484 Comments

  1. AlexinCT

    Bolsonaro supporters invade Brazil’s Congress, Supreme Court and executive buildings

    This looks a lot more like some kind of insurrection to me than that field day on J6 2021.

    • cyto

      Twitter is already filled with stories. One blue checkmark was saying this was planned in Florida. Somehow this means Trump is behind it.

      • Count Potato

        Isn’t Bolsonaro in Orlando?

      • cyto

        That was the connection

      • cyto

        And Trump is in West Palm Beach… only a couple of hours away. So… obviously.

      • Rebel Scum

        And he called for peace, which clearly means he incited an insurrection.

      • UnCivilServant

        What sort of Mickey Mouse operaton are they running down there?

    • Michael Malaise

      There are 2 ways to look at this phenomenon:

      1. These masses of people are domestic terrorists who will not accept elections and the governance of their country by their betters

      or

      2. Something is seriously wrong with how we pick leaders.

      I’m guessing the corporate media is all-in on 1.

      • Count Potato

        Or electronic voting machines are cancer?

  2. Rat on a train

    Brazil’s capital could use some destruction. Those building are ugly.

    • Zwak, who has his own double cross to bear.

      Brazils capital, Brasillia, was a manufactured city in the sixties, I think. Totally useless place with no connection to the country.

      Kinda like DC.

  3. AlexinCT

    El Paso Bulldozes Illegal Alien Homeless Encampments Prior to Biden Visit

    How often have you read any of the plethora of dystopian novels with shit like this, and said to yourself, this just seems too far fetched a notion to be plausible, only to see it happening for real in the last few years, huh?

    Old me wishes I could go tell young me that dismissing those things as implausible was not just wrong, but potentially disastrous for human civilization in general.

    • UnCivilServant

      My first question after reading the headline was “Did they bother to evacuate first?”

      • Certified Public Asshat

        I need a crying AOC meme with her driving a bulldozer over a bunch of tents.

      • AlexinCT

        They did. The hobos are now all in the luxury suites at the most expensive & posh establishments in that area…

        At tax payers expense.

  4. Count Potato

    “El Paso Bulldozes Illegal Alien Homeless Encampments Prior to Biden Visit”

    It’s always about optics. Same reason people are mad at Libs of Tik Tok.

  5. AlexinCT

    Food prices were at record highs in 2022, U.N. says

    2023 says “Hold my beer and watch how the corruptocracies and the green antihumanism movements will make tat shit look tame”….

  6. AlexinCT

    Movie Attendance Collapses 48% over Four Very Woke Years

    The one serious positive I see that came from the shenanigans related to the scam-pandemic is that so many people decided or have come to a point where they do not give their money to these scumbags anymore….

    • R.J.

      It doesn’t matter. Now the government will fund movies with ill-gotten gains.

      • Rat on a train

        Governments already subsidize film production. Now they need to subsidize consumption.

      • R.J.

        France already does. See below.

    • The Last American Hero

      To be a little fair, 2018 included some big titles, like Infinity War, a Star Wars Movie, and the Spiderverse movie, plus Black Panther.

      A trendline over time with median attendance rather than box office dollars would be more useful to measure film performance.

      Why not pick 2019 to compare to 2022? Probably because it included the final Avengers movie, the final Star Wars movie, and the final Bond movie.

      • UnCivilServant

        I haven’t been in a theater since 2008.

        What’s taking the rest of you so long to catch up?

      • Not Adahn

        You missed out seeing Dune then.

      • UnCivilServant

        Naw, Frank Herbert turned me off the franchise.

      • Sensei

        No, David Lynch’s “masterpiece” was in 1984.

      • juris imprudent

        No. Lynch’s film strayed too far from the books and was too condensed. Of the two films, Villeneuve’s is clearly the better – unless he screws up part 2.

      • Sensei

        I agree, hence the quote marks.

        Although Lynch’s film does have some things I liked. I’ve watched it a few times and realized it was better than when I first saw it in the theater. If you never read the book I’m not sure how you were supposed to understand the film.

        I think Villeneuve’s version would work better if you never read the book.

      • juris imprudent

        Yes – I’ve read the books and the wife hasn’t and she didn’t pester me with questions during the movie (Villeneuve’s).

  7. PieInTheSky

    El Paso Bulldozes Illegal Alien Homeless Encampments Prior to Biden Visit – I mean Texans are evil it is known

  8. Count Potato

    “IRS Targeted More ‘Easy-Mark’ Low-Income Families Than Millionaires, University Report”

    Low hanging fruit. It’s the same as the War on Drugs. Why go after people who can hire accountants and lawyers to defend themselves?

    • cyto

      Well, the way it is phrased it could not be otherwise. More low income than millionaires? A couple of orders of magnitude more low income earners than million dollar earners.

      • whiz

        ^^ This

  9. PieInTheSky

    2022 Was Another Gloomy Year For Many Cable Networks – we need to ban popular youtubers. The networks must be saved. Our democracy is at stake.

  10. Count Potato

    “Movie Attendance Collapses 48% over Four Very Woke Years”

    I think closing theaters due to covid is more of an issue than wokism.

    • AlexinCT

      All theatres are open again… Most people are still not going to the movies. In my case it is simply because the product delivered seems to be idiotic woke shit that I now no longer feel compelled to go watch anyway to kill a few hours on a weekend. I was not that big of a movie goer, but I saw a movie at least once or twice a month, but now, simply see no reason to go spend all that money for a subpar experience and a screed intended to insult my intelligence.

      • Drake

        You don’t want to pay to see yet another Marvel spin-of where the woke hero beats up bitter-clingers?

      • rhywun

        You and I might not want to, but that’s not stopping them from pushing out one after another. Somebody’s watching that crap.

      • SDF-7

        In my case, part of it is that I don’t trust this insane state not to still have some masking / proof-of-vax / whatnot crap in theaters even at this point (and certainly don’t trust big theater chains not to have them anyway). I don’t know what crap they’re requiring… and it simply isn’t worth it to deal with it. I thought about seeing the first 2 episodes of season 3 of The Chosen last month or so… and then decided I just didn’t want to deal with whatever crap they might be doing. And I’m probably not alone in the stupid states.

      • Zwak, who has his own double cross to bear.

        I generally went to art theaters, and they ALL have/had mask requirements, or are doing some sort of streaming service. Which is a lame as it sounds.

        That might have stopped, but I haven’t bothered to check.

      • Zwak, who has his own double cross to bear.

        Just checked the local one, and they are now listing masks as optional.

        I might go to the movies again. But it speaks volumes that I hadn’t even bothered to check yet.

      • Rat on a train

        In the 90s my father and I went almost every week. We didn’t check what was playing. We found out when we got to the cinema. It was inexpensive entertainment. Now prices are up and quality down. It’s been years since I went.

      • AlexinCT

        In my case I was playing the role of the father, and my kid was the one dragging me out to all the movies. And it has been over 5 years since I would let one of those movie theatres rake me over the coals and rob me of so much money for a product that has not steadily declined in quality, but had become downright insulting to my intelligence in too many cases because of the woke shit in these dumb movies.

      • Count Potato

        “All theatres are open again”

        Yes, but they were closed. So you have the time when people couldn’t go, followed by the time people got used to not going.

    • PieInTheSky

      Also streaming has some role… I do not go much to the cinema anymore, one because most movies are not worth it, but also because I no longer have the large group of frienmds to go with like in university or immediately after

      • cyto

        I think this is huge. Covid taught people to stay home. They spent government checks on Big TVs. Now nobody wants to pay for crappy sequels with “reimagined” characters.

        They will pay for the good stuff though. People went to see Top Gun in huge numbers. Avatar is doing well domestically. (Not nearly as well as overseas)

    • UnCivilServant

      Closing the theaters led to a re-evaluation and a lot of people going “Why was I paying so much for this shit?”

      They worked together as lethal comorbidities.

      • R.J.

        Very true. Also that article ignores the fact that movies had been flagging down for years due to shitty content and poor experience. The last four years of difficulties just added another nail in the coffin.

    • Michael Malaise

      I think comparing pre- to post-pandemic moviegoing habits is simplistic (Breitbart? Shocker!)

      People simply got used to not going and realized they could get a similar or better experience at home. I know this has existed for quite awhile but I think being forced made a lot of people change their habits in ways that they just became more comfortable with. I do agree the cost is not commensurate with the experience most of the time. I am very discriminating about what I choose to see in the theater.

      I also only go to to one movie chain. Marcus. The CEO, Greg Marcus, is a corny MF who makes pre-trailer videos that always thank the audience for coming to the theater. He also seems to really love movies and the experience of going to them.

      • Not Adahn

        I miss Alamo Draft House.

    • DrOtto

      I did a massive remake of my media room early in the pandemic thanks to some good luck in Lake Charles/Las Vegas just prior to the plandemic. I need to get my return on investment from that.

      • DrOtto

        Also, unless you like pregnant Jokers, movies have really gone to shit. The last 2 movies I saw prior to the plandemic were The Gentlemen and Ford v Ferrari. I saw those probably a week apart. Since then, I’ve seen Maverick and Elvis in theaters. Nothing else even looked worth making the effort.

    • Lackadaisical

      Perhaps people just realized that for the cost of a single movie ticket they could fund a whole month of entertainment?

  11. AlexinCT

    Hysteria Begins as the Reality of a GOP Majority Sinks In

    I would think that the bigger stink comes from the fact that for all its worth, the establishment/uniparty now has to operate by rules that could make it harder to just steamroll the people like D.C. does by rote.

  12. The Late P Brooks

    The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization said in a press release that “many commodities are still at record highs” even as overall prices declined modestly through the end of the year.

    “World prices of wheat and maize reached record highs last year,” the FAO said, “and the average value of vegetable oils hit a new record.”

    “Individual indexes for dairy and meat prices also marked their highest full-year levels since 1990,” the agency added.

    Obviously the solution is higher taxes and more regulations on industrial agriculture and food subsidies for the consumer.

    • AlexinCT

      The powerful should be in charge of picking winners & losers so the world is more just!

      /evil fucking leftards

    • Fourscore

      Need more electric tractors in the farm fields.

      First, get rid of subsidies. Let the market figure things out.

      • AlexinCT

        And lose control over the ability to punish those you disapprove of while giving victories to those you do no matter how inept and undeserving they are?

        PSHAH!

  13. PieInTheSky

    World Bank to Warn of Global Recession Risk in Economic Outlook – I think we need to print more money for stimulus. Also print some natural gas for Europe… oh wait that aint that ewasy

    • AlexinCT

      That Modern Monetary Policy shit is and should be D.O.A. after the destruction & havoc these scumbags caused using it the last 2 or 3 years…

  14. Count Potato

    “The boxes have a side that opens to the outside of the building, allowing parents to place their infant in a temperature-controlled container that alerts firefighters to the baby’s presence 60 seconds after they’re placed inside. ”

    Seems unnecessarily technology. Someone could just leave the baby in a basket or whatever, ring the doorbell, and run off.

    • SDF-7

      I suppose the alligators make it hard to go really old school and float the baby down the river in the hopes that it will lead the revolution later in life and all….

      • UnCivilServant

        I donno, the Nile Crocodile was around in those days.

      • Rat on a train

        Moses didn’t have to worry about Florida Man in a boat.

      • Not Adahn

        Well yeah, Mooses don’t live as far south as FL.

    • Fourscore

      I hope there are some lady firefighters standing by. The guys would all look at each other and try to get someone else to touch the newborn. It would be like Mikey’s brothers waiting for someone else.

    • Bob Boberson

      The box makes it so there is a direct anonymous handoff to a person on the other side of the wall and eliminates any chance of anything happening the baby due to lack of supervision. It incentivizes the parent because they don’t risk prosecution for abandonment. It was a concept started in Asia where there was a lot of abandonment of babies (resulting in deaths from exposure) with disabilities. It’s actually a good idea.

      • UnCivilServant

        What it really needs to be paired with is easier adoption. It really galls me how much expense and hassle there is to adopting in-country, leading many families to adopt from other countries when there’s so many children locally in need of a home.

      • cyto

        Is there an age limit?

      • Michael Malaise

        The kid just has to be able to fit in the box. Did you raise a surly contortionist?

      • cyto

        Actually, I was thinking of giving myself up. Having someone else buy me a pony would be a nice change.

      • Lackadaisical

        Yup, it’s criminal how much adoption costs.

        Pass a background check, inspection and interview, should be under 1k, maybe $500?

      • cyto

        After we lost our baby, my ex and I went through the process. I spent almost a grand just hiring a consultant to help us through it.

        If you want a 5 year old kid from an abusive home, the foster r system will support you. But if you want a healthy baby… you gotta make an “adoption portfolio ” to advertise what great parents you will be.

        With lawyers and everything else, 20 grand was what we were told to expect 25 years ago.

        We have a friend who went the Africa route. She adopted a baby and by the time the legal and diplomatic work was done, she got an expensive 2.5 year old. Probably spent over 30 grand. Had to take a couple of trips to Africa, so 50 grand is entirely possible.

  15. The Late P Brooks

    Those “productivity enhancing” tech companies sure seem to have a lot of dead weight.

    • PieInTheSky

      a lot of dead weight. – what you are saying sounds misogynist to me

      • Rat on a train

        fatphobic

  16. Trigger Hippie

    ‘This hysteria isn’t actually about it taking three days to pick a Speaker. It’s not even about the rules changes that took place in the House. Rather, it’s about the realization that unfettered leftwing power at the federal level is coming to an end.’

    Sure, Red State columnist, sure. It’s so relieving to know that those newly elected Republicans will finally bring some fiscal and social sanity back to the halls of Congress and break up the power of the alphabet agencies and the MIC by withholding funds and conducting investigations into their actions. The long national top-down Uni-party nightmare is finally over. Thank the God of your choosing.

    • cyto

      Yeah… now it is “mostly unfettered”.

      • Trigger Hippie

        “You mean I have to go through the motions of pretending to do my job before voting to pass a bill I neither read nor would understand even if I did?! The horror!”

    • Fourscore

      Open mike at the comedy club? Sure sounds like it. My Trumpinista friends were quick to jump on the bandwagon.

      “We got ’em now”

      • Trigger Hippie

        It was a razor thin majority of Republicans in the House that was going to save us all along. Who woulda thunk it? Nevermind the fact that the major majority of them are the same lazy, corrupt, useless squishes that were roaming the Halls of Congress for years and years prior to this election cycle. This time it will be different.

    • juris imprudent

      Why do you think Republicans want to enact your (our) agenda? Are you a Republican?

      • Trigger Hippie

        Are those serious questions? I don’t and I’m not, neither are/do they. The disconnect from the verbiage and their actions are the Republicans’ favorite running joke on the people who keep voting for them.

      • juris imprudent

        Reagan promised smaller govt – did he deliver on it? I mean you’re right – it is a joke – that anyone stills believes a single word about that, ever. I don’t think Republican voters really do – because they’d have to get a bit pissed about never getting it.

      • Trigger Hippie

        Totally agree about the desire for small government. Being an average Republican voter today seems to have boiled down to little more than reactionary Owning the Libs as the bases of political and philosophical thought. Not a helluva lot different than those on the left who automatically want the exact opposite of whatever Trump happened to be pushing at the time.

        “I want my team to win at all costs and I’ve never heard of a Greek guy named Pyrrhic.”

      • juris imprudent

        Hell, I don’t think most Dem voters really believe what the Dem politicians have to say. It’s just fucking TEAM labels and how you feel so good belonging to one team or the other.

        If we could really have the chance to make life interesting we’d have the parties relabeled Hutu and Tutsi.

      • PieInTheSky

        there was no greek guy named Pyrrhic

      • Trigger Hippie

        *rolls eyes*

        Pyrrhus

        Happy?

      • UnCivilServant

        No, these victories are costly.

      • Trigger Hippie

        Not enjoying your extended stay in Sicily?

  17. The Late P Brooks

    I think we need to print more money for stimulus.

    We can print and spend our way to prosperity. Worrying about government debt is just outmoded superstitious nonsense.

    • AlexinCT

      Reality must be made to bend to the wishes of the people that want to force it to behave in the way they want it to….

  18. PieInTheSky

    Ex-French Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot Takes Aim At “Cinema World… Stuffed With Public Money” In Pandemic Memoir

    https://deadline.com/2023/01/ex-french-culture-minister-roselyne-bachelot-takes-aim-at-cinema-world-1235212010/

    Veteran French politician Roselyne Bachelot has taken an extraordinary potshot at the French film industry and the state funding system that keeps it afloat in a candid memoir recounting her difficult term as France’s culture minister during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Entitled 682 Jours – Le Bal Des Hypocrites (682 Days – The Hypocrites’ Ball) the book is stirring controversy in France following its publication there on Thursday for Bachelot’s outspoken criticism of the behaviour of everyone from technocrats to small-town councillors to “stars on big salaries” during the health crisis.

    In a section on the film industry, Bachelot questioned the efficacy of France’s state funding mechanisms for cinema, suggesting the driving principle of French cultural exception resulted in films that were of no interest to the general public.

    “The famous ‘Cultural Exception’ in fact allows very many French films ‘not to find their public’, to put it politely, or more explicitly, to be flops,” she wrote. “This system also guarantees lead actors to secure extraordinary fees, three or four times superior to actors in American independent cinema.”

    • Michael Malaise

      Does she have a newsletter?

  19. UnCivilServant

    Glib gearheads – Recently (just discovered this morning) the seal along the top edge of my windshield has sprung a leak and water started dripping down the inside of my windshield (not a lot, one drop at a time). I figure I could run a bead of something in the gap between windshield and frame to seal it, but wanted to ask for product recommendations so that it wouldn’t cause trouble if I ever needed to replace the whole windshield.

    • PieInTheSky

      you should buy a new Teasla

      • UnCivilServant

        Why? My current statuette of Nicola is doing just fine.

    • Rat on a train

      duct tape

    • Count Potato

      Does your insurance have a all glass coverage? Shatter it, and they’ll seal the new one.

      • UnCivilServant

        That’s just wasteful.

      • Homple

        Monsieur Bastiat would have a word with you.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      The easiest thing to do outside of having the windshield replaced is to run a bead of silicone RTV along the seam.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Yup

  20. PieInTheSky

    Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, January 5) — The Makabayan bloc of the House of Representatives has filed a resolution to investigate the potential price manipulation and overpricing of onions, which recently sold for up to ₱800 per kilogram.

    “There are reasons to believe that there is an ongoing control and manipulation of onion prices from farmgate to market retail by big traders who store onions in cold storage warehouses,” read House Resolution No. 673, which was released to the media on Thursday.

    It was filed a day prior by Gabriela Women’s Party Rep. Arlene Brosas, ACT Teachers Partylist Rep. France Castro, and Kabataan Partylist Rep. Raoul Manuel.

    The lawmakers pointed out that the prices of local onions have surpassed the highest daily minimum wage in the country which is ₱570.

    https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2023/1/5/makabayan-bloc-house-probe-onion-prices.html

    Someone is trying to corner the onion market

    • Rat on a train

      Over the past weeks, authorities have confiscated smuggled onions valued at tens of millions of pesos. Citing a claim by farmers’ group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, the Makabayan bloc said only 10% of contraband onions are caught by the DA and the Bureau of Customs, while 90% are sold at high prices in markets.

      Wait until the Mexican cartels learn about onion smuggling.

      • Lackadaisical

        Maybe the problem is whatever laws results in onion smuggling?

      • Tres Cool

        Im sure there’s many layers to that story.

        And roughly $7/lb ?

      • Lackadaisical

        Thanks for saving me from translating it from gibberish units.

      • pistoffnick

        It could become a dicey situation.

    • Fourscore

      “During the Civil War, General Ulysses S. Grant believed that onions would prevent dysentery and other physical ailments. He reportedly sent the following message via telegraph to the War Department: “I will not move my army without onions!” Within a day, the U.S. Government sent three trainloads of onions to the front.”

      • UnCivilServant

        Faaake.

        The only way the government would have sent three trainloads of onions to the front within a day is if they had already scheduled the shipment a year previously.

      • juris imprudent

        You aren’t accounting for the govt’s hyper secret strategic onion reserve.

      • The Last American Hero

        It must be true. I saw a Civil War uniform collection at the Smithsonian, and they had onions strapped to their belts.

  21. Not Adahn

    I think I won some converts to shotgun at winter steel yesterday. All of my last six strings were under 3 seconds.

    I set up the last stage to be fast — all of the targets were within a 30 degree cone, and I got a 1.79 sec run on that one. There was much grinning.

    • UnCivilServant

      Did you have any feed issues, or have you figured out what ammo works best?

      • Not Adahn

        I was using the CZ1012 — it runs without a hitch. Just loads slow. One of the cowboys brought his lever gun — he was good.

      • UnCivilServant

        Has anyone sued over the longarm permit requirement yet?

      • Not Adahn

        I don’t know. Something is going to give though, Fulton Co is apparently adding dumb requirements.

        For those of you unfamiliar with NYS’s gun licensing requirements.

        Evey handgun you own has to be written on your license (your standard sized plastic card). When you acquire a new handgun, you are supposed to file an amendment prior to acquisition. The Sheriff’s office gives you a coupon that you give to the gun store to take possession of the handgun. But they do not reprint your license card. You are supposed to hand-write the info on the card yourself.

        Fulton Co Sheriff’s office suddenly thought that people might just write “semiauto rifle” on their cards without actually filing the amendment! So they’ve told the gun shops there to require that purchasers how their handgun license, plus a receipt for the amendment fee.

  22. The Late P Brooks

    In the 90s my father and I went almost every week. We didn’t check what was playing. We found out when we got to the cinema. It was inexpensive entertainment. Now prices are up and quality down. It’s been years since I went.

    I used to go to the afternoon matinees once in a while if there was something interesting-looking on. It was like $4.50, so even if the movie sucked it wasn’t that big of a deal.

    And I was usually just about the only person in the theater.

    • Fourscore

      Pre-covid that was the old people’s time. After the movie hit a buffet that offered an early bird special and the day was perfect.

      My folks spent a lot of Sunday afternoons with friends, playing cribbage and maybe a beer or two.

      • Tres Cool

        I remember my parents playing cribbage. I feel like I should learn.

        Oh, and Tripoli

      • The Hyperbole

        Cribbage is a great game, unfortunately all anyone around here wants to play is Euchre which is the lamest card game ever.

      • Rat on a train

        My family played a lot of cribbage on family trips. I still have a couple nice boards I pull occasionally pull out for family game days.

    • Rat on a train

      The local UA cinemas had Tuesday $2 matinees. There was also a non-chain cinema that had $1 weekday matinees but only older films. Disneyland was also only $99 for an annual pass.

  23. PieInTheSky

    Apple destroyed my 7-figure business, unjustly, and threatened to report me to the feds.

    To clear my name, I had to reach deeper into Silicon Valley than ever before.

    Here’s the story, AKA how I learned about platform risk.

    https://twitter.com/evanmr/status/1612085234648121346

    • AlexinCT

      Sounds like some criminal enterprise combined with the crime syndicate that creates the legal climate (government & regulatory agencies working with politicians) to destroy the competition.

    • Count Potato

      Same goes for YouTubers, etc.

    • Lackadaisical

      Lol,

      How I lucked into millions by buying low and selling high

      Take my course now to learn more.

  24. The Late P Brooks

    I think I won some converts to shotgun

    Do you use slugs? Big (#00) shot?

    • Not Adahn

      Birdshot. The rules of the game are “nothing that can damage my targets” (3/8″ AR500).

      In my particular case, I’m burning through a case of some Spanish #10 birdshot that is labeled for “hunting,” but which can’t knock over a late at 15 yards. This game only makes you have to hit the plate.

      • UnCivilServant

        What are they for hunting? Snark?

      • Not Adahn

        Dunno. Mice? According to the box, the pellets are 1.75mm across.

      • EvilSheldon

        #10 is for doves and clay targets.

  25. PieInTheSky

    This is the stupidest attachment for a rifle that I have ever seen.

      • Michael Malaise

        Do you NOT want to survive the apocalypse?

      • AlexinCT

        For that, you need THIS FUCKER!

      • EvilSheldon

        Yeah. The MLok knife ruiner is dumb, but believe me, there’s much dumber stuff out there…

  26. AlexinCT

    There was a time when a revelation that the media had been lying about someone or something, like this, would have resulted in some serious repercussions and problems for the liars. These days it feels like these revelations just are another “well, there we go again” experience to us….

    I really do not get how anyone takes the media seriously anymore. I by default assume I am being lied to for some reason or another if it comes from the usual bullshitters.

  27. Rebel Scum

    Supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro broke into buildings for Brazil’s National Congress, Supreme Federal Court and the Planalto Palace, the presidential workplace, videos show, as some American politicians are comparing the event to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

    Seems to have followed the same formula.

      • Not Adahn

        Los glowinos?

      • rhywun

        Os glowões

  28. Rebel Scum

    El Paso Bulldozes Illegal Alien Homeless Encampments Prior to Biden Visit

    Wouldn’t want any bad optics for the photo shoot .

    • Tonio

      [narrows camera aperture]

  29. Michael Malaise

    The new Elon Twitter problem is I keep getting followed by those bot-model random woman accounts. There seems to be no end of them. I have to remove them as followers.

    • PieInTheSky

      why are you on twitter in the first place, if you dont want as many followers as possible, real or not.

    • Mojeaux

      I never bothered removing them.

  30. SDF-7

    ‘Orning ‘ordles — disaster loomed near:

    Daily Duotrigordle #313
    Guesses: 36/37
    Time: 06:03.41
    https://duotrigordle.com/

    Daily Quordle 350
    9️⃣6️⃣
    8️⃣4️⃣
    quordle.com

    • Sean

      #waffle353 4/5

      🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
      🟩⭐🟩⭐🟩
      🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
      🟩⭐🟩⭐🟩
      🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

      🔥 streak: 62
      🥇 #wafflegoldteam
      wafflegame.net

      Daily Quordle 350
      4️⃣5️⃣
      6️⃣7️⃣
      quordle.com

      • Lackadaisical

        You inspired me to get this one with 5:

        #waffle353 5/5

        🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
        🟩⭐🟩⭐🟩
        🟩🟩⭐🟩🟩
        🟩⭐🟩⭐🟩
        🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

        🔥 streak: 84
        💎 #wafflediamondteam
        wafflegame.net

      • Sean

        🙂

    • rhywun

      Pleasingly average.

      TL made me go wut

      Daily Quordle 350
      4️⃣5️⃣
      6️⃣7️⃣

    • Grumbletarian

      Daily Quordle 350
      4️⃣3️⃣
      7️⃣6️⃣

    • Tundra

      Daily Quordle 350
      5️⃣7️⃣
      8️⃣6️⃣

    • Cowboy

      Daily Quordle 350
      5️⃣3️⃣
      8️⃣7️⃣
      quordle.com

      Can’t brain today. I has the dumb.

    • Michael Malaise

      “Back, and to the left.”

    • R C Dean

      I’m wondering how he lived nearly a year after a bullet traversed his entire torso top to bottom.

    • EvilSheldon

      Probably skated under the skin. Live human skin is amazingly tough – I read somewhere that the skin is about equal to 3-4 inches of muscle tissue, for purposes of ballistic testing.

      • UnCivilServant

        Well, the primary function of skin is to protect the insides from the outsides.

  31. Rebel Scum

    The IRS is continuing its historic trend of pursuing more low-income groups as relatively fewer billionaires and millionaires have come under its audit sweep, according to a recent report by Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC).

    Plebs are easier targets with their possibly illicit $600 transactions.

    • AlexinCT

      People with money use tax software and accountants, and they can afford court if the IRS dicks around with them. If you can’t afford even to talk to a lawyer, being told by some tool at the IRS that you owe the corruptocracy another $433 plus daily compounded interest, means you pay up, because THAT’s your only fiscally viable recourse.

    • Q Continuum

      Save a horse, ride Tres.

      • AlexinCT

        Someone needs to record this song…

  32. Rebel Scum

    Global food prices reached record-high levels in 2022, the United Nations said this week, marking a sustained period of sharply elevated commodities amid historic worldwide unrest and economic turmoil.

    “Excellent.” – Klaus Schwab

  33. Q Continuum

    “Lula[…]announced an official “federal intervention” in Brasilia – consolidating the public security powers of several agencies into the hands of a hand-picked, top-level official”

    How do you say “Reichstag fire” in Portuguese?

    • Trigger Hippie

      Carnaval?

      • Drake

        ☝️
        The lights are going out in the western world. Brazil will never again peacefully elect a conservative President just like Republicans will never win a state-wide election again in Arizona or Pennsylvania.

      • Q Continuum

        *Klaus and George’s geriatric and shriveled penises get as semi-erect as they are capable of*

      • juris imprudent

        PA Republicans don’t deserve to win with the candidates the voters selected in the primaries. Choose badly, lose in the general.

      • WTF

        Yeah, Fetterlump was so much better than Oz. Why does the “bad candidate” thing seem to only go one way?

      • Q Continuum

        Oz sucked, but he could at least put together a sentence.

      • juris imprudent

        And that ended up a much closer race than governor – where the Republican thought he was running for chief preacher of the state. I still voted for him, purely out of spite, not because I thought he should be governor.

        As for bad candidates – how ’bout that Beto?

      • juris imprudent

        Or Stacey “I was cheated and you’re still suppressing votes” Abrams?

      • juris imprudent

        Oh I see, no one has too much objection to Dems having bad candidates after all. And you didn’t even make me roll out the queen of them all – Hillary.

      • AlexinCT

        Your assumption, and error, is that you think the machine gives good candidates a chance. Have you missed how big money was spent by team blue to help elect team red or other independent candidates they felt war unelectable or shit anyway?

        What most people need to realize is that good candidates – meaning one that actually goes into government to shrink it, make it responsible and responsive to the people, and demands it lives within it means – will never make it past the gatekeepers unless it is by pure accident. And in states where team blue controls the machine and counting, it won’t matter anyway (see Kari Lake).

      • juris imprudent

        Dems poured money into the Republican primary to get Mastriano. That worked out well for them. Too bad Republican primary voters are so easily fooled.

      • Drake

        deserves got nothing to do with it

      • juris imprudent

        I guess you’ll never vote again if the system is that corrupt. Wonder how that’s going to work out for everyone that chooses that?

      • Drake

        The difference will…?

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        A scenario where nobody chooses to vote will have the the exact same outcome as if everyone chooses to vote in a rigged system.

        I’d bet the presented vote count totals after election would even be damn near mirror images in either scenario.

      • Tundra

        Check out voter turnout for primaries. It’s fucking pathetic. If people aren’t willing to put up the slightest fight, why would anything change?

        We just watched 20 people slow Leviathan for a couple days. It’s not much but it’s something.

      • juris imprudent

        Primary turnout is the party stalwarts – for what that’s worth.

      • Tundra

        Yeah, that’s the point. How the fuck could you change anything if only the insiders play?

      • juris imprudent

        I’d be very happy if we killed the primary system. Let the parties decide who to put up for the general election at their own expense and trouble.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Brazil has a storied history of military coups.

        We’ll see what happens from here.

      • juris imprudent

        The usual way that plays out is that the civilians on both sides lose.

  34. The Late P Brooks

    According to the box, the pellets are 1.75mm across.

    seventy thou. That’s like dust. Are they for hunting parakeets in the conservatory?

    • Not Adahn

      Somebody made it, it must have a purpose somewhere.

  35. Rebel Scum

    McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski revealed in a memo to staff on Friday that he is planning to cut some corporate staff as part of the company’s new business strategy.

    Nothing a Happy Meal can’t fix.

    • PieInTheSky

      I only eat bacon mcmuffins at ROmanian mcdonalds

    • UnCivilServant

      Well, there is only one country between Finland and Korea.

      Mind you Twitter’s not loading at work these days, so I don’t know what the original post was.

    • Q Continuum

      “‘Listen, Paige, you’re not famous because of your golf swing or how far you can drive the ball,’ Adams hit back.”

      The guy has a point…

      • Grumbletarian

        What is Adams famous for?

      • Lackadaisical

        Complaining about alpha milkers?

  36. Rebel Scum

    McCarthy’s win means doom. @GStephanopoulos: It “came with concessions to the most extreme members of his caucus…prospect of two more years of brinksmanship over his hold on the office, the fiscal security of the United States and the basic functions of governing.”

    Better to have uniparty rule to continue printing and spending until the dollar is no more useful than a piece of toilet paper.

    • Not Adahn
      • Grumbletarian
  37. Tundra

    Good morning, Banjos!

    Billy Idol is a perfect Monday morning choice!

    From the hysteria article:

    McCarthy’s win means doom. @GStephanopoulos: It “came with concessions to the most extreme members of his caucus…prospect of two more years of brinksmanship over his hold on the office, the fiscal security of the United States and the basic functions of governing.”

    I’m aroused.

    • AlexinCT

      I know that it should not reflexively cause me to feel good about something, but when anything that pisses of these propagandists and members of the statist cabal is presented I am by default pro it until I hear evidence otherwise that shows me it is not worth my agreement. That is also my de facto attitude towards any accusation by the woke against someone. i assume a hoax, Ruparing, or bullshit, until proven otherwise, and so far it has not failed me.

  38. juris imprudent

    So this is rather interesting.

    A chart prepared by the authors shows how dependent many Americans are on government subsidies. “The average household in the bottom quintile [lowest 20% of income] received an astonishing $45,389 in government transfer payments annually, more than nine times greater than its earned income. The second quintile received a total of $29,793 in government transfer payments, about two-thirds as much as the bottom quintile, and the middle quintile received $17,850.”

    • PieInTheSky

      Well this makes the case for more governments or people would die.

    • PieInTheSky

      are these the total effect of transfers, transfers minus taxes? Or does the middle also pay some in taxes?

      • juris imprudent

        RTFA

    • UnCivilServant

      What do they count as transfer payments?

      And if we abolished these programs, how many of the recipients would seek employment/better employment?

      • juris imprudent

        The point they are making is that the Census bureau and other trackers of poverty do NOT include these payments – only ‘cash’ income.

      • UnCivilServant

        I’m not tracking poverty, I’m trying to trim government.

      • juris imprudent

        Trim govt? Around the edges?

      • UnCivilServant

        anywhere and everywhere.

      • juris imprudent

        Your personal grooming habits are TMI.

      • Q Continuum

        Those hairs that go up the shaft are quite annoying.

    • Trigger Hippie

      Looks like I’ve been doing the whole “poor” thing all wrong.

      • juris imprudent

        [Bureaucrat examines rules on who to give to]

        “Hmm, white male, single – nope you aren’t in here.”

    • Tundra

      Good article.

      Thanks to this vast transfer of income (and the accumulation of federal debt), the actual poverty rate for children is not the Census Bureau’s 2017 figure of 17.5% but 3.1%. For Americans 65 and over, they add, the proportion in poverty falls from 9.2% to 1.1%. The upshot? “Social Security, Medicare, Supplemental Security Income, food stamps, and other transfer payments have virtually eliminated poverty among seniors.”

      Fuckery with numbers. Color me shocked.

      • WTF

        America doesn’t actually have poverty in the traditional sense. We only have relative poverty, whereby those in the lower quintile are relatively “poorer” than those above, but they don’t lack for any necessities and even have income to pay for TVs, smart phones, etc. etc.

      • Fourscore

        Some of the poverty stricken have reported difficulty in buying ammo for their inner city protection. Ammo deserts coupled with no ammo stamps, plus a shortage created by the hoarders have left some to carry empty or 1/2 filled magazines as they go about their daily business.

      • AlexinCT

        That’s my beef with all this poverty shit… The bar keeps moving, and it is always shifting upward at a faster pace than warranted. Not being able to buy the latest electronic must-have today – iPad/iPhone, Android device, computer, gaming console, wrist device, ear buds, and so on – the day it comes out, or having to settle for cheap Hulu or other streaming service over premium stuff, doesn’t make you poor.

        If you have decent shelter (and deciding you prefer to live & shit on the streets cause of whatever reason is a disqualifier) ad don’t have to go without food for days, you are not really poor. You may be living below the standards others have, but you are not poor.

        BTW, I still contend that the biggest reason for inequality in America today is the public school system. No other system causes as much damage to people’s chances to have the skills required to be successful in the real world as that. and it is by design. It’s not an accident that in the poorest urban areas these schools piss away the largest amount of money to be nothing better than a poor excuse for daycare where these kids get indoctrinated in how to fail at everything (or to not even give it a try).

    • Lackadaisical

      ‘received an astonishing $45,389 in government transfer payments annually,’

      To play devil’s advocate, this may be the cost of the programs provided rather than their value. Compare per student spending at private and public institutions to get an idea of what I mean.

      The government pays much more than the value of a service that would be purchased in a free market.

      • juris imprudent

        I’m willing to bet that SocSec is by far the largest transfer system, and it operates pretty efficiently (for a govt program). Whatever AFDC is called these days, and given it operates under the Dept of Agriculture – yeah, the overhead on that is probably 50%.

    • PieInTheSky

      maybe it is the European in me but a 6 year old should not have a loaded guin

      • juris imprudent

        Strangely enough, even us Americans don’t think this is quite right.

    • Certified Public Asshat

      The teacher (yes, I hope she recovers) looks nuttier to me.

      • Tres Cool

        Am I desensitized to what our society has become? Is it crazy of me to think that just maybe some nutty person in a position like a teacher would set-up some kid to shoot them just to maybe take one for the team on gun control?
        Or just attention in general ?

      • juris imprudent

        It’s really a lot easier to believe this kid doesn’t know his father and that whatever male pseudo-adult is banging his mom might have left the gun accessible.

      • Lackadaisical

        ‘ pseudo-adult’

        This is a neologism I can get behind.

    • Tundra

      That’s not the mom of the shooter. Just a random hottie who’s kid was in the classroom.

      I love the DM.

      • Tundra

        “Whose” even.

        Sorry, TedS’

      • slumbrew

        That’s an extremely DM move – “she’s hot and vaguely connected – publish!”

      • Lackadaisical

        Weird because they were showing pictures of her with her kid, which reinforced that perception a lot.

        She’s cute, would.

    • Q Continuum

      “her son has suffered nightmares in the nights since the shooting”

      Pobrecito. He has bad dreams since almost killing someone? How tragic.

      Also, would the teacher and the mom; preferably at the same time.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        No, that was not the shooter, a kid in the classroom who witnessed it.

      • AlexinCT

        Q’s point that he would still like to do the teacher and that witness’ mom at the same time still has standing in the court of Would….

    • AlexinCT

      Molon Labe @6…

      Word!

    • Semi-Spartan Dad

      Parent describes moment teacher, 25, was deliberately shot by six-year-old boy in Virginia classroom – child unlikely to ever be charged with a crime

      It happened in Newport News. I’d be surprised if half the kids in that classroom weren’t strapped and already slinging rock.

    • waffles

      people really want to blame the gun, but man, there’s so many failures that have to happen to get to this point.

  39. Count Potato

    “Professor is FIRED after showing a 14th-century painting of the Prophet Muhammad to students at Hamline University: Muslim student – who at first did not object – later complained and said incident was an attack on her religion

    As a Muslim and a Black person, I don’t feel like I belong, and I don’t think I’ll ever belong in a community where they don’t value me as a member, and they don’t show the same respect that I show them,’ the student said.”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11612991/Hamline-University-adjunct-professor-fired-showing-painting-Prophet-Muhammad.html

    Nothing shows respect like getting someone fired.

    • UnCivilServant

      Indeed, they showed the complainant too much respect.

    • juris imprudent

      I could be wrong, but I thought the first complainants were NOT Muslims – which means they couldn’t have possibly had their religious sensibilities offended. They were white-knighting.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Virtue must be signaled.

    • Tres Cool

      “‘As a Muslim and a Black person, I don’t feel like I belong, and I don’t think I’ll ever belong in a community where they don’t value me as a member, and they don’t show the same respect that I show them,’ the student said. ”

      Level >900 victimhood status

    • SDF-7

      The report from the New York Times stated the syllabus issued by the lecturer notified students they would see holy figures across religions, including the Prophet Muhammad and the Buddha. 

      Additionally, López Prater allegedly gave students a heads up moments before the painting was shown, giving them another chance to leave the room if they didn’t feel comfortable looking at the picture. 

      Ok… I’m now at “screw this infantile idiot” then… you’re an adult, you were warned at the beginning of the semester and again before the actual event. If it bothered you so, step outside that day.

      “they don’t value me” == “they aren’t in their proper role as dhimmi following all of my rules”. Asshole.

    • Rebel Scum

      later complained and said incident was an attack on her religion

      As a Muslim and a Black person, I don’t feel like I belong

      Oh, well, go fuck yourself.

    • cyto

      I really don’t understand these universities.

      Why don’t they tell the students to pound sand? And if they are continuously disruptive, just trespass them off campus. Most higher level schools have a waiting list.

    • WTF

      “Attention whore complains about too much attention.”

    • The Other Kevin

      Reminds me of a Benny Hill line. Benny’s getting interviewed and the interviewer throws him a lot of compliments. Benny says “Don’t, stop!” The interviewer stops, and Benny says “I told you don’t stop, didn’t I?”

    • Seguin

      Reading the article, it sounds like she was asking for her fans to be respectful of the other athletes (being a bit derisive i.e. ‘you’re not Livvy, but you’ll do.’), not that she didn’t crave the attention.

  40. PieInTheSky

    On the US fast food front, I have tried popeyes chicken. It is somewhat better than kfc but meh overall. I got some drumsticks maybe I should have tried the sandwich, kfc sandwiches are not that good.

    • UnCivilServant

      Fast food is generally Meh.

      You need to come visit and have real food.

    • Ownbestenemy

      Hole in the wall > fast food. Find a local joint that is making some good southern fried chicken.

    • UnCivilServant

      Well, dribbled out. It was a piddling amount of data.

      • SDF-7

        Urine big trouble now. Apparently that president is pissed.

      • juris imprudent

        At first yes, but then there was a torrent of coverage.

      • Tres Cool

        A full stream, even.

      • R.J.

        His reputation is stained. He wants revenge on the press that smeared him.

    • R.J.

      One drop of information getting out is too much.

    • Grumbletarian

      I’ll wait for more details to trickle out.

      • R.J.

        He’s gotta shake off this embarrassment.

    • Pope Jimbo

      I bet if the journalos used the old Monty Python skit as a guide, they’d be just fine.

      Whistler: Right, Your Majesty is like a stream of bat’s piss.

      Prince: What?

      Whistler: It was one of Wilde’s.

      Oscar: It sodding was not! It was Shaw!

      Prince: Well Mr. Shaw?

      Shaw: (Michael Palin) I… I merely meant, Your Majesty, that you shine out like a shaft of gold when all around is dark.

    • The Other Kevin

      The journalists are just wetting the public’s appetite for that kind of thing.

    • The Last American Hero

      We need to have a summit with him and Nadler.

    • AlexinCT

      Now do Joe Biden!

    • JaimeRoberto (carnitas/spicy salsa)

      That’s a real pisser.

    • Tundra

      Awesome. Thanks, Holiness!

    • slumbrew

      Thanks, these are a welcome balance to the normal nut punches.

    • UnCivilServant

      Where would you get that idea?

      • Lackadaisical

        Yeah, there are plenty of polish-Americans.

    • Tres Cool

      To be fair, I cant downhill. Cross-Country, but its been a long time.

  41. Rebel Scum

    This seems to be happening with increasing frequency.

    College Basketball Player Collapses Suddenly, Imo Essien Goes Down Clutching His Chest

    “Members of the Old Dominion men’s basketball team watched in shock, and many held back tears, as their teammate Imo Essien had to be tended to by training staff” – Nathan Epstein

    But Dr. Fauxci is on the case(s)!

    Fauci: “Completely untrue” Covid vaccines played a role in Damar Hamlin’s cardiac arrest; “clearly” the result of the hit itself.

    Myocarditis post-mRNA shots is “relatively benign” and “very, very rare”

    • UnCivilServant

      I donno about anyone else, but I don’t recall sportsball players suffering any form of cardiac incident on the field at nearly this rate in the beforetimes. In fact, It was always a once in never sort of situation prior to mandated clot shots.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      Myocarditis post-mRNA shots is “relatively benign”

      Myocarditis is never benign.

      • UnCivilServant

        Well, it doesn’t metastasize and spread to other organs.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        When your heart stops beating the symptoms tend to spread.

    • cyto

      More rare than a mild hit to a chest protected by a shouldpad chest plate causing a cardiac arrest?

      That hit was not that bad, even for backyard no pads football.

      I don’t have the numbers on either, but my SWAG is that myocarditis is the much more common of the two.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        And the basketball player above wasn’t touched at all.

      • Tundra

        Yeah, I was willing to consider commotio cordis for the Bills player, but the basketball one is scary.

      • cyto

        Eh… Hank Gathers wasn’t the only one with Marfan syndrome either.

        But it would be nice to know that the CDC is doing a good job of investigating and the FDA is gathering all followup evidence for their oversight of the vaccines.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        it would be nice to know that the CDC is doing a good job

        Bruh

    • Rebel Scum

      Taking political prisoners is a sure sign that you are a legitimate leader.

      Supporters of the ousted far-right leader also stormed the Supreme Court and surrounded the presidential palace.

      Anyone insufficiently left is “far-right”.

    • AlexinCT

      I like that guy’s approach…

    • slumbrew

      That’s just excellent – it’s a treasure-trove of hilarious details.

      The “Educasion is over rated” sign over the door is just fantastic.

    • Rebel Scum

      A big, beautiful wall built by the Trump administration.

  42. UnCivilServant

    Random unrelated travel question – How bad is it if one were to drive from Cleveland to Iowa on I90/I80 and pass within the Chicago radius midday on a weekday?

    • Tundra

      Summertime? Road construction is the only thing I can think of that will be a problem.

      • UnCivilServant

        September.

        I was ploting the shortest rational Honey Harvest Route. Since Canada is out of the question, that leaves south of the lakes.

      • juris imprudent

        Ludington-Maniwoc ferry across the lake if you want the shortest route.

    • Lackadaisical

      I don’t remember any problems when I did that drive, many moons ago.

      • Lackadaisical

        Except getting bored, of course.

        Corn corn corn soy soy soy….

      • UnCivilServant

        I’m more worried about getting stuck around the city than the rural drive.

      • juris imprudent

        Hold on, you’ve got that whole stretch of RV manufacturers in Indiana.

      • Lackadaisical

        That’s fair.

        They interesting thing is that parts of Iowa have way more interesting topology than most of the states you drive through, at least along that route.

    • The Hyperbole

      I stay on 94/294 when I travel to the east of chicago and rarely have any issues traffic-wise, if anything the idiots are driving too fast.

      • UnCivilServant

        Wait, are you the guy doing 30 in the left hand lane?

      • Pope Jimbo

        I always drive no more than 5 over in WI. They always seem pretty strict there about the speed.

        They also enjoy ticketing IL and MN drivers, so maybe they are just a bunch of biased assholes who like to pull people over for “Driving while Purple”

        * The Altar Boy and I couldn’t get enough of The Pack losing to the Lions at home and being eliminated from the playoffs. It was especially great because Rogers is gonna have an aneurism soon if his receivers continue to drop balls like they did in that game.

      • Count Potato

        “Shit, I’m 47 and could have caught that.”

        — Donald Driver on his couch.

    • The Other Kevin

      Mid day shouldn’t be bad.

    • kinnath

      How bad is it if one were to drive from Cleveland to Iowa on I90/I80 and pass within the Chicago radius midday on a weekday

      Been there; done that.

      Stop and go traffic for a hour passing through around noon.

  43. Pope Jimbo

    Uffda. I have no idea how an idea this stupid wasn’t shut down instantly.

    Of course, the loudest of the outraged are just as stupid. Why being the mother of an armed robber who ends up being killed by a cop makes you an authority on anything is beyond me. I feel sorry she lost a kid.

    Local activist groups are calling for the firing of Brooklyn Center city and police officials after the department posted a “militarized” recruitment video to its website.

    The city quickly removed the video from the department’s social media pages and made it inaccessible on the city’s website. Amid ongoing policing reform efforts by the city after 20-year-old Black motorist Daunte Wright was killed by then-Brooklyn Center Police officer Kim Potter in April 2021, the recruitment video ignited concerns over accountability and the types of officers the department is trying to attract.

    Most of the officers in the video appear to be white, and all of the officers appear to be male. A majority of the residents of Brooklyn Center are people of color – nearly 59% – and just more than 30% of residents are Black, according to Minnesota Compass.

    The recruitment video comes after a year and a half of efforts by the city to reform its police department, which began when Potter fatally shot Wright during a “routine” traffic stop. The killing happened during the time of the Derek Chauvin trial in Minneapolis less than 10 miles away, reigniting feelings of anger over George Floyd’s murder and sparking days-long protests outside of the Brooklyn Center police precinct.

    • juris imprudent

      I feel sorry she lost a kid.

      I don’t. Not if the asshole was committing armed robbery. He got what he deserved.

      Militarizing of police is stupendously stupid, so of course we’re doing that. If the morons would stop screaming about race and just work on accountability for police, I’d be all in with them.

      • AlexinCT

        ^^^THIS^^^

        The fucking cuntes going stupid is destroying any chance for real and workable reform. In the end my suspicions are that things will get so bad that police will get the same pass as Judge Dredd.

    • Rebel Scum

      Most of the officers in the video appear to be white, and all of the officers appear to be male.

      And?

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        I think the racial divide on LEOs is an issue. You have towns and cities that are 80% black and close to a 100% white police force. I get that Glibs don’t see the world through a racial lens, but I’m not so sure LEOs are in that boat.

        Racism aside, cops should be pulled from the communities that they are supposedly keeping the peace in. When the racial proportions are that far off, it’s showing the LEOs have no connection to the community. They are brought in from the outside and that ramps up militarization and abuse. Just fueling that transition from peace officer to police officer.

      • Pope Jimbo

        I wouldn’t worry about the racial makeup if they all lived in the city. I agree with you that busing in cops from other cities/areas does exacerbate the U/Them mentality in a cop shop. Right now, I don’t know how you could get the “right” number of black cops because no one in Brooklyn Center wants to work for the police force. You have to take anyone who applies.

      • juris imprudent

        Who applies to be a cop these days is part of the concern (and the ‘standards’ they are held to).

    • Grumbletarian

      Sir Mixalot hardest hit?

      • Lackadaisical

        So many people misinterpreting the author of the article with the author of the book, despite Kat clearly being dismissive of the concept.

      • Lackadaisical

        Also, not bad.

      • slumbrew

        I like the cut of her jib:

        Kat Rosenfield
        @katrosenfield
        ·
        Jan 5
        Replying to
        @and_furiouser
        I keep a ready supply of butt pics at hand, it’s my version of apocalypse prepping

      • Lackadaisical

        Yeah, doesn’t seem to take herself overly serious.

        It’s a very attractive quality these days.

    • PieInTheSky

      we covered that a few days ago

    • PutridMeat

      I look forward to Q’s take on this question on Wednesday.

  44. Lackadaisical

    ‘IRS Targeted More ‘Easy-Mark’ Low-Income Families Than Millionaires, University Report’

    More so, the disparity in rates looks alarming, in particular it is interesting that so much changed in 2 years. I wonder how much of that is COVID related vs. Biden related or other factors.

    I also wonder what triggers an audit, there may be a very good reason for any disparity.

    • PieInTheSky

      the government should get all the money automatically and then give you your fair share, it would avoid audits

    • Pope Jimbo

      My mom ran her own tax preparation service for decades. She’d justify her fees by knowing what triggers an audit. Some types of deductions or moves would trigger them. Other times it would be the amount of a deduction.

      Her other value add was that if you did get audited, she’d go represent you. In the small world of NW Minnesoda, she quickly became known by the various IRS agents. They realized that she ran things on the up and up for the most part, so if she showed up, there wasn’t a lot of searching for more violations. Usually it was some arguing about a technical rule and that was it.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      Millionaires have accountants and your average IRS auditor is not a genius.

    • db

      If you were allowed to know what triggers an audit, you could avoid one, and then they would audit you for audit avoidance behavior patterns.

      • Ownbestenemy

        No pattern is a pattern /HR

  45. PieInTheSky

    In local tax news, they are again attempting to tax tips given to waiters and such

    • Lackadaisical

      Besides the general reasons no one should be taxed, what is the argument against it?

      • Certified Public Asshat

        Yeah if we’re going to tax income, then cash tips should be included.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        Loan forgiveness should also be taxable, you whiny cunts.

      • Mojeaux

        Um … it is.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        I know, it’s a trigger of mine when normies try to tell me why it shouldn’t be. Not to mention, there are enough exceptions for most people to avoid paying tax on a forgiveness anyway.

      • Swiss Servator

        When the G does it…?

      • PieInTheSky

        eh it is more a gift for good service than standard income…

      • Certified Public Asshat

        a gift for good service

        We call that earned income.

    • Ownbestenemy

      This is why with good service, I tip cash. The server can decide what they wish to declare.

    • UnCivilServant

      It doesn’t. And Asia Minor belongs to the Greeks, give it back.

      Free Byzantium!

      • juris imprudent

        Restore Greater Assyria!

      • Lackadaisical

        From your lips to God’s ears.

        Using difficult to spell and pronounce spellings from other languages makes no sense and only adds confusion when reading historical reports. When well this stupid trend stop?

    • WTF

      We should start calling it “Booby”.

  46. UnCivilServant

    *sigh*

    Trying to figure out how to explain to [Current Supervisor] that most of what I do in the ‘legacy’ environments isn’t task-based but troubleshooting. I get reports of “something wrong” and work backwards to a cause, identify what needs to be done to fix it, and either do it or send the tasks to whoever is supposed to. There’s no “Here’s what needs doing every day/week/month/etc” because it’s mostly just sitting there, rotting and waiting to be replaced. To be useful, the knowledge transfer needs to be a deep dive in the system architecture and foibles.

    Oh well, that’s your foot in front of the muzzle, not mine.

    • Sensei

      Explain your “task” is to see what broke today?

      Depending on what broke and how spend, minutes, hours, days or week fixing. Rinse and repeat.

  47. The Late P Brooks

    Death to America party

    Pundits were quick to portray McCarthy’s grueling and at times comically pathetic three-and-a-half day slog to victory as a symbol of weakness and dysfunction within the not-quite-post-Donald Trump Republican Party, but the reality of what just happened on Capitol Hill is far worse than that, and I’m not sure if it’s fully set in.

    The ambitious but low-wattage Californian was finally elected speaker on that 15th ballot — in the kind of gridlock that America hasn’t seen since the run-up to a Civil War that killed 600,000 people — with just 216 votes that amounted to less than 49.8% of the total, since 218 House members cast ballots for either Democratic leader Hakim Jeffries or “present” as a final show of anti-McCarthy animus.

    That seems most fitting for the titular head of a political party that — while it did manage last November to win its narrow 222-212 House margin despite an atmospheric river of tailwinds like President Biden’s low approval that should have created a blowout — just lost ground in the Senate and in key statehouses and has also lost the national popular vote in seven of the last eight presidential elections.

    The ability of a McCarthy-led House to stymie progress for two years against the run of play in American politics would be bad enough, but it’s a lot worse than that. To win that diminished and tarnished speaker’s plaque over his new office door, McCarthy ceded much of his power to the radical bloc of the House’s 20 or so most extreme right-wing members. He gave them not just increased visibility but power to investigate their enemies and block basic governance — and to replace the speaker on a whim. These grifters and C-list stars of their own reality shows, elected from the most extreme pro-Trump, uncompetitive districts in the United States, now wield veto power over the will of the American people.

    The living will envy the dead.

    • R.J.

      “These grifters and C-list stars of their own reality shows, elected from the most extreme pro-Trump, uncompetitive districts in the United States, now wield veto power over the will of the American people.”

      Replace Trump with Leftist and you just described The Squad. Recycling text much?

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      One of these days, the dam is going to break. I believe there will come a time when Americans wake up to the reality of minority rule and say that enough is enough.

      I’d recommend that all liberal assholes and mouthpieces for the technocracy like yourself go hide in the basement when that happens. Because it’s unlikely to turn out the way you think it will.

    • Sensei

      Investigators found an iPhone in the burnt car with an account connected to Mesmarian, documents said. Police also found two laptops.

      These people are always so smart too…

    • Lackadaisical

      ‘An employee at the plant said the fire caused “major damage,” estimating it would take two years to receive replacement parts, police said.’

      The value of having spares on hand… Though this might be a bit of an extreme case.

      • UnCivilServant

        The actual question is why there were no alarms for either “someone has rammed through the gate” or “The plant is on fire”

  48. The Other Kevin

    The Mrs. and I used to go to movies a few times a week before we had kids. It just got too expensive. And lately, it’s too expensive and there really are not great movies out there. I have some teammates that go at least once a week, but they can’t even come up with a top 5 best movies of last year. They can only think of 4 that they liked that much.

    I think that Billy Idol video was filmed right after he got in a motorcycle accident. He was coming home really late from the recording studio, and had been drinking among other things, and wiped out on his bike. In the video he’s sitting down because he couldn’t stand up due to his injuries.

    I used to be at least a bit skeptical about things that sounded like conspiracy theories. After the Twitter files, I’m now assuming that not only are those things very likely to be true, they’re also very likely to be much worse than we imagined.

  49. The Late P Brooks

    “I don’t think anybody should doubt his influence,” McCarthy said of Trump — on the second anniversary of the 45th president’s attempted coup to thwart the peaceful transfer of power that resulted in at least five deaths.

    The lie too big to die.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      And there were good people on both sides…

    • Rat on a train

      If you are going to call it a coup why not lie about how many people died?

      • Hyperion

        Those cell phones they were carrying around looked like guns! Well, they ‘could’ have been guns. You see how dangerous they were?

      • Rat on a train

        They would have brought WMDs if they had them. They could have killed millions.

      • Hyperion

        There’s proof that Trump tried to email them those WMDs.

    • Hyperion

      “45th president’s attempted coup”

      If they ever saw a real coup, you know, the kind with guns and people getting shot?

  50. Hyperion

    “IRS Targeted More ‘Easy-Mark’ Low-Income Families Than Millionaires, University Report”

    This is truly shocking.

  51. The Late P Brooks

    I believe there will come a time when Americans wake up to the reality of minority rule and say that enough is enough.

    The kind of minority rule where a highly motivated 25% or less of the pool of qualified voters decides elections because an actual majority of people can’t be bothered to register their preference between a giant douche and a turd sandwich?

    That kind of minority rule?

  52. Hyperion

    “It was pure entertainment”

    It was. Latest update I got last night was after they called the military on them. I guess the next step is to build the gulags to keep the insurrectionists in an then the show trials. Let’s see, January 8th Committee? Perfect! Now all they need is their very own Lizzy, I’m sure they will find her.

  53. Hyperion

    “World Bank to Warn of Global Recession Risk in Economic Outlook”

    No shit. What visionaries.

    • cyto

      Tomorrow i shall be issuing my prediction for the college football championship game.

  54. Rebel Scum

    EXTREME!

    “Our general concern is the dysfunction that was historic that we saw this week is not at an end, just the beginning. And while the Congress was held captive this particular time, what is going to be a problem is if the American people will be held captive for the next two years to the extreme MAGA Republican agenda that apparently has been negotiated into the House rules and the functioning of the Congress. That going to undermine the health, safety, and well-being of the American people. It may undermine national security and a robust defense and undermine our ability to advance an agenda anchored in kitchen table issues, not extremism.’

    Divided government means all is lost.

    • The Other Kevin

      Politicians arguing and negotiating is dysfunctional. They’re not supposed to do that.

      • juris imprudent

        I mean I can get my dog to roll over, why won’t you?

    • Semi-Spartan Dad

      And while the Congress was held captive this particular time, what is going to be a problem is if the American people will be held captive for the next two years to the extreme MAGA Republican agenda that apparently has been negotiated into the House rules and the functioning of the Congress.

      I haven’t dug deeply into it, but it seems like the rules are just changed back to how Congress operated for decades before Pelosi had changed the rules to further entrench power in the leadership. The wailing about this extremism from Republican-leaning media sources, like PJ Media and the WSJ Editorial Board, just shows the uniparty in action.

      • Tundra

        Amash explains.

        It’s important to note that this wasn’t due to a change in House rules; it was due to a choice by consecutive speakers—one Republican, one Democrat—to shut down the legislative process and undermine your representation in the House of Representatives.

      • Ownbestenemy

        Did they reinstitute the CSPAN blackout of cameras pointing at the gallery?

  55. Hyperion

    “Food prices were at record highs in 2022, U.N. says”

    No shit. More visionaries and geniuses. Where do they find these brilliant people?

    • Lackadaisical

      Graduate school?

  56. The Late P Brooks

    Loan forgiveness should also be taxable, you whiny cunts.

    It will be interesting to see what sort of treatment those written-off student loans get.

    And by “interesting”…

    • Rat on a train

      All negative consequences are waived by the secretary as authorized during a national emergency.

  57. Hyperion

    “Hysteria Begins as the Reality of a GOP Majority Sinks In”

    Yeah, if I were a prog, I’d panic too! I mean gee, they’re going to talk about stuff and sit around like a bunch of cucks. The horror! Our socialist utopia will end!

  58. juris imprudent

    Sen. Paul delivers

    Under what circumstance would Iran choose to limit their ballistic missiles as the surrounding Sunni sheikdoms enhance their own missiles and house U.S. troops? Anyone seriously desiring a ballistic missile pact with Iran should understand that no such agreement will ever occur between the U.S. and Iran unless it includes the Sunni sheikdoms. A useful diplomatic goal would be to have a regional dialogue among the countries actually in the Middle East.

    Why is it that that kind of ability to think is so rare in both the legislative and executive branches?

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      Because they’re not actually interested in a deal.

      They want war.

      • juris imprudent

        Well, he also didn’t play the nonsense game of describing the Arab countries as partners in democracy! He called them what they are.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Again, you’d only be interested in the “subtleties” of the situation if you actually wanted a resolution.

        The vast majority of DC pols are just propaganda shills, particularly among the Democrats but most of the GOP qualifies as well.

      • AlexinCT

        I would be interested in understanding what resolution you see is possible for a conflict that goes back a couple of millennia and is ingrained in the region…

        I get that it shouldn’t be our job to fix all the stupid in the world, but the problem is that this part of the world sits on a lot of wealth – energy – and ignoring it would be catastrophic for the world. I sure as hell would prefer us to go independent of them, but the rest of the world would end up burning if we did that and we would be dragged in sooner than later. I just wish we were smarter about this shit.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        We absolutely have the opportunity to ignore that region and its associated stupidity. All we have to do is drill.

    • Hyperion

      Iran? What is that? We don’t have time for that, we have to take care of Ukraine, the one true democracy!

      • juris imprudent

        Just as Rand speaks sense, this idiot gives us a double-dose of toxic hubris. We define what is right for you!

        Russia’s aggressive intentions, therefore, will end only when its culture and ideology undergoes a seismic shift and comes to accept Ukrainians as human beings and neighbors.

      • Ownbestenemy

        We aren’t doing regime change, we are doing cultural change…see! Different!

      • AlexinCT

        Actually what they are desperately are trying to do is a “reality change”…

        Too many people feel they can simply change reality to suit their needs/goals.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Perhaps that idiot thinks cultural change is a more reasonable goal.

        Got news for ya bub, wars destroy nations but they also make them.

      • juris imprudent

        WWII certainly remade ours.

      • Hyperion

        I seriously cannot figure out how Rand hangs out with all these cucks every day without just losing it and saying fuck it.

  59. Rebel Scum

    Dems really have their talking points down.

    “We have shown, Jake, Democrats stand ready at all times to work for the American people. It is exactly the American people and the solutions they need to meet the challenges that were completely left out of the speaker’s chaos we saw this week. It not only endangered our country’s national security, but it also showed that the keys have been handed over to extremists. At the top of their agenda is a national abortion ban, dismantling Social Security and Medicare. These are the priorities they’ve put out. But we have demonstrated over the last two years, when Democrats are united and in charge, that we work for the American people. Whether that’s rebuilding infrastructure, gun safety, returning manufacturing to our shores, reducing health care costs and making sure we’re investing in climate change. Those are going to continue to be our priorities, and we hope that some Republicans will be able to get to work for the American people.”

    It’s amazing you cuntes can keep a straight face when saying things like that.

    • Sean

      They left out grooming children.

    • juris imprudent

      It’s almost like Republicans talking about smaller govt, isn’t it?

    • Hyperion

      “we work for the American people”

      For sure, we’re going to make sure all Americans are robbed equally by the new mega IRS and we’ll build comfortable gulags, that’s what we call doing infrastructure right. We’re nothing like those do nothing Rethuglicans.

    • rhywun

      Good lord. 🤣

  60. Hyperion

    “First newborn baby placed in Florida Safe Haven Baby Box”

    How long before the first Baby Box smash-n-grab gangs appear?

    • rhywun

      I’m surprised babies aren’t popping up in ballot drop-boxes.

      • Ownbestenemy

        Dead babies in ballot drop-boxes might actually get our election officials to consider we have a baby-roll problem.

      • Hyperion

        LOL, this is true.

  61. Count Potato

    “In FL we gave parents the option of bringing kids in or keeping them remote, and for a long time the majority of parents kept their kids remote. We kept kids safe by ensuring proper protocols for a safe return. #TeachersAreHeroes”

    https://twitter.com/KarlaforFlorida/status/1612244311935950850

    CWAC

    • Ownbestenemy

      #TeachersAreHeroes? Lol. A handful, yes, but not all. As my dad always said, the only requirement to teach 3rd grade is to have a 4th grade education.

      • UnCivilServant

        So what’s with this “Master’s Degree and State Teaching Certificate” bull?

      • Ownbestenemy

        Gatekeepers to ensure they can control the educational narrative at the root?

      • juris imprudent

        As he said, a 4th grade education.

      • Hyperion

        #TeachersAreIdiots if you are going for a percentage win.

