Archive for February, 2025

Open Letter To All Smooth-Brained DFL Social Media Smurfs

Friday, February 28th, 2025

To:  Smooth-brained DFL Social Media Smurfs
From:  Mitch Berg, Obstreporous Peasant
Re: When Did You Stop Beating…

SBDFLSMS,

As we watch Governor Piglet – who staged a lockdown, seized 18 months of emergency power for a 3 month emergency, started a snitch line and a “badthink” database and has spent seven years relentlessly dividing Minnesotans under the slogan “One People, One State, One Minnesota [1] – flail around at having called half of his state’s people “Nazis” and “Fascists”, I urge you to take a moment for introspection about some basic logic and, yes, morality.

To wit:

https://twitter.com/DanTheRulesNerd/status/1895254418997792948

And this person, a DFL thought-leader:

https://twitter.com/UnionLindy/status/1894950857961283984

Here’s the thing; the burden of proof is on you to prove someone is a “Nazi” or “fascist”, with some sort of evidence.  It is not on your target – we’re not “victims” – to prove they are not. 

Otherwise, you’re just a mud-slinging coward. 

That is all. 

[1] OK, that wasn’t literally the slogan.  But nobody who studied European totalitarianism in the 20th century didn’t think that when they first heard the slogan “One Minnesota”.  I guarantee it. 

Opportunity Runs Into The Door Like A Battering Ram At The Front Of An MRAP

Friday, February 28th, 2025

The Piglet isn’t running for Senate:

That leaves the field with:

  • Lt. Governor Flanagan, the one-time extremist who has drifted toward the center-left, at least as compared to
  • Ilhan Omar and
  • Leigh Finke.
  • Al Franken is also riumored to be thinking about wanting to go back to DC.  
  • Angie Crag, who just keeps barely portraying herself as “moderate” in defending her always vulnerable House seat. 

The DFL’s big advantage is their chair has far more power to shape the election field than the GOP chair does.  I suspect the wrangling before, during and after the DFL convention will reflect the wishes of whomever is the MNDFL’s sitting char.   If it were still Ken Martin, I’d suspect a lot of push behind Rep. Craig – I can’t see that the other three contenders aren’t going to have problems outside 494/694.  Franken’s a wild card – but he’s also 73.  

There are mainstream (i.e. less overtly Maoist) DFLers who say they think Craig may have an inside shot.   Which would open up CD2, which has been vulnerable ever since Jason Lewis left the seat – provided the CD2 GOP can coalesce around a viable candidate, rather

As to Walz running for a third term?   That’s gotta be a big lift – but with seemingly every other contender for statewide office in the ring for Senate, it’s hard to see who in the DFL would oppose him, as the field looks now – or which of them would do better in a Governor race. 

The wildest card of all, of course, would be vintage DFL:  Senator Smith resigns early, Walz appoints either himself or whichever candidate has the current favor of the DFL (himself or Craig, I’d suspect), potentially leaving that choice and Lt. Gov. Flanagan as incumbents next year.  

At any rate – the opportunity is there for the MNGOP, if they can tame the circuilar firing squad for one lousy cycle. 

And the size of that “if” seems to defy physics. 

Battlespace Prep, Part V

Friday, February 28th, 2025

Joe Doakes, formerly of Como Park, snuck one in after the putative (ahem) finale yesterday:

When I claim Trump must shut down the government to force Congress to slash spending because the United States is bankrupt, I get angry push-back.  

We can’t be bankrupt! That’s ridiculous.  This is the greatest nation in history.  How can we be bankrupt?  

How can you tell if someone is bankrupt?  One classic test is being unable to meet obligations they come due. That certainly is the USA.  We have to borrow more every minute to keep paying the bills. The hole never stops getting deeper.  Look at The National Debt Clock website.  Another class test is whether the person’s debts exceed their assets.  Ours certainly do. 

But we have all the gold in Fort Knox and all the national parks and stuff!   That’s worth a ton of money!  

