Monday, June 15, 2026

Something to Know - 15 June

Perhaps we (Iike me) spend too much time at our Animal Farm worrying about the Pig at the Top.  For good reason, we are concerned about the direction and morality found in the sty known as the Oval Office (Ofal Orififace).    Ezra Klein brilliantly points out that we should be just as concerned about the pigs at the bottom of our food chain.   We should be just as concerned, maybe more so.   We derive more quality of life and sustenance from our food sources than we will ever from the inefficient arrangement of human tissue behind the resolute desk.  Rehabilitation of a Mafioso pedofile and habitual criminal is a waste of time, while improving the life of regular pigs is something we really can do something about.



Ezra Klein

What the Cult of Efficiency Costs Us

June 14, 2026
A pig sniffing at a daisy.
Credit...Michael Raines/Connected Archives
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/14/opinion/chris-murphy-save-bacon-pigs.html?searchResultPosition=1

Chris Murphy, the Democratic senator from Connecticut, offered the graduates of Wesleyan University wise counsel in his commencement speech a few weeks back. “You are about to step out into a world that prizes efficiency and the annihilation of drift and friction above all else,” he said. “Our entire economy is built on rewarding companies that are efficient at making a profit, not based upon how they treat their workers, the social value of their product or the impact they have on the community.”
“You didn’t design this world,” he continued. “You didn’t choose it. But you will live with the consequences of this cult of efficiency. And you will have to choose which side you are on.”
How do you make the most bread from the least wheat? A classic question of efficiency, but one that can be answered destructively. You can mix the flour with chalk or gypsum, as bakers sometimes did in previous centuries. Weigh the bread, and “more” of it is being made. But then people are eating powdered rock. Or you can use alum to whiten your loaves on the cheap. But alum harms the human digestive system and can kill children who consume it, as happened during the Victorian era.
This leads to a question that we too rarely ask: Efficient for whom? In Victorian England, what could be efficient for the baker was ruinous for the buyer. In modern America, what can be efficient for the factory farmer can be ruinous for the animal and, I’d argue, unwise for us.

In April, the House passed its version of the farm bill. It’s one of those sprawling pieces of legislation that includes many sections sizable enough to be their own bills. One of those sections is the text of a bill that would not stand a chance in the Senate on its own: the Save Our Bacon Act.

My colleague Nicholas Kristof wrote a wonderful column on this last month, but let me recap it: In 2016 and 2018, voters in Massachusetts and California passed ballot initiatives banning, among other things, the sale of pork from pigs confined in gestation crates. These crates confine breeding sows — large animals, often 400 to 500 pounds — in two-by-seven-foot cages in which they cannot so much as turn around, much less root or socialize. Because sows are often reimpregnated about a month after their piglets are born, they can spend years of their lives in these crates.
I watched, in the interest of fairness, a video from an arm of the National Pork Board on why gestation crates are good for pigs. It features row upon row of sows penned between bars so narrow they cannot turn around. It is no way for any animal to live, particularly not one as smart and as social as a pig.
There are studies I can cite on the psychic and physical violence these crates inflict on pigs — the elevated cortisol levels, the sores, the obsessive biting of metal bars — but I think the way Kristof puts it is simpler and more honest: “Think of your dog enduring what pigs face, and you realize that the moral cost is incalculable.” The difference between dogs and pigs is neither their intelligence nor their sentience. It is our willingness to admit their intelligence and their sentience. It is our decision to extend them our compassion and concern.
If you pack pigs into a confined space without room for them to roam, retreat and establish normal group hierarchies, they will bite one another and compete for food, and the weakest pigs will be tormented. The best argument for putting pigs in crates is that it’s kinder than leaving them in overcrowded, confined conditions. But that’s like saying solitary confinement is preferable to an overcrowded prison. It may sometimes be true, but neither is a way for a creature to live.

