Posts Tagged ‘Sargon of Akkad’

Labour: The Pedophile Party

Saturday, February 14th, 2026

Another Podcast of the Lotus Eaters look at how the Epstein files implicate a whole lot of UK’s ruling Labour Party

  • “The Starmer Cabinet [has] completely fallen apart in the past week since a lot of this information has come to light.”
  • Peter Mandelson’s “heavily heavy involvement with Jeffrey Epstein” was already known.
  • “Something that, again, the Epstein files has made very clear to everybody, was that all of these elites, whether or not there is quote unquote hard evidence of them being involved in a ring to traffic young girls to one another. That was just organized by Epstein. At the very least, they all knew that this guy was in prison for having groomed and assaulted a 14 year-old girl. And they were all more than happy to speak to him anyway while he was in prison and even offer condolences.”
  • “Here are some of the major resignations from the Labour party and from people in high positions. So first of all you had Peter Mandelson himself, who has resigned from the party. And while he has not forgotten his peerage, has stepped down from the House of Lords.”
  • “There was Morgan McSweeney who was the chief of staff under Starmer who was the guy who put forward Mandelson as being the ambassador to the US in the first place. He has resigned due to his advice for that appointment.”
  • “And then you have other people in the crossfires like Matthew Doyle, Starmer’s former director of communications, unrelated to Mandelson, but it seems to have dredged up a lot of extra stuff with the Labour Party, who is in trouble due to campaigning for a Mr. Sean Morton, a former Labour counselor convicted of possessing indecent images of children in 2016.”
  • “It may have been Morgan McSweeny, his chief of staff, but ultimately Keir Starmer was the guy who said, ‘Okay, we’ll go ahead with Peter Mandelson.’ He might not be Matthew Doyle or Shawn Morton. He might not have campaigned for this pedophile back in 2017, but he was the guy who gave two thumbs up to this guy becoming a lord back in January.”
  • “And there are questions of whether Keir Starmmer, despite having said just in January, a few weeks ago, that he’ll be sitting in the seat by 2027 in an interview he gave at the beginning of the year, There are questions whether he’s even going to make it to the end of this year. Some are even suspecting that it might not be within the next few months.”
  • “One thing you can be sure of in this country is that if your policies are terrible, if you screw over the country in the worst ways imaginable, you are fine. There is nothing that can touch you because most of the time your party will be absolutely fine with it. But what does take you down? Salacious media scandals, right? And that seems to be what is taking down Starmer.”
  • “It’s not just that Mandelson was friends with Epstein, or that he even supported him while he was in prison. It’s also that he was trading insider government secrets with Epstein back in 2008-2009 when he was was he deputy leader.”
  • “After Epstein was in jail, he stayed at his townhouse and was emailing him ‘when you get out we’ll have liberation day and go see strippers.’ And in 2024, Starmer allowed him to choose the candidates for Labour’s electoral run and then do the cabinet reshuffle afterwards.”
  • “Wes Streeting [Secretary of State for Health and Social Care] is signing off his his messages to Mandelson with kisses.”
  • “It’s getting more and more common to hear the weary conclusion that Starmer will later or sooner perhaps have to go.”
  • “I think [long serving hard left female MP Labour kicked out of the party in 2025] Diane Abbott had the best analysis, weirdly, surprise surprise, which is they want him to lose the May election and then clear house afterwards.”
  • “You’d be the fall guy for May election. It’s going to be brutal.”
  • “They are already cancelling some council elections, but the ones that are going ahead probably not going to be great for Labour. I would expect a bit of a Reform sweep.”
  • “Quite unsurprisingly, the party is now starting to gain a reputation as the pedophile party.”
  • “Ed Davey [leader of the Liberal Democrats] got up and said, you know, Prime Minister, appointing one is pretty inexcusable but how did you appoint two pedophile pols?”
  • “We have this conception of Keir Starmer that he’s Mr. Cool essentially, and controlled. In reality, he keeps on losing his temper these days, and you can see how much pressure he’s under, and you can see that he’s going to break.”
  • Starmer’s response to being criticized by Tory leader Kemi Badenoch was to scream that the Tories still had Liz Truss. “He’s like, I might be harboring pedophiles, but Liz Truss is still in your party. What? What? These are not moral equivalents.”
  • “Say what you want about Jeremy Corbyn. You could call him mad or socialist, anti-Semitic, whatever. As far as I’m aware, he’s not a pedophile. Not buddies with Mandelson.”
  • Some are suggesting Harriet Harmon should be Labour’s new deputy. Guess what? “Harriet Harmon, for those who do not know, when she was a higher figure within Labour in the 70s and 80s, was a supporter of and associated with PIE, the Pedophile Information Exchange.”
  • “She was literally the number one advocate in the Labour Party, because they were trying when they were trying to advance gay rights, for some reason, the Pedophile Information Exchange was a part of that coalition and Harriet Harmon was their champion in the Labour Party.” Later: “Harriet Harmon’s name should always be prefixed with ‘noted pedophilia advocate Harriet Harmon.'”
  • “It’s interesting that Harmon is involved in these opposition attempts to spin the subject from like, no, no, no, no. Ignore the pedophilia. Think about the women.”
  • “Labour MPs have told Keir Starmer they’ve been branded as pedo lovers on their doorsteps.”
  • “People are pointing out that when he was director of public prosecutions, that Starmer did nothing about [BBC personality and sex offender Jimmy] Savile, and everyone knew and everybody knew about Savile, but Starmer never did anything about Savile.”
  • “This is something in polite society everyone accepts, but this is something in normal society everyone despises.”
  • “Pedophilia is not disqualifying in the Labour Party.”
  • They’re calling Labour “The Nonce Party,” nonce being British slang for someone who’s committed sex offenses against children. “This is just everybody else in the country looking at a duck that quacks like a duck and walks like a duck and going ‘that’s a duck.'”
  • “This guy Jody McIntyre, I’m not familiar with him.”
  • “Bit of an insane leftist, if I remember correctly.”
  • “He posted this huge thread just saying about how Starmer’s Labour is now infested with sexual predators and child rapists.”
  • “The communist types, the Jeremy Corbynites, you know, like, you know, they’re insane, but they’re not Blairites. And the Blairits seem to have a lot of nonces in there.”
  • “You’ve got this guy, Labour MP Dan Norris, sat on the board of the Snowden Trust, supports disabled students, and the Kidscape Child Safety Charity, co-wrote a book called Don’t Bully Me: Advising School Children on How to Deal with Abuse, launched a booklet to educate parents about pedophiles. Yesterday, and this would have been the 2nd of February, he was charged with new counts of rape and sexual assault. His initial arrest was last April on suspicion of child sex offenses and child abduction. Still an MP at the time when this was written.”
  • “Before the 2024 election, Starmer was warned that Norris was facing legal action, but let him stand for Labour anyway.”
  • “He goes on to trace some of the lobbyists and people who were funding him, and there’s more to it as well, where you’ve got just more cases popping up every day.”
  • “Just the other day there was this bloke, former Labour counselor Liron Velleman pleaded guilty to a series of sexual offenses against a 13-year-old girl, sent naked pictures of himself to her and asked whether she was a virgin and at home alone.” Just today there’s this Daily Mail piece saying that both Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves campaigned for Velleman, the latter as recently as 2022.
  • Naturally, Velleman was a campaigner for Hope Not Hate and drafted the pro-censorship Online Safety Act.
  • The “campaign to get Margaret Hodge elected was supported by Hope Not Hate in the 1980s. Whilst head of Islington council, Hodge dismissed allegations of severe sexual abuse in children’s home under her watch.”
  • “2023, Tom Dewey, another Labour counselor and Labour First activist, plead guilty to charges of possessing five category A [the most serious category] images of children. Six days after his arrest, he was reelected as a Labour counselor.”
  • “2022, Labour counselor Sean Coughlan was convicted of trying to groom a 14-year-old girl.”
  • “Ivor Caplin, [the] vice chair of the LFI [Labour Friends of Israel], was caught by pedophile hunters last January and arrested for sexual communication with a child. When he was arrested, his Twitter account was full of explicit images, apparently. And he was still being followed by Labour front benchers.”
  • “It just goes on and on. There’s just so many of them.”
  • This may be the Jody McIntyre list the podcast is drawing from. There are a lot more Labour insider names on it, not all of which are listed as pedophiles or pedophile enablers. More research is probably in order…

    Jeffrey Epstein Revelations Update For February 12, 2025

    Thursday, February 12th, 2026

    Revelations continue to surface from the giant Epstein files data dump, so let’s do a roundup of some of the more interesting bits.

  • By far the most frustrating revelation for TDS-obsessed Democrats is learning that Donald Trump’s main tie to Epstein was being one of the first people to report him to the police. “Unsealed court docs reviewed by the Miami Herald show DONALD TRUMP called Palm Beach police about Jeffrey Epstein in 2006.”

    Mar-A-Lago is a mixture of everyone. DONALD TRUMP told [blacked out] that he threw EPSTEIN out of his club. TRUMP called the PBPD to tell him “thank goodness you’re stopping him, everyone has known he’s been doing this”. TRUMP told him people in New York knew EPSTEIN was disgusting. TRUMP said [GHISLAINE] MAXWELL was EPSTEIN’s operative, “she is evil and to focus on her”. TRUMP told [blacked out] that he was around EPSTEIN once when teenagers were present and TRUMP “got the hell out of there”. TRUMP was one of the very first people to call when people found out that they were investigating EPSTEIN.

    Snip.

    Trump’s comment came in direct response to reporters asking if he had any knowledge that Epstein had molested girls. He was denying awareness of Epstein’s crimes or the allegations of molestation/sex trafficking that surfaced prominently around Epstein’s 2019 arrest.

    Nowhere in this FBI interview does it indicate he had specific knowledge of the criminal molestation, sexual abuse, or trafficking details that later emerged in the full Epstein investigation or his 2008 plea deal. It’s Trump saying he had heard from others about “disgusting” behavior and how he was so creeped out that he had to remove Epstein from his club.

    Countless people in Palm Beach social circles noticed Epstein had a pattern of questionable behavior with young women, without having direct evidence or knowledge of the felony-level crimes. Good try, media.

    “Nothing within the FBI report even alludes to Trump knowing about Epstein and Maxwell’s crimes. Sometimes your gut tells you something is off about people.”

    You know Democrats and their MSM familiars must be gnashing their teeth as their Great White Whale swims away again…

  • But you know who did pal around with Epstein? Noam Chomsky.

    Valeria Chomsky, the wife of Noam Chomsky, issued a statement about their longtime friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Noam Chomsky, 97, suffered a massive stroke in 2023 and is unable to speak.

    Noam and I have felt a profound weight regarding the unresolved questions surrounding our past interactions with Epstein. We do not wish to leave this chapter shrouded in ambiguity.

    Throughout his life, Noam has insisted that intellectuals have a responsibility to speak the truth and expose lies — especially when those truths are uncomfortable to themselves.

    As is widely known, one of Noam’s characteristics is to believe in the good faith of people. Noam’s overly trusted nature, in this specific case, led to severe poor judgment on both our parts.

    Ah. Another brilliant and successful expert in human behavior who hung around Epstein at length and just never noticed anything unusual or suspicious about him. It’s amazing how often those keen, long-honed skills at reading people just disappeared once Epstein entered a room. Valeria Chomsky continues:

    Noam and I were introduced to Epstein at the same time, during one of Noam’s professional events in 2015, when Epstein’s 2008 conviction in the State of Florida was known by very few people, while most of the public – including Noam and I – was unaware of it. That only changed after the November 2018 report by Miami Herald.

    A reminder: That conviction was for “felony solicitation of prostitution and, pursuant to the NPA, to a criminal information charging him with procurement of minors to engage in prostitution.” It was public record and covered in the Palm Beach newspapers.

    We had lunch, at Epstein’s ranch, once, in connection with a professional event; we attended dinners at his townhouse in Manhattan and stayed a few times in an apartment he offered when we visited New York City. We also visited Epstein’s Paris apartment one afternoon for the occasion of a work trip. In all cases, these visits were related to Noam’s professional commitments. We never went to his island or knew about anything that happened there.

    We attended social meetings, lunches, and dinners where Epstein was present and academic matters were discussed. We never witnessed any inappropriate, criminal, or reproachable behavior from Epstein or others. At no time did we see children or underage individuals present.

    Here’s the biggest and most prominent problem with Valeria Chomsky’s “we just had no idea” excuse. Several months after the Miami Herald published the series, on February 23, 2019, Epstein emailed Chomsky looking for advice on how to handle his bad press.

    In a response purportedly from Chomsky, the famed linguistics professor advised Epstein “the best way to proceed is to ignore it” and “not to react unless directly questioned.”

    Chomsky drew parallels to his own experience with “hysterical accusations of all sorts,” writing, “I pay no attention, unless I’m approached for a comment on a specific matter.”

    “What the vultures dearly want is a public response, which then provides a public opening for an onslaught of venomous attacks, many from just publicity seekers or cranks of all sorts,” the email said. “That’s particularly true now with the hysteria that has developed about abuse of women, which has reached the point that even questioning a charge is a crime worse than murder.”

    Does that sound like a man who’s deeply concerned about what Epstein may have done?

    But Valeria Chomsky insists that message is being taken out of context.

    Noam’s email to Epstein, in which Epstein sought advice about the press, should be read in context. Epstein had claimed to Noam that he [Epstein] was being unfairly persecuted, and Noam spoke from his own experience in political controversies with the media. Epstein created a manipulative narrative about his case, which Noam, in good faith, believed in. It is now clear that it was all orchestrated, having as, at least, one of Epstein’s intentions to try to have someone like Noam repairing Epstein’s reputation by association.

    Noam’s criticism was never directed at the women’s movement; on the contrary, he has always supported gender equity and women’s rights.

    Oh, shut up. You don’t get to send a message to Epstein reassuring him that “hysteria that has developed about abuse of women, which has reached the point that even questioning a charge is a crime worse than murder” and then turn around and tout yourself as a feminist.

    But there’s more. Back in 2023, Noam Chomsky confirmed to the Wall Street Journal that he received a March 2018 transfer of roughly $270,000 from an Epstein-linked account. That too was just an innocent favor, Valeria Chomsky insists.

    Regarding the reported transfer of approximately $270,000, I must clarify that these were entirely Noam’s own funds. At the time, Noam had identified inconsistencies in his retirement resources that threatened his economic independence and caused him great distress. Epstein offered technical assistance to resolve this specific situation. On this matter, Epstein acted accordingly, recovering the funds for Noam, in a display of help and very likely as part of a machination to gain greater access to Noam. Epstein acted solely as a financial advisor for this specific matter. To the best of my knowledge, Epstein never had access to our bank or investment accounts.