Yes. But we owe a ton and whole lot more.  Look, 147 million ounces of gold in Fort Knox at the current price of $3,000 per ounce gives us $450 Billion worth of gold (billion with a B).  But the national debt is $37 Trillion (trillion with a T).  All the gold in Fort Knox won’t cover two percent of our national debt.  And that’s if the gold is all there at stated purity (what, you never heard of debasement, clipping or plugging? Look them up. Wouldn’t be the first time United States money was debased by our own government. Silver dollars began as pure silver but were reduced to half in the 1830s and after 1964, contain no silver at all.  The fact Trump was concerned enough to ask for a look at the gold reserve concerns me, but the fact nobody was allowed to weigh a bar or melt one one down to assay its purity sends my paranoia into overdrive.  You think Biden wouldn’t countenance stealing from it so long as he got 10% for the Big Guy?)

Yes, but Fort Knox isn’t the only gold!  We have other gold, and gold rights, and gold leases and options, none of which has been audited but Biden assured us it was there.  8,000 METRIC TONS of gold.  That’s $775 Billion worth of gold! And we have other assets, too, like Yellowstone and the White House!

If all that gold is there, sure, that’ll cover nearly 3% of the national debt.  As for all the land the federal government owns and mineral rights and navy bases, how do you determine the market value of the White House and who are you going to sell it to?  China?  Do you really want to go there?

That’s why Trump sicced Elon on finding fraud and waste, so they could drum up public support to slash the budget, so they could force Congress to stop digging the hole deeper and maybe, if we get really, really lucky, force Congress to start paying down the debt before the creditors come knocking and the United States is compelled to publicly admit we are bankrupt.  Because when that happens, nobody has money in the bank, nobody gets paid, nobody’s 401k is worth a damn, nobody gets Social Security, nobody gets welfare, nobody can fix it. 

It’s not too late.  Demand that your Congress-critter get with Trump’s program.  Before it IS too late. 

Joe Doakes

 

Passing the “big beautiful bill” earlier this week was a start. 

Open Letter To Mayor Carter

Thursday, February 27th, 2025

To:  Mayor Melvin Carter, Saint Paul
From:  Mitch Berg, Ornery Peasant and Human ATM
Re:  Election Denier?

Mayor,

You said this yesterday:

Quick point of order, yerroner – the rest of us pay taxes, too.  Lots and lots of them.

And we won the election.  In an electoral-college landslide, in fact. 

Aren’t you glad the Senate still has a filibuster?

That is all.

Battlespace Preparation IV

Thursday, February 27th, 2025

Joe Doakes formerly of Como Park emails:

We know there’s a battle coming.  Congress’s funding resolution runs out March 14.  If Trump and Congress don’t reach a deal on a new budget, the government shuts down with all the angst and drama we recall from earlier battles, with all the political risks that have made some Republicans unwilling to fight the battle again.  So in the upcoming fight over the budget, what’s our view, the Conservative view?

Personally, I’d like to see something akin to Constitutional government. Article I, Section 8 enumerates the powers given to Congress.  Go read it. It’s worth remembering that those are the ONLY powers the Founders wanted Congress to have.  To get back to that, we’d have to cut about 80% of the federal government.  I concede that’s not realistic in today’s political climate. 

What is realistic?  How about living within our means?  How about balancing income and outgo, revenue and expenditures, same as every family and small business must do?  What would it take to get there? 

We would have to cut about 2 Trillion dollars of annual spending. Is that possible?

First, let’s remember the last budget was 2019 when Trump was in office.  Starting in 2020, Congress ramped up spending to cover the extraordinary costs of fighting a world-ending epidemic of Covid.  Leaving aside the possibility  that Covid was merely an excuse to promote absentee ballots to steal the election, the spending never stopped.  Every year since 2020, Congress passed a continuing resolution which keeps spending the same amount of money as before, plus a little extra for inflation, including the emergency money for Covid and lately, money for Ukraine to the tune of a third-of-a-trillion dollars.  Surely some of that can go.

Second, let’s remember that Congress gives money to agencies to promote vague policy objectives like “safe food” or “transportation.”  What, specifically, the agency does with that money is up to the bureaucrats.  That’s why we get drag queen shows on military bases. Surely some of that can go. 

Third, let’s remember that every bureaucrat knows the first rule of budgeting is “spend it or lose it.”  They will hide behind a “hostage puppy” to protect the rest of their funding (so named for the famous National Lampoon cover). They will insist that if we cut the funding for drag queens, the puppy will die, the child in Ethiopia will starve, the meat will not be inspected, the Washington Monument will be closed, and Grandma will have to eat dog food to survive. We have heard it all before, surely they can’t expect us to fall for it again?

