The Critical Drinker reviews the new movie Wicked
A conservative YouTuber who calls himself “The Critical Drinker” gave a positive review to the new movie “Wicked.”
I haven’t seen the movie, but I totally agree with him that movies should be judged on their own merits, and not based on the political ideologies of the actors who are in the movie.
His praise for this movie is a great argument against the “cancel culture” that is so common today.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYtRO5S9g1k
Trump’s Ukraine envoy has a plan to end the war that Putin may revel in
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/29/europe/trump-new-ukraine-envoy-analysis-intl/index.html
Trump’s Ukraine envoy has a plan to end the war that Putin may revel in
By Nick Paton Walsh
November 29, 2024
In a single post, the president-elect told the world what the end of the Ukraine war might look like. And it is going to be a big diplomatic ask, to say the least.
“I am very pleased to nominate General Keith Kellogg to serve as Assistant to the President and Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social channel. “Together, we will secure PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH, and Make America, and the World, SAFE AGAIN!”
By appointing Keith Kellogg as his special envoy to Ukraine, Donald Trump has also chosen a very specific, pre-announced plan for the thorniest foreign policy issue on his plate.
Kellogg, Trump’s 80-year-old former national security advisor, has laid out his peace plan in some detail, writing for the America First policy institute in April.
It begins calling the war “an avoidable crisis that, due to the Biden Administration’s incompetent policies… has entangled America in an endless war.”
In short, a ceasefire will freeze the frontlines and both sides will be forced to the negotiating table. But it is in the longer details where it all gets complex.
Changing the US’ involvement
Kellogg spends most time berating Biden’s actions – saying that his administration gave too little lethal aid too late. He says Trump’s decision to give the first lethal aid to Ukraine in 2018 conveyed the strength needed to confront Putin, and that Trump’s soft approach to the Kremlin head – not demonizing him like Biden has – will enable him to strike a deal.
Kellogg says more weapons should have been given before the Russian invasion, and immediately afterwards, to enable Ukraine to win.
But that’s when the plan – which CNN has reported that Trump’s soon-to-be national security adviser is considering – stops being to Ukraine’s liking.
Kellogg says the United States doesn’t need involvement in another conflict, and its own stocks of weaponry have suffered from aiding Ukraine, leaving the country potentially exposed in any conflict with China over Taiwan. He says Ukraine’s NATO membership – in truth a very distant prospect, tentatively offered to Kyiv in symbolic solidarity – should be put on hold indefinitely, “in exchange for a comprehensive and verifiable peace deal with security guarantees.”
Foremost, the plan says it should become “a formal US policy to seek a ceasefire and negotiated settlement.”
It says future US aid – likely given as a loan – will be conditioned on Ukraine negotiating with Russia, and the US will arm Ukraine to the extent it can defend itself and stop any further Russian advances before and after any peace deal. This latter suggestion is perhaps dated by the fast Moscow advance underway in eastern Ukraine and the current high US level of aid already makes Kellogg uncomfortable.
Kellogg credits partially a 2023 article by Richard Haas and Charles Kupchan for some of the next ideas.
A freeze to the frontlines
The frontlines would be frozen by a ceasefire, and a demilitarized zone imposed. For agreeing to this, Russia would get limited sanctions relief, and full relief only when a peace deal is signed that is to Ukraine’s liking. A levy on Russian energy exports would pay for Ukraine’s reconstruction. Ukraine would not be asked to give up on reclaiming occupied territory, but it would agree to pursue it through diplomacy alone. It accepts “this would require a future diplomatic breakthrough which probably will not occur before Putin leaves office.”
It is fetchingly simple and swift in its approach. But it lacks an accommodation of what Moscow will demand and has used the diplomatic process for in the past: To cynically pursue military advances. The freezing of the frontlines will precipitate a very violent few months ahead as Moscow seeks to take as much ground as it can. The Kremlin has in the past ignored ceasefires and pursued its territorial objectives – often blankly denying that it is.
A demilitarized zone would likely need to be policed, possibly putting NATO troops, or soldiers from other non-aligned nations, in between the two sides. That will be hard to maintain and staff, to say the least. It would be enormous, spanning hundreds of miles of border, and a massive financial investment.
Arming Ukraine to the extent it can stop present and future Russian advances will also be tough. The plan notes the United States manufactures 14,000 155 artillery rounds a month, which Ukraine can use up in just 48 hours. Paradoxically, Kellogg wants the US to arm Ukraine more, yet also accepts they really can’t.
A change in values
Two lines provide a wider insight into the author’s thinking. He says that national security, the America First way, was about practical necessities.
“Biden replaced the Trump approach with a liberal internationalist one that promoted Western values, human rights, and democracy,” he writes. That is a pretty grim base from which to build a compromise on European security.
He adds that some critics of continued aid to Ukraine – in which he seems to include himself – are “worried about whether America’s vital strategic interests are at stake in the Ukraine War, the potential of the involvement of US military forces and whether America is engaged in a proxy war with Russia that could escalate into a nuclear conflict.”
These two sentences provide the ultimate backdrop for the deal proposed: That Ukraine’s war is about values we don’t need to perpetuate, and we should step back from Putin’s nuclear threat. It is the opposite of the current unity in which the West prioritizes the values of its own way of life and security, based on the lesson of the Thirties that appeased dictators don’t stop.
The plan presents Ukraine with a welcome chance for an end to the violence, at a time when it is losing on all fronts, and darkly short of basic manpower – a hurdle it may never overcome, and something in which Russia will likely always outpace it.
But it begins a process in which a wily and deceitful Putin will revel. Exploiting a ceasefire and Western weakness is his forte, the moment he has been waiting nearly three years for. The plan accepts Western fatigue, that its armament production cannot keep pace, and that its values are wasteful. It also makes little accommodation for what Russia will do to upset its vision.
It is a bleak compromise for a bleak war. But it may not end it and instead open a new chapter where Western unity and support begins to crumble, and Putin edges, both at the negotiating table and at the front, closer towards his goals.
ABC News Saint Paul, Minnesota affiliate: Audit finds 20 missing ballots in Shakopee were likely thrown out during early voting period
Audit finds 20 missing ballots in Shakopee were likely thrown out during early voting period
November 27, 2024
Election workers in Shakopee likely threw out 20 ballots by mistake when tabulating absentee ballots during the early voting period, a Scott County audit found.
The discrepancy sets up a legal challenge in a Minnesota House District where the DFL incumbent won by just 14 votes.
According to a preliminary report released by Scott County Attorney Ron Hocevar on Wednesday, Scott County election officials found a 21-vote discrepancy between voter check-ins and ballots received in Shakopee when reviewing election results. Of the uncounted ballots, 20 were in Precinct 10 and one was in Precinct 12A. Staff decided not to investigate the single missing vote in Precinct 12A because “it is not uncommon for one voter to check in and not vote,” the report states.
Hocevar said Shakopee’s absentee ballot board accepted the 20 ballots in Precinct 10 on Oct. 17, and they were not accounted for the next day when city staff were allowed to open the absentee ballots collected to date and begin tabulating them.
Hocevar said all early voting from Sept. 20 through Oct. 17 was done by “envelope voting,” in which ballots were placed in a security envelope and a signature envelope and set aside until “direct ballot voting” started on Oct. 18.
Before tabulating the absentee ballots, the number of envelopes must match with the number of accepted ballots in the Statewide Voter Registration System. Then they are removed from their signature envelopes, which are placed in a separate pile from the secrecy envelopes. Election workers then tabulate the ballots once all secrecy envelopes are opened.
Scott County’s review found the 20 missing ballots in Precinct 10 were likely never removed from their secrecy envelopes and were thrown in the trash. Despite the county’s efforts to track them down after they had been discarded, Hocevar said “the recycling bale had already been sent for shredding.”
Even if the county had successfully found the discarded secrecy envelopes, “it is unlikely that their chain of custody can be proven to assure they have not been tampered with,” Hocevar said.
Hocevar noted the audit is still ongoing but said “human error” is the apparent cause for the missing ballots.
“This unfortunate situation resulted in a level of confusion that should not have occurred,” Hocevar said.
All of the missing ballots were within Minnesota House District 54A, where a recount and subsequent certification found DFL Rep. Brad Tabke won by 14 votes over Republican challenger Aaron Paul.
The missing ballots surpass the margin of victory by six ballots. In a social media post, GOP House Speaker-designate Lisa Demuth said an election contest will be filed in the coming days.
“Today’s news confirms why we will be seeking an election contest to protect the integrity of the vote in District 54A with a new election,” Demuth said. “With 20 ballots missing and confirmation from Scott County that they will likely not be recovered, it’s impossible to declare a winner with a 14 vote margin. We appreciate the efforts by Scott County to investigate this matter and be transparent about their findings.”
It’s impossible to know what was on the 20 missing ballots, but of the 1,266 votes counted in the precinct where they were tossed, Tabke won by a 15-point margin.
House DFL Speaker-designate Melissa Hortman released the following statement:
“Rep. Brad Tabke won the election in District 54A by the count on Election Night and in the recount. We expect Rep. Tabke will prevail again in the election contest.”
Undocumented immigrant charged in Pittsburgh shooting encountered Border Patrol earlier this year
Undocumented immigrant charged in Pittsburgh shooting encountered Border Patrol earlier this year
By Amy Hudak
November 20, 2024
PITTSBURGH — 11 Investigates has new details about an undocumented immigrant charged with attempted homicide in Pittsburgh.
Rawvil Brito Chirinos was arrested last week after Pittsburgh Police say he randomly robbed a 70-year-old man of his gold wedding band and cash and shot him in the stomach. The victim survived. Police say he was trying to visit his brother at the Corner View Nursing and Rehab Center in Larimer at the time of the attack.
ICE tells 11 Investigates that Brito Chirinos is a Venezuelan national who entered the U.S. illegally on Jan. 4 near El Paso, Texas. ICE says when U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered him, he was given notice to appear before an immigration judge and was released the same day. It’s not clear if he showed up for court or not.
Officers with enforcement and removal operations placed a detainer with the Allegheny County Jail on Nov. 15 following Brito Chirinos’ arrest.
ICE says that a detainer is to ensure an undocumented immigrant who is accused of committing a crime is not released from local custody and cannot pose a risk to the public before being taken into federal custody and ultimately deported per federal law.
A spokesperson for ICE sent 11 Investigates the following statement regarding Brito Chirinos:
“Rawvil Yamil Brito Chirinos is a Venezuelan national who entered the United States Jan. 4 near El Paso, Texas, and was encountered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection. He was given a notice to appear before an immigration judge by CBP and released the same day. Officers with Enforcement and Removal Operations placed a detainer with Allegheny County Jail in Pittsburg Nov. 15 after Brito was arrested by the Pittsburgh Police Department on local charges.”
Why did Katie Porter invite a violent criminal and drug addict named Julian Willis to live with her and her children? And why did she allow him to stay for such a long period of time?
https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1862126748214735127
https://twitter.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1862126748214735127
Rep. Katie Porter obtains temporary restraining order against ex-boyfriend on harassment allegations
By Laura J. Nelson
November 27, 2024
Porter said her ex-boyfriend Julian Willis had sent her more than 1,000 text messages and emails since August, including texting her 82 times in one 24-hour period in September.
The court filing includes a copy of one email in which Willis said he had visited Porter’s son at an out-of-state college and told him that he would “bring the hammer down on Katie and smash her and her life into a million pieces.”
U.S. Rep. Katie Porter (D-Irvine) secured a temporary restraining order Tuesday against a former boyfriend, saying in dozens of pages of court filings that he had bombarded her, as well as her family and colleagues, with hundreds of messages that she described as “persistent abuse and harassment.”
Porter, 50, alleged in a filing with Orange County Superior Court that her ex-boyfriend Julian Willis, 55, was contacting her and her family with such frequency that she had a “significant fear” for her “personal safety and emotional well-being.”
Judge Stephen T. Hicklin signed a restraining order Tuesday barring Willis from communicating with Porter and her children until a mid-December court hearing. He also barred Willis from communicating about Porter with her current and former colleagues.
In the court filing, Porter said that Willis had been hospitalized twice since late 2022 on involuntary psychiatric holds and had a history of abusing prescription painkillers and other drugs.
She said in a statement to The Times that Willis’ mental health and struggles with addiction seemed to have gotten worse since she asked him in August to move out of her Irvine home. She said she sought the court order after his threats to her family and colleagues “escalated in both their frequency and intensity.”
“I sincerely hope he gets the help he needs,” Porter said.
Willis declined to comment. He will have an opportunity to file a legal response to the temporary restraining order and challenge Porter’s allegations.
Porter is leaving the House of Representatives in January after losing in California’s U.S. Senate primary in March. She has been discussed as a front-runner in the 2026 governor’s race in California after Gov. Gavin Newsom is termed out, but has not said whether she will launch a campaign.
The 53-page court filing, first reported by Politico, included 22 pages of emails, text messages and other communications among Porter, family members and colleagues who had received messages from Willis, as well as messages that Willis sent to Porter’s attorney and to her political mentor Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).
The filing also included messages between herself and Willis’ siblings as they discussed trying to help him during his psychiatric holds and while he was staying in a sober-living facility.
Porter said that since she ordered Willis to move out, he had sent her more than 1,000 text messages and emails, including texting her 82 times in one 24-hour period in September, and 55 times on Nov. 12 before she blocked his number.
Porter said in the filing that her ex-boyfriend had “already contacted at least three reporters to disseminate false and damaging information” about her and her children, which she said “poses a serious risk to [her] career and personal reputation.”
The filing includes an email that Porter said Willis sent to her attorney late Monday, in which Willis said he had visited Porter’s son at college in Iowa and told him that he would “bring the hammer down on Katie and smash her and her life into a million pieces.”
Another screenshot shows Willis telling Porter’s attorney that he would file a complaint about Porter, who has children ages 12 and 16, with child protective services.
One of Porter’s congressional staff members received a text message from Willis saying he would “punish the f—” out of him if he did not agree to “cooperate” with a New York Times reporter and Willis’ attorneys, according to a screenshot included in the court document.
Willis previously made the news in 2021, when he was arrested after a fight that broke out at a Porter town hall at a park in Irvine.
MSNBC commentator Jonathan Capehart: “Scott Bessent is gay? And married? And has children? … He – if he’s confirmed – would be the highest ranking LGBT person ever to serve – to be appointed and confirmed – by the United States Senate… I’m kind of conflicted about this.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4m0S_PIcRc
“Breaking Bad: A Study in the Moral and Intellectual Consequences of Compromise” – By Ayn Rand (ChatGPT, actually)
By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)
November 26, 2024
I asked ChatGPT: “Pretend that Ayn Rand is still alive. Pretend that she just watched Breaking Bad. Pretend that she wrote an essay about the show, viewed from her own Objectivist philosophy. Please show me that essay.”
This is its response:
Breaking Bad: A Study in the Moral and Intellectual Consequences of Compromise
By Ayn Rand
In the television series Breaking Bad, we witness the descent of Walter White from a humble high school chemistry teacher into the self-proclaimed “kingpin” of a methamphetamine empire. This tragic narrative is not only a tale of personal degradation but also a profound illustration of the moral and intellectual consequences of compromise. It offers a vivid depiction of the fundamental principles of Objectivism—principles I have long advocated for—played out in the life of a man who chooses to abandon his values for the sake of the fleeting power and false sense of purpose.
The Premise: The Rational Man’s Struggle Against a Society That Demands Altruism
At the outset, Walter White is presented as a rational, capable man—someone with the intelligence to achieve great things but who finds himself trapped by circumstances. Diagnosed with terminal cancer, Walter is forced to confront the material realities of life. His financial situation, compounded by his inability to provide a secure future for his family, drives him to choose a path that seems rational in his mind: manufacturing and selling methamphetamine. At first glance, this might seem like a logical decision for a man desperate to secure his family’s future, but it is, in fact, a profound rejection of his own values and the principles of rational self-interest that would have guided him to better choices.
The Collapse of Moral Integrity: Sacrificing Reason for a False Sense of Duty
Walter’s decision to engage in illegal drug production and distribution is, at its core, an act of moral surrender. Under the guise of helping his family, Walter forsakes the most essential component of human life: rationality. His choice to manufacture meth—an immoral, dangerous, and destructive product—reveals his abandonment of reason as the guiding principle of his existence.
What is particularly striking about Walter White’s journey is how the very rationalizations he constructs to justify his actions are based on a fundamental contradiction: the belief that he is helping others while simultaneously violating their right to live and make their own choices. By entering the drug trade, Walter forfeits any moral high ground and creates a reality where his pursuit of self-interest is dependent upon the suffering of others. The idea that one must harm others to secure one’s own future is the ultimate moral fallacy.
If Walter White truly valued his family, he would not have sought a shortcut that relied on criminal enterprise; he would have pursued methods consistent with rational self-interest, maintaining his personal integrity while ensuring a future for his loved ones through honest, productive work. The fact that he cannot make this distinction underscores the inherent fallibility of the sacrifice-based morality imposed by society.
The Death of the Individual: The Tragedy of Heisenberg
As the series progresses, Walter adopts the alter ego “Heisenberg,” a persona that represents his complete abandonment of personal integrity. This is not merely a transformation into a more ruthless businessman; it is the epitome of the psychological destruction that comes with living in contradiction to one’s highest values. Walter’s decision to embrace violence, manipulation, and deceit in the pursuit of his meth empire is a direct consequence of abandoning reason, honesty, and personal responsibility.
In his quest for power, Walter seeks to assert his will over others, deluding himself into thinking that his actions are justified because they serve his “greater good.” This is, of course, a profound misunderstanding of the nature of morality and the role of the individual in society. To achieve greatness, one must never compromise on the sanctity of one’s mind, and one must never sacrifice others for personal gain. Yet Walter’s descent into tyranny—both over his family and his criminal enterprise—proves that compromising one’s integrity in the name of expediency inevitably leads to ruin, both in one’s personal life and in the broader context of society.
Jesse Pinkman: A Study in the Consequences of Abandoning One’s Potential
Jesse Pinkman, the troubled former student of Walter, is another fascinating character in this narrative. Unlike Walter, who is ostensibly driven by his intellectual prowess, Jesse is portrayed as someone who possesses a considerable degree of potential but squanders it through his emotionalism and dependency on others. While Walter falls into the trap of rationalizing his actions through a distorted sense of duty, Jesse’s actions are primarily motivated by a need for acceptance and validation from others, especially from Walter himself.
Jesse’s tragic flaw lies in his inability to take full responsibility for his actions and his tendency to sacrifice his personal aspirations for fleeting emotional bonds. While it is easy to sympathize with Jesse’s circumstances—his impoverished background, his struggle with self-worth—his moral failings, driven by an emotional dependence on others, ultimately prevent him from realizing his own potential as an independent, rational individual. In contrast to Walter, who rationalizes his choices as a means to an end, Jesse never fully internalizes the idea that he is the master of his own fate.
Both Walter and Jesse’s stories exemplify the destructive nature of altruism—the idea that individuals must sacrifice their own interests for the sake of others. For Walter, this manifests in the betrayal of his own rational self-interest for an unearned sense of moral duty to his family. For Jesse, it is a failure to break free from the chains of emotional dependency on others, preventing him from embracing the independence and self-responsibility that would have allowed him to flourish.
The Conclusion: The Ultimate Consequence of Compromise
Breaking Bad is a tragic illustration of what happens when a man chooses to compromise his rational self-interest for the sake of external forces—whether societal expectations, emotional attachments, or an ill-conceived sense of duty. Walter White’s fall from a rational man to a petty criminal and ultimately to a murderous despot is the inevitable consequence of rejecting the principles of Objectivism: reason, self-interest, and individualism.
In the end, Walter’s destruction is not just the result of his criminal activities but the consequence of his betrayal of the one fundamental value that sustains human life: the ability to think and act according to one’s own judgment. His entire journey is a tragic, cautionary tale of how the mind, when compromised, leads not only to personal ruin but to the destruction of all that makes human life possible.
To the rational individual, Breaking Bad offers a clear lesson: one must never abandon the integrity of one’s values. It is only through the unwavering commitment to reason, honesty, and the pursuit of one’s own happiness that one can achieve true greatness—no matter the external pressures or challenges faced along the way.
Joe Rogan rants against Biden, Zelensky for trying to ‘start World War III’
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCU_O916jsA
Joe Rogan rants against Biden, Zelensky for trying to ‘start World War III’
By Ronny Reyes
November 24 2024
Podcaster Joe Rogan has accused President Biden and Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky of trying to “start World War III.”
Rogan on Friday slammed Biden for recently approving the Ukrainian president’s request to use US-made long-range missiles against Russia to fight off the Kremlin’s invasion.
“How are you allowed to do that when you’re on your way out?” Rogan said of lame-duck outgoing President Biden. “There should be some sort of pause for significant actions that could potentially start World War III.”
Zelensky, whose country was invaded by Moscow in 2022, has long pleaded for approval to use US-supplied Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) to attack targets in Russia, a request Biden finally approved last week.
Britain then approved the use of its Storm Shadow missile — a weapon similar to the ATACMS — sparking Russia to fire a new hypersonic ballistic missile at Ukraine.
Moscow has since warned that its new missile, which is capable of carrying a nuclear weapon, could be used against the US because of its extraordinary range.
Russia also has warned of the possibility of a nuclear strike in Ukraine.
Rogan blamed the escalation of the war on Ukraine and its military as he rejected Zelensky’s claims that Russia was acting out of desperation over its slowed invasion and loss of thousands of troops.
“Zelensky says Putin is terrified. F–k you, man,” Rogan told the Ukrainian president. “F–k you, people. You people are about to start World War III.
“Maybe that would be a good thing we would like to avoid from a dying former president,” Rogan added, referencing the 82-year-old Biden.
The podcaster then expressed his hopes that President-elect Donald Trump will be able to stop the war in Ukraine, which was a campaign promise he vowed to complete during his Election Day victory speech.
Trump has suggested he will oversee a diplomatic end to the war that includes Russia being allowed to keep the territory it has invaded, a condition Ukraine has slammed as unacceptable.
Moscow currently controls about one-fifth of Ukraine after launching its invasion in February 2022, including Crimea and the vast majority of the Donbas, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions.
Rogan is only the latest public figure to describe the current escalation in the war as grounds for the start of World War III.
Valery Zaluzhny, Kyiv’s former military commander in chief and current envoy to the UK, said the presence of North Korean troops and Iranian weapons on Russia’s frontlines constituted the start of a third world war.
Reports have also emerged that a Houthi-linked company has been allegedly tricking men in Yemen to enlist in Moscow’s army and deploying the unwitting fighters, who believed they were applying for high-paying non-war jobs and Russian citizenship.
Michael Moore lashes out at Biden, says he’s leading America into World War III: ‘This is your legacy?’
https://www.yahoo.com/news/michael-moore-lashes-biden-says-180024081.html
Michael Moore lashes out at Biden, says he’s leading America into World War III: ‘This is your legacy?’
By Kristine Parks
November 25, 2024
Progressive filmmaker and activist Michael Moore accused President Biden of ruining his legacy and leading America “right into World War III” in a scathing open letter to the president.
Moore, who told Biden last month he could leave the White House as “a hero” by ending aid to Israel and forgiving all student loan debt and medical debt, once again addressed Biden in a letter published to his Substack on Saturday. This time, Moore attacked Biden for not heeding his requests and going in the “opposite direction.”
“My suggestions were all about cementing your status as a ‘Great President’ — about shaping your legacy, making you an unforgettable figure in the pantheon of all 44 White men who’ve presided over this country before you (and also your former boss). You, on the other hand, seem to be trying to cement your legacy as a war monger — doubling down on some of your worst mistakes and worst impulses,” Moore wrote.
“So I’ll ask again, WHAT ARE YOU DOING?” he asked.
Moore said Biden was dragging America into foreign conflicts instead of “help[ing] the American people” during his final days in office, by authorizing the delivery of weapons to Ukraine, allowing Ukraine’s military to use U.S.-provided long-range missiles on targets inside Russian territory, and signing off on sending anti-personnel mines to Ukraine.
“LAND MINES, Joe? Seriously? THIS is your legacy? This is how you want to go out? In a blaze of horror? Like, if Joe’s gotta go, we all gotta go with him… right into World War III?” he fumed.
Moore also attacked the Biden administration for selling weapons to Israel and vetoing an United Nations Security Council draft resolution that demanded an “unconditional cease-fire” in Gaza.
“The only country speaking out in favor of more death and destruction was the one you and I are citizens of. This is your legacy, Joe?” Moore griped.
The filmmaker ended his screed by begging Biden to once again use the “power of the pen” and make “real and powerful change,” starting with passing the Equal Rights Amendment, or “ERA,” which would create a constitutional right to abortion.
Moore argued that the ERA would “finally” recognize women as “equal citizens and human beings” and should be the “law of the land.”
“You have the power to do this, Joe. You have the power to make this your legacy,” he pleaded. “So, Joe, I’m really telling you for the last time: JUST DO IT.”
Moore, who confidently predicted that Vice President Kamala Harris would win the election, previously lashed out at voters after President-elect Donald Trump’s victory.
“If you stop and think about it, we’ve come up with a lot of doozies in our history,” he wrote in a post on MichaelMoore.com. “Like the genocide of 20 million Native Americans. Or the enslavement of 12 million kidnapped Africans. Or us invading Vietnam and killing 4 million Asian people for no reason at all. We are not a good people.”
The White House did not return Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Watch Ana Kasparian Admitting She Was WRONG About Trump Supporters
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8m7vgZO3CLg
Man accused of shooting FedEx employee released without bond
https://wreg.com/news/local/man-accused-of-shooting-fedex-employee-released-without-bond/
Man accused of shooting FedEx employee released without bond
By Megan Fayard and Jessica Knox
November 13, 2024
MEMPHIS, Tenn. – The man accused of shooting a FedEx employee in the hub parking lot in October has been released without bond.
18-year-old Tyreese Earnest was charged with attempted second-degree murder, employment of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon, and vandalism.
Earnest was released on his own recognizance and is scheduled to be back in court on November 26.
On October 30, Memphis Airport Police responded to the shooting at the FedEx World Hub located in the 2800 block of Democrat Road. Memphis Police say the victim identified Earnest as the man responsible for the shooting.
Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy said on Wednesday that the D.A.’s office opposed lowering Earnest’s initial $200,000 bond which was set by a judicial commissioner, and also opposed his release without bond.
“The details of the alleged crime, the fact the victim was ambushed, and the violent nature of it convinces us that this suspect is a threat to public safety,” said Mulory in a statement. “I respect the court’s decision but disagree with it.”
The D.A.’s office can argue for bond and against ROR, but ultimately, it is the judge who makes the final decision.
“Be sure if the defendant violates the terms of release, we will be ready to ask the court to reincarcerate him. As for the case, we will further investigate, build a strong case, and prosecute vigorously,” Mulroy said.
Earnest later identified the other two men with him on the scene as 18-year-old twin brothers Ja’Marcus Odell and Ja’Marion Odell.
Ja’Marion admitted to officers that he drove Earnest and his brother to the FedEx World Hub.
The Odell twins were later taken into custody and each charged with criminal attempt facilitation to wit: second-degree murder. They are being held on $80,000 bonds.
They are scheduled to be back in court Thursday morning.
State Sen. Brent Taylor responded to the decision by a judge to let Earnest out of jail on no bond, calling it an injustice.
“Judge Anderson does not deserve the respect of anyone who is determined to solve our crime problem,” Taylor wrote on Facebook.
