trump deals with the schism within MAGA could be the actual measure of his accountability, even if his name never shows up in the Epstein files. 

An interesting side note in the Epstein case is what is to become of Ghislaine Maxwell? She is Epstein's associate who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for child sex trafficking. With Trump claiming the Epstein files are fake and a hoax, can Maxwell now ask Trump for a pardon, or at the very least, a retrial? Trump, of course, wants her to stay quiet.

Trump is asking Bondi to release "pertinent" aspects of the Epstein grand jury testimony, but that's not a simple thing to do – not even for a president. By law, grand jury testimony can only be released by a judge and a court order, and that will take time. If it happens at all. Grand jury testimony is almost never revealed.

It's a freaking mess. But the MAGA monster seems to be eating its own over this. I don't know. Trump has wriggled out of accountability so often before that we've come to expect it to happen again.

Maybe this time it will be different.

 

  

 

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Review

Last month I participated in my second political protest since my college days in 1970 – 55 years ago – when I joined about 300 other demonstrators for the "No Kings" rally on the Square by the Old Courthouse.

I was holding a hand-crafted cardboard sign that said "Hands Off Our Democracy" when a fellow came up to me and asked me point blank, with more than a little reproach in his voice, "Do you think we're a republic or are we a democracy?"

The question caught me off guard. I wasn't expecting to attend a Q and A event. But without giving it much thought, I responded with a smile, "A little bit of both, I think." It's what I was taught in civics class back in high school, when civics was an actual subject and public schools were not considered a platform for leftist propaganda.

"You're wrong," he replied. "We are not a democracy. We're a republic," and then he stormed off to stand behind me, where he promptly gave a smart military salute to the American flag waving proudly on the tall pole in the Square.

I swear to God he did. 

Several thoughts raced through my head at once. I'm pretty sure his earnest salute to the flag was a protest to my (our) protest and that possibly he thought he was the only patriot in the crowd that day. I told myself, "Wait a minute. I'm exercising my First Amendment right to free speech here. I'm as much a patriot as you think you are. It's because I love this country that I protest against a president who sends brown-skinned people to detention camps in an overt act of racial prejudice and without due process, who places the Marines in American streets to intimidate protesters, who fosters an enforcement agency (Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE) whose members wear masks and no identification, and who does all of this without the consent of Congress and through executive decisions that are probably illegal and can be challenged in court.

I want this country that I love to be better than this. 

In retrospect, I should have stepped next to this fellow and saluted the flag with him. All my best thoughts come after the fact.

I bring this up because I recently heard a conversation on TV where this Trump supporter tried to explain why this country is a republic and not a democracy. OK, I get it now. That's where I've heard this argument before. It's a MAGA talking point. If you take democracy out of the equation, you can justify to yourself that a president is all powerful. A monarch. A king. This is exactly what the Founding Fathers tried to avoid and why presidents were given limited powers in the Constitution.

Originally, a president was commander-in-chief of the armed forces; he could negotiate treaties (with Senate approval); he could appoint ambassadors and other officials (with Senate approval); he could grant reprieves and pardons, and he had the power to veto legislation. There's nothing there about suspending due process or building inhumane detention camps in the Florida swamp.

So what kind of government are we supposed to be? 

I see us as a constitutional federal democratic republic.

It is constitutional because we follow the  U.S. Constitution; it's federal because power is divided between national and state governments; it's a democracy because its citizens (We The People) have a voice through free and fair elections, and it's a republic because we elect a representative government.

There's not a lot I remember from high school. I do remember slow dances with Peggy, running cross country in the fall, chess club on Fridays. And all those civics and history classes. 

That was the good stuff worth remembering. 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, July 6, 2025

1776

Every Fourth of July, I treat myself to a viewing of the Broadway musical 1776. I taped the show off TCM about seven or eight years ago and tucked it away in my video library, so I always have access to it. I can watch it any time I want to.

But mostly, I like to watch it on the Fourth.

As you might expect by the title, it's a Broadway rendition of the birth of or country. And while many aspects of the film (and the musical) are either composites or half-truths to move the narrative along (for example, Martha Jefferson never came to Philadelphia to be with her horny husband), it's still an inspiring film – especially given that the Second Continental Congress was held in secrecy and the nascent nation was in the midst of a shooting revolution.

If nothing else, the movie reflects the sense of purpose the Founding Fathers had in breaking away from England and the tyranny of King George III and thus drafting the Declaration of Independence. The half-truths and composites are not only entertaining, but they feel real. At least they do to me.

Anyway, the signing of the Declaration ultimately led to the creation of the U.S. Constitution in 1788 – just seven years after the end of the Revolutionary War. I tend to tie those two incredible documents together. The Revolution was fought to separate the colonies from a monarchy and the Constitution was designed and created by We the People to prevent the rise of another King George III.

The Founding Fathers were aware of this problem as they grappled with the danger of a strong president who could become a tyrant. That's why they created a bicameral Congress with three branches of government that is empowered with checks and balances to reign in a rogue president. 

It works when everybody does their jobs. 

Fast forward 237 years...

Somehow, some way, the Supreme Court has granted a felonious president with 34 criminal indictments complete immunity for the length and duration of his term. Where is the logic in that? Where is the logic of removing 50 years of settled law to prevent a woman from having control of her own body? How do detention camps exits in America after what we saw in World War II?

On this Fourth of July, felon president Trump signed the Big Beautiful Bill (who comes up with these stupid names anyway? Alligator Alcatraz. Really? It sounds like we're getting our government from out of a comic book) that will add $3.3 trillion to the nation debt over 10 years. It will cut $930 billion from Medicaid, thus endangering the existence of possibly 300 or more rural hospitals and perhaps 25 percent of the country's nursing homes. A total of $170 billion will be cut from Medicare. Another 12 million people could lose their health care. How about a $285 billion cut to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program? All of this in order to pay for a tax break for billionaires in what is amounting to be the largest transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich. How does this help the American people? All it does is make us hungrier, poorer and sicker. Many of us will die before our time because of this immoral bill, but, hey, we all die anyway, right Sen. Joni Ernst?

Meanwhile, $10 billion is earmarked for missions to Mars (what?) and another $150 billion to immigration enforcement (those masked men from ICE who don't bother with piddly stuff like due process). You know all those criminals they're supposed to be deporting? Turns out less than 10 percent have committed violent crimes, and that is from ICE's own data. Another 65 percent have committed no crimes at all except, apparently, for the color of their skin. And to meet a quota.

I have a feeling this type of paranoid, fear-mongering government isn't what the Founding Fathers had in mind when they penned We the People. I might be wrong, but I assumed their concept of government was a bit loftier. Perhaps more idealistic. Certainly kinder.

I guess I might have to wait for the musical 2025 to find out. 

 

 

 

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Whirlwind

Last night the U.S. Senate, powered by Republicans, approved moving convicted felon president Donald Trump's Big Beautiful (tax and spending) Bill forward toward becoming a reality by a narrow 51-49 vote.

If you're paying attention, you know this is the bill that will take cuts out of key social programs, most notably Medicaid, which stands to lose hundreds of billions of dollars. If the bill eventually passes as written, peoples' very lives could be in jeopardy. Especially – and ironically – those in red-state fly-over country.

The bill provides the lifeblood for many services, but it's particularly the sustenance for rural hospitals. If passed, expect many rural hospitals to eventually go out of business. People will suffer.

Even Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled that some of the bill's provisions did not comply with Senate budget rules. Angry and irresponsible Republicans ignored her anyway. I guess this is what happens when a convicted felon sets the example.

In reality, the bill is designed to pay for Trump's pledged tax cuts for the incredibly wealthy. It will also add upwards of $5 trillion to the national debt.

And I thought Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility. If this bill passes, expect more hardships for all of us – unless you're in the top one percent. It's wealth disparity personified.

•   •   •

I woke up one day and discovered that the United States has a secret police force. It's called Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Apparently, it has the power to seize, kidnap and arrest American citizens off the street and deport them – without the constitutional right of due process – to foreign nations for detention.

ICE officers wear masks, which is something I thought criminals did. Oh, OK. Right. They beat on people who fit a certain racial profile. Almost exclusively it involves people with dark skin. It doesn't even matter if targeted people were born in this country because the 14th amendment (1868) – the birthright amendment which proudly distinguishes this nation from all others – is under fire.

Even recent rulings by the Supreme Court seem to be ignoring the Constitution, granting Trump even more power to arrest and deport people considered to be criminals. 

I think what is happening here is a reaction to the browning of America, which is a demographic reality some folks are trying to reverse. People with white skin are in power and apparently they'll do anything to circumvent the Constitution to stay in power. And to keep the country white.

It's an abomination. It's unAmerican.  It's unconstitutional. This is what happens when an arrogant convicted felon is in charge.

•   •   •

Trump has declared that the bombing strike he ordered against Iranian nuclear facilities last week "obliterated" Iran's capacity to make a nuclear bomb.

But early assessment from his own military analysts seem to suggest otherwise. "Leaked" reports (probably from people in Trump's own administration) indicate that Iran's program may have been set back perhaps three to six months. That's far from obliteration.

There's even doubt that nuclear fuel needed to build these bombs was even in these facilities. Even Tulsi Gabbard, the Trump-appointed director of National Intelligence, said it was unlikely Iran was building a nuclear bomb. Trump, the bone-spurred military genius that he is, disagreed with her and his own intelligence agencies, and Gabbard hasn't been seen since.

If the early damage assessments we've been given are any indication, the 30,000-pound bunker bombs (designed to penetrate upwards of 200 to 300 feet underground) did not have the intended effect of obliterating the Iranian program. It's likely those B-2s bombed an empty mountain. Nobody is certain exactly where that weapons-grade fissionable material is right now.

The absurdity here is that Trump is desperately trying to bomb his way to a Nobel Peace Prize. You know, because President Obama has one.

The most reliable way to destroy a military target is to put boots on the ground.

This got me to thinking of the historical past.

During World War II, the Nazis had reinforced concrete pens along the French, German and Baltic states coastlines to house and protect their U-boat submarine fleets. Repeated bombing missions could not destroy those pens, and some still exist today. None were obliterated.

Concrete pillboxes still dot the Normandy beaches. Castles still abound in the French and English countrysides. Sometimes it pays to learn from the past. 

 

 

Friday, June 27, 2025

Hacked off

I instantly went into panic mode.

I'd clicked onto a text message. The next thing I knew, the screen on my laptop filled border to border with a message that my MacBook Pro had been infected, and instructed me to not hit the "off" button.

Oh, yeah. And here's the 1-800 number to Apple Security.

I know. I know. Whatever you do, don't call that number. There is no such thing as Apple Security. Little bells were going off in my head, clearly warning me not to call that number. In fact, I should have hit the "off" button.

But I called the number.

I mean, jeez, this was my $1,500 computer. I wanted it back.

So I'm on the phone with a fellow who speaks English with a Middle Eastern accent (another red flag, I guess). I'm on the phone with him for 90 minutes or so, following his instructions. He gets control of my cursor and I see it flipping around my screen as my mouse sits silently on its pad.

I'm sweating, feeling really uncomfortable about this. But he promises me we're almost done and I'll have my laptop back soon.

He transfers me to another person, who also speaks with a Middle Eastern accent. We're in my banking accounts. And then I get transferred again, to yet another Middle Eastern accent. It finally dawns on me that I'm being scammed. It's probably some troll farm halfway around the world, since everybody is speaking with the same accent. I hang up in the middle of the phone call and go directly to my bank, where I tell them what I did. I keep mumbling "idiot" to myself the whole time.

We start closing accounts immediately. We call my wife at work and tell her what happened. She's understanding, but I suspect I'll be divorced by the end of the day because she never bargained to be married to an idiot. She asks our banker if any money has been moved and we discover that $1 has been routed from one account into another. A test.

Kim gets home, and there's no shouting. No blaming. No accusations. I figured I'd deserve everything she could throw at me, but all she did was try to calm me down. We take the laptop and drive to Best Buy in Winston-Salem, where we let the Geek Squad take over. 

They look at the screen, where the hackers' "Any Desk" program was running. "Ah, the infamous 'Any Desk,'" said the associate. "We have the tools to repair this." Apparently, they've seen this hack before.

I have to tell you, those guys were great. They told me the computer would be ready in six days, but two days later, I got a text from them telling me my device was ready for pickup.

In the meantime, Kim and I were doing everything we could to protect ourselves. We've changed a lot of passwords. We've changed accounts. The computer has been scrubbed. We froze our credit cards. It's been an exhausting and stress-filled hassle to finally get here, but here we are. Finally.

I've been telling my friends what happened and several suggested that I write this blog to serve as something like a public service announcement. I mean, I have a college education and I still did this. It could happen to anybody. The bank told me that. The Geeks told me that. My friends have told me that.

So if anything happens to you while you're on the computer, just TURN IT OFF!

And DON'T CALL THE NUMBER!

Take it from me. 

Sunday, June 22, 2025

When Johnny Comes Marching Home

So now we're at war.

I thought president and convicted felon (and don't forget adjudicated rapist) Donald Trump was going to keep us out of any future wars. He's a peacemaker. Wasn't that one of his campaign promises? What, you mean he lied to us? How is that possible?

Sometime yesterday afternoon, Trump ordered an airstrike against the nuclear facilities at three separate locations in the sovereign (albeit terrorist sponsoring) nation of Iran. If I understand this correctly, several 30,000-pound bunker buster bombs were dropped on the underground uranium enrichment plant at Fordo, while 30 Tomahawk missiles launched by the Navy found targets in two other sites.

I don't know how surgical these strikes were. I'm assuming some people have died. It's hard to imagine a 30,000-pound bomb as being surgical.

While the strike may satisfy the insatiable cravings of MAGA (comments like "It's about time," "He's the best president we've ever had," and "I've been waiting for this since 1981" have shown up in social media), there is a sense of constitutional illegality to this.

Article I, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution says the president cannot unilaterally declare war. That privilege is the sole responsibility of Congress, which is supposed to serve as a check and balance to presidential overreach. The Founding Fathers foresaw this when they divided the powers between the legislative and executive branches to prevent a rogue president from having unchecked power over military actions. Los Angeleans might know something about that what with Marines and National Guardsmen in their streets in the wake of a civil disturbance that local law enforcement has under control.

The War Powers Resolution of 1973 also limits a president's ability to commit troops to military action without Congressional approval. It requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours of deploying troops. It also requires the president to withdraw troops within 60 days unless Congress authorizes deployments.

I'm sure a felon president who insists on wearing MAGA baseball caps at cabinet meetings like some obtuse cartoon character would do this. Not. 

As the sun breaks through the morning twilight today, we can only wonder what Iran's response will be. American foreign military bases are clearly now in jeopardy of Iranian retaliation. Heck, I think Americans in our own country are in jeopardy. I wonder if that includes immigrants?

Trump apparently ignored American intelligence sources (putting the words "Trump" and "intelligence" in the same sentence seems like an oxymoron. Or maybe just moronic) insisting that Iran was not close to building a nuclear weapon at all. "I don't believe it," said Trump, disparaging American intelligence collection yet again. That makes yesterday's attack by the U.S. very opportunistic, especially in the wake of Israel's military actions against Iran in the days before. 

Some reports state that Iran already moved its fissionable material to other locations prior to the bombing. 

Trump promised (Oh, no. Not another promise) us a two-week pause while making a decision whether or not to attack Iran, but he waited less than two days instead. It has the feel that Trump had already made up his mind to bomb Iran in the moment. Like a child opening his Christmas presents early, he couldn't wait. Instead, he's fulfilling Israel Prime Minister Bebe Netanyahu's wildest wet dream, because no other country in the world has bunker bombs.

And, hey. Have any of our allies commented on Trump's actions, or shown any support at all (other than Israel?) Not that I've heard as I write this. If a response from our Allies does come, it certainly won't be considered immediate.

Instead, we're left wondering what the Iranian response will be. You know Iran will not let this go. Could we find pain on American soil? Cyber attacks? Biological attacks. Do you not think Iran has sympathetic proxies and sleeper cells around the world? Is air travel less safe? Expect the cost of gas to soar. Maybe the stock market takes a dive. Did Trump consider any of this in his eagerness to blow up Iran?

In his desperate bid to win a Nobel Peace Prize (you know, because President Obama got one), Trump said he would keep us out of war. 

All we know is that we're in an undeclared war waiting for the next foot to fall.

And people die in wars.