President Trump arrives in Warren, Mich., to deliver a speech marking his 100th day in office on April 29. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
President Trump arrives in Warren, Mich., to deliver a speech marking his 100th day in office on April 29. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
President Trumpย says a recession is OK in the short term, in a clip of a pre-recorded interview with NBC’s “Meet the Press with Kristen Welker” released on Friday.
Why it matters:ย Business owners andย politiciansย alike have shared fears of aย recessionย given the uncertainty surrounding the president’s tariffs.
The latest:ย When Welker asked Trump whether he’s “comfortable with the country potentially dipping into a recession for a period of time” if he were able to achieve his long-term goals, the president initially avoided answering the question directly.
“Some people on Wall Street say that we’re going to have the greatest economy in history. Why don’t you talk about them?” he insteadย said.
But after Welker pushed more, Trump responded, “Yeah, everything’s OK. I said, this is a transition period. I think we’re going to do fantastically.”
When asked if he was worried about a recession, Trump said: “Anything can happen. But I think we’re going to have the greatest economy in the history of our country. I think we’re going to have the greatest economic boom in history.”
The full interviewย will publish on NBCNews.com on Sunday.
Last Wednesday, Trump predicted during a Cabinet meeting (where everyone was required to praise him while Gulf-of-America caps were aligned across the table) that higher prices caused by tariffs will mean โchildren will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls.โ
Iโm sure fathers buy their daughters as many dolls as they cry for, because dads are weak for their daughters, but I doubt they buy 30 for Christmas. Am I wrong? What Iโm thinking, is that he bought Ivanka thousands of dolls and maybe half as many for his other daughter, whatโs-her-name. He probably bought a gazillion GI Joes for Jr and maybe a few Barbies for Eric.
I had โactionโ figures, not dolls, when I was a kid. Not only did I have superheroes like Batman and Spiderman, I also had a Fonzie (who suffered a traffic accident when I hid him in a lamp and one of his cool legs melted off). I even had an Epstein from Welcome Back, Kotter. Of course, I had a bunch of Star Wars guys. Oh, crap, maybe I did have 30, but I didnโt get 30 for Christmas.
Whatโs surreal here is that Trump is a glutton. From what Iโve heard from his friends, heโs also a pack rat and a hoarder. His offices are full of useless crap he doesnโt need. Itโs all junk. But now this billionaire, who purchases portraits of himself and has multiple homes and golf resorts, is telling Americans to cut down on their consumerism. What?
This is probably the first time in the modern era that the Republican message is, โDonโt spend so much money.โ Wasnโt one of Trumpโs campaign messages, โMake America wealthy again?โ It was along with, โMake America hate again.โ
At the cabinet meeting, Trump said, โYou know, somebody said, โOh, the shelves are going to be open. Well, maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls, you know, and maybe the two dolls will cost a couple of bucks more than they would normally.โ
Yeah! Screw those spoiled brats! If nothing else, instead of buying them so many dolls, make them get a job and pay rent and board. You can ship them off to Arkansas, where Governor Sarah Huckabee Hound Sanders has greatly loosened child labor laws.
When you go to McDonaldโs and theyโre screaming for the Happy Meal toy, make that brat pay for that Happy Meal.
In 1995, my life was a living hell every time we went to McDonaldโs because my kid was always screaming for the Black Power Ranger, and we got Pink Power Ranger every. fucking. time, and my son would lose his shit. I should have melted them like I did to poor Fonzie.
I still have nightmares about Pink Power Ranger.
Trump also said, โThey (China) have ships that are loaded up with stuff, much of which โ not all of it โ but much of which we donโt need.โ Thisโฆ.THIS coming from the asshole selling us Trump straws. This grifter probably wants us to stop buying so much shit from China and buy more of his shitโฆfrom China.
Trump is out of touch because he thinks the tariffs will only hike prices for useless shit. But people need to eat too, and some are taking out loans to buy groceries. The other option is to make your kid eat his GI Joe.
Stephen Miller said, โIf you had a choice between a doll from China that might have, say, lead paint in it, that is not as well-constructed as a doll made in America that has a higher environmental and regulatory standard and that is made to a higher degree of quality, and those two products are both on Amazon,โ Miller said, โthen, yes, you probably would be willing to pay more for a better-made American product.โ
Lead paint? Someone tell Baby Goebbels that imports sold in America are often subject to the same regulatory standards as domestic products. Also, during Trumpโs first term, his Environmental Protection Agency tried to roll back safety standards that would expose children toโฆwait for itโฆ.lead paint.
If you really want to freak your kid out, buy them a Stephen Miller doll. The brat will be begging for a Pink Power Ranger after that.
A Stephen Miller doll would be like a Goebbels version of Chucky.
Creative note: Proofer Laura wrote, โThis is unspeakably gross.โ I told her she should be ashamed of herself for looking at itโฆ after I sent it to her.
Students are shown at Carl Wunsche Sr. High School, 900 Wunsche Loop, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025, in Spring.
Melissa Phillip/Staff Photographer
A lawmaker pushing to ban non-human behavior in schools says he based his bill on a conversation with a school administrator, who has since denied so-called furries are a problem in her district.
During an at-times tense hearing Tuesday night, Republican state Rep. Stan Gerdes said he filed the bill after hearing โreports of the presence of a furryโ in a Smithville school. He said he called the district superintendent in November, who told him โthis is happening in districts across the stateโ and schools donโt have the ability to stop it.
โWe just want to help them have the tools to get some of the distractions out of the classroom so we can get back to teaching time,โ Gerdes told the House Public Education Committee.
But the Smithville school district issued a public statement last month disputing Gerdesโ claims. It said Superintendent Cheryl Burns told Gerdes there were no litter boxes on campus for use by students dressed as cats, but as a courtesy to the lawmaker, she โmade the extra effort to walk the campus to confirm.โ
โAt this time, the District has no concerns related to students behaving as anything but typical children,โ the statement said.ย
Still, Gerdes argued the legislation was needed to curb the โextremely concerningโ trend while providing scant evidence furries are a problem, or even present, in Texas schools.
Bothย Gov. Greg Abbott and House Speaker Dustin Burrows have backed the โForbidding Unlawful Representation of Roleplaying in Education (F.U.R.R.I.E.S) Act,โ which would prohibit any โnon-human behaviorโ by a student, including wearing animal ears or barking, meowing or hissing.
Theย bill includes exceptions for sports mascots or kids in school playsย and would only apply to grades 6-12. Still, it includes a clause that would amend the family code to deem schools โallowing or encouragingโ a child to โdevelop a dependence on or a belief that non-human behaviors are societally acceptableโ as child abuse.
The furries trend has existed for years, at least among adults. Many like taking on animal personas, dressing up in costumes and attending gatherings. The annual Anthrocon convention in Pittsburgh draws thousands.
Rumors about classrooms adapting to child furries appeared to start online in 2022. School districts in Iowa, Michigan and Nebraska later debunked claims they were providing litter boxes in bathrooms, and the fact-checking team at PolitiFact could not find any credible news reports that supported the claim.
Under questioning from a Democrat on the panel, who cast the bill as part of a โsmear campaignโ against public schools, Gerdes could not point to a single example of a school providing litter boxes to students.ย
Gerdes, a two-term legislator and past aide to former Gov. Rick Perry, said his office has received โsome reports of them.โ
โDid I go to these school districts and visit and see it with my own eyes? No,โ Gerdes said.
When Gerdes introduced the legislation last month, he said he fully expected members of the subculture he was targeting to show up at the Capitol โin full furry vengeanceโ when the bill was heard.
โJust to be clear โ they wonโt be getting any litter boxes in the Texas Capitol,โ the Smithville Republican said in a press release announcing the bill.
But there were no so-called furries or litter boxes at the late-night hearing Tuesday. Instead, the four people who showed up to testify against the measure included a public school teacher and a Texan who worried the measure could affect students with disabilities.
State Rep. James Talarico, a Round Rock Democrat who grilled Gerdes on the legislation, called the bill a โjoke,โ but said it would have serious consequences for educators. Teachers and schools could face fines of $10,000 to $25,000 for allowing behavior prohibited by the bill.
Talarico questioned whether a student licking their fingers after eating Cheetos would be prohibited by language in the bill, which defines โnon-human behaviorโ as โlicking oneself or others for the purpose of grooming or maintenance.โ He asked whether students reading โAnimal Farmโ would be flouting the law if they made sounds like the characters in the book.
Gerdes said neither would meet the intent of the bill, and said he would be open to working with Talarico on the language to make him more comfortable with the legislation.
โI’m not comfortable with any bill that’s going after a non-existent issue,โ Talarico responded. He cast the bill as part of an effort by Republicans to undermine public schools.
