Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Why Too Many Fed. Workers

The federal government has too many employees. The way the civil service works, this was almost inevitable. 

The pay level a supervisor or boss gets in the civil service is related fairly directly to the number of employees he or she has directly and indirectly reporting to him or her. Grow the number supervised, grow the paycheck.

This gives every boss in the federal civil service an economic motive to justify the employment of additional subordinates plus subordinates of subordinates. Having successfully done so, the next step is a reclassification audit with hoped-for upgrade resulting, without changing job or employer.

Given how the system is designed, you’d be amazed if there were not too many employees.

Announcement This Afternoon

Today we get to find out how Trump will impose tariffs on foreign goods imported into the US.  Securities markets have been ‘nervous’ at the prospect. I have seen YouTube video of  a youngish Trump complaining of unfair tariffs, so his interest in the issue is no new thing.

In anticipation of this move, yesterday Israel cancelled all tariffs on US imports. If Trump chooses reciprocity, he should likewise impose no tariffs on Israeli imports, even if the switch was last-minute, giving him only one day notice.

At least some believe Trump will do a flat across-the-board tariff on all imports. We should know by this evening.

Off-year Voting Results

There were four things on the ballot in yesterday’s off-year election. Two in Wisconsin: a state Supreme Court justice and a constitutional amendment requiring voter photo ID. Plus two House seats in Florida. 

Republicans won three of the four, the two FL House seats which stayed Republican, and the voter ID requirement which passed. Democrats won the Wisconsin Supreme Court seat, which of course is being spun by the legacy media as the most important of the four.

By my count, the GOP won three out of four. That is a decent night’s work, but a clean sweep would have been nicer still. 

Musk threw a ton of money at the WI judge election, to no avail. He isn’t a natural politician and WI is a purple state. Was it a referendum on Musk himself … maybe in part.

Kennedy on Injunctions

Go read the transcript of Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) questioning a nominee for Assistant Attorney General. In the manner of a kindly law prof conducting a Socratic master class on the law concerning nationwide injunctions, he gently demolishes the legal basis (hint: there is none) for the practice. 

With kind words he lays out the lack of constitutional or common law underpinning for district judges to issue nationwide injunctions. These should only occur in the case of class action suits.

I hope the Supremes see it as he does, they certainly should. However, Chief Justice Roberts is unreliably conservative.

Monday, March 31, 2025

Obsolete, Arrogant, and Parasitic

Writing for The Guardian - a Brit paper that's definitely never-Trump - a columnist pens an interesting view of the relationship between Europe and the US.

Washington considers Europe to be obsolete, arrogant and parasitic.

So, is that a fair appraisal? Let's consider the evidence, is Europe obsolete? It seems clear its great days of world dominance and empire ended nearly a century ago, and are unlikely ever to return. 

Is Europe arrogant? It is trying to force US companies to comply with its overly bureaucratic and stifling regulations. It's politics are post-democratic, having completely surrendered to the bureaucratic blob in Brussels. It is trying to force Net Zero on the world, when nearly everywhere not-Europe isn't buying what they're selling. 

Is Europe parasitic? It has allowed the US to provide their defense; most of its nations have token militaries. It has given up on tech leadership, and to a large extent on manufacturing. They're largely "retired on the job."

I conclude that whether or not Washington considers it so, Europe is actually obsolete, arrogant, and parasitic. They've decided hard work, long hours and having children aren't worth it. They're going to take it easy and enjoy life, be satisfied with less, and let the future take care of itself when the time comes.

Europe has chosen the path they're on, a choice they are free to make. It does not, however, deliver the great power status to which they were once accustomed and appear to still feel entitled. 

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Another Politician Plagiarizing

Economist Mark Carney replaced Justin Trudeau as the leader of the Liberal Party in Canada, and thereby became PM. He has an impressive resume' and held high level positions in the Canadian and British governments 

He has called a "snap" election happening soon. Before the plagiarism accusations surfaced, Carney was favored to win the PM job in his own right. 

Someone ran his doctoral dissertation against a plagiarism checker. They found 10 or more examples of Carney using others' words without making clear they were borrowed.

Joe Biden was famous for borrowing other pols' speeches to give as his own, so maybe the bar is lower for politicians. Or more likely, Carney cut corners. 

Don't give his adviser's claim that the work is original too much credit. Not catching the plagiarism makes her look bad too. 

See this long column in Canada's National Post for multiple examples of Carney playing fast and loose with citation of others' works. I'd expect to see this kind of shoddy citation in undergraduate work, not in a dissertation.

