Friday, May 16, 2025

Trump, antisemitism, and the radical right

Photo: Chandan Khanna, Getty Images

I do not fully understand Republican voters and antisemitism.

One of the reasons frequently given for why people voted for Donald Trump in 2024 was that there were antisemitic incidents on college campuses. And voting for Trump was a way of opposing those bad people. 

Yet the people doing the campus antisemitism weren’t opposed to Donald Trump. They were attacking Joe Biden.

The reason they were anti-Biden is that they believed he was too supportive of Jews and/or Israel. If a voter wanted to rebuke these people, wouldn’t the logical response have been to vote for Biden?

Donald Trump was the only presidential candidate of the last ten years to be privately friendly with real-deal neo-Nazi types. And now NPR reports that he’s branching out from private friendships to professional associations: He’s pulled a bunch of antisemites into his administration.

I know what you’re thinking: It can’t be that bad, can it?

Paul Ingrassia, currently serving as White House liaison to the Department of Homeland Security, has ties to multiple figures widely known for promoting antisemitism. . . .

In 2023, Ingrassia repeatedly praised the controversial “manosphere” influencer Andrew Tate and worked on his legal team.

Ingrassia was also seen at a June 2024 rally in Detroit led by Nick Fuentes, a Holocaust denier and white nationalist.

As Fuentes began his speech, his supporters chanted, “Down with Israel!”

The link between Ingrassia and the two other Trump administration figures is a fellow named Timothy Hale-Cusanelli....

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Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Trump and immigration

From 2021

From the New York Times:


By Hamed Aleaziz and Michael Crowley

May 13, 2025

On the same day that dozens of white South Africans arrived in the United States as refugees, at the invitation of President Trump himself, his administration said thousands of Afghans could be deported starting this summer.

Mr. Trump’s immigration policies are riddled with contradictions, epitomized by Monday’s arrival of a chartered jet, paid for by the American government, carrying dozens of Afrikaners who say they are facing racial discrimination at home.

The Trump administration’s focus on white Afrikaners, an ethnic minority that ruled during apartheid, is particularly striking as it effectively bans most other refugees and targets legal and illegal immigrants alike for deportation. 

Those include Afghans who were granted “temporary protected status” after the disastrous U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, many of whom had risked their lives to help American forces.

Mr. Trump’s hard line on immigration helped propel him back to the White House as voters from both parties expressed frustration over the issue. He has promised to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history, and one of the first executive orders of his second term was to suspend refugee resettlement in the United States.

But the administration’s decision to carve out an exception for white Afrikaners has raised questions about who the “right” immigrants are in Mr. Trump’s view....

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Israel starves the people of Gaza



One in five people in the Gaza Strip are facing starvation as the entire territory edges closer to famine, a new United Nations-backed report warns, after nearly three months of Israel’s blockade of critically needed humanitarian aid.

The warning comes as the UN and several NGOs, as well as civilians in Gaza, say the situation has deteriorated since Israel launched its renewed assault on the enclave in March, as residents struggle to access food, medicine and clean water.

The enclave’s entire population is experiencing “high levels of acute food security” and the territory is at “high risk” of famine, the most severe type of hunger crisis, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said in its latest report Monday.

“Goods indispensable for people’s survival are either depleted or expected to run out in the coming weeks,” the IPC said. Food is running out, and what little is left is being sold at exorbitant prices that few can afford, it said.

Israel imposed a humanitarian blockade on Gaza on March 2, cutting off food, medical supplies, and other aid to the more than 2 million Palestinians who live in the territory. Israel says the blockade, along with the military’s expansion of its bombardment of Gaza, is intended to pressure Hamas to release hostages held in the enclave – but international organizations say it violates international law, with some accusing Israel of using starvation as a weapon of war.

There is a “high risk” that famine will occur between now and the end of September, the IPC report warned, leaving most people in Gaza without access to food, water, shelter, and medicine.

“Only an immediate and sustained cessation of hostilities and the resumption of humanitarian aid delivery can prevent a descent into famine,” the report said...

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Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Congestion Pricing works

Photo: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg

The New York Times:


Fewer cars. Faster travel. Less honking. And some questions we still can’t answer.

The reporters sought information from everyone they could think of, including the M.T.A., the Fire Department, restaurant-booking platforms, researchers and one yellow school bus company.

Policy changes often take years to show results. Even then, you may have to squint to see them.

And then there is congestion pricing in New York.

Almost immediately after the tolls went into effect Jan. 5 — charging most vehicles $9 to enter Manhattan from 60th Street south to the Battery — they began to alter traffic patterns, commuter behavior, transit service, even the sound of gridlock and the on-time arrival of school buses.

What’s changed since the toll began?

The idea was that many people, faced with a toll, would stop driving into the heart of Manhattan.


So far that appears to have happened.


The Metropolitan Transportation Authority estimates that about 76,000 fewer vehicles per day in April entered Manhattan’s central business district, which encompasses the congestion zone, than probably would have without the toll.

 

That’s the equivalent of 2.3 million fewer cars for the month, or 12 percent fewer than would have been expected given historical traffic trends....

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  Mike Luckovich

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Sunday, May 11, 2025

A gummie lesson

Not clear what this illustration
has to do with the article



What two packs of weed gummies taught me about America

By Jennifer Finney Boylan

I stepped into a Manhattan dispensary not long ago and left with a sense of uncertainty about the morality of pinball, going to the circus on Sundays, the rise and fall of transgender rights and the legality of dancing to the national anthem.

Not to mention a couple packs of gummies.

This was, incredibly, on the very same street just off Amsterdam Avenue upon which I had lived in 1981, when my roommate, future-filmmaker Charlie Kaufman, and I lived one floor above a storefront marked “Health Food.” If you went in there, you’d find the place dark, lit by nothing more than a couple of ultraviolet lights. On the wall were black light posters of naked women and Jimi Hendrix. 

There was a hole in the back wall, and if you put 10 bucks in the hole, and waited, a hand appeared and snatched the money, just like the action of an antique toy bank. A moment later, a little package appeared. Each one was marked with a black stamp that spelled “Heartbeat.”

Yes, it was illegal. And, a few years later, all the weed stores on that strip of Amsterdam would be shut down by the police.

But what was illegal then is legal now. It’s big business to boot: Pot sales in New York state have generated over $1 billion since 2022, including $22 million in taxes (of which $ 7.9 million went to New York City).

There’s no shortage of laws, not to mention moral prohibitions, that have changed with the passage of time. Some of these are humorous: In Michigan, until 2015, it was illegal to dance to the national anthem. In some major cities, pinball was banned until the late ’70s. And in many states, blue laws prohibited all sorts of commerce and activity on Sundays — including, poignantly, going to the circus. From 1989 to 1995, the Ethics Reform Act made a ban on government employees constructing crossword puzzles while at work.

Other overturned or amended laws are more serious. It took constitutional amendments and a Civil War to end slavery and give women the right to vote. More recently, the Supreme Court enshrined marriage equality as the law of the land in Obergefell v. Hodges.

In one poll, 69 percent of Americans now support same-sex marriage’s legality. But as recently as 1996, the same percentage of Americans were opposed to it. The change in our perception of right and wrong on this issue is profound; in the colonial era, gay and lesbian people could be put to death for what were then perceived as crimes against nature. Now, a gay Republican with a longtime partner — Richard Grenell — is a special presidential envoy for Donald Trump.

I came out as trans during an era when lives such as mine were not at the top of anyone’s list of things to worry about. Then, in 2012 (a dozen years after my transition), Vice President Joe Biden said he considered trans discrimination the “civil rights issue of our time.” Two years later, Laverne Cox appeared on the cover of Time magazine as it declared the arrival of the “Transgender Tipping Point.”

Now we have arrived at a very different moment, one in which gay, lesbian and bisexual rights are mostly affirmed by Trump (although some conservatives are now urging the court to reconsider Obergefell) while his administration attempts to erase trans people from the public sphere, in everything from military service to our passports. 

The most jaw-dropping of these efforts might have been the removal of the words “transgender” and “queer” at the National Park Service’s Stonewall Uprising memorial website, which celebrates the very place where trans and queer people helped to jump-start a social revolution. You could make a very good argument that we’d never have arrived at Obergefell in 2015 were it not for the now-erased transgender people at Stonewall in 1969.

Acceptance of trans folks has risen and fallen over time. The Institute for Sexual Research in Berlin was founded in 1919 by Magnus Hirschfeld to provide support for trans and nonbinary people; on May 6, 1933, one of Adolf Hitler’s first acts as chancellor of Germany was to destroy it. The institute’s books — over 20,000 volumes — were burned in the street in a massive bonfire.

But support for trans people had another early supporter in Jesus Christ, at least judging by Matthew 19:12. “There are some eunuchs, which were so born from their mother’s womb: and there are some eunuchs which were made eunuchs by men: and there be eunuchs, which have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven’s sake.” 

That’s from the New King James translation, but I especially like the way the Holman Christian Standard Bible concludes that verse: “Let anyone accept this who can.”

...What is it then, that we can accept? How do we find our truth when the definition of what is moral or immoral can change in a day?

Most of us choose to obey the law, even when we disagree with it, fearing the consequences. We’re also aware that if each person interpreted the law according to their own lights, the result would be anarchy. It’s this awareness, for instance, that keeps me from running a red light at 3 a.m., even when there are no other cars in sight.

On the other hand, in certain circumstances, it’s necessary to break the law to do the right thing — especially when the laws of the country are immoral. Huckleberry Finn chooses to free Jim from slavery, even though the laws of his country expressly forbid any such thing. “I’d got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself: ‘All right, then, I’ll go to hell.’”

Huck’s country would fight a war over the morality of decisions like that one. It would take another century before the passage of the Voting Rights Act ensured that the antislavery amendments to the Constitution were legally enforced. (An act that the Supreme Court then gutted in 2013, in Shelby County v. Holder.)

...These are days when, to do the right thing, it might sometimes be necessary not to just follow the law of the land, but to instead listen to the laws of our consciences.

Let anyone accept this who can.

Jennifer Finney Boylan is president of PEN America. Her newest book is “Cleavage: Men, Women, and the Space Between Us.”

Rob's comment:
I agree with almost everything Boylan says here, except she doesn't not run red lights only because she's afraid of getting a ticket. She surely also has a sense of self-prevervation and even concern for the safety of others. To program yourself to not run red lights in any circumstance seems like a good idea.

It is significant that Hitler and the Nazis made it a priority to burn books on sexuality

Contemporary conservatives are still the main perps for banning books. Many of them think they only need one book, the one that features Jesus Christ. That some Christian fundamentalists make their ignorance a point of pride tells us something significant about an important part of the Republican Party's political base.

I've never been able to "accept" Jesus as my savior or, for that matter, any other religious interpretation of human life.

Trump himself doesn't seem to be particularly religious or homophobic, but he will go along with the mob---that is, the Republican base---if he finds it politically expedient. Even Republicans probably understand that explicit homophobia and racism are no longer acceptable. 

If they can't accept that in 2025 America, too fucking bad.

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Saturday, May 10, 2025

No Habeas Corpus for migrants

Stephen Miller
Good casting. Miller even looks like a TV villain.


The Constitution Annotated:

Article I  

    Section 9 Powers Denied Congress

    • Clause 2 Habeas Corpus

    • The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

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Trump: Permanently on the D list

Most Americans don't give a shit about this, but I bet Trump does. That gives many of us peasants some pleasure.

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Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Hell no, he wouldn't go

Photo: Ruth Fremson

Letter to the editor on May 7 in the New York Times:


To the Editor:

I was gratified to read “They Fled a Torn U.S. Long Ago,” by Ruth Fremson (May 4).

It’s important to recognize and understand why people would make such a drastic move and leave their home country when faced with a situation they can’t accept. The Vietnam War created such a situation.

In writing “Hell, No, We Didn’t Go!,” I interviewed more than 100 men and women who resisted the Vietnam War and the draft. Many of those I spoke to chose to move to Canada and contribute to its society.

Fifty years later, not one of them regrets the move, regardless of how difficult it might have been initially. Today, they look back and know they made the right decision.

I thank The New York Times for reporting on this aspect of the war.

Eli Greenbaum
Vancouver 
British Columbia

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Israel: Killing Gaza


The generals wanted the operation launched on April 1st to go unnoticed until their soldiers had taken up secure positions. 

But the politicians were quick to crow. The Israel Defence Forces (idf) had embarked on a new operation to “smash and clean the area of terrorists,” said Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz. It was aimed at “capturing wide areas [of Gaza] and adding them to Israel’s security zones,” he continued....


RAMALLAH, Palestine / ANKARA

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa declared the Gaza Strip a “famine-stricken zone” on Wednesday, as Israel continued to block the entry of food and aid into the blockaded enclave.

"We declare Gaza a famine-stricken area," Mustafa told a press conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

"We demand all UN member states take urgent action according to their obligations under international humanitarian law, and recognize this disaster and famine," he said.

The Palestinian premier called on the international community to "implement UN resolutions that prohibit using starvation as a weapon of war."

Mustafa also appealed to the entire UN system to "immediately activate its mechanisms and treat Gaza as a famine zone."

Since March 2, Israel has kept Gaza’s crossings closed to food, medical, and humanitarian aid, deepening an already humanitarian crisis in the enclave, according to government, human rights, and international reports.

Nearly 2.4 million people in Gaza live completely dependent on humanitarian aid, according to World Bank data.

Figures released by Gaza’s government media office showed that at least 57 Palestinians have died of starvation since October 2023.

More than 52,600 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza in a brutal Israeli onslaught since October 2023, most of them women and children.

The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants in November for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

Trump: Feds "not going to pay" for high-speed rail


President Trump said Tuesday that the federal government will not pay for California’s high-speed train, another potential wrinkle in a troubled project that has repeatedly blown past its budget and completion timeline since voters approved funding in 2008.

“That train is the worst cost overrun I’ve ever seen,” Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office during a joint appearance with Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada. “It’s, like, totally out of control.” He added: “This government is not going to pay.”

The president’s comments came three months after his administration launched a review of how California is spending a $3.1 billion federal grant issued under the Biden administration. That audit has not yet been completed.

The project was originally envisioned as a $33 billion bullet train that would, by 2020, whisk people between San Francisco and Los Angeles in less than three hours. 

But plans have been stymied by inflation, lawsuits over land acquisitions and lengthy environmental reviews, along with repeated tussles over funding. The cost has more than tripled, the scope of the line has been scaled back and completion is now slated for 2033 for an initial segment that connects two smaller cities in the Central Valley.

Construction on that portion is underway, with Gov. Gavin Newsom visiting Bakersfield in January to tout progress on the project.

“With 50 major structures built, walking away now as we enter the track-laying phase would be reckless — wasting billions already invested and letting job-killers cede a generational infrastructure advantage to China,” Izzy Gardon, the governor’s spokesman, said in response to Mr. Trump’s comments.

Mr. Newsom rode China’s high-speed rail on a visit to that country in 2023, highlighting the possibilities of the technology as the train whizzed through the countryside on the way to Shanghai.

Representative Kevin Kiley, Republican of California, has been critical of the project for years and has called on the F.B.I. to investigate the cost overruns. “There is zero justification for any further funding, state or federal, for the high-speed rail project,” Mr. Kiley said Tuesday.

He said the state’s federal transportation funding should be spent instead on “improving our roads, alleviating traffic, and bolstering regional transit systems that people can actually use.”

A spokesperson for the California High-Speed Rail Authority, the agency planning and building the train, said the project has resulted in 15,000 construction jobs and is delivering results, “despite the noise in Washington”....

Rob's comment: Suspicions confirmed: The only argument for continuing the dumb project is that it creates jobs. That's why the unions supported it early. Congressman Kiley is right.


Randal O'Toole is good on high-speed rail and other rail fantasies.


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Sunday, May 04, 2025

Defend the Constitution? Trump: 'I don't know'

This is shockingly stupid, even by Trump standards. The President of the United States is in effect saying that he doesn't have the legal authority to even call for the return of this guy, even though his administration admits that he was deported illegally.

Here Trump seems like an old man trying to pass the buck for a mistake made by his administration.

That Trump is suffering from dementia is a serious possibility---and a potential national emergency---the country's political class urgently needs to face.


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Friday, May 02, 2025

Trump v. Big Bird

Trump has a history with Sesame Street.

It's an easy call: Trump or Big Bird?

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Thursday, May 01, 2025

1945 in the city: A post about the Post

Saturday Evening Post cover September 1945 from a painting by Mead Schaeffer (1898 - 1980).

More on Mead Schaeffer

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Sorry, he can't make it

Nick Anderson


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Whatever happened to high-speed rail?

It's still happening Near Fresno

That looks like the prophetic cartoon below from days of yore:


My last post on the project was more than a year ago.

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American Bystander

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Wednesday, April 30, 2025

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Monday, April 28, 2025

Dozing Don

Trump at the pope's funeral

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Facebook

Later: Nice picture of a sign presumably marred by a critic of city government a long time ago, though not clear exactly when. Why the city thought we needed this warning is a mystery. 

Someone a lot younger than me should research the history of this sign: Which city department first conceived it and how---and who---pushed it through the planning process? Their name/names should be immortalized in planning history and maybe a plaque installed at the base of the sign.

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Saturday, April 26, 2025

Letters to the editor

Today's NY Times:


To the Editor:

Larry David’s brief article about his imagined dinner with a “so human” Adolf Hitler spoke volumes about Bill Maher’s summation of his actual dinner with Donald Trump.

While I really enjoy Mr. Maher’s program in general, in his relating his experience of his dinner with Mr. Trump, he neglected to point out that anyone has the ability to act gracious during a brief social engagement, but it is a person’s actions on a day-to-day basis that reveal the true nature of the man.

Claire Di Meola
Hoboken, N.J.


To the Editor:

I don’t want Canada or Greenland or the Panama Canal.

I want PBS, Social Security, NPR, Medicare, the Kennedy Center and the Smithsonian.

I want democracy.

Mel Tansill
Catonsville, Md.

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Trump and Nixon: Mirror mirror on the wall....

har har!

....On January 17, 2025, three days before Trump was inaugurated as president of the United States, the Trump meme coin was launched. The lack of a public announcement by Trump initially led to concerns that the cryptocurrency was a scam and might have no association with the president-elect. 

....Hours after its launch, Trump announced that he was launching the Trump meme coin. Initially, the value of the crypto coin spiked to $74, but as Trump’s popularity has floundered during his failing presidency, the coin has fallen to an all-time low of around $8. Until today.

....Trump announced that the top 220 “investors” in the Trump coin would receive special access to the White House at an “intimate private” dinner. The price of the Trump meme coin doubled almost immediately. 

Of course, the White House had no comment on the ethical implications of an openly pay-for-presidential-access scheme.

The memecoin is just one of several ways in which Trump and his family are positioning themselves to cash in on crypto. Trump’s sons launched a separate crypto company last year called World Liberty Financial, which is launching a digital token known as a stablecoin that is pegged to the value of the dollar. 

Trump has also been pushing forcefully for deregulating cryptocurrency and creating a strategic reserve of cryptocurrency (tacitly from currency confiscated from criminal enterprises).

The clear and present danger of the nation’s top executive selling access is nauseating in itself, but the fact that he doesn't even try to hide the corruption is mind-boggling. 

There is, in fact, a leaderboard that shows who the top buyers are. This president is telling the world that access to the president is available to anyone who wants to line his pockets. 

In another time, this would have been the end of not only his presidency, but probably his life eating with sharp utensils and wearing anything but a standard issue orange jumpsuit.

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Friday, April 25, 2025

How things are going

 Hegseth orders makeup studio at Pentagon

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Thursday, April 24, 2025

Larry David and Bill Maher

Larry David mocks Bill Maher for having dinner with President Trump.

April 21, 2025

Imagine my surprise when in the spring of 1939 a letter arrived at my house inviting me to dinner at the Old Chancellery with the world’s most reviled man, Adolf Hitl

er. I had been a vocal critic of his on the radio from the beginning, pretty much predicting everything he was going to do on the road to dictatorship. No one I knew encouraged me to go. “He’s Hitler. He’s a monster.” But eventually I concluded that hate gets us nowhere. I knew I couldn’t change his views, but we need to talk to the other side — even if it has invaded and annexed other countries and committed unspeakable crimes against humanity.

Two weeks later, I found myself on the front steps of the Old Chancellery and was led into an opulent living room, where a few of the Führer’s most vocal supporters had gathered: Himmler, Göring, Leni Riefenstahl and the Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII. We talked about some of the beautiful art on the walls that had been taken from the homes of Jews. But our conversation ended abruptly when we heard loud footsteps coming down the hallway. Everyone stiffened as Hitler entered the room.

He was wearing a tan suit with a swastika armband and gave me an enthusiastic greeting that caught me off guard. Frankly, it was a warmer greeting than I normally get from my parents, and it was accompanied by a slap on my back. I found the whole thing quite disarming. I joked that I was surprised to see him in a tan suit because if he wore that out, it would be perceived as un-Führer-like. That amused him to no end, and I realized I’d never seen him laugh before. 

Suddenly he seemed so human. Here I was, prepared to meet Hitler, the one I’d seen and heard — the public Hitler. But this private Hitler was a completely different animal. And oddly enough, this one seemed more authentic, like this was the real Hitler. The whole thing had my head spinning.

He said he was starving and led us into the dining room, where he gestured for me to sit next to him. Göring immediately grabbed a slice of pumpernickel, whereupon Hitler turned to me, gave me an eye roll, then whispered, “Watch. He’ll be done with his entire meal before you’ve taken two bites.” 

That one really got me. Göring, with his mouth full, asked what was so funny, and Hitler said, “I was just telling him about the time my dog had diarrhea in the Reichstag.” Göring remembered. How could he forget? He loved that story, especially the part where Hitler shot the dog before it got back into the car. Then a beaming Hitler said, “Hey, if I can kill Jews, Gypsies and homosexuals, I can certainly kill a dog!” That perhaps got the biggest laugh of the night — and believe me, there were plenty.

But it wasn’t just a one-way street, with the Führer dominating the conversation. He was quite inquisitive and asked me a lot of questions about myself. I told him I had just gone through a brutal breakup with my girlfriend because every time I went someplace without her, she was always insistent that I tell her everything I talked about. 

I can’t stand having to remember every detail of every conversation. Hitler said he could relate — he hated that, too. “What am I, a secretary?” He advised me it was best not to have any more contact with her or else I’d be right back where I started and eventually I’d have to go through the whole thing all over again. I said it must be easy for a dictator to go through a breakup. He said, “You’d be surprised. There are still feelings.” Hmm … there are still feelings. That really resonated with me. We’re not that different, after all. I thought that if only the world could see this side of him, people might have a completely different opinion.

Two hours later, the dinner was over, and the Führer escorted me to the door. “I am so glad to have met you. I hope I’m no longer the monster you thought I was.” 

“I must say, mein Führer, I’m so thankful I came. Although we disagree on many issues, it doesn’t mean that we have to hate each other.” And with that, I gave him a Nazi salute and walked out into the night.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Trump has "worst April since the Hoover administration"

Bret Stephens in today's NY Times:

....When the president completed his extraordinary political comeback in November, he was at the summit of his political power. He has eroded it every day since.

With Matt Gaetz as his first choice for attorney general With the needlessly bruising confirmation fights over the absurd choices of Hegseth, Robert Kennedy Jr., Kash Patel and Tulsi Gabbard. With making an enemy of Canada. With JD Vance’s grotesque outreach to the German far right. With the Oval Office abuse of Volodymyr Zelensky. With the helter-skelter tariff regime. With threats of conquest that antagonize historic allies for no plausible benefit. With dubious arrests and lawless deportations that can make heroes of unsympathetic individuals. 

And now with threats to the basic economic order that sent gold soaring to a record high of $3,500 an ounce and the Dow on track to its worst April since the late Hoover administration.

Democrats wondering how to oppose Trump most effectively might consider the following. Drop the dictator comparisons. Rehearse the above facts. Promise normality and offer plans to regain it. 

And remember that no matter how malignant he may be, there’s no better opponent than a face-plant president stumbling over his untied laces.

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