โGovernor Abbott has used this litter box rumor to paint our schools in the worst possible light,โ Talarico said. โThat’s because if you want to defund neighborhood schools across the state, you have to get Texans to turn against their public schools. So you call librarians groomers, you accuse teachers of indoctrination, and now you say that schools are providing litter boxes to students. That’s how all of this is tied together.โ
Gerdes denied the accusation. Later in the hearing, state Rep. Jeff Leach, a Plano Republican, defended Gerdes as a supporter of public schools and cast Talaricoโs opposition to the legislation as part of an โobsessionโ with the governor.
โHis hatred for Gov. Abbott and for private school vouchers or educational savings accounts has just gone too far,โ Leach said. โYouโre highly respected,โ he told Gerdes, โand this bill doesnโt change that.โ
The committee left the measure, House Bill 54, pending.
ย Detailed Army plans for a potentialย military parade on President Donald Trumpโs birthdayย in June call for more than 6,600 soldiers, at least 150 vehicles, 50 helicopters, seven bands and possibly a couple thousand civilians, The Associated Press has learned.
The planning documents, obtained by the AP, are dated April 29 and 30 and have not been publicly released. They represent the Armyโs most recent blueprint for its long-planned 250th anniversary festival on the National Mall and the newly added element โ a large military parade that Trump has long wanted but is still being discussed.
The Army anniversary just happens to coincide with Trumpโs 79th birthday on June 14.
While the slides do not include any price estimates, it would likely cost tens of millions of dollars to put on a parade of that size. Costs would include the movement of military vehicles, equipment, aircraft and troops from across the country to Washington and the need to feed and house thousands of service members.
High costs halted Trumpโs push for a parade in his first term, and the tanks and other heavy vehicles that are part of the Armyโs latest plans have raised concerns from city officials about damage to roads.
Asked about plans for a parade, Army spokesman Steve Warren said Thursday that no final decisions have been made.
Col. Dave Butler, another Army spokesman, added that the Army is excited about the plans for its anniversary.
โWe want to make it into an event that the entire nation can celebrate with us,โ said Butler. โWe want Americans to know their Army and their soldiers. A parade might become part of that, and we think that will be an excellent addition to what we already have planned.โ
Others familiar with the documents, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the plans have not been finalized, said they represent the Armyโs plans as it prepares for any White House approval of the parade. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
There has been no formal approval yet. Changes to the plans have been made in recent weeks and more are likely.
In a Truth Social post Thursday night that did not mention the June 14 plans, Trump wrote, โWe are going to start celebrating our victories again!โ He vowed to rename May 8, now known as Victory in Europe Day, as โVictory Day for World War II,โ and to change November 11, Veterans Day, to โVictory Day for World War I.โ
What would go into the potential Army parade
Much of the equipment would have to be brought in by train or flown in.
Some equipment and troops were already going to be included in the Armyโs birthday celebration, which has been in the works for more than a year. The festival was set to involve an array of activities and displays on the National Mall, including a fitness competition, climbing wall, armored vehicles, Humvees, helicopters and other equipment.
A parade, however, would increase the equipment and troops involved. According to the plans, as many as 6,300 of the service members would be marching in the parade, while the remainder would be responsible for other tasks and support.
The Armyโs early festival plans did not include a parade, but officials confirmed last month that theย Army had started discussionsย about adding one.
The plans say the parade would showcase the Armyโs 250 years of service and foresee bringing in soldiers from at least 11 corps and divisions nationwide. Those could include a Stryker battalion with two companies of Stryker vehicles, a tank battalion and two companies of tanks, an infantry battalion with Bradley vehicles, Paladin artillery vehicles, Howitzers and infantry vehicles.
There would be seven Army bands and a parachute jump by the Golden Knights. And documents suggest that civilian participants would include historical vehicles and aircraft and two bands, along with people from veterans groups, military colleges and reenactor organizations.
According to the plan, the parade would be classified as a national special security event, and that request has been submitted by the National Park Service and is under review.
And it is expected that the evening parade would be followed by a concert and fireworks.
One of the documents raises concerns about some limitations, which include where troops would be housed and โsignificant concerns regarding security requirementsโ as equipment flows into the city. It says the biggest unknown so far is which units would be participating.
Trump has long wanted a big military parade
In his first term, Trumpย proposed having a paradeย after seeing one in France on Bastille Day in 2017. Trump said that after watching the two-hour procession along the famed Champs-Elysees that he wanted an even grander one on Pennsylvania Avenue.
That plan was ultimately dumped due to the huge costs โ with one estimate of a $92 million price tag โ and other logistical issues. Among those were objections from city officials who said including tanks and other heavy armored vehicles would tear up the roads.
Trump said in a social media post in 2018 that he wasย canceling the eventย over the costs and accused local politicians of price gouging.
This year, as plans progressed for the Army to host its birthday festival in Washington, talk about a parade began anew.
D.C. Mayorย Muriel Bowserย acknowledged in April that the administration reached out to the city about holding a parade on June 14 that would stretch from Arlington, Virginia, where the Pentagon and Arlington National Cemetery are located, across the Potomac River and into Washington.
Bowser at the time said she didnโt know if the event was being โcharacterized as a military paradeโ but added that tanks rolling through the cityโs streets โwould not be good.โ
โIf military tanks were used, they should be accompanied with many millions of dollars to repair the roads,โ she said.
In 2018, the Pentagon appeared to agree. A memo from the defense secretaryโs staff said plans for the parade โ at that time โ would include only wheeled vehicles and no tanks to minimize damage to local infrastructure.
Baldor has covered the Pentagon and national security issues for The Associated Press since 2005. She has reported from all over the world including warzones in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria.
After seeing this cartoon, my friend John Kovalic wrote, โSesame Street is brought to you today by the letter โFโ and the number 47.โ
Late last night (Thursday), Donald Trump issued another illegal executive order, with this one ordering the board of directors for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to โcease federal funding for NPR and PBSโ because Trump claims theyโre woke and liberally biased.
The problem with liberal bias is that facts have a liberal bias. If everything you say is a lie and everything you do is corrupt, illegal, sick, depraved, inhumane, racist, and fucked up, then factual reporting is not your friend.
Trump canโt do anything official against the free press, but he can put his weight on them, which seems to be working on The Washington Post and CBS News, but he can meddle with government programsโฆto an extent.
The order says, โNeither entity presents a fair, accurate, or unbiased portrayal of current events to tax-paying citizens. The CPB Board shall cancel existing direct funding to the maximum extent allowed by law and shall decline to provide future funding.โ
The good news is, the government will continue to fund Trumpโs golf games.
PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger called it a โblatantly unlawful Executive Order, issued in the middle of the night.โ The middle of the night is when authoritarian governments tend to do their best work, like sending stormtroopers to break down your door, drag every member of your family out, and then put them in a train cattle car.
CPB issued a statement saying, โCPB is not a federal executive agency subject to the President’s authority. Congress directly authorized and funded CPB to be a private nonprofit corporation wholly independent of the federal government.โ
I bet Trumpโs thinking thatโs the kind of biased reporting that is costing PBS and NPR their funding. Heโs probably also thinking, โRespect my authority!โ
The CPB noted that the statute Congress passed to create it โexpressly forbade any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over educational television or radio broadcasting, or over [CPB] or any of its grantees or contractors.โ
Congress said that such funds โmay be used at the discretion of the recipientโ for producing or acquiring programs to put on the air.
Trump has already asked Congress to rescind funds already approved for public broadcasting. Fascists always murder a free press.
CPB is already suing the regime over Trumpโs executive order seeking to fire three of its five board members.
Trump recently attacked PBS and NPR on his platform ShitSocial, saying, โREPUBLICANS MUST DEFUND AND TOTALLY DISASSOCIATE THEMSELVES FROM NPR & PBS, THE RADICAL LEFT ‘MONSTERS’ THAT SO BADLY HURT OUR COUNTRY!โ
Does Big Bird look like a radical left monster?
Conservatives have been howling for years that NPR and PBS are liberally biased while the progressive group Fair (Fairness in Accuracy in Reporting) once issued a report blasting PBS and NPR for being too conservative.
Thatโs the thing with the media. Itโs never conservative enough for conservatives or liberal enough for liberals.
We got that complaint all the time when I was at The Free Lance-Star. Our page at that time was conservative, but we ran liberal columns and my pinko and unpatriotic cartoons. My editors sought balance, but there was still more conservative content than liberal, yet the conservatives still howled.
Each week, Politico publishes what they call the โCartoon Carousel,โ which is a collection of cartoons from the past week (USA Today and The Washington Post both used to do this, but they stopped). It too seeks balance and publishes an equal number of conservative and liberal cartoons, which means half the cartoons suck. I support diversity in news content, but I hate when itโs chosen over quality.
Now, one of those who complain irrationally about balance is in the White House, and heโll abuse his power to do things the Constitution doesnโt give him the power to do.
Trump’s first 100 days have been a total disaster. Defunding public broadcasting is the kind of messed up crap we can expect for the next 100 days and every day after that until we get this orange ogre out of the White House.
Creative note: My brain was slow-moving today, and I have about ten subjects written down to choose from. Sometimes itโs harder to choose your subject than it is to write the cartoon. When you have a long list of subjects, itโs nice when you can combine two of them, which I did today. Oscar came to me around noon. I need to move on to those other subjects, but while writing this blog, I got a great idea featuring Bert and Ernie.
Music note: Have you ever noticed that the Sesame Street theme is the same song as Sunshine Day by The Brady Bunch?
Drawn in 30 seconds:ย From TikTok, and with music. (snip-MORE)
May 2, 1963 Hundreds of children ranging in age from six to eighteen were arrested in Birmingham, Alabama, as they marched from Kelly Ingram Park, across from 16th Street Baptist Church, to downtown singing, โWe Shall Overcome.โPart of an ongoing effort to end segregation in that city, and following the arrests of many adults including Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., the children had volunteered to minimize the threat to families if a breadwinner were jailed.ย A judge had issued an order preventing any of 133 civil rights leaders from organizing a demonstration. Birmingham, the capital of Alabama, had been the site of 18 unsolved bombings in black neighborhoods over recent years, and the place where mobs had attacked Freedom Riders on Motherโs Day in 1961. Leaving the park in groups of fifty, the kids were put in vans by police, led by Eugene โBullโ Connor, until there were 959 filling the city jails.
May 2, 1968 The Poor People’s Campaign began with groups from several locations around the U.S. setting out for Washington, D.C., to draw attention to the living conditions of the poorest Americans. It was conceived and organized by Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. and, following his assassination the previous month, led by his successor at the head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), Reverend Ralph David Abernathy. The first wave of demonstrators arrived in Washington on May 11. One week later, Resurrection City was built on the Washington Mall, a settlement of tents and shacks to house the protesters. Resurrection CityA Read moreย
Note From Ali in 2025: Not a dream, and while not yet fulfilled, the goal is not unfulfilled (“A Dream Unfulfilled” from the link above,) as The Poor People’s Campaign is still very active, operating in many US states. See if there’s a committee near you!
The billionaire helped fund an effort to gin up fraud claims against the Democratic donation platform.
Trumpโs claim that he can order the Justice Department to investigate a fundraising platform used by his political foes based on vague allegations is part of hisย ongoingย effortย to use the governmentโs powers to target political enemies. Itโs not a particularly realistic accusationโthe fact sheet claims itโs targeting โstraw donorโ schemes, in which one person donates on behalf of another. Given the fairly strict limitations on campaign contributions, any straw donor scheme that wants to inject any noticeable amount of money into an electoral system that had $15.5 billion run through it is a great deal of tedious, high-risk work for a scammer.
On the other hand, in the post-Citizens Unitedย era, there are plenty of ways to inject unaccounted-for moneyโeven, theoretically, foreign moneyโinto the election. Super-PACs can accept unlimited donations from fairly easy-to-obscure sources, for instance, which makes the idea of anyone using a small-dollar conduit like ActBlue (or the GOP equivalent WinRed) fairly silly.
And notably, the funding for some of Trumpโs โdataโ on an alleged ActBlue โfraudโ seems to have come from just such a source: a super-PAC bankrolled by Elon Musk.
Last year, an opaque group called the Fair Election Fund beganย promisingย to pay โwhistleblowersโ who cited election fraud โwith payment from our $5 million fund.โ That never panned out, but the same organization found more success with a claim that 60,000 people who were named as small-dollar donors in the Biden-Harris campaignโs July Federal Election Commissionย report did not recall making the contribution when contacted by the Fair Election Fund.
Asย Mother Jonesย reportedย last year, the Fair Election Fund appears to have generated this finding by blasting out ominous-sounding texts and emails telling ActBlue donors that their donations had been โflagged,โ then tallying people who respondedโaccurately or notโby checking a box saying they did not recall making the contribution.
More at the link above
Israel carrying out โlive-streamed genocideโ in Gaza, Amnesty says
Amnesty accuses US President Donald Trump of committing a โmultiplicity of assaultsโ on human rights.
Israel is perpetrating a โlive-streamed genocideโ in Gaza, committing illegal acts with the โspecific intentโ ofย wiping out Palestinians, Amnesty International has said.
Israeliย forces in Gaza have violatedย the United Nations Genocide Convention with acts that include โcausing serious bodily or mental harm to civiliansโ and โdeliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destructionโ, the human rights organisation said in its annual report released on Monday.
