A Texas GOP Candidate’s New Claim: School Cafeteria Tables Are Being Lowered for “Furries”

https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/texas-gop-candidate-furries-schools/

This is the newest culture war outrage attempt by the right wing.  Hoping to play off the anti-LGBTQ+ book removal issues the right is now claiming that little kids schools are allowing kids to identify as cats and dogs along with other animals.  In other words schools are now accommodating furries.  Furries for those who don’t know are simply people that like to dress up in animal costumes.  It is not necessarily sexual but it also can be.  Some costumes are full body very expensive suits and others are much more limited.  Right wing candidates want to drum up outrage and get their base motivated are claiming that schools are setting out litter boxes for kids to relieve themselves and now letting kids eat like pets without using their hands.  The litter box thing was a joke the right wing took for real.  The more embarrassing thing is these candidates for elected office never checked out these silly things and just promote them as real.  

The allegation isn’t true. But that isn’t stopping some politicians and right-wing activists from running with it.

Round Rock ISD Furry Fury
Getty

On Sunday night, a candidate in the GOP primary for Texas House District 136, which includes a large portion of the suburbs north of Austin, tweeted a curious allegation. That candidate, Michelle Evans—an activist who works with the local chapter of conservative parents’ group Moms for Liberty and who cofounded the anti-vaccine political action committee Texans for Vaccine Choice, back in 2015—tweeted that “Cafeteria tables are being lowered in certain @RoundRockISD middle and high schools to allow ‘furries’ to more easily eat without utensils or their hands (ie, like a dog eats from a bowl).”

She was responding to a tweet from right-wing Texas provocateur Michael Quinn Sullivan, who had shared a video of a woman speaking at a December school board meeting in Midland, Michigan, claiming that schools there have added “litter boxes” in the halls to allow students who identify as “furries” to relieve themselves. Sullivan retweeted the video, adding, “This is public education.” (It isn’t; the claims made by the speaker in the video have been shown to be untrue.) 

As in the debunked Michigan example, the claim about Round Rock ISD is false. Jenny LaCoste-Caputo, Round Rock ISD’s chief of public affairs and communications, told Texas Monthly, “This is not happening. Our tables don’t even have the option of lowering.” She added, “You win the award for strangest media question of the year!” When reached for an interview about her tweet, Evans said she had “no comment” and was “merely relaying information” that she received from another parent. She promised to put other parents and students who could speak to her claim in touch with Texas Monthly. As of press time, we have yet to hear from anyone who could offer firsthand knowledge of what Evans described in her post. 

 

At face value, Evans’s claim fails to pass a sniff test: Did an entire school district of smartphone-addicted teens just forget to snap a picture of their classmates eating in the way that dogs do? If not, where did this strange claim come from? 

The furries panic appears to have originated from a news report from Meade County, Kentucky, about an hour southwest of Louisville, that ran on WLKY, an NBC affiliate, in August. That story lacked some of the more sensational elements that appeared in the tweet about Round Rock and in the video from Michigan, but it cited a lone, anonymous Kentucky grandmother who claimed that students wearing cat ears and tails were bullying her grandchildren. “Apparently, from what I understand, they’re called ‘furries,’” the grandmother told the station. “They identify with animals. These people will hiss at you or scratch at you if they don’t like something you’re doing.” (Notably, the story the station posted on its website is illustrated not with a picture of a student in an outfit like the one described by the grandmother, but with a photograph of a house cat.) 

In response, the Meade County school district superintendent said there was no need to change school policy because what was being reported as a plague of cat-people taking over a school was actually “a small number of Meade County High School students [who] have violated the dress code policy during the early part of the school year.” As for allegations of teens hissing at classmates they don’t like? That just sounds like high school. 

Nonetheless, concerns over furries in schools began to take on elements of moral panic and urban myth in the ensuing weeks and months. In October, an Idaho talk radio station ran a report that said students who claimed to be furries were being excused from their homework because “paws and hooves can’t grip a pencil and struggle with a keyboard”—with citations such as “I recently heard someone say that there are students in the Twin Falls city school system identifying as animals.” The story was later updated, after the station spoke with the Twin Falls school superintendent, who clarified that “none of the TFSD schools have experienced students coming to them with claims of identifying as animals. Nor have any building administrators heard from teachers that students are being disruptive during class due to identifying as an animal.” He added that such a claim would not exempt a student from homework. 

