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Month: September 2025

One Year Ago

The lights went out. Then the water system failed.

When Helene came to visit WNC on this day last year, things didn’t look too bad in this neighborhood until I tried to leave it. Downed trees blocked every road out. The power was out for nine days. Water for 17. And that was for a neighborhood otherwise pretty much unscathed. (It was worse in rural areas and for people on wells.) Internet was unusable for a week. With so much devastation and relief work going on, it was three months before we toured the county to survey the worst. The pharmacist who gave me my Covid booster in July last year died when his four-plex was swept away in the flooding. Our house painter lost his best crew member. His body wasn’t found until sometime in December. While for much of the region things have gotten back to normal, cleanup and recovery continues to this day.

December 26, 2024, Three months after Helene hit, the entrance to Riverbend Dr. in Oteen area of East Asheville. Helene flooding destroyed 21 homes here and on adjacent Driftwood Court.

The National Weather Service today is sucking wind in the middle of hurricane season after eight months of Trump 2.0:

Some National Weather Service staffers are working double shifts to keep forecasting offices open. Others are operating under a “buddy system,” in which adjacent offices help monitor severe weather in understaffed regions. Still others are jettisoning services deemed not absolutely necessary, such as making presentations to schoolchildren.

The Trump administration’s cuts to the Weather Service — where nearly 600 workers,or about 1 in every 7, have left through firings, resignations or retirements — are pushing the agency to its limits, according to interviews with current and former staffers.

Weather dot com:

Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine Forms, Imelda Likely Soon

Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine has officially formed in the Caribbean, and Tropical Storm Imelda is expected to form this weekend. Tropical storm alerts have been issued for the Bahamas. The storm is expected to batter the Bahamas with heavy rain and strong winds as it moves toward the Southeast coast, where we could see a landfalling named storm next week. The exact track of the storm is still unknown because of several potential driving factors like a stalled frontal boundary that is draped across the Southeast and Hurricane Humberto, which continues to strengthen nearby in the Atlantic.

When severe weather threatens since last fall, people around here get a touch of PTSD. Like now.

* * * * *

Have you fought dicktatorship today?

50501 
May Day Strong
No King’s One Million Rising movement – Next national day of protest Oct. 18
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

Friday Night Soother

Celebrating World Gorilla Day!

The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund:

Today commemorates the day that Dian Fossey founded her Karisoke Research Center in Rwanda 58 years ago – the longest-running research center dedicated to gorilla conservation.

Dian worked tirelessly to save mountain gorillas, which she originally projected would be extinct by the year 2000. But today, because of Dian Fossey and the bravery of many men and women since her time, they are the only non-human great ape increasing in number. But, we can’t stop now.

There are only about 1,000 mountain gorillas left on the planet. Not to mention, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, we have lost as much as 60% of Grauer’s gorillas in recent decades, and they are now listed on the 25 most-endangered primates list. It’s imperative. We must save gorillas.

Today, will you help us ensure the survival of this extraordinary species? Give today and see your donation matched, because of a generous gift from Gorilla Grip – up to $25K: https://save.gorillafund.org/campaign/714100/donate?c_src=social Thank you to SouthState Bank for sponsoring our World Gorilla Day campaign

The Cincinnati Zoo has a 4 day old baby!

If you’ve never seen “Gorillas in the Mist”, the movie about Dian Fossey starring Sigourney Weaver, it’s well worth watching. You can rent it on YouTube and a bunch of other streamers.

It’s Happening Right Now

Garret Graff wrote an op-ed for the NY Times today. (gift link)

We have seen much debate over the merits and timing of a legal case against Mr. Comey,but any such discussion misses the most important point: We don’t want to live in a country where the president of the United States dictates, publicly or privately, who should be targeted by federal prosecutors and then pressures any prosecutor unwilling to bring said politically motivated charges. The Justice Department and the attorney general are supposed to keep an arm’s length distance from the president, not be his personal score settlers.

[…]

Mr. Trump’s future plans are worryingly clear. Hours before the Comey charges became public, he signed an presidential memorandum that outlined how he hopes the full weight of the federal government will be turned against domestic terror groups. The sweeping order so twists the definition of “domestic terror” that it is likely the intent could be to sweep up progressive activist groups, think tanks, their funders (the MAGA bête noire George Soros appears a likely target) and groups like the League of Women Voters.

Graff explains further in his Substack today:

The oped grew out of a frustrating segment I did Wednesday night on CNN with Laura Coates, where the other two guests immediately got into the weeds about the strength of a Comey indictment and whether or not he deserved an indictment and whether there was a workable case against the former FBI director.

I argued that was all missing the point: The Comey indictment should stand as a bright line — President Trump decreed that Comey should be indicted and found a sycophantic lawyer who was willing to be appointed to a position she was manifestly unqualified for where her sole job is to undermine the Justice Department’s independence and do the president’s bidding. Over the objections of senior and career federal prosecutors, who said there was not a case here to be made under DOJ standards, he then was indicted.

That’s something we’ve never seen in modern times — and a line that every president since Richard Nixon has tried hard to stay way clear of. Exactly a month before the Comey indictment yesterday, I argued America has tipped over that invisible line into authoritarianism and fascism. It’s hard to think of a more clear example of an authoritarian regime than a political enemy being charged with crimes simply because the president wants him to be. As Peru’s fascist leader General Óscar Benavides famously said: “For my friends, everything; for my enemies, the law.”

Today we live in a country where the same standard applies.

It seems depressing to put it that way but I actually find it bracing. Better to be clear on where we are.

There are still vestiges of our constitutional republic that are working as we’ve seen this week. These people are working very quickly and they’re sloppy. The Comey indictment is ridiculous and if our courts are working properly it’s inconceivable that he will be convicted. Perhaps the country needs to see this play out in order to understand it.

ABC and Sinclair both backed off of canceling Kimmell largely, it appears, as a result of the economic blowback. People have power. If we are able to exercise that at the ballot box next year, we may be able to stop some of this before it is totally institutionalized.

The damage will be incalculable and it will take a great deal of imagination and energy over many years to create something new and better out of the rubble but it is possible as long as people realize that they still have the capacity to fight back.

An Important Right Wing Influencer Isn’t Wrong

Imagine that

If you read this blog regularly you know that Christopher Rufo is a very talented right wing propagandist. He’s a partisan operative with tremendous influence, one of the major leaders of messaging strategy for the GOP. Imagine my surprise to read the following which is actually a fairly level headed analysis of the recent spate of mass shootings, including Kirk’s.

Let me say upfront that his thinly veiled transphobia is predictably obtuse but considering what most of these people say on a daily basis, it’s pretty mild. But his overall analysis is right:

In recent years, a new form of terror has emerged: decentralized, digitally driven violence organized not around coherent ideologies but around memes, fantasies, and nihilistic impulses. The perpetrators of this low-grade terror campaign do not belong to hierarchical organizations or pursue concrete political aims. More often, they come from ordinary families and lash out in acts of violence without discernible purpose.

At the close of this summer, two such incidents underscored the trend: the attack on schoolchildren at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the assassination of Charlie Kirk in Orem, Utah. Though the first resembled the school-shooter archetype and the second evoked a JFK-style political assassination, both share psychological and sociological roots that make them more alike than they initially appear.

The new terror campaign is defined by a particular kind of psychopathology. It is perhaps tautological that anyone willing to kill innocent schoolchildren as they are praying or to assassinate a popular podcast host in broad daylight is pathological. But in these cases, both alleged killers—Robin Westman (formerly Robert Westman), and Tyler Robinson—left behind several warning signs that were psychological in nature.

Westman, the alleged Annunciation shooter, left a diary detailing fantasies and inner turmoil related to his transgender identity. While he decorated his weapons with pithy slogans, including “Kill Donald Trump,” “Burn Israel,” and “Nuke India,” these were memes and ironies, designed to give the appearance of ideology, concealing a potentially more disturbing motive. He was in the throes of a transgender identity crisis and had fantasized about being a demon and wanting to watch children suffer. The ideology was a brittle shell around a deeper emptiness that could only be satisfied with horror.

Robinson, Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin, reportedly spent thousands of hours playing video games, had an account on sexual fetish websites, and played a “dating simulator” game involving “furries,” muscular cartoon characters that are half-animal and half-man. Officials claim that Robinson had moved in with a boyfriend who identified as transgender and to whom he confessed the crime. Like Westman, Robinson inscribed slogans on the shell casings he used in the assassination, including a message about noticing the “bulge” of male genitalia through women’s clothing. The fact that Robinson waited until Kirk began to answer a question about transgender mass shootings seems to reinforce the point.

In addition to their shared fixation with transgenderism, both Westman and Robinson immersed themselves in peculiar digital subcultures. These online spaces were not hubs of Marxism—or even transgenderism, strictly speaking—but of memes, attitudes, copycatting, in-jokes, and irony that, in certain cases, spilled over into violence. Both men allegedly acted out their fantasies not to advance a coherent ideology shaped by study or political organizing but to gratify an obscure personal urge.

In a note to his transgender boyfriend, Robinson wrote that he wanted to stop Charlie Kirk’s “hate.” While this may hint at a nascent ideology, the remark was perfunctory and incidental to the crime. Robinson did not seek to change policy or dismantle a system of government. He seems instead to have wanted to kill a man who spoke openly about transgenderism and embodied a vague notion of “hate.”

Another striking pattern in these crimes is that, at least from initial reporting, the alleged perpetrators came from ordinary, middle-class, Middle American families. Westman’s mother, for example, was active in her Catholic parish in Minneapolis. These were not visibly broken homes but functional households that nonetheless produced monsters—what we might call “radical normie terrorism.”

Radical normie terrorism poses a new challenge for law enforcement. As a veteran FBI agent told me, domestic law enforcement has no systematic program to identify, assess, and respond to this kind of online radicalization. The Bureau still relies on old-fashioned methods—processing tips, knocking on doors, interviewing witnesses—and, in most cases, cannot intervene against disturbed individuals until after they strike.

These acts of terror reflect something dark in our nation’s soul. The perpetrators were so dissatisfied with their middle-class lives that they sought to destroy the highest symbols of their society: murdering children in church pews, an attack on God; and murdering a political speaker in cold blood, an attack on the republic.

Stopping similar killers in the future will be a major challenge. The Internet is hard to police and culture hard to reform. But we should keep the stakes in mind as we work to protect the things we love and grapple for a solution, however elusive it may seem.

Again, the focus on these two particular shooters’ transgender relationships is misplaced. There are many more examples of this phenomenon in which there is no transgender connection at all. But there is definitely something going on in these dark corners of the internet where alienated young people are finding an identity in violent nihilism and “meme culture.” And whatever is driving it aren’t the easy shibboleths about broken families and urban decadence. These people come from what appear to be, on the surface at least, the quintessential Real America.

It’s hopeful that someone in Rufo’s position is at least admitting that this isn’t ideological. Maybe there can be some common ground after all?

Dr. Trump Is On Call

If your kid has a fever just let it run. Sure there are serious complications from high fevers but Dr Trump knows best. The rest is completely incoherent and wrong but that’s ok too. His uncle taught at MIT.

Even Nixon didn’t give medical advice.

JD Vance’s America

Right:

Blood libel? Seriously? They act like thugs. Do they expect respect for this behavior? In front of her little kids…

This is happening every single day in cities and towns all over this country. It is depraved.

Whiskey Pete A Go Go

Who’s minding the store?

Headline at The Washington Post.

The Department of War(?) head Pete Hegseth in an extraordinary development has summoned top U.S. military brass stationed around world by the hundreds for an impromptu tête-à-tête. They’ll gather at Quantico Marine Base in Virginia on Tuesday. No one knows why. Nobody’s talking. You should be worried.

The order “applies to all senior officers with the rank of brigadier general or above, or their Navy equivalent, serving in command positions and their top enlisted advisers,” the Washington Post reports. That’s over 800, although it’s unknown how many must attend in person.

Newsweek adds:

Vice President JD Vance said Thursday the gathering is “not particularly unusual.” Asked about it during an Oval Office appearance, President Donald Trump appeared unaware of the details and said, “I’ll be there if they want me but why is that such a big deal?”

I can imagine apocalyptic reasons why it could be a big deal: a ham-fisted, Trumpy version of the Night of the Long Knives, the Katyn forest, or the Ba’ath Party Purge. But nobody in the Trump administration has the stomach for that, not even Stephen Miller.

Thinking about how in 1979 Saddam Hussein held a party conference in which his opponents were dragged out and soon executed, and everyone who was left inside was like "Oh yeah, we're on the team, you bet"

Paul Waldman (@paulwaldman.bsky.social) 2025-09-25T15:26:19.853Z

What else? In-person loyalty oaths? “I pledge allegiance to Donald Trump and to the Monarchy for which he stands”? In an administration otherwise inclined to fire people by social media post, could an in-person purge of the military be in the offing?

Greg Williams, the director of the Center for Defense Information at Project on Government Oversight, tells The Hill:

“It begs the question of why [Hegseth] would do something on such short notice and require so many people to show up in person,” Williams told The Hill. “The absence of public justification for something so unprecedented is in and of itself, a sort of concern.”

He added that the military normally doesn’t require such large, in-person meetings for a whole host of different reasons, including the disruption of ongoing operations, security and “just the sheer safety concerns of having that large a fraction of our military leadership all in one place,” calling it “really concerning.”

Fox News Weekend host Pete Hegseth at 2018 Student Action Summit hosted by Turning Point USA, back when heavy-handed government was bad. Photo by Gage Skidmore (CC BY-SA 2.0).

USA Today brings readers up to speed on the former Fox News Weekend host’s Trumpy Pentagon makeover to date:

In February, he fired Air Force General C.Q. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, along with five other admirals and generals in an unprecedented shake-up of U.S. military leadership.

Last month, Hegseth fired the head of the Pentagon’s intelligence agency and two other senior military commanders.

In May, Hegseth ordered a 20% reduction in the number of four-star officers. In that May memo, Hegseth said there would also be a minimum 20% reduction in the number of general officers in the National Guard and an additional 10% reduction among general and flag officers across the military.

“More generals and admirals does not lead to more success,” Hegseth said at the time.

Now, many of those generals and admirals will be in the same room.

Now, isn’t that a rather glaring strategic vulnerability? All the military’s top leadership away from their posts “in a world that has walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with guns”? What must be going on in the minds of Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping while U.S. generals from around the globe are engaged in a team building (or team eviscerating) exercise in Virginia?

Rumor has it that Hegseth is soon to publish a new defense strategy. That in itself should send shivers down our collective spine (and NATO’s and Ukraine’s). Might top brass be asked to sign on to the U.S. pulling back from strategic defense of key allies and trade routes or else find themselves purged as well?

Worst-worst case? Preparation for Trump invoking the Insurrection Act and declaring martial law, suggests podcaster Jack Hopkins, former Republican. It’s the first time I’ve run across this guy, so take it with a grain of salt, but here’s what he recommends to watch out for:

  1. Post-Meeting Talking Points lean on “civil order” and “homeland security.”
  2. National Guard federalization ramps up…governors sidelined.
  3. Rules of Engagement quietly shift to allow “crowd control” language.
  4. JAGs excluded from the meeting. (Lawyers in the room = legal brakes. Lawyers out = no brakes.)

And the guest list? “Any White House faces present? That’s an alarm,” warns Hopkins.

No problem. I’m already alarmed.

* * * * *

Have you fought dicktatorship today?

50501 
May Day Strong
No King’s One Million Rising movement – Next national day of protest Oct. 18
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

Are You There Yet?

Pace yourselves

Via Spocko on Mastodon. (Yes, it’s still a thing.)

Defeating Trumpism is a marathon, not a sprint.

* * * * *

Have you fought dicktatorship today?

50501 
May Day Strong
No King’s One Million Rising movement – Next national day of protest Oct. 18
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

Comey Indicted

Trump promised he would get vengeance and he’s getting it. Comey was indicted by a Grand Jury today for lying to Congress and obstructing justice. None of the career prosecutors appeared, it was only Trump’s pageant queen insurance lawyer and one US attorney and that’s because the office knows that this is a bogus case only being pursued because Donald Trump has ordered it. The previous USAT resigned rather than bring it.

Trump is celebrating:

How many will resign over this?

They have a big mission ahead of them:

He’s inciting his rabid followers to attack regular, everyday opponents.

This is where we are people. It’s bad. Very bad.