    Now, keep in mind, for just about all his intellectual career, Noam Chomsky has been a furious critic of American capitalism (“a grotesque catastrophe”), the wealthy elites of the U.S., and corporate influence over politics. He has written, “in this world there happen to be huge concentrations of private power that are as close to tyranny and as close to totalitarian as anything humans have devised… The corporations are just as totalitarian as Bolshevism and fascism.”

    Recall that Epstein ran a financial management firm that catered to billionaire clients.

    Let yea who has never had a convicted pedophile wire $270,000 into their account cast the first stone.

  • But Chomsky isn’t the only left-wing grandee that shows up as a buddy of Epstein. So does Democrat megadonor Reid Hoffman.

    Top donors to Wis­con­sin politi­cians are men­tioned in the latest release of files related to invest­ig­a­tions into pedo­phile Jef­frey Epstein, includ­ing top Demo­cratic donor Reid Hoff­man, who appears in the doc­u­ments more than 2,500 times.

    Hoff­man, a ven­ture cap­it­al­ist and co-founder of LinkedIn, has donated $15 mil­lion to the state Demo­cratic Party since 2019, con­tri­bu­tions that include a recent pair of dona­tions total­ing $275,000, state cam­paign records show.

    Hoff­man was among those who vis­ited Epstein’s private Carib­bean island called Little St. James in 2014, six years after the Amer­ican fin­an­cier pleaded guilty to soli­cit­ing pros­ti­tu­tion of a minor and registered as a sex offender, accord­ing to report­ing by the Wall Street Journal.

    The Mil­wau­kee Journal Sen­tinel first repor­ted the Demo­cratic donor’s ties in 2023. Hoff­man has not lived in Wis­con­sin, but the Sil­icon Val­ley bil­lion­aire has ded­ic­ated his spend­ing in part because of Wis­con­sin’s battle­ground polit­ical dynamic.

    The new batch of doc­u­ments show sched­uled meet­ings between Hoff­man and Epstein between 2013 and 2018.

    At one point in 2015, Epstein invited Hoff­man to visit him to “play.” In 2014, Hoff­man told Epstein he had sent gifts to his New York home that included ice cream for Epstein to try or “for the girls.”

    What girls might these be, one wonders…

  • Ann Coulter (remember her?) has extracted a couple of additional notable names from the files.

    I don’t have a team of researchers like The New York Times to review the Epstein files, but I have flipped through them and found a couple things that you won’t read in the Times — and you definitely won’t see on MS-NOW.

    Criminal defense lawyer David Schoen sent an informative email to Epstein, saying no one would ever take the Russia investigation seriously because special counsel Robert Mueller had selected a legal team that was a “murderer’s row of the worst.”

    Schoen’s case-in-chief was Andrew Weissmann, frequent Times opinion writer (Title of actual column: “A Former Prosecutor on the ‘Incredibly Strong Case’ Against Trump”). He appears so frequently on MS-NOW, he has a cot and toothbrush under Lawrence O’Donnell’s desk.

    Weissmann, Schoen said, was known in the U.S. attorney’s office as “The Pathological liar,” because he “literally would withhold exculpatory evidence throughout the case.” When defense counsel complained, Weissman waited until the guy “went to the bathroom or lunch, stick the documents under other [papers] on his table, and tell the judge the lawyer had it all along.” He did this even in murder cases, which Schoen knew because, “his rats have come to me to admit their role in it.”

    If true, this is a Brady violation, about as bad as it gets.

    The Times has frequently discussed the rule, saying it ought to be “obvious,” to “prosecutors with any sense of fairness” that they have to “inform a defendant’s lawyer of evidence that could be favorable to the defendant’s case.” The paper complains about the “near complete lack of punishment for prosecutors who flout the rule.”

    Democrats are demanding that ICE agents be stripped of their qualified immunity? Federal prosecutors like Weissmann have absolute, blanket immunity for their actions.

    Schoen noted that Weissmann’s unsavory tactics “ruined” some of the biggest criminal cases ever tried. For example, he led the federal prosecution of Arthur Andersen LLP, a major player in the Enron scandal. But because of his extreme overreach on jury instructions (agreed to by the pliant judge) the Supreme Court unanimously reversed the conviction.

    In terms of Weissmann’s appearance of fairness, Schoen said Weissmann is a “Trump hater and Clinton sycophant.”

    Saying he could “go on and on,” Schoen singled out only two other Trump/Russia investigators with personal and political baggage: Jeannie Rhee, who “was actually Clinton’s lawyer in the email investigation,” and Greg Andres, “100% in the pro-Clinton, anti-Trump camp.”

    Snip.

    The media may want to ignore Barry Krischer, but the Epstein files don’t.

    Palm Beach’s Democratic district attorney, Krischer spent years going after Rush Limbaugh for pain pills — raiding drugstores, seizing records, and leaking to the press — before finally dropping all charges. But when the Palm Beach police handed him a child sex ring implicating Epstein, a major Democratic donor, Krischer intentionally tanked the case.

    There was no excusing it: The police’s meticulous investigation gave us pretty much everything we know today about Epstein’s crimes. The media have raged against U.S. attorney Alex Acosta for his sweetheart plea deal with Epstein a few years later, solely because he was Trump’s first Secretary of Labor. Krischer makes Acosta look like Elliot Ness.

    Instead of locking up Epstein and putting an end to his sexual predations on young girls back in 2006, Krischer’s office treated the girls as if they were the ones on trial. Prosecutor Lanna Belohlavek accused the teens of prostitution, asking them, “You’re aware that you committed a crime?” She also grilled them about their drug and alcohol use, body piercings and posts on MySpace.

    After a presentation like that, the grand jury ended up charging Epstein with only one count of soliciting prostitution. Krischer released him on bond. No prison sentence, no fine — and no ankle monitor to get in the way of massages.

    One of Epstein’s semi-literate emails gives us some insight into Krischer’s thinking. Reporting a conversation between the Democratic prosecutor and the Democratic former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, Epstein says Krisher believed that “what i did was barely crimianl but basically inapporritate,,, “ [spelling in original].

    Perhaps this was merely Epstein’s self-flattering version of the conversation. Except we know what Krischer did. Back pain pills: Bigger than the Manson murders! Raping 14 year-olds: Basically “inapporritate”

    (Hat tip: Director Blue.)

  • A few days ago we talked about the appearance of the word “jerky” in Epstein communications. Well, the Podcast of the Lotus Eaters (Sargon of Akkad, Firas Modad and “Nate” AKA MrHReviews) delve into the Epstein files and notice a lot more weird food references that appear to be codeword for…something else. Including:
    • Shrimp
    • Tuna
    • Pizza
    • Grape soda

    And they watch the Asmongold jerky clip as well.

    “There’s not enough evidence to say that this is a satanist network or that this is a child eating network.”
    “That’s very restrained of you.”
    “Yes. And I’m willing to accept that they might be all of these things.”

    “Epstein is messaging [I assume Peter] Mandelson saying, quote, I love the torture video. It’s [hard] to think of a good context for that.”

    They also note how a journalist who dismissed “Pizzagate” as a “right wing conspiracy” later went to prison for child rape.

  • I don’t know what to make of this, but the possibilities range from dark to very, very, very dark…

    LinkSwarm For November 14, 2025

    Friday, November 14th, 2025

    Happy Anti-Communism Week everyone! (In addition, of course, to May 1st being one of two Victims of Communism Day.) The #SchumerShutdown ends with a whimper, a whole lot of SNAP fraud has been uncovered, more Democrats committing fraud, Chip Roy wants a complete immigration halt, Ukraine hits a bunch more Russian oil refineries, some semiconductor shenanigans, another company leaves Delaware for Texas, some tech companies in trouble, an interesting new pistol design, and a novel theory on “AI-related layoffs.”

    It’s the Friday LinkSwarm!

    As a side note, the mosquitos have been brutal the last few days. Possibly because it’s been a very warm (though largely dry) November, and the bats have already migrated south.

  • Our short, mild national nightmare is officially over.

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday night signed a continuing resolution at the White House that ends the record-breaking 42-day federal government shutdown.

    The Senate passed the resolution on Monday and the House passed it earlier Wednesday evening. The resolution will keep the entire government funded through Jan. 30, and extends funding for military construction, Veterans Affairs, the Department of Agriculture, and Congress beyond that, through Sept. 30.

    Trump slammed Democrats for causing the shutdown by refusing to go along with a clean continuing resolution for over a month, and urged voters to remember the party responsible for causing the six-week-long chaos during next year’s midterms.

    “Republicans never wanted a shutdown and voted 15 times for a clean continuation of funding,” Trump said. “The Democrats shutdown has inflicted massive harm … So I just want to tell the American people, you should not forget this when we come up to midterms and other things. Don’t forget what they’ve done to our country.”

    The resolution gives backpay to many federal workers and reinstates employees who were fired during the shutdown, but does not include an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies despite it having been a key Democratic demand in the shutdown. The subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year.

  • And what did Chuck Schumer get for shutting down large portions of the federal government for more than a month? Two things: “Jack” and “Squat.”

    I hear that if you call Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s office, the hold music is Cheap Trick’s “Surrender.”

    Last Tuesday night, Democrats were jubilant, convinced they had just inflicted the first of many consequential defeats upon their detested foes, President Trump and the Republican Party. And now here we are, six days later, and Democrats are once again disappointed, infuriated, and at each other’s throats.

    For the past 41 days, Republicans have had 53 senators willing to reopen the government, joined by Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, and “independent” Angus King of Maine, who caucuses with the Democrats. But it requires 60 votes to cut off debate and bring the legislation to the floor for a vote, and thus to reopen the government, Republicans needed at least four more Democrats to change their mind.

    Last night, five additional Democratic senators agreed to vote to reopen the government — and in the eyes of their fellow Democrats, effectively surrendered. Tim Kaine of Virginia, Dick Durbin of Illinois, Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, Jacky Rosen of Nevada, and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire shifted their positions.

    Those eight agreed to reopen the federal government at current funding levels through January 30, and in exchange, all they needed was a pledge from Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota to hold a vote on legislation to extend the Obamacare exchange premium subsidies by the second week of December.

    There are one or two other deal-sweeteners in there for Kaine, notably an attempt to reverse more than 4,000 federal layoffs the Trump administration announced in the shutdown, and language to prevent future layoffs through January 30.

    Snip.

    Republicans just got the government reopened in exchange for a promise of a vote — not even promise of passage! — and rehiring government workers who were on the job on September 30. That’s a very small price to pay, and Republicans didn’t have to get rid of the filibuster, the ultimate short-term gain, long-term loss for Republicans in the Senate.

  • 500K Double Dippers, 5K Dead People Found on SNAP in 29 States.”

    Across three-fifths of the United States, the Trump administration has found half a million people receiving SNAP benefits twice over and 5,000 dead people receiving them. In deep blue states, the fraud is probably much worse.

    It is important to clarify that 20+ states out of the 50 did not comply with the federal government’s request for information on SNAP beneficiaries, likely because they are trying to hide how many illegal aliens are illicitly receiving food stamps. So the horrifying numbers revealed by U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins on Laura Ingraham’s Fox News show, The Ingraham Angle, are actually incomplete, and will probably be much higher if the administration can make radical Democrat states provide the necessary data.

    Snip.

    The secretary continued to list off food stamp recipient statistics: “80% [are] able-bodied Americans, meaning they can work, they don’t have small children at home, they’re not taking care of an elderly parent. They can work, and they choose not to work, of course, because they’re getting significant benefits from the taxpayer.”

    We need to restore shame to able-bodied adults living on the public dole.
    (Hat tip: Stephen Green at Instapundit.)

  • Texas Republican congressman Chip Roy wants a complete immigration freeze until the system is fixed.

    A Texas congressman is proposing a “freeze” on all immigration until the federal government fixes the country’s broken system.

    U.S. Rep. Chip Roy (R–TX) said Wednesday he is introducing a bill called the “Pause Act” that will freeze all immigration until Congress achieves certain objectives, including reforming chain migration and birthright citizenship and ending H-1B visas.

    He said the nation’s record-high foreign-born population is creating “a cultural problem about who we are as Americans.”

    Roy, who is in a four-way race to be the Republican nominee for Texas attorney general in 2026, explained his proposal on The Benny Show.

    In addition to the immigration freeze and related reforms, Roy called for revisiting Plyler v. Doe, a case originating in Texas that resulted in a 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision requiring states to fund the education of illegal alien children.

    Roy also said his bill would require vetting people for their adherence to Sharia law.

    “Why are we importing any human being that is adherent to Sharia law, which is totally contrary to the Constitution, and our values, and Western civilization?” Roy asked host Benny Johnson.

    “In Texas, we’ve been dealing with the brunt of the illegal immigration influence. But now we’re seeing, I think, the ramifications of the H-1B system and how it has been abused, in addition to chain migration and diversity visas, which we’ve been trying to fix for a long time, and we’ve been unable to do so,” said Roy.

    Mostly agree with this, though there would probably have to be a way for individual exceptions to be made (say, a foreign Christian under a death threat from jihadists, or a Russian or Chinese defector, or a foreign NBA draft choice). But it should be so narrow as to require the personal approval of DHS Director Kristi Noem…

  • There are Somalis in Minnesota who wouldn’t vote for far leftist Somali Omar Fateh because he was from a different Somali clan, and they want members of the rival clan kicked out of the country…
  • Ukrainian drones hit the Saratov oil refinery for the fourth time since August.
  • They also hit the Orsk oil refinery, some 1600km from the Kharkiv.
  • Ukrainian drones also attacked the Russian Taneko oil refinery in Nizhnekamsk.
  • They also hit multiple targets in Novorossiysk, including both the oil terminal and the S-300/400 system defending it. Also, there’s no way I can donate €100 right now, but I really want one of those “This Is Fine” patches…
  • They also hit two oil depots and a fuel train in Crimea.
  • “Nearly 7,000 transport companies in Russia on verge of bankruptcy.
  • Glorious footage of a Ukrainian Mi-8 door gunner taking out a Shahed drone with a minigun:

  • “Top 20 Outrages of Norm Eisen’s War on America.”

    Orchestrating Over 180 Anti-Trump Lawsuits Through CREW: As co-founder of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), Eisen led hundreds of ethics complaints and lawsuits against the Trump administration, often perceived as partisan harassment that politicizes oversight and strains constitutional separation of powers.

    Snip.

    Involvement in USAID Funding Scandal: Accused of ties to $17M misappropriation via family-linked NGO, raising corruption concerns in foreign aid.

    Plenty more at the link.

  • (Heavy sigh) Look, I’ve been avoid the whole stupid Tucker Carlson thing because he hasn’t been a particularly important part of the mediascape for a while, and plenty of other people were already dog-piling him. Yet, this week he seemed to turn up some pretty interesting information on would-be Trump assassin Thomas Crooks. Namely that he was a pro-Trump supporter…until he radically changed his tune in early 2020.

    On July 19, 2019 Crooks writes: “Ilhan Omar and others are invaders and should honestly be killed and their dead bodies sent back.”

    On July 20, 2018, Crooks writes: “If youre saying trump is a bad president you arent a patriot as trump is the literal definition of Patriotism”

    Seven hours after that comment, Crooks writes: “I hope a quick painful death to all the deplorable immigrants and anti-trump congresswoman who dont deserve anything this countru [sic] has given them”

    Later that evening he wrote: “Everyone of the Trump hat-ing democrats deserve to have their heads chopped of and put on steaks for the world to see what happens when you fuck with America”

    These types of comments continued for months, “and became increasingly violent.”

    “If any of the democratic candidates win. They wont be in there for long. Because unlike the dems we have guns and lots of them”

    He also quoted Mao – writing “The only real political power comes from the barrel of a gun.”

    The Change:

    In early 2020 as the pandemic shifted into the headlines, crooks “radically” changed – writing of “trumps stupidity.”

    He then began to mock the idea of the deep state – writing that “The deep state is simply made up of anybody who dis-agrees with the right wing. Conversation over.”

    In Feb. 2020, Crooks called out Trump supporters as “brainwashed,” and a “cult.”

    Later that day, Crooks called Trump a racist.

    And in April 2020 when the COVID panic was in full swing, Crooks became pro-lockdown, writing “It seems that you people don’t understand that sometimes Public safety comes before your Personnel rights.”

    He then wrote: “…going to a chinese new years party in america isn’t putting you at risk for corona virus because believe it or not viruses don’t spread through race like Tucker Carlson probably told you.”

    In May of 2020, Crooks called Republican concerns over voter fraud “ignorant.”

    He then wrote a comment that sounded like a “digital manifesto,” Carlson reports.

    “they only way to fight the gov is with terror-ism style attacks, sneak a bomb into an essential building a set it off before anyone sees you, track down any important people/politicians/military leaders etc and try to asasinate them. Any sort of head fight is suicide and even ambush/surprise attacks likely aren’t going to end well.”

    Sounds like another “known wolf,” doesn’t it? And the assertion that “there’s no deep state” (combined with what else we know about the assassination) makes you go “Hmmm.”

  • “Obamacare’s Effect on Health Insurance Costs: It Makes Everyone Else Poor.'”

    Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) is pushing back on the idea that the Affordable Care Act (ACA), known as Obamacare, has made health insurance costs more affordable, saying, “Obamacare makes everyone else poor.”

    Lee shared a graphic, first posted by President Trump on Truth social, showing how major health insurance company stocks have performed since the ACA was enacted in 2010 to November 2025.

    The seven major health insurance companies depicted on the graph show gains of anywhere from 414% to 1177% in their stock prices between March 2010 and November 2025.

    Lee called out the insurance providers, noting that they’re “making money hand over fist” but not because they are providing “new & innovative ways of making Americans healthier.”

    Instead, Lee says, these health insurance companies are prospering due to the bureaucratic barriers that prevent new competition and from massive subsidies from the federal government.

  • The Saudis are getting ready to purchase 48 F-35s.
  • “California Governor Gavin Newsom’s Former Chief of Staff Indicted on Public Corruption Charges.

    California Governor Gavin Newsom’s former chief of staff Dana Williamson was arrested Wednesday in an FBI corruption probe and charged with multiple counts of bank and wire fraud.

    Federal authorities accused Williamson, 53, of participating in a scheme to funnel campaign money from former federal Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra into a personal account. Sean McCluskie, Becerra’s former chief of staff, was named as a co-conspirator.

    “This is a crucial step in an ongoing political corruption investigation that began more than three years ago,” U.S. Attorney Eric Grant said in a statement. “As it always has, the U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue to work tirelessly with our law enforcement partners to protect the people of California from political corruption.”

    Williamson and McCluskie stole $225,000 between February 2022 and September 2024 from Becerra’s dormant state campaign fund, the federal indictment says. The Department of Justice investigation into the matter began three years ago, under former President Joe Biden’s administration, FBI Sacramento Special Agent in Charge Sid Patel said.

    “The news today of formal accusations of impropriety by a long-serving trusted advisor are a gut punch,” Becerra told local outlet KCRA 3.

    Williamson was hit with 23 charges, including conspiracy to commit fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and obstruct justice, subscribing to false tax returns, and making false statements, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

    Democratic political consultants are so money-hungry they’ll rake graft off other Democrats. Big fleas have little fleas…

  • Man, it sure seems like a lot of prominent Democratic politicians are committing mortgage fraud. ‘Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) was hit with a federal criminal referral for alleged mortgage and tax fraud related to his purchase of a $1.2 million home in Washington, DC, that he claimed as a primary residence.” As Dwight notes: “You may remember Eric Swalwell for such hits as ‘banging a Chinese spy‘” and “threatening to use nuclear weapons against gun owners.”
  • Stephen Green wonders how the hell we let China buy a trailer park next door to a stealth bomber base.

    So a Chinese fraudster connected to Communist intelligence services wandered in from Canada and bought a trailer park next door to a stealth bomber base in Missouri.

    This is not the opening line of a surreal joke.

    Whiteman Air Force Base is home to our tiny fleet of B-2 bombers, and yet an RV park just a mile away “is one of several properties near U.S. military interests acquired by a web of shell companies, which are ultimately owned by a couple who live in Canada and belong to organizations controlled by disgraced Chinese tycoon and self-described former CCP intelligence ‘affiliate,’ Miles Guo,” according to a bombshell Daily Caller report.

    Someone in the federal government needs to get this fixed. Get a warrant to toss the entire trailer park to see what spectrum warfare equipment they might be using, then seize the place under eminent domain for national security reasons.

  • “Kansas AG charges small town mayor with illegally voting as a non-citizen day after winning second term.”

    ‘We now have tools, thanks to the current White House, that we haven’t had in over 10 years,’ said Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab, ‘that we can check through the SAVE program, to find out if folks end up on our voter rolls. And they could be a legal resident, but they’re not a citizen. We want to make sure that gets clarified.’

    Deport him.

  • Least you think I’m never critical of President Trump, I want to note that his trial balloon for 50 year mortgages is a really bad idea. It’s not a way to build wealth, and the only party getting rich off that deal is the banks. Financially, you’d be better off living in a van for a few years until you can afford a real mortgage.
  • This certainly has a whiff of scandal: “Houston ISD Sues Texas Attorney General to Block Release of Emails with California PR Firm. The district wants to keep communications with a PR firm from becoming public.”

    Houston Independent School District (ISD) filed a lawsuit against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to block the release of emails between the district and Los Angeles public relations firm Bryson Gillette.

    Bryson Gillette is former Obama aide Bill Burton’s public relations firm run by Democratic operatives. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was a senior adviser there.

    Bryson Gillette was involved with the district’s rebranding in May. Houston ISD’s Chief of Public Affairs and Communications Alex Elizondo told an advisory committee that the district had a brand identity that “isn’t inviting or super compelling.”

    A Houston ISD spokesperson said the rebrand came at no additional cost to the district and coincided with the rollout of new district and campus website designs scheduled for August.