Not See The Putin Love

clayjonz's avatarCLAYTOONZ

CjonesRGB02032022

If you’re at a rally or a protest and the person next to you is flying a Swastika, you may be on the wrong side.

Why is this so hard for conservatives to understand? Oh, yeah. Because hate is not a deal-breaker for them. Look at all the Trump voters. The Trump train is the Hate Train.

Right after Trump won the election, I was talking to someone about the election who has since unfriended me. I gave this person some advice I called an “election primer.” That is, don’t vote for the candidate supported by Vladimir Putin. My former friend was upset and said he was a veteran and didn’t need voting advice from a liberal such as myself. I replied if you voted Putin, ya’ kinda do need voting advice from a liberal such as myself.

Republicans try to step away and claim they’re not associated with Nazis…

View original post 673 more words

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: How much profit is enough and how many people will have to suffer for the wealthy to get that profit

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Scottie’s world today

I am tired boss

My blood sugar has been uncontrolled all day causing me to have periods of extreme tired.  As my sugar soars and then the insulin fights to bring it down and then soars again I am seesawing  between feeling OK and not able to keep my eyes open.  I have been back to bed four times so far today.  I feel I have not gotten anything done. 

I found out that my part D insurance company wont pay for the insulin my doctor prescribed.  Now I have to find what insulin they will cover and see if the doctor thinks that will work for me.  It is not about what works best and what the doctor thinks will be the best choice for my medical condition, it is what the insurance company will pay at least part of.   I sure could have used that lower drug prices and $15 insulin in the Build Back Better bill that wealthy yacht living Maserati driving Manchin says I don’t need.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Who protects #WorkingPeople ?

imageWorking It Out Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

image

If only the #NYT were this concerned about the debt when #TFG was ramming through tax cuts for corporations and rich people.

What about interest on the W Bush tax cuts and his two endless wars?

Political cartoon

Joel Pett Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

image

They said ‘don’t politicize the bench, no judicial activism’. They lied. It’s what conservatives do.

Most of the braindead Right have no idea of the mission of the Federalist Society. They can’t connect the dots between their grievances with life and a corporate fascist judiciary/SCOTUS.

image

Political cartoon

political cartoon

image
image

How do you work for Putin without saying you work for Putin. Hawley is a Russian rat.

image

image

Andy Marlette for Feb 01, 2022

image

https://chorus.stimg.co/23211350/sack020222.jpg?w=525&h=600&format=auto%2Ccompress&cs=tinysrgb&auto=compress&crop=faces&dpr=2.2222222222222223

image

Steve Benson Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

#trumpism

image

The media are underplaying Trump crimes.

image

Misogyny is MAGA gospel.

image
image
image

The media’s gender bias is obvious.

media was mean to me

Neveer treated so unfairly

A trump cartoon I can not see

image

Political cartoon

Jack Ohman Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

morning in america democracy

Drew Sheneman Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

Ridiculous

image

Women are punished. Men get ‘locker room’ BS.

Always a different set of rules for [mediocre white] men.

stole our freedom once

Political cartoon

Political cartoon

Political cartoon

Tom Stiglich for Feb 02, 2022

Speed Bump Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

image

Would like to see this broken into Red State and Blue State deaths per capita to compare policies.

NYT avoids telling why the US has such a high death rate: right wing disinformation & Putin

image

image

True that

fuck your lies

The idea is to walk softly but carry a big stick.  I agree with Ukraine on this.  Russia would love it if Ukraine’s economy crashed and their businesses closed.  That actually could be used by Russia to invade. So world, be ready to act but don’t scream about it world wide. 

ViewsEurope Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

ViewsBusiness Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

ViewsAsia Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

Nope, not even close.  What was requested is he stop promoting lies about a health crisis and getting people killed.  Even he admitted he had to try harder to give the correct information. 

No Biden did not base his pick just on skin color, skin color is just one of the qualifications he requires of the nominee.    Those who keep complaining of this see only that he is picking a black woman as if it was a random person he seen on the street.  The complainers are not even worth arguing because they are doing it in bad faith, wanting to find some fault with Biden, and fault at all.  

Michael Ramirez Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

What’s that have to do with car crash?  he prison system in the US always fails. The reality is that it doesn’t rehabilitate. It teaches people to be better criminals.   We have more people in the jail and prison than any other country. Yes, the system has certainly failed.

Lisa Benson Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

The right is up in arms because ICE is moving families to new locations.  They act as if ICE has never moved people around the country and in the night at that.  Well I posted on the many flights they did to hide kids taken from their families in the middle of the night.  Companies started to refuse ICE to fly these scared kids who were under orders not to talk and who no one was allowed to talk to.  This was the real abuse.   These kids were taken from their families and taken across the country to be given to adoption agencies (usually christian adoption agencies)to place in families for money.  That is called child trafficking. 

So the cartoonist admits the average person in the US can not afford necessities which is increasing petty crimes of theft. I think it is time to tax the wealthy and large corporations the way they were taxed in the best economic times of the US such as the 1950’s so the government can take care of the needs of the people. The government can create programs to insure people have the things they need and are not so deep in poverty that they need to steal to stay warm and clothed.

Mike Lester Comic Strip for February 01, 2022

Whoopi Goldberg made a foolish comment about the Holocaust. She apologized. Mike Lester nevertheless piled on.

Less than a year ago, Marjorie Taylor Greene, an actual member of the U S Congress, made vile comments trivializing the Holocaust in the context of criticizing mask mandates as tyrannous. Even Kevin McCarthy condemned them. Mike Lester bravely and forthrightly responded by . . . publishing cartoons condemning mask mandates as tyrannous.

This is, of course, the same Mike Lester who in October 2018, following the Tree of Life synagogue shooting, published cartoons attacking the criticism of Halloween costumes as cultural appropriation and depicting Stacy Abrams as a common thief. It’s pretty clear what bothers Mr. Lester and what doesn’t.

Gary Varvel for Feb 01, 2022

I remember night flights when ICE took children who had been taken from their parents at the Southern border and taken across the US to mostly Christian adoption agencies to be placed with US families for a price. The frighted kids were not allowed to speak to anyone and ICE agents wouldn’t let anyone talk to the children. This is child trafficking. It was done under the tRump administration and it was because of the tRump separation policy that they had children they had to move around the country.

Bob Gorrell for Feb 01, 2022

Complete lie. It is stupid to even promote that idea. Remember the US is a country of laws and the DA and Gov. of Texas along with other states have go to court to block every attempt that Biden has made to change rules at the border. The only one rule change that was made was that families seeking asylum are not detained but verified given ways to track them and sent to family or NGO’s in other parts of the country. There are cities and towns in the US that are welcoming as many immigrant families as they can get. Reality is the US has places dying because of lack of people living there. Immigrants bring life back to these places. But that is the only rule change. The borders are not open, apprehensions are up. Facts matter

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

And now some for fun

not a flight risk

Zack Hill for Feb 02, 2022

Bloom County Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Peanuts Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Free Range Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Eek! Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Al Goodwyn Editorial Cartoons Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Herman Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

The Flying McCoys Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Aunty Acid Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Real Life Adventures Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Rubes Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Shoe Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Lola Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

One Big Happy Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Rose is Rose Comic Strip for February 02, 2022

Banned: Books on race and sexuality are disappearing from Texas schools in record numbers

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/texas-books-race-sexuality-schools-rcna13886

Facing pressure from parents and threats of criminal charges, some districts have ignored policies meant to prevent censorship. Librarians and students are pushing back.
Illustration of a young boy reaching for a book on a bookshelf censored by black bars.
School libraries in Texas have become battlegrounds in an unprecedented campaign by parents and conservative politicians to ban books dealing with race, sexuality and gender.Matt Williams for NBC News
 
 

 

Notice each of these concern parents talked only about their children and not wanting their children to read the books or see the stuff in the books.  What about all the other kids whose parents think it is OK for their kids to be exposed to new and diverse worlds?  These people are demanding the right to control what other kids are exposed to, what is next no science books because they object to their kids learning the earth is not 6,000 years old?  Understand what they really are doing here.  They don’t feel they have enough control over their children to stop them from wanting to see or read what is in these books.  They don’t feel their children will respect the wishes the parents have.  They want the information in the books hidden from these their kids, but because they feel they cannot control their own children they must take the resources, the books, away from all kids.  This is the case of I don’t want my kid to read / see a playboy so all adult magazines must be outlawed.  I remember as a kid that was a push to remove all adult magazines because kids might see a nude woman.  The horror of it but let’s take them to a violent movie instead.  We have to understand the point about the woman who wanted four books she objected to removed and replaced with the bible!  Is that book filled with incest, slavery, and killing a book any better than the ones these parents want hidden from all kids?   I guess so because they know their kids won’t read the bible even when forced to do so.  

