Wednesday, September 06, 2023

Kylie Minogue, Kyle Kulinski and Doo-Doo DeSantis

First up, my daughter loves Kylie Minogue's new song "Tension" and asked me to note the video.


When I was a kid, I shared music with my dad all the time -- we still do, in fact.  So I am so glad that my daughter's into music as well.  I hope we'll always be able to talk about music. 


Now this is Kyle Kulinski's segment on Tucker Carlson's new show topic:  Barack Obama's gay lover Larry Sinclair. 


In 2008, Sinclair came out with his story.  He was huge -- fat -- then.  Kind of like Tara Reade now.  And he insisted that you had to picture the way he looked then (1999).  So he's a bit more aware than Tara, I'll give him that.  

Is he telling the truth?

I don't know.  I didn't know in 2008.  


But I do think this is important because this is the gutter Tucker is rolling around in.  Tucker was always sleaze.  He was always trash.  Whores like Jimmy Dore and Glenneth Greenwald and Aaron Mate -- all the grifters, in fact, wanted to insist he was this journalist worthy of praise.  


No.

He's not.  He's tabloid TV and it tells us what Jimmy Dore and Glenneth and Aaron and Max Blumenthal and all those s**t f**ks are into.  They're all fake asses.  Just like that mother Tucker.


Doo-Doo Ron Ron DeSantis better run run because his donors are.  Alex Isenstadt and Jessica Piper (POLITICO) report:


Former Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner was among Ron DeSantis’ biggest boosters during the 2022 midterm election, giving nearly $1 million to his reelection bid. But as he has surveyed the field of GOP candidates for president, Rauner — a wealthy former private equity executive who was DeSantis’ fifteenth biggest donor in last year’s election — has not given any more money to the Florida governor. Rauner told POLITICO he thinks another candidate, former U.N Ambassador Nikki Haley, has a better shot of defeating President Joe Biden than DeSantis.

[. . .]

Rauner isn’t the only former mega-DeSantis donor who’s refused to open his wallet for DeSantis. Of the 50 donors who gave at least $160,000 in the years leading up to his 2022 reelection campaign, only 16 — less than a third — provided funds to the super PAC Never Back Down, which can receive unlimited contributions, through the end of June. Eight other major donors gave directly to his presidential campaign but not the super PAC.

The top 50 list includes five donors who are now financially supporting rival presidential candidates. And of those who are giving money to the DeSantis campaign or his super PAC, five are splitting their funds with other candidates.

The inability of DeSantis to convert more of his gubernatorial donors into presidential ones is emblematic of a larger shortcoming of his current campaign. And it presents particular problems for the governor precisely because his operation has leaned so heavily on the super PAC to perform basic campaign functions.


Why would anyone want to throw good money out for bad?  He's a loser.  Doo-Doo is a loser and the people are catching on.  NBC NEWS notes that Doo-Doo is sinking in the polls:


According to the Wall Street Journal’s polling, Trump held a 24-point lead over DeSantis back in April, 48% to 24%. But now it’s a 46-point advantage for Trump, 59% to 13% (though the rest of the GOP field has changed during this time).

Or take CNN’s polling, which had Trump ahead of DeSantis by 21 points nationally back in June, 47% to 26%. But Trump’s lead has now ballooned to 34 points, 52% to 18%.

Or look at Fox News’ poll, which had DeSantis at 28% back in February, versus 43% for Trump.

But Fox’s latest national poll — back in mid-August — had DeSantis at 16% (versus 53% for Trump). 

Altogether, the pattern is clear: DeSantis’ national polling percentages have gone from the mid- to high-20s earlier this year to the teens now. And instead of battling directly with Trump, he's fighting fellow rivals for the right to remain the top alternative.


And Doo-Doo and his racism got rebuked by a judge.  Nate Moore (FLORIDA TIMES-UNION) reports:

 A Florida judge last week struck down a congressional map backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis that, in defiance of the Florida constitution, stripped away the ability of Black North Florida voters to elect the candidate of their choice, a rejection not just of the map but also of an imperial view of the governor's powers that the maps' defenders sought to advance in court.
DeSantis cast himself not just as a governor but as a judge: He unilaterally decided a popular voter-approved amendment to the Florida constitution, called the Fair Districts Amendment, violated the U.S. Constitution and thus did not need to be followed. And so he took it upon himself to, against the wishes of the Legislature, advance a map that deleted a North Florida district that provided an opportunity for Black voters to elect the candidate of their choice and replaced it with a whiter, conservative district whose power is concentrated in the exurban Nassau and Clay county neighborhoods surrounding Jacksonville. In doing so, DeSantis set himself directly at odds with the state constitution and with a previous decision by the Florida Supreme Court — a recalcitrant posture the state's lawyers acknowledged was deliberately struck — and he wiped away nearly 30 years of congressional representation even his conservative legislative allies tried to preserve.

It was a brazen ploy from a governor who has now twice suspended elected state prosecutors for, in his words, "effectively nullif(ying) certain laws in the state of Florida," the very sin his lawyers attempted to defend to disastrous results in state court.

"The judicial branch alone has the power to declare what the law is, including whether the Florida Constitution’s provisions are themselves unconstitutional," Second Judicial Circuit Judge J. Lee Marsh wrote in his order last week.




Meanwhile, The Miami Herald, one of Florida’s largest papers, published an editorial on Tuesday criticizing him for using “the power of government to assault the freedoms of anyone he and his supporters consider different.”


“Black people, gay and trans people, and immigrants have all felt the unmistakable hostility of the state,” the editorial began. “In his pursuit of a far-right record that could outstrip Donald Trump’s, DeSantis has systematically — during five years in office, with a lockstep Republican Legislature — turned Florida into an unwelcoming place for many.”

“As DeSantis runs for president, voters across the country only have to look at Florida to understand what he’s pushing. Divisiveness. Anger. Marginalization of anyone who might not be white, Christian, straight or whose family doesn’t go back generations in the United States,” it continued.

Indeed, Equality Florida, the NAACP, and the Florida Immigrant Coalition have all issued travel advisories telling queer people, Black people, and immigrants not to visit Florida. Several major conventions are now avoiding the state and Disney has killed a $1 billion development plan for central Florida.

“What’s going on in Florida isn’t a left-versus-right thing. It’s a right-versus-wrong thing,” the editorial board added. “Going after various groups of people to push them out of public life isn’t about liberalism or conservatism. It’s about denying them human dignity and human rights. DeSantis, though, specializes in dread and fear. So far, he has been restricted to one state. Imagine what he would do if he exported his vision to the whole country.”


Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Wednesday, September 6, 2023.  The US State Dept wants to give out 'advice' on Kirkuk, Baghdad would rather make trouble for Kurdistan than make billions of dollars in oil revenue, hate merchant Ron DeSantis continues to destroy Florida and aims to do the same to the United States.


Over the past weekend, the federal government was supposed to return buildings to the KDP (see yesterday's "Iraq snapshot").  The KDP is the biggest political party in the Kurdistan.  Following the non-binding referendum the Kurdistan held on independence, the federal government grabbed up the buildings in a retaliatory exercise.  In the lead up to the weekend, some began protesting the handover -- some included Shi'ite militias.  Chenar Chalak (RUDAW) notes, "Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) and their supporters staged a sit-in near the headquarters of the Iraqi military’s Joint Operations Command (JOC) in Kirkuk and blocked the main Kirkuk-Erbil highway for nearly a week, causing inconvenience for incoming and outgoing citizens using the key road, and frustration for nearby residents." Were Kirkuk not oil-rich and a disputed territory, it might have gone differently.  On Saturday, four Kurds were killed in clashes and over a dozen more injured by the 'protesters' who didn't want the handover to take place.  

Yesterday, at a US State Dept press briefing, spokesperson Vedant Patel was asked about this incident.

QUESTION: Thank you, Vedant. A few questions about Iraq. The first: What’s your comment about the recent events in Kirkuk, which is disputed area in Iraq? There were protesting between the Kurds and Arabists. Four protesters were killed and dozens were wounded and arrested. What’s your comment on that, and what is the U.S. view about the current tension between Kurds and Arabists in Kirkuk?

MR PATEL: So we’re closely monitoring the tensions in Kirkuk. We condemn the violence that took place and express our condolences to the families of those killed. The U.S. calls on all parties to resolve any disputes through dialogue and through the activation of Article 140 of the Iraqi constitution.

QUESTION: One more question between – the disputes between Baghdad and Erbil over the budget and also revenue sharing. There are still the Baghdad refuse to disburse the KRG shares, and the KRG accusing Baghdad that they are – they have an intention to fuel the current financial crisis in KRG just to have some to get more gains, strategic gains in the Kurdistan region. Have you any engagement with both Baghdad and Erbil on this?

MR PATEL: We of course engage regularly with partners in Baghdad and Erbil, and I will let our missions in both of those cities speak to this engagement with any more specificity.



The US calls on all parties to resolve any disputes through dialogue and through the activation of Article 140 of the Iraqi constitution?  Did the reporters have to pay a cover charge during Patel's stand-up?

Article 140 was supposed to be implemented by the end of 2007.  Per the Constitution that the US government is now saying should be followed.  In spring of 2006, the US government installed Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister of Iraq following a CIA assessment that argued Nouri would be easy for the US government to control due to his immense paranoia.  He was prime minister at the end of 2007 and he refused to follow the Constitution.

He continued to refuse throughout his first term.  In the March 2010 elections, Nouri was voted out of office.  Iraqiya won that election and its leader, Ayad Allawi, should have been given the right to form the government.

Instead, Nouri refused to step down.  And the US government went along with it.  For eight months and several days following the March 2010 election, the government had a political stalemate.  Instead of demanding that Nouri -- who had brought secret prisons and torture chambers -- step down and that the votes of the Iraqi people be honored, then-US President Barack Obama had then-Vice President Joe Biden oversee the negotiation of a legal contract -- The Erbil Agreement -- between the leaders of the various political blocs and it would give Nouri a second term and Nouri would agree to give the blocs different things that they wanted.  The Kurdistan, for example, wanted Article 140 implemented.  In writing, Nouri agreed to it.  After the signing of the contract, the day after, the Iraqi parliament finally met up and Nouri was then named prime minister-designate -- this was November of 2010 -- and he promised publicly that Article 140 would be implemented before the end of the year . . . promised that until the start of the next month.  He'd need more time.

As we said at that time, the Kurdistan leaders were being idiots to believe that Nouri would implement because of a legal contract when, despite it being mandated in the Iraqi Constitution, he'd refused to implement it.

Nouri never did.  This despite that day in Parliament, when Nouri was named prime minister-designate, Barack personally calling Ayad Allawi and asking him to get Iraqiya members back into Parliament (there had been a walk out) and swearing that The Erbil Agreement had the full backing of the United States.

The US never gave another thought to that contract -- one that they had honestly imposed upon Iraq.

So it's really funny to hear the US State Dept now insist that the Iraqi Constitution needs to be followed when they could have made it happen back in 2007 and again back in 2010.  

Brookings warned about this while Bully Boy Bush was in office.  They noted this needed to be implemented and the issue needed to be resolved.  Instead, it's been kick the can all along.

Baghdad is currently refusing to pay what it owes Kurdistan from the national budget.  It's trying to sew chaos in Kurdistan.  AFP reports:

Thousands of people carrying flags of Iraqi Kurdistan demonstrated on Tuesday in the autonomous region over unpaid civil service salaries which they blamed on Baghdad, an AFP correspondent reported.

The protest occurred in a region where activists usually accuse local Kurdistan authorities of repressing any sign of dissent.

It came in the context of simmering tensions after protests turned violent and led to the deaths of four people on Saturday in the multi-ethnic city of Kirkuk, whose control has historically been disputed between Iraqi Kurdistan and federal authorities in Baghdad.

"Kurdistan will not back down in the face of the Iraqi authorities' hostile policies," one banner said at the demonstration in Dohuk, the third-biggest city in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq.

"Solidarity with our people in Kirkuk," said another placard.

An administrator in a hospital, Massoud Mohamed, said he had not received a salary in two months. "We must get our rights," the 45-year-old said. "They want to weaken our region."

 

Erbil-based Kurdish media outlet Rudaw said several officials, including governor of Dohuk Ali Tatar, took part in the protests.