    According to the suit, ABC13 News requested one month of emails between Houston ISD and Bryson Gillette on May 8, which the district received on May 9. On May 21, the district asked Paxton to withhold documents and submitted the required materials to the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) asserting attorney-client privilege.

    The OAG issued a ruling on August 12, ordering Houston ISD to release the records and stating that attorney-client privilege did not apply.

    Houston ISD filed a lawsuit in Travis County on September 11, looking to block the emails from release.

    Makes you wonder what they’re hiding, doesn’t it?

  • Federal judge threatens to sanction California for ‘misleading’ him in ‘gender secrecy’ case. State claimed lawsuit over muzzling teachers, hiding students gender identity from parents was moot because it removed FAQ page with challenged policies, but they secretly popped up again in required teacher training.”

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom has repeatedly slurred a federal judge by name, echoing President Trump’s history of diatribes against judges even before the current Democrat started copying the former Democrat’s social media style and insulting nicknames.

    The perceived contender for the 2028 Democratic nomination for president may cluck his tongue again when he sees the latest order from U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez in a lawsuit against The Golden State’s alleged mandate on school districts to hide from parents their children’s asserted gender identity at odds with sex.

    The President George W. Bush nominee ordered state Attorney General Rob Bonta and the California Department of Education to “show cause” on why they should not be sanctioned for “misleading” Benitez so he would remove them from the suit by teachers who allege their school district muzzled them and parents of “gender incongruent children.”

    The state defendants’ motions to dismiss and opposition to the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment claimed that CDE had “withdrawn and conclusively replaced” an FAQ page that contained the challenged policies, which they claimed was the “only basis” for being named defendants and thus made the case moot, Benitez wrote.

    “However, evidence demonstrates that the CDE may have merely moved the challenged content of the FAQ page to a new, required ‘PRISM’ training module,” as documented by the plaintiffs’ lawyers at the Thomas More Society, the judge said, ordering state defendants to explain their behavior Nov. 17 in court.

    “From day one, officials from the local school district all the way to the governor’s mansion have tried to deflect responsibility” but “have now been caught not only lying to California taxpayers but attempting to mislead the Court to escape accountability,” TMS Executive Vice President Peter Breen said in a statement.

  • “The special election for Texas Senate District 9 will continue into a runoff with two candidates: Republican Leigh Wambsganss and Democrat Taylor Rehmet.”

    Based on early voting and some voting day results, no candidate secured over 50 percent of the votes cast, so the two highest vote recipients will move on to the runoff election, the date of which remains to be set by Gov. Greg Abbott.

    The North Texas Senate seat was vacated when former state Sen. Kelly Hancock (R-North Richland Hills) resigned and was appointed by Abbott to fill the vacancy as the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts.

    Snip.

    Wambsganss was endorsed early on in the race by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who has vocally opposed expansion of casino gambling in Texas. She has also received support from Texans United for a Conservative Majority (TUCM), which opposes gambling expansion as well. Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a group not frequently on the same side of an electoral battle as TUCM, has also supported Wambsganss.

  • Leave it to Sargon of Akkad to point out the obvious: Female prison guards shouldn’t guard male prisoners. And vice versa.
  • “Substrate’s claims about revolutionary ASML-beating chipmaking technology scrutinized.” That’s because they’re bunk.

    The Substrate startup has been doing the rounds in the news lately, thanks to its proposition of making chips using particle accelerators and X-rays instead of conventional EUV lithography, claiming it can eventually have angstrom-sized features at only $10,000 per wafer—in U.S. fabs, no less.

    Oooo, where to begin? IBM tried experimenting with x-ray lithography in the 1980s and 90s, and found the rays were too energetic to use because they damaged wafers.

    And technically, semiconductor equipment manufacturing already has particle accelerators: they’re called ion implanters and they’re used for gate dopants. Axcelis (formerly Eaton Semiconductor) and Applied Materials (both companies I worked for in the 1990s) make good money selling them, and there are a whole bunch of limits-of-physics reasons why you can’t use them for lithography. (Historical trivia: Applied Materials used to have their own in-house designed ion implanters, but their current offerings trace back to a competitor named Varian they bought in 2011.)

    Those are bold claims, and an article by Fox Chapel Research (FCR) is seriously questioning whether they pay off.

    The write-up is the first of two parts, and takes aim at not just the seemingly outlandish technological claims, but also at the track record of the venture’s founders, as well as the overall messaging on Substrate’s website. The start-up is backed by various investment funds, namely but not only Founders Fund, of whom Peter Thiel is part of.

    The report says the founders are James and Oliver Proud, who reportedly have no experience in the semiconductor industry, nor do any of the investor funds. James’ latest venture was apparently the Sense sleep tracker, a product that had its inception on Kickstarter to the tune of $2.5m, but didn’t materialize until funding rounds raised over $50m. After release, the tracker was found to be borderline useless by reviewers and drew many comparisons to a scam.

    Yeah, that reeks of a scam. Avoid. (See also: “China’s Semiconductor Industry: Shell Games All The Way Down.”)

  • “Wendy’s Is Closing Roughly 300 Restaurants This Year and Next.”

  • ClowfishTV floats an interesting theory: A lot of those “AI-related” layoffs are just companies using that as an excuse to purge the woke from the ranks.

  • Coinbase Leaves Delaware For “Greener Pastures” In Texas As Exodus Continues.”

    For more than half a century, Delaware stood as America’s corporate capital, renowned for its business-friendly laws, respected Chancery Court, and consistent legal rulings. But in recent years, leftist activist lawmakers and politicized judges have undermined that very foundation, sparking an exodus of major companies seeking stability and fairness to more welcoming states like Texas and Nevada.

    On Wednesday morning, Coinbase joined the growing exodus, announcing on its website and in a Wall Street Journal op-ed by Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal that it is moving its state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas.

    “For decades, Delaware was known for predictable court outcomes, respect for the judgment of corporate boards, and speedy resolutions,” Grewal wrote in the op-ed.

    However, he pointed out that recent inconsistent Chancery Court rulings and reliance on ad hoc legislative fixes do not create a sustainable business environment.

    “Our decision to leave is about ensuring more predictable opportunities for the company, our shareholders, our customers and the new on-chain ecosystem we’re building,” he noted, adding, “Texas offers efficiency and predictability, in part thanks to recent corporate-law reforms that enhance governance flexibility and legal predictability.”

    Grewal concluded, “Delaware wasn’t always the go-to choice for companies. At one point it was New Jersey, and before that New York. We’ve reached another inflection point in corporate law. The more states that can credibly attract companies, the better—and we’d like to see Delaware step up to stay in the mix. But as for Coinbase, you can find us in Texas….”

    The exodus list from Delaware increases:

    • Tesla: Moved to Texas.
    • SpaceX: Moved to Texas.
    • Trump Media & Technology: Moved to Florida.
    • Dropbox: Moved to Nevada.
    • TripAdvisor: Moved to Nevada.
    • Roblox: Moved to Nevada.
    • Pershing Square: Moved to Nevada.
    • The Trade Desk: Moved to Nevada.
    • AMC Networks: Moved to Nevada.
    • Madison Square Garden Sports: Moved to Nevada.
    • Fidelity National Financial: Voted to move to Nevada.

    So was a Delaware judge letting Elon Musk know how much he hated him for supporting Trump worth it?

  • Texas Governor Abbott officially files for a fourth term, and is endorsed by President Trump.
  • Incumbent state rep Tom Craddick (R-Midland) has filed for re-election to his 30th term.
  • San Francisco train driver falls asleep while driving. Brown alert ensues. It’s a greatfentanylmystery how this could happen…
  • “Brazil carves through Amazon rainforest for new highway to ferry global climate conference elites.”

  • “750-meter-long Chinese bridge partially collapses just weeks after opening.” From a landslide, but I’m betting the usual Chinesium/tofu drugs construction quality didn’t help…
  • Google is investing $40 billion in Texas AI data centers.

    At its Midlothian Data Center, alongside a number of state officials, Google announced a $40 billion data center infrastructure investment in Texas.

    Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and its parent company Alphabet, said that the investment will go toward the construction of three data center campuses located in Armstrong and Haskell counties.

    Armstrong County is southeast of Amarillo. Haskell County is north of Abilene. Both counties have a whole lot of nothing there.

    “They say that everything is bigger in Texas – and that certainly applies to the golden opportunity with AI,” Pichai stated.

    “This investment will create thousands of jobs, provide skills training to college students and electrical apprentices, and accelerate energy affordability initiatives throughout Texas.”

    Gov. Greg Abbott said the new Google AI data center announcement is “a Texas-sized investment in the future of our great state.” U.S. Sens. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Ted Cruz (R-TX) were also in attendance, along with Congressman Jake Ellzey (R-TX-06) and a number of other local officials.

    “Google’s $40 billion investment makes Texas Google’s largest investment in any state in the country and supports energy efficiency and workforce development in our state,” Abbott added. “We must ensure that America remains at the forefront of the AI revolution, and Texas is the place where that can happen.”

    Google has already officially broken ground on two other data centers in the state: one in Midlothian in 2019, and the other in Red Oak in 2023. The technology company has since announced further investments into data and cloud infrastructure to the tune of $2.7 billion.

    This most recent announcement of a $40 billion investment will focus on building out infrastructure to support the three new data centers. Some of that investment includes building up new and existing energy storage facilities, advanced water use operations, and partnering with universities to offer technology training and education.

    My reservations about Google’s AI notwithstanding, that will offer a bunch of real jobs for real Texans…assuming the AI bubble doesn’t burst before they get built.

  • Remember when Adobe’s new terms and conditions demanded you give them unlimited rights to anything you created with their tools, forever? Well, now their stock is in the toilet, you can’t own any of their software, only rent it, and there’s a big class action lawsuit against them.
  • Speaking of tech firms in trouble, video game maker Ubisoft (makers of Prince of Persia and Assassin’s Creed games) has not only postponed an earnings report, they’ve suspended stock trading. I can’t recall a single instance where that was a good sign. The last time we mentioned Ubisoft, they were pissing off Japanese gamers for including a black samurai in one of their games…
  • Ian McCollum looks at the new Rideout Arsenal Dragon, a low-bore-axis, lever-delayed pistol. It’s funky looking and has some interesting features, including complete non-tool disassembly. However, the price point would make it way too expensive to consider even if I had a job, he experiences several firing malfunctions testing it (though it is a prototype), and I fear the tiny little tabs it uses may not hold up under heavy use. Still a pretty interesting design.
  • Hasan Piker arrested in China over meme. Sadly, they let him go before he could get to experience more of the communism he professes to love…
  • Disney+ wants to flood you with AI slop.
  • Critical Drinker on the Production Hell of Groundhog Day.
  • “With Cheney Dead, Iraq Finally Admits They Had WMDs All Along.”
  • “Democrats Agree To End Shutdown In Exchange For 15% Off Coupon To Cracker Barrel.”
  • “Congress Prepares To Pivot From Doing Nothing Because Of The Shutdown To Doing Nothing Because They’re Congress.”
  • Dave Ramsey In Critical Condition After Learning Of 50-Year Mortgage.”
  • “Latest Tucker Guest Bigfoot Reveals How Mind-Controlling Chemtrails Are Sprayed Over The Flat Earth By The Jews.”
  • Stampede!

    (Hat tip: Ace of Spades HQ.)

  • I’m still between jobs. Feel free to hit the tip jar if you’re so inclined.





    LinkSwarm For August 7, 2020

    Friday, August 7th, 2020

    Welcome to another Friday LinkSwarm! Rioters, Democrats, Iran and China are all behaving badly.

  • Remember that this weekend is a sales tax holiday on back-to-school items like clothing and paper in Texas. It should apply to onine shopping as well, so feel free to throw some shirts into your Amazon basket.
  • The Democratic Party is unfit to govern:

    We are fortunate indeed to have real world results that we can look at for how well or how poorly governing philosophies and agendas work. America’s major cities have been dominated by the Democratic Party for decades, and the results are in.

    All but 3 of America’s largest cities are run by Democratic mayors. The 3 largest cities – New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, are losing population every year.

    Several of the most violent cities in America, including Albuquerque, Memphis, Detroit, Chicago and Washington, DC are run by Democrats.

    States that are bleeding population every year due to high taxation, over-regulation, decaying cities and failing public services including New York, Connecticut, California and others are all run by Democrats.

    States that have low to no income taxes, are right-to-work and favor energy development do better economically than high tax, forced union and energy unfriendly states. According to the annual economic outlook rankings published by the American Legislative Exchange Council Center for State Fiscal Reform, in 2019 the bottom ten states were all run by Democrats and the top 10 states except two were run by Republicans.

    Needless to say, the top 10 states all have higher GDP, better quality public services, and are experiencing net in-migration. Nevada is an outlier in that it recently flipped blue. However, they have no personal income taxes, a low corporate income tax and they are a right to work state.

    Finally, all of the bottom ten states have net out-migration, high tax burdens, and lower quality of life.

    The evidence couldn’t be more clear. Democrats are incapable of governing well, or in some cases, such as Seattle or Chicago, governing at all. Every single city that has problems with decaying infrastructure, gentrification, crime, violence, homelessness and other social pathologies are governed by Democrats. They promise a boundless cornucopia of “free” (i.e. taxpayer-funded) services and programs to meet every demand of the creeping socialism we’re seeing in America, at the cost of trampling people’s constitutional rights including property rights.

  • “In Portland, Seattle, Homeland Security Is Facing Organized, Criminal Activity.”

    Critics assailing the Department of Homeland Security for “over-stepping their bounds” in Portland have it 100 percent wrong. The department is in the right.

    Further, its actions thus far should just be the first step in disrupting the organized violence aimed at intimidating public officials, injuring law enforcement officers, destroying public and private property and making our streets less safe.

    Let’s be clear. We are not talking about “peaceful protests.” What is going on in Portland, as well as Seattle and some other is an array of criminal activity: rioting, looting, arson, assaulting law enforcement officers and more. This is flat out criminal activity.

    And it is not all spontaneous. This is organized criminal activity.

    For starters, the rioters are targeting cities where public officials have created a more permissive environment. They have restricted the actions of local and state law enforcement. When rioters are arrested, they release them quickly, refusing to prosecute.

    Moreover, these officials refuse to cooperate with federal law enforcement. In sum, they have turned their cities into “soft targets” for criminals.

  • More in the same same vein: “Violent Crime Explodes Across American Cities Following Nationwide Protests.”

    Violence has spiked in cities nationwide following weeks-long anti-police protests over the death of George Floyd, according to government statistics and media reports.