        Seriously, from my own personal experience, teachers are some of the dumbest people with jobs I’ve ever met.

  62. The Late P Brooks

    Why is it that that kind of ability to think is so rare in both the legislative and executive branches?

    The world is best and most easily understood as string of ones and zeroes.

  63. The Late P Brooks

    Today’s winner with multiple idiots!

    I was waiting for the right front to rise and fall as he ran over the motorcyclist’s head.

    • Tundra

      Same. And wouldn’t you stop and make sure the dude was ok?

      • Sensei

        It seemed like the dude with camera was pulling over.

  64. CPRM

    Movie Theatres – It’s not woke or re-thinking anything after the pandemic for me, it’s just the simple fact nothing I want to watch is being produced. There are fewer and fewer things made for any platform that interest me. I WANT more comic book movies, but not the ones being produced. Not because they are woke, just because they are shit. When I want to watch something at home it’s mostly the same. I check 3 streaming sites, the TV, youtube, even pirate sites and often find nothing that interests me. Maybe I’m just getting old and cranky, or maybe they aren’t producing anything of value.

    Plastic straws – Drove through McDonald’s last night after work. ‘Straws Available Upon Request’. The drink had a little opening like those plastic coffee lids. Because of the ice I had to tip the cup back really far to get a drink, not really what one wants when driving. But we’re saving sea turtles or such, because all those straws from Wisconsin landfills migrate into the oceans like mudskippers.

    • Ownbestenemy

      Thats the wife and I. Nothing really looks good enough to open the wallet. Hell, we were going to overlook Silicon Valley when it first came out until I was stuck in DC and that was the only thing on TV and realized it was a funny ass show.

      • juris imprudent

        Before The Message, the reason I didn’t care for most movies was the Bruckheimer effect.

      • Sensei

        +1 lens flare!

      • Ownbestenemy
      • CPRM

        You’re thinking of Michael Bay.

    • AlexinCT

      The turtles and dolphins are now being killed by all the disposable face masks we have to dump into the oceans..

    • R.J.

      1. Maybe I can do Cribbage Thursdays after Tinfoil Hat Thursdays plays out.
      2. You should get a stainless steel straw that can also function as a weapon. Tactical straws are the new hotness.

      • CPRM

        Thursday is never my day off, and when I’m watching bad movies I want to talk people about them, but the site is usually dead by the time I get home. The rare Thursdays I have been off I’ve enjoyed Glibflix.

    • The Other Kevin

      I’m with you on the super hero movies. In the past I couldn’t wait for the next Marvel thing, because they were usually good and tied in to a larger, interesting story line. But now there’s not really anything tying them together, and they’re producing way more with decreasing quality. Films like Top Gun stand out partially because they’re not woke, but mostly because they have a compelling story and good characters.

    • AlexinCT

      I guess this was another “You must pass it to find out what is in it” event… But it had a great name that doesn’t bear anything on the reality of what the bill is really doing. I surmise that the “Fuck the tax payers in the a$$. HARD” bill would kind of face SOME questioning and resistance.

  65. Rebel Scum

    *Yawn*

    U.S. Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) vowed to bring “traitor” general Mark Milley to justice in a tweet Saturday. Gosar, Rep. Dan Bishop (R-NC) and Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX), among others, had been lobbying for the establishment of a “Church Commission-style” investigation into the weaponization of the FBI against Americans, as well as alleged federal government coordination with January 6 instigators. Under a compromise between newly elected House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and his 20 dissenters, such a committee will be established. Many conservative pundits and voters have expressed skepticism, however, as they do not trust McCarthy to follow through.

    I’m not holding my breath for anything to come of this.

    • juris imprudent

      First off, Milley is the wrong target. I wonder if Gosar knows that or he is just that fucking stupid?

      • AlexinCT

        Yes.

    • mock-star

      Wasnt Milley the one who said that he would give the Chinese a pre-emptive heads up in the event we ever went to war with them? Yeah, I can see how admitting that could see one getting investigated by Congress.

  66. Certified Public Asshat

    This is a joke I just heard…

    What do the Super Bowl and a Doctor’s Office have in common? Aaron Rodgers doesn’t have a shot at either this year.

    I would like a shot in the head.

    • PieInTheSky

      I am gonna go with so what the guy makes bank and is apparently dating some billionaire heiress or something

    • CPRM

      It is amazing how the media view on Rodgers turned on a dime with the vaxx thing. ‘HE LIED! He NoW CraZy!’ I’ve had my gripes about the guy even as a fan, but the media went from disgusting tongue bathing to two minutes hate.

      • juris imprudent

        Is there supposed to be something in between?

  67. The Late P Brooks

    Into the wilderness

    Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., an outspoken critic of former President Donald Trump, officially resigned from the Senate on Sunday as he prepares to step back into academia as president of the University of Florida.

    Sasse, who led Midland University, a small private college in his home state, before he ran for the Senate, submitted his resignation last month saying he would leave office Jan. 8 — two years into his second term.

    In farewell remarks last week, Sasse criticized the body that he had been a member of since 2015, saying, “This institution doesn’t work very well right now.”

    ——-

    Sasse’s departure opens up the seat to an appointment by Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, a Republican. The previous governor, Republican Pete Ricketts, has said he would seek the appointment.

    As a senator, Sasse was a conservative China hawk who backed repealing the Affordable Care Act and voiced opposition to same-sex marriage, having abstained from voting on landmark legislation codifying gay marriage rights in November. He served in President George W. Bush’s administration as an assistant secretary of health and human services and was first elected to the Senate in 2014.

    Now he can destroy higher education in Florida with his radical far right extremism.

    I think Sasse is an interesting guy, for what that’s worth. More honest than most of those mendacious backstabbing clowns.

    • Pine_Tree

      Full disclosure: Sasse was my write-in vote for the 2016 presidential election. Interesting guy, as you say.

  68. juris imprudent

    Here’s a thought.

    What if instead of term limits, we had a Constitutional amendment that said no person could serve in the U.S. govt for more than 20 years. That would cover politicians and the bureaucracy. It would also modify the lifetime appointments to the judiciary.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      That would create maximum howls of protest from the agencies.

      I like it.

    • Sensei

      And lose all that “expertise”?

    • UnCivilServant

      20? I proposed 5.

      People like me have been in the bureaucracy too long

      • R.J.

        Agreed. In a perfect world government employees would not have unions either.

      • juris imprudent

        Man, unions wouldn’t even exist today if it wasn’t for AFSCME, et al.

        And UCS, can’t be 5 – that’s less then a Senate term. I’d want it to cover everything in the federal domain.

      • R.J.

        I’d say 10. Plenty of time to be good at the job and add value. By 15 years people get jaded.

      • UnCivilServant

        *looks at upcoming 15th year anniversary with the state*

        Does that mean I should ask for something in jade?

      • Lackadaisical

        Why?

    • The Other Kevin

      I haven’t heard that. I like it.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      I think every agency and every department should have to pass a detailed audit every five years or it is automatically defunded.

      The audit should be wholly public and they should be answerable for every nickel spent.

      • Ownbestenemy

        Also would be fine with this. I am the outcast for maintaining a lean budget

      • Rat on a train

        DOD hardest hit.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Yes

        I knew an auditor for the Navy. He got drunk one time and admitted that he had never found a base or any other entity that was able to pass an audit. The corruption was endemic and persistent.

    • Ownbestenemy

      I’d be fine with it…Radar seems complicated, but it isn’t. Takes about 2-3 years to be fully trained and enough time to work through attrition.

      • Ownbestenemy

        I would prefer if my work went private but the proposals for privatization have been really a proposal for defense contractors to do it, not mom and pop shops picking up former feds to do the work.

    • Pine_Tree

      Instead of term limits, I like something more tangible. Each vote for a tax increase should cost each legislator something like 1 pound of flesh or blood. If they think it’s important enough to steal from millions, they should have some skin (bone, muscle, sinew, blood) in the game. So it’s kinda self-limiting.

    • Tundra

      If we can’t get a meteor strike, this is a good solution.

      • juris imprudent

        Unfortunately, I think the meteor strike is more likely.

    • Lackadaisical

      Eh, 16 years of President Obama? No thanks.

      • juris imprudent

        I’m okay if we leave in the presidential limit.

    • creech

      OK with 20 years but modify it to be “10 years working for the U.S. government followed by 10 years in Federal prison.”

      • juris imprudent

        Ah, so we’re going to pitch full on anarchy are we?

      • Ownbestenemy

        Huh…didn’t know my peers would put me in prison

      • creech

        There will be full pardons for those who attempted to do the right thing.

  69. The Late P Brooks

    What if instead of term limits, we had a Constitutional amendment that said no person could serve in the U.S. govt for more than 20 years.

    As UCS said, 20 years is too long, but better than nothing.

    At one time, I dabbled with the notion of drafting cops and prison guards, specifically because nobody should spend a lifetime doing that. Drafting politicians for a specified term and then banishing them from DC on pain of death would be my preferred plan.

    • CPRM

      With the #1 Pick in this years draft the Washington Senators select Jemarphus Randle-Tussle, Flat-Earther; Greater Piedmont City College Commuter Site C.

  70. Fatty Bolger

    New Twitter files drop:

    https://twitter.com/AlexBerenson/status/1612526697038897167

    1/ My first #TwitterFiles report: how
    @scottgottliebmd – a top Pfizer board member – used the same Twitter lobbyist as the White House to suppress debate on Covid vaccines, INCLUDING FROM A FELLOW HEAD OF
    @US_FDA!

    They suppressed known to be true at the time information that natural immunity was more effective than the shots, and that there was low risk to children from the virus.