George Carlin: A Modern Man

Official George Carlin_ A Modern ManSource:Official George Carlin showing George’s 2005 modern man monologue.

Source:The New Democrat

“Legendary stand-up comedian George Carlin performs a piece on the contradictions of being a modern man for the millennium.

George Carlin returns to the stage in Life is Worth Losing, his 13th live comedy stand-up special, performed at the Beacon Theatre in New York City for HBO. Life is Worth Losing includes: A Modern Man, Three Little Words, The Suicide Guy, Extreme Human Behavior, The All-Suicide Channel, Dumb Americans, Pyramid of the Hopeless, Autoerotic Asphyxia, Posthumous Female Transplants, Yeast Infection, Excess: Fires and Floods, Coast-to-Coast Emergency.”

From Official George Carlin

“I’m a modern man, a man for the millennium. Digital and smoke free. A diversified multi-cultural, post-modern deconstruction that is anatomically and ecologically incorrect. I’ve been up linked and downloaded, I’ve been inputted and outsourced, I know the upside of downsizing, I know the downside of upgrading. I’m a high-tech low-life. A cutting edge, state-of-the-art bi-coastal multi-tasker and I can give you a gigabyte in a nanosecond!
I’m new wave, but I’m old school and my inner child is outward bound. I’m a hot-wired, heat seeking, warm-hearted cool customer, voice activated and bio-degradable. I interface with my database, my database is in cyberspace, so I’m interactive, I’m hyperactive and from time to time I’m radioactive.

Behind the eight ball, ahead of the curve, ridin the wave, dodgin the bullet and pushin the envelope. I’m on-point, on-task, on-message and off drugs. I’ve got no need for coke and speed. I’ve got no urge to binge and purge. I’m in-the-moment, on-the-edge, over-the-top and under-the-radar. A high-concept, low-profile, medium-range ballistic missionary. A street-wise smart bomb. A top-gun bottom feeder. I wear power ties, I tell power lies, I take power naps and run victory laps. I’m a totally ongoing big-foot, slam-dunk, rainmaker with a pro-active outreach. A raging workaholic. A working rageaholic. Out of rehab and in denial!

I’ve got a personal trainer, a personal shopper, a personal assistant and a personal agenda. You can’t shut me up. You can’t dumb me down because I’m tireless and I’m wireless, I’m an alpha male on beta-blockers.

I’m a non-believer and an over-achiever, laid-back but fashion-forward. Up-front, down-home, low-rent, high-maintenance. Super-sized, long-lasting, high-definition, fast-acting, oven-ready and built-to-last! I’m a hands-on, foot-loose, knee-jerk head case pretty maturely post-traumatic and I’ve got a love-child that sends me hate mail.

But, I’m feeling, I’m caring, I’m healing, I’m sharing– a supportive, bonding, nurturing primary care-giver. My output is down, but my income is up. I took a short position on the long bond and my revenue stream has its own cash-flow. I read junk mail, I eat junk food, I buy junk bonds and I watch trash sports! I’m gender specific, capital intensive, user-friendly and lactose intolerant.

I like rough sex. I like tough love. I use the “F” word in my emails and the software on my hard-drive is hardcore–no soft porn.

I bought a microwave at a mini-mall; I bought a mini-van at a mega-store. I eat fast-food in the slow lane. I’m toll-free, bite-sized, ready-to-wear and I come in all sizes. A fully-equipped, factory-authorized, hospital-tested, clinically-proven, scientifically- formulated medical miracle. I’ve been pre-wash, pre-cooked, pre-heated, pre-screened, pre-approved, pre-packaged, post-dated, freeze-dried, double-wrapped, vacuum-packed and, I have an unlimited broadband capacity.

I’m a rude dude, but I’m the real deal. Lean and mean! Cocked, locked and ready-to-rock. Rough, tough and hard to bluff. I take it slow, I go with the flow, I ride with the tide. I’ve got glide in my stride. Drivin and movin, sailin and spinin, jiving and groovin, wailin and winnin. I don’t snooze, so I don’t lose. I keep the pedal to the metal and the rubber on the road. I party hearty and lunch time is crunch time. I’m hangin in, there ain’t no doubt and I’m hangin tough, over and out!”

From Good Reads

What George Carlin was talking about in 2005, are people who are called male hipsters today. People who I like to call modern left-wing hippies, or hipster leftists. People who politically claim to be champions of the underclasses, the underdogs, minorities, who claim to oppose the American establishment, while tending to be very overprivileged. And would be last people to ever give up their new technology, their coffee houses, imported wine and other alcoholic drinks, their 2nd homes, (which were probably 2nd lofts) etc, so the underprivileged can have more in life.

If there was a male voter bloc that Vice President Kamala Harris and her 2024 presidential campaign targeted, it would’ve been the male urban hipsters. Not Blue Collar Joe and Tom who work as construction workers, or auto mechanics, who shoot pool, or go bowling, after work, while drinking beer and eating chicken wings. Instead, they would’ve targeted guys who live in and work out of urban and suburban lofts, who drink coffee all day from their favorite coffee houses, who eat veggie wraps for lunch and drink French or Italian wine after work, with French cheese.

But the guys that George Carlin was talking about, were probably large part of his audience as a comedian. Along with left-wing, urban, hipster, feminists, who probably made up a lot of his female audience. People like this:

“The term “hipster” is elusive and frequently wielded as an insult, yet it has a rich history. The first hipsters were young Black jazz aficionados in 1940s Harlem. Their hipster culture was appropriated in the 1950s by young middle-class whites of the Beat Generation. By the late 1990s, “hipster” had acquired almost wholly negative connotations, describing affluent, coffee-drinking middle-class whites living in gentrified urban neighborhoods.

The contemporary hipster refers to a late-1990s subcultural figure that first rose to public attention in select gentrified enclaves of major global cities. Brooklyn and the lower East Side of New York, Seattle’s Capitol Hill, San Francisco, Sidney, Cape Town, and East London. Today the hipster lives in all these places and more. The hipster trend is global.

The defining marker of contemporary hipster culture is fashion. The archetypal hipster male sports a beard or ironic mustache, flannel shirts, skinny jeans, and rides a fixed-gear bike. His female counterpart has retro tattoos and a top-knot hairstyle and wears vintage clothes with Converse shoes. These figures appreciate vinyl records, vegan food, slick digital design, artisanal coffee, and mid-century Scandinavian modernism.

Hipster culture is about taste, fashion, and being in the know. But like any cultural form, it has a material base. In coffee shops, record stores, bicycle repair shops, bars, etc. within gentrified enclaves of major cities and beyond.