Pentagon fails 7th audit in a row, unable to fully account for $824B budget
https://www.yahoo.com/news/pentagon-fails-7th-audit-row-130419510.html
Pentagon fails 7th audit in a row, unable to fully account for $824B budget
By Stephen Sorace
November 17, 2024
The Pentagon failed its seventh consecutive audit on Friday as the agency was unable to fully account for its massive $824 billion budget, though officials were confident the Department of Defense “has turned a corner” in understanding its budgetary challenges going forward.
The audits resulted in a disclaimer of opinion, which means auditors were provided with insufficient information to form an accurate opinion of the accounts.
Of the Department of Defense’s (DoD) 28 reporting entities that had standalone audits, 9 received an unmodified audit opinion, 1 received a qualified opinion, 15 received disclaimers, and 3 opinions remain pending, the Pentagon said.
But with the goal of achieving a clean audit by 2028, Michael McCord, Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) and Chief Financial Officer, said the agency “has turned a corner in its understanding of the depth and breadth of its challenges.”
“Momentum is on our side, and throughout the Department there is strong commitment—and belief in our ability—to achieve an unmodified audit opinion,” he said in a statement.
The objective of earning an unmodified audit opinion is mandated by the National Defense Authorization Act.
McCord told reporters at a briefing on Friday that he would not say that the agency “failed” as it had “about half clean opinions.”
“So if someone had a report card that is half good and half not good, I don’t know that you call the student or the report card a failure,” he said.
Independent public accountants and the DoD Office of Inspector General closely examined the financial statements for the audit.
McCord emphasized in a statement that the path to a clean audit is clear.
“Significant work remains and challenges lie ahead, but our annual audit continues to be a catalyst for Department-wide financial management reform, resulting in greater financial integrity, transparency, and better-supported warfighters,” he said.
DOGE’s first move to shake up the federal government may be a mobile app for filing your taxes. The stock prices of H&R Block and Intuit tumbled Tuesday after the story was published.
https://yahoo.com/tech/doges-potential-first-target-mobile-110613278.html
DOGE’s first move to shake up the federal government may be a mobile app for filing your taxes
By Tom Carter
November 21, 2024
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency reportedly plans to shake up the US tax system with a new app.
Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy’s cost-cutting group has discussed developing a free mobile app that Americans could use to file taxes, two people told The Washington Post.
The stock prices of H&R Block and Intuit, which sell tax-filing services such as TurboTax, tumbled Tuesday after the Post story was published. Shares were down 8% and 5% on the day, respectively.
The launch of an app would see Musk and Ramaswamy, who were die-hard supporters of Donald Trump’s successful election campaign, follow in the footsteps of Joe Biden.
The outgoing president’s Inflation Reduction Act introduced Direct File, a free IRS tax-filing system that rolled out in February.
The legislation, which attempted to make tax filing easier and cheaper, was strongly opposed by Republicans at the time. It has been used by more than 100,000 taxpayers this year, according to the Treasury.
When Trump announced that Musk and Ramaswamy would lead the new advisory commission, he said they’d be tasked with cutting regulation and government spending “from outside of Government,” with a deadline of July 2026.
Musk and Ramaswamy have suggested they could cut $2 trillion from the federal budget and “delete” entire government departments, though political experts previously told Business Insider these goals were unrealistic.
Since its announcement last week, DOGE has been active on Musk’s social media platform, X, with an account for the organization posting that it was seeking to hire “super high-IQ small-government revolutionaries.” Musk also proposed an online leaderboard for “the most insanely dumb spending of your tax dollars.”
Musk and DOGE didn’t respond to requests for comment from BI sent outside normal working hours.
Jaguar commercial from 40 years ago vs one from today
https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1859802052224057405
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJX05mJ8tz4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLtFIrqhfng
Elon Musk is opening a Montessori school!
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/inside-elon-musk-plans-private-004159755.html
Inside Elon Musk’s plans for a private pre-school in Texas, which just got a permit to open and where children will learn to sweep, draw, and explore
By Jessica Mathews
November 20, 2024
Elon Musk’s pre-kindergarten Montessori school in Texas can now open its doors.
The school, which has been in the works since last year, received its initial permit from the Texas childcare regulator on Thursday
The first Ad Astra pupils in Bastrop will be between three and six years old and attend a pre-Kindegarten school that focuses on exploration and on tasks like coloring, collage-making, and studying maps and globes.
… its approach to learning will revolve around exploration, with toddlers learning how to button things, color and draw, collage, construct words, and study globes and maps. Outside, there is a basketball court, and toddlers will be able to play with tricycles and balls, according to the documents. The curriculum itself—which entails periods for “work” and “play” and has children learning to sweep, apologize to others, and learn how to “solve a conflict”—is inspired by the work of Alfred Adler and Rudolf Dreikurs, two psychologists and educators, to “teach young people to become responsible, respectful, and resourceful members of our community,” according to Ad Astra’s permit application. As a Montessori school, the school will likely also emphasize self-directed learning, hands-on experiences, and collaborative play.
Bill Maher talks about differences between how progressive whites view black people, and how black people actually view themselves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtCK-dMb-F8
One of Alvin Bragg’s employees was robbed because Bragg himself refused to lock up a violent serial criminal named Brandon Simosa. I wonder if Bragg will let him go this time.
The New York Post just reported the following:
Venezuelan migrant with ties to Tren de Aragua grins after being arrested in lewd robbery of NYC prosecutor
November 20, 2024
A Venezuelan migrant with links to Tren de Aragua has been arrested for allegedly robbing one of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s prosecutors in her apartment building after she busted him masturbating, police sources told The Post Wednesday.
Brandon Simosa, 25, who has apparent ties to the vicious prison gang, was nabbed outside the Row Hotel migrant shelter in Midtown Manhattan Tuesday night over the sick ordeal, the sources said.
