“Lightweight Jamie Raskin is a stupid person’s idea of a smart person. President Trump’s sharpness, unmatched energy, and historic accessibility stand in stark contrast to what we saw during the past four years when Democrats like Raskin intentionally covered up Joe Biden’s serious mental and physical decline from the American people.” — White House spokesperson David Ingle
*The quote was in response to Jamie Raskin sending a letter to the White House doctor requesting that he perform a thorough neuropsychological assessment and cognitive test of the president and provide the details to the public. Lol.
Greg Sargent makes note of one little bit of news in that unhinged rant:
Trump’s eruption—which singled out critics like Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Alex Jones, who have attacked the war and declared Trump’s genocidal threat disqualifying—specifically attacked Jones this way:
Bankrupt Alex Jones…says some of the dumbest things, and lost his entire fortune, as he should have, for his horrendous attack on the families of the Sandy Hook shooting victims, ridiculously claiming it was a hoax.
Wait, so Trump thinks it was “horrendous” that Jones claimed the Sandy Hook massacre was a “hoax”? That’s interesting. Because after Jones first pushed his vile conspiracy theories about the 2012 massacre—which took the lives of 20 children and 6 educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut—some in Newtown publicly called on then-president Trump in 2017 to condemn Jones’s conspiracy theorizing about it. And they say it never happened.
It turns out that there’s a whole backstory here involving Trump, Jones, and Newtown that goes back many years. Now that Trump has reopened the topic, it deserves a recapping.
To wit: Back in 2015, when Jones was prominently questioning whether the Sandy Hook massacre really happened, insisting that it was staged by the government, Trump was untroubled by Jones’ claims. Running for president the first time, Trump appeared on Jones’s “Infowars” show that year to boost his candidacy. He praised Jones’s ability to get attention with his conspiracy-theorizing, declaring: “Your reputation is amazing.”
This understandably upset people in Newtown. In 2017, soon after Trump took office, the Newtown school board sent a letter to the new president, urging him to “clearly and unequivocally” recognize that the massacre had happened and denounce Jones’s lies about it. A perfunctory White House statement only condemned “hate” generally.
Jones is a certified nutcase and what he did to the Newtown families was one of the worst conspiracy theories ever perpetrated. It was inconceivable that any politician would seek his endorsement after he deployed his followers to harass and intimidate the families of those slain 6 year olds. But Trump did it and never denounced Jones in any way. Instead he cultivated him.
Now that Jones has turned on Trump (for his own purposes, I’m sure) he decides to mention in passing that his disgusting crusade was a hoax — a word that Trump commonly deploys to deflect the exposure of his own criminal activities. He defines the word narcissist.
Those are not good numbers. And they’re getting worse:
He thought he was going to march across the globe, seizing territory, flexing U.S. military might and economic power to dominate everyone in sight. Instead he’s made a fool out of America and fatefully diminished American power even going so far as to start a war in the middle east that he couldn’t win. There has never been a worse foreign policy president in all our history. Even some Republicans appear to be noticing — at least a quarter of them have no faith in his abilities to handle our relationships with every one of those countries.
President Trump has repeatedly promised his top administration officials pardons before he leaves office, according to people who have heard his comments.
“I’ll pardon everyone who has come within 200 feet of the Oval,” Trump said in a recent meeting to laughs, according to people with knowledge of the comments. That radius appears to be expanding as the president repeats the line. Another person who met with Trump earlier this year said the president quipped about pardoning anyone who had come within 10 feet.
In one conversation with advisers in the dining room next to the Oval Office last year, Trump said he would host a news conference and announce mass pardons before he left office, some of the people said. The people said they weren’t aware of specific pardons being offered to specific people for specific acts.
They’re acting like this is just a joke. It is not. Trump issued a blanket pardon to all the J6 defendants and has already used his pardon power indiscriminately, 1600 in total. We know that he will do it.
Many have gone to allies and donors, or those who had hired them, coming after a social pull-aside or a round of golf. Some have received bipartisan criticism, including one to a crypto billionaire whose company boosted Trump’s own digital-currency company, and another to a former Honduran president convicted of conspiring with cartels to ship cocaine to the U.S. In Trump’s first term, he signed fewer than 250 pardons and commutations.
He has apparently said repeatedly that he will pardon people when they tell him they could face prosecution for his orders. And let’s be frank — the kind of people who are willing to work with him are also the kind of people who will commit crimes without any pangs of conscience knowing they will suffer no consequences.
Naturally, everyone’s blaming Biden for pardoning the J6 Committee, Hunter and Fauci saying that broke the norm and Trump is just following his lead. That’s not true. Trump pardoned Manafort, Roger Stone, Steve Bannon and Michael Flynn in his first term and he knew that Biden was not going to go after his family. He did not test the norm that said a president couldn’t pardon himself so I guess there’s that.
I certainly don’t blame Biden for pardoning those people. Trump had made it clear that he was prepared to pursue vengeance against his political enemies and has taken steps to do it. They just opened an investigation into Cassidy Hutchinson!
I have zero doubt that he will pardon everyone before he leaves office. The whole staff and every single political appointee. I might even put money on the prediction market.
It seems Kansas Republicans have made a song by Sting and The Police into state policy:
Republican legislators overrode Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto to create a 25-foot buffer around law enforcement and emergency personnel, a move the Senate leader said ensures Kansas won’t become like Minnesota.
Senate President Ty Masterson said in a news release that House Bill 2372, referred to as the Halo Act, keeps “radical protesters” from interfering with law enforcement and keeps officers and bystanders safe.
Masterson referred to riots in Minnesota when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers injured and killed bystanders while detaining immigrants.
The bill makes it a misdemeanor crime to go within 25 feet of a first responder while they are working. A violation can result in a fine up to $1,000 and jail term of up to six months.
The new law would also keeps reporters 25 feet away and virtually end documentation by citizens with cell phones. They’d need cameras with long lenses and shotgun mics to record what officers are doing with (or to) detainees. Cell phones won’t cut it.
Darnella Frazier, then 17, was filming with her cell phone from a sidewalk a few feet away from Minneapolis police when in 2020 they pinned George Floyd to the pavement and squeezed the life out of him. She was close enough to both see and for her phone to pick up audio of Floyd’s cries of “I can’t breathe” as he died.
Say something. Do something. Hell, sing something!
Photos byJulie Harrison.
We may not have peace in our time. Not from our self-described “peace president.” But we have each other.
There are clips on the net showing how Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band open the Land Of Hope And Dreams American Tour they launched, appropriately, in Minneapolis on March 31. Springsteen’s monologue closes by the band launching into Edwin Starr’s “War”.
But someone overnight put up a clip of how Springsteen closes the show, referencing slain Minneaplis protesters Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
I wanted to share a piece of the transcript:
So when you go home tonight, hold your loved ones close. And in the morning, do as Renee did. Find a way to take aggressive, peaceful action to defend our country’s ideals. And as the great civil rights leader, John Lewis, said, go out and get into good trouble.
Say something. Do something. Hell, sing something!
If you’re feeling helpless, hopeless, betrayed, frustrated, angry, I understand. I have felt that way too. This is a tour that wasn’t planned. But that’s why the E Street Band is here tonight. Because we needed to feel your strength. And your hope. And we needed to bring you some strength and some hope in these times. I hope we’ve done that for you tonight.
View on Threads
It’s easy to lose hope. Who saw the United States becoming a rogue nation led by a murderous lunatic? It’s not the country I expected to retire into. But you’re not living in a bombed-out building in Gaza, I tell myself. Like Springsteen said, do something to make things better.
The commuters who honk, smile, wave, applaud, and cheer Sign Guy five rush hours a week keep me from losing hope. Dancing like an idiot for about 15,000 of them each week feels like community service. I hope it keeps them from losing hope. The thank-yous just keep coming. The smiles alone are worth it.
Crimson CUBdate:this little rescued mtn lion cub continues to improve!
Crimson’s little purple dinosaur may look like just a toy, but it actually helps him learn to stalk, pounce, and play— all behaviors we want to see in a developing young puma.
It was an unusual scene. A lion cub alone for days in southern California’s sprawling Santa Monica mountains, emitting a noise that sounded like a cross between a purr and a light squeal, perhaps calling out for his mother.
Where was his mother? The National Park Service’s biologists, who monitor the recreation area’s small mountain lion population, visited the cub’s location on several occasions. They surmised that his mother had likely moved to another den, abandoning the cub in the process.
The lion kitten’s health was taking a turn for the worse. He appeared weaker and was losing weight. In consultation with the California department of fish and wildlife, the biologists swooped in to rescue the kitten, which would land in the care of the Oakland Zoo.
The 3-week-cub, later named “Crimson”, arrived in late March to the Oakland Zoo, emaciated and unable to stand, according to the zoo’s chief executive officer Nik Dehejia. He was “extremely tiny”, Dehejia said. The newborn cub could fit into cupped hands.
It’s rare for mountain lions to abandon their offspring. It’s unclear why exactly Crimson’s mother left him. “Often times we’ll never know,” Dehejia said, although one hypothesis emerged that the cub’s abnormality – missing toes – could have signaled to his mother that he would not be able to survive as well. “It’s hard to know how many cubs were potentially there, how many cubs the mother was taking care of.”
Now at the Oakland Zoo, Crimson is in an intensive care unit at the zoo’s veterinary hospital, Dehejia said. He has received bottle feedings every 3 hours to pump nutrients back into his body. He is the 33rd mountain lion that the Oakland Zoo has rescued. Another young mountain lion, a three-month-old named Clover, is currently at the zoo as well.
“We never want to pull a mountain lion from the wild,” Dehejia said. While the zoo is proud to be rehabilitating Crimson, they want cubs to be with their families, he said. “These cubs need their mother actively for nursing and socialization.” Crimson was abandoned by his mother. But, other factors including habitat fragmentation, urban development and human-wildlife conflict have contributed to the zoo receiving distressed animals, Dehejia said.