Mr Tatar blamed Dohuk's lack of oil revenue for the salary issue.

"When we had oil, we distributed salaries properly. What is 500b dinars ($381m) enough for?" he said, according to Rudaw.

In March, a dispute between Baghad and Erbil escalated over revenue sharing and oil production after the International Chamber of Commerce ruled against Kurdistan's unilateral oil exports under its own 2007 law.

Since March 25, more than 450,000 b/d of oil that usually heads to the Mediterranean remains offline amid lingering issues among Baghdad, Erbil and Ankara over the resumption of flows.


Some analysts place the number of revenues lost as a result of Baghdad's actions on restricting the oil to Turkey to be up to four billion dollars.  Meanwhile, THE NEW ARAB reports:

The US is storing offensive military weapons at a base in Iraq, despite an agreement meant to see the US transition from a combative to a training and advisory role almost two years ago, a senior Iraqi military official has said.

The source told The New Arab's Arabic-language sister site Al-Araby Al-Jadeed that he had seen weaponry including Black Hawk and Apache helicopters present during a recent visit to the Ain al-Asad base in western Iraq by Iraqi military officials.

"The recent visit of the military delegation to Ain al-Asad base revealed the presence of offensive equipment and weapons," the official reportedly said.


Turning to the US, Val Demings is a former police officer and a former member of the US House of Representatives.  She Tweets:


On yesterday's DEMOCRACY NOW!, the responsibility of those who preach hate was addressed.


AMY GOODMAN: We’re looking now at the rise in racist attacks in the United States and a new campaign to take back the mic from those who seed hate. The latest deadly attack came just over a week ago in Jacksonville, Florida, when a white supremacist gunman shot and killed three Black people at a Dollar General store, then shot himself dead. The gunman used racial slurs, had a swastika-emblazoned assault-style AR-15 rifle, along with a handgun. He attacked the store in a predominantly Black neighborhood after being turned away from the HBCU campus of Edward Waters University, the historically Black college. Law enforcement officials say there’s no question the killings were racially motivated. The three victims were Angela Carr, Jerrald Gallion and AJ Laguerre Jr. This is Sabrina Rozier, grandmother of Gallion’s 4-year-old daughter.

SABRINA ROZIER: All my grandbaby keeps saying is “Where’s my daddy?” And all I can do is grab her, because I don’t have the words right now. … I thought racism was behind us, but evidently it’s not. You was a coward. You went in and shot these innocent people for nothing, that you didn’t even know.

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Sabrina Rozier, speaking with CNN.

Federal law enforcement has opened a civil rights investigation into the attack as a possible hate crime and act of domestic violent extremism. This comes as federal data shows hate crimes are on the rise in the United States, that Black people were targeted in half of all the racially motivated hate crimes.

On Saturday, President Biden addressed the Jacksonville attack when he was in Florida to tour storm damage after Hurricane Idalia.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: We’re still reeling from the shooting rampage near Edward Waters University, an HBCU, last weekend, a terrorist act driven by racial hatred and animus. Our hearts are with you, those of you who were affected and all your families. A terrorist act, as I said, driven by hatred and animus.

And, ladies and gentlemen, let me say this clearly: Hate will not prevail in America. Hate will not prevail in America. Racism will not prevail in America. Domestic terrorism will not prevail in America. And to make it real clear, silence on this issue, both public and private, from the private sector, silence is complicity. We must not, we will not remain silent.

AMY GOODMAN: President Biden was in Florida to tour the hurricane damage. Governor DeSantis refused to meet him there. He went around with Senator Rick Scott of Florida.

Just last year, a gunman targeting Black people killed 10 people at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, the Tops grocery store. In 2021, a gunman killed eight people, including six Asian American women, in Atlanta. The Jacksonville, Florida, shooter reportedly left a suicide note and other writings that laid out his racist ideology.

Now a diverse group of faith leaders is calling on elected leaders in Florida and nationwide to, quote, “cease and desist from sowing division and hate.” The move comes after Republican Florida governor and presidential hopeful Ron DeSantis spoke at a vigil where he was booed by the crowds, with one person shouting out, “Your policies caused this.” DeSantis and Florida Republicans have imposed racist laws, including rolling back diversity and inclusion policies and attacking African American studies. DeSantis also opposes gun law reform.

The new Take Back the Mic from Haters campaign will also mark this month’s 60th anniversary of the horrific bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, often called “Bombingham” at the time, that killed four young Black girls September 15th, 1963.

For more, we’re joined by Bishop William Barber, president and senior lecturer at Repairers of the Breach, founding director of the Center for Public Theology & Public Policy at Yale Divinity School. His new piece for The Guardian is headlined “The racist murders in Jacksonville didn’t happen in a vacuum. Words came first.”

Bishop Barber, welcome back to Democracy Now! Talk about the context in which that young white shooter, leaving behind racist manifestos, first tried to get into a historically Black college, when turned away by a brave security guard, opened fire at a dollar store.

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Yeah, Amy. Bishop Reid of the AME Church in Florida, the oldest Black denomination, has been working with myself and others to bring together a diverse group of clergy — Jews, Muslims, Christians — to actually have a whole season of resistance, that will continue even after the actions, this coming Thursday having a press conference and to announce what’s going on, calling for 10 days of fasting, confession and repentance, and for politicians to cease and desist or resign, and then calling for the communities to rise up, take back the mic, not let hate have the last word, and to mobilize and register to vote. On the Saturday — next Friday, the Friday will be a massive leaflets drop of these cease-and-desists by students, Black and white and Asian students, in Tallahassee, leaving from the conference of the AME Church. And then, on Saturday the 16th, the one-day anniversary right after the bombing of the four girls in Birmingham, there will be a massive gathering in Jacksonville, diverse people coming together and denouncing all of this hate.

You think about — we’ve got to talk about what, not just who, has killed these people, and who, what is killing across this country. DeSantis and others are spewing hate rhetoric, hate against Black history, hate against trans people, hate against women, hate against immigrants. And the suggestion is that these are the problem. Now, we know that this is this division and distraction. They use hate rhetoric and culture wars to distract from the areas that he’s failed as a governor, which I’d like to talk about in a second.