Most importantly, hipster culture is intertwined with the material structures that define the global economy. In line with the “neoliberal” turn of the 1980s and the newfound primacy of the individual consumer, contemporary hipster culture is connected above all to an ethos of consumption. Within a global economy that “specializes in the niched mass production of consumer goods that cater to the needs of small, subcultural groups” (Maly & Varis, 2015) hipsterdom becomes primarily about rejection of mainstream “taste.”

The contemporary hipster has morphed into what Thomas Frank (1997) calls the “rebel consumer” — the target subject of the synthesis of business culture and counterculture, where the imagery of youthful rebellion is mobilized to market corporate products.”

From The Collector

I imagine George Carlin was into hipster culture himself. He’s considered a counter-culture hero. But I guess what separates him from let’s say WOKE today (who are the modern political hipsters) is that he was an individualist. Who thought people should be free to speak and act for themselves And wasn’t trying to take down “The Man”, or dye his hair green or purple, to look more antiestablishment. But instead he was someone who wanted to teach people and tell people to think and act for themselves. And not get part of political cultural movements, simply to try to fit in and seem cool.

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Jack Cassidy: The Perfect Villain For Lieutenant Columbo

Columbo Phile: Columbo Full Episode_ Murder by the Book (2018)Source:Columbo Phile– Jack Cassidy as Ken Franklin, in Murder By The Book (1971)

“The first episode made available on the channel was the seminal Murder by the Book, which opened Columbo‘s first season in September 1971. Starring the irrepressible Jack Cassidy as Ken Franklin, and directed by Steven Spielberg, it remains one of the best pieces of episodic television ever made and you can view in HD glory below.”

From the Columbo Phile

“The Columbo calendar year of 1974 got off to the most arresting start imaginable in the shape of Publish or Perish.
Not only were the opening credits an extraordinary combination of explosions and freeze frames, but consummate villain Jack Cassidy was back in his second appearance as a killer – this time sporting an evil moustache to accentuate his inherent wickedness.

A publishing backdrop, reassuringly familiar to fans of Murder by the Book, promised to make Publish or Perish a series highlight. But is it a the equivalent of an Allen Mallory best-selling novel, or an amateurish effort set to languish in the bargain bucket? Let’s set our clocks back to 18 January 1974 and find out…

Columbo Phile: Episode Review_ Columbo Publish or Perish (2018)Source:Columbo Phile

From the Columbo Phile

“ALAKAZAM! As if by magic, master villain Jack Cassidy returned to give Columbo‘s fifth season a much-needed boost in the illusion-packed Now You See Him on 29 February 1976.
The presence of Cassidy as The Great Santini, the return of Sergeant Wilson and the unique and mysterious backdrop of the Cabaret of Magic help Now You See Him stand tall in the memory. But is the end result as good as the ingredients itself? Or to put it another way, is this a water tank illusion of an episode, or merely a simple card trick?

Let’s don our most luxurious capes, twirl our moustaches and bust out of some unbreakable handcuffs as we investigate…

Columbo Phile: Episode Review_ Columbo Now You See HimSource:Columbo Phile

From the Columbo Phile

“A star of stage and television for over two decades, actor Jack Cassidy embodied the vainglorious, self-absorbed side of his profession in a series of Tony-winning and Emmy-nominated turns that made him a much-loved performer until his tragic death. Cassidy’s rich, mellifluous voice and fair-haired good looks made him a popular leading man on Broadway in the late 1940s and early ’50s, where he met his first wife, dancer Evelyn Ward, who would give birth to their son, future pop star David Cassidy…

From Turner Classic Movies

Just to give you my personal observation about Jack Cassidy, someone who’ve I had a platonic man crush on for about 10 years now, since MeTV, The Hallmark Channel, Sundance, CoziTV, and other have been doing their Columbo marathons:

I think the Columbo TV series is at its best, when the murderer is almost as sharp and as witty as Lieutenant Columbo himself. Someone who can go toe-to-toe with the Lieutenant up to the point where he not only figures it out, but now can prove it. That’s where you get all the great wisecracks back and forth, the suspect now playing defense attorney for himself, or herself, because he or she now knows that the Lieutenant has figured out, but only has to prove it.

I think all of these factors are what made Jack Cassidy so great in all 3 of his appearances which were his charm, his self-confidence, his humor, his comedic timing, and his intelligence, as well as the intelligence of his characters. And of course the overconfidence of all 3 of his characters, thinking that he’s just pulled off the perfect murders, even though he’s an amateur murderer.

I’ll give you a little bit but what I think of Jack Cassidy’s 2nd and 3rd episodes on Columbo, but I’m mostly going to concentrate on Murder By The Book (1971) because it’s not only his best episode, his best performance on Columbo, but I believe the best Columbo episode in the entire series.

If you are familiar with the original USA Network TV series In Plain Sight (from 2008-2012) starring Mary McCormack (as Deputy Marshal Mary Shannon) then you have probably seen the pilot episode as well. There’s a scene where she’s about to question her lead suspect of this murder (or killing) and she’s walking up this kid’s father’s place and about to meet his father. And I haven’t been able to find the exact quote anywhere, but she’s referencing Lieutenant Columbo. (Played by Peter Falk) And she says something to the effect:

“You know when you are watching a Columbo episode and the Lieutenant figures out who the ,murderer is as soon as he meets that person…

Columbo hasn’t figured out who the murderer is as soon as he meets Ken Franklin. (Played by Jack Cassidy) But thanks to the victim’s wife, (played by Rosemary Forsyth) Franklin is already the lead suspect. She tells the Lieutenant about his partnership with her husband Jim Ferris (played by Martin Milner) and how much Franklin is about to lose financially, because now they’re breaking up and their both authors, but Ferris does most of the writing. And Ferris is about to go out on his own and that could cost Franklin a lot of money and so-forth.

So now Ken Franklin is the only suspect to this crime, even though Columbo hasn’t even met him yet. And they are at the Ferris home when Franklin shows up and Columbo still hasn’t figured out who the actual murderer is. But it gets really interesting after the Lieutenant starts talking to Franklin.

If you have ever played the game Follow The Trail, where you have to keep finding clues that lead you to where you are going and finally end up, that’s what Murder By The Book is:

Franklin and Columbo are at Franklin’s office that he shared with his partner Jim Ferris, the night of the murder. What Franklin really wants to do is detour Columbo and get him looking at other people like West Coast organized figures as suspects that his Jim Ferris was doing research on to write a book about. What Franklin does instead is make himself look even guiltier. He explains to Columbo that instead of flying back to Los Angeles from San Diego, he drives back instead. Now, San Diego is only a 2 hour drive from Los Angeles. But it suggested to Columbo that Franklin wasn’t in a hurry to get back and find out what happened to his missing partner and friend. And he showed no emotion whatsoever about the fact that his friend and partner was missing.

And now they’re at Ken Franklin’s place and Franklin of course knows what happened to his friend and partner, since he murdered him and has been keeping the dead body in the trunk of his car and now decides to dump the body on his lawn and report it to the police. So Franklin and Columbo are now in his home and Columbo asks Franklin to retrace his steps and movements once he found the dead body and what he was doing and after he founded the body. And he tells Lieutenant Columbo that he was looking at his mail and going through his mail, even though he just discovered a dead body on his lawn, who just happened to be his partner, as well as best friend. Franklin is still trying to put this murder on a list of West Coast organized crime figures. But he doing that while dropping all sorts of clues on the floor about his own guilt.

And you get into the facts that Ken Franklin and Jim Ferris both has insurance polices on each other. That Franklin who was doing very well financially, but was a playboy bachelor with very expensive women and taste. But Franklin who is the co-author of the very book where the murder that he just committed was literally laid out, thinks he just committed the perfect murder.

Publish Or Perish (1974) and Now You See Him (1976) are both excellent Columbo episodes. The 2nd and 3rd Jack Cassidy episodes are both in my Columbo top 5-10. But Murder By The Book is my personal favorite, because the murderer thinks he just committed the perfect murder. But his so overconfident that he literally proves himself guilty of the crime, because of his arrogance and he kept leaving little clues that only Lieutenant Columbo could put together to solve the crime.

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Lewis Black: Daylight Savings

Lewis Black_ Daylight SavingsSource:Lewis Black on daylight savings in America.

Source:The New Democrat

“Lewis gets a lot of people ranting about Daylight Savings Time. Here’s one from a fan and one from Lewis about it both beginning an it ending.”

From Lewis Black

I guess my first point here would be, I would tell Lewis Black and his fan Ted Williams: “Watch your fucking language, God dammit! Why the fuck do fucking swear so much? What’s your fucking problem God dammit? You are always fucking swearing”.

And if Lewis Black ever saw this, his response would probably be something as intelligent and mature as: “Fuck you”, or: “Go fuck yourself”, while he’s walking away, while giving me the middle finger, or “kiss my ass sign”. You figure it out.

As far as Lewis Black’s fan Ted Williams sharing that story with him, it takes me back 20 plus years, in the early 2000s, when I was working at movie theater in Bethesda, Maryland. This is about 10 years before I got into blogging full-time.

I swear, maybe as many 1-2, 3-5 of the customers that I could come across at this movie theater, forgot their brains. They would remember their cell phones, but would forget their brains. They could tell you what the latest drug rehab that Lindsay Lohan was staying at, or the latest jail that Paris Hilton was being held at, the latest nightclub that Khloe Kardashian got kicked out of. Or whoever the latest “hot celebrities” were at the time and what their current troubles were.

Even though the customers were such keen experts on anything that’s trivial, (at least as it relates to celebrity culture) they couldn’t find the ticket office at the theater to save their lives. Even though they just walked past the ticket office, to ask an usher “where do you buy tickets?”

Or whether or not the damn theater sold popcorn or not. Even though they could smell popcorn all over the place. And it was a freakin movie theater, for crying out loud. (Unless they forgot their noses as well as their brains) But at least they have their cell phones) Movie theaters that don’t sell popcorn, would be like a ballpark that doesn’t sell hot dogs. Or a bar that doesn’t sell beer. And unfortunately you could go on.

If these customers didn’t forget to bring their brains to the movie theater, then they were falling asleep before they bought their 10 dollar movie tickets, to a movie that was probably so bad, they would’ve fallen asleep trying to watch it anyway. Or, spent most of the show texting to their friend next to them about how much the movie sucks. And then would try to get a refund for the film that they just bought tickets too, after they just saw the entire film, because they thought the movie sucked. If you are dizzy from reading that last point, I don’t blame you. I got dizzy just trying to write it.

So yes I have experience waiting on people who were either half asleep, or lost their brain somewhere on the way to the movie theater. But not to the point where I can’t get through a sentence without swearing my ass off. Sounds like this person has been working at that Holiday Inn for too long. And should try to get a better job. Unless they’re still stuck at the Holiday Inn, because that’s the best job that they can get. Perhaps they have anger management issues. Just throwing a thought out there.

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Sarah Longwell CALLS OUT Donald Trump’s Biggest Enablers TO THEIR FACE

The Bulwark_ Sarah Longwell CALLS OUT Trump’s Biggest Enablers TO THEIR FACESource:The Bulwark giving you a few of Sarah Longwell’s highlights.

Source:The New Democrat

“Sarah Longwell spoke on a mega-panel at the DealBook Summit and used the opportunity to call out Trump’s biggest enablers—Kevin McCarthy, Kellyanne Conway, and Jason Miller—for their gaslighting and election lies.”

From The Bulwark

“A panel of political figures, advisers and journalists discuss the 2024 election and its aftermath. The discussion is moderated by Maggie Haberman, a senior political correspondent at The Times.

Participants:

Kellyanne Conway, campaign manager for the 2016 Trump-Pence campaign, former senior counselor to President Donald J. Trump and author
Anita Dunn, former senior adviser to President Biden
Major Garrett, chief Washington correspondent at CBS News
Margaret Hoover, host of “Firing Line With Margaret Hoover” on PBS
Alexis McGill Johnson, president of Planned Parenthood
Van Jones, founder of Dream Machine, CNN host and author
Jonathan Karl, chief Washington correspondent at ABC News
Sarah Longwell, publisher of The Bulwark and host of “The Focus Group” podcast
Kevin McCarthy, former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
Jason Miller, senior adviser to Mr. Trump
The conversation was recorded at the annual DealBook Summit and recorded live in front of an audience at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Read more about highlights from the day at https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/12/04/business/dealbook-summit-news

Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.”

From Apple

Just from the outset, if you are wondering why you didn’t see any give and take here in this discussion from this video and it was just really just about Sarah Longwell’s highlights, with one quick wisecrack from former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy: The Bulwark title of this video is literally: “Sarah Longwell CALLS OUT Donald Trump’s Biggest Enablers TO THEIR FACE” So don’t act like you just saw Martians landing in middle of Nevada, or somewhere else in the middle of nowhere. Don’t have a meth freakout over this.

Another observation here, is some of the human, political, wreckage here. Both KellyAnn Conway (who is famous for coining the political term “alternative facts”) and former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy were also on this panel.

Just 4 years ago, KellyAnne Conway was married with a couple kids and was working as one of President Donald Trump’s chief political advisors. Now she’s divorced and somewhat in the political abyss, who appears from time to time as a political talking head on Fox News. Donald Trump probably never becomes President of the United States, had KellyAnne not gone to work for his campaign in the summer of 2016. Which would’ve been a great, patriotic service on her part to the country, had she not have saved his presidential campaign.

And of course former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy. Just 15 months ago, he was still Speaker of the House of Representatives. But he was too MAGA for the House Democrats and not MAGA enough, or at least too politically unilateral for House MAGA, to save his speakership. Now he’s basically just another political talking head in Washington.

But to go back to my political point about Donald Trump’s political wreckage; 1 of the chief Never-Trumper’s of the Never-Trump movement, Rick Wilson, wrote a book about Donald Trump back in 2018 simply called: “Everything That Donald Trump Touches Dies” and this is what he was talking about:

“Respected conservative strategist and notorious provocateur Rick Wilson today released his from-the-right attack on our 45th President: Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever.

Wilson, a Daily Beast contributor, has spent his career as a GOP party insider and he isn’t afraid to call out top players like Mike Pence and Ted Cruz by name. But his new book isn’t a mere clap back. After skewering the hypocrisy of the evangelical right’s embrace of the current administration, he describes a way for the GOP to escape the trap of Trumpism and return to limited government conservatism.

With his characteristic scathing wit, he offers a party that has lost its way a light at the end of the tunnel. No matter what side of the aisle you live on, any politics junkie should pick up a copy of this pivotal take on Trump’s presidency.

Scouted is here to surface products that you might like. Follow us on Flipboard. Please note that if you buy something featured in one of our posts, The Daily Beast may collect a share of sales.”

From The New Democrat

My final thought here is to pick up on something that Sarah Longwell was talking about in this video. She’s simply arguing that Donald Trump is simply held to a much lower standard than everyone else in American politics.

Imagine Joe Biden doing the same political rallies that Mr. Trump was doing back in October, where it was almost impossible to figure out what the man was saying. He was either rambling or speaking in gibberish, or rambling in gibberish. (You decide) If President Biden were giving speeches like that at the same time that Mr. Trump was giving the same speeches, both the mainstream media and House Republicans would be calling for his impeachment.

This is just one example of why Donald Trump is both the Manhattan Don and the Teflon Don of American politics. He can do almost no wrong with half of the country, including with people who actually don’t like that man. Almost nothing can end his political career. Except the Constitution, time, and age.

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Chris Cillizza: The New Electoral Map

Chris Cillizza_ The Morning_ Why The Electoral Map is Moving Toward RepublicansSource:Chris Cillizza talking about the next American electoral map.

Source:The New Democrat

“The Morning: Why the electoral map is moving toward Republicans

Every (late) December, two things happen:

Christmas

The Census Bureau releases its population estimates for the past year

And, yes, I get very excited for both.

Next week I will roll out my Christmas list for the political junkie in your life — so stay tuned for that.

But, today, I want to talk about the Census!

Here’s why it matters: Where people are moving over the decade will reshuffle the relative political power of states and regions. And that, in turn, has a direct impact on the two parties and their chances of winning the White House and the House.

While I eagerly await this year’s Census population estimates release, I pored over last year’s — and thought I would share my thoughts with you. The big one is this: Population growth (and loss) is working in Republicans’ favor right now

Here’s the map from the liberal Brennan Center estimating seat losses and gains based on current population trends:..

From Chris Cillizza

The mainstream media loves stories like this because it helps them drive ratings and viewership, which drives their profits.

The Democrats looked like they were lost in Antarctica (you know, politically) after the 2004 elections and Karl Rove talked about the “permanent Republican majority at that point”. They thought they would never lose the House of Representatives at that point. And it would be a long time before they would lose the Senate as well.

Republicans went through this just 4 years later in 2008-09, when they not only lost The White House, including Missouri, Indiana, and North Carolina, but got crushed in the House and Senate as well.

Republicans when though this in 1964 with Barry Goldwater when Senator Goldwater failed to even get 40% of the popular vote and only won 7 states. And the Democrats won additional landslides in Congress (House & Senate) to go on top of their large majorities as well.

After 1988, when the Democrats lost their 3rd straight presidential election in a landslide, the mainstream media and to a certain extent pop culture, including Saturday Night Live were talking about whether the Democrats could ever win The White House again.

It’s easy to be a glass is half full person when your party is down. But that’s not why I’m a glass half full guy right now and I’m about to get into that. The worst thing that you can do politically when your party is down, is to politically panic.

Sun Tszu once said: “Victory comes from finding opportunities in problems.”

Steve Jobs once said: “Innovation is the ability to see change as an opportunity, not a threat.”

John D. Rockefeller once said: “I always tried to turn every disaster into an opportunity.”

My personal political hero John F. Kennedy once said: “When written in Chinese, the word ‘crisis’ is composed of two characters. One represents danger and the other represents opportunity.”

Here’s a quote that I bet President Joe Biden agrees with and likes a lot: “The true measure of success is how many times you can bounce back from failure.” From Stephen Richards.

The other decision that you can make when you are down, is just try to look past it. And in a political sense, perhaps the 2nd to last thing that Democrats should be doing (and I’m already seeing evidence of this on social media and MSNBC, as well as the Harris Campaign) is to blame the voters for your losses. After all, the voters decide who represents them in any democracy. And you are not communicating with them and addressing their issues, you are going to lose a lot.

But to get back to where I started on this issue when I talked about “Why The Democrats Lost” just 11 days ago:

“And far as as the Harris Campaign’s strategy, it seemed to be about maxing out yuppy, white-collar, especially female, yuppy, white-collar voters, of all political backgrounds, including urban and suburban Republican women, to vote for her. And hope African-Americans fall in line, where they were even dragging with President Biden, who did so well with them in 2020. And as far as blue-collar Democrats, I guess they left that up to Governor Tim Walz.”

From The New Democrat 

And Chris Cillizza sort of picked up on this, the Democrats coalition is simply too small right now. While the Republican coalition is just big enough to lock in all the states that they have to have and win all the swing states as well. And the public image of the Democratic Party is too bad as well. They’re seen as a left-wing feminist, hippie party, that hates straight men. At least masculine, straight men (to be more politically correct) ,who love sports, who served in the military, or law enforcement, who love to drink beer, eat meet, who love women. America is simply not San Francisco or Greenwich Village ideologically and culturally. It’s a lot more ideologically and culturally diverse than that.