So what do we do?  First, we don’t fall for the  hostage puppy, we stand firm. If bureaucrats would rather let the Ethiopian kid starve than give up their drag queen shows, on their heads be it.  Second, we empower someone to look through agency budgets to cut out silliness to focus on core functions.  Musk’s team is doing that now but it ought to be a full time job for somebody. Third, we insist on real cuts now, not gimmicks like “out year” reductions 10 years down the road.  And most importantly, we get tough – we harden our hearts – so we can ride out the wailing and gnashing of teeth, the rending of garments, the accusations of every -ism imaginable. 

Why this fight?  Why now?  Because we’re nearly at the end of the road. We’re short about $2 Trillion a year which we borrowed to get by, but that’s been going on for so long we now owe $36 Trillion dollars which is more than the entire Gross Domestic Product of $26 Trillion. Do you realize what that means?  It means we owe more on the national debt than the value of all the goods and services produced in the entire nation.  

We pay more for interest on the national debt than the entire defense budget.  

By every reasonable measure, the United States is bankrupt.

It comes down to surgical cuts now or default on our debts later and then everything collapses into complete anarchy.  Choose wisely.  And demand that your elected representatives do the same. 

Joe Doakes

 

One of the upshots of Americans (induced) economic illiteracy is that if they’ve gotten any education in economics at all, it’s been in Keynesianism. As such, they think the natural, effective response to an economic downturn is to pour taxpayer money into the situation.

Which merely stretches out the natural recovery, as it did in 1933, and in 2008. 

In an economy with healthy fundamentals, a sharp downturn in a free market serves to kill off a whole lot of bad ideas – unsustainable dotcoms in 2001, subprime mortgages in 2008, and probably a whole lot of bubble-like irrational exuberance over AI today.   

Now – are we as a society smart enough to know this?   The fact that the Obama regime went back to subsidizing subprime mortgages after the ’08 recession (which their policies dragged out for years) indicates “probably not”. 

 

A Cold Mississippi, Only Dumber

Thursday, February 27th, 2025

Reading and math scores in Minnesota schools are lagging behind those of smug Minnesotans’ eternal punching bag, Mississippi.  

This should fix that:

Starting this fall for the 2025-26 school year, Minnesota’s public schools will be required to teach third graders how to use non-binary gender pronouns in writing sentences.

The Minnesota Department of Education’s new K-12 English Language Arts (ELA) standards and benchmarks were adopted in 2023 and are scheduled for full implementation at the beginning of the 2025-26 school year. Reviewed and revised on a 10-year cycle, Minnesota’s ELA standards and benchmarks are organized into three strands: 1) reading, 2) writing, and 3) listening, speaking, viewing, and exchanging ideas.

That’ll fix things.

Comforting The Comfortable, Afflicting The Afflicted

Wednesday, February 26th, 2025

I’m old enough to remember when Rolling Stone was vividly counter-culture.

But only barely .

Read this piece on Amy Klobuchar.

Pressed for a message to viewers, the Democratic senator cited her own disenfranchised feelings since the inauguration, saying it’s important, “To not give up, to not look down [and] to not end up in The Container Store like I did for three weekends in a row cause I decided I wanted to bring order to my life.”

Klobuchar added that one interaction in particular at The Container Store made her feel less alone in her frustrations. “This constituent comes up and says, ‘I know why you’re here,’ the senator reccounted. “It’s cause you feel like everything’s out of control and you’re trying to control it.”

Klobuchar told a similar story in a recent podcast interview with The Daily Beast. As the publication notes, the four-term senator “was on the hunt for baskets to organize her coffee and tea collection—and, in retrospect, the broader sense of satisfaction that comes with things being the way they’re supposed to be.”

 

Am I the only one who thinks is reads like an ad for the Container store woven not-all-that-cleverly into a piece on Klobuchar’s (checks notes) stunnng courageous boss-lady journey over the past month?

Does she need to moisturize, with all the tongue-baths she gets from BIg Media?

Battlespace Preparation III

Wednesday, February 26th, 2025

Joe Doakes, formerly of Como Park, emails:

Why is Trump in such a frantic rush to issue executive orders, fire employees, deport people, surrender Ukraine to Russia?  Is he out of his mind?

