More clips from The Majority Report on Charlie Kirk, Tariffs, and TRUMP VS REALITY

Brian Kilmeade gave Trump an opportunity to cool the temperature down in the country, but he decided to crank the thermostat up instead.

In an interview on Meet the Press, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent defended the Trump administration’s tariffs.

 

Jimmy Kimmel Cancelled??? Stop Being Pusillanimous!!! | BREAKING NEWS Armageddon Update

Political cartoons / memes / and news I want to share. 9-21-2025

I posted two cartoon posts using different methods.   I have not heard back if that stopped the broken links or not.  So I have not included them in this post.   If anyone needs the links to those post please let me know.   The Cagle site has great cartoons but is useless as a source if people can’t see them.   Hugs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ICE Attack Hospitalizes 80-Year-Old US Citizen

Two more clips from The Majority Report. One on RFK destroying the CDC and the other on the how bad Chuck Schumer is as an opposition party leader.

 

Kash Patel lies and is pilloried for tRump.

It Is International Day Of Peace

FWIW.

September 21, 1963
The War Resisters League organized the first American anti-Vietnam War demonstration in New York City. The League, founded in 1923, was the first peace group to call for U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, and played a key role throughout the war, organizing rallies, the burning of draft cards, civil disobedience at induction centers, and assisting resisters.
History of WRL
 
WRL home 
September 21st (since 1982)

The International Day of Peace was established by United Nations resolution in 1981 and first celebrated in 1982 (then as the 3rd tuesday of the month).
Events are planned all over the world to promote peace and make it more visible.

About Peace Day and plans around the world 

Less Serious News

Because it doesn’t hurt to know a little about these things, too.

News of the Week: Lottery Woes, Robert Redford, and Why Do People Swear So Much?

In the news of the week ending September 19, 2025, are lots of profanity, a stone skimming scandal, and saying goodbye to Robert Redford.

Bob Sassone

Random Notes

If I ever win the lottery, remind me to save and invest the money.

Every time I put down an ant trap, a mouse comes in overnight and takes it away. What are they doing with them?

I love prescription medication commercials that say “Tell your doctor what medications you’re taking.” Shouldn’t my doctor know that already?

Could you eat an entire meal at a restaurant without your phone? That’s what you have to do at the new eatery Hush Harbor in Washington, D.C., which doesn’t allow cell phones. They will supply you with letter-writing materials and board games though!

Life advice: Try not to be the type of person who would go on a reality show.

Kids, what if I told you that in the 1960s and ’70s, companies embedded vinyl records on the back of cereal boxes? It’s true!

If I put down mouse traps, will a larger animal come into the house overnight and take those?

Mass. Appeal

Why do things have to change?

Massachusetts is currently in the process of picking a new state flag and a new state seal. The old ones were perfectly fine but I guess they’re no longer appropriate for modern times. Or something.

Unfortunately, the finalists are TERRIBLE. The seals are passable, I guess, but the state flag choices are a mayflower (the flower, not the ship), a mountain with a gold star on top, and a circle of turkey feathers.

Writer Matt Taibbi thinks the state should run with the turkey idea but maybe in a Norman Rockwell direction.

Some people have joked that the new flag should be the colors of Dunkin’ Donuts, and compared to the finalists that might not be a bad idea.

Peak Profanity

I have a theory that everyone swears. They may not do it all the time and they may even pick the mildest of curse words. But everyone from the ages of 9 to 90 does it.

The New York Times thinks so too. The writer, Mark Edmundson, grew up in the 1950s and ’60s when cursing was relatively rare. And the people that swore were almost always guys (only never in front of a parent, teacher, or cop). But it’s everywhere now, from homes to schools and on television. I’m still sometimes shocked by what the basic cable channels can get away with now.

We try our hardest to leave out certain words in the pages of the Post, and if you leave a comment, please try to control yourself as well.

Headline of the Week

“Cheating Scandal Rocks World Stone Skimming Championships”

RIP Robert Redford, Bobby Hart, Patricia Crowley, Thomas Perry, Marilyn Hagerty, and Ricky Hatton

Robert Redford starred in many classic films, including All the President’s Men, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance KidThe Way We WereThe StingThree Days of the CondorCaptain America: The Winter SoldierThe Candidate, and many other movies and TV episodes. He was also a director, helming Ordinary People (for which he won an Oscar), Quiz Show, and A River Runs Through It. He died Tuesday at the age of 89.

Here’s the Post’s Bill Newcott on Redford’s career.

