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Month: July 2025

“Better get used to us now, cause this is going to be normal very soon.”

“We’ll go anywhere , anytime we want in Los Angeles.”

That’s from the chief of the Gestapo er… Border Patrol in L.A.:

Mr. Newsom and local leaders had expected the troops to return to their regular duties once the protests had died down. But the president has released only 150 Guard troops for firefighting efforts, and Gregory Bovino, a Customs and Border Protection chief in Southern California, indicated Monday that the Trump administration intended to make itself seen across the city.

“Better get used to us now, cause this is going to be normal very soon,” Mr. Bovino told a Fox News reporter. “We will go anywhere, anytime we want in Los Angeles.”

This is America now. I sure hope everyone’s happy about the egg prices. Or, truthfully, are enjoying the spectacle of soldiers on American streets rounding up people and treating everyone like animals which is what apparently gives them joy.

Things like this:

City leaders and community groups have long tried to address homelessness and drug use in the park about 10 blocks west of downtown Los Angeles. Workers with a St. John’s Community Health street medicine clinic that was serving homeless people at the park said that agents had pointed guns at them and instructed them to stop their work and leave on Monday.

People were warned that they were going to deport millions of people. So you have to assume it’s what they wanted:

We are an occupied city. And this model is coming soon to a neighborhood near you:

Federal officials have accused local leaders of fostering lawlessness and allowing criminals to roam free. Mr. Bovino persisted on Monday, saying on X: “We may well go back to MacArthur Park or other places in and around Los Angeles. Illegal aliens had the opportunity to self deport, now we’ll help things along a bit.”

It Happened Before

They clearly need a better system.

As I was watching the officials duck and cover under questioning yesterday I got a distinct Uvalde vibe from it and it made me sick. The people in charge just can’t seem to take any responsibility and kids keep dying.

A Blizzard In July

Community and solidarity

It’s a blizzard. A blizzard in July of bad news, personal loss, loss of life, and threats of violence.

As the death count mounted last night from the flash flood in Texas, flooding in central North Carolina left communities devastated. Communities here in the west will be rebuilding for years from the Helene’s visit last fall. The hurt is still raw, so we can relate.

WRAL reports that Tropical Depression Chantal left “devastating flooding in its wake, especially in Alamance, Durham, Chatham, Orange, Moore and Person counties.” Today, Gov. Josh Stein will tour some of the hardest-hit areas. I checked in with a friend in Southern California about her family in Chapel Hill (Orange County). I checked in with Democratic state chair Anderson Clayton. She and her parents hail from Person County.

Stephen Miller’s Trump-sponored ethnic cleasning program sparked more concerns on Monday:

The Trump administration has ended temporary protections for people from Honduras and Nicaragua in the latest phase of its effort to expel undocumented people from the US.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced it would end temporary protected status (TPS) for an estimated 72,000 Hondurans and 4,000 Nicaraguans in moves that will come into effect in about 60 days.

Citizens of the two Central American nations were accorded the status after Hurricane Mitch in 1998, which left 10,000 dead after it ripped through the region.

Honduras and Nicaragua are the latest in a series of countries to have their US-based citizens stripped of temporary protections since Donald Trump’s return to the White House. Similar moves have been made to end TPS for those from Venezuela, Haiti, Afghanistan, Cameroon and Nepal.

I checked in with a friend whose husband is from Honduras. He’s naturalized, she said. I hope that’s the end of it. But it might not be:

The U.S. Department of Justice has begun to prioritize stripping naturalized Americans of their citizenship when charged with crimes, according to a recent memo.

They said they were prioritizing deporting criminals too, “the worst of the worst.” But NBC reports that’s not how it’s worked out:

Trump administration officials have said they will prioritize deporting criminals, but ICE data shows that roughly half of those who were deported in February did not have criminal records, and more than half of those currently in ICE detention have no criminal charges or convictions.

Take care of one another because the awful budget bill Trump 2.0 just passed demonstrates that Republicans mean to abandon us all. “The cost isn’t theoretical,” Rick Wilson warns. “It’s measured in caskets.”

Respond by building community. Reinforce solidarity. Make good trouble.

I checked in this week with Andrew Aydin, co-author of “March” with the late John Lewis. (He lives nearby.) He’ll be speaking just west of here for a Good Trouble Lives On rally on July 17 in memory of John Lewis. Make good trouble.

Mike Lux this morning writes:

With all these benefits cuts hurting people, and with the ICE raids out of control and abducting people all over the country, a lot of people are going to be hurting badly. Progressive and Democratic Party activists need to be on the frontlines of helping those who are scared and hungry and hurting. By helping each other and taking care of each other, we build what Martin Luther King called the beloved community. People are desperate for that sense of community right now, of trusted relationships where people are showing they care about each other.

I love the writing of Christy Hardin Smith on this topic. This is where her writing lives in general, but this piece in particular hits home for me.

Christy is from West Virginia, and knows how tough Democratic politics is right now in that state. She is working to change things one act of kindness at a time.

Kindness is getting hard to come by. So we’ll have to generate our own.

The father of another friend, a local state representative, is worried enough about threats of violence against politicians that he published an op-ed in the Sunday paper here about it. Rep. Lindsey Prather is already under attack with smears and lies about her record. Papa is worried (also found here):

Even though the gerrymander failed in a district that the President won by three points, my daughter remains a target of the NC GOP. They have now adopted the language of fear and terror in an effort to remind their followers to hate and hate often. Their recent postcards and social media posts claim that Lindsey has voted “eight times for Criminal Illegals” and would do “ANYTHING to protect criminal illegal aliens from deportation.” Look again at what they are implying about my daughter.

These allegations about my daughter are lies masquerading as hyperbole, and are meant to incite.

I admire my daughter’s resolve and her courage. She has not dropped her language to the level of her opponents, and I am thrilled that Lindsey is continuing to work for the betterment of all of North Carolina.

I am proud to be her father. That does not reduce my fear.

I’m waiting on a progress report today about one of my oldest friends and two-time roommate. He had a stroke on his way to his local No Kings rally on June 14.

Like I said, a blizzard in July. Check in on one another.

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

Good Trouble Lives On (July 17, in memory of John Lewis)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Ghouls On Parade, Pt. 2

They’ll be selling souvenir postcards soon

Brandi Buchman posted the above composite photo this morning:

Image on the left is from the Motorcycle Album via The Wiener Holocaust Library. Circa 1935. Read more about it here: share.google/JSWX0UTijgIa…. Image on the right is an American in 2025.

And a video of a family making memories at the sign accompanies Buchman’s first post:

Capitol Hunters identifies the man in the black t-shirt as J6er Christopher Worrell. Buchman follows up for those who need reminding:

Jan. 6er appears to be taking photos under America’s concentration camp sign. Here’s more on Worrell before being pardoned by the president. Proud Boy who went on run, faked overdose, gets 10 years

https://share.google/wRnK8Wt68GlHozPgV

https://bsky.app/profile/dominicervolina.com/post/3lt62t5jvff23

A post from Luke O’Neil’s Welcome To Hell World  site contains the above image. He observes:

I couldn’t wash the stink of it all off of me. Neither my own nor our collective filth.

Not even the entire ocean is sufficiently cleansing. 

They’re selling merch for that new concentration camp in Florida and everyone is rightfully aghast at the prospect. 

No, I won’t be posting images of lynching postcards that were a thing until the U.S. Postal Service banned them from the mails in 1908.

But now that we’re rolling back the clock, who knows? They’re already selling Alligator Alcatraz merch.

Celebrating cruelty is a thing, of course. MAGAs would be tailgating deportation flights if they had enough advance warnings. All things old….

* * * * *

Have you fought dictatorship today?

Good Trouble Lives On (July 17, in memory of John Lewis)
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Second Verse Same As The First

We’re right back where we started with Trump telling them that they now have three weeks to come crawling on their bellies to beg for his dispensation or the tariffs that he announced in April will go into effect.

I’d guess they didn’t kiss his ass properly? Or perhaps he just doesn’t understand trade at all. He actually seems to expect the country of South Korea to import exactly an equal amount of the same products to their much smaller country than they export over here. That’s what he deems to be “fair.” It’s the way a child would think about it.

I sure hope the American people are ready for what’s about to hit them. S. Korea makes a ton of stuff that Americans like to buy and which American manufacturers rely on:

Vehicles other than railway, tramway$42.97B2024
Machinery, nuclear reactors, boilers$26.68B2024
Electrical, electronic equipment$20.90B2024
Mineral fuels, oils, distillation products$5.46B2024
Plastics$4.45B2024
Articles of iron or steel$3.08B2024
Optical, photo, technical, medical apparatus$2.45B2024
Organic chemicals$1.99B2024
Essential oils, perfumes, cosmetics, toileteries$1.83B2024
Iron and steel$1.76B2024
Miscellaneous chemical products$1.48B2024
Pharmaceutical products$1.47B2024
Rubbers$1.32B2024
Aluminum$1.02B2024
Aircraft, spacecraft$1.01B2024
Inorganic chemicals, precious metal compound, isotope$890.24M2024
Paper and paperboard, articles of pulp, paper and board$657.94M2024
Cereal, flour, starch, milk preparations and products$649.42M2024
Ships, boats, and other floating structures$640.86M2024
Pearls, precious stones, metals, coins$629.76M2024
Miscellaneous articles of base metal$583.95M2024
Copper$573.66M2024
Furniture, lighting signs, prefabricated buildings$479.52M2024
Tools, implements, cutlery of base metal$452.43M2024
Vegetable, fruit, nut food preparations$298.00M2024
Miscellaneous edible preparations$251.31M2024
Glass and glassware$246.08M2024
Stone, plaster, cement, asbestos, mica or similar materials$223.38M2024
Arms and ammunition, parts and accessories$214.05M2024
Soaps, lubricants, waxes, candles, modelling pastes$203.12M2024
Toys, games, sports requisites$192.63M2024
Articles of apparel, knit or crocheted$181.01M2024
Manmade staple fibers$180.36M2024
Beverages, spirits and vinegar$173.39M2024
Fish, crustaceans, molluscs, aquatics invertebrates$168.86M2024
Tanning, dyeing extracts, tannins, derivatives, pigments$160.38M2024
Manmade filaments$148.11M2024
Base metals not specified elsewhere, cermets.$141.21M2024
Cotton$135.54M2024
Lead$133.66M2024
Knitted or crocheted fabric$129.04M2024
Printed books, newspapers, pictures$119.92M2024
Impregnated, coated or laminated textile fabric$115.65M2024
Albuminoids, modified starches, glues, enzymes$107.65M2024
Wadding, felt, nonwovens, yarns, twine, cordage$104.43M2024
Animal, vegetable fats and oils, cleavage products$104.13M2024
Railway, tramway locomotives, rolling stock, equipment$97.41M2024
Miscellanneous manufactured articles$96.08M2024
Works of art, collectors’ pieces and antiques$85.69M2024
Meat, fish and seafood preparations$79.52M2024
Other made textile articles, sets, worn clothing$61.85M2024
Carpets and other textile floor coverings$58.29M2024
Footwear, gaiters and the like,$54.51M2024
Salt, sulphur, earth, stone, plaster, lime and cement$51.37M2024
Zinc$48.35M2024
Musical instruments, parts and accessories$47.91M2024
Edible fruits, nuts, peel of citrus fruit, melons$47.61M2024
Ceramic products$46.87M2024
Articles of apparel, not knit or crocheted$46.16M2024
Articles of leather, animal gut, harness, travel good$43.76M2024
Oil seed, oleagic fruits, grain, seed, fruits$34.10M2024
Special woven or tufted fabric, lace, tapestry$26.53M2024
Headgear and$25.55M2024
Photographic or cinematographic goods$25.55M2024
Lac, gums, resins$24.61M2024
Fertilizers$23.12M2024
Edible vegetables and certain roots and tubers$21.61M2024
Dairy products, eggs, honey, edible products$16.91M2024
Sugars and sugar confectionery$16.22M2024
Nickel$15.92M2024
Wood and articles of wood, wood charcoal$15.56M2024
Ores slag and ash$14.95M2024
Coffee, tea, mate and spices$11.78M2024
Milling products, malt, starches, inlin, wheat gluten$11.41M2024
Tobacco and manufactures tobacco substitutes$10.94M2024
Silk$10.02M2024
Explosives, pyrotechnics, matches, pyrophorics$9.73M2024
Cereals$6.13M2024
Live animals$3.80M2024
Clocks and watches$3.50M2024
Tin$3.23M2024
Residues, wastes of food industry, animal fodder$2.59M2024
Live trees, plants, bulbs, roots, cut flowers$2.57M2024
Raw hides and skins (other than furskins) and leather$2.04M2024
Bird skin, feathers, artificial flowers, human hair$1.90M2024
Vegetable textile fibers not specified elsewhere, paper yarn, woven fabric$1.61M2024
Products of animal origin$1.09M2024
Cocoa and cocoa preparations$1.02M2024
Furskins and artificial fur, manufactures$766.41K2024
Manufacturers of plaiting material, basketwork$702.36K2024
Umbrellas, walking-sticks, seat-sticks, whips$601.08K2024
Cork and articles of cork$242.63K2024
Wool, animal hair, horsehair yarn and fabric$175.09K2024
Vegetable plaiting materials, vegetable products$100.88K2024
Pulp of wood, fibrous cellulosic material, waste$25.76K2024

.

Killing Themselves For Trump

I don’t know how we survive if these people are willing to sacrifice their lives and livelihoods for their Dear Leader:

Wheat grows so prodigiously here on the Kansas high plains that in 1953 the surplus birthed one of the Cold War’s big ideas: Food for Peace, a federal government program that delivered the excess bounty to a hungry postwar world.

Conceived by a Kansas farmer and created by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Food for Peace has sent burlap sacks of grain stamped “From the American People” to more than four billion people in 150 countries around the world. Now it is effectively dead.

The program was administered by the U.S. Agency for International Development, which Elon Musk fed “into the wood chipper” on a weekend in February. Kansas’s Republican lawmakers tried to save it but failed to persuade President Trump, who last month proposed cutting the entire 2026 budget for Food for Peace as well as another food aid program dear to Kansans, the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition program.

