Sunday, May 10, 2026

Something to Know - 10 May (again)

The flavor of some newsletters, though not all, seems to have morphed away from the minutiae of sordid details of the microcosm to a wider macro view of the situation.   So, to this, we have Mary Geddry sounding forth on the total behavior of our "stable genius" president.   Remember, this is the guy who is taking our tax money, and disregarding the direction of those funds to his own playpen of ego-driven games.  

Geddry’s Newsletter a Publication of nGenium marygeddry@substack.com 

9:17 AM (50 minutes ago)
to me

This Is Not The Way

Trump, the empire's graphic design department, and a Mother's Day dispatch from the edge of the galaxy far, far away where we apparently now live.

May 10
 
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Good morning! Happy Mother’s Day to everyone celebrating, remembering, grieving, mothering, being mothered, including you single dads doing double duty!

Today’s roundup is going to be brief because I’m spending the day with my kids, which feels like the correct and morally superior use of my time. The news will still be terrible tomorrow. Democracy’s group project will still be on fire. The usual suspects will still be lying into microphones like it’s cardio. So today: a shorter cup of coffee, a few things worth noting, and then I’m logging off to be with the people who made me a mother in the first place.

Unfortunately, before I can go enjoy pancakes and familial affection, we do need to check in on the President of the United States, whose brain continues to be available in real time through Truth Social, like a national security briefing written by a haunted slot machine.

NPR analyzed Trump’s first four months of Truth Social posts this year and found that he posted 2,249 times, averaging just under 19 posts a day. His most common topic was the 2026 elections, followed by Iran and the economy, but the real story is the scattershot obsession. Trump posted 71 times about the 2020 election lie, more often than he posted about tariffs. He posted 68 times about his various Washington, D.C. building projects, including his White House ballroom and proposed arch, more often than he posted about Venezuela, the SAVE Act, or the Minneapolis protests and federal agents. And he posted more than six times as often about his legal grievances as he did about health care policy. Sort of a live feed from the presidential id.

On March 1, the day after U.S. forces bombed Iran and launched a war now dragging into its tenth week, Trump posted 30 times. He did post about Iran, including a threat warning Tehran not to retaliate. But then, because the man has the attention span of a firework in a microwave, he also posted a video portraying Mitch McConnell as the dead guy from Weekend at Bernie’s, praise for his State of the Union, Trump-friendly news coverage, months-old celebrity-adjacent approval fluff, screenshots of people praising him online, and a video about San Francisco from an account called “truthaboutfluoride.”

Again: this was the day after he bombed Iran. It matters because the rest of the world is not treating Trump’s posts as harmless uncle-at-Thanksgiving nonsense. Adversaries, allies, markets, militaries, and diplomats all have to parse the difference between policy, impulse, threat, delusion, performance, and whatever category includes reposting pet videos next to war updates. Former national security adviser John Bolton told NPR that Trump’s ferocious posting about Iran may actually signal weakness to Tehran: if Iran waits him out, Bolton suggested, Trump may “flip right out entirely” and start offering concessions. Bolton’s verdict was concise: “Just being generically crazy does not give you an advantage.”

Regional reporting from Tehran suggests Iran is trying to send two messages at once: it is still leaving the door open to diplomacy, but it wants everyone to understand that its military is prepared for another round of confrontation. According to Al Jazeera’s reporting from Tehran, Iranian military officials are describing the country as fully prepared after attacks on coastal areas and oil tankers, warning that Iran’s “strategic patience” is over and that its forces have “fingers on the trigger.” Military spokesmen are also threatening “surprises” involving new weapons, new methods of warfare, and new arenas of conflict if Iran is attacked again. It feels like the diplomatic equivalent of saying, “We are open to talking, but please note that the flamethrower is plugged in.”

The Strait of Hormuz remains the pressure point, and the rhetoric surrounding it is increasingly dangerous. Tehran is insisting that negotiations are not surrender; Washington is still pressing for a deal, and both sides are behaving like people standing in a room full of leaking gas while debating whether sparks are technically part of the negotiation process. Iran’s president is saying the Iranian nation will not bow before its enemies, while military officials are emphasizing readiness for “hostile action” and “confrontational scenarios.”

No “war or diplomacy.” This is war and diplomacy walking down the same hallway, bumping shoulders, each pretending the other one is not there.

Trump is preparing for a high-stakes meeting with Xi Jinping in Beijing next week, because apparently Mother’s Day weekend needed a little “two most powerful men on Earth compare grievances while the world economy sweats through its shirt” energy.

The agenda is enormous: Iran, trade, Taiwan, artificial intelligence, rare earths, semiconductors, fentanyl, the South China Sea, China’s nuclear buildup, and the case of jailed Hong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai. Expectations, however, are modest. The most likely outcome appears to be some limited investment agreements and an extension of the temporary trade truce Trump and Xi struck after last year’s bruising tariff fight.

The more revealing part is the backdrop. Trump enters the summit entangled in a war with Iran, China’s closest partner in the Middle East, while the conflict has helped trigger a global energy crisis and pulled U.S. military attention and resources away from Asia. The war has also depleted American munitions, raising questions among some Chinese analysts about whether the United States could defend Taiwan if Beijing decided to test the moment.

Xi, meanwhile, is not exactly arriving from a position of carefree strength. China is dealing with slower growth, higher energy costs, and the threat of a global recession that could hit its export-heavy economy hard. So the meeting may be less about solving the U.S.-China rivalry than about both men trying to buy time while sharpening the knives behind their backs. Not the kind of thing one wants simmering in the background while trying to enjoy pancakes with the kids.

Speaking of strongmen pretending chaos is strategy, Putin appears to be borrowing from Donald Trump’s favorite playbook: announce that something is basically solved, then let the fine print reveal that nothing has actually changed.

Putin claimed the war in Ukraine is “coming to an end,” but senior Kremlin officials immediately made clear there is no quick peace on the table. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the United States may be “in a hurry,” but a Ukraine settlement is “too complex” and peace remains “a very long road.” Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said negotiations would “probably resume,” but Moscow sees no basis for new trilateral talks until Ukrainian forces withdraw from the Donetsk region, a demand Kyiv has already rejected.

Kyiv Post and Kyiv Independent are reporting the same basic posture from Moscow: Russia is insisting that progress will remain frozen unless Ukraine gives up Donbas, including territory Russia has failed to seize after years of brutal, costly offensives. At the same time, the Kremlin says it expects Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to return to Moscow “quite soon” for more talks, despite the fact that Trump’s envoys have reportedly made repeated trips to Russia while still not visiting Kyiv.

That is not exactly a subtle diplomatic signal. It looks less like a peace process than Moscow auditioning for a surrender process with American middlemen in the room.

Ukraine, meanwhile, is calling for an unconditional ceasefire along the current front lines as the starting point for talks. Russia is demanding the entire Donbas region, including territory it could not conquer militarily. So Putin gets to sound reasonable, Trump’s envoys get to look busy, and the actual Russian condition remains: Ukraine must give Russia what Russia could not win.

Classic strongman theater: declare victory-ish, demand surrender-ish, call it diplomacy, and hope everyone mistakes exhaustion for peace.

Which brings us, somehow inevitably, to Trump dressed as a Mandalorian.

Subtlety died of embarrassment sometime around 2016, so the White House marked Star Wars Day by circulating an image of Trump styled as a Mandalorian warrior, complete with armor, halo lighting, an American flag, Grogu tucked into his gear, and a tiny White House glowing in the corner like a nationalist snow globe.

The caption reportedly read: “In a galaxy that demands strength, America stands ready. This is the way. May the 4th be with you.”

The key detail is the White House watermark. This was not just some random MAGA meme scraped from the internet and passed around by a guy named PatriotEagle1776 whose profile picture is a truck wearing sunglasses. This was branded through the official machinery of the presidency. That turns the whole thing from embarrassing fan art into state-sponsored cosplay propaganda.

And the timing is fascinating. The post came as Disney was ramping up publicity for The Mandalorian & Grogu, opening May 22. So the White House essentially used Disney’s own intellectual property to generate either free publicity or a poisoned promotional tie-in for a Disney blockbuster while simultaneously existing in an adversarial relationship with the company.

Lucasfilm had no comment, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which starts to look less like capitulation and more like a cold calculation. Why hand Trump a fight that would only draw more attention to the image days before opening weekend? Disney is many things, but allergic to risk is certainly one of them. Sometimes the mouse does not roar because the mouse has done the math.

Still, the image itself deserves attention because it is not merely ridiculous. It is revealing.

Trump’s political movement constantly tries to appropriate the language of rebellion while behaving like the empire. They cast themselves as freedom fighters while demanding loyalty oaths, targeting enemies, punishing dissent, militarizing civic life, and turning the presidency into a merch table with subpoenas. They want the aesthetics of resistance without the inconvenience of resisting power, because they are the power.

That is why the Star Wars imagery is such a spectacular self-own.

George Lucas built Star Wars out of the visual language of empire, fascism, rebellion, myth, and propaganda. He did not accidentally borrow from authoritarian spectacle; he studied it, repurposed it, and made it legible to modern audiences. The throne room ceremony in A New Hope famously draws on the staging of Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will. The monumental symmetry, the ceremonial procession, the massed bodies, the architecture of triumph, Lucas knew exactly what visual grammar he was invoking.

But the point was not to celebrate fascist spectacle. The point was to show how power wraps itself in grandeur, ritual, and heroic imagery. Star Wars is obsessed with how republics become empires, how fear becomes policy, how emergency powers become permanent, how myths can liberate or enslave, and how people convince themselves they are saving civilization while helping build the machine that crushes it.

And now the White House is apparently looking at that entire warning label and saying: great, but what if the emperor had better branding?

The image casts Trump as a mythic protector figure: armored, holy-lit, flag-bearing, carrying Grogu like a sacred child through the snow. It is paternal, militarized, sentimental, and authoritarian all at once. It is not just “Trump is strong.” It is “Trump is the guardian of innocence, the warrior-father, the chosen protector, the man who carries the future through the storm.”

That is not politics. That is cult iconography with a Disney+ subscription.

And it is especially absurd because The Mandalorian itself is a story about a lone warrior who slowly learns that rigid codes and weaponized identity are not enough. Din Djarin’s entire arc is about care breaking through dogma. Grogu is not a prop that makes the armored man look tender. Grogu is the moral center that forces the armored man to become something more human.

So naturally, the White House looked at that and thought: perfect, put the baby in the pouch and make the president look taller.

Fans immediately understood the problem. Earlier this year, Trump had also been depicted with a red lightsaber, the color associated with Sith Lords and villains in Star Wars lore. As one fan put it: “Imagine watching Star Wars and thinking that the ones with the red lightsabers are the good guys.”

Exactly.

This happens when a movement consumes pop culture entirely as branding, not meaning. They see armor and think hero. They see flags and think virtue. They see rebellion and imagine it means being rude to fact-checkers. They see Star Wars and somehow miss the part where the bad guys are the ones obsessed with domination, spectacle, loyalty, and crushing democratic resistance.

Of course, that is the whole trick. Authoritarian movements do not announce themselves by saying, “Good morning, we are here to destroy the republic.” They arrive wrapped in symbols people already love. They borrow the music, the myths, the heroes, the slogans. They call coercion strength and cruelty order. They call surrender peace, propaganda communication, and call cosplay leadership. Then they put a White House watermark on it.

So that is where we are this Mother’s Day: Trump rage-posting through a war, Iran warning that its fingers are on the trigger, Xi preparing to test a distracted and depleted America, Putin pretending his demand for Ukrainian surrender is a peace process, and the White House trying to turn the president into a Mandalorian saint while accidentally reminding everyone that the empire always had excellent graphic design.

The Force is not with this communications shop.

Happy Mother’s Day. Hug your people. Drink something warm. And may the fourth branch of government, exhausted women with coffee and Substack subscriptions, continue to hold the line.




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****
Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.


Something to Know - 10 May

One of the most exotic assignments in the White House  is the personal task force that Trump employs CGI cratsmen that creates and forwards all the weird cartoons and graphics for Trump to accompany his mindless screeds at all hours of the day.   This is our president.   How can he be taken seriously, for one thing, but why is it that his minders and his fraternal order of deranged elected congressmen stoop to silent obeyance to every crackpot scheme?    

Geddry’s Newsletter a Publication of nGenium marygeddry@substack.com 

7:46 PM (32 minutes ago)
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Useful Fools

Trump, his enablers, and the oldest miscalculation in modern history

May 10
 
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The Useful Fools

On Saturday afternoon, while the Strait of Hormuz remained effectively closed to tanker traffic, while 1,600 ships sat bottled up in the Persian Gulf, while six people were reported missing after an overnight American strike on an Iranian port, the President of the United States posted an AI-generated image of himself standing on a Navy carrier deck watching ships explode.

He also posted “Bye Bye, Drones” above a graphic of a destroyer firing laser beams. He posted a before-and-after comparison: 159 Iranian ships sailing under Obama and Biden, 159 Iranian ships on the ocean floor under Trump. He posted “Drones Dropping Like Butterflies” alongside an AI rendering of Iranian drones falling into the sea. He posted a fat caricature of the Governor of Illinois eating a comically oversized meal. He did all of this from his golf course in Florida, where he was watching a tournament, between approximately 3:51 and 5:36 in the afternoon.

These timestamped posts are now part of the permanent record. Xi Jinping’s intelligence services don’t need to hack anything, they can scroll Truth Social. The IRGC’s strategic planners, whose missile capability remains largely intact despite the cartoon ocean floor imagery, are drawing their own conclusions about who they’re dealing with. Every adversary with an internet connection received, for free, on Saturday afternoon, a precise and detailed picture of the American president’s relationship with reality.

Thus far, Congress has said nothing. The GOP caucus, which controls the levers of oversight, which has access to classified damage assessments that reportedly contradict everything Pete Hegseth has told the public, which is constitutionally empowered to demand answers, said nothing. This is where the story stops being darkly comic and becomes something that requires a different kind of language.

History offers a useful framework, if we’re willing to use it honestly. When conservative German politicians handed Franz von Papen’s coalition the chancellorship in January 1933, they believed they were making a controlled transaction. Hitler was useful, a battering ram against the left, a mass mobilizer they could aim and redirect. Papen said the quiet part out loud: within two months, he assured his colleagues, they would have pushed Hitler into a corner so tight he’d squeak. The conservative establishment’s fatal miscalculation was not that they failed to see Hitler clearly, but that they saw him clearly enough to use him and believed that the same qualities that made him useful also made him manageable. They were wrong about the second part in ways that consumed them.

The Republican establishment has spent a decade making the same calculation. Trump was useful, a base mobilizer, a culture war instrument, a wrecking ball aimed at institutions they found inconvenient. They swallowed their private assessments and made their accommodations. What they failed to account for, as Papen failed to account for it, is that a man without genuine institutional loyalty, without consistent ideological commitments, without the normal political self-preservation instincts that make actors predictable, such a man cannot be contained by rational strategy. You cannot negotiate with someone who doesn’t experience consequences the way you do. The containment strategy contains nothing. It does, however, make the containers complicit.

The Night of the Long Knives, June 30 to July 2, 1934, is instructive here. Ernst Röhm had been Hitler’s oldest ally, one of the very few people who addressed him informally, a man who had been indispensable to the Nazi rise. He led the SA, the Brownshirts, the street muscle that had made everything possible. By 1934 Röhm had ambitions that made him inconvenient to the industrialists and military establishment whose support Hitler now needed more than he needed the SA. Over one weekend, Hitler had him murdered, along with the broader SA leadership and anyone else who had become inconvenient, rivals, witnesses, old enemies, Papen’s own secretary. Papen survived only because he was still momentarily useful. He was placed under house arrest and thoroughly terrified. Perhaps most chillingly, the German cabinet retroactively legalized the murders. The judiciary concurred, and the military, relieved that the SA threat to their institutional prerogatives had been eliminated, said nothing.

They got what they wanted in the short term. Then they lost everything on the longer timeline.

Consider the current roster of the useful and the spent.

Jeff Sessions was Attorney General. Mike Pence was Vice President. Bill Barr provided the juridical cover. James Mattis, John Kelly, H.R. McMaster, the adults in the room, as they were briefly and hopefully called, each made their calculation that their presence was moderating, stabilizing, essential. Each was consumed.

Consider Pam Bondi, the recently fired Attorney General, installed with a specific mandate to manage the Justice Department as a protective instrument. She is already caught between congressional pressure over the Epstein files and the demands of the man she serves, with no exit from that corridor that doesn’t damage her. Kristi Noem dismantled a carefully constructed political identity, the presidential-adjacent brand, the Mount Rushmore backdrop, and received in return the kind of casual dismissal reserved for people who’ve already been squeezed. Lori Chavez-DeRemer surrendered the independence that was her political identity for a cabinet position that has made her radioactive in exactly the districts she’d need to survive. Kash Patel is running the FBI on a mandate of retribution and loyalty, leaving a paper trail of his own that will outlast whatever protection he currently enjoys.

Protection is always conditional. It is always, eventually, withdrawn. Röhm knew Hitler from the very beginning and it did not save him.

After the collapse came Nuremberg. The trials established something legally new: that institutional complicity is its own category of crime, that the lawyers who wrote the opinions and the judges who signed the orders and the bureaucrats who processed the paperwork bore individual responsibility for what the machinery produced. “I was following orders” was not a defense. The Judges’ Trial prosecuted men who had simply done law, and found them guilty of the law they had done.

The American situation will not end in Nuremberg trials. The analog does not extend that far and it would be both inaccurate and hysterical to suggest it does. But the people who have used legal and institutional instruments to shield one man from accountability while dismantling the mechanisms designed to protect everyone else are creating a record. History has a longer memory than a news cycle. Some of Hitler’s enablers hanged. Some fled to South America. Some lived out quiet lives under assumed names. Eichmann made it to Buenos Aires. The Mossad found him in 1960.

The pursuit, when it comes, tends to be longer and more determined than the pursued expect.

On Saturday afternoon, the President of the United States posted AI images of naval warfare from his golf course while an actual naval conflict closed one of the world’s most critical shipping lanes. World leaders and adversaries watched in real time. The Republican Congress, with its classified briefings and its constitutional obligations, said nothing.

These posts are timestamped. They will sit in the archive alongside the Cuban Missile Crisis cables, the Eisenhower memos, the Roosevelt correspondence, the record of how American power was exercised at its most serious moments.

“Bye Bye, Drones.”

The record is the indictment. Everyone who had the power to intervene and chose silence is also in it.




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Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.


Saturday, May 9, 2026

More to Know - 9 May

Meanwhile, Donny keeps meddling around in his playpen in DC; more of the same.   The same grifting corruption that he practices every day, and has done for too long.   He has no shame because he has no scruples.   

Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 

12:55 AM (7 hours ago)
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In case you’re wondering what kind of a news day it was, President Donald J. Trump announced that the “Department of War” was releasing “Government files related to Alien and Extraterrestrial Life, Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, and Unidentified Flying Objects.” The president posted: “Have Fun and Enjoy!”

It’s hard to see the release of this information at this moment as anything more than a distraction from the many stories in the news that show the administration in an unflattering light.

The biggest of those stories was not that Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy took his family on a seven-month road trip to film a television series called The Great American Road Trip while he was supposed to be doing his job as secretary of transportation, or that he told Fox & Friends this morning that “it fits any budget to do a road trip” on a day when the national average for a gallon of gas was $4.54.

It was not the story, written by David A. Fahrenthold and Luke Broadwater and published in the New York Times, that Trump gave a no-bid $6.9 million contract to reseal the joints, waterproof, and paint bright blue the Reflecting Pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial. Such contracts are supposed to be reviewed and put out for bids, but Trump ignored the review process and used an exemption designed to prevent “serious injury, financial or other, to the government” to award a no-bid contract to Atlantic Industrial Coatings, which has never before won a federal contract but which had worked at one of his golf clubs, because he wanted the work done before the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 2026.

The contract is for more than triple the $1.8 million Trump promised, and officials say the repairs will last for seven to ten years, rather than the 50 years Trump claimed. Even that might be generous: One expert warned that the motorcade the president took onto the pool yesterday to review the project was heavy enough to have sprung the newly-repaired joints between the concrete slabs that make up the pool bed.

It was not the story by economist Justin Wolfers in the New York Times explaining that the Defense Department’s claim that the war on Iran has cost taxpayers $25 billion tallies only the price of the 2,000 spent Tomahawk and Patriot missiles, the airplanes lost, and the other matériel used. It does not measure the lives lost, the disruption in global oil markets, companies shut down (like Spirit Airlines), heightened geopolitical tensions, higher interest rates, lower stock prices, lower economic growth, Iran’s new ability to charge tolls in the Strait of Hormuz to fund its nuclear ambitions, and the new need for countries to increase military spending. Wolfers notes that the Iraq war cost about $3 trillion and estimates the Iran war “will cost hundreds of billions of dollars, and very possibly trillions.”

In any case, Jonathan Lemire of The Atlantic reported today that Trump is “bored” with the war and wants to move on. Five of Trump’s aides and advisors told Lemire that Trump is convinced he can sell any agreement as a win, but so far Iran is unwilling to bail Trump out of the war he started.

It was not the story in the Washington Post by Brianna Sacks and Kevin Crowe reporting that under Trump, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which helps people prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters, has been denying aid to states that have Democratic-led governments while speeding it to Republican-dominated states.

It was not the story by Mark Olalde of ProPublica reporting that the Trump administration has granted a two-year pause on compliance with the Clean Air Act to more than 180 facilities, like coal power plants and medical sterilizers, that are polluting in 38 states and Puerto Rico. The administration sidelined the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by using a presidential exemption that can be tapped “if the technology to implement the standard is not available and it is in the national security interests of the United States to do so.”

This authority has never been used before, and other utilities say they are using the pollution controls the administration claims don’t exist. Trump has also invoked the national security justification for the pauses, claiming that the U.S. is in a national energy emergency out of concern that emerging industries, like AI and the data centers on which AI relies will not be able to get the huge amounts of energy they need. White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told Olalde: “The President has provided regulatory relief from certain burdensome Clean Air Act requirements due to national security concerns that critical industries would no longer be able to operate under such stringent standards.”

Democratic senators Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and Adam Schiff of California have introduced a bill requiring the president to get Congress’s approval for such pauses in the future. Whitehouse noted that Trump’s exemptions show a willingness to “abuse every loophole available to pollute for free, damn the health consequences for Americans.”

It was not the story that the Court of International Trade in New York found Trump’s 10% global tariffs, imposed after the Supreme Court declared his “Liberation Day” tariffs of April 2025 unconstitutional, to be illegal. Trump is expected to appeal. Yesterday, he threatened to impose “much higher” tariffs on the European Union if it does not approve a trade agreement with the U.S. by July 4.

The biggest story of the day was not even the dedication of the 22-foot gold statue of Trump installed at his golf course in Miami. Marth McHardy of the Daily Beast reported that a group of crypto investors paid for the $450,000 statue as part of a promotional push for their new memecoin.

No, the biggest story of the day was that after voters in Virginia turned out in record numbers to approve a new temporary congressional district map on April 21 to garner four more seats for Democrats, the Virginia state supreme court struck down the referendum. Virginia voters had agreed to the change in order to counter gerrymandering imposed by Republican legislators in Texas, Ohio, Tennessee, Missouri, North Carolina, and Florida that is expected to gain them an additional 14 seats across the country. (Following last week’s Louisiana v. Callais Supreme Court decision, Republicans are hoping to change the lines in Louisiana, Alabama, and South Carolina to take four more.) So far, voters in California have agreed to a temporary redistricting of California to pick up four seats there.

The court split on partisan lines, saying the process of passing the referendum violated the state’s constitution. With Trump’s job approval ratings in the low 30s, anger at rising prices, frustration at the war on Iran, dislike of the administration’s attacks on immigrants, and growing outrage at the extraordinary corruption of the administration, Republicans were so worried they would lose control of the House of Representatives in the November midterm elections that they began the gerrymandering wars. Now those wars have turned in their favor.

“Huge win for the Republican Party, and America, in Virginia,” Trump gloated on social media. “The Virginia Supreme Court has just struck down the Democrats’ horrible gerrymander. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

In the end, the UFO files red herring from today’s news dump didn’t appear to work. Former representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) called the UFO files a distraction from the Iran war and said: “Unless they roll out live aliens and test demo UFOs or actually admit what we know this really is then I have way better things to do on this Friday.” The chair of the Michigan Democratic Party also commented: “If any aliens had flown over Epstein Island, you could be damn sure Trump would keep their secret. Whether aliens are out there or not, I’m more concerned about the American people here on Earth struggling to pay for food [and] rent.”

And Democrats certainly didn’t miss the Virginia decision. Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD), the top-ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, posted: “Today, in an outrageous outburst of right-wing judicial activism following the Roberts Court’s Callais decision, the Virginia Supreme Court has struck down the will of the voters. But democracy won’t end with right-wingers in black robes. Now is the time to campaign like never before for strong democracy, freedom and progress. The American people will have the final say in November. Organize!”




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****
Juan Matute
R.B.R.
C.C.R.C.