He is accused of robbing the 38-year-old assistant district attorney when she arrived home to her 44th Street pad at about 2 a.m. Sunday and busted him midway through the lewd act in the building’s hallway.
… during his time in the Big Apple, Simosa racked up a hefty rap sheet — six busts in the last 10 months…
He was also arrested for a string of assault, grand larceny, robbery, and transit evasion incidents
So one of Alvin Bragg’s employees was robbed because Bragg himself refused to lock up a violent serial criminal named Brandon Simosa.
I wonder if Bragg will let him go this time.
“Blue city prosecutor attacked in own home by illegal immigrant… the victim works for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/blue-city-prosecutor-attacked-own-154118751.html
Blue city prosecutor attacked in own home by illegal immigrant with Tren de Aragua gang ties: police
By Michael Ruiz
November 20, 2024
They almost caught him with his pants down.
An illegal immigrant from Venezuela with suspected ties to the Tren de Aragua gang has been arrested outside a New York City migrant shelter after allegedly breaking into a Manhattan prosecutor’s apartment, pleasuring himself and robbing her, according to a new report.
Brandon Simosa, 25, followed the unidentified 38-year-old woman into her apartment building near the intersection of 44th Street and Ninth Avenue around 2 a.m. Sunday, according to the NYPD.
Once inside, he demanded cash and stole credit cards and a cellphone from her purse. Then, he allegedly “performed a lewd act in front of the female” and ran away, police said.
The suspect is an illegal immigrant with suspected ties to the infamous Venezuelan prison gang, and the victim works for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, the New York Post reported.
The “lewd act” was him allegedly masturbating in her hallway before he took off, only to be arrested outside the Row, according to the paper.
The Row is a former luxe hotel that city officials turned into a migrant shelter to help house tens of thousands of illegals who flooded into the Big Apple under the Biden-Harris administration.
Police grabbed him around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Although he was hanging around the shelter, he was listed as homeless.
Simosa faces charges of sexually motivated robbery, sexually motivated burglary, grand larceny, five counts of possessing stolen property, two counts of petit larceny, and drug charges, according to the NYPD.
The Row and other New York City shelters have been identified as Tren de Aragua hot spots, and police previously blamed the gang for a rise in robberies targeting women with purses or cellphones, describing it as a “wave of migrant crime.”
Bragg is the controversial far-left Democrat whose office prosecuted President-elect Donald Trump and is currently trying to convict a Marine veteran who intervened during a schizophrenic man’s violent subway outburst of manslaughter.
Three people were murdered because New York City gave concurrent sentences, instead of consecutive sentences, to a serial criminal named Ramon Rivera.
Ukraine fires US-made longer-range missiles into Russia for the first time
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/19/europe/ukraine-russia-atacms-biden-strike-intl/index.html
Ukraine fires US-made longer-range missiles into Russia for the first time
By Christian Edwards
November 19, 2024
Ukraine hit a Russian weapons arsenal with US-made ATACMS missiles that it fired across the border for the first time, according to two US officials, in a major escalation on the 1,000th day of war.
The attack comes just two days after the Biden administration gave Kyiv the green light to use the longer-range American weapons against targets inside Russia.
The Russian Defense Ministry said Tuesday that Ukraine fired the US-made missiles into Russia’s Bryansk region.
The attack marks the first time Ukraine has used the longer-range American weapons to strike targets deep inside Russia, and shows that Kyiv has wasted little time in making use of its newly-granted powers.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky declined to confirm or deny the attack during a Tuesday news conference but said: “Ukraine has long-range capabilities. Ukraine has long-range drones of its own production. We now have a long ‘Neptune’ (Ukrainian cruise missiles) and not just one. And now we have ATACMS. And we will use all of this.”
At 3:25 a.m. local time (7:25 p.m. ET) Tuesday, Ukraine fired six ballistic missiles at a facility in Bryansk, Russia’s Defense Ministry said. It said that American-made ATACMS missiles had been used in the attack.
Russian air defenses said they shot down five of the missiles and another was damaged. Fragments from the damaged missile fell on the territory of a military facility, causing a fire that has since been extinguished. There were no casualties or damage.
On Sunday, US President Joe Biden authorized Ukraine to use longer-range American missiles inside Russia, ending a months-long prohibition aiming to help Ukraine defend itself while not drastically escalating the conflict.
The decision came at a crucial moment in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia is probing on the frontlines in Ukraine’s east while pummeling its cities with missile and drone strikes, aiming to disable Ukraine’s power grid and weaponize the freezing temperatures for a third consecutive winter.
Meanwhile, thousands of North Korean troops have been deployed to Russia’s Kursk region, where Ukrainian troops launched a daring counteroffensive in the summer.
In a press briefing Monday, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the involvement of North Korean troops in the war was “a major escalation by Russia, bringing in an Asian military to a conflict inside Europe.”
The decision to allow the use of the Army Tactical Missile Systems, or ATACMS, inside Russia had been under consideration for months. American officials had been divided on the wisdom of allowing the new capability. Some had concerns about escalating the war, while others worried about dwindling stockpiles of the weapons.
Although Kyiv has repeatedly used Ukrainian-made drones to hit targets in Russia – deeper into the country than Bryansk – Moscow has long maintained that using far-reaching Western weapons would constitute a major escalation.
After the reported missile attack early Tuesday morning, President Vladimir Putin updated Russia’s nuclear doctrine – just two days after Biden’s green light.
Under the updated doctrine, Moscow will consider aggression from any non-nuclear state – but with the participation of a nuclear country – a joint attack on Russia.
However, in more than two-and-a-half years of war, Russia has often rattled the nuclear saber in response to perceived escalation by Ukraine and its allies.
After French President Emmanuel Macron said earlier this year that he would not rule out sending European troops to Ukraine, Putin ordered a tactical nuclear weapons drill in response to what he called “threats” by the West.
For months, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had argued that “long-range capabilities for our army” is a key part of his “Victory Plan” for winning the war.
Responding on Sunday evening to reports of Biden’s green-light, Zelensky said: “Strikes are not carried out with words. Such things are not announced. Missiles will speak for themselves.”
Communism is evil.
Farmers have hoarded land for too long. Inheritance tax will bring new life to rural Britain
Prices and rents will fall under Rachel Reeves’ plans, enabling a younger generation with new ideas to enter the field
By Will Hutton
November 17, 2024
One of the baleful dimensions of our times is the way that the conversation about what constitutes the good society is framed by the rich and their interests. A conception of the common good withers; instead it is replaced by the existential importance of private wealth, private interests and private ownership to societal health. Nowhere is this more exposed than in the debate over taxation, and in particular the taxation of inherited wealth – as the debate over the past fortnight has dramatised.
Half a million people die every year. Under the reforms to inheritance tax relief on agricultural land proposed in the budget, about 500 individuals who inherit land worth more than £2m (£3m if they were married to the deceased) will join the rest of society and have inheritance tax levied on their bequest – albeit at half the rate, with an enlarged exemption and 10 years to pay it, concessions not made to the rest of us. How fortunate and privileged are they?
Yet ever since, the National Farmers Union, Historic Houses, the Tory party, the rightwing media and, inevitably, Elon Musk have behaved as if the move represents a new communist dictatorship. Edward Stanley, the 19th Earl of Derby, denizen of Merseyside’s Knowsley Hall where his family has lived since 1385, represented their united view. “Taking 20% of a business away every generation is just a shockingly awful concept for a government that wants growth,” he told the Financial Times. Positioning himself as a wealth-creating small business, he insisted it “would kill off farming and heritage businesses” like his. According to the lobby, a new age of Jacobin terror has been unleashed – production will collapse, rural Britain will be devastated, and all for a trivial amount of money. Rarely have 500 very privileged people got so hysterical – and commanded so much attention.
There is no acknowledgment of the potential wider benefits that go beyond the non-trivial contribution the tax will make to relieving the crisis in public services. The hoarding of land that has gone on since the bung was introduced by Margaret Thatcher in 1984, which has so steadily driven up land prices and farmers’ rents, will at last be checked as some of the larger estates are obliged to sell parcels of land to pay inheritance tax, as they did before 1984 without the world falling in, rather than be enabled to own it in perpetuity. Young farmers, now increasingly crowded out of the market, will get a chance to buy land: there is the prospect of a levelling off, even a fall, in farm rents. New life and ideas will be brought to the rural economy as innovative, energetic farmers enter the market – and production even increases.
As importantly, a key principle that has underpinned all human societies – that we have a right to share in the bounty of inherited assets – will be reaffirmed. Whether ancient Rome or feudal Europe, societies have taken the view that just because an individual got lucky and came out of the right womb, they are not entitled to inherit everything without paying some levy or tribute on their inherited wealth. After all, wealth is enjoyed in a societal context and society made a contribution to the existence of the wealth. Of course society should share in the transfer, if only in a minor way, and the principle should extend to everyone, with as few exceptions as possible. Far from a death tax, it is a life tax on undeserved good luck.
Why so much fuss? Part of the problem is that rural Britain has never escaped the cultural trappings of feudalism. It is now largely forgotten, but in 1883 the Conservative party, to fight the rise of progressive liberalism and its emergent outrider socialism, set up the mass membership Primrose League, whose adherents formally accepted the vital role that the “landed estates of the realm” played in an idea of imperial, free-enterprise Britain. It was a direct response to William Gladstone’s creation of “succession duty” in 1881 codifying the longstanding practice of levying a duty on the transfer of landed assets – and the principle had to be fought to the last. Within a decade its members, incredibly, outnumbered trade unionists.
The Earl of Derby speaks to that Primrose League tradition, arguing that his family is less a 650-year beneficiary of the baronial carve-up of England after the Norman conquest and more an employment-generating small business. Selling a little of the estate to pay inheritance tax is off limits; instead, the assumption is that the tax will have to be paid from the business’s cashflow, to preserve the estate in perpetuity – hence the over-egged predictions of devastation. In the wider economy, the creation of perpetual monopolies would be widely criticised as not only unfairly entrenching wealth and power but stifling the process of creative churn that is at the heart of economic vitality. Britain’s landed estates are excused from the same criticism.
It is a political and cultural achievement that must be challenged today with the same energy it was challenged by Liberal leaders in the run-up to the First World War. The Lib Dem leader, Ed Davey, calling for the government to suspend the measure, forgets Gladstone’s succession duty, William Harcourt’s introduction of estates duty in 1894 and David Lloyd George’s imaginative plans to break up the monopoly of land ownership. Yet, while the non-royal dukes might no longer have automatic membership of the House of Lords, they still own as much of Britain as they did then. Davey should not cosy up to Musk and co, inflaming the hysteria, but rather back Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves who, to their credit, are holding the line.
But Labour needs to win the argument, and to be convincing that argument must be made from first principles. Inheritance tax springs from the universally held belief that society has the right to share when wealth is transferred on death as a matter of justice. This is not confiscation, especially if the lion’s share of the bequest is left intact. It is asking for a share. The principle should apply to all estates and to everyone. It is fair. It limits the entrenchment of wealth and privilege. It breaks up monopoly, especially of land. It enlarges the tax base. It gives the next generation a chance. Any other argument is the special pleading of plutocrats – and should be seen as such.