Bill pushing freedom from discomforting lessons in classrooms, businesses heads to final House panel

Bill pushing freedom from discomforting lessons in classrooms, businesses heads to final House panel

‘This bill is white privilege personified and white fragility in legislative form.’

Legislation barring instruction that could cause someone to feel discomfort because of his or her demographics is approaching the end of the House committee process.

The House State Affairs Committee voted 16-8 Tuesday, along party lines, to advance a bill (HB 7) targeting class lessons and corporate trainings that teach cultural guilt, teachings proponents say inserts ideology into history lessons. The legislation, filed in part at Gov. Ron DeSantis’ urging, is Florida Republicans’ effort to quell classroom or corporate training discussions they consider “woke” indoctrinations of cultural guilt or critical race theory.

The House bill, carried by Miami Springs Republican Rep. Bryan Ávila, would prohibit lessons and training which teach that some people are morally superior to members of another race, color, sex or national origin. Additionally, it would ban teachings that an individual is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously. The goal would be to promote objective lessons in classrooms and beyond, Ávila said.

Some movements in education and corporate America threaten to undo progress in achieving equality by asking people to consider themselves as groups, not individuals, as assigning traits and experiences to groups rather than highlighting individual experience, he said.

“These movements confuse and muddle important history and civics lessons that should be taught by imposing ideologies that twist reality and fostering stereotypes that take us backward and not forward,” Ávila said.

 

In classrooms, enforcement would be placed in the hands of parents who could approach teachers to resolve concerns before filing complaints.

Critics argue the measure could effectively ban certain books, classroom materials or classroom discussions if parents believe the content contains subjective spins on historical facts. Some history lessons can’t be taught without possibly making people feel guilt or discomfort, they asserted.

Critics raised its potential impact on the teaching or discussion of other troubling historical events such as slavery or the Holocaust.

Ávila argued that teachers should stick to the curriculum and err on the side of caution when opining on historical events. That drew complaints from North Miami Democratic Rep. Dotie Joseph, who called erring on the side of caution the definition of a chilling effect — signifying a possible First Amendment violation.

“This bill is white privilege personified and white fragility in legislative form,” Joseph said.

 

“We need to be comfortable with being uncomfortable through reconciliation rather than through silence and suppression,” she continued.

For Democrats, the effort took on new meaning this weekend after neo-Nazi demonstrations in Orlando Sunday.

“My fear now as a teacher, as I’m teaching about the Holocaust, is that those Nazis who were on that bridge in Orlando, their children, are in my classroom. And now they go home and say, ‘My teacher told me, look what Nazi Germany did, look what Germans did,’” said Weston Democratic Rep. Robin Bartleman.

Joseph and Rep. Daryl Campbell, who is serving his first day in the House, noted Tuesday marks the first day of Black History Month.

“It dawned on me that I am a Black man with locks sitting at this seat, and I don’t recall the last time a Black man with locks was a Representative in the state of Florida,” Campbell said. “It makes me feel quite uncomfortable, sitting here right now.”

The bill also extends the same bans to corporate human resources policies and training to stop what Ávila cited as offensive cultural policies reported for such firms as AT&T, Coca-Cola, CBS, Google, Lockheed Martin and Walt Disney Corp.

To accomplish its goal in the corporate sphere, the bill would expand the Florida Civil Rights Act to consider such teachings as discrimination based on race, color, sex or national origin.

“This bill makes a mockery of the Florida Civil Rights Act, turns it completely upside down,” Orlando Democratic Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith said. “It minimizes the seriousness of real complaints of discrimination — someone who was denied a job promotion, someone who was demoted or fired from their job.”

Despite the heated discussions during the meeting, Ávila told members he loved them. He said both parties always agree to come from an objective point of view during political discourse.

“What makes a classroom different? Being objective, being fair, treating each other with respect, that is the American way of life,” Ávila said. “That is what this bill represents.”

The Senate’s version (SB 148) from Republican Sen. Manny Díaz Jr. got through its first committee vote last month after similar contention. Both bills have one more committee stop in their respective chambers. Díaz’s bill next heads to the Senate Rules Committee while Ávila’s bill heads to the House Education and Employment Committee.

CDC: COVID-19 hospitalizations 23 times higher for unvaccinated than boosted

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/592289-cdc-study-hospitalizations-23-times-higher-for-unvaccinated-than-boosted

Unvaccinated adults were 23 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 during the omicron wave than adults who were vaccinated and boosted, according to a new study that further highlights the importance of coronavirus vaccination and booster shots.   

The study, released Tuesday, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found by far the highest rates of cases and hospitalizations among unvaccinated people, followed by vaccinated but not boosted people, with vaccinated and boosted people having the most protection.  

The study used data from Los Angeles County as of Jan. 8, during the omicron wave.  

Hospitalizations were 5.3 times higher among the unvaccinated than vaccinated but not boosted.  

“Efforts to promote COVID-19 vaccination and boosters are critical to preventing COVID-19–associated hospitalizations and severe outcomes,” the study states.  

While the largest effects were in reducing hospitalizations, the study also shows that vaccines and boosters lowered the chance of getting infected at all. The protection is not total, meaning there are still frequent breakthrough cases, but the severity is far lower among people who are vaccinated and boosted than among the unvaccinated.  

Case rates among unvaccinated people were 3.6 times higher than vaccinated and boosted people, and two times higher than vaccinated and not boosted people, the study found.  

The study also found that, as expected, there was some drop-off in the performance of the vaccines against omicron compared with the delta variant, given omicron’s increased ability to evade protection.

Gaps between the unvaccinated and vaccinated were even larger with the delta variant, with a hospitalization rate 83 times higher for the unvaccinated compared to boosted people, and a case rate 12.3 times higher.  

“Rate ratios indicated continued protection conferred by vaccine against severe disease, especially among those who had received a booster, although reduced for Omicron compared with Delta,” the study states.  

Health officials are urging more people to get boosted. About 44 percent of fully vaccinated adults have also received a booster, according to CDC data.  

 

Anti-Vax Truckers Blockade Busy US Border Crossing As Protests Enter 5th Day At Parliament In Ottawa

Who is paying these truckers?  They are not earning money doing this.  Who is paying to organize these things.   This is serious dark money.  

CTV News reports:

Protesters have been bringing in fuel and supplies to those who are hunkered down in their vehicles Tuesday, while others have been seen playing street hockey throughout the day.

Buttons and badges that were offered for sale at the convoy Tuesday included those with “mask exemption” messaging, offensive imagery and other anti-mandate language. Some child care centres remain closed in the downtown area, and at least one vaccine clinic has shut its doors due to the protest Tuesday, for the fifth day in a row.

Some residents in Ottawa have reported being challenged on wearing masks by protesters and being assaulted while walking in their neighbourhoods. Many businesses in the downtown core will remain closed in light of the protest.

The BBC reports:

Tensions are rising at one of the US-Canada border’s busiest ports of entry over a vehicle blockade that has halted traffic and disrupted services. The demonstration is tied to the ongoing nationwide “Freedom Convoy” protests over Canada’s new restrictions on unvaccinated cross-border truckers.

Some motorists and area residents have reportedly been stuck in standstill since the protest began on Saturday. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Alberta said the event was “unlawful”. They said extensive efforts to negotiate with protest organisers had failed.

The line-up of trucks in Alberta extends for several miles along the main Highway 4 into the border village of Coutts. Mayor Jim Willett said the protest was blocking residents’ access to the grocery store and the gas station, and playing havoc with mail delivery and school bus pickups.

The Toronto Star reports:

Anyone standing with his back to the border in the howling winds and blowing snow would come face to face with the headlights of vehicles, two abreast, blocking the highway as far as the eye could see.

Big rigs were also parked horizontally, blocking traffic in both directions. Between lanes, other vehicles and campers were parked haphazardly in the median. Some vehicles were occupied, engines idling, exhaust fumes swirling in the icy wind.

Others sat silent and empty, their drivers seeking comfort and coffee in the nearby Smugglers Saloon. Mounties said late Monday they had been negotiating without success to end the illegal protest and were prepared to make arrests and tow vehicles if necessary.

True Facts: Proboscis Monkey

How Matt Gaetz’s Battered Campaign Bled Almost $100,000 in 2021

https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-matt-gaetzs-battered-campaign-bled-almost-dollar100000-in-2021

Why is he allowed to use campaign donations to pay for his private legal problems?

Gaetz’s campaign spent big on lawyers and ended with the only donation to the Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene joint fundraising committee in the last quarter of 2021.

Greg Nash

 

Federal sex crime investigations don’t pay.

That appears to be one takeaway—among many—from the year that has befallen beleaguered Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL).

After two breakneck fundraising quarters to kick off 2021, his campaign committee, Friends of Matt Gaetz, ended with a $94,838.65 loss on the year, according to a report filed on Monday with the Federal Election Commission.

