November 14, 1910 Eugene Ely performed the first airplane takeoff from a ship. His Curtiss pusher flew from the deck of the U.S.S. Birmingham in Hampton Roads, Virginia.By January he would execute the first (takeoff and) landing on a warship, the U.S.S. Pennsylvania. Captain Washington I. Chambers of the Navy Department had been interested in the military uses for the seven-year-old invention. Naval flight training started shortly thereafter. More of the whole story
November 14, 1954 “Ten Million Americans Mobilized for Justice” began a campaign to collect 10 million signatures on a petition urging the Senate not to censure Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-Wisconsin). The motion of censure against Senator McCarthy was for obstructing a Senate committee and for acting inexcusably and reprehensibly toward a U.S. soldier appearing before his own committee. McCarthy had used his Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee to publicly denounce thousands as subversive, especially within the federal government, many without any justification. The political views of most were painted as treasonable and conspiratorial, rather than differing political views. The petition effort fell about nine million signatures short. More on Joe McCarthyย
November 14, 2000 Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, simultaneously co-chair of George W. Bushโs Florida presidential campaign organization and the public official responsible for the conduct of the election itself, certified Governor Bushโs fragile 300-vote lead over Vice President Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election. Katherine Harris Florida Judge Terry Lewis gave Harris the authority to accept or reject a follow-up manual recount from some counties where the count was open to question. Harris rejected the manual recounts.
November 13, 1933 The first recorded “sit-down” strike in the U.S. was staged by workers at the Hormel Packing Company in Austin, Minnesota. When the Independent Union of All Workers (IUAW) went on strike, the company tried to bring in scab (strike-breaking) workers.
โ Four hundred men, many of them armed with clubs, sticks and rocks, crashed through the plant entrance, shattering the glass doors and sweeping the guards before them. The strikers quickly ran throughout the plant to chase out non-union workers. One . . . group crashed through the doors of a conference room where Jay Hormel and five company executives were meeting and declared “We’re taking possession. So move out!” (Larry Engelmann, “We Were the Poor — The Hormel Strike of 1933,” Labor History, Fall, 1974.) The tactic worked: within four days Hormel agreed to submit wage demands to binding arbitration. The success of this strike reinvigorated the labor movement, which had been in decline throughout the 1920s.
November 13, 1956 The U.S. Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional in public transportation. The case, Browder v. Gayle, was brought by four women, Aurelia Browder, Susie McDonald, Claudette Colvin and Mary Louise Smith, who had refused to surrender their bus seats to whites in Montgomery (months before Rosa Parks had done so), and had been arrested for violating Alabama law which required segregation on public buses.They challenged the law and the Court agreed, finding the law under which they were arrested in violation of the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Aurelia Browder A roadside monument was dedicated in 2004 to the four plantiffs in the Browder v. Gayle case. Colvin, a 15-year-old student at Booker T. Washington High School, boarded a bus in 1955 and refused to give up her seat to a white man. She was handcuffed, arrested and forcibly removed from the bus, as she screamed that her constitutional rights were being violated.ย More on Browder v. Gayleย
November 13, 1960 Over 1000 Quakers (members of the Society of Friends) surrounded the Pentagon for a silent vigil to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the first Quaker Peace Testimony issued to King Charles II in 1660. From the original Peace Testimony:ย “We utterly deny all outward wars and strife and fightings with outward weapons, for any end or under any pretence whatsoever. And this is our testimony to the whole world….” The complete text of the 1660 Declaration
November 13, 1974 Karen Silkwood, a technician and union activist (Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers’ Union) at the Kerr-McGee Cimarron plutonium fuels production plant near Crescent, Oklahoma, was killed in a one-car crash. Read more about her storyย ย
November 13, 1982 Maya Ying Lin The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated in Washington, D.C. Carved into black granite are the 58,260 names of those Americans who died in Vietnam. The designer, Maya Ying Lin of Athens, Ohio, a 21-year-old architecture student at Yale University, was the winner of the competition that drew 1,421 design entries: “. . . this memorial is for those who have died, and for us to remember them.” Eventually, the Memorial included three elements, the Wall of names, the Three Servicemen Statue and Flagpole, and the Vietnam Women’s Memorial. The Wall of Names, the Three Servicemen Statue and Flagpole, and the Vietnam Women’s Memorial
Be careful with what you ask for. You just might get it. Read on Substack
Stephen Colbert made a joke about people telling comedians after the Trump victory (gag), โAt least youโll have so much material to work with.โ Cartoonists were sick of that comment back in 2016. One of my colleagues and friend, Ward Sutton, drew a cartoon about it. Itโs something we hear all the time and I donโt think people truly understand itโs the last thing we want to hear. In fact, it was repeated to me last night at a party for writers.
We donโt want to hear it. Itโs empty solace and goddammit, we hear it too often. Iโm going to hear it again before the dayโs over. I would rather my nation survive and not turn into a fascist state controlled by racist goose-stepping troglodytes than have great material from it. And by the way, the materialโs not that great. Another fact is that Trump cartoons are bad for business. Editors are scared shitless of them.
What Iโm getting to with this in regards to todayโs cartoon is that after posting on social media about the comment, a few people told me they will need to laugh to avoid crying and thatโs what my cartoons will give them. Yeah, except I think each of my cartoons since last Tuesday has been sad. Proofreader Laura told me that at least twice, and I didnโt argue with her (sheโs really smart and perceptive). Others have told me the same thing. Someone told me they couldnโt even click like on one of my cartoons because it was so sad, and Iโm not even drawing dead puppies.
My last few cartoons have been kinda sad, like this one, or this one, or this one. And now many will find todayโs cartoon sad. The Latino vote certainly depresses me.
Why would any Latino other than George Zimmerman vote for a racist whoโs been shit-talking you for the past decade? Hmm? I will never understand the appeal of Donald Trump.
While Harris won the Latino vote with 53 percent, about 45 percent of Latinos voted for Donald Trump. Why? Tommy Vallejos wrote a column for The Tennessean in Nashville to explain it to all of us liberal dummies.
Vallejoโs first argument is that voting for Trump doesnโt make him or other Latinos racist. Iโm not going to call Latinos racists for voting for Trump. Iโm going to state the fact that voting for Trump means Latinos voted for a racist. They voted for racism. Donald Trump is a racist and nobody can make a strong case that he isnโt.
Voting for Donald Trump, at the very least, means racism is not a dealbreaker for you, no matter what race you are. And while you may wonder why a Latino would want to shit on other Latinos, I would like to have about 60 percent of Americaโs white population deported. Letโs send them all to Liberia.
Vallejoโs major reason for being a Trumper is the economy, so he claims. But if Vallejo is an intelligent person, he knows thatโs a lie.
He writes that most Latinos who voted for Trump were concerned about jobs and the economy, forgetting that the unemployment rate was 6.4 percent when Trump left office. Trump inherited President Barack Obamaโs economy and fucked it up. He left office with fewer American jobs than there were when he entered. Heโs the first president to love more jobs than he created since Herbert Hoover.
There is no evidence that Donald Trump can rebuild an economy. Thereโs only evidence he can destroy it.
Trumpers will claim thatโs not Trump’s fault. It was Covidโs fault. If youโre going to make that argument then you canโt blame President Joe Biden for inflation. In case you werenโt paying attention, inflation hit the entire planet. High gas prices hit every nation. Vallejo, who forgets Trumpโs final numbers, blames Biden for inflation. Heโs making an extremely dishonest argument in voting for Trump.
And if you voted for Trump because of the economy, here are a few other facts can chew on with your lying mouth: Under Trump, the trade deficit went up over 36 percent. Trumpโs promising even more tariffs so enjoy your 20 percent tax increase on imported goods, fuckers. People lacking health insurance rose by three million, and thatโs even with Trump failing to repeal Obamacare. What are they going to do now? How many Americans will lose healthcare coverage in Trumpโs second term? Vallejo argues that under Biden, the government spent โfreely and indiscriminately,โ yet under Donald Trump, federal debt went from $14.4 trillion to $21.6 trillion. Under Trump, home prices increased nearly 30 percent while rising 20 percent under Biden. Wages rose higher under Biden than they did under Trump. The top 25 U.S. companies invested more than $900 billion in the economy, which is 40 percent higher than during the Trump regime.