Bobby Hart was half of the music duo Boyce & Hart. They not only recorded their own music, they wrote and produced songs for The Monkees, including “Last Train to Clarksville” and the theme song to the show. They also wrote “(I’m Not Your” Steppin’ Stone,” “Come a Little Bit Closer,” and the theme song to Days of Our Lives (!). He died last week at the age of 86.

Here’s Boyce & Hart on a classic episode of I Dream of Jeannie (they also made an appearance on Bewitched around the same time).

Uploaded to YouTube by Willy Gilligan

Patricia Crowley starred in the TV series Please Don’t Eat the Daisies and played Mary Scanlon on Port Charles. She appeared in dozens of other TV shows and films. She died Sunday at the age of 91.

Thomas Perry was a writer of bestselling thriller and suspense novels. He died Monday at the age of 78.

Marilyn Hagerty achieved fame at the age of 85 when her newspaper restaurant review of Olive Garden went viral. She was championed by Anthony Bourdain, and he even published a collection of her columns, titled Grand Forks: A History of American Dining in 128 Reviews. She died Tuesday at the age of 99.

Ricky Hatton was the former world boxing champion. He died Sunday at the age of 46.

This Week in History

William Howard Taft Born (September 15, 1857)

Here’s how Taft’s bid for a second term made for a chaotic 1912 election.

Lots of TV Shows Debuted! (September 15, 1965)

This was a big day for the debuts of classic shows. Lost in SpaceGreen AcresI SpyThe Big Valley, and Gidget all started on this day in 1965.

It was actually a big week for debuts. Other shows that launched this week in 1965: I Dream of JeannieHogan’s HeroesF TroopThe Dean Martin Show, and The Wild, Wild West.

This Week in Saturday Evening Post History: Dole Fruits and Veggies (September 16, 1950)

That woman has a lot of hands.

September Is National Fruits and Veggies Month

You can use your own hands to make these recipes with those fruits and veggies.

Smitten Kitchen has Broccoli Parmesan Fritters and a Cranberry-Walnut Chicken Salad. Jellojoy has a Jello Fruit Cake, while Martha Stewart has Boiled Asparagus. The Pioneer Woman has a recipe for something called Melting Potatoes, and Allrecipes has Copycat Cracker Barrel Fried Apples. Iowa Girl Eats has this Marinated Vegetable Salad, Love & Lemons has Roasted Brussels Sprouts, and Dance Around the Kitchen has Banana Pudding.

All these recipes sound $%&*! great!

Next Week’s Holidays and Events

Fall Begins (September 22)

If you’re keeping track, it happens at 2:19 p.m. ET. (It also starts at that time even if you’re not keeping track.)

National Punctuation Day (September 24)

This, is, the, day to celebrate? periods, Commas; Exclamation “points” and other … forms of punctuation!!!!

Ryder Cup (September 26-28)

The annual U.S. vs. Europe golf event takes place at Bethpage Black in Farmingdale, New York. Here’s the broadcast schedule.

The right’s inflamtory rhetoric and blaming the left for inciting political violence on the left clips From The Majority Report

 

Hacks star Hannah Einbinder ended her Emmys speech with choice words for Donald Trump’s secret police force and some solidarity with the people of Palestine.

 

About The Arrested In NYC-

These Are the 15 New York Officials ICE and NYPD Arrested in Manhattan

More than a dozen elected officials were arrested in or around 26 Federal Plaza in New York City, where ICE detains people in what courts have ruled are unsanitary conditions.

Police arrested more than a dozen New York state and city elected officials Thursday at 26 Federal Plaza, the Manhattan immigration court and an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office, many as they pressed to gain access to the building’s 10th-floor lockup, where recent court rulings—including a temporary restraining order—directed ICE not to cram immigrants into overcrowded, unsanitary conditions.

The lawmakers and other officials, arrested around 3:45 pm local time, say they were “attempting to conduct oversight” following claims that people appearing for court hearings were being confined for hours or days without proper food, medical care, or contact with attorneys.

A spokesperson for New York City comptroller Brad Lander’s office told WIRED by phone that Lander and 10 other elected officials were denied access and then arrested while “engaged in an action on the 10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza, where ICE inhumanely detains thousands of immigrant New Yorkers.” Lander was previously arrested at the same facility in June while accompanying a migrant man whom ICE targeted with arrest.

A joint press release issued by New York officials in the aftermath lists the electeds among those arrested:

  • NYC comptroller Brad Lander
  • State senator Julia Salazar
  • State senator Jabari Brisport
  • State senator Gustavo Rivera
  • Assembly member Robert Carroll
  • Assembly member Emily Gallagