Sunday, February 15, 2026
Something to Know - 15 February
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Something to Know - 14 February
| Feb 13, 2026, 9:43 PM (13 hours ago) | |||
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Something to Know - 13 February
| Feb 12, 2026, 11:47 PM (8 hours ago) | |||
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In a ceremony at the White House yesterday, surrounded by coal industry leaders, lawmakers, and miners, President Donald J. Trump was presented with a trophy that calls him "the undisputed champion of beautiful, clean coal." At the event, Trump signed an executive order directing the Defense Department to buy billions of dollars of power produced by coal and decried "the Radical Left's war on the industry." Anna Betts of The Guardian noted that Trump also announced the Department of Energy will spend $175 million to "modernize, retrofit, and extend" the life of coal-fired power plants in West Virginia, Ohio, North Carolina, and Kentucky. As Lisa Friedman pointed out in the New York Times last month, the United States has been the largest polluter since the start of the industrial era, but emissions of carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas, have been declining since 2007. Trump maintains that climate change is a "hoax" and has withdrawn the U.S. from the main global climate treaty. Since he took office in January 2025, U.S. emissions have increased 1.9% largely because of the renewed use of coal, the dirtiest of the fossil fuels. Today, the Environmental Protection Agency revoked the scientific finding that has been the basis for regulating emissions from cars and power plants since 2009. That finding, called the endangerment finding, reflects the consensus of scientists that greenhouse gases produced by burning fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas endanger the health and general welfare of the American people. The Trump administration says scientists are wrong about the dangers of climate change and that the regulations hurt industry and slow the economy. It claims ending the rule will save Americans $1.3 trillion, primarily through cheaper cars and trucks, but it did not factor in the costs of extreme weather caused by climate change or the costs of pollution-related health issues. Last year, Josh Dawsey and Maxine Joselow of the Washington Post reported that at a campaign event at Mar-a-Lago in April 2024, then-candidate Trump told oil executives they should raise $1 billion for his campaign. In exchange, Trump promised he would get rid of Biden-era regulations and make sure no more such regulations went into effect, in addition to lowering taxes. Trump told them $1 billion would be a "deal," considering how much money they would make if he were in the White House. Tyler Pager and Matina Stevis-Gridneff of the New York Times reported on Tuesday that Trump's threats to stop the opening of the Gordie Howe International Bridge between Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, came just hours after billionaire Matthew Moroun, whose family operates a competing bridge, called Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Moroun has tried to stop the construction of the new bridge for decades. The $4.7 billion construction cost of the Gordie Howe bridge has been fully funded by Canada although the bridge is partly owned by Michigan and will be operated jointly by Canada and Michigan. The new bridge will compete with the Ambassador Bridge—the one the Moroun family operates—for about $300 million in trade crossing the border daily. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that "This is just another example of President Trump putting America's interest first." This afternoon, Dustin Volz, Josh Dawsey, and C. Ryan Barber of the Wall Street Journal reported that the whistleblower complaint of last May involved another country's interception of a conversation between two foreign nationals who were discussing Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, issues related to Iran, and perhaps other issues. Kushner runs Affinity Partners, an investment fund that has taken billions of dollars in funds from Arab monarchies. He does not have an official role in the U.S. government but appears to be acting in foreign affairs as a volunteer. The Wall Street Journal reported on the existence of the whistleblower complaint on February 2, 2026, reporting that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard had bottled it up for political reasons, taking it not to Congress but to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles. On February 3, Gabbard released a highly redacted version of the complaint to the Gang of Eight, the top member of each party in the House and Senate and the top member of each party on the House and Senate intelligence committees. It may or not be related that in early April 2025, the administration abruptly fired National Security Agency director General Timothy Haugh and his deputy, hours after dismissing several staffers at the National Security Council. At the time, conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer, who is close to Trump, posted on social media that Haugh and his deputy "have been disloyal to President Trump. That is why they have been fired." In Talking Points Memo, editor Josh Marshall has been exploring the contours of what he calls the Authoritarian International, which he identifies as "a host of authoritarian governments around the world, the princelings of the Gulf monarchies, the sprinkling of European right-ravanchist governments, the rightward portion of Silicon Valley (which accounts for a larger and larger percentage of the top owners if not the larger community), the Israeli private intel sector, various post-Soviet oligarchs and, increasingly, the world's billionaire class." Marshall notes that those in this world are not just antidemocratic. They are constructing a private world in which deals are done secretly without any democratic accountability, mixing national interest with individual financial interest. The model operates in part by maintaining control over key figures thanks to compromising material on them. Marshall points out that the system can be oddly stable if everyone has something on everyone else. Marshall's description dovetails neatly with former Federal Bureau of Investigation director Robert Mueller's 2011 explanation of the evolving organized crime threat. Organized crime had become multinational, he said, "making billions of dollars from human trafficking, health care fraud, computer intrusions, and copyright infringement [and] cornering the market on natural gas, oil, and precious metals, and selling to the highest bidder." He explained: "These groups may infiltrate our businesses. They may provide logistical support to hostile foreign powers. They may try to manipulate those at the highest levels of government. Indeed, these so-called 'iron triangles' of organized criminals, corrupt government officials, and business leaders pose a significant national security threat." To protect this system, transparency must be prevented at all costs. The administration seems to be illustrating this principle as it denies the right and duty of Congress to conduct oversight of the government. The Department of Justice (DOJ) has refused to release all the Epstein files to the public as Congress required when it passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Yesterday Attorney General Pam Bondi appeared before the House Judiciary Committee, but it was clear she was not there to answer lawmakers' questions or explain why she had not released the files. Nor did she acknowledge the survivors of Epstein's sexual assaults and sex trafficking, many of whom were in the audience and noted that she had not met with them. When Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) urged her to apologize to the survivors for the sloppiness of the release that had left many survivors's names, identifying information, and even sexually explicit photos unredacted while covering the names of perpetrators, Bondi accused Jayapal of theatrics and, as Glenn Thrush of the New York Times reported, of dragging the hearing "into the gutter." Instead, she came prepared with a book of insults to aim at Democrats and met questions with attacks on the questioners and praise for Trump. Republican Thomas Massie (R-KY), who has been instrumental in pressuring the White House over the Epstein files, posted on social media: "A funny thing about Bondi's insults to members of Congress who had serious questions: Staff literally gave her flash cards with individualized insults, but she couldn't memorize them, so you can see her shuffle through them to find the flash-cards-insult that matches the member." Bondi was not only stonewalling but also demonstrating the tactics of authoritarian power, turning her own shortcomings into an attack on those trying to enforce rules. Even more ominously, Kent Nishimura of Reuters captured a photograph of a page of the book with a printout titled: "Jayapal Pramila Search History." It appeared to be the files Representative Jayapal accessed after the DOJ made some of the Epstein files available at DOJ offices earlier this week. This is a shocking intrusion of the executive branch into surveilling members of the legislative branch and weaponizing that information. The top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD), said he will ask for an investigation of this "outrageous abuse of power." Bondi's performance drew widespread condemnation from outside the administration, and even Republicans seemed to realize she was toxic: Scott MacFarlane of CBS News noted that in the committee hearing, Republicans didn't use all their time to question her but simply yielded their time allotted to ask questions back to the committee. But Bondi appeared to be playing to Trump, as she made clear when she veered into the bizarre claim that what the committee should be talking about was not the Epstein files but rather the booming stock market. Last month, Josh Dawsey, Sadie Gurman, and C. Ryan Barber of the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was complaining to aides that Bondi is weak and ineffective. Yesterday's performance pleased him. This morning, Trump's social media account posted: "AG Pam Bondi, under intense fire from the Trump Deranged Radical Left Lunatics, was fantastic at yesterday's Hearing on the never ending saga of Jeffrey Epstein, where the one thing that has been proven conclusively, much to their chagrin, was that President Donald J. Trump has been 100% exonerated of their ridiculous Russia, Russia, Russia type charges…. Nobody cared about Epstein when he was alive, they only cared about him when they thought he could create Political Harm to a very popular President who has brought our Country back from the brink of extinction, and very quickly, at that!" An Economist/YouGov poll released Tuesday shows that 85% of U.S. adults agree with the statement "There are powerful elites who helped Epstein target and abuse young girls. They protected him and need to be investigated." Only 3% of American adults disagree. Fifty percent of American adults think Trump "was involved in crimes allegedly committed by Jeffrey Epstein," while only 29% think he wasn't. |
Something to Know - 13 February
| 9:49 AM (11 hours ago) | |||
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Friends, Producer Alicia Hastey departed CBS News Wednesday, saying the kind of work she came to do was "increasingly becoming impossible," as stories were now evaluated "not just on their journalistic merit but on whether they conform to a shifting set of idealogical expectations." Whose ideological expectations was Hastey referring to? Would it be impertinent for me to suggest it's the sociopath in the Oval Office? Hastey's criticism came a little over two weeks after Bari Weiss, the anti-"woke" opinion journalist who became editor-in-chief CBS's News, unveiled her "21st century" vision at a town hall meeting. Weiss told producers and staff they were free to leave if they didn't like it. Since then, at least six out of CBS Evening News's twenty producers have accepted buyouts. At that town hall meeting Weiss also named a bunch of new contributors — including the anti-aging influencer Peter Attia. In the latest tranche of Epstein Files, Attia appears over 1,700 times, including an email in which he tells Epstein that "p—y is, indeed, low carb." In a missive to the newsroom, Weiss declared that "We love America" should be a guiding principle for the relaunch of the CBS Evening News. Meanwhile, Weiss has replaced Evening News anchors John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois with Tony Dokoupil — who was best known for hassling the writer Ta-Nehisi Coates for his "extremist" belief that apartheid is morally wrong. In one of his first broadcasts, Dokoupil accepted without question Israel's justification for violating the terms of the ceasefire when it killed three journalists in Gaza, reporting only that "Israel said it was targeting a group operating a drone affiliated with Hamas." Weiss faced blowback in December when she shelved a "60 Minutes" report about Venezuelans being deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador's notorious CECOT prison, hours before it was set to air. Sharyn Alfonsi, a long-standing "60 Minutes" correspondent who reported the segment, had accused CBS News of pulling it for "political" reasons. "Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices," she wrote in a note to the CBS News Team. "It is factually correct. In my view, pulling it now, after every rigorous internal check has been met, is not an editorial decision, it is a political one." The segment later aired on Jan. 18, drawing in over 5 million viewers. The story CBS posted about Renee Good's killing in Minneapolis reported that "The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who fatally shot Renee Good last week in Minneapolis, Jonathan Ross, suffered internal bleeding to the torso following the incident, according to two U.S. officials briefed on his medical condition." No identifiable source was given for CBS's assertion of "internal bleeding." A CBS News staffer reported "huge internal concern" that the source was an anonymous leak by the Trump administration meant for an outlet they could trust to run it, no questions asked. Weiss doesn't exactly report to Donald Trump, of course. Trump runs CBS News the way he runs Venezuela — with a widely-understood threat that he'll wreak havoc if it doesn't do what he wants. As Trump told Dokoupil recently in a rambling nearly 13-minute interview, if Kamala Harris had won the presidential election in 2024, "you probably wouldn't have a job right now." Perhaps CBS News didn't edit Dokoupil's rambling interview with Trump because, moments after it ended, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt conveyed Trump's threat that "'if it's not out in full, we'll sue your ass off.'" You see the way Trump now controls CBS News? Dokoupil is Bari Weiss's newly-minted anchor. Bari Weiss is David Ellison's newly-minted head of CBS News. David Ellison is his father's (Larry Ellison) newly-minted head of Paramount, which is the new owner of CBS. Larry Ellison is a pal of Trump's, who contributes to Trump's super PAC. And Trump? He has the power to take the prized Warner Bros Discovery out of the clutches of Netflix and deliver it to Ellison. Among David Ellison's first moves at CBS was to gut DEI policies, appoint right-wing hack Kenneth R. Weinstein to a new "ombudsman" role, and appoint Weiss. I'm old enough to remember when CBS News would never have surrendered to a demagogic president. But that was when CBS News — the home of Edward R. Murrow (who also revealed to America the danger of Joe McCarthy) and Walter Cronkite — was independent of the rest of CBS. And when the top management of CBS felt they had responsibilities to the American public that transcended making money for CBS's investors. America can survive without a "60 Minutes" it can trust, just as we can survive without trustworthy editorial pages of the Washington Post — which Jeff Bezos has censored, and whose newsroom he just gutted. But at some point, as Trump continues to repress criticism of him and his regime, American democracy is compromised beyond repair. ** Here, in contrast to the Trump suck-up CBS News has become, is the courageous CBS News's Edward R. Murrow, from April 13, 1954. |