    Residents in Minneapolis have created patrol groups to protect themselves after the city’s crime spike, and shootings in Atlanta rose 265% compared to last year during an almost month-long period. Seattle’s “Capital Hill Autonomous Zone” (CHAZ) led to a 525% increase in crime, including the death of two teenagers.

    As crime rates rose, activists have called to abolish the police, an idea that’s gained traction among liberals. Former Hillary Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon, singer John Legend and women’s soccer star Megan Rapinoe have all supported dismantling the police, and protesters have touted the idea during demonstrations.

    The Minneapolis City Council unanimously voted to dismantle their police department next May, and a school board in Oakland, California, voted to ban the police from its schools.

  • Amazingly, Austin police managed to avoid the stupidity of other cities who let rioters run amok:

    Saturday’s protest activity was billed as the biggest yet, at least in part due to the shooting of Garrett Foster. Foster was the man who apparently pointed his AK-47 rifle at the car window of driver Daniel Perry while protesters surrounded and pounded on his car during an unpermitted protest and illegal taking of the public street just before 10 p.m. on July 25. Perry, an Army sergeant and licensed handgun carrier, fired his weapon after Foster had used his rifle to order Perry to roll his car window down. Pointing a gun at someone can, obviously, be read as hostile action. Texas’s castle law covers drivers in vehicles defending themselves, including the use of deadly force.

    APD and the Texas Department of Public Safety were ready for Saturday’s action, making this post short.

    Law enforcement officers were deployed and ready downtown. According to a source familiar with Saturday’s events, no officers were injured. Little force was used in shutting down the protest — which illegally blocked streets and was intended to bring violence to Austin. No property was damaged despite the protesters’ plan. They did take roads illegally, briefly including Interstate 35, the main highway that runs through downtown Austin. Protesters harassed innocent diners and others downtown.

    These assholes, and the decision to let Austin become bumsville, is why so many downtown restaurants are in danger of closing. (Hat tip: Instapundit.)

  • New York’s Democratic attorney general Letitia James files a lawsuit to completely dissolve the NRA over Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre’s self-dealing. This is a blatantly political abuse of power that courts will strike down, but LaPierre’s crooked deals with Ackerman McQueen set them up for it.
  • Jeffrey Epstein hosted Bill Clinton on his private island, documents reveal.” Alas, I’ve already used the “You Don’t Say” meme…
  • “The Democrats’ Pro-Iran, Anti-Israel 2020 Platform.”

    The Democratic National Committee released a platform 180 degrees off from the spin. It’s so pro-Iran that the National Iranian-American Council, the de facto Iranian regime lobby in Washington, immediately “applauded” the DNC “for its forward-leaning platform commitments on issues of importance to the Iranian-American community.” It demonstrates that President Obama’s curious preference for the supremacists running the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood, rather than our traditional regional allies, has become mainstream Democratic ideology.

    Trump administration policies have brought the bloody Islamic Republic to its knees. The Democrats seek to restore its vitality by ending sanctions and re-entering President Obama’s odious Iran deal. Every faction across Israel’s notoriously fractious political spectrum agreed that this deal was an existential threat. Biden and the 2020 Democrats take the opposing view: Regime change is wrong; diplomacy and economic engagement can restrain the mullahs.

    Next up, the Gulf Arabs: A new generation of leaders have recently expanded women’s rights, confronted Islamism, acted to curb terrorism, deepened ties to the U.S. and moved towards ending the Arab/Israeli conflict. Biden and the 2020 Democrats prefer to “reset” those warm relations in order to keep America’s traditional Gulf allies at arms length.

    (Hat tip: Instapundit.)

  • Speaking of Iran, their accidental sinking of fake U.S. target carrier creates real port blockage.
  • “Based on the data, there seems to be no relationship between lockdowns and lives saved.”
  • Despite all that, Democrats want even harsher lockdowns. (Hat tip: Director Blue.)
  • “Five GOP lawmakers filed a lawsuit against Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott (R) over a contact-tracing contract signed with MTX Group in May. The Frisco-based private company agreed to a $295.3 million dollar deal after defeating several well-known corporations. But lawmakers argue that the bidding process bypassed constitutional requirements and voice concerns about the ability of MTX to mitigate privacy concerns.” The Republicans suing are State Reps Mike Lang, Kyle Biederman, William Zedler and Steve Toth, and state Senator Bob Hall. And the MTX contract does stink.
    

  • Everyone hates the MSM, and think that they’re making America worse.

    The mainstream media as a whole – especially the political news media in and around the DC/NYC/Beltway area – has two options: They can straighten up their acts and stop insulting the intelligence of their audiences or they can continue to show their (mostly left-wing) partisan stripes and turn audiences off.

    If recent history is any indication, however, they’ll be going with option two – because they’ve shown over and over again that when it comes to demonstrating a commitment to objective reporting versus pushing biased political angles that help Democrats, they will choose those biased political angles nearly every time.

  • 50 illegal aliens arrested at Laredo stash house.
  • Three charged in Twitter hack.

    Nima “Rolex” Fazeli, a 22-year-old from Orlando, Fla., was charged in a criminal complaint in Northern California with aiding and abetting intentional access to a protected computer.

    Mason “Chaewon” Sheppard, a 19-year-old from Bognor Regis, U.K., also was charged in California with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, money laundering and unauthorized access to a computer.

    A U.S. Justice Department statement on the matter does not name the third defendant charged in the case, saying juvenile proceedings in federal court are sealed to protect the identity of the youth. But an NBC News affiliate in Tampa reported today that authorities had arrested 17-year-old Graham Clark as the alleged mastermind of the hack.

    Wfla.com said Clark was hit with 30 felony charges, including organized fraud, communications fraud, one count of fraudulent use of personal information with over $100,000 or 30 or more victims, 10 counts of fraudulent use of personal information and one count of access to a computer or electronic device without authority. Clark’s arrest report is available here (PDF). A statement from prosecutors in Florida says Clark will be charged as an adult.

  • The strange story about the Russian-born, Cyprus-resident man who abandoned the ship carrying 2,750 metric tons of ammonium nitrate in the Beirut.
  • Social Justice Warrior Akilah Hughes sues Sargon of Akkad over his fair use of one of her videos, despite the judge telling her that was a bad idea, promptly gets her ass handed to her, and is ordered to pay $38,000 in attorney’s fees. Showing the same level of self-awareness that got her where she is, she attacks the judge and labels Sargon a “white supremacist.”
  • Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson buys the XFL for $15 million.
  • Remember Wirecard’s financial shenanigans? “Key Wirecard ‘Business Partner’ Turns Up Dead In The Philippines After Mafia Links Exposed.”
  • Tik-Tok: It’s really bad:

  • Texas is doing a better job than some states at controlling government spending, but is far from perfect:

  • “Riotous BLM Protesters Suddenly Realize They’re All White People.” (Hat tip: Stephen Green at Instapundit.)
  • I LOLed:

  • This week’s funny dog tweet:

  • Heh:

  • Iran’s Retaliation: A Big Nothingburger

    Thursday, January 9th, 2020

    I believe this is YouTube/Twitter personality Sargon of Akkad (though this is a different YouTube channel from his main one) on the big nothingness of Iran’s retaliation:

    “It looks like the Iranian regime is actually so impotent they couldn’t kill a single American.”

    “This was just the yappy dog, yapping.”

    (Hat tip: Poster TheWanderingJewels on this Instapundit thread for Stephen green linking yesterdays’s Iran piece.)