But this has a history. In the early 1900s, Woodrow Wilson spewed hate, called Birth of a Nation, that glorified the Klan, the history that the nation needed. And in a few years, what did you have? You had Red Summer, where Black men and others were killed and run out of town all over this country in reaction to what was being spewed by the president. In 1963, you had an Alabama governor, George Wallace, say, “Segregation yesterday, today and tomorrow.” He loosed the idea that Black people were the problem, that the fight for integration was the problem. By the end of year, you had people blown up in Birmingham, dogs sicced on children, children blown up in Alabama. And if you continue down this road, in 1960, August 17, 1960, the Florida Legislature, the extremists, the Dixiecrats, were railing against integration. They were pushing all kind of divisive rhetoric. Even the governor, who was a moderate at the time, Collins, but he had said that the Supreme Court had overreached. What happened? You had the ax handle mob in Jacksonville, where a white mob brought ax handles and beat Black men, while the police watched, until Black men started fighting back, and then they joined in.

So there is this history of not just who kills, but what kills and what creates the atmosphere. And spewing hate from the most powerful levels of government gives license. It others people. It puts it in the ethos and suggests that it’s all right to eliminate folks. So, what happens is, this guy goes to a Black HBCU. He’s been hearing all the while that Black history is a problem, it’s a lie, wokeness is a lie. So, if he’s already skewed toward racism, then he begins to hear from the most powerful people this is what you do, it can trigger. We’re not saying DeSantis did the killing, but as Dr. King said at the death of, funeral of the four girls that were killed, he said, “We must not just talk about who, but what — what killed them.”

And lastly, I want to put this on the record. It’s not just DeSantis. Down in Florida, he has gotten Black people, certain Black scholars, to join with him and lie about Black history and call for the elimination of courses. He has gotten Black people to join him, some of them to join him in pushing against affirmative action programs. They are just as guilty, as well, because it doesn’t matter what the color of your skin is. Once you spew this stuff and loose it and suggest that people are the problem — they’re not people with problems, but problem people — it can create all kinds of justifications in the ethos for violence and other kinds of death.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Bishop Barber, I wanted to ask you — in the same climate of intolerance and hate that is promoted by some of these top Florida leaders, we see a judge rule on a redistricting case, congressional redistricting in North Florida, saying that DeSantis and the other political leaders violated the state’s constitution, ordering them to create a new map. Your response to this news?

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Well, you know, I know about that. In North Carolina, we beat back extremists who redistricted, and we met them in court, found out that they had engaged in racism with surgical intention. And what we know with redistricting is it’s another form of diversion and division and lies, because what it says is that somehow people are cheating, somehow people are not doing right. But the extremists, they want to cheat, because they can’t win. They can’t win on policies. So what they want to do is create a situation where they stack, pack and block and bleach Black voters, not just so Black can’t elect Black people, but so Black people and white people and others can’t form fusion coalitions to elect the candidates of their choice.

And why do they do this? Why are they so afraid? Because DeSantis and those with him, they don’t want to talk about the real record. That’s why they redistrict illegally. That’s why they engage in culture wars. They don’t want to talk about Florida. There are 9 million poor and low-wealth people, 44% of the state, and their policies aren’t doing anything about that. They don’t want to talk about the 7 million voters in Florida that are poor and low-wealth. And if just 3% of them would vote that haven’t voted, they could send any of them home. They don’t want to talk about the fact that in Florida over 4 million people make less than a living wage, while the Legislature there and the governor there have been blocking living wages. They don’t want to talk about — that’s 32% of white workers and 57% of Black workers. They don’t want to talk about the fact that you have over 2 million people in Florida — 2.5 million people, who are uninsured, even during the pandemic, and that the life in Florida, the life expectancy, went down in Florida. And one study shows that among Republicans, their life expectancy went down, and it’s directly connected to the ways DeSantis and others like him railed against vaccines and railed against protections during COVID. They don’t want to talk about the fact that 8.4 million workers, 78% of the workforce, do not have access to paid leave. They don’t want to talk about when you end, cuts in Medicaid, 800,000 people who lost access to healthcare.

See, they support all of those policies, so they don’t want to talk about this. So, where do they want to focus? They want to focus on culture wars and division and dissension, and they want to fight for redistricting, racist redistricting, which undermines the ability for votes to count. And that’s why when we criticize them, we can’t just talk about hate. We’ve got to make the connections. One of the things we’ve said to Democrats is: Don’t just talk about the deaths that are caused when somebody uses a gun to kill; connect that to the deaths that come when people are kept in poverty. Poverty is now the fourth-leading cause of death. So, if you are fighting addressing poverty and fighting addressing living wages and fighting addressing healthcare, that is also a form of death and a form of violence. We have to connect the dots. Racist voter suppression creates death, because when you suppress the right to vote and you stack and pack and bleach Black voters, you allow extremists to get elected, who then, once they get elected, they block healthcare, they block living wages, they block addressing poverty. And when you do those things, people die. Bad public policy creates death. Racist rhetoric and division can create a context of death, give people the license to kill. All of it is deadly.

And we must take back the mic, raise up an army of love and truth and light, that will say, “We’re not having it anymore. We’re going to call you to cease, desist, to repent, to confess. And if you won’t, then we’ve got to mobilize and send some people home,” so that they won’t have the power and the mic to continue to do what they’re doing. They may have the same opinion, but they won’t have the power, and the power of the office and the mic, to continue to spew their divisive rhetoric.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Bishop Barber, I wanted to ask you — in this recent hurricane, Idalia, clearly, the country is facing and the world is facing more and more natural disasters, so many of them fueled by climate change. President Biden goes down to Florida, and the governor, DeSantis, doesn’t even bother to meet with him. Your response to the president’s words? Especially he spoke out against the attack, this racist attack, as well as offering assistance to the people of Florida ravaged by Idalia.

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Well, you know, DeSantis, though he’s trained and educated even at Yale and got a law degree, he’s rooted in racism and meanness. He has decided that this is his way to office: distraction, division, deflection, focusing on culture wars so that he cannot be labeled as a failed governor. That’s what he really is — not a presidential candidate, he’s a failed governor. Anytime you have this many poor and low-wealth people and low-wage workers and you haven’t addressed those issues, you’re a failed governor.

The president was right to call out the racism and call out the rhetoric and say that, either private or publicly, if you’re quiet, then you’re complicit. I would also encourage the president to go one step further, though. And that is to say it’s not just the racist rhetoric. The racist rhetoric and the culture wars and the hatred toward women, the hatred toward immigrants, the hatred toward the trans community is a form of deflection. And then the president run the record and show how the same person who’s spewing all of this division, guess what? He’s not addressing the issue of poverty in your state. He’s not addressing more than 40% of the people working for less than a living wage, even though the people voted for a living wage to happen in Florida. He’s not addressing the more than 2.5 million people that don’t have healthcare. In other words, connect the rhetoric not just to the deaths that are caused by someone like the young man who did what he did and creating the ethos of death, but actually show how they are failing in their roles as governors and legislators, and that’s why they want the division and the deflection and the deception, so that we don’t see how they’re also engaging in forms of policy violence and policy murder, which is hurting the lives of people. And it doesn’t have to be this way. Imagine if this same governor was bringing people together, was raising the minimum wage, was ensuring healthcare and those things. Florida would be a very, very different place. He does not want people to look at that, and so he’s posturing himself like the Dixiecrat governors of the old South.

And we need a new South to rise that’s not fooled by that, that brings Black people together, white people together, Brown people, Asians, Latinos, gay, straight — it doesn’t matter who you are — and says, “We’re not having it anymore. We’re taking back the mic. We’re mobilizing.” And we’re going to do it, because the fact of the matter is, Juan, if just 2 to 3% of poor and low-wealth voters in Florida who have not voted chose to vote an agenda, they could send any candidate home, including Ron DeSantis. Poor and low-wealth folk have the power. That’s what Bishop Frank Reid and others are saying. They understand. And why they’re calling for this is that there comes a time, as the Bible says, when the stone that the builders rejected have to rise up and become the cornerstone of a new reality. That’s what we’re going to launch on Thursday and beyond. It must happen, not just in Florida, but across the country. Take back this mic.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Bishop Barber, I wanted to ask you — Ron DeSantis is still only a — he’s not the major candidate for the Republican Party. Obviously, Donald Trump still remains the major candidate. And could you comment on Trump’s virtual silence on all of these racist attacks that have been occurring and these hate crimes around the country?

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Well, you know, he laid the foundation for it, so he doesn’t have to say anything. His very presence has already laid it down. He does enough at his rally. I mean, he is the provocateur par excellence. You know, he is the one that has really laid the playbook down, and Ron DeSantis is playing it.

But I think Ron DeSantis, in some ways, is more dangerous than Trump because of his background, his education, that he’s been a governor — Trump had never held political office — and that Ron DeSantis is doing all these things as the governor. Right now he’s caught up, you know, in the popularity of Trump among people who are mean and racist. You know, he doesn’t have that kind of play nationally, but he has that kind of play within the party. And he has a lot of play within the country because of the ongoing history of racism and division. And, you know, hatred and meanness sells and works, and othering people turns a lot of people on. That’s why folk that don’t agree with it, we can’t stay home. You can’t have low voter turnout, because that allows extremists to get elected. But DeSantis, I think, in some ways, and these legislatures are more dangerous than Trump, because they actually can enact policy. You see, they are actually passing policy. And that’s what I don’t want people to miss.

I said to some people it’s OK for us to get upset when he attacks Black history. It’s right for us to be bothered with them and move when these folk have been killed. But let’s not think that there wasn’t a big problem before this, and there weren’t problems beyond just the rhetoric. Go back to the policies. DeSantis is a failed governor. He is a man that only got elected the first time by 1.5% of the vote. He didn’t get elected overwhelmingly. And then, the second time, I think maybe about 3 or 4%. He is not even invincible. But as long as he has the mic, as long as he has that Legislature, they can continue to push and promote not only rhetoric, but policy. And both the rhetoric and the policy is deadly. That’s what makes DeSantis and these other extremists in these state houses and legislatures even more formidable, in some way, than Trump, because they actually have legislated.

Now, right now it looks like Trump right now has, you know, this popularity within the body of extremism. But make no mistake: These guys are not just running for office for right now. They are running — they’re hoping Trump goes to jail. They’re hoping they can step in afterwards. And if you listen to the Republicans that are running, there’s not a dime of difference, there’s not a penny of difference, between them and the policies of Trump. The only thing they’re differing is the antics of Trump, in terms of the way he has done some things seemingly illegal. But they have the same policy, the same rhetoric, the same division, the same deception, the same denial of dealing with poverty. It’s the same thing.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, speaking of taking the mic, Bishop Barber, when — after that young white male shooter killed three people, Black people, in Jacksonville, there was this vigil, and Governor Ron DeSantis took the mic. But he was booed roundly by the crowds. One attendee shouted out, “Your policies caused this!” I want to play that clip.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is here. We’re going to ask the governor if he would come down and give remarks —

CROWD: Boo!

ATTENDEE: You’re not welcome here! These deaths are on your hands!

CROWD: Boo!

GOV. RON DESANTIS: Thank you for doing this. I want to just say to the councilwoman —

CROWD: Boo!

GOV. RON DESANTIS: Councilwoman — councilwoman —

CROWD: Boo!

GOV. RON DESANTIS: I got you. Don’t worry about it. We’ve already been looking to identify funds to be able to help.

AMY GOODMAN: So, you can hear what was going on at that vigil. So, there you have just the crowd essentially taking the mic. But then you have, in Tennessee, a young man you know well, just celebrated his 28th birthday, the legislator Justin Jones, who was thrown out, along with another Justin, Justin Pearson — one represents Nashville, the other Memphis — of the state Legislature.

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Yeah, Justin Jones was silenced by —

AMY GOODMAN: And now — right. Then he was thrown out. They spent a lot of money having to redo the election. He’s voted right back in by Nashville. And then, last week, he is silenced by the Legislature. This is the last minute we have, but if you can talk about what’s happening?

BISHOP WILLIAM BARBER II: Well, a couple things. Justin Jones got elected in the most diverse district in Tennessee. Let’s note that. That’s why he’s such a thing of fear to the extremists. Also, he got silenced when he went to the floor to put a slate of policies, 12 things that he’s calling on legislators to join him in fighting for. He’s not just dealing in the emotionalism; he’s actually dealing in policy.

DeSantis was booed, should have been booed, because the only reason he should have been there was to get on his knees and repent for how he has helped create an atmosphere and an ethos of othering and division that gives license to this kind of violence. We’ve seen it down through history.

But I also want to say to Floridians, even before this happened, he should have been booed. He should have been booed for the way that he has not dealt with poverty. He should have been booed for the way he’s not dealt with living wages. He should have been booed for the way he’s blocked healthcare. He should have been booed for the way he lied and caused people to die, in essence, by saying you don’t need to get vaccines. He has a whole record that needs to be booed. And that’s what I’m arguing for. He needs not just for when he has attacked Black history and in this moment. Sure, this is — what we see here and all that rhetoric has created such a bad atmosphere, but look at his whole record.

And let’s take the mic and raise up and mobilize all over the country, but starting in Florida, people who will not be about partisan politics but will be about principled politics, and say, “If you are going to use the mic to spread division, deception and distraction and create an ethos of death and violence, we’re going to take the mic from you, send you home the best way we can, in love and through our votes. Our votes are going to speak, our voices are going to speak, because what we cannot have in this moment is leaders who use powerful positions to create a kind of a pathological atmosphere and an ethos of violence and destruction. It’s been deadly in the past, and it’s deadly in the present.

AMY GOODMAN: Bishop William Barber, we thank you for being with us, president and senior lecturer at Repairers of the Breach, founding director of the Center for Public Theology & Public Policy at Yale Divinity School. We’ll link to your new piece in The Guardian, “The racist murders in Jacksonville didn’t happen in a vacuum. Words came first.”

Coming up, we speak with a psychologist, Roy Eidelson, whose new book is just out, Doing Harm: How the World’s Largest Psychological Association Lost Its Way in the War on Terror. Back in 30 seconds.



Ron DeSantis is one of the biggest hate merchants in this country.  He is destroying Florida and, given the chance, he would love to destroy all of America.  Greg Owen (LGBTQ NATION) reports on Ron DeSantis' Florida:


Neo-Nazis dressed up in matching red and black outfits, their identities haphazardly obscured by ski masks and colorful sunglasses, marched on Walt Disney World this weekend in a display more akin to cosplay than a latter-day Third Reich Nuremberg rally.

The Nazi groups shouted white supremacist, antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ+ messages and threw Nazi salutes as they marched and wandered around the Disney Springs shopping center at the mega-resort, as well as in a separate rally a few miles north of Orlando in Altamonte Springs.







These anti-Black, anti-LGBTQ, anti-trans, anti-immigrant actions have a financial price, too. Conventions have begun refusing to come to Florida — at least 10 have canceled in Broward County alone. Disney killed a $1 billion development planned for Central Florida after DeSantis attacked the company’s right to free speech. The NAACP issued a travel advisory in May of this year, urging people of color and LGBTQ individuals to avoid the Sunshine State, a move the governor derided as a “stunt.” That was three months before the Jacksonville shooting.

Other groups have cautioned about coming to Florida. The Florida Immigrant Coalition issued a travel advisory this year. So did Equality Florida, an LGBTQ civil-rights organization. As the group’s senior policy adviser, Carlos Guillermo Smith, told the Editorial Board, Florida has “rolled out the welcome mat for hatred and bigotry.”

There is a term for what DeSantis has been doing as he stokes resentments of immigrants and Black people and trans people. It’s called “othering” — when you turn the person you’re attacking into someone you keep at arm’s length. You don’t know them or understand them or care about them. You can impose all sorts of negatives onto that kind of a blank canvas. It’s the opposite of empathy. And it makes it easier to pass laws that target them. They’re the “other.”

What’s going on in Florida isn’t a left-versus-right thing. It’s a right-versus-wrong thing. Going after various groups of people to push them out of public life isn’t about liberalism or conservatism. It’s about denying them human dignity and human rights.

DeSantis, though, specializes in dread and fear. So far, he has been restricted to one state. Imagine what he would do if he exported his vision to the whole country.



The following sites updated:

Tuesday, September 05, 2023

BLACK POWER MEDIA, Doo-Doo DeSantis called out on THE VIEW

Video?  How about BLACK POWER MEDIA's THE REMIX MORNING SHOW.



First up, be sure to read Ava and C.I.'s "TV: Hypocrisy, silences, embarrassments, it's YOUTUBE."  Second thank you to Elaine and to C.I.  I was so tired last night.  When I was falling to sleep, I said to Elaine, "See if C.I. will just go ahead and publish the piece she and Ava wrote because I am too tired to work on THIRD tomorrow."  And I was.  Elaine and C.I. work out early in the morning and when I woke up, the first thing I did was check THIRD.  Yep, she went ahead and published it.  So thank you.

We were supposed to work on it on Sunday.  Ava and C.I. did their piece on Sunday but we just couldn't pull anything together.  And my mom was busy until Tuesday night.  She wrote "" and needed to be interviewed by Ava and C.I. about the two cookbooks she reviewed.  Because she was going to be busy until Tuesday, Jim said Sunday around noon, "Oh, okay then we'll regroup on Tuesday."  And I was like, no, no no.  

Sorry.  I wanted some time away from online.  So be sure to read Ava and C.I.'s latest.  And also be sure to read Kat's "Kat's Korner: Hozier takes you on a trip."

THE WRAP notes Ana Navarro's comment on THE VIEW about Doo-Doo Ron Ron DeSantis:



"Ron DeSantis was supposed to be the great non-Trump vote," Navarro mocked. "And he's, right now, 46 points beneath Trump, and I think he's like on his third or fourth reboot of his campaign. The only person who gets to reinvent themselves that much is Cher."


A big difference is that Cher never uses her power to harm others but that's all Doo Doo knows to do.  Ryan King (NY POST) reports some bad news for Doo-Doo:

Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley is now neck and neck with fellow candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in New Hampshire, a new poll shows.

The former South Carolina governor, 51, who had been trailing DeSantis, 44, in the Granite State, tied with the Sunshine State gov at 10% apiece among New Hampshire’s likely GOP primary voters in the new NMB Research survey.

New Hampshire is considered key for GOP presidential candidates because early next year, it will hold the party’s first official primary — with the results typically helping to make or break campaigns.


Doo-Doo is a loser.  Daniel Kline (THE STREET) calls out Doo-Doo's lies about DISNEY not paying enough in taxes:


BlogMickey, an online news outlet concentrating on the tourism industry in and around Orlando, did some research into the former RCID. Bottom line: Disney pays more than 85% of the taxes in the district. The vast majority of the remaining taxes paid to the CFTOD come from hotels

"Other taxpayers in the district include the Four Seasons hotel, Swan & Dolphin hotel, Hilton, Wyndham, and considerably smaller payers like Duke Energy and Sunbelt Rentals. Of the roughly $185 million in ad valorem taxes collected by the Reedy Creek Improvement District (now CFTOD) in 2022, Disney World paid more than $161 million of that. The next-closest taxpayer was the Four Seasons, which paid a hair over $5 million. Of the dozens and dozens of taxpayers, only eight (including Disney) paid more than $1 million," the website reported.

So, while DeSantis board regularly cites its actions as being about saving taxpayers' money, its taxpayers are basically Disney and companies that make their money supporting Disney on an overwhelming basis. Disney World will, in fact, pay more in taxes than this year because improvements at its theme parks added $2 billion to its assessed value.


And the editorial board of THE MIAMI HERALD notes:


Under Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida has used the power of government to assault the freedoms of anyone he and his supporters consider different.

Black people, gay and trans people and immigrants have all felt the unmistakable hostility of the state. In his pursuit of a far-right record that could outstrip Donald Trump’s, DeSantis has systematically — during five years in office, with a lockstep Republican Legislature — turned Florida into an unwelcoming place for many.

As DeSantis runs for president, voters across the country only have to look at Florida to understand what he’s pushing. Divisiveness. Anger. Marginalization of anyone who might not be white, Christian, straight or whose family doesn’t go back generations in the United States.

He has harnessed the power of the governor’s office and Legislature to do it. We can only assume he would continue on that un-American trajectory if he were to succeed in winning the White House. Even if he fails to win the 2024 Republican nomination, DeSantis is just 44; he’ll likely remain in politics for a long time to come.

And that’s a problem. The kind of attacks on vulnerable groups that have flourished in DeSantis’ Florida harm us all. The United States is supposed to be a beacon of hope and opportunity. But his policies, too often, are the opposite of that ideal. Florida, under DeSantis, has become an example of what not to do.


Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Tuesday, September 5, 2023. Iraq's high court nullifies the border agreement with Kuwait, it also prevents a handover the prime minister had announced, Australian politicians prepare to visit the United States to call for Julian Assange's release, Ronald DeSantis continues to struggle on the campaign trail.


Starting in Iraq where its overzealous Supreme Court has been churning out verdicts.  Esra Tekin (ANADOLU AGENCY) reports:

Iraq's Federal Supreme Court decided Monday to invalidate a maritime border agreement with Kuwait under which the two countries shared a key waterway in the Gulf.

The decision against the Khor Abdullah agreement followed a trial related to an ongoing dispute over the deal, which was signed in 2012 and ratified in 2013 and concerned maritime borders and navigation regulations.

The court cited its inconsistency with the Iraqi Constitution, which mandates approval through legislation passed with a two-thirds majority in parliament, said a statement.

Following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, the UN Security Council passed Resolution 833 in 1993 which determined the land border between Iraq and Kuwait.

However, the delineation of the maritime border was left to the two countries.


As we've noted before -- most often with regards to Iraq and Iran -- neighboring countries and Iraq never can agree on borders.   This one had been in place for over a decade but now is being tossed aside. 

Kirkuk and the Iraqi court were in the news over the weekend. Oil-rich Kirkuk?  Julian Bechocha (RUDAW) explains:


Kirkuk is a multiethnic city home to Kurds, Arabs, and Turkmen, as well as an Assyrian minority. The city was under joint administration before 2014, when Kurds took full control after Iraqi forces withdrew in the face of a brazen offensive by the Islamic State (ISIS) group threatening the city. Kurds held Kirkuk until October 16, 2017, when Iraqi forces retook control and expelled Kurdish security forces following the Kurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) independence referendum. While other Kurdish political parties remain active in Kirkuk, the KDP refused to return, saying the city was “occupied” by Shiite militias.


  Chenar Chalak (RUDAW) sexplained


An order from [Iraq's prime minister] Sudani in August asked the JOC to evacuate their offices in Kirkuk and hand them over to the KDP to allow the Kurdish party to resume its political activities in the province. The buildings were used by the KDP prior to the expulsion of the Peshmerga forces from Kirkuk in October 2017 when Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) gained control of the province.

Sudani’s decision was strongly rejected by the PMF and their supporters, who set up tents and held sit-in protests near the JOC headquarters in Kirkuk, blocking the main Kirkuk-Erbil highway and vowing to continue demonstrations until the Iraqi premier revokes his decision and leaves the matter to the judiciary. The protesters claimed that the KDP’s return would be detrimental to the province’s security.

Footage emerged on social media depicting the PMF protesters disrespecting the flag of the Kurdistan Region and Kirkuk’s Peshmerga statue located near the JOC headquarters, further enraging the city’s Kurdish population who were already frustrated with the ongoing blockage of the key highway for nearly a week.


In the leadup to this handover, IANS notes, clashes began taking place, "The Arabs and Turkmens have been protesting over the past few days against the return of the KDP, including blocking streets, setting tyres on fire, and staging a sit-in outside the building to prevent the KDP from reclaiming their headquarters."  






Saturday, the clashes turned extremely violent and at least four people (Kurds) were killed with over a dozen more left injured.  Following that, Kirkuk was placed on curfew Saturday night.  The curfew was only lifted after the Supreme Court weighed in the following day.   REUTERS reports:


Iraq's federal supreme court issued an urgent temporary ruling on Sunday obliging the government to delay procedures regarding the handover of a building in Kirkuk to the KDP, the state news agency reported.

The court ruling halted an order issued by Prime Minister Mohammed al-Sudani in his capacity as the commander-in-chief of Iraq's armed forces to hand over the army building to the KDP on September 1, according to a copy of the ruling seen by Reuters.


Not everyone fell into silent agreement.  ALJAZEERA reports:


Masoud Barzani, a veteran Kurdish leader, accused “rioters” of blocking the highway from Kirkuk to Erbil, the Kurdish capital, with their sit-in.

