Saturday, November 01, 2025

Guardian reports Senate resolution against Trump tariff powers.

 Link. In part:

The US Senate took a stand against Donald Trump’s global tariffs affecting more than 100 countries on Thursday, voting to nullify the so-called “reciprocal” tariffs.

Four Republicans joined with all Democrats to vote 51-47 on a resolution to end the base-level tariffs that the president put into place via executive order.

It was the third time the Republicans have voted alongside Democrats on a tariff resolution this week, previously rallying to end tariffs targeting Brazil and Canada.

Going against Trump is rare for Republicans in his second term. But Republican senators Susan Collins of Maine, Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska joined the opposition party.

The vote comes as Trump is wrapping up a week in Asia, where he struck a deal with China to lower tariffs on Chinese goods into the country and get China to buy up US soya beans, a pain point of the trade wars that had farmers on edge, among other concessions.

Despite the opposition in the Senate, the House is unlikely to take any similar action.

The economy and its health stands apart from other questionable things, Crypto and Stephen Miller for examples. Hegseth and Noem can posture, but tariffs have so strong an effect that the Senate spoke.

Also that link to a rebuke of the Brazilian situation, where the linked item notes:

Trump has imposed 50% tariffs on Brazil, tying them to what he has called a “witch-hunt” prosecution of his far-right ally, the former president, Jair Bolsonaro. In July, he declared a national emergency with respect to “recent policies, practices, and actions of the Government of Brazil” that he said amounts to an “unusual and extraordinary threat”. Bolsonaro was convicted in September and sentenced to 27 years in prison for attempting a military coup in 2022.

“This president has said that their prosecution of a disgraced former politician is a national emergency for the United States. How could that be?” Kaine said in advance of the vote, accusing Trump of attempting an “end-run” around Congress. “If this is a national emergency for the United States, any president of any party could say that anything is a national emergency for the United States.”

Kaine also noted that the US ran a trade surplus of nearly $7bn with Brazil last year.

That was one of the most galling things Trump did, and saying that, you get a feel for how bad it was/is.

UPDATE: Another outlet from the UK reporting

 

Friday, October 31, 2025

Charlie Kirk got shot dead. The internet is full of podcasts about possible conspiracy. Yet --- where are the financial audits of who had what financial stake in Kirk, insurance dimensions, who were insiders and what money trail is there?

 2013, updated 2014, an AP item: https://tucson.com/news/nation-world/government-politics/article_e5d8d8c0-ed8c-5f22-a906-3dfaea00dabb.html

Mid-item :

“Any donor who thinks an organization needs $108 million for a three-state grassroots get-out-the-vote campaign is being taken advantage of,” said Erick Erickson, a nationally syndicated conservative talk radio host and frequent Trump critic. “It sounds like a grift.”

In a statement, Turning Point spokesman Andrew Kolvet said none of the group’s leaders have inappropriately benefited from their financial arrangements. If anything, he said, many were underpaid for their talents.

“If the so-called ‘experts’ know what it takes to build successful ballot chasing teams, why are conservatives apparently so bad at it?” Kolvet said.

Turning Point was founded in suburban Chicago in 2012 by Kirk and William Montgomery, a tea party activist, to proselytize on college campuses for low taxes and limited government.

Despite early misgivings, Turning Point enthusiastically backed Trump after he clinched the GOP nomination in 2016. Kirk served as a personal aide to Donald Trump Jr., the former president’s eldest son.

That's interesting. News then, now, not mentioned. Continuing mid item near the end-

Compensation also soared, with Kirk’s climbing from $27,000 in 2016 to more than $407,000 by 2021, tax records show. He bought three high-end properties, all worth over a million dollars. Millions more were paid out to a cluster of companies linked to a handful of group leaders and their allies, according to tax filings and business records.

Kolvet said that much of Kirk’s wealth was derived from his successful podcast and radio show, as well as public speaking fees, though he declined to provide earnings figures.

Yet specifics about how exactly Turning Point spends its money — and who benefits — are often difficult to discern because the IRS does not require nonprofit groups to publicly disclose detailed accounts of their expenditures. Meanwhile, many of Turning Point’s biggest vendors are limited liability companies that are registered in states that do not require public disclosure of ownership.