No, he’s out of time.  Congress’ most recent continuing budget resolution runs out March 14th. Trump has three more weeks to set the stage for the budget showdown. He knows every Democrat will vote against spending cuts to balance income against outgo. He knows at least some Republicans will join them.  He needs to act fast to get public support on his side so he can stand up to Congress and say,  “No more.”

Elon Musk and his team of auditors continue to find examples of fraud and waste that piss off normal people. Why are we paying for stupid stuff like that?  The judges who refuse to let the auditors do their job and who halt layoffs, piss off normal people. Why are you leaving the thieves in charge of the checkbook?  The politicians screaming about deporting illegal alien criminals piss off normal people.  Why are you putting scum ahead of citizens?  Why not put Americans first?

And it’s working.  Trump has extraordinary approval numbers. He is going to need that public support when he tells Congress, “No more,” and when he tells Ukraine, “No more,” and when he tells rogue federal employees (including some judges), “No more.”  

It’s all coming to a head in a few weeks. The media will scream. Democrats will scream.  Europeans politicians, Catholic bishops, liberal judges, and Hollywood celebrities will scream. Let them. Elections have consequences. It’s our turn now. 

Get ready.  

Joe Doakes

More tomorrow.

Mercy Killing

Tuesday, February 25th, 2025

There’s a move afoot to kill off the Northstar Commuter Rail line…

Well, no. There’s a move to finish the job that a misbegotten concept, government bloat and Covid started:

In 2023, it cost taxpayers over $11.5 million to operate, but the line only generated about $325,000 in fare revenue, according to a new study

As ridership has dwindled, the Northstar line’s future has become uncertain.  

Before the pandemic, the service carried between 2,200 and 3,000 riders on weekdays. However, during the pandemic, ridership plummeted by nearly 98%, dropping to just 60 weekday riders in April 2020. Today, the line still struggles to attract passengers, with only a couple hundred people using the service.

 

The funny – as in “weird”, not “ha ha” for the most part – thing is, commuter rail was the kind of rail service that should have had some shot at making sense; they use (or are supposed to use)  existing right of way, can use fairly minimal stations, and don’t have to tear up streets or utilities like the light rail lines through the city, and can be designed and purposed to address actual transportation needs across larger metropolitan areas.  

And yet they botched it.

And the bureaucracy’s defense – “practice makes perfect”?  Well…

Let’s see:

  • The Blue Line (2005) went in without much of a hitch (provided you leave out the 30+ year delay between the clearing of the right of way and the actual building of the line)
  • The Northstar (2009) had all kinds of bureaucratic and legal glitches over right-of-way, and of course the customary over-engineering.   Its problems are noted herein.
  • The Green LIne (2014) went 50% over budget, and was a huge waste even at that; “light rail” is designed to be hypothetically efficient with stops every mile, so it can run at 50-60MPH over clear rights of way.  Trolleys are designed to go stop to stop down crowded streets.   The Met Council decided to make a stupid compromise – run a big train down a crowded street; sort of like.using a Corvette to pull a beer wagon.  
  • The Southwest Light Rail is way over double budget and several years behind schedule, with little sign of being ready much before the end of the decade.

So I don’t think practice is doing is much good. 

Battlespace Preparation II

Tuesday, February 25th, 2025

Joe Doakes, formerly of Como Park, emails:

A federal government shutdown is coming in three weeks.  Democrats and the media will have a meltdown and will try to frighten the public, claiming the sky is falling and we are all going to die. Get ready for it. The shutdown will be tough but it is neecessary.  

The federal budget is … unknown. We don’t have a budget. We haven’t had an actual budget where expenditures are debated and prioritized since 2019, when Trump was last in office. Every year of the Biden administration, Congress simply spent money without caring what it was spent on or how much was spent.  The money runs out March 14.

The federal government spends about $6 Trillion but only takes in about $4 Trillion so it borrows the other $2 Trillion. That’s the deficit – the amount we are short – $2,000,000,000,000. That is how much fraud and waste Elon Musk is hoping to cut, just to get income and outgo to break even.  That’s how much Democrats (and, to be fair, some RINOs, too) are trying to protect.

Come March, Trump must either cave in to Congress and continue to let them have a blank check, or he must stand up to Congress and refuse to sign more blank checks. If he refuses and Congress does not come up with a budget acceptable to him, the government shuts down until an acceptable deal is made.

Trump is a deal maker but he is not a quitter.  The showdown is coming and the shutdown is his only leverage.  Get ready for it.  

Joe Doakes

 

Part III coming up tomorrow. 

Level-Setting

Tuesday, February 25th, 2025

This sums up the moment we’re in as well as anything I’ve seen. 

Worth a watch.

Battlespace Preparation I

Monday, February 24th, 2025

Joe Doakes, formerly of Como Park, emails:

We should start warning people now to expect bad news so they’re not upset and disheartened when it comes

We’ve known for years that Biden was senile but everybody in the establishment, administration and media lied to us to hide it.   We know they tried to blame the price of eggs on Trump when they are the ones who killed all the chickens. We know they are liars. Keep that in mind.

Every quarter the Biden administration triumphantly released figures showing the Biden economy was growing and there were record numbers of new hires.  And every quarter they would quietly release a few revisions and corrections which showed that there were practically no hires and if you discount the lies, the economy was in a recession heading for depression.

 It’s going to get worse. Economists talk about gross domestic product as a measure of success of the economy but one of the numbers in the formula to calculate GDP is government spending. Take out the 2 trillion dollars of fraud and waste that Elon Musk’s team has identified and the problem will be obvious. We’re definitely in a recession and have been for years, probably a depression. 

 Get ready for headlines screaming Trump depression, Trump ruins economy, worst economy in years.  No, it’s an honest look at the economy.  And now that we have the real figures, we can start making changes necessary to fix it. 

Get ready.  It’s coming.

Joe Doakes

 

Two more parts to come.  I’ll save my comments for after Part III.

Whatever You Do…

Monday, February 24th, 2025

…don’t you dare claim there’s intrinsic bias in Twin Cities media:

So many ways to word that:  “uphold federal immigraiton law”, “stop abuse of the healthcare system”, “drop non-qualified non-citizens from taxpayer-funded healthcare”, among others.

But they just have to imply malice.  

You think you hate the media enough?  You…well, you know where this goes, right?

Sunday Afternoon Open Thread

Sunday, February 23rd, 2025

Go to it!

I Heard It On The NARN

Saturday, February 22nd, 2025

Adam Schwarze is running for the GOP nomination to run for US Senate.

And here’s today’s music list:

Stragegy

Friday, February 21st, 2025

So, somewhere, in some market research or PR firm, once upon a time, apparently some political marketing executive figured out that…

https://twitter.com/LtGovFlanagan/status/1892681608609603625

…an eternal diet of photos of politicians was all DFLers needed to provide to keep winning elecitons.

Not giving press conferences.

Not debating.

Not engaging with voters. 

Not actually solving problems or, y’know, doing anything but taking pictures of themselves with food. 

“Now, wait”, you might say.  “What about those photos Republican politicians do, with the swimsuits…

https://twitter.com/RealTrump2020_/status/1823843494198174196

…and the shooting…

https://twitter.com/GuntherEagleman/status/1856907362625335317

OK, sure!   The GOP is to self-defense and flirtatious PG-rated sexuality that seems borderline prudish on TV today, as the DFL is to stuffing their faces. 

I’m good with that. 

The real question is – how is Tim Walz going to raise the steaks?

Er, stakes…

No, wait…

Auditioning For “The View”

Thursday, February 20th, 2025

Conservatives – and humans with any sense of history or moral conscience – have been blasting CBS’s Margaret Brennan for blaming the Holocause on “free speech”.

Seems pretty indefensible.

Now, some do indeed try to defend Brennan. One such argument points to the fact that the Nazis did co-opt free speech. In an editorial in 1928, Joseph Göbbels, Hitler’s social media director, wrote, “We are an anti-parliamentarian party that for good reasons rejects the Weimar constitution and its republican institutions . . . We enter the Reichstag to arm ourselves with democracy’s weapons. If democracy is foolish enough to give us free railway passes and salaries, that is its problem. It does not concern us. Any way of bringing about the revolution is fine by us.”

So yes. The Nazis co-opted free speech. to gain power. .

They also co-opted many of the other institutions of German society – the Lutheran and Catholic churches, the school system, academia (Hitler’s inner circle was disproportionately artists, writers and intelledtuals, not thugs), the bureaucracy (in effect a fourth branch of government), and eventually the military, as well the quirks of the structure of German government under the Bismarck constitution (which the Weimar constitution didn’t change much, other than replacing the Kaiser with an elected President).