He said this was “creating a tense and dangerous situation for residents”.

Barzani said it was “surprising” that security forces had not prevented “the chaos and illegal behaviour of those blocking the road”, while on Saturday, “violence was used against Kurdish youth and demonstrators”.


  KURDISTAN 24 reports:


Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani described the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court’s Sunday decision on recovering the Kurdistan Democratic Party’s (KDP) former headquarters in Kirkuk as a “farce”.

“Today's ‘federal court’ decision is a farce,” Barzani wrote on X platform, formerly known as Twitter.

[. . .] 

Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani on Sunday ordered the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Ministry of Martyrs and Anfal Affairs to register the killed protestors in Kirkuk as “martyrs” and provide medical assistance to the wounded, the spokesperson announced.


THE NATIONAL quote Barzani point out, "It's surprising that in the past few days security forces in Kirkuk did not prevent the violence and illegal behaviour of some groups, but today the Kurdish protesters were faced with violence and (the) blood of Kurdish youth was spilt, and it will carry a heavy price."


Turning to the topic of Julian Assange, the journalist who exposed War Crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Julian remains persecuted by US President Joe Biden for the 'crime' of journalism as the world watches.  Now, however, some members of his country's government are not just speaking out from Australia, they are planning on traveling to the United States.





Heloise Vyas (SKY NEWS) reports:

A delegation of Australian politicians from across the board will travel to the United States in September to lobby against the extradition of Julian Assange from a London prison.

The contingent is set to visit Washington DC to meet with top US diplomats and urge the government to end its prosecution bid, following years of unsuccessful intervention attempts to free the WikiLeaks founder.

MPs spanning the political spectrum, including Barnaby Joyce from the National Party, Tony Zappia from Labor, Alex Antic from the Liberals, independent MP Monique Ryan and David Shoebridge and Peter Whish-Walson from the Greens, will be part of the lobby group.

“Australians are united in their view that this matter must come to an end now,” Assange Campaign group’s legal advisor Greg Barns said in a media release.


THE FAMAGUSTA GAZETTE quotes Gabriel Shipton (Julian's brother), "The vast majority of Australians can't understand why the U.S. continues to act in a way that keeps Julian locked up in one of the worst prisons in the UK.  Even Australians who didn't support Julian's actions believe he has suffered enough and should be set free immediately."  His brother also Tweeted:



If Julian's going to be set free (and he should be), it's going to require pressure from the Australian government.  



Patrick Bell (Australia's ABC) explains, "The parliamentary delegation will include former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, Labor MP Tony Zappia, Liberal senator Alex Antic, independent MP Monique Ryan, and Greens senators David Shoebridge and Peter Whish-Wilson."
AAP notes, "The delegation will meet with members of Congress and Senate, the US State Department and the Department of Justice. They will also meet with think tanks and organisations including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders."



Should he be deported from the U.K., Julian Assange, the Australian publisher of WikiLeaks, faces up to 175 years in a U.S. prison on charges related to his release of information that revealed U.S. war crimes and torture. His legal team has stated that they plan to appeal the extradition case to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg, France, arguing that the British litigation process has been rife with malpractice.

However, experts say, there is little likelihood that Assange, who is currently being detained without British charges at London’s Belmarsh Prison pending extradition, will be allowed to physically attend any ECHR hearings in Strasbourg, which lies in France’s Alsace region.

“The U.K. authorities’ case against bail has always been that he is ‘a significant flight risk’ and a reminder of his seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy,” Tim Dawson of the International Federation of Journalists, a group opposing Assange’s detention, told Truthout. “I can’t see that they are going to allow anything similar to arise.”



In other news, today on NPR's MORNING EDITION, Ashley Lopez notes Ronald DeSantis' campaign for the Republican Party's presidential campaign which continues to struggle for support. Or maybe it's just the focus on smearing others.  That's LGBTQ+ people, that's African-Americans, Democrats . . . He can't even stop smearing his fellow Republicans.  Josh Christenson (NEW YORK POST) reports, "The strategist for a super PAC for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has privately boasted to donors that his group is behind recent negative press about GOP presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy, a new report says."  Ben Blanchet (HUFFINGTON POST) adds:

“Every misstatement, every 360 he’s conducting or 180 that he is going through in life, is from our scrutiny and pressure. And so, he’s not going to go through that very well, and that will get worse for him,” said Jeff Roe of the DeSantis-supporting Never Back Down super PAC in audio obtained by the news organization.

Meanwhile, Ronald looked even less like a leader than usual when he refused to stand with the president in surveying the state of Florida and its recent damage from the hurricane.




The criticism has been building over the long weekend.  Ben Blanchet notes:

Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) pointed out Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ “absolutely outrageous” move to not meet with President Joe Biden in the aftermath of Hurricane Idalia.

In a CNN appearance Friday, Kinzinger criticized the Florida governor, who had expressed logistical concerns over Biden’s trip to survey hurricane damage and remarked that the visit could be “very disruptive.”

“There’s a 1 to 2% chance it’s logistics, there’s a 98 to 99% chance it’s the optics,” Kinzinger told CNN’s John Berman.




Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has been accused of "petty politics" after he snubbed President Joe Biden when he visited the state on Saturday to survey the damage caused by Hurricane Idalia.

DeSantis and Biden met when the president toured Florida after Hurricane Ian hit the state last year, and in the aftermath of the Surfside condo collapse in Miami Beach in 2021.

The pair have been speaking regularly this week about Idalia, but DeSantis avoided being photographed with Biden as he visited Florida on Saturday.

[. . .]

"In times of crisis, the American people expect our leaders to put aside their differences and find strength in unity," said Nikki Fried, chair of the Florida Democratic Party "By refusing to meet with President Biden, he's proving again what we've known for years—Ron will always put politics over people. I hope his fundraisers in Iowa are worth it."

Victor Shi, a Gen-Z activist and Biden supporter, said media reports should make clear that it was DeSantis who refused to meet with Biden and not the other way around.


Let's wind down with this Tweet from Paul Rudnick.




Sunday, Kat's "Kat's Korner: Hozier takes you on a trip" went up.  The following sites updated: