Tuesday, March 4, 2025

In case you missed it...

 

... 22 Democratic Party senators just released individual video statements criticizing President Trump.  Nothing wrong with that - except that they all used precisely and exactly the same script, word for word, parroting each other.  Originality?  Thinking for themselves?  Not so much!




Needless to say, President Trump and Republican politicians are having a field day responding to such ham-handed criticism.  Elon Musk has even offered a free Cybertruck to anyone who can identify the author of the script.  I imagine there's a lot of searching going on right now!

To be fair, President Trump's claim that he would bring down prices, starting on day one of his presidency, has not yet been visible in the marketplace - except in the Washington D.C. area, where housing prices are falling under the weight of fired federal officials and bureaucrats!  However, the amount of waste, fraud and financial abuse he and his team have uncovered in the federal government means that a great deal of money will be saved in future, which should help our inflationary situation.  As for high prices in general:  I don't know whether or not they will come down.  They've certainly gone up during the Biden administration, but historically, when that's happened, they've been slow to come down again.  Will producers be able to save enough on their input costs to lower their prices on their finished products?  That remains to be seen, and it's not something a President can dictate.

Perhaps the price of finished copycat videos will go down, thanks to heavy demand for them from Democratic Party senators?



Peter


If "democracy dies in darkness", so does evidence

 

The Washington Post adopted a new slogan when President Trump was elected:  "Democracy dies in darkness".  I don't know why it felt the inauguration was so dark, but they're entitled to their opinion, I guess.

Now it emerges that the Southern District of the FBI in New York City had been sitting on "a truckload" of evidence from the Jeffrey Epstein case, and had not even reported its existence to its superiors in Washington D.C.  What better way to interfere in the administration of justice than to keep the evidence so dark, nobody in high places knows it exists?


U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi revealed that the Department of Justice has received more Jeffery Epstein files from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) after the document release she touted last week fell flat. 

Speaking to Fox News host Sean Hannity on Tuesday night, Bondi confirmed that a "truckload" of Epstein files were delivered by the FBI after she gave the agency until 8 a.m. on Friday morning to deliver them. 

"I gave [the FBI] a deadline of Friday at 8 a.m. to get us everything," Bondi explained. "And a source had told me where the documents were being kept, Southern District of New York, shock. So we got them all by Friday at 8 a.m."

"Thousands of pages of documents. I have the FBI going through them...and Director Patel is going to get us a detailed report as to why the FBI withheld all of those documents," she continued.


There's more at the link.

I see that the boss of the Southern District was given a choice between immediate retirement or being fired (he chose the former).  However, he's only one person.  How many others of the same ilk had he recruited and/or transferred to his district, to ensure that it would be run the way he wanted it?  How much more evidence and important information is still hidden in the files and computer servers of the Southern District?  And how much may already have been destroyed, rather than admit its existence?

A few years ago I said that "The FBI can no longer be trusted in any way, shape or form".  I hope that, with the changes that have just begun to be introduced under the Trump administration, that judgment may be revised . . . but this latest brouhaha over the Epstein evidence doesn't give me any immediate cause for relief.  There's still an awful lot of partisan political deadwood in the FBI that needs to be pruned back and burned out.

Peter


Deep Schools corruption???

 

We've heard of the Deep State often enough, but Tulsa, Oklahoma looks to have a Deep Schools problem.


The highly anticipated state audit for Tulsa Public Schools released Wednesday [last week] accuses former leaders of promoting a culture where financial misappropriation ran wild for years.

. . .

Byrd pointed to various areas of concern highlighted in the audit, noting that her office found more than 1,400 financial discrepancies. She said multiple district administrators fostered a culture of financial noncompliance and disregarded laws and policies meant to protect taxpayer money.

Key findings from the audit:

  • Byrd says the investigation focused on more than $37.7 million in expenditures.
  • $25 million of the money investigated, according to the audit, violated the district’s own policies.
  • Former Chief Learning and Talent Officer Devin Fletcher was able to commit fraud because of lax financial and internal controls. Fletch was convicted and sentenced to 20 months in federal prison in 2024.
  • Tulsa Public Schools paid more than 700 vendors without receiving proof of services.
  • Some vendor contract language was vague.
  • Some invoices didn’t list services on them at all.
  • State auditor’s office experienced difficulty obtaining some records pertaining to the audit due to poor record-keeping practices.
  • Processes were taken to bypass the local board of education to avoid oversight.
  • Conflicts of interest in awarding vendor contracts.

“Oklahoma law states that no payments can be made without an itemized invoice, as well as proof of receipt of goods or service,” said Byrd. “TPS’ disregard for this statute was perhaps the most pervasive issue uncovered during our investigation.”

. . .

News 4 also received late reaction to the audit findings Wednesday from Governor Kevin Stitt who encouraged Drummond to take action:

I requested this audit in 2022, and today Auditor Byrd finally confirmed what myself and many other Oklahomans believed to be true— where there’s smoke, there’s fire. And it’s deeply troubling to see Tulsa Public Schools having engaged in such gross financial misconduct. The release of the audit is only the first step in holding wrongdoers accountable. The Attorney General needs to take immediate action and bring charges wherever possible. This can never be allowed to happen in Oklahoma again.


There's more at the link.

As if we needed any more evidence of why a D.O.G.E.-style investigation of any and all administrative bodies, in federal, state and local government, is vitally necessary!  $25 million is chump change on a federal level, where we're talking expenditure in the billions and trillions of dollars;  but it's a huge financial burden on the taxpayers of Tulsa, who are now on the hook for however much can be proved to have been stolen or misused.  How long will it take them to make up that loss?  And how much impact will that have on their children?

Full marks to the Governor of Oklahoma for pushing for this investigation, three years ago;  and full marks to the auditor for pushing for its publication, despite resistance from Tulsa Public Schools.  As usual, the administrators and bureaucrats are scuttling for cover now that their misdeeds have been uncovered.  I hope much of the money can be recovered from those responsible for its loss, and that those guilty of criminal malfeasance in office will spend long enough behind bars to regret their error of judgment.

I wonder how many other school districts have similar problems that haven't yet been detected?  I'm willing to bet it's more than a few, in every state in the nation.


 


Peter


Monday, March 3, 2025

Friday's little diplomatic bust-up has revealed a lot

 

When President Zelensky tried (and failed) to maneuver President Trump into providing security guarantees for Ukraine, he not only damaged his country's relationship with ours, he also acted as the spark to a fuse that's since revealed all sorts of interesting behind-the-scenes information.

First off, it's clear Zelensky was manipulated into acting as he did.  A cabal of Senators met with him beforehand, and appear to have assured him that if he insisted on guarantees, Trump would cave in and provide them.  Did they do that because they actually believed their assurances, or because they wanted to make President Trump look bad in front of the world's press?  I'm betting on the latter - and the fact that he didn't cave in, but stood firm on his original premise, appears to have shocked those Senators as much as it did Zelensky.  Francis Porretto put it like this:


Zelensky met with a bipartisan group of Senators before meeting with Trump and Vance. I have yet to see such a report that went into the details of the meeting. How did those Senators advise the Ukrainian? Unclear. Worse, the ABC report concludes with a statement from two Democrat Senators castigating Trump and Vance!

[Minnesota Senator Amy] Klobuchar and [Delaware Senator Chris] Coons came out with posts on X in defense of the Ukrainian president after his exchange in the Oval Office, particularly the moment in which Vance accused Zelenskyy of being “disrespectful” toward his American hosts.

“Answer to Vance: Zelenskyy has thanked our country over and over again both privately and publicly. And our country thanks HIM and the Ukrainian patriots who have stood up to a dictator, buried their own & stopped Putin from marching right into the rest of Europe. Shame on you,” Klobuchar wrote.

“Every time I’ve met with President Zelenskyy, he’s thanked the American people for our strong support. We owe him our thanks for leading a nation fighting on the front lines of democracy — not the public berating he received at the White House,” Coons wrote.

The transcript of the Trump / Vance / Zelensky meeting makes it plain that the backhanding the Ukrainian received was only what his conduct had earned. Why, then, would two United States Senators characterize it in the exact opposite fashion?

Because they [like Zelensky] are animated by hatred.

If there’s anything the Democrat Party despises without limit, it’s a Republican president who refuses to play by their rules. Atop that, Trump is an outsider: one who, by their lights, doesn’t belong in the corridors of power ... They want his hide tacked up on their barn wall as a warning to others who contemplate intruding on their domain.


There's more at the link.

Nor is such behind-the-scenes encouragement limited to politicians.  Deep State neocons were part of it too, as Mollie Hemingway notes.


Zelensky repeatedly declined opportunities to sign the deal in Kyiv and Munich, and requested the meeting at the White House. It later came out that [Susan] Rice and Tony Blinken, Victoria Nuland, and Alexander Vindman may have been personally advising Zelensky to do this meeting in the way he did -- that they recommended him to be hostile and to try to goad Trump into blowing up. Even though he didn't, and even though Zelensky's actions horrified many normal Americans, the Obama team went on the airwaves to falsely characterize what happened.

I think their goal was to have a wonderful performance by Zelensky, an angry Trump appearing to scuttle the deal, and the support of the neocon portion of the GOP to start applying pressure on Trump to have US Troop commitments as part of the "security guarantee." It was a set-up, in Susan Rice's interesting choice of words.

. . .

As you can see from the hostility of the bureaucracy to any Republican oversight, no matter how reasonable or minor it may be, the entrenched bureaucracy and permanent DC apparatus is quite active. That goes quadruple for the deep state in the Intelligence Community. I'd expect more and more shenanigans and to be prepared so that you don't fall for the next information operation. The post-WWII architecture in Europe and the US needs this war to continue or be settled on "US troops on the ground" type guarantees, even though that's not what Americans want.

Things will heat up here, and it's a very dangerous time.


Again, more at the link.

What steps are being taken to bring charges against those US "advisers" for interfering in foreign affairs?  At the very least, they should be registered as foreign agents if they want any say in the matter.  If they're not, they've broken the law, and should be charged.

We also see that the so-called "Deep State" isn't limited to the USA, but is an international operation, with "Deep States" (for want of a better term) active in every European nation and in the European Union as a whole.  That was made very clear when several European leaders consoled and encouraged Zelensky in precisely and exactly the same words.  It was like those news broadcasts we've seen in the USA, where dozens or scores or even hundreds of nominally "independent" TV news stations all parrot exactly the same words and phrases to their audience, clearly reading from the same script.  Those European leaders were using a script for public consumption when they encouraged Zelensky.  It's as plain as the nose on your face, and demonstrates how forces and individuals behind the scenes are manipulating the situation.

The lack of logic and rationality behind the European approach was illustrated by Polish prime minister Donald Tusk when he pointed out that "500 million Europeans are asking 300 million Americans to defend them against 140 million Russians."  Europe appears willing to fight to the last American to defend Ukraine - and President Trump's not playing that game.  Now they have to figure out how to do it themselves, without American firepower to support them - but they've cut their armed forces to the bone in order to pay for entitlement programs.  How are they going to do it?  The short and simple answer is that, without the USA, they can't.  As Divemedic put it:


There is not a reason to spill a single drop of American blood, nor waste a single American dollar on a war that simply isn’t our problem. Let Europe worry about this one. I don’t think that Russia is going to go to war with the European Union unless the EU keeps beating war drums and trying to start one. We need to stop letting France, Britain, Russia, and Germany drag us into the wars that they have been fighting in Europe for over 1,300 years. If they want to keep fighting, let them, but there is no reason for us to be involved.


More at the link.  I said much the same thing three years ago.

Finally, the Telegraph advises that there may be "wheels within wheels" on this issue.


The president appeared to make an initial offer to Putin that contained nearly everything the Russian dictator wanted ... But there may well be a more sophisticated logic behind Trump’s seeming madness.

The Trump administration is thought to view China, not Russia, as the gravest threat to the United States and Europe in the long-term, having declared in the 2017 National Security Strategy that it is a “revisionist” power that seeks “to erode American security and prosperity”. China’s Belt and Road initiative is widely seen as a disguised attempt to secure control of future land and sea routes, by laying out massive transport, energy, and telecommunication infrastructure across the Eurasian landmass.

. . .

The Trump administration has every incentive to undo China’s Grand Strategy.

Team Trump may well have concluded that this can only be achieved through radical changes to US foreign policy elsewhere. In the first instance, it necessitates cutting the West’s losses in Ukraine and conserving US combat power to deter Beijing. US officials seem to have realised that Putin is prepared and willing to fight, at almost any cost to Russia, until the last surviving Ukrainian and until the last missile is left in the West’s stockpiles.

. . .

A peace deal in Ukraine might have the benefit of giving Nato members the breathing space – as well as the incentive – to finally re-focus their economies towards defence, so that they can meet Trump’s call for 5 per cent of GDP to be spent on their militaries. On Tuesday, Starmer committed to increase UK defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP, up from 2.3 per cent now. Others are likely to follow suit. A rearmed Nato would serve as a much stronger deterrent against both Russia and China in the long-term, minimising the chances that Putin might attack a Nato country in the future.

. . .

Trump may be preparing to signal to Putin that he is content with Russia serving as the dominant power in Eurasia, as long as it doesn’t invade a Nato country. By having direct talks with Russia and excluding Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky, at least for the time being, Trump has already played on Putin’s sense of vanity, Russian national pride, and Moscow’s long-term sense of being a great power that deserves a seat at the table with the big boys.

. . .

Peace in Ukraine, a reshuffle of alliances in the Middle East, and a new settlement with Russia would allow the United States to return to a version of the original Monroe Doctrine, refocusing on hemispheric defence and freeing Washington up to directly confront Beijing. Having renamed the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, Trump is signalling to China to get out of the US sphere of influence and strategic security perimeter. 

The US would protect the Western Hemisphere – North, Central, and South America, including the surrounding islands. Russia would dominate Eurasia. Europe would look after itself. And with US assistance, Japan, Australia and South Korea would, within a Joint Deterrence Force framework, take the lead in ensuring stability in the Indo-Pacific. 

Could this be Trump’s latest Art of the Deal? We may be about to find out.


More at the link (may be paywalled).

The Telegraph is quite correct.  President Trump can't allow himself to fixate on Ukraine and its problems.  He has to sort out our own country's internal mess and deal with geopolitical issues across Europe, the Middle East, Eurasia and the Far East, all at the same time.  Committing too much US effort to Ukraine would force him to short-change all those other areas . . . to the undoubted pleasure of China, North Korea, Iran and other trouble-makers, who would instantly move to take advantage of such preoccupation elsewhere.

I'm very sorry for the people of Ukraine, who find themselves pawns in a battle of nations and alliances and are bleeding and dying while the politicians wring their hands and search for solutions.  Ukrainians are the real victims here . . . but nobody's talking about them.  They aren't even on the globalists' radar screen.  They're the "little people".  They don't count.

May God have mercy on them.  They're going to need it.

Peter


Memes that made me laugh 251

 

Gathered from around the Internet over the past week.  Click any image for a larger view.











Sunday, March 2, 2025

Sunday morning music

 

Following last weekend's look at dwarf metal, I came across this rather strange piece of heroic fantasy music.  It's certainly metal-ish, and brings in most of the tropes and tales of the genre.  You'll recognize the voice of Christopher Lee as the narrator.  I'm not sure I like it, but it's different enough that I thought I'd let you hear it and make up your own mind.  (If you want the lyrics, they may be found at the video's YouTube page.)




It's . . . well, it's different!

Peter


Friday, February 28, 2025

The two sides of government job cuts

 

Zero Hedge warns that massive job cuts in the federal government may lead to a recession in certain parts of the country.


The Trump administration's epic purge of federal workers is shaping into one of the most significant job cuts in a generation. Early indicators suggest Northern Virginia, Washington, DC, and Maryland may be in the beginning innings of an economic downturn, as jobless claims rise and a surge in active housing listings signals a very ominous outlook.

On Thursday morning, Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo, joined Bloomberg TV, warning, "The consensus expects total DOGE-related job cuts to be 300,000 ... However, studies show that for every federal employee, there are two contractors. As a result, layoffs could potentially be closer to 1 million," Slok noted.


There's more at the link.

I suppose Mr. Slok has a point;  one side of the coin, if you will.  However, the other side of the coin is much more advantageous to all of us.  It's our tax dollars that created and paid for the jobs that are now being cut.  Effectively, they were an unnecessary tax on the entire nation, not just certain areas.  Now that they're being cut, all of us should feel the economic relief from that tax, one way or another.  Quite how that will work out remains to be seen, but I'd much rather remove that economic burden from our budget and use the savings to pay down the national deficit that we've incurred through unnecessary and wasteful spending.

Yes, the Washington D.C. area may slip into local recession with all the job losses that may be incurred.  However, those jobs are the reason why, until now, it was the highest-paid region in the country, with the most expensive houses and other amenities.  Perhaps that will now come back into balance with the rest of us plebs!

Peter


More fallout from the Catholic clergy sex abuse tragedy hits New Orleans

 

I'm not sure how far the news has spread, but the Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans is involved in a fairly significant scandal concerning one of its associated ministries, Second Harvest Food Bank.  Here's a summary from Grok AI, X.com's artificial intelligence system, compiled from several news and commentary sites on the Web.  It seems accurate to me, according to the information at my disposal.


The dispute between New Orleans Archbishop Gregory Aymond and Second Harvest Food Bank centers on a clash over money and control, escalating tensions between the two entities, which had been partners in fighting hunger for over 40 years. The conflict erupted when Aymond, leveraging his authority as the "sole member" under Second Harvest’s bylaws, fired longtime CEO Natalie Jayroe and several board members in late January 2025, replacing them with the archdiocese’s chief financial officer, Dirk Wild, as interim CEO. This dramatic move sparked widespread controversy and allegations about the archdiocese’s intentions.

The core issue stems from claims by the ousted leaders—backed by statements from former board chair Bert Wilson and others—that the archdiocese pressured Second Harvest to contribute up to $16 million to help fund its ongoing bankruptcy, initiated in 2020 to address over 500 clergy sexual abuse claims. These leaders argued that reallocating donor funds, intended solely for combating food insecurity across 23 Louisiana parishes, would violate legal agreements with major donors like Feeding America and the MacKenzie Scott Foundation, which prohibit non-secular expenditures. Second Harvest’s 2024 audit revealed $89 million in net assets, including $32 million in investments, but the former leadership insisted these resources were restricted for feeding the hungry, not settling church liabilities unrelated to the food bank’s mission.

Archbishop Aymond has denied that donor funds were ever used or intended for the bankruptcy, asserting in a February 3, 2025, video statement that “not a single dollar” from Second Harvest donations has gone to anything but its mission. He framed the $16 million figure as a theoretical discussion about Second Harvest buying its independence from the archdiocese, not a direct demand. Aymond also justified the firings by claiming the ousted leaders refused to sign a tolling agreement—meant to shield church affiliates from lawsuits during bankruptcy negotiations—potentially exposing Second Harvest to legal risk. However, former board member Nick Karl disputed this, noting the court-set deadline for the agreement was May 1, not January 31 as Aymond suggested, and that negotiations were ongoing.

The fallout has been intense. Community outrage, reflected in petitions and donor backlash, accuses Aymond of jeopardizing Second Harvest’s integrity and operations, with some, like major donor Morris Bart, threatening legal action to reclaim contributions if funds are diverted. Aymond’s quiet amendment to Second Harvest’s articles of incorporation on January 29, expanding his power to fire leadership “without cause,” further fueled perceptions of a power grab. Meanwhile, a committee is exploring a potential separation of Second Harvest from the archdiocese, though details—like whether it involves the $16 million—remain unclear as of February 27, 2025. The dispute highlights broader tensions between the church’s financial pressures and the food bank’s secular mission, leaving its future uncertain.


This is a tragedy for the food bank, and is likely to further damage the Catholic Church in New Orleans as well.  I don't know exactly why the Archbishop was exerting pressure on Second Harvest to make at least some of its reserves available to the Archdiocese, but I have little doubt that the latter's declaration of bankruptcy in the face of hundreds of claims from child sex abuse survivors is at the root of it.  I've spoken with a couple of clergy acquaintances in the Archdiocese, and they feel the same way about it.  In so many words, the Archdiocese appears desperate for money to pay the claims against it and get back to normal operations, and the reserves of the food bank were probably an irresistible target, given that it's nominally (legally) part of the Archdiocese, although its operations are secular and have (until now) been completely separate from religious affairs.  The Archbishop's most recent statement on the affair appears to sidestep such issues.  Dare one say it's just another case of "follow the money"?

This is yet another example of how the Catholic Church in America has inflicted long-term damage upon itself.  If only the bishops had, way back in the post-World-War-II era, insisted upon orthodoxy of faith, and imposed strict discipline upon the selection of candidates for the priesthood and their education in seminaries, the problem would have been far smaller and more manageable.  (It can never be eradicated completely, unfortunately, because human beings remain sinners, and one can't detect all of them in time to stop the damage from their sins.  Inevitably, some will slip through the screening - but in this case, the entire screening process appears to have become infected by the very sins - and sinners - it was supposed to detect and exclude.)  Since that was not done, the damage incurred was vastly greater, and it continues to have repercussions to this day.  Furthermore, a number of those who became clergy during the "evil years" are still in office, and continue to do damage (just look at the isolated, but well-publicized cases of priest abusers that continue to be unmasked to this day).  One might go so far as to say that the Catholic Church has abdicated its moral authority, to such an extent that it no longer possesses any in the eyes of much of the world.

I fear that, no matter how this issue is ultimately resolved, it will further damage the Catholic Church in the eyes of many of the faithful.  I know that a very large proportion of Catholics have stopped donating to the Church, because of unease about how their donations will be used, and I expect that problem will grow exponentially worse in southern Louisiana after this news.  I could wish with all my heart that the Archdiocese had left the food bank severely alone, and not tried to change anything . . . but the allure of millions of dollars in donations and reserves was probably irresistible, given the Archdiocese's bankruptcy declaration.  Sadly, the food bank is now likely to lose support from outside, non-Catholic sources who were happy to support secular food aid, but are not willing (or, in some cases, legally able) to support a religious enterprise.  That's going to directly impact up to about four hundred thousand people who depend on the food bank on a more or less regular basis.

I hope something can be done to compensate those dismissed by the Archbishop because they would not conform to his views.  They've contributed decades of their lives to their work, and to be summarily fired for reasons totally unrelated to the food bank's primary operations must have been a terrible blow.  Do they have pensions?  If they have suffered financial loss or hardship, will the Church make good those costs?  So far, nobody is talking about any of that.

What a mess . . . and the only winner might be said to be the devil himself.

Peter


Thursday, February 27, 2025

That's why half the country feels like our leaders have abandoned us - and why President Trump won the election

 

The Wall Street Journal pointed out earlier this week that "The U.S. Economy Depends More Than Ever on Rich People".


[Rich] consumers now account for 49.7% of all spending, a record in data going back to 1989, according to an analysis by Moody’s Analytics. Three decades ago, they accounted for about 36%.

All this means that economic growth is unusually reliant on rich Americans continuing to shell out. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, estimated that spending by the top 10% alone accounted for almost one-third of gross domestic product.

Between September 2023 and September 2024, the high earners increased their spending by 12%. Spending by working-class and middle-class households, meanwhile, dropped over the same period.

. . .

Taken together, well-off people have increased their spending far beyond inflation, while everyone else hasn’t. The bottom 80% of earners spent 25% more than they did four years earlier, barely outpacing price increases of 21% over that period. The top 10% spent 58% more.


There's more at the link.

That sharp divide in the economy shows up in many ways, not least in our politics.  I daresay most conservative Americans are in the "bottom half" of the country, economically speaking - with shining exceptions like Elon Musk, of course.  If you look at most of the progressive left, they live in larger cities with larger incomes, and react to the nation and the world from within that "economic cocoon" that shelters them from the harsher reality many of us face.  I daresay the readers of this blog average rather less than six-figure incomes every year.

I've lived from hand to mouth, from paycheck to paycheck.  When you're worrying about where the baby's next meal will come from, or juggling rent and a car payment, or having to give up holiday plans because you simply can't afford them any more . . . it gives you a radically different perspective on the economy and on our nation than those who can blithely wave a credit card and do as they please.

The news that the Biden administration was paying illegal migrants far more per month than Social Security recipients added more fuel to the fire of resentment and outrage;  and that boiled over when we learn that disaster victims in North Carolina were being abandoned to their own resources by FEMA because all of the money allocated for that purpose had been redirected to assist illegal migrants.  To make matters even worse, most of that money came from borrowing rather than income, leaving us with the biggest national debt in the nation's history - one our children's children will probably still be struggling to repay.  You may be sure that outrage was a major contributing factor to President Trump's electoral victory last year.

The most worrying thing is that our political elites largely appear to ignore this reality.  Just look at the budget debates going on in the Republican Party right now.  So few of our politicians need to exercise care in managing their money that they ignore the perspective of those of us who do.  There's a breakdown in understanding, in perception.  The politicians seemingly can't resist spending money we don't have.  I'd like nothing more than a balanced budget law (or even better, a Constitutional amendment), specifying that our national budget must balance income and expenditure before it can be passed, and that any loans required to balance it may be no greater than a (very small) percentage or proportion of the total budget, and must be paid off in full before new loans can be authorized.  Obviously, national emergencies (disasters, wars, etc.) might be grounds to suspend the balanced budget requirement for a period, but this should be limited as far as possible.

What say you, friends?

Peter


Ouch!

 

J. K. Rowling is hated by the progressive left for her refusal to approve of genderism and the transgender cult.  Fortunately, she's not afraid to speak up for her beliefs, and can hit back with acid humor when needed.  Yesterday:



Love it!



Peter