Israeli air strikes have alsoย frequently hit civiliansย who were following evacuation orders, while its forces continued to โarbitrarily detain and, in some cases, forcibly disappear Palestiniansโ, the rights group said.
DOGE has made a big impact on Washington. But government spending is up.
Elon Musk and his shadowy โtech supportโ team have ripped through Washington, reshaping the government and culling the federal workforce with astonishing speed and scope.
Nearly a quarter of a million workers have or are expected to leave their federal jobs. That includes more than 112,000 federal workers who have opted into the deferred resignation program, according to a POLITICO analysis of previous reporting and conversations with administration officials. It also includes some 121,000 workers across agencies who have been fired, according to aย CNN analysis.
DOGE has hollowed out or shut down 11 federal agencies and says it has terminated more than 8,500 contracts and 10,000 grants. It has wiped out foreign aid and volunteerism in the U.S., slashed education spending and made sweeping changes to the way the government makes procurements, hires contractors and shares data.
DOGE, after promising $2 trillion in savings, now says it has saved the government $160 billion. But even these reported savings, so far, have not led to any meaningful decline in total government spending this year, according to the nonpartisan Penn Wharton Budget Model, which tracks weekly Treasury data.
In fact, the government has actually been spending more compared to this time last year, the model found.
Total spending rose by 6.3 percent, or $156 billion since Trump took office, compared to the first four months of 2024, said Kent Smetters, a Wharton professor who directs the model. Even when accounting for inflation, the federal government has still added $81.2 billion more spending to its books compared to the same period last year, he added.
It’s rare these days that I see a new product and think, this is really cool, but seriously, this is really cool:
“Meet the Slate Truck, a sub-$20,000 (after federal incentives) electric vehicle that enters production next year. It only seats two yet has a bed big enough to hold a sheet of plywood. It only does 150 miles on a charge, only comes in gray, and the only way to listen to music while driving is if you bring along your phone and a Bluetooth speaker. It is the bare minimum of what a modern car can be, and yet itโs taken three years of development to get to this point.”
So far, so bland, but it’s designed to be customized. So while it doesn’t itself come with a screen, or, you know, paint, you can add one yourself, wrap it in whatever color you want, and pick from a bunch of aftermarket devices to soup it up. It’s the IBM PC approach to electric vehicles instead of the highly-curated Apple approach. I’m into it, with one caveat: I want to hear more about how safe it is.
It sounds like that might be okay:
“Slateโs head of engineering, Eric Keipper, says theyโre targeting a 5-Star Safety Rating from the federal governmentโs New Car Assessment Program. Slate is also aiming for a Top Safety Pick from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.”
I want more of this. EVs are often twice the price or more, keeping them out of reach of regular people. I’ve driven one for several years, and they’re genuinely better cars: more performant, easier to maintain, with a smaller environmental footprint. Bringing the price down while increasing the number of options feels like an exciting way to shake up the market, and exactly the kind of thing I’d want to buy into.
Of course, the proof of the pudding is in the eating – so let’s see what happens when it hits the road next year.
About the Tea Party, the direction the Republican Party took during the Obama administration, and then of Trump first riding down the escalator to announce his candidacy:
“If you saw in any of this a threat to liberal democracy writ large, much less one that could actually succeed, you were looked at with the kind of caution usually reserved for the guy screaming about aliens on the subway.”
And yet, of course, it got a lot worse.
The proposal here is simple:
“I propose we promote a simple rule for these uncertain times: Those who saw the danger coming should be listened to, those who dismissed us should be dismissed. Which is to say that those of us who were right should actively highlight that fact as part of our argument for our perspective. People just starting to pay attention now will not have the bandwidth to parse a dozen frameworks, or work backwards through a decade of bitter tit-for-tat arguments. What they might askโwhat would be very sensible and reasonable of them to askโis who saw this coming?”
Because you could see it coming, and it was even easy to see, if you shook yourself out of a complacent view that America’s institutions were impermeable, that its ideals were real and enduring, and that there was no way to overcome the norms, checks, and balances that had been in place for generations.
What this piece doesn’t quite mention but is also worth talking about: there are communities for whom those norms, checks, and balances have never worked, and they were sounding the alarm more clearly than anyone else. They could see it. Of course they could see it. So it’s not just about listening to leftists and activists and people who have been considered to be on the political fringe, but also people of color, queer communities, and the historically oppressed. They know this all rather well.