Proposition 12, the ballot measure in California, took this problem seriously and specified a minimum amount of space per pig. It mandated that a breeding sow must be able to turn around, lie down, stand up and fully extend her limbs, and that there must be 24 square feet of floor space per pig. That’s it. These are not conditions any creature would choose. But they are better than the conditions in which millions of breeding sows lived.
Prop 12 probably made pork between 5 percent and 20 percent more expensive. Some of that reflects the cost of space and management, some of it the cost of rebuilding infrastructure in operations that were previously designed around gestation crates. But Californians heard that argument and passed the measure anyway. They decided that they did not want the low cost of pork to hide the high cost on pigs; they would pay slightly more if it meant a somewhat better life for the animals. The law also helped small and more humane farms, whose operations were not built around gestation crates.
Having lost the argument before the voters of California, the pork industry turned to the courts. They argued that California’s law should be declared unconstitutional because the costs of California’s rules would fall on out-of-state producers, and that California was such a big market, it would act as a de facto national policy. They also argued that the policy would raise the cost of pork without offering sufficient benefits to either pigs or people. They lost.
And so, having lost before Massachusetts’ and California’s voters and the Supreme Court, the pork industry has turned to Congress. The Save Our Bacon Act wouldn’t just override the California or Massachusetts laws. It would also stop any similar law from passing in any state ever again. The bill would make it illegal to set standards that affected out-of-state producers. To expand on an analogy made by the Supreme Court, this would be akin to saying you can ban child labor in your state, but you cannot ban the sale of goods produced with child labor in other states.
“The Save Our Bacon Act reaffirms livestock producers’ right to sell their products across state lines, without interference from arbitrary mandates,” Representative Ashley Hinson, the Iowa Republican who introduced the bill, said. But the mandates were anything but arbitrary. Californians decided that there was more they cared about than the price of pork: They wanted breeding sows to be able to lie down, turn around, walk a little bit. They want low prices for pork, but they didn’t want those low prices to come at the cost of terrible cruelty to animals. Now, in the name of cost and efficiency, Congress might make it illegal for any state anywhere to say that there is a minimal standard of treatment for livestock destined for their market.

In traditional economics, prices are the informational lifeblood of an economy: They reveal the cost of materials and labor, the balance of supply and demand. But much can be hidden in prices. Perhaps it is artificially low because waste is being dumped into the rivers or workers are being robbed of their wages or the burden is borne by animals that will spend years of their lives without the comfort of their herd or the ability to feel grass beneath their hooves or the space to turn around when curious about a sound. When that happens, we have sacrificed compassion for cost.
Most of us know by now that the lives animals lead in factory farms are often hideous. A 2019 survey by the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future found that a majority of Americans wanted stronger oversight of confined animal feeding operations and a plurality wanted a ban on new ones. Those numbers were even higher when the same pollsters asked Iowans and North Carolinians, where majorities favored a ban on new concentrated animal feeding operations, in part because these operations often impose terrible costs on the human beings who live near them.
This is not a partisan issue. A 2022 Data for Progress poll found that 83 percent of Democrats and 77 percent of Republicans considered preventing cruelty to farm animals a matter of moral concern to them personally; when the pollsters described Prop 12, 85 percent of Democrats and 76 percent of Republicans supported it.
Many of us know that we would rather not know what is happening in these sheds. There is a reason the livestock industry fought so hard for the so-called ag-gag laws, making it illegal to film inside such facilities. It is hard knowledge to hold when our agency is so limited. The plight of an individual dog, cat or even pig is manageable. Plenty of people would go to great lengths to save a potbelly pig they saw wandering near a street corner, even as they consume factory-farmed pork at the dinner table. That pig is an individual. Breeding sows are an abstraction. We can relate to individuals; we feel powerless before systems. And systems fight to keep us that way.
What the ballot measures in Massachusetts and California revealed is that many Americans want the assurance that the meat they buy is not priced so low because the true and terrible cost was borne by the animal. They should be allowed to make that choice. The industry’s answer has been to spend millions in the courts and in Congress seeking to take that power from us.

That would not just inflict harm on sows. It would inflict harm on us. Compassion is a form of attention. Like any other form of attention, it can be strengthened or left to atrophy. To force states and people to participate in practices they find morally objectionable is to deny them the exercise of their moral judgments. That is not an efficiency, even if it lowers prices. It is a loss of collective agency, an enforced atrophying of our compassion, and Congress should reject it.



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


Andy Borowitz

The Borowitz Report borowitzreport@substack.com 
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2:52 AM (4 hours ago)
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Jim Watson / AFP via Getty Images

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Taking his milestone birthday in stride, on Sunday Donald J. Trump told reporters, “I may be eighty, but I have the brain of a four-year-old.”

“People who think I’m too old should take a look at this UFC fight,” he argued. “That’s an idea that could only come from a four-year-old’s mind.”

Trump said his self-assessment was corroborated by doctors at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, who told him at his most recent exam that his cognition had scored at a four-year-old level.

In the first official act of his ninth decade, the president renamed RFK Jr. “The Donald J. Trump Robert F. Kennedy Junior.”



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


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Something to Know - 14 June


Christopher Armitage offers a view to the future.   As polling shows, support for Donald J. Trump's support is in a death throe.  For over 20 years he has finagled and conned his way out of legal corners.   A MAGA faction still adheres to his every corrupt thought, but the majority of his constituents wish him gone.  His list of lies and his constitutional violations are documented.   However, one particular legal problem has followed Trump since 2005: a compilation of events now known as the Trump/Epstein Files.   In these files we have the crime, the victims, the prosecution, the defense and all testimony on record, and almost all of it has remained hidden.   We are now approaching what is going to be the enevitable finality of all the records that could be compared to the Nuremberg Trials.   Armitage does a splendid display of journalism as he outlines the public pressure needed to accomplish this.   Contact your federal representatives and demand that justice be done.

Christopher Armitage from The Existentialist Republic cmarmitage@substack.com 

6:02 PM (5 minutes ago)
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If Democrats Ever Regain Control Federally, This Is What An Effective Response Looks Like

What an effective commission would look like, who it pursues, and the question to put to your representative now.

Jun 14
 
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David Ramos/Getty Images

No public official has been convicted for the crimes against Epstein’s victims, the deals and payments that protected him and his associates, or the ongoing coverup. The only American ever convicted in the entire case is Ghislaine Maxwell. The prosecutors who signed the deals, the deputies he paid, the supervisors who approved his work release, and the officials deciding right now which pages the public sees all kept their careers. We are watching a coverup succeed, for now.

The evidence to change that is already in government files: the court rulings, the inspector general report, the grand jury transcripts, the released emails. All that’s missing is a body with the power to use that evidence and the willingness to prosecute. This article describes that body, a commission of inquiry, built on the clearest precedent we have for holding officials criminally responsible for what they did in office: the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, the court the Allies built after World War II to try Nazi officials.

The commission’s mandate would cover every official, at any level of government, whose conduct falls into four categories: committing crimes against Epstein’s victims; protecting Epstein and the people around him from prosecution; accepting money or anything else of value from Epstein in connection with their official duties; hiding any of this conduct afterward. The span runs from the first Palm Beach police report in 2005 to the present, and every claim that follows comes with its receipt linked in the text.

In a Manhattan courtroom in 2011, with Epstein due to be entered on the state sex-offender registry, a prosecutor from the district attorney’s office asked the judge for the lowest of the three risk levels, the one that keeps an offender off the public registry, while the office’s own confidential assessment called him highly dangerous. Justice Ruth Pickholz refused, telling the prosecutor she had never seen the office do anything like it. The defense argued for the predator because that was its job; the prosecutor argued for him too, and in that courtroom the only person doing the public’s work was the judge. In other rooms the judge was part of the problem. That scene repeated for twenty years, and the crimes, the deals, the payments, and the concealment took hundreds, maybe thousands, of public employees, almost none of whom ever answered for any of it under oath.

