Sunday, March 08, 2026

What do I know? What the Internet tells me, and there are multiple voices.

 Try this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nikab396KPs

How do I judge it? I don't. I link. 

Aside from a new war, a Senator speaks on the floor, at length. So, what of it?

 Epstein again. You're still talking about Epstein?

And now Arab states in the Mid-East are keen in interest in counter drones, as a lower cost options than Patriot missiles for downing incoming Iranian drones. The drones from Iran seem numerous, and widely targeted. The Ukrainians have experience in countering Iranian drone attacks, since Russia sends the Ukraine scores and scores of Iranian drones in attack mode. 

 

Special envoy to fuck-a-duck

 

wiki - if it lasts

Or a Lewandowski. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvixBOh370w

Trump put her out to pasture, with a title of special envoy.  She takes it seriously.

Jeez. A piece of work if there ever was one. And - she gave a speech.

 

 

Monday, March 02, 2026

AJ notes that Qatar LNG facilities are now shut down as a result of Iranian counterattack risks. Europe and China will likely see prices raise. India's market, and other consumers are likely to also suffer worldwide fossil fuel price hikes of some degree..

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/2/qatarenergy-worlds-largest-lng-firm-halts-production-after-iran-attacks 

EmptyWheel has some discussion of possible negotiator conflicted interests in the negotiations the US had with Iran prior to the decision to go to war. Speculation about Iranian world gas reserves, and the current market situation are a part of that post and commentary. And it all is guesswork. Inferences, about possibilities. Hard evidence might be hard to come by.

 See, also: https://www.qatarenergy.qa/en/MediaCenter/Pages/newsdetails.aspx?ItemId=3892  and- https://energy-oil-gas.com/news/us-lng-exports-outpace-qatar-in-landmark-year-for-natural-gas/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquefied_natural_gas 

Fat city, for US fossil fuel firms. Trump presumably would not be troubled by such an outcome, short term, mid term, long term. And what of potential investors, if any, having advanced insider knowledge of the Israeli-US war initiation timing? What they, if any, might have been expected by you to have done, in energy markets?

As earlier noted, hard evidence might exist, but it would be hard to unearth. 

Reuters

Expect US pump prices to show an effect.

____________UPDATE____________

One firm: https://www.reuters.com/company/venture-global-inc/ 

 There are several recent (this year, so far) items there, and beyond that, what do I know? Beyond:

Commercial activity in the sector has gained further momentum after U.S. President Donald Trump lifted a moratorium on new LNG export permits after taking office last year

 That fact flew under Crabgrass attention levels until now. Yours too?

The potential profitable avenues of those making good bets, or having insider knowledge of ongoing Israel-US planning leading to the strikes, are staggering.

Who knew?

FURTHER: https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/dec/04/venture-global-shares 

That item is dated Dec. 4, 2025. So, how long were Bibi and Trump - their people - talking in secret of plans for this now-upon-us Iran war? Who knew? A mere three months ago, until today.

And that's just  one fairly new public firm, with its IPO traceable, and with SEC filings.

Not that I'd care. Somebody might. 

FURTHER: Supply and Demand, per the Crabgrass Econ 101 understandings, is that if you take US gas out of the US as LNG, then the demand, worldwide, goes up, and a new price balance point is reached, where we consumer - citizen - voters in the US pay more to heat our homes. That means Trump and his people have the billionaire energy industry players more in mind, than us. We should vote our best interests, shouldn't we? Prove me wrong. LNG is capital intensive, not labor intensive, so, job growth might be minimal. Exact economics are for Congress persons to figure out, because staff people on Capitol Hill are brighter and have more at stake, than me.

Especially the Democrats. Who are still processing being at war with Iran, and all of the implications. And there are mere months until the next election, so hope they work fast and in our interests. 

Who, stateside, has uncontracted excess LNG capacity, ready to meet current and near term demand, with Qatar paused? 

FURTHER: Again, what do I know? For the hell of it, two or three nations, what/where are they?

try search = "Singapore LNG" or "Ireland LNG" or "Norway LNG". 

Just a stab in the dark. Are they even players? They are further shipping points from Qatar large scale LNG shipping compared to Mediterranean nations, but, again, what do I know? Qatar might not ship through Suez as much as open ocean. 

I do not know the LNG market details, pricing, supply and demand. But this war does tug along a few profit and loss dimensions. Which I can only guess at.

Others know. In upcoming days we may hear more. 

If regime change does somehow happen in Iran, all is on the table. They've got gas reserves out of the wazzoo, but appear to not be current big LNG players. Ripe for plucking. LNG is capital intensive. Sharks smell blood at a distance.

FURTHER: America First. That's a slogan, not a fact-intensive thing. Simply for example, the America of paycheck-to-paycheck people Bernie cares about, heating their homes in the winter with natural gas, whatever it costs, or another America to be First; the oligarch class that Bernie and AOC toured to warn us about? Which, for Trump, is First. And how distant is second? Way back there?

The paycheck-to-paycheck America cannot give Trump piles of money. That might be a factor at play.  What would Smedley Butler say?

 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Alternative SOTU versions - Bernie, short + Heather Cox Richardson 50min

 Bernie = 1.25 M views

HCR = 884 K views

There is variety, but more truth than Trump's BS.