[…]

It was the latest blow to farmers, particularly in Kansas, where about 80 percent of those on the high plains voted for Mr. Trump and agriculture makes up almost half of the state’s economy. The president’s whipsawing tariffs and cuts to agriculture grants and global food aid have left the state with swollen silos, shrinking markets and volatile prices for crops.

Last year Kansas sold half its annual wheat crop abroad, but those buyers have mostly dried up. At least one big grain broker is now trying to sell Kansas grain that once fed people overseas for use in dog food.

Paul Penner, a Kansas wheat farmer and former president of the National Association of Wheat Growers, is frustrated that there have not been more objections to the administration from wheat growers and the state’s largely Republican congressional delegation.

“We need people who are willing to speak up,” he said. “I think privately they say things, but publicly, no. And I’m not sure what their pain threshold is.”

I’m sure Trump will write them a check at some point. He loves to take credit for helping “his” farmers” when he destroys their livelihoods. And it could get them through the moment. But he’s already destroyed their long term markets by letting Elon take a chainsaw to USAID and alienating their global customers.

I don’t know how much pain they are prepared to take for their Dear Leader. I can’t understand why they’re willing to take any at this point. It’s not as if it’s World War Two and we all have to sacrifice. They’re taking these hits in order to punish non-white people and own the libs. Is it really worth it?

Rogue Pentagon Chief

Last week:

The Defense Department held up a shipment of U.S. weapons for Ukraine this week over what officials said were concerns about its low stockpiles. But an analysis by senior military officers found that the aid package would not jeopardize the American military’s own ammunition supplies, according to three U.S. officials.

The move to halt the weapons shipment blindsided the State Department, members of Congress, officials in Kyiv and European allies, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the matter.

[…]

“We are not at any lower point, stockpile-wise, than we’ve been in the 3½ years of the Ukraine conflict,” Smith, the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, told NBC News.Smith said that his staff has “seen the numbers” and, without going into detail, that there was no indication of a shortage that would justify suspending aid to Ukraine.

Suspending the shipment of military aid to Ukraine was a unilateral step by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, according to three congressional aides and a former U.S. official familiar with the matter. It was the third time Hegseth on his own has stopped shipments of aid to Ukraine, the sources said. In the two previous cases, in February and in May, his actions were reversed days later.

The Supremes have said that the president is to be given great defence in matters of foreign policy so I guess that must mean that his drunken Pentagon chief is allowed to make massive policy changes on his own without telling anyone?

Good to know.

At the time, Trump backed him up:

President Donald Trump complained Thursday that the United States provided too many weapons to Ukraine under the previous administration, his first public comments on the pause in some shipments as Russia escalates its latest offensive.

Speaking to reporters before boarding Air Force One for a flight to Iowa, Trump said former President Joe Biden “emptied out our whole country giving them weapons, and we have to make sure that we have enough for ourselves.”

That was a lie, of course but what else is new?

On Monday:

President Trump said Monday the U.S. would resume providing Ukraine with arms to help it withstand Russian attacks after months of trying without success to draw Moscow into negotiations on ending the war.

“We have to, they have to be able to defend themselves,” Trump said of aiding Kyiv during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “They are getting hit very hard. Now they are getting hit very hard. We’re gonna have to send more weapons.”

His comments were the strongest indication so far that Trump has come around to the idea of strengthening Kyiv’s defenses less than a week after it was disclosed that the Pentagon was withholding a shipment of arms earmarked for Ukraine.

In a statement late Monday, Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said: “At President Trump’s direction, the Department of Defense is sending additional defensive weapons to Ukraine to ensure the Ukrainians can defend themselves while we work to secure a lasting peace and ensure the killing stops.”

Trump told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a telephone call Friday that he wasn’t responsible for the halt in weapons shipments to Kyiv.

Trump said that he had directed a review of Pentagon munitions stockpiles after the U.S. struck Iran’s nuclear sites last month but hadn’t ordered the department to freeze the arms deliveries, according to people briefed on the conversation.

Today:

It looks like Whiskey Pete doesn’t know what’s going on either:

Fabulous.

Well, at least they’re saving us from the threat of gardeners and nannies. Thank you Daddy.

“Some fruit was thrown, a lot of yelling”

Life in occupied Los Angeles, July 7, 2025:

I’m sure Trump will be very upset with fruit being thrown and will order them to shoot to kill.

Update —

It’s a Fox news special. It’s all over the network. Here’s a Fox correspondent.

I assume Miller and Trump will watch it together in onanistic ecstasy.

For Me But Not For Thee

Kitchen Table Issue

Luckily, Real Americans don’t have to deal with any of those issues so there’s no reason they would need to have a discussion about it at the kitchen table.

That image is from a New York Times interactive story about all the biomedical research cuts and what they’re going to affect. It’s not pretty.