The Nuremberg tribunal judged its defendants on the evidence alone, regardless of rank. I’m not saying everyone in this record goes to prison; I’m saying they get handled that same way. The tribunal acquitted three of its defendants, which proved it weighed evidence rather than delivering verdicts decided in advance. Then it prosecuted lower-ranking figures in twelve more trials and 183 more defendants, and in the one most relevant here the defendants were judges and prosecutors, convicted because they committed their crimes through legal procedure itself. The U.S. has prosecuted the misuse of legal process many times, such as the seventeen Chicago judges convicted for fixing cases to the corruption trials that too infrequently recur in courthouses across the country.

Every person gets judged against the documented record, in public and under oath, and neither rank nor “a subordinate handled it” changes the outcome. For any given name that outcome is one of four: indictment and a criminal trial, disbarment, a permanent public finding of what they did, or, where the evidence clears them, a public finding that they did nothing wrong, printed just as plainly.

Now the design, and the standard is the opposite of the polite version this country already tried. The 9/11 Commission issued three subpoenas in its entire run, let the President and Vice President testify together, in private, unsworn and unrecorded, required unanimity that weakened its findings, and then disbanded. This commission inverts each of those choices. Its subpoenas carry criminal contempt, and its statute strips executive privilege over the covered records before the first hearing convenes. Every witness testifies under oath, on camera, in public; we know why that matters, because Pam Bondi used a private transcribed interview to name her deputy more than thirty times while ducking questions about the President.

The first public act is releasing every file, with only the victims’ identities redacted. And the commission does not merely recommend; its special counsel holds grand jury authority and indicts on the commission’s own evidence, and where the conduct breaks state law, the case goes to the state attorneys general automatically.

What about the people who already got pardoned? Refer them to the states. A presidential pardon does not touch a state charge, it covers only federal crimes, and accepting one is itself an admission of guilt. So the states prosecute pardoned officials under their own criminal codes, and New York rewrote its law in 2019 to make sure they can. The same answer covers the rest. Double jeopardy only protects people who were already tried, and almost nobody here ever was. A pardon cannot cover future conduct, so lying to the commission or destroying records is a fresh crime. A president can pardon a federal case or stall it, but he has no such power over a state charge, and the one Epstein-case conviction that held across the last four years was the state conviction in New York.

Delay is the danger this design takes most seriously, because we just lived through it. Four federal criminal cases were slowed past an election, the defendant won, and the prosecutors and investigators who had pursued him then became the targets. That cannot happen here. The enabling law sends every subpoena fight and privilege claim straight to a three-judge court with direct appeal to the Supreme Court, so the delays that ran out the clock last time end in months. And because the cases also live in the states, no federal election and no federal pardon can shut them down.

Ten members serve, none of them sitting politicians: former judges, prosecutors, career investigators, and survivors’ representatives the victims choose. Findings publish by majority with dissents alongside, and funding arrives up front for the full eighteen months so no future Congress can withhold funding for political purposes.

Running this inquiry raises an obvious problem: the Justice Department and the FBI cannot do it, because they are implicated in the very coverup it would investigate, from the leaders who made the decisions down to the staff who carried them out, and no agency can be trusted to investigate itself. So the commission hires its own investigators, drawn from state agencies and inspector general offices, and its special counsel answers to the commission alone.

The Epstein record under investigation by the counsel would span four eras, and rather than catalog all of them we will cover the first one in full, because it shows the kind of conduct the commission exists to address; the rest follow the same pattern.

Florida, 2005 through 2009. Palm Beach State Attorney Barry Krischer resisted his own police department’s push to charge Epstein with multiple felonies, then convened a 2006 grand jury that heard from a single underage victim out of nearly two dozen the police had identified, and his assistant attacked that girl with her own MySpace pages supplied by Epstein’s defense. The grand jury returned one count. The case then went to U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, who met with an Epstein lawyer who was a partner at his old firm and turned a draft 53-page indictment into a secret non-prosecution deal that immunized Epstein and unnamed co-conspirators, an agreement a judge later ruled was hidden from the victims in violation of the law. And during the thirteen-month sentence that followed, the sheriff’s office let Epstein out twelve hours a day, six days a week against its own policy, while his foundation paid that office $128,136. One man’s crimes, and at every turn a different public official chose to help. The commission would pull every communication, every name behind the co-conspirator clause, every signature on the work release file.