Everyone who voted for Trump because the economy was their top concern should have voted for Harris.
Vallejos also argues that we need Trump to curb illegal immigration, but guess what, Buddy. In Trumpโs last year, apprehensions at the southern border had a nearly 15 percent increase than President Obamaโs last year in office. Even if you honestly wanted to reduce illegal immigration, do you really support deporting millions of people and tearing apart families by using the military? Seriously, Mr. Vallejo, how much do you hate Latinos?
Vellejos also cries that under Biden and with inflation rising, stagnant wages โfailed to keep paceโ and blames Biden for not reducing the tax and regulatory burden on โjob creators.โ But Trumpโs huge tax cuts for asshole billionaires were still in place, so why didnโt corporate America come running to the rescue? Oh, yeahโฆtrickle-down economics doesnโt work. Instead of cutting their own profits, Corporations jacked up prices and as inflation has been going down, their prices have not. In fact, Corporate profits continued to rise throughout the Biden administration. Exxonโs second-quarter profits this year were over $9 billion. Did they lower the price of gas at the fuel pumps? HAHAHAHAHA. Youโre funny.
Despite Donald Trump tweeting in 2020, โIf you want your 401kโs and stocksโฆto disintegrate and disappear, vote for the Radical Left Do Nothing Democrats and Corrupt Joe Biden,โ the stock market did better under Biden than Trump. Fact fact fuckity fact fact.
The S&P 500 has posted a compound annual growth rate of 14.1 percent from Bidenโs November 2020 election to the beginning of this month. The market returns under Biden are the second best in modern history, only trailing behind Bill Clintonโs, gasp, another Democratic president.
Vallejo accused Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris of โfumblingโ the economy which makes me think he doesnโt watch football and doesnโt know what a fumble is. Is it when the cheerleaders kick the ball?
Vallejo also wrote that Latinos voted for Trump because they are โsupportive of the rule of law and desire an orderly process.โ Now you gotta get the fuck out of here. Vallejo, like most MAGAts, is a liar who suffers from memory loss. Hello? January 6, fake electors, electoral fraud, 11,780 votes, stolen documents, assaulting women, corruption, violating the emoluments clause, etc. If you truly desire the โrule of law,โ Mr. Vallejo, call the Trump team now and demand that he doesnโt fire Jack Smith.
Shockingly, Vallejo didnโt include that he voted for Trump so boat batteries would be lighter, the boats wouldnโt sink from their weight, and sharks wouldnโt eat you while youโre flapping around in the water.
At the end of his bullshit designed as a column for a newspaperโs opinion page, Vallejo writes, โMost importantly, we love the USA and cherish freedom and opportunity.โ So you voted for the treasonous fuck whoโs a subordinate of Vladimir Putin? You voted for the asshole who gave Putin classified information. You voted for our nationโs greatest national security threat who has been secretly talking to Putin since we fired him in 2020. You voted for the guy who says he wants to be a dictator, quoted Hitler, and said he wants to delete the Constitution.
Every reason Vallejo gives for voting for Trump is bullshit. That means I donโt know why in the hell Trump won 45 percent of the Latino vote. I just hope that when it burns them, they fucking get it.
And Mr. Vallejo, I changed my mind. You are a racist. Itโs like anytime when someone says, โIโm not a racist, butโฆโ
And hey, at least I have so much material to work with now.
Creative note: I drew most of this yesterday and all I had to do this morning was color it. I was all like, โYay, Iโm done by 1 p.m. and now I can go watch footballโฆright after I write this blog. Itโs now 3 p.m. Are my Saints winning?
Music note: I listened to Buddy Holly. I will never get over the hiccup thing he does at the start of Rave On.
if we all click our heels together three times, everything will be okay Read on Substack (Language NSFW, as always with Jeff Tiedrich’s writing)
the worthless scribblers of the corporate-controlled media utterly failed us during the 2024 campaign season.
New York Times executive editor Joe Kahn came right out and said it: defending democracy is a โpartisan act,โ and we wonโt do it โ and, fuck us all, the press kept their word, and didnโt do it. they enthusiastically put their fingers on the scale for Donny Convict.
arguably, the mediaโs worst transgression was the sanewashing โ the cleaning-up of Donnyโs incomprehensible blitherings, to hide his obvious cognitive disintegration and make him sound coherent.
a minutes-long disjointed word-salad about how tariffs on Chinese goods were going to lower the cost of childcare became โa major economic speech.โ
Donnyโs inability to keep his increasingly-demented mind on the topic at hand โ his crazypants pinballing from theyโre eating the dawgs to Hannibal Lecter wants to have you for dinner to would you rather be eaten by a shark or electrocuted โ was explained away by Donny as his brilliant โweave.โ
[Wishcasting is] the act of interpreting information or a situation in a way that casts it as favorable or desired, despite the fact that there is no evidence for such a conclusion; a wishful forecast.
sure enough, the media has now gone into overdrive, churning out piece after piece in which they promise us that if we all click our heels together three times, everything will be okay.
not twelve hours after the election had been called for Donny, the Times wasted no time in assuring us that the election of a vindictive fascist is an amazing opportunity for vindictive fascism not to happen.
what kind of magical, everybody-gets-a-pony thinking is this? just fucking stop it.
did Ezra Klein and Ross Douthat both experience some kind of recent head trauma that has caused them to forget the years 2017 through 2020? Donnyโs first presidency was a dumpster fire of corruption, mismanagement and mass death โ but somehow now, given a second chance to fuck shit up worse, Donnyโs going to bring us an โAmerican renewalโ?
anythingโs possible, right? overnight, Donny Convict could magically become a wise and fair statesman โ also, technicolor pigs could fly out of my ass.
oh my god, the media never stops imagining that Donny is going to somehow become presidential. during his first term โ over and over โ every time Donny stopped short of taking out his dick and pissing on the floor, the press would fall all the fuck over itself in a mad dash to proclaim him presidential.
spoiler alert: Donny never became presidential. not from the the first time he threw a ketchup-hurling tantrum in the White House, to the moment he absconded back to his Florida golf motel, taking with him boxes of stolen classified documents.
the premise here is that if weโre respectful to Donny โ if we fucking kowtow to him, and stop opposing him โ heโll be nice to us in return. heโll become โ dare I say it? โ presidential.
Stop indulging the fantasy that outrage, social stigma, language policing, a special counsel, the Twenty-Fifth Amendment, or impeachment will disappear him. And stop talking as if normal political opposition is capitulation.
Everyone should normalize Trump. If he does something good, praise him. Trump is remarkably susceptible to flattery.
okay, I will grant that Newsweek may be half right. Lisa Murkowski seems to genuinely loathe Donny, and we can probably count on her to vote against the worst of his fuckery โ but Susan Collins? the credulous naรฏf who assured us over and over again that Donny had learned his lesson, and would never transgress again?
now, letโs bask under some rays of hope from people who arenโt just blindly wishcasting, but are actually offering reasoned arguments.
in the middle of a fairly clear-eyed assessment of the Trumpian horrors to come, the Guardian gives us this:
Elaine Kamarck, a former official in the Bill Clinton administration, said: โFor him to expand presidential power, Congress has to give up power and theyโre not in the mood to do that. Theyโve never done that. There are plenty of institutionalists in Congress.โ
Kamarck also expressed faith in the federal courts, noting that judges appointed by Trump only constitute 11% of the total placed on the bench by former presidents. A Trump dictatorship is โnot going to happen,โ she added. โNow, there might be things that the president wants to do that people donโt like that the Republican Congress goes along with him on but thatโs politics. Thatโs not a dictatorship.โ
Paradoxically, however, Trumpโs reckless venality is a reason for hope. Trump has the soul of a fascist but the mind of a disordered child. He will likely be surrounded by terrible but incompetent people. All of them can be beaten: in court, in Congress, in statehouses around the nation, and in the public arena. America is a federal republic, and the statesโat least those in the union that will still care about democracyโhave ways to protect their citizens from a rogue president. Nothing is inevitable, and democracy will not fall overnight.
Americans cannot vote themselves into a dictatorship any more than you as an individual can sell yourself into slavery. The restraints of the Constitution protect the American people from the unscrupulous designs of whatever lawless people might take the reins of their government, and that does not change simply because Trump believes that those restraints need not be respected by him. The Constitution does not allow a president to be a โdictator on day one,โ or on any other day. The presidency will give Trump and his cronies the power to do many awful things. But that power does not make them moral or correct.
I sure hope to fuck theyโre right.
This is going to be my closing message for the foreseeable future:
practice self-care. do what you need to do to keep sane. if that means disengaging with my daily posts for a while, I get it. this community of ours will still be here when you return.
to all the people who have signed on in the days since the election, welcome aboard. settle in as we all try to deal with the shitfuckery thatโs ahead of us.
we are all in this together, and we are all here for each other.
November 11, 1942 The U.S. Congress approved lowering the draft age to 18 and raising the upper limit to 37 less than a year after having declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy. In September 1940, Congress, by wide margins in both houses, had passed the Burke-Wadsworth Act, the first peacetime draft (though war raged in Europe and Asia, the U.S. was not yet directly involved) imposed in the history of the United States.ย The good war and those who refused to fight itย
November 11, 1972 The U.S. Army turned over its massive military base at Long Binh to the South Vietnamese army, symbolizing the end of direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War. The last American forces, however, did not leave until 1974. U.S. military leaving the Long Binh base
My top-line thought for the week ahead: Donโt give up!
If you want to plan a protest, plan it. If you want to knit in public at a lecture, do it. Donโt let anyone else make the rules for you. You get to set your own vision for what it means to be persistently pro-democracy as we prepare to face whatโs ahead.
For me, it means resisting the language of division that brought us here and working to maintain the big tent that helped us win the fight for four more years of democracy in 2020. People are down right now; none of us are at our best. So, give people a lot of space and understanding. But donโt be afraid to act on your own or enlist like-minded friends to come along with your plans. Donโt let anyone tell you that your way of expressing your love for country and Constitution isnโt the right way. There is a lot of that going around, as many people with good intentions are struggling.
If youโre looking for inspiration and have the concentration for a longer piece, read the words of Czech leader Vรกclav Havel, who wrote The Power of the Powerlessin 1978, ten years after the Soviet Union crushed Prague Spring. Havel explored the idea that individuals who might normally be seen as powerless can make common cause in dissidence against a repressive political structure. The Czechs did not have the centuries-long history of democracy like we do, nor did they have a Constitution in place that guaranteed rights like our does. Still, Havel pointed the way for them to resist a totalitarian system. Although the story of our coming struggle is likely to be very different from theirs, you may still take heart reading Havel, knowing that his people struggled free from a dictatorial regime and created a republic.
The outcome of this election has been incredibly hard to come to terms with. In my heart, I feared Donald Trump would winโI live in a state where many people support him and their numbers were strongโbut I hoped and even dared to believe it wouldnโt happen. And of course, I was wrong.
We are in for tough times, and they will not be times to give up in. Lawyers are already preparing to do important work. They have the experience of 2016 to guide them. Project 2025 and Trumpโs Agenda 47 vision are dark. But they are not self-executing; they will have to do the work to put them in place, and we need to be there every step of the way, pushing back. Never underestimate the value of the public voice.
But do take time to refresh your understanding of the policies this administration has rallied around in advance. I have not forgotten that in early July, Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts commented that the coming revolution could be โbloodless if the left allows it to be.โ
This interviewย with States United CEO Joanna Lydgate is an overview of Project 2025
This pieceย talks about the impact of mass deportations
This pieceย linked Trump to Project 2025 after he disclaimed knowledge of it
This is an indexย of the columns I wrote about Project 2025 prior to last July
We have a long history and tradition of democracy in this country. We have local governments and organizations where we can run for office and use our power to make things better, even if Trump is trying to make them worse at the national level. We are still a constitutional democracy, and if we want to keep the Republic, we are going to have to fight to hold onto as many of our norms as we can.
But not all this week.
This week we are going to have to endure the winding down of the criminal cases against Donald Trump. Thatโs a gut punch for those of us who believed that accountability was possible and that Donald Trump wasnโt above the law.
Tuesday in Manhattan, Judge Juan Merchan is expected to rule on whether the Supreme Courtโs presidential immunity decision impacts Trumpโs conviction in the New York case. If the convictions survive, and they should, or at least some of them, expect a rocket of an appellate case going off, as Trump tries to avoid being sentenced later this month. He may succeed given the politics of the moment, but legally, there is no reason he canโt be sentenced, although, and Iโm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, I expect that even if he receives a custodial sentence, he will not serve it because of the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. Itโs an entirely unsatisfactory conclusion to one of the worst-ever violations of American democratic principles.
I donโt expect normal times ahead. I believe Trump when he tells us who he is. I believe MAGA when they tell us who they are. This wasnโt just a campaign where the winner takes office and we all move on happily together, shoring up our disappointment. We have to be prepared for that reality, and not get sucked into a โbusiness as usualโ version of what Trumpโs time in office will look like.
We havenโt begun to fight yet, but as we get over the shock of the election, we can begin to get ready. As President Biden says, you canโt love your country only when you win. Iโd add to that, you canโt be willing to fight for democracy only when itโs easy.
All morning I did the three Sunday shows I watch.ย This Week, Meet the Press, and Face the Nation.ย Ranted while I wrote stuff to refute and talk about pushed by the republicans on the panels and interviewed as they crowed about how this was a clear mandate for them to take the country so far right the Puritans would be scared to come here.ย I stopped writing figuring I had recorded all of these shows.ย ย Then I spent an hour while listening to them trying to figure out how to record them from one computer to the other as I really need to change my desk configuration and have already ordered the ram to do drastically help one of my computers.ย ย Sadly my main computer is maxed out.ย I should have known better but it was on sale with great specs … so I bought it.ย Always.ย Yes always by a computer that is upwards expandable.ย I won’t make that mistake again.ย However even if I lose these recordings of the corporate media and on This Week Johnathan Carl was creaming his pants on the tRump win, so much for media impartiality, I need a break as Ron was telling me.ย So I am going to play Portal Two.ย ย It is a wonderful puzzle game using a portal gun to shoot an incoming portal and an outgoing portal.ย No shooting other players.ย This is a grand game for people not wanting to hurt others even in a game and for stretching the mind.ย If you don’t have a gaming console the game is also on PC, which is where I first played it.ย Hugs I am off to challenge my brain on more than politics.ย Hugs.ย ย ย
Please watch this.ย This is Vaush.ย He points out that of the top left wing streamers.ย Streamers make an hour to 3 hour content on schedule.ย A lot of them clip their streams to smaller 10 minute clips or so that they can post.ย Of the top ten who many are right wing media?ย 9.ย Yes 9 out of 10 most popular streamers on social media which includes YouTube, Twitch, other smaller streaming services.ย The amount of money pumped into the right wing media is incredible as I have been saying.ย Look at the graph of incomes.ย The one that was leftist was Hessian and he doesn’t lean towards either democrats or republicans.ย He once worked for TYT and left to make millions streaming.ย This is about 20 minutes long but it describes the cumulative power of everyone left of center right now is drowned out (tRumped) by 5 to 10 Nazis from the right.ย ย If we want to win we must reach people where they are, and to do that we must be on the media they us.ย Much more covered in the video. Hugs