So where do Democrats go from here? And this is where I talk about turning a major problem (but I wouldn’t call it a crisis) into a huge political opportunity. I got into this last week as well:

“So this brings me to what I think the Democrats should be doing instead. As I said yesterday, America is still 35-40% working class. 70% middle class, which combines both blue-collar and white-collar workers. The most reliable voters in America, are people who go to work everyday, who work very hard for their money, to pay their bills. Hoping to put some money away, and trying to give their kids a better opportunity at life, then they had when they started out…

The famous bank robber Willie Sutton coined the phrase: “Go where the money is”. He was once asked: “Why do you rob banks?” With his reply being: “Because that’s where the money is”. Take that line of thinking up to a political sense and I would add you have to go where the votes are. American presidential elections are always decided by middle class voters and at least to a certain extent blue-collar workers. Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden, never get near The White House (at least as President) without these voters…

The 50 state strategy is not about winning every single state and being the governing party in every single state at the same time. But instead it’s about shooting for the stars and seeing how many stars that you can hit. Aiming for perfection knowing that you’ll never be perfect, but doing that to see how good you can be, how close to perfection that you can get. Instead of what the Yuppycrats are doing now, which is raising as much money as possible, from big donors, in hoping of holding the Blue Wall and winning all the Deep Blue states, to be a governing party in America…

From The New Democrat

Governor Howard Dean was talking about a Democratic 50 state strategy back in 2004-05. Probably even as early as the summer of 2003 when he was talking about how the Democrats could win back The White House. And it paid off big time for the Democrats when they completely won back Congress in 2006 and held the Congress and won The White House in 2008.

The fact that the South is growing and the yuppy Northeast and West Coast is shrinking, is actually an opportunity for the Democratic Party. For a couple of reasons:

1. It proves that the current Democratic coalition is simply too small and they have to get their numbers of with blue-collar voters and middle class voters in general, especially with men from those backgrounds.

2. A lot of the Southern states that are growing, has to do with people from Northern and West Coast states moving there. Some of that might be because of lets say blue-collar voters moving from Fresno, California, to Texas, or Florida. But some of these voters are people who are moving from let’s say California to Texas or Florida, to teach and start their own companies. White collar people who are Democrats, but might think it’s too expensive for them to do business in California or New York, and prefer the business environments of Texas and Florida.

And as a JFK Liberal Democrat (meaning someone who believes in liberal Democracy) this is a great opportunity for my wing of the party, because it just goes to show you can only go so far with the Socialist Left of the party and white collar hipsters. And that this party simply has to expand its coalition and get back to being the party of progress again. Instead trying to become the party of government-backed-guarantees. Americans tend to like progress. Not so much government trying to tell them that it can solve all their problems for them, if the people just give up most of their money to Uncle Sam.

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Inside Edition: Morgan Wallen Pleads Guilty After Throwing Chair Off Rooftop

Inside Edition_ Morgan Wallen Pleads Guilty After Throwing Chair Off RooftopSource:Inside Edition takes you into the Morgan Wallen rooftop bar chair throwing incident.

Source:The New Democrat

“Morgan Wallen was in a Nashville court and pleaded guilty to two counts of misdemeanor reckless endangerment in a Nashville courtroom. The prosecution says back in April, Wallen threw a chair off a rooftop bar, six stories high, onto a busy street in downtown, nearly hitting two police officers on duty. He was reportedly at the bar, Chief’s on Broadway, to celebrate its opening. Inside Edition Digital’s Mara Montalbano has more.”

From Inside Edition

If you are interested in some of YouTube comments for Inside Edition about this… I don’t blame you, so am I:

Flame Ex 1708: Mind you this guy is 31.

ZT Yaaboi: Last night we let the liquor talk

Jaxsun: Ol’ son better leave that liquor alone

Clifford Doo: Normal people would have gotten a heavier penalty. The famous always get lighter penalty

In case I’m not the only person on Planet Earth who had no idea who the hell Morgan Wallen was before this story broke:

“Morgan Cole Wallen (born May 13, 1993) is an American country singer and songwriter. He competed in the sixth season of The Voice, originally as a member of Usher’s team, but later as a member of Adam Levine’s team. After being eliminated in the playoffs of that season, he signed to Panacea Records, releasing his debut EP, Stand Alone, in 2015.”

From Wikipedia

I guess my first response to this would be: the young and the stupid. I guess I can say that now as a 47 year old, who is 1 of the last of the American Gen-Xer’s.

But to go forward with this and ask questions like: “What was this guy thinking?” that sounds like a trick question. Because he obviously wasn’t thinking. If I did drink alcohol at all (and didn’t actually have anything in common with Donald J. Trump, besides our German ancestry) I could understand why a guy, especially a young guy would want to go to a bar and load up. (Or is that get loaded?) But you are already in a danger zone when you are drunk.

The question is after you are already drunk is: “Where do you go from there?” If you have good people around you, perhaps real friends, (to use as an example) you probably go home from there. But if your friends are just as drunk as you are and perhaps just as stupid, you all might become contestants on “Who Wants To Be America’s Stupidest Idiot” and perhaps you go upstairs (if you are not already there) and you see who can throw a chair the farthest off the roof of this bar. Which seems to be what Mr. Wallen did here.

Hopefully for Mr. Wallen’s sake, he at least won this contest. (If this contest even took place) 1t’s 1 thing to be a drunk asshole, but I guess it’s another to be a drunk asshole, who loses a chair throwing contest, off the roof of a bar, in the same night.

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George Carlin: In Defense of Politicians

Official George Carlin_ In Defense of Politicians_ Back in Town (1996)Source:Official George Carlin Back in Town (1996)

“Legendary counter culture comedian, George Carlin, pokes holes in the reasoning behind the verbal attacks on American politics and politicians.

Back in Town aired as a live broadcast from New York City’s Beacon Theater and features Carlin’s trademark acerbic observations on topics such as abortion, capital punishment, familiar expressions and bodily functions. Classic routines “Sanctity of Life,” “State Prison Farms,” “Free-Floating Hostility” and more are included in this hysterical stand-up comedy performance.”

From Official George Carlin

“Everybody complains about politicians. Everybody says they suck. Well, where do people think these politicians come from? They don’t fall out of the sky. They don’t pass through a membrane from some other reality.

They come from American parents, American families, American homes, American schools, American churches, American businesses, American universities, and they’re elected by American citizens.

This is the best we can do, folks. This is what we have to offer. It’s what our system produces. Garbage in…garbage out.