So it’s not a very good defense of Brennan.

So let’s make sure we’re clear on *why* this exchange happened.

  • VP Vance loudly and rightly castigated Europe for curtailing free speech – arresting people for social media posts, confiscating computers, etc.
  • Brennan tried to press Rubio, “You’re standing in a country where free speech was weaponized to commit a genocide”. Brennan was saying because the Weimar version of “free speech” was one of the *many* factors the Nazis (as you cite with Göbbels) were able to use to gain power, the Germans and Brits are *right* to curtail free speech [1].

In some ways, it’s the “why was your skirt too short?” argument.

In others, it’s much more sinister than that.

Remember – Big Left’s house PR firms have been strongly hinting that free speech is just too complicated and dangerous for us proles. Harris and Walz *ran on* curtailing free speech, including reinforcing the (very Göbbelsian) alliance between the DOJ and Big Tech. Governor Walz, who is in many ways the exposed “id” of today’s center-left, established a database to track “badthink” in Minnesota.

The system of which Brennan is a privileged part isn’t even being coy about it. They think free speech (for the rabble) is a bad thing, and they act on that belief.

Rubio pointed out, absolutely correctly, that it wasn’t peoples’ right to speak freely, but *a government with too much power*, that committed genocide. No need for an apology – it’s true.

Brennan is literally everything that’s wrong with today’s news media. I will be standing on Fifth Avenue pelting her with (rhetorical) rocks and garbage as security escorts her out of Black Rock when she’s eventually laid off, on her way to her inevitable job at NPR or “The View”.

[1 Well, *some* peoples’ free speech, anyway.

 

The Buck Stops Ne’er

Wednesday, February 19th, 2025

Up next in “profiles in courage”:  LA Mayor Karen Bass takes the firm moral stance that her people…

…er…

https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1892232820254290324

They, the people of Los Angeles pay good taxpayer money for that fortune teller who reads the future for good or bad auguries.  

Handicapping

Wednesday, February 19th, 2025

So – Tina Smith is retiring from politics.

The rumor mill has it that the Walz camp is pressuring Smith to resign early, so he can appoint himself – setting himself up as an incumbent in the Senate race (and Flanagan in a hypothetical governor race), and giving him and Gwen that “inside the beltway” view they clearly lust for.  Flanagan entering the race changes that equation, maybe.

But let’s put a pin in the rumor, and talk about what we do know:  there are five DFL candidates so far saying they’re running, or thinking strongly about it:

  • Gov. Walz
  • Lt. Gov. Flanagan
  • Rep. Ilhan Omar
  • Rep. Angie Craig
  • State Rep. Leigh Finké.

Who’s gonna get the nod in the end?

We’ll come back to that.

SOP – One thing Ken Martin has always been good at is concealing the metro DFL’s insanity to the state at large.  He’s sought, I think it’s fair to say, to convey the image that the DFL isn’t thst different from the Humphrey/Mondale DFL that everyone’s grandparents voted for while listening to WCCO and talking about Bud Grant over a Hamms and some walleye.  

See also 2018 – when the DFL convention was well on its way to endorsing Erin Murphy and Erin Maye Quade for the top of the gubernatorial ticket, as well as radical Matt Pelikan for Attorney General.  Martin stepped in, marshalled the party’s resources, attached Walz to Peggy Flanagan to keep the progressive base happy(er), and dragged him across the. primary finish line with barely a 40% plurality. 

With Ken Martin in charge, one might presume the machinations would end up something like…

    • State Rep. Leigh Finké – kryptonite outside CD4-5.   Ultra-progs might rally around Finké at the convention – especially now that Flanagan looks like a relative moderate – but the ultra-progressivr DSA vote would still get split with… 
    • Rep. Ilhan Omar, who would also be poison statewide, but who can raise money like…well, a Democrat with connections in Hollywood.  
    • Lt. Gov. Flanagan – She used to be considered borderline radical – she had the most “progressive” voting record in the MN House in 2018.   Is she progressive enough to keep the loony vote from moving to Omar and maybe Finké?  And while she was in literally every Walz ad, news release and selfie from 2018 to five minutes after he got off the national campaign trail, she hasn’t actually done anything.   What does she run on – being Tim Walz’s insurance policy? 
    • Rep. Angie Craig – On the one hand, she could climb into her jeep and make some more ads cavorting around Le Seuer county with some central-casting Good Ol’ Boys to make herself more appealing to Greater Minnesota than the three above.   Which leaves…
    • Gov. Walz, the incumbent.  On the one hand, polling shows he’s still got general approval – which is inexplicable to me.  He’s got a national profile.  He’s got fundraising chops like Omar – likely similar to those Crag draws from.  

