If I ever do a political podcast, this is what I’d have called it! :)
This is where you’ll find the opinion pieces (often political) so if you’re not into the rantings of someone who is generally fiscally conservative and socially liberal that the two main political parties blew off years ago, you might want to give this space a miss!
Historians years from now will be writing massive tomes on how not to handle an existential political crisis that threatens to bring down a President. This administration’s handling of the Epstein files seems to be just such a threat…
Senator Hise certainly had a lot to say about those new Congressional district maps he's so proud of but the statement that'll win him the award isn't the one attributed to him that went viral...
Even though the aspiring monarch in Washington DC is certainly the most notorious of those who would wish to subjugate the population to their rule by fiat, there's more than a few would-be kings on Jones Street who have been a problem for far longer than King Donald I...
With the Supreme Court's latest travesty of a ruling from it's shadow "emergency docket" and the President's obvious admiration of how Vladimir Putin rules Russia, is it so much of a stretch of the imagination to imagine the ICE gangs who have routinely ignored the Fourth Amendment and the Constitution writ large taking the next step and actually becoming the KGB?
Here is another post from the Facebook thread started by a mate of mine that I wanted to capture as we're now almost two years on from Hamas attacking Israel with the situation on the ground now being far more dire and deplorable. The person I was talking to pivoted to her hatred for President Trump because he "allows Netanyahu to kill all Palestineans. I do hate him for this" as well as his inability…
Hating Trump is certainly "easy" in this day and age but what I truly feel is pity for the shadow of a human being he's become and those much more clever than him that rule him from the shadows. Pity is far, far worse than hatred and it is something for which the President and his sycophants in government have no effective defence.
Who knew that the memory of Richard Dawson on "Family Feud" would become the defining way on how I'd come to view being able to actually celebrate Independence Day this year in spite of the deplorable activities of our current government?
Senator Murkowski in a rare moment of unintended honesty after being the vote that allowed Trump's evil budget bill to go back to the House made it clear her vote was for sale to whoever would exempt Alaska from the pain this bill will cause the rest of us. :(
Much as I respect Attorney General Jeff Jackson, I can't in good conscience agree with his assessment of Senator Tillis announcing he was standing down from the Senate. After years of ignoring consistent majorities of North Carolinians, he's decided to chicken out of standing in the mid-terms and let the voters have their say about his extensive records of political flip-flopping and inability to stand his ground against a threatened primary opponent in the 2026 election. Sir Robin has forgotten more of courage than Senator Tillis will ever know... :(
When Israel started attacking Tehran and Iranian nuclear weapons sites, the only question was *WHEN* the US would be asked to bring in the B-2 Spirit and it's two GBU-57 MOP (Massive Ordinance Penetrator) bombs to really ruin the day at Fordo and Natanz.
For all of the hullaballoo about President Trump's "birthday parade" and the comparisons to authoritarian regimes it evoked, the blatant politicisation of the event back home at Fort Bragg two days prior and apparent erosion of the standard of the military being professional and apolitical when on duty is far more terrifying than the tanks rolling down Constitution Av.
History is replete with examples of why an effective government needs a professional and apolitical civil service to faithfully execute the laws and defend the Constitution. President Jackson's disastrous implementation of the spoils system of patronage is exactly why the Trump administration's desire to implement Schedule F's successor is a dreadfully dangerous idea at best... :(
The Great Writ of habeas corpus is a fundamental right derived from centuries of legal tradition and one that should not be taken lightly or suspended by fiat. The ability to challenge one’s detention by the state and force them to provide evidence as to why your liberties should be curtailed is a right no citizen of a democratic society should be deprived and we shouldn’t let the current administration even progress it past the informal proposal stage!
A sign reading, “silence and respect” sits near the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery, May 6, 2015, Arlington, Va. (U.S. Army photo by Rachel Larue)
It should be the easiest speech a President ever delivers on a solemn occasion where we honour those who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to our country. It is not a partisan political speech nor should it be self-aggrandising. Sadly, this was not the case... :(
If I wasn't allowed to offer an EPA employee a $15 lunch after mending their computers for ethics reasons, there's no way in hell President Trump should be allowed to accept a "gift" from the government of Qatar of a Boeing 747-8i Intercontinental "Palace in the Sky" massively upgraded at taxpayer expense that he couldn't possibly be allowed to fly as an Air Force One and would eventually end up as his personal property once his term ends. Some "gifts" like this one from a not-so-friendly regime should be flatly refused...just ask the Trojans what happened when they forgot that rule!
One down, several more need to go after National Security Advisor Mike Waltz walks the plank over to a cushy job as ambassador to the UN. How about Whiskeyleaks Hegseth next, eh?
Secretary of Defence Loose Lips is at it again posting military operational plans on Signal. But at least he didn't have a journalist seeing those details...this time, it was his wife who I'm pretty sure has less of a security clearance than the Pentagon janitors. It's man overboard and he clearly needs to go but it seems clear his boss has other ideas... :(
The Secretary of Defence tries to defend the indefensible and fails miserably! There's no way a SecDef that no defence minister in the world can ever trust again can stay in the job after a scandal in which not only actionable intelligence of a sensitive nature was compromised, it was done in the most silly and stupid way which just beggars belief. Any junior officer or official would have already been cashiered out of the service...it's time for the "warfighter's SecDef" to actually do the honourable thing for once and resign for the good of the service.
Get ready for another rendition of that dance we all know as "The Potomac Two-Step". Cabinet officials discussed classified military operations details on a commercial and insecure platform called Signal and willfully violated OPSEC (operational security) if not the Espionage Act in the process...and that was before the National Security Advisor added a journalist to the chat. This is *WHY* we need people who know what they're doing minding our national security... :(
The Uhmerican House of Representin's "budget blueprint" tells you all you need know about how stupid they think the American people are.
The truly sad thing is that their view of the electorate's stupidity is probably more optimistic than it ought to be which will allow them to get away with complete dereliction of their duty to protect America's most vulnerable citizens... :(
Last Friday, the American people and the world were witnesses to the most unabashedly savage political hit job ever seen in the Oval Office when President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine was ambushed by VP Vance and President Trump.
In so doing, they proved themselves to be disgraceful and weak cowards who have sold every shred of honour of this country and are perfectly content to do Vladimir Putin's dirty work in destroying the most successful alliance this world has ever seen.
President Trump's hiring criteria for senior positions seems to boil down to one essential skill: how well can they stick their nose up the bum of the boss? You'd think the Senate who is supposed to use the "advise and consent" prerogatives in the Constitution would weed out the worst and most unqualified of them but you'd be utterly wrong. "Abdicate and cower", more like... :(
President Musk through the Office of Personnel Management pulled one of his old HR tricks out of the bag of stupid management practices when he sent a "justify your existence in five bullet points" EMAIL to the entire Federal civil service.
Stupidity this blatant and contemptible really deserves only one possible answer...
Senator Tillis seemed to be taking the Senate's duty under Article II Section 2 of the Constitution very seriously when it came to the nomination of Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defence until...he didn't.
This shouldn't be a surprise when there is a clear record of flip-flopping on defending the prerogatives of Congress versus the Executive Branch.
Advice and consent doesn't mean blindly accepting every fool and sycophant offered in nomination.
You can actually show a measure of courage and say *NO*...and you really need to start doing it much more often when dealing with nominees who are being put up for office by toddlers!
President Carter showed that even though he was only allowed one term in the nation's highest office, it's what he did with the next 44 years that truly made him the Obi-Wan amongst modern chief executives!