If you have selfish, ignorant citizens…if you have selfish, ignorant citizens, you’re gunna get selfish, ignorant leaders. And term limits ain’t gunna do ya any good. You’re just gunna wind up with a brand new bunch of selfish, ignorant Americans [leaders].

So, maybe…maybe…maybe it’s not the politicians who suck. Maybe something else sucks around here. Like…the public. Yeah, the public sucks! That’s a nice campaign slogan for somebody: “The public sucks! Fuck hope! Fuck hope!”

Because if it is really just the fault of the politicians then where are all the other bright people of conscience? Where are all the bright, honest, intelligent Americans ready to step in and save the nation and lead the way?”

From Daniel Joder

Here’s some of what I wrote about this issue in 2015:

“I partially agree with George Carlin on this. Our politicians actually do suck in way too many cases. I think that is obvious when you have a Congress that can’t get its basic responsibilities taken care of:

Like gee I don’t know, funding the government that they are part of.

Or paying the bills that has been run up on the debt, which is what a debt ceiling extension actually is. Not an agreement to borrow more money, just to pay the interest on the current debt.

And you could add other examples of how members of Congress in both parties treat each other…

From The New Democrat

“In Defense of Politicians”, that would never be 1 of my lines. Not even if I was a defense lawyer defending a politician. I would be in there in court telling the judge:

“I’m here to defend the politician”. But if I win this case, as soon as it’s over, I’ll be the first person telling the public how big of an asshole I think this person is. And why I’ve never voted for this politician. Well, not after the first time…

My point here is it’s not  just the politicians. It’s not just the voters either. It’s just mostly the voters. As George Carlin said:

“Everybody complains about politicians. Everybody says they suck. Well, where do people think these politicians come from? They don’t fall out of the sky. They don’t pass through a membrane from some other reality.

They come from American parents, American families, American homes, American schools, American churches, American businesses, American universities, and they’re elected by American citizens.

This is the best we can do, folks. This is what we have to offer. It’s what our system produces. Garbage in…garbage out…

If voters took voting as seriously as buying I don’t know, their latest smartphone, their latest smart TV, which coffee house to buy their coffee and what coffee drinks that they want, (just to throw out a few examples) I could guaran-damn-tee you that voting would be a helluva lot better in America. For the simple reason because then American voters would become American consumers of politics and government and would take it seriously. It’s not that Americans are stupid by-en-large, (with a lot of exceptions) it’s that they tend to be mentally lazy and don’t like doing their homework and taking risks. Unless that’s what their pop culture icons are doing and they think that’s the cool thing to do.

But as long as American democracy is like some realty TV game show, or something, where the winner is the person who is the coolest, the best looking, knows the best and most catch phrases, is hanging out with fabulist people, (so to speak) voting in American democracy will never be any better than voting for the NBA or MLB All Star Game. And to paraphrase George Carlin: it will just continue to be garbage in, garbage out, in our government.

Source:The New Democrat

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The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson: George Carson’s Last Appearance (May, 1992)

Johnny Carson_ George Carlin Makes His 105th & Final AppearanceSource:The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson and George Carlin. I’m willing to bet George Carlin is the best comedian to ever appear on TSWJC. I think Richard Pryor would be the other possibility.

Source:The New Democrat

“George Carlin Johnny Carson The Tonight Show
Original Airdate: May 13th, 1992”

From Johnny Carson

At risk of seriously, offending the far-left, especially the WOKE Left to the point that even Seattle would run out of coffee, with all the caffeine and sugar that they would need to get though this: (and that’s only assuming any of them ever read this) just imagine George Carlin doing standup comedy today.

Forget about Bill Maher, George would be the WOKE Left’s right-wing boogeyman. 10-12 years ago, Bill Maher was considered a “Progressive” champion because of his soft embraces of socialism and his comedic attacks on the Tea Party in America. And then he expands his attacks against right-wing, religious fundamentalism to not just right-wing, fundamentalist Protestants, but Islamists and Islamism as well.

Go up to 2014 and now according to the far-left, Bill Maher was no longer a “Progressive” champion and fighter for “real progressive change” in America. He was an Islamaphobe who hated Muslims and Islam,. Hollywood actor/political activist Ben Affleck (key word with Ben Affleck being actor) called Bill Maher a racist, because of his critiques of Islamism. Affleck apparently unaware that Islam is not actually a race. It’s just a religion and to a certain extent a culture.

I believe that’s how George Carlin would be viewed by the militant WOKE Left today, as another Bill Maher. They liked George because he made fun of rich people and people he and they view as stupid Americans. Those folks are basically white-collar, suburban, middle class, yuppies, (mostly of European background) that he and the WOKE Left simply referred to simply as “White people”. As well as blue-collar Americans, with the same racial and to a certain extent ethnic backgrounds, but with less education and financial security.

But Carlin for me and everyone else who is a champion of free speech and personal freedom in America, (which is basically anyone who is to the right of Che Guevara and his followers) he’s a champion of American, liberal democratic values. He made fun of people and things simply because he thought they deserved to be made fun of. He didn’t check their ethnic or racial backgrounds and worry about making fun of men or women. Or poll college campuses and coffee houses to see if his material would be acceptable or not.

George Carlin simply live and experienced American life and told people what he thought about life and the people he saw in it, in a very humorous way. And I think that’s why he so well-respected by just about every comedian in America. Why so many comedians look up to him today. At least all the comedians who believe in free speech and personal freedom, who are more than willing to take chances with their comedy, because they’re individualists.

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Robert Reich: Where They’re Raging Against The Establishment

Robert Reich: Where They’re Raging Against The EstablishmentSource:Robert Reich showing his readers the iconic political mascot of his American socialist movement.

Source:The New Democrat

“A groundswell of rage against the establishment has been growing in America for decades.

It became a gale-force wind after the Wall Street financial crisis of 2008, when banks that gambled with other people’s money had to be bailed out by taxpayers but millions of average Americans lost their savings, jobs, and homes.

It has been fomented by record levels of inequality. CEO pay has soared to 320 times that of average workers, and the stock market has reached staggering heights. At the same time, young men with no more than a high school degree are now earning 22 percent less, adjusted for inflation, than non-college young men earned 50 years ago.

And it’s become a deepening source of public distrust, as big money has taken over our politics. In the 2024 election, candidates raised $16 billion, much of it from a relative handful of billionaires.

Indicators of that rage are all around us.