If Ken Martin were in charge, I’d guess he’d throw the state DFL behind Walz, offer to get behind Flanagan for Governor, promise resources to soften and broaden Omar’s image for a future Senate run whenever A-Klo leaves office. 

But that was Ken Martin.   

Swerve: Persistent rumor has it that Ken Martin will be replaced by Richard Carlbom – former head (however briefly) of “Protect” Minnesota (remember them?) and before that the architect of the Same Sex Marriage amendment push.

On the one hand, he’s more openly allied with the “progressive” wing than Martin. 

On the other, he’s smart enough to have sold same sex marriage as a “moderate-enough” issue to win a statewide vote. 

If I had to predict…

The Right Victims

Tuesday, February 18th, 2025

Star-Tribune, 2020:  Crippling mass layoffs due to knee-jerk government response to Covid.   Economy in the tank.  Governor Klink sics his pet Soros Attorney General on dissenters, declares emergency power, sets up a snitch line. 

Star Tribune:   <Crickets>

Star Tribune, 2025:  A pulse:

https://twitter.com/StarTribune/status/1891608725820960823

I keep saying “you don’t hate the media enough”.   I’m trying to figure out a way to convey that idea without wearing it out.

The Problem Is Families

Tuesday, February 18th, 2025

Dunking on the MNDFL’s social media intern isn’t “punching down”.  It’s “squishing something with my foot”. 

But this one tells us a lot about the DFL. 

The intern is looking at something in the GOP platform:

Forget for a moment that they deflected from the GOP’s correct assertion that the DFL calls post-partum care “anti-abortion” – the crisis pregnancy center may be as noir of a béte to the MNDFL as Trump himself.

But look at the bit the intern highlighted:   it’ll show you how depraved the DFL is. The highlighted bit in the GOP platform asserts that *fathers should have rights* as well as obligations”.  

The DFL’s position is that not just the fetus, but the father, is just a clump of cells.  

Every time I think I hate the DFL enough, I find out I’m not even close.

Eras

Monday, February 17th, 2025

Do pseudo-religious cults reflect the times in which they develop? Or does popular culture make the various cults the symbols of the times?

I’m sure there’s an online sociologist or philosopher, somewhere, who has thought this before – feel free to point them out – but what the heck.  It’s my blog, I’ll derive if I want to.

Think about the major cults that’ve made news over the past five or six decades:

The Manson Family formed in the Sixties – communal pseudo-hippies, living on LSD, intertwined with California popular culture – and in some ways marked the end of the Sixties.

The Peoples Temple – like an EST seminar run amok?  All about the seventies. 

Heavens Gate?  Even though it ended with a mass suicide in ’97, it flourished (after a fashion) in the eighties, for reasons that seemed to match the decade. 

The Branch Davidians?   Synonymous with the ’90s – in a decade of groups that fought the law and the law won, they were the big kahuna of them all. 

The 2000s?   My theory breaks down a little here, unless you count militant Wahhabi Islam which, conveniently for my theory, dominated American culture more than any cult in history. 

And with the war over and lost, we can go back to normal…

…well, not “normal”.  

It’s all setup for my theory that this particular cult may be perfectly set to define the 2020s, or vice versa, so far.

Our Moronic Elites

Monday, February 17th, 2025

Margaret Brennan has emerged in this past few months as the poster girl for all that is stupid and depraved about our “elites”. 

But even I didn’t think she’d go here…:

Stupid reporter?

Or a natural progression of the whole “free speech is bad” thing that elites were pushing during a campaign where the Democrats were opposing it?

Why choose?

Things Happening Too Fast?

Sunday, February 16th, 2025

Bigman asked for it.  What the hey.  ‘

Sunday open thread. 

We’ll do more, earlier in the day, next time.

I Heard It On The NARN

Saturday, February 15th, 2025

Today’s song list:

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