The viewing numbers are as of the timestamp of this post.

 

 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

EmptyWheel reviews how the siege of Minnesota was a giant federal clusterfuck, but it also was one extremely traumatic and costly to the affected population.

 The priorities were to intimidate, rather than to do regular or useful business:

https://emptywheel.net/katie-britts-sad-confusion-about-and-complicit-in-misallocation-of-hsi/ 

With Pritzker having sent Trump a bill for the mayhem costs Illinois/Chicago citizens were subjected to, we await the Minnesota invoice for compensation, or for lawsuit damages, whichever. The siege's litigation will continue into and well past the November 2026 election season. May it have a giant weight in a Democratic Blue Wave. And may the federal murderers of Renee Good and Alex Pritti be held to punishment for their crimes, as may be proven in Minnesota courts, under Minnesota law. Those prosecutions should be done. And they will be done. DHS and FBI cooperation or not, the perps will face prosecutions.

(Is there a betting market on those perps facing Minnesota State justice?

 

Trump gave a speech yesterday evening. Big fucking deal. His poll ratings tell a better story than anything he could say. And the speech probably was written by Stephen Miller. Delivered via paired teleprompters. Irritating and a Biden-blaming thing, I'd guess.

 I did not watch it. Wise choice I'd guess. Bloviating and in that irritating style that is Trump's. If JD had delivered it it likely would have come across as less offensive. Less dreadfully tedious.

But having not watched it, a likely somewhat biased review is online, by GOP blogger Gary Gross. I link to that, with the opinion Gary is a nice enough guy, but he's dead wrong about something I did not think worth watching:

https://libertyprosperityblog.blogspot.com/2026/02/donald-trumps-triumphant-speech.html 

Gary highlighted it had its blame-Biden dimension. He excerpted in larger print a quote of a speech segment, that of all things, started by blaming Biden then indulging in falsehoods or partial truths while citizens pay exorbitant tariff pass-throughs and are getting soaked by outrageously inflation-tainted supermarket prices they struggle to afford. If you agree with Gary, that's how politics gets parsed. If you did not watch it, you are with me and Robert Reich.

I am not bothering to find any online critical review. I presume some have been published and that readers can find one agreeing with whatever view they hold. 

My bet, the poll numbers stay under water and "the Peace President" gets us mired into something with Iran because Bibi told him what he should do and Putin agreed. 

________________UPDATE______________ 

It was longer than any previous SOTU, The Independent covered the event.

Anonymous Republican insiders started talking to a variety of sources after the speech had concluded. Although they insisted that it was a rousing, successful address to their sources — and Trump certainly did look healthier and sound more forceful than he has done in weeks — they also said they’d ideally have wanted some specifics about how he’s actually planning to improve the economy as it relates to normal people.

Even the MAGA faithful were muted for MAGA faithfuls. Kevin McCarthy tweeted about “America’s greatness” as shown by “war heroes” and Olympic champions”. Fox News claimed the president had left “Democrats seething”, with no actual examples. Chip Roy, bless his heart, called it a “home run”. Those boilerplate reactions really show how little the president gave them to work with: few specifics as they relate to voters, no new attack lines that are landing reliably. Others stuck to generic lines — a “bold vision” laid out for the future, “dominance” for America, and all that jazz — before pivoting into talking about their own agendas.

There was no takeaway line for the party to rally around. As the confetti settled, it became clear that Republicans had done their duty and little more.

Absolutely no one was expecting this State of the Union speech to be normal. What we underestimated was how weird that would become in a midterm year when his approval rating looks increasingly shaky. Trump now looks both out-of-touch and boring: two fatal political flaws for a man whose strength is wresting control of the attention economy and claiming he’s looking out for the people outside the swamp.

Further Independent coverage, here and here. There was that one quoted early coverage sentence saying Trump looked in better health than at other recent times, i.e., the dementia guesses could be wrong. We should hope so. Dementia is not something one would wish on a worse enemy. Age takes a toll, but many die still cogent, and we all hope that will be our personal ending.

_______________FURTHER UPDATE_______________

NBC coverage, saying in part:

On Tuesday, it was one thumb in the eye of Trump after another. More than a dozen House Democrats invited survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to be their guests, centering on a topic Trump has been loath to speak about and has explicitly asked the country to move on from.

"How about those Epstein files?" Tlaib yelled at Trump during his speech.

Other Democrats, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California, wore pins calling on the Trump administration to release all of the files.

And as Trump delivered a speech of record-breaking length, the Democratic gallery was partially empty. Dozens of Democratic lawmakers attended or spoke at alternative events

FURTHER: FOX gave a positive spin, noting the USA Olympic men's hockey team was there. See, however,  https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2026/02/23/usa-womens-hockey-declines-invitation-state-of-the-union/88828973007/

Both teams won gold. 

FURTHER: Gary posted this AP link to the full transcript of what Trump said.

Specific words which are absent-from-the-transcript words: elon miller bondi epstein files renee alex pretti investigation putin netanyahu bibi refugee crypto pardon(s) underage pedophile pedophilia survivor(s) = do the word search, each word, if you doubt. Those are words which will not go away, but words he might have choked on. The word "good" was used, but not as a proper noun, a person's name, dead or alive.