Those first six months saw record fundraising for the three-term Republican, and it likely would have been a banner year if it weren’t for the investigation, which is examining whether Gaetz sex-trafficked a 17-year-old girl, illegally paid for sexobstructed justiceviolated the Mann Act, and played a role in an allegedly corrupt political influence campaign—and additionally whether his campaign broke the law in furthering any of those possible crimes.

All told, the Gaetz campaign hemorrhaged well over a million dollars in costs last year that appear associated with the investigation and related fallout—more than one out of every five dollars raised in the same period. And even though the Gaetz campaign ended the year with a bit over $1.5 million in the bank, it’s highly unusual for a congressman to spend more money in a non-election year than the campaign takes in.

Asked for comment, Gaetz pointed to his 2020 pledge not to accept special interest funds.

“I’m the only Republican in Congress who doesn’t take lobbyist or PAC money. I rely exclusively on donations that average around $38. HBO made a movie about it called The Swamp,” Gaetz said, referring to a documentary that chronicles Gaetz and other Republicans’ relationships in Washington.

(On Monday, the Trump campaign announced an average donation of $31 over the last six months.)

As for Gaetz’s legal troubles, more than $100,000 of his campaign’s disbursements on the year went to lawyers. That’s significantly more than the total $73,515 the campaign paid in legal fees since the Florida man’s first congressional bid in 2016. (That 2021 total would have been more than $130,000, but one firm returned its $25,000 retainer after severing ties with the campaign over the summer under unclear circumstances.)

In fact, Friends of Matt Gaetz paid more than its previous four-year total to one lawyer alone this year—$75,000 to Marc Fernich, who has represented convicted sex traffickers Jeffrey Epstein and Keith Raniere, as well as mobster John Gotti and imprisoned drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán. Fernich pocketed $50,000 in campaign cash last quarter.

One former Gaetz attorney, however, appears to have retained a degree of confidence in the Panhandle Republican. On May 15 this year, troubled porn lawyer, neo-Nazi defender, and Alex Jones Sandy Hook defamation attorney Marc Randazza—who received $2,000 from the Gaetz campaign in 2018—appeared to take up for Gaetz in response to a Twitter comment about the congressman possibly misusing public funds to buy drugs.

“He’s worth hundreds of millions in family money. If he even paid for the coke, I don’t see it as him misusing taxpayer money,” Randazza, who has represented alt-right conspiracy theorist Mike Cernovich, tweeted.

But while Fernich might boast deep expertise in sex crimes, he has no experience with campaign finance law. And the campaign, with its accounting under the microscope, spent big on compliance fees.

Between July and the end of September, the campaign paid roughly $85,000 to one firm for campaign finance services, far outstripping those costs from any other reporting period. Last quarter’s fees were less steep but still inordinate—$55,000.

And while Gaetz’s public relations expenses have fallen considerably since the brutal first weeks after the news of the probe broke last spring, they still took a chunk out of the campaign’s annual total. His go-to firm, Logan Circle Group, reaped about $850,000 in PR consulting and advertising fees in 2021. Those public relations costs dropped considerably as Gaetz began keeping his mouth shut and the investigation news cycle slowed, with only a single $2,750 check cut in the last three months, in late October.

As is customary for MAGA fixtures like Gaetz, the campaign paid its tributes to Donald Trump, tithing more than $2,200 to Trump properties in 2021. More than half of it came during the final months—$729 on Nov. 2 for lodging at Mar-a-Lago, and $445 for a late-October meal at Trump International Hotel in D.C.

On the other side of last quarter’s ledger, Gaetz raised $524,000, slightly outperforming his $500,000 summer, but only accounting for about 11 percent of his total $4.8 million for the election cycle to date.

Gaetz is also still politically exiled. He received no money from other officials or groups last quarter, and the only support he gave was a $2,000 transfer to Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ), who spearheaded the efforts to overturn the 2020 election results.

Gaetz’s joint fundraising committee with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) also appears to have all but officially gone bust. The two right-wing bomb-throwers never really made money from the jump. Everything they took in went right back out the door. But their final quarter in 2021 was notably bad.

The joint fundraising committee received one donation since the end of September—from Gaetz himself.

The $18,922 transfer from Gaetz’s campaign to the Gaetz-Greene enterprise appears to have been necessary to pay off the PAC’s final outstanding obligations. The committee, “Put America First,” has no money left.

Avlon on book bans: Don’t complain about cancel culture and try to cancel others