One branch, the Turning Point Endowment, held more than $55 million in reserve in 2022, while donors were courted to give more.

Kolvet said the money was part of Turning Point’s “50-100 year plan to continue reaching generation after generation of young Americans.” He added that the organization’s leaders were “good stewards of donor money.”

While building for the future, however, Turning Point has shown a willingness to spend lavishly.

In 2019, the group stated that its leaders would travel first-class or by charter plane, explaining later that it was sometimes needed to “ensure the uninterrupted success of the organization’s mission.”

In 2021, Turning Point sponsored a wedding reception for Kirk and his wife, Erika Frantzve, at the Fairmont Scottsdale Princess luxury hotel, which was also billed as a ninth anniversary celebration and fundraiser for the organization.

Kolvet said the event was separate from the couple’s small wedding ceremony, describing it as an “elegant and gracious way for Erika and Charlie to mark a landmark in the life of TPUSA (the 9th anniversary) while also inviting a much larger group of friends and family to celebrate a landmark in their own lives.”

Other expenditures defy easy explanation.

A $999,000 payment was made to a limited liability company in Nevada for a “research project on educational outputs,” according to 2020 tax documents. The company, called Clocktower LLC, was dissolved in 2022 and the only corporate officer listed in its business filings is the president of a firm that advises on tax avoidance strategies.

That's not chump change. It's a cashflow feeding many. The entire article should interest readers. Yet, now, with a dead Charlie nobody's talking money trail. Kash and Pam seem to have a perp and have shut things down without any forensic audits of anything or anybody. Nothing to see there, move on? Huh?

Ending paragraph of that years-earlier item:

“Any insinuation that anyone” at Turning Point “benefited from this is defamatory,” Kolvet said. 

That was a statement in a context, but it sure as hell fits today. WTF happened to follow the money?

Here is a YouTube of Charlie's chief-of-staff, (that likely having been a well compensated post), and was there a preacher McCoy's other son, a brother to Michael in TPUSA, well compensated leadership? With a role, of some kind, in the organization, before and after the shooting,  with what functions, responsibilities, powers, benefits and persona? Or not? These are basic questions of organizational structure and beneficial interests, which change however, after the publicity and fact of Charlie Kirk being shot dead on YouTube. 

Presuming there's money, now greater or not than 2013-14, FOLLOW IT, ALREADY!

That is basic Investigation 101 so who's doing it? 

------------------

BASIC QUESTIONS: Who takes over this cash cow, what person, persons, or group with money sloshing around, and what's the potential cash flow in the future, with all this current publicity? I don't know, but I know there's no harm in asking. What are the interrelationships of key people? Who gains, who doesn't?

All for now on this topic and related coverage. But it might show motive to remove Charlie, depending upon what inquiry yields.

________________UPDATE______________

Got it! Found on a web video, Ian Carroll, where about 2-1/2 min into the item, there is a Justin mentioned by Pastor McCoy. The pastor on a video clip loaded by Carroll, from some other resource unknown to Crabgrass.

Of interest? Crabgrass judges it so. All I know is what I find on the web.

FURTHER: One site, two items, here and here, one of which embedded the Carroll video. 

More in future posting, maybe. 

FURTHER: We'll see whether Charlie had left a will which will surface, or not. There was a ton of money sloshing around, so, we'll have to wait, but the answer exists and will surface. Was there a trust for the children set up, as you'd expect in big buck estate planning?

FURTHER: The widow says the show goes on. View the full statement she made. It should be profitable. There seems ambition to the voice, yet different persons will see her speech differently. I saw it as less rather than more. She is now the CEO of the show.

 FURTHER: Grief - https://d.ibtimes.co.uk/en/full/1764917/erika-kirk-jd-vance.webp

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

How's this for headlining?

https://www.startribune.com/former-minneapolis-city-council-member-arrested-suspected-of-driving-under-the-influence/601511831 

 Screen capture =


Right, first paragraph of the report does say "driving while . . ."