Signalgate

The Washington Examiner’s Byron York posts this quote by the New York Times’ Ross Douthat, (behind NYT’s paywall) and I take the liberty of reposting it here for the good sense it reflects. 

No leading officials were fired over the Iraq/W.M.D. debacle. There were no notable resignations when Barack Obama’s Libya intervention turned that country into a war-torn terrorist haven. No heads rolled when the Afghanistan papers revealed official dishonesty, and Biden’s foreign policy team did not quit after the Afghanistan withdrawal became a bloody rout.

Given that record you can argue that Hegseth or Waltz should resign over operational security failures even if those failures didn’t have tragic consequences—but it is silly to act shocked when they do not.

What a chronicle of screw-ups in two short paragraphs. Such missteps appear to be almost the disgusting norm in DC.

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Saturday Snark

Images courtesy of Power Line's The Week in Pictures
and its Comments section.

We Share the Blame

In conservative media you will see columns like this one at Red State that bemoan limitations on free speech being openly practiced in Germany. These limitations act to the detriment of the increasingly popular conservative Alternative for Germany Party (AfD). 

What most such don’t tell you is that Germany limits speech because we (the US and allies) required them to do so following the collapse of the Third Reich. Our concern then was forestalling any resurgence of the Nazi Party that had held sway under Hitler. So any depictions of Nazi regalia or symbols were banned, and the stating of nationalist positions were sanctioned.

Germans in particular but many European polities as well (e.g., Netherlands, France, etc.) have national agreements among all centrist and leftist parties that they will not join parliamentary coalitions with openly rightist parties. The effect is to require a right wing party to get an absolute majority to form a government, nearly impossible to do.

Since parliamentary systems tend to feature more than two parties, often four or more, the effect has been to freeze conservative parties out of government even when they might be the most popular party in the nation. A plurality of seats in parliament is insufficient if no other party will join yours in coalition.

This obviously has been a great boon to the left. The left therefore ends up in most European governing coalitions and has had undue influence on European government policies. 

Yes, European political parties refuse to join coalitions containing openly conservative, anti-immigration parties. And yes, that makes their political system biased toward the left. But understand part of the guilt for establishing those policies had US collaboration and encouragement in those long-ago, post-World War II days. 

We in the US tend to forget that substantial numbers of Norwegians, French, Dutch, Czechs and Poles actively and enthusiastically collaborated with the Nazis. We forget, but the Europeans have not forgotten. Those memories still bias their politics.

Friday, March 28, 2025

Excellent News

Some amazing news tonight, the White House announces President Trump has signed an Executive Order ending collective bargaining for all federal agencies with a national security mission. These include the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, State, Energy, Health and Human Services, all federal Information Offices, Treasury, most of Justice, and FEMA

His rationale is that our national security requires there be no work stoppages in any of these agencies. Collective bargaining is therefore inimical to the nation's security. You need to realize the unions here banned will sue to stop this order, and the issue will likely be settled at the Supreme Court.

In my opinion this move is long overdue. I'd favor banning unions for all federal workers. Trump may view a wholesale ban as the proverbial "bridge too far."

Friday Snark

Images courtesy of Politico's 
The Nation's Cartoonists on the Week in Politics.

Tough Love Indicated

In a column criticizing German state governments for banning police officers joining or supporting the conservative AfD Party, David Strom concludes with a statement I like and endorse.

I love Europe in the way any family member loves an alcoholic family member. It pains me no end to watch the continent destroy itself, but at some point, you have to recognize that we are enabling, not helping them.

I generally share that view of the ancestral homeland.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Conflict of Interest

This article alleges the left-wing CEO of National Public Radio (NPR) Katherine Maher sits on the board of directors of Signal. It is the platform which gave Jeffrey Goldberg the White House chat about bombing the Houthis. 

That at least suggests perhaps someone who hates Trump at Signal arranged the hookup. It is possibly sabotage by the company or one of its bent minions.

An Unusual Story

A very interesting minor story on the wires today. President Trump has withdrawn the name of Rep. Elise Stefanik to be UN Ambassador. That isn't what is unusual, other names have been withdrawn.

What makes the story news is that the White House concluded she was more valuable to its policy goals staying in her House seat representing upstate New York. The Republican majority in the House is so slender that literally every vote counts.

A poor turnout in a special election to name a successor for her seat could be won by a Democrat. So whoever gets the UN job won't be a sitting member of Congress.