Where can you find it…

From Robert Reich

Populist uprisings (whether you are talking about left-wing socialist movements or right-wing nationalistic movements) are nothing new to America. I think Robert Reich and I completely agree on that. Shouldn’t be surprising, especially in a liberal democracy, where we have constitutional rights to free speech, assembly, and even personal autonomy, that has the capitalist, private enterprise system that we have, that just doesn’t allow, but encourages individuals to be as economically successful as they can. So my second point here might be where Mr. Reich and I differ.

I think my second disagreement with Mr. Reich would be why these uprisings emerge in the first place. And I’ll give you some examples of some populist movements from both the Left and the Right from the past and tell you what I think and know about them.

The New Left from the 1960s and 70s:

“The New Left was a broad political movement that emerged from the counterculture of the 1960s and continued through the 1970s. It consisted of activists in the Western world who, in reaction to the era’s liberal establishment, campaigned for freer lifestyles on a broad range of social issues such as feminism, gay rights, drug policy reforms, and gender relations.[1] The New Left differs from the traditional left in that it tended to acknowledge the struggle for various forms of social justice, whereas previous movements prioritized explicitly economic goals. However, many have used the term “New Left” to describe an evolution, continuation, and revitalization of traditional leftist goals.[2][3][4]

Some who self-identified as “New Left”[5] rejected involvement with the labor movement and Marxism’s historical theory of class struggle,[6] although others gravitated to their own takes on established forms of Marxism, such as the New Communist movement (which drew from Maoism) in the United States or the K-Gruppen[a] in the German-speaking world. In the United States, the movement was associated with the anti-war college-campus protest movements, including the Free Speech Movement.”

From Wikipedia

I think what separates the New Left and even Occupy Wall Street from the Tea Party/MAGA movements, is that the New Left was primarily made up of teenagers and young adults, from the Silent Generation (1920s and 30s babies) and the Baby Boom (1940s and 50s babies) who at the very least came from well-educated, white-collar, suburban, middle class, as well as upper class families.

And lot of these folks were in college at the time of their movement and lot of them were coming of age in a time when the country was changing dramatically culturally and politically and they simply had a lot more information than even their parents did when they were young, as well as grandparents and they were seeing an America that they didn’t like. All the racism, the sexism, the ethnicism, the homophobia, all the poverty, especially in African-America communities.

And these folks perhaps feeling guilty about how they had it at that point and how they grew up, wanted to do something about the injustices that they saw in America.

Some members of the New Left wanted change through peaceful, democratic means. But the militant members of this movement, saw the American system, our form of government economic system, as the obstruction to what they would call real progress in America. And they simply wanted to take out system down. You could literally argue (and I do) that the militant wing of the Socialist New Left, was what we seem from the WOKE Left today.

The Tea Party from 2008-14:

“The Tea Party movement was an American fiscally conservative political movement within the Republican Party that began in 2009. The movement formed in opposition to the policies of Democratic President Barack Obama[1][2] and was a major factor in the 2010 wave election[3][4] in which Republicans gained 63 House seats[5] and took control of the U.S. House of Representatives.[6]

Participants in the movement called for lower taxes and for a reduction of the national debt and federal budget deficit through decreased government spending.[7][8] The movement supported small-government principles[9][10] and opposed the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare), President Obama’s signature health care legislation.[11][12][13] The Tea Party movement has been described as both a popular constitutional movement[14] and as an “astroturf movement” purporting to be spontaneous and grassroots, but created by hidden elite interests.[15][16] The movement was composed of a mixture of libertarian,[17] right-wing populist,[18] and conservative activism.[19] It sponsored multiple protests and supported various political candidates since 2009.[20][21][22] According to the American Enterprise Institute, various polls in 2013 estimated that slightly over 10% of Americans identified as part of the movement.[23] The movement took its name from the December 1773 Boston Tea Party, a watershed event in the American Revolution, with some movement adherents using Revolutionary era costumes.[24]

The Tea Party movement was popularly launched following a February 19, 2009, call by CNBC reporter Rick Santelli on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for a “tea party”.[25][26] On February 20, 2009, The Nationwide Tea Party Coalition also helped launch the Tea Party movement via a conference call attended by around 50 conservative activists.[27][28] Supporters of the movement subsequently had a major impact on the internal politics of the Republican Party. While the Tea Party was not a political party in the strict sense, research published in 2016 suggests that members of the Tea Party Caucus voted like a right-wing third party in Congress.[29] A major force behind the movement was Americans for Prosperity (AFP), a conservative political advocacy group founded by businessman and political activist David Koch.[30]

By 2016, Politico wrote that the Tea Party movement had died; however, it also said that this was in part because some of its ideas had been absorbed by the mainstream Republican Party.[31] CNBC reported in 2019 that the conservative wing of the Republican Party “has basically shed the tea party moniker”

From Wikipedia

If anyone is putting at an all points bulletin for the Tea Party, you don’t need to do that because it’s still around. But similar to let’s say the Washington Redskins becoming the Washington Commanders, they’re almost unrecognizable today. If you are familiar with Donald Trump’s MAGA movement, that’s the Tea Party. It’s just that they’re not so much populist now, as they are oligarch and run and funded primarily by billionaires today who think they should be able to run the world simply because they have so much more money than anyone else. And they also believe that anyone who tries to get in their way, should be arrested or beat up, or something.

And the other key difference between the Tea Party and MAGA, is that of course the Tea Party from 10-15 years ago had its’ fundamentalist populists, who put their religious and cultural beliefs over everything else. But they wouldn’t have had the success that they did and electing all the Republicans that they did, if they weren’t against the corporate, taxpayer funded bailouts, and their push for fiscal conservatism and fiscal responsibility. Fiscal conservatism is all but dead in the Republican Party today, because MAGA is almost completely dominated by oligarchs and right-wing, militant, cultural warriors. Not fiscal conservatives.

Occupy Wall Street of 2011-12:

“Occupy Wall Street (OWS) was a left-wing populist movement against economic inequality, corporate greed, big finance, and the influence of money in politics that began in Zuccotti Park, located in New York City’s Financial District, and lasted for fifty-nine days—from September 17 to November 15, 2011.[7]

The motivations for Occupy Wall Street largely resulted from public distrust in the private sector during the aftermath of the Great Recession in the United States. There were many particular points of interest leading up to the Occupy movement that angered populist and left-wing groups. For instance, the 2008 bank bailouts under the George W. Bush administration utilized congressionally appropriated taxpayer funds to create the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which purchased toxic assets from failing banks and financial institutions. The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United v. FEC in January 2010 allowed corporations to spend unlimited amounts on independent political expenditures without government regulation. This angered many populist and left-wing groups that viewed the ruling as a way for moneyed interests to corrupt public institutions and legislative bodies, such as the United States Congress.

The protests gave rise to the wider Occupy movement in the United States and other Western countries. The Canadian anti-consumerist magazine Adbusters initiated the call for a protest.[8] The main issues raised by Occupy Wall Street were social and economic inequality, greed, corruption and the undue influence of corporations on government—particularly from the financial services sector. The OWS slogan, “We are the 99%”, refers to income and wealth inequality in the U.S. between the wealthiest 1% and the rest of the population. To achieve their goals, protesters acted on consensus-based decisions made in general assemblies which emphasized redress through direct action over the petitioning to authorities.[9][nb 1]

The protesters were forced out of Zuccotti Park on November 15, 2011. Protesters then turned their focus to occupying banks, corporate headquarters, board meetings, foreclosed homes, college and university campuses, and social media.”

From Wikipedia

We had the New Left of the 1960s and 70s and now Occupy Wall Street from 2011-12, who were the kids and grandkids of the New Left, at least ideologically and culturally. People who were left-wing hippies (or hipsters, if you prefer) trying to take down “The Man”. (Democratically or otherwise) Because similar with the Tea Party of the same era, these leftists opposed all the corporate bailouts that happened during the Great Recession of 2008-09, especially when the country was dealing with 9% unemployment and lot of these folks were so young at this point and were buried in college debt and had no government bailout for themselves.

But again similar with OWS’s political ancestors, these folks weren’t so much populist. We’re not talking about Blue Collar Joe and Mary who worked very hard at the factory, just trying to pay their bills. Most of these folks come from well-educated, white-collar, middle class and upper class families, who thought they were getting a raw deal by their government. And decided to politically fight back.

As a Liberal Democrat myself (meaning someone who believes in liberal democracy) I’m all about liberal democracy, which means a helluva lot of free speech, (even if I don’t agree with it) free assembly, and personal freedom. Even for the people who don’t believe in liberal democracy for their political opponents. But I think we have to be careful about throwing out terms like populist and populism. A populist is:

“A person, especially a politician, who strives to appeal to ordinary people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by established elite groups.
“he ran as a populist on an anticorruption platform”

From Dictionary

And of course the Don Trump’s, the Liz Warren’s, the Bernie Sanders, Alex Cortez’s, (if AOC runs for President in 2027-28) try to appeal to ordinary Americans. But other than perhaps Bernie Sanders (everyone’s favorite Socialist) most of these people aren’t populists in the sense of how they live their own lives. All these folks are already very well-to-do who believe appealing to ordinary Americans simply helps them politically.

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Dan Mitchell: Advice For DOGE: Fiscal Federalism

Dan Mitchell_ Notwithstanding my WSJ Quiz Results, I Am Not a ConservativeSource:Dan Mitchell is a Libertarian blogger and egghead.

“Donald Trump was a big spender during his first term in office. Even if you don’t count the orgy of pandemic-related spending, he spent more and spent faster than Barack Obama.

He even increased domestic spending faster than Obama!

But maybe his second term will be different. One positive sign is that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are spearheading a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is a private effort to identify ways of saving money and streamlining government.

In a triumph of hope over experience, let’s make some suggestions for DOGE.

We’ll start with fiscal federalism.

Under current law, politicians in Washington send hundreds of billions of dollars every year to state and local governments. Every single penny of this spending is in areas where the federal government should have no involvement.

As part of a federalism agenda, it is time to eliminate all these transfers.

The savings for taxpayers could be enormous. Here’s a list of federal handouts compiled by my former colleague, Chris Edwards.

Nearly $1.3 trillion last year…

From Dan Mitchell

I think Never Trumper Adam Kinzinger had the perfect statement about “DOGE” last week when he said:

“To the Dems that have “warmed up to” the DOGE idea with Musk and Vivek…. This is gonna come back and bite you. They are not doing this for the right reason. It’s for control. Stop normalizing these clowns.
We are spending more on interest to the debt than national defense. Budget health is going to take bipartisan solutions.”

From Adam Kinzinger on Threads.

My point is if the modern Republican Party was serious about the national debt and budget deficit, (and they are serious problems that need to be addressed) this is what they would be talking about.

I’m not in the habit of quoting bank robbers. But when Willy Sutton was right, he was damn right. If you are interested in paying off the debt and making savings in your budget, you go where the money is:

Food Assistance, Public Housing, and Welfare, are nothing compared with the rest of the U.S. Government budget. Put those programs together in once package, you are talking about maybe 200 billion-dollars, at most.

The fiscal year U.S. Government budget was almost 7 trillion-dollars. ($6.75 trillion) The current Federal budget deficit is $1.8 trillion dollars. Can you see an intelligent, sane, sober person, who thinks chipping away at a bunch of Federal social programs, that add up 1 only 1/5 of a trillion-dollars, will finally balance the budget? You could just eliminate all those programs and still run a deficit of around $1.6 trillion dollars for 2026-27.

Now, for anyone who is still awake after seeing all these numbers and facts, (that’s right, both of you, who aren’t related to me) there are some real solutions to dealing with the budget deficit and the national debt. But to get to Adam Kinzinger’s Thread, it’s going to take some real bipartisan solutions, as well as some real solutions that aren’t that bipartisan, which is what Dan Mitchell is talking about.

The Republican Party in Congress, even in 119th Congress where Republicans will control both the House and Senate, aren’t even going to want to reform Social Security and Medicare, by themselves, let alone gut those programs. Especially with the bare majorities that they are going to have and with Congressional Democrats plotting both to win back the House and Senate in 2026.

If the Democrats win back both the House and Senate in 2026, (big if) they probably won’t have any political interest in taking on the national debt and deficit. Other than perhaps trying to roll back all of Donald Trump’s tax cuts, which they won’t be able to do themselves anyway.

The only way to deal with the national debt and deficit, is to do what the Adam Kinzinger’s of the world are talking about, which is about reforming our entitlements, to make them more cost-effective, as well as the tax code, to make it more pro-growth and less expensive for the budget, as well as reforming the Department of Defense and every other department and agency in the U.S. Government as well, to make them more cost-effective.

And what Dan Mitchell is talking about, which is what I agree with as Liberal (or a Classical Liberal, for all you pansy closeted leftists) is fiscal federalism. Which means the states would become completely responsible for running the safety net programs in their states, including Social Security and Medicare. And taking those programs off the Federal budget. But they’ll still be in existence, but just run by the states instead of the Feds. As well as work, and educational requirements, for anyone receiving any public assistance whatsoever. And there goes your budget deficit.

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