From the adroit headlining, she could have been standing on the sidewalk hammering on somebody's car with a hard object or her fist. DUI, and boy, that mug shot does show bleary eyes, a standard eigen description of police reports everywhere, car smelled of alcohol, slurred speech, etc. She really looks as if she's had a real snoot full of something, but not a stimulant. 

And either the nose ring was removed for the mugshot or she ditched it between pics.

Yes, the headline does imply an arrest, and therefore DUI implied, but say it. Don't headline like the way it was done if you pretend to be a statewide major newspaper in print and in the online world. That headline is below grade; subpar.

Bonus. Yes, creepy-geeky, but it was 1963 and proof Baez and Dylan had not much competition back then. This is better.

__________________UPDATE___________________

Here is a bonus MSM report about Trump. And about law and order, but not what you might expect. Related. These judges do have a hammer. Gavel, hammer, similar at least.

And all this other stuff is happening when the Trump Shutdown is the big story, the big hurt to the people.

____________FURTHER UPDATE_____________

Left.mn keeps at it, most recently Dan Burns posted.

 

 

The Trump wife is showing an intent toward SLAPP suing Hunter Biden too. For a billion bucks.

 USA Today ---

Why is Melania Trump threatening to sue Hunter Biden? Here's her story on meeting Donald

  • Hunter Biden claims Jeffrey Epstein introduced Donald and Melania Trump, a claim Melania Trump denies.
  • Melania Trump has threatened to sue Hunter Biden if he doesn't retract his claim.
  • Trump maintains she met her husband at a New York City nightclub in 1998.

First lady Melania Trump and former President Joe Biden's son are feuding over different accounts of how she met Donald Trump.

[...] The first lady on Aug. 6 threatened to sue for more than $1 billion if he didn't retract the claim, and Biden said in a follow up video, “F--- that. That’s not going to happen."  

[...] On Aug. 6, the first lady threatened to sue Biden for more than $1 billion if he doesn’t retract the claim.

The legal notice by Alejandro Brito, the first lady’s lawyer, demands that Biden "immediately retract the false, defamatory, disparaging and inflammatory statements made about Mrs. Trump."

Donald Trump said he encouraged his wife's legal action against Biden.

"Jeffrey Epstein had nothing to do with Melania," Trump said August. 14, during an interview with Fox Radio's Brian Kilmeade. "But they do that to demean. I told her to go ahead and do it. She was very upset about it."

Other outlets have also received notices from Melania Trump's lawyer over similar claims and issued apologies and retractions. But Biden doesn't seem poised to back down.

Same lawyer as sent the SLAPP letter to Michael Wolff. Brito. Reminds me of a brillo pad.

It's not worth the time to track down online copies of the Wolff letter and the Biden letter, but the Crabgrass guess is only names were changed, otherwise same SLAPP letter, same Donald behind it, same bullshit aimed to distance from the Epstein file. You, Donald, own the Epstein files, and allegedly Bondi told you you're in them, and there's no SLAPP claim that will change that. And using the wife as a weapon is shabby. Weaponize the wife - it rings pretty bad, and not well thought out, but we'll see. The New York state courts have the litigation started, Crabgrass opinion is Wolff is right, it's a SLAPP, and time will tell.

As to what's a SLAPP, or a threatned one, under New York law, readers can research that all they want.

With a layman's understanding, after reading a book about SLAPP lawsuits, Crabgrass' guess is it's one. Or the threat to push one, costing a defendant what it will. A billion? Is the Trump wife's reputation worth that? Opinions can range between yes and no, without guessing what the reputation is worth. Melania seems several cuts better than her spouse, but I'd not want to try to do dollar valuations. Melania is likeable.

The claim Melania challenges, mainly, is that she/Donald are unhappy with anyone saying Epstein introduced one to the other. A chance meeting at Kit Kat Club, they say, not Jeffrey. The USAToday item spells it all out, Melania/Donald version.

More coverage, here and here. It seems the Trump Shutdown is a bigger story. More people suffering real and actual injury.

 

 

All news is local. Strib publishes, "Roper: How the ‘slate for change’ could upend the Minneapolis mayoral election An alliance between Jacob Frey’s challengers may prove significant in the ranked-choice election." - By Eric Roper - The Minnesota Star Tribune - October 29, 2025

Keeping it tight - There are four candidates for  mayor of Minneapolis. One is the incumbent, not respected by Crabgrass, but somebody liked him since he's now in the seat, challenged by three others.

Frey, the incumbent has name recognition, being generally favored  by ranked-choice voting, as a second or third choice because people know the name. To overcome that, the other three have formed a slate, a bloc saying "Rank Us." One, Omar Fateh, got the city convention's endorsement, but by politics the State Dems pulled it - probably because they like Frey, as a middle road waffle.

So, for any reader who votes in that election, Crabgrass not being there -

 

image from within strib report: https://www.startribune.com/omar-fateh-dewayne-davis-jazz-hampton-slate-for-change-minneapolis/601508381

Let Frey retire to raising Black Orchids, or some such. Put in progress, sweep out detritus. Crabgrass goes with the endorsement, if ranked-choice voting; Fateh first. the others 2 and 3, and Frey not anywhere at all on the ballot.

  Because of incumbency, with its name recognition, putting Frey anywhere on the ballot enhances the chance he'd again get the seat while progressive options exist. Frey is a dweeb. Full of himself, over-prone to use the veto to override will of the Council. Swell-headed that way.

Worth noting, Crabgrass, in the Strib headline quoted in the Crabgrass headline would replace the word "upend" at least with a neutral "change" or more favorably, "reform" with its two meanings of forming anew, and improving. Did I say, Frey is a dweeb? He is. 

Also worth noting - all four candidates are running as Democrats, if the local GOP dredges up some candidate it would be irrelevant. Only Dems win within that particular urban setting - citywide. Some council seats fall into bad hands, but the Republicans are always a  backwater few. With Dems holding the majority, and the mayoral seat. 

Get Frey out of there, and see the difference improvement. Opinions will vary. 

.

MTG is on the warpath. Not that it is an unusual thing. But it is newsworthy. MSN carries the story.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/greene-says-johnson-refused-to-share-health-care-plans-on-gop-conference-call/ar-AA1PmuPg 

The item includes a video, and text about the Georgia Congresscritter, and a real mean copyright statement so the excerpt is short and readers are exhorted to go to the original MSM linked item. Briefly -

 [video omitted]

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) on Tuesday called out House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) for not providing any plans on a Republican alternative to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and tax subsidies set to expire at the end of the year.

“You left out that I said I have no respect for the House not being in session passing our bills and the President’s executive orders,” Greene wrote on social platform X, in response to a post from Punchbowl News’s Jake Sherman following a recent GOP conference call.

“And I demanded to know from Speaker Johnson what the Republican plan for healthcare is to build the off-ramp off Obamacare and the ACA tax credits to make health insurance affordable for Americans,” she added.

“Johnson said he’s got ideas and pages of policy ideas and committees of jurisdiction are working on it, but he refused to give one policy proposal to our GOP conference on our own conference call,” the Georgia Republican continued.  

[,,,] The comments come after Johnson said Monday that House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) was working with the heads of three committees to develop a Republican health care plan.

Greene and Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) have been among Republicans who see health care premiums as being a serious risk to their campaigns in the 2026 midterms.

[...] 

According to a recent poll sponsored by Undue Medical Debt and led by the nonpartisan research firm PerryUndem, 69 percent of respondents believe health care is too expensive.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

Well, leaving the video and analysis out but only excerpting their direct quoting, the poll included, and acknowledging the copyright statement by presenting it; fair use. Read it all at MSM. So, big copyright chestbeating while it's mostly quoting from Greene's X post, get real, live with fair use by Crabgrass.

UPDATE: While the noted/quoted item above omitted linking about Josh Hawley's backfilling, there is NBC:

After voting for Trump's megabill, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley wants to prevent a key Medicaid cut from taking effect

Hawley, on his congressional site, https://www.hawley.senate.gov/hawley-op-ed-dont-cut-medicaid/ - spends much disingenuous text repudiating one of the major provisions of the bill he voted for, to cover his ass, apparently, as he mixes in dissing the dems and touting Trump. (NOT worth reader time).