The other three eras followed the same general trends. The 2011 hearing above was one. In 2019 Epstein died in a federal jail where guards falsified the logs, and only the two lowest-ranking officers ever faced charges, which were later dropped. The conduct under review does not end with his death, because the current handling of the files is the fourth era, and it’s ongoing.

On February 21, 2025, Attorney General Pam Bondi went on Fox News and said of the long-rumored list of Epstein’s clients, “It’s sitting on my desk right now to review.” By July 7 her department had reversed her, issuing a memo that no such list existed and no further disclosure was warranted. Then Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act and required disclosure, and the Department released about 3.5 million pages of the roughly 6 million it had collected and withheld the rest, citing duplicates and victim protection.

Meanwhile Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche questioned Ghislaine Maxwell under oath, and she was moved soon after to a minimum-security camp in Texas; she has since taken the Fifth before Congress while her attorney says she wants a pardon or a reduced sentence from the President in exchange for her testimony.

Bondi, fired in April, told the Oversight Committee that Blanche ran the entire release; current and former Justice Department officials dispute that account and say she signed off on every major decision, including the July memo itself. Blanche now serves as acting Attorney General. FBI Director Kash Patel told the Senate that inmate transfers were the Bureau of Prisons’ decision, not his, and told the House the Bureau had released everything lawfully permitted, though his own agents had logged thousands of overtime hours in March 2025 preparing a fuller release that was then halted by Bondi and the President.

Survivors are demanding that Blanche and Patel finally testify under oath, on camera. Bondi, Blanche, and Patel each blame the others for how the release was handled, and none has answered for it in sworn public testimony: Bondi gave a closed-door interview that was not under oath, and Blanche and Patel have given no account at all. The commission would start there, putting all three under oath, where lying is a fresh felony and their answers become evidence for the inevitable charges that follow.

The Epstein Commission’s deliverables, aimed to be accomplished inside an eighteen month window:

  • a report written for the general public

  • indictments where the special counsel discovers sufficient cause

  • mandatory referral packages to the state attorneys general, with the evidence attached

  • bar complaints against every licensed attorney the findings name

  • recommendations for changes to the laws that failed to prevent this disgusting multi-decade miscarriage of justice

The changes start with a loophole the full federal appeals court in Atlanta confirmed in 2021: the Crime Victims’ Rights Act never applied to Epstein’s victims, the court held, because federal charges were never filed. Under the law as it stands today, a prosecutor can still negotiate a secret immunity deal before indictment and owe the victims nothing. We close that loophole by statute, and no future Acosta gets to use it.

Justice Pickholz did her job alone in that courtroom fifteen years ago, with the state’s own lawyer on Epstein’s side of the argument and the state’s confidential assessment sitting unread in a file. The Epstein Commission can ensure that no judge, no detective, no police chief, and no fourteen-year-old girl ever has to stand alone against the government’s own employees again. Further, the Epstein Commission would aim to ensure that in the future, any FBI Director, DOJ Attorney, President, or Supreme Court Justice that participates or protects those involved in these crimes against humanity, will be prosecuted swiftly and without sympathy or leniency for their role.

The commission is what creates consequences for the people who think they’re above the law. That justice takes the form of indictments, trials, and prison sentences for the people who protected and participated.

Every member of Congress can be asked the same question, yes or no: will you publicly endorse and vote for a commission with these powers? And any one of them can introduce the bill tomorrow, because a discharge petition of 218 signatures forces a floor vote past the leadership that would rather bury it.

Find your representative at house.gov, your senators at senate.gov, and your state legislators at openstates.org. Then send something like this, in your own words:

“I’m [your name], a constituent in [your city]. I care about this because [your reason]. I’m asking you to publicly commit to supporting the creation of an independent Epstein commission with subpoena power, its own special counsel, and mandatory criminal referrals to appropriate state prosecutors. Will you publicly endorse this?”


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