“More often than not we are in their habitat versus they being in ours. This is a broader scale issue over how we build, how we live, how we co-exist with wildlife around us.” For now, the zoo is focused on helping Crimson grow strong and weaning him off bottle feedings, Dehejia said.
Crimson and Clover being close in age could make them well-suited companions, although it’ll be weeks before the zoo gradually introduces the two.
Gothic fantasy art titled “On the Edge” by artist Yaroslav Gerzhedovich.
We’ve been waiting for MAGA Fever to break for years. It hasn’t happened. Americans elected a walking sheaf of personality defects to the White House twice, the second time after two impeachments and multiple felony convictions. The American electorate has its own issues, clearly. Lots of them. But it seems that Donald Trump’s illegal Iran war and his threat to destroy “a whole civilization” on “Bridge Day” was (no pun intended) a bridge too far. A woman at a street protest told me on Thursday that Trump’s threat made her physically ill. It finally broke some of his strongest supporters.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Candace Owens, Megyn Kelly, Tucker Carlson, and Alex Jones stared long into the abyss only to be shaken by what stared back.
Tucker Carlson helped get Donald Trump elected president in 2016, but now he’s warning Christians they should abandon support for the president as he commits immoral crimes against humanity.
Alex Jones was already done with Trump, but Trump’s “supervillain” statements about Iran and Melania Trump’s Epstein statement on Thursday made him withdraw his support. “The ship is sinking.”
Alex Jones reacts to Trump attacking him, saying Trump is possessed by demonic forces and Melania contradicted him on Epstein with her surprise press statement: “It looks to me like she’s breaking with Trump because she knows the ship is sinking. He’s acting like he’s guilty.” pic.twitter.com/GeYVDZT0q2
Ryan Grim remarks on a “damning portrait” of MAGA collapse.
This is quite a well put together summary from @megynkelly but what’s interesting about it is that if you take each piece on its own, not a single piece of it is even remotely controversial. Yet adds up to such a damning portrait of this moment. pic.twitter.com/oF6j4GCjUR
I’m not holding my breath. I’ll wait for mass resignations from the White House. As I noted the other day, the dead enders are still out there. They know. They just haven’t processed their betrayal yet.
“The dead-enders are still with us, those remnants of the defeated regimes who’ll go on fighting long after their cause is lost.” — Donald Rumsfeld
“If this was victory, I’d hate to see what failure looks like,” writes Susan B. Glasser in The New Yorker. “‘Unconditional surrender’ this was not,” she writes in her Iran war scorecard Glasser begins by quoting the hyperventilations of victory by Secretary of WAR! Pete Hegseth. “Operation Epic Fury, he exulted, ‘achieved every single objective, on plan, on schedule, exactly as laid out from Day One.’”
Hegseth sounds like he closely studied the tape of Sean Spicer berating Press Room reporters for not highlighting the collossal size of his malignant narcissist boss’ smallish first inaugural crowd. Well done, Padawan.
— Barney Panofsky's Best Intentions (@mynamesnotgordy) April 8, 2026
Glasser is not one for vulgar slang in print, but in her review of Trump’s humiliation in a war he started for reasons the remain unclear, it pops up:
How awful, then, to have to admit what we Americans have seen for a decade now—this is not a new Trump but a very old one. Defeat will not temper his mania. There is no strategic setback so big as to embarrass him. Unchastened by failure, Trump, on Thursday morning, was shit-posting on social media about his plans for the U.S. military’s “next Conquest.”
To Trump, the inability to achieve the goals he himself articulated in a war of his choosing against Iran is just one more screwup. He has, after all, made a lifetime of catastrophic mistakes and still ended up as President—twice. He’ll handle this like all the rest by moving on and getting over it even before the cleanup crews have finished in Tel Aviv and Tehran.
Trump’s capital-V victory is in all the cleanup jobs he’s created. I immediately thought of the little guy who cleans up after Mr. Peabody’s imperial parade. He’d never make Trump’s Mar-a-Lago guest list.
Yes, you, dear reader—at least assuming you’re not among the small community of courtiers sucking public funds dry. Instead, in virtually every way imaginable, Trump has made it easier for all those insiders to profit and, in turn, rip you off. If you bet on or invest in anything Trump might influence and you don’t have inside information, you’re a chump.
As the expression goes: If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.
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The recent rash of curiously well-timed trades in prediction markets is one example of how those who have drawn up chairs to Trump’s banquet table appear to be feasting at public expense.
Yep. The corruption is epic. To appropriate a certain phrase, “we’ve never seen anything like it.” And in this case that’s literally true.
The White House warned staff against improperly leveraging their positions to place bets in futures markets in an email on March 24, a day after President Donald Trump ordered a brief pause in some Iran strikes, a White House official said on Thursday…
Ethics rules already prohibit executive workers from gambling while on federal property, and there are rules on the books barring the use of government information for private gain. A senior administration official who received the email described the warning as a timely “refresher” given the fact that suspicious monster bets in futures markets are “hot in the news.”
I feel much better now, don’t you? I’m sure they would never do anything that might be construed as unethical.