HAZELWOOD, Mo. — Four days after President Donald Trump signed his “big, beautiful bill” into law, one of the Republicans who voted for it wasn’t interested in touting the measure’s high-profile tax, immigration or health care provisions.

Instead, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., held an event here Tuesday centered on a less-noticed part of the nearly 1,000-page bill: an expanded fund for victims of nuclear waste, a bipartisan issue he worked for years to get across the finish line.

And when asked about the steep Medicaid cuts in the bill, Hawley continued to criticize them. Hawley said his “goal” is to ensure the provider tax changes, which will limit state reimbursement for Medicaid, don't go into effect in Missouri in 2030 — even as he helped to pass a piece of legislation that will do just that.

It illustrates the challenges Republicans face as they turn their attention to selling to the public the massive bill they’ve been working on for months, ahead of next year’s midterm elections.

“I think that if Republicans don’t come out strong and say we’re going to protect rural hospitals, then, yeah, I think voters aren’t going to like that,” Hawley told NBC News in an interview at St. Cin Park. “The truth of the matter is, we shouldn’t be cutting rural hospitals. I’m completely opposed to cutting rural hospitals period. I haven’t changed my view on that one iota.”

Hawley suggested he would work with Democrats to cut prescription drug pricing, a priority Trump has said he wants Congress to focus on, to pay for the tax cuts made permanent by the new law.

[UPDATE] Hawley, on record, "Republicans need to open their eyes: Our voters support social insurance programs. More than that, our voters depend on those programs. And there’s a reason for this that Republicans would do well to ponder. Our economy is increasingly unfriendly to working people and their families." [end UPDATE - highlighting added] 

On the topic of health care, MSM has reported: Many voters say health care unaffordable, are open to new insurance system: Poll - the item stating in part -

New polling has found that the majority of voters say health care in the U.S. is unaffordable and are open to a health insurance system that doesn’t tie coverage to employment.

Undue Medical Debt, a nonprofit that works to eliminate medical debt and supports policies to prevent new debt, sponsored the poll, which was led by the nonpartisan research firm PerryUndem. Along with a national survey, focus groups were also asked for their opinions on health care.

The poll was provided first to The Hill.

So, while the first quoted item negligently declined to link to the poll, we now have it:  https://unduemedicaldebt.org/bipartisan-support-for-policies-that-protect-people-from-medical-debt/ - stating in part:


Voters Show Strong Bipartisan Support for Policies that Protect People from Medical Debt - New Study

October 2025A new study sponsored by Undue Medical Debt finds that 2024 voters across party ID (Republicans, Independents and Democrats) agree that healthcare is unaffordable and health insurance coverage is failing people.  

Many respondents are under intense economic stress, and the high cost of healthcare is adding to the pressure. An overwhelming majority of voters recognize medical debt as a real and persistent threat — even those not experiencing a financial burden. For this reason, there is broad bipartisan support for states to pass commonsense laws that protect people from medical debt and associated burdens when they access healthcare. 

The goal of this study is to identify common ground among people of all political affiliations and backgrounds when it comes to protecting patients from medical debt. PerryUndem, a non-partisan research firm, conducted a series of focus groups and a survey. The following are insights from this research. 

About the Study

The study involved a 12-minute national survey of 1,319 2024 general election voters. The survey was fielded online from August 21 to September 2, 2025, using NORC’s nationally representative AmeriSpeak panel. The margin of sampling error for total survey results is ± 3.63 percentage points. 

The remainder of that item is quality content, so read it there. At this point, the study is well presented in this item and in the "Download Study" linked item, so Crabgrass readers are strongly urged to follow the link after reading the balance of this item, as linked to earlier. As worthy of copyright protection, deference is given the study; no excerpt, read it all on the copyright holder's site.  They deserve the full hit-count readers will provide, if readers do rotor over. 

FURTHER: Title of Study - Healthcare Affordability and Medical Debt - Findings from a National Study of 2024 Voters 

[Copyright is a thicket since it seems "fair use" is in the eye of the beholder. And copyright can be a fertile field for SLAPP litigation, big guy deep-pocketing little guy, via  Stretegic Litigation Against Public Participation. 

Leave it at that.]

 

Big in Hong Kong. Why? I have no fucking idea. There is no understanding here, none. But this info is from Google Analytics - access in last 24 hrs -- other meager numbers make sense - more than expected - Thank You, Readers.

 

If any reader can explain the Hong Kong numbers with any reliability beyond mere guessing, then:

email = 4crabgrass@gmail.com

please do not spam the gmail account - please

 

It's been a while since Crabgrass featured the EFF. So - . . .

 As a "member" on the mailing list, there is this, from a most recent email -

Featured Story: Our Speech-Defending Lawsuit Against the Trump Administration

If "free speech" only applies to opinions the government approves of, it's not really that free, is it? This basic concept seems to be lost on the Trump administration, which is using the threat of immigration enforcement to suppress dissent online. This year, the government launched a sprawling surveillance program to spy on the social media activity of millions of noncitizens and punish those who express views it doesn't like. This unconstitutional surveillance program is wrong and we're suing to stop it.

Since taking power, the Trump administration has created a mass surveillance program to monitor constitutionally protected speech by noncitizens lawfully present in the U.S. Using AI and other automated technologies, the program (sometimes called "Catch and Revoke") surveils the social media accounts and other online speech of visa holders with the goal of identifying and punishing those who express viewpoints the government doesn't like. This has been paired with a public intimidation campaign, silencing not just noncitizens with immigration status, but also the families, coworkers, and friends with whom their lives are integrated.


As EFF Staff Attorney Sophia Cope told The Verge, “If we’re a country that values free speech, then we should value it for everyone who’s here. Otherwise, it doesn’t really mean very much.”

Three labor unions, represented by EFF and co-counsel, sued the Departments of State and Homeland Security this month because this viewpoint-based surveillance program violates the First Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act. We're asking the court to stop this unconstitutional surveillance program which has silenced and frightened both citizens and noncitizens, and hampered the ability of the unions to associate with their members and potential members.

That sounds alright with me. Good luck to EFF and its lawyers, the cause seems just.

That said, there is more:

https://www.eff.org/ 

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/10/its-time-take-back-ctrl 

After bookmarking (favorites) those sites, consider this about paywalled scholarly journal access ++ 

Creating and sharing knowledge are defining traits of humankind, yet copyright law has grown so restrictive that it can require acts of civil disobedience to ensure that students and scholars have the books they need and to preserve swaths of culture from being lost forever.

Reputable research generally follows a familiar pattern: Scientific articles are written by scholars based on their researchoften with public funding. Those articles are then peer-reviewed by other scholars in their fields and revisions are made according to those comments. Afterwards, most large publishers expect to be given the copyright on the article as a condition of packaging it up and selling it back to the institutions that employ the academics who did the research and to the public at large. Because research is valuable and because copyright is a monopoly on disseminating the articles in question, these publishers can charge exorbitant fees that place a strain even on wealthy universities and are simply out of reach for the general public or universities with limited budgets, such as those in the global south. The result is a global human rights problem.

This model is broken, yet science goes on thanks to widespread civil disobedience of the copyright regime that locks up the knowledge created by researchers. Some turn to social media to ask that a colleague with access share articles they need (despite copyright’s prohibitions on sharing). Certainly, at least some such sharing is protected fair use, but scholars should not have to seek a legal opinion or risk legal threats from publishers to share the collective knowledge they generate.

Even more useful, though on shakier legal ground, are so-called “shadow archives” and aggregators such as SciHub, Library Genesis (LibGen), Z-Library, or Anna’s Archive. These are the culmination of efforts from volunteers dedicated to defending science.

SciHub alone handles tens of millions of requests for scientific articles each year and remains operational despite adverse court rulings thanks both to being based in Russia, and to the community of academics who see it as an ethical response to the high access barriers that publishers impose and provide it their log-on credentials so it can retrieve requested articles. SciHub and LibGen are continuations of samizdat, the Soviet-era practice of disobeying state censorship in the interests of learning and free speech.

Unless publishing gatekeepers adopt drastically more equitable practices and become partners in disseminating knowledge, they will continue to lose ground to open access alternatives, legal or otherwise.

EFF is proud to celebrate Open Access Week.

Source: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/10/civil-disobedience-copyright-keeps-science-going 

EFF does much other good stuff. They take donations.

https://www.eff.org/about 

https://supporters.eff.org/donate

 

No it isn't "BACK." The Republican House members, or at least their Whip, Tom Emmer, have made their congressional web CONTACT pages harder to get the message to them. To me, knowing they're responsible for the shutdown, but hiding from accountability, is crude. Face the music. Don't go hiding from the people telling you to STOP AND BE REASONABLE.


NO. NOT SO! --- source: https://www.whitehouse.gov/  --- Republicans sent AMERICA into SHUTDOWN!!

That "AMERICA IS BACK" is untrue - America is still half in hiding over causing the shutdown

Specifically, Republican House members, discernibly, are MIA and in hiding over their shutdown of out government - for example, compare contact pages at official gov sites, Amy Klobuchar vs. Tom Emmer. 

The formerly easy Emmer "contact page" thing is changed. Even using a capcha. They know responsibility for the shutdown is theirs, and want to avoid a landslide of public contact telling them so, and saying STOP! 

Repubs - Take responsibility, and accept accountability. Don't hide.

 Clearly it's speculative to base a conclusion of wanting to avoid a landslide of criticism, but the fact remains. It is easier for Citizen Crabgrass to navigate an opinion to Amy, rather than to Tom. 

That is an objective fact, and a Senator, one would expect, would be harder to reach than a local District Rep. Perhaps, Emmer being GOP Whip expects more grief over the shutdown, being in Repub leadership, and hence more responsible than rank and file GOP folks. But it's petty to hide. It shows. People notice.

It's cowardly.

_________________________UPDATE____________________

Still on whitehouse.gov, looking for truth. (Sad task)

From the site: 

 



Well. Compare a screen capture from today's online Strib homepage -


 The food crisis caused by the lengthy Trump Shutdown is the featured news. It has been featured by Strib earlier in the week - and before then. Since its beginning - People  - the more vulnerable among us needing food assistance - suffer most from the Trump Shutdown. They cannot afford supermarket prices, need assistance, and the Republican Party is denying them relief unless Democrats cave in on wanting healthcare kept affordable for most Americans. It is sick.

It is the Republican Party at its worse, and it hurts every one of us, some more than others. Except, Elon and Bezos and Larry Ellison's family, buying up media while milking cash cow ORACLE. They are above suffering, they and other billionaires such as Trump or Bloomberg, the Clintons, you can name more but there are some - many actually - with great enough wealth to weather Trump Shutdown suffering. In fact, they don't suffer at all. They want the bulk of the people to be dinged if they can gin up a few dollars more. They are The Trump Constituency. That's the truth. Not the horde of MAGA voters. The latter, expendable. The former, the essence of Trump 45 and Trump 47 beneficiaries. 

 CNN online, reporting its insight into the full reach of the food crisis -

The US Department of Agriculture has said it does not have the money to pay $8 billion in food stamp benefits for November amid the funding impasse on Capitol Hill that led the government to shut down on October 1. The agency argues it cannot tap into its roughly $6 billion contingency fund to cover next month’s benefits, though Democratic lawmakers and advocates claim the USDA should — or is even obligated to — use the money.

Without help from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, the formal name for food stamps, many recipients are going to have to decide whether to use their limited budgets to buy groceries, pay rent, fill prescriptions or turn on the heat, said Ed Bolen, director of state SNAP strategies for the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Tell me again, which branch of the government runs the Ag Departimet? Who mandates its policies? Crabgrass was unable to find the word "Agriculture" anywhere on the whitehouse.gov homepage. If that word appears on the site's "Executive Actions" https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/ sub-site, it must be on pages 2-41, buried there somewheere. Possibly. Not page 1 content.

Love Trump? If you can afford to Crabgrass cannot stop you. If you suffer because of it, love can hurt.

 FURTHER: Interested readers should try: search = Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

The 501(C) operation has a wikipedia page. Homepage = https://www.cbpp.org/

Such search may help readers understand aspects of the Trump Shutdown; decencies and indecencies. The site does appear partisan, but with that in mind, consider its facts, suggestion and argument.


Tuesday, October 28, 2025

The Trump Shutdown continues. Politico reports.


Controlling all three branches, Republicans thought they could roll over the opposition and impose a very Draconian plan of government attrition and loss of healthcare assists the people were enjoying.

In effect, playing chicken with all the power held in their hands. The Republicans have not explained why they believe the people should suffer lower health benefits while billionaires get tax breaks and all the funding comes from squeezing the people on taxes, in effect high taxation of the regular folks, while cutting their safety net with no plan whatsoever, other than to inflict suffering to make opposition more distressed and pliant.

That is a shameful way to govern. A petty tariff program where even Reagan understood the weakness a tariff war imposes on world economic reality. We suffer, all suffer, and the tariff business is changed daily to where businesses cannot do future planing if any part of their supply chain depends upon foreign products as a part of their needs. To produce and generate income they need to put product into commerce, and without an assured future product flow or cash flow, the employees are at far greater risk of loss of jobs and economic depression happening exactly when the Repubican bill would cut health safety.

It is a battle of one party against the other. Yes both suffer. But the suffering of the people will be worse longer if the Democrats give in, and say, "It is okay to harm the people your way, we need to end the shutdown." The Dems, in turn, are correct to hold the line against harming the people. 

POLITICO reported Wednesday that the Office of Management and Budget is instructing federal agencies to prepare reduction-in-force plans for mass firings during a government shutdown, specifically targeting employees who work for programs that are not legally required to continue.

“Historically, it’s the aggressor that always loses,” the senior White House official said. “And quite simply, their constituencies and their priorities are all going to get chewed up, and ours, not so much.”

The official said the second Trump administration is far better equipped to battle Democrats during a shutdown than it was when this happened during his first term.

Many Democrats believe the White House is bluffing about its sweeping layoff plans, and insist Republicans will bear responsibility for a shutdown in the public eye because the GOP controls the government.

Democrats are demanding Republicans negotiate a bipartisan stopgap spending measure. Among their asks is for the GOP to extend certain Affordable Care Act subsidies, which were expanded by Congress in 2021 and are due to sunset at the end of the year.

President Donald Trump on Thursday blamed Democrats for making “unserious and ridiculous” demands, foreshadowing what is likely to be the go-to talking point should neither side blink ahead of the Tuesday night deadline.

“He read all the shit they’re asking for, and he said, ‘on second thought, go fuck yourself,’” the White House official said.

If that strikes you as a seriously flawed way to approach governing a nation where future relialabiliy of the ability for businesses to plan, you are then now understanding why Democrats are so frustrated. The Democrats cannot end the standoff. The Republicans hold all power to end things easily, but will not.

Meanwhile Trump is tearing down a third of the White House itself, for a ballroom. A place to play and party while the entire nation is being run through the ringer. It is irresponsible, and unnecessarily hard upon the people for Trump running his party to harm things to hurt so badly that he reckons the Dems will show up surrender flag in hand, and allow all he'd do. But HE HAS NO REAL PLAN, AND JUGGLES TARIFFS DAILY, TO FIT THE WHIM OF THE DAY. TO FIT THE IMAGINED HARM OR DISRESPECT HE BELIEVES OTHER NATIONS ARE AIMING AT HIM, HIM, THE AGGRESSOR.

We suffer. We wait for some sensible Republicans to break ranks and be reasonable. The wait could be long.

 

Monday, October 27, 2025

Medicare Advantage - Explained in terms you can understand.

 John Oliver. UnitedHealthcare, a Minnesota Company, gets its due mention. (Luigi knows)

 

TURNING THE TABLE: Suing against a SLAPP from the Trump family, Melania, ostensibly the perp, but The Donald is the man behind the woman fronting the thing. A preemptive suit, against a threatened suit, no more, no less. Quite a nice story. Filed in a New York State trial court, not otherwise, other places.

The short written item explaining things.

The complaint Michael Wolff filed, in pdf format. 

The better source, the video in which Wolff explains it all. If you don't watch, you'll wish you had.

Pop the popcorn. This might be the Trump SLAPP tactic, tried one time too many, and the one that blows up in his face.