Something Brewing

Diego Garcia is an island in the Indian Ocean located roughly halfway between Singapore and Dar es Salaam. This article and another similar one suggest US long-range bombing assets are massing at Diego Garcia. The means one of two things.

Either they are there to add weight to the pressure Trump will put on Iran to reach a no-nukes deal, or they are there to bring pressure and, if the diplomatic effort fails, bomb to destruction Iran's nuclear program using (non-nuclear) ground-penetrating high explosive bombs. Carrier based assets will aid in this latter effort.

The intelligence behind this article comes from open-source unclassified civilian satellite look-down video. There is not a lot of overhead privacy in this modern age.

Greens Can't Do Abundance

Ruy Teixeira writes a Substack column called The Liberal Patriot. Today he is on about "abundance," the title of a recent book and a policy which several keen observers are recommending the Democrat Party adopt as a mantra. 

Today Teixeira writes that the Dems are too committed to Net Zero and the green agenda to stomach the fast, efficient growth which the abundance agenda envisions. Some key quotes:

From the profound shortage of housing where America needs it most, to our shockingly expensive and slow infrastructure projects, this country is not delivering what its people need.

In some alternative universe there may be a Democratic Party for whom this (abundance) would be an easy sell. But this Democratic Party in this universe? I have my doubts.

The culprit is a Democratic Party that puts ideology and special interests ahead of good governance. It is committed to ensuring that development is not socially harmful in any way, and does not transgress the interests of any “stakeholders.” In reality, that amounts to a promise that nothing will get done.

Cheap, reliable, plentiful energy must necessarily underpin any abundance agenda worthy of the name.

The Democrats’ base is now educated liberal whites, especially women, for whom a vision of lovely green abundance that doesn’t include distasteful things like “big-ass trucks” is an article of faith. (snip) This vision is not shared by massive numbers of Latino, young, and working-class voters.

The more I read what Teixeira writes, the more I see a man talking himself out of being a Democrat. He even admits Trump is pursuing some of the abundance agenda. My question is can he allow himself to become a MAGA Republican where the abundance agenda is known as "common sense"? Full disclosure: I've happily owned six of those "big-ass trucks," one after another since 1983, driven them all over North America, and loved them all.

Oops, I Missed the Equinox

Apologies, dear readers, I forgot to note the spring equinox which occurred a week ago. Days will keep getting longer, and nights shorter, until the third week in June.

Here on the eastern edge of the Mojave spring-like weather arrived in late February and I’ve been comfortable in short sleeves for a month or more. Winters here on the desert are more or less like anyone else’s early spring. 

Back home in Wyoming there is still snow everywhere but they are getting daytime temps above freezing so I suppose the thaw is slowly happening. We’ll get there in early May which is mud season and we’ll probably see the aspens leaf out after we arrive. Our property is aspen forest so we arrive to bare sticks and a few days later, magically we have leaves everywhere.

Weird Pharmacological Science

Fox News reports mothers’ use of acetaminophen during pregnancy is associated with greater incidence of ADHD diagnosis in children.

"Compared with no exposure, detection of acetaminophen in maternal blood during pregnancy was linked with three times the likelihood of the child developing ADHD," lead author Brennan Baker, a researcher at Seattle Children’s Research Institute, told Fox News Digital.

"Three times" greater is no small effect. What’s worse is that acetaminophen is what doctors push because it doesn’t attack stomach linings as aspirin does. My own GP recommends it. 

A possible caution with the study is that anxious mothers are more likely to experience discomfort (e.g., headaches) prompting NSAID use, and are also more likely to have neurodivergent children.

Russia Then and Now

Thinking about tariffs and diplomacy — the relations between nations — I want to look at the relations between the US and Russia, during the Cold War and now. Once again we find ourselves at odds, but it is far from “same old, same old.”

That Russia, a mini-empire styling itself the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, was the “Rome” of a would-be-world-wide quasi-religious evangelical ideology called Communism. It sought converts everywhere with some success. Even the US had a small Communist Party.

Practitioners of that ‘faith’ remain in power in North Korea, Vietnam, China and possibly Laos, although most other one-time adherents have shed its trappings and rituals. The Russian branch of the ‘faith’ collapsed under its own weight in 1991 and Communism has not made many new converts since.

Today’s Russia is merely a nationalistic authoritarian regime with no ‘missionaries’ out seeking converts. It has ambitions to return to its imperial past by becoming the military power in its “near abroad which seeks to include Ukraine and the other former SSRs., some of which (e.g., Belarus) are willing, others (e.g., the Baltic republics, Ukraine) not at all. A fair few former SSRs (e.g., the "Stans") fall somewhere in between those extremes.

Today’s Russia under Putin has tried to make itself an ideological force by arguing for conservative values in a world where those are under attack by social progressives. This has had limited success as it lacks Communism’s evangelical fervor. Thus, the new antagonism between our countries falls far short of the vigor which the Cold War inspired. Perhaps we are fortunate Putin is not especially charismatic.

Why Tariffs?

You may be wondering at President Trump’s fondness for tariffs, which of course are taxes on imported goods, having the effect of raising the price of said goods to the US buyer. For example he just announced a 25% tariff on imported autos.

I note the media are not explaining why he is doing this, beyond observing that it makes it more likely that those goods be made in the US as it thus becomes cheaper to do so to avoid the tariff. I thought I might take a stab at explaining his motives, which begin with having more manufacturing done here in the US.

Under 20 years of Obama/Biden/Bush free trade policies, the US has become a place that imports most of its manufactured goods. We don’t make a lot here. As long as the world is at peace and not under threat, this isn’t a huge problem. We get cheap goods from abroad, send money there and everybody is happy.

Except a very large percentage of our manufactured goods come from China. China is also viewed as our main competitor for hegemony — the military adversary which poses a credible threat to us and makes no bones about it. 

This is problematic because wars grind through a vast amount of manufactured stuff - most notably arms and explosives. Thus wars are won by manufacturing nations. Russia is prevailing against Ukraine because it manufactures arms and Ukraine must import most of theirs from the US and to a lesser extent Europe.

A US that doesn’t manufacture much stuff - which we are now - isn’t a credible military threat. A credible military threat is exactly what we need to be to keep others with hegemonic ambitions (mainly China) from attacking us. 

This is a major reason why President Trump wants to bring manufacturing back to the US. It will help restore our military credibility. The more credible our threats of force, the less likely they are to be challenged, the less likely we have to fight. It is “if you would have peace, prepare for war” in action.

It is also true that as a major customer of China’s manufacturing sector, our buying much less from them reduces their income stream and creates economic problems for them. This is a secondary benefit.

Manufacturing jobs tend to pay good wages to the blue collar workers who are the backbone of Trump’s coalition of supporters. A healthy home-grown manufacturing sector will go a long way toward improving the lifestyles of our blue collar workforce.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Finally ... a Possible Name

A lot being said and written about the inappropriate inclusion of Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic on a Signal group chat about military tactics - actually air strikes - on the Houthis. Something I find mildly interesting surfaced in the comments on a podcast of talking heads bloviating about this error.

@derek2966
1 day ago
Alex Nelson Wong, not Mike Waltz, set up the group. Wong is Deputy National Security Advisor. Wong invited Goldberg to join the group. Why did Wong invite Goldberg? I don't know. It may have something to do with Covington & Burling LLP losing their security clearance.

This is the first thing I've seen that names a possible perpetrator. I notice Wong's Wikipedia entry doesn't mention which Washington law firm he worked for before becoming a government official.

Wednesday Snark

Image courtesy of Lucianne.com.

Image courtesy of Instapundit.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Gender Gap Has Exploded

Ezra Klein interviewed David Shor, a pro-Democrat data guy for a polling outfit about last November's presidential election. The original is behind the New York Times paywall, but others have quoted large chunks thereof, and I take the liberty of citing one of those. Shor says:

For voters over 30, the gender gap was fairly stable at around 10 percent, which is roughly where it’s been in American politics.

[If] you look at people under the age of 30, the gender gap has exploded. Eighteen-year-old men were 23 percentage points more likely to support Donald Trump than 18-year-old women, which is just completely unprecedented in American politics.

Causing some to conclude that Democrats have lost a generation - the Zoomers - of young men. As a conservative, I'm savoring it.

Monday, March 24, 2025

Poll: Some Canadians OK With US Merger

Some very interesting polling data from the Great White North (aka Canada). The scare headline below is the most radical finding. Hat tip to RealClearWorld for the link.

Nearly half of young Canadian men would take US citizenship from Trump if offered.

Who were those most likely to agree? The young men, the educated, the affluent, and the English speakers. 

Those who would try to tell you there are no Canadian supporters of the off-hand Trump suggestion of merger of our two countries are clearly exaggerating. 

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Gender Gap Growing

Ed Driscoll posts an interesting chart showing how young men from four first world countries on three continents are trending conservative while their sisters are going the opposite direction. What is going on here?

The chart is paired with an article in The Observer, by a young woman whose take on the data is that smartphones are "poisoning the minds" of young men. I look at the same data and see something - maybe smartphones - poisoning the minds of young women, turning them in latter-day Red Guards. 

It appears the gender gap in ideology is growing. Here we see the old canard that the GOP is "the daddy party" and the Dems are "the mommy party" is actually the case.

Movin’

CBS News reports President Trump has revoked President Biden’s preferential treatment for refugees from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. Some 532,000 came in under what was called the CHNV program.

The termination of their work permits and deportation protections under an immigration authority known as parole will take effect in late April, 30 days after March 25, according to a notice posted by the federal government.

The Department of Homeland Security said it will seek the arrest and deportation of those subject to the policy change if they fail to depart the U.S. in the next 30 days. Officials are urging migrants to use the newly repurposed CBP Home smartphone app to register for self-deportation.

Needless to say, this is another good thing Trump is doing. 

Keep movin’, movin’, movin’ 
Though they’re disapprovin’ 
Keep them dogies movin’ 
Rawhide

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Process Note

Professor Steven Hayward who was Power Line's numbers guy, poster of many useful graphs and charts, and perhaps most important, impresario of The Week in Pictures, has severed his relationship with Power Line. If his leaving message was accurate, the separation is because Steve has become too busy with other aspects of his teaching and writing career.

PL's senior member John Hinderaker has taken over TWIP and will continue to offer it on Saturday mornings. Let us selfishly wish John well as he picks up this additional duty. I know if TWIP was no more I would miss it.

Saturday Snark


Images courtesy of Power Line's The Week in Pictures
and its Comments section.

Transition In Doubt

Greens and others who think about what energy sources humanity uses talk of an “energy transition” away from fossil fuels. Many of us on the right take a dim view of such claims.

Writing for City Journal, energy analyst Mark P. Mills observes that despite all the talk, no such transition has happened, is happening, or in fact, will happen.

The renewable share of final energy consumption is slowly advancing at 0.3%–0.6% per year. One does not need a mathematics degree to understand that such anemic growth rates are not the hallmarks of an “unstoppable” juggernaut.

Fossil fuels supply over 80 percent of all global needs today.

The world obviously uses far more coal, oil, and natural gas than at any time in history. Indeed, the world today uses more of every kind of energy deployed since the dawn of civilization (with the notable exceptions of whale oil).

Mills is clearly of the opinion that fossil fuels will continue to be important for the foreseeable future.

Friday, March 21, 2025

Friday Snark

Images courtesy of Politico's 
The Nation's Cartoonists on the Week in Politics.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

DOGE vs. Tesla

One wonders, could the board at Tesla Corp. act to sever Elon Musk’s role in the firm’s management? I ask this because Musk’s new hobby - DOGE - has him picking on government activities favored by the precise virtue-signaling demographic most likely to purchase Tesla cars. 

Specifically college-educated individuals with incomes over $200,000 are those most likely to (a) vote for Democrats, and (b) signal their green virtue by purchasing an EV. However, as Democrats, this demographic is likely to be opposed to Musk’s DOGE activities and his hanging with and implicitly endorsing President Trump’s MAGA populist nationalism.

Looking out for the firm’s interests, the board could ask Musk to publicly distance himself from the firm, always assuming the damage isn’t already done and dusted. News reports suggest that it may be too late.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

World War II Revisited

People who have been together for decades develop rituals, things they do at about the same time each year. Once again we have watched the 19 episodes of a two-part TV miniseries on World War II, based on two heavily researched novels by Herman Wouk: The Winds of War and War and Remembrance. It has become a midwinter ritual for the DrsC. 

If your library has the two parts on DVDs for loan, I recommend them to you. If they don't have the DVDs they probably have the two novels. Reading those is a serious time commitment, but they are excellent if you have an attention span of sufficient bandwidth. 

Herman Wouk was a noted novelist, he also wrote The Caine Mutiny and Marjorie Morningstar, plus another dozen or so. He spent the war as a US Navy officer on mine sweepers.

Part of Wouk's accomplishment is that he weaves a narrative that has you spend some time with FDR, Churchill, Mussolini and Stalin, seen through the eyes of Pug Henry as he moves from Commander to Captain to Rear Admiral. You also meet Hitler, Goering, and a bevy of German generals seen through the eyes of Armin von Roon, a fictional German officer of flag rank.

Review: The Electric State

We decided to look at the new Millie Bobby Brown film The Electric State last evening. We watched about half of the film, looked at each other, concluded it was a loser, and switched to other programming. It hadn't gotten our full attention or interested us in the ultimate fate of the characters.

In a long life I believe I have only done a "walk out" of a film 2-3 times. Electric State was a bad career choice for Ms. Brown. It was worse than her Damsel film which was also disappointing after the Enola Holmes films and Stranger Things.

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Internal Migration

Those who write at Liberal Patriot are Democrats unhappy with the direction their party has taken and with its declining acceptance in the general populace. Nate Moore writes today about the exodus blue states are experiencing and the corresponding growth in red states.

Moore isn't happy about this migration but you need not agree, I expect most COTTonLINE readers think it logical. If current migration trends continue, five years from now when the decentennial census results in reapportionment, the results will look much like the following graphic.

The projection is that 11 congressional seats (and electoral college votes) will move, following the population trends. Big losers are CA (-3) and NY (-2), with OR, MN, WI, IL, PA and RI predicted to lose one each. Big winners are predicted to be TX and FL with a gain of 4 each, while ID, UT, and AZ will each gain one. 

Not shown, don't be surprised if NV gains one as well. Minus the casinos, today's Las Vegas looks like Southern California with mile after mile of low-rise development linked together by a decent web of freeways. Its footprint has doubled or tripled in the last decade and continues to grow.

Since these are predictions, the actuality five years from now may not exactly match the above map. It will be close to what is shown. 

Culturally Insufferable

Writing for the LA Times, and echoed by msn.com, Matt Lewis advises the sad sack Democrats as follows.

People don't vote based on governance--they vote based on vibes. Trump's vibe is chaos, but it's charismatic chaos. His base doesn't care if he burns down the country as long as he looks cool doing it.

[Democrats] really have to stop being culturally insufferable.

If they want to win, they need to talk like normal human beings again. Right now your average Democrat sounds like an NPR panel discussion moderated by a yoga instructor with a Whole Foods tote bag.

Less conspicuous compassion and more old-fashioned patriotism would also help a lot.

Monday, March 17, 2025

Tariff Fairness an Old Theme for Trump

A couple of weeks ago Bret Baier ran some video of President Trump complaining about other countries taking unfair advantage of Uncle Sam with tariffs, and then followed it with video of a young Donald Trump saying very similar things to an interviewer. 

What I found striking was that Trump has held these opinions for decades. Complaining about the unfairness of foreign tariffs is no new thing with him, it has been a theme of his foreign policy outlook since his 30s.

To see how much Trump has held the same views for essentially his whole adult life, search YouTube using “young Trump interview” as your search heading, you’ll find several interviews by Mike Wallace, Oprah, etc. Trump has been a president-in-training for most of his adult life. 

I am of the opinion that he is a latter-day polymath, who has mastered several skill sets including real estate developer, entertainer, entrepreneur, impresario, deal-maker and, most recently, politician while being a bon vivant in his private life. I believe he and Musk see each other very much as kindred souls.

Navin Gruesome

Instapundit posts blogger Cher@TheFabBookLover’s characterization of CA Gov. Gavin Newsom. She writes:

Gavin Newsom is the male version of Meghan Markle. He wants so badly to be loved, but he’s so disingenuous and gives me weird, creepy vibes.

It’s because he says what he thinks you want to hear, without actually believing it himself.

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Democrats Viewed Negatively

Democrats, as a party, are in trouble. They've no consensus on who - if anyone - is leading the party. An unfriendly review writes:

A devastating new CNN poll shows the party's favorability has cratered to an abysmal 29%—the lowest since 1992. The numbers don’t lie; this is a spectacular fall from grace.

The party has hemorrhaged support, suffering a jaw-dropping 20-point collapse in favorability since January 2021, when Joe Biden was inaugurated. Even their own base is abandoning ship, with Democratic Party favorability among supporters plummeting from 81% to a pathetic 63%.

The respondents were asked "who they see as the party's leader?" Of the responses, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez came in first with 10% naming her, all others were named by fewer than that. 

Later ... NBC News has an even lower favorability number for the Democrats: 27% favorable, which includes just 7% who are "very favorable."

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Saturday Snark

Images courtesy of Power Line's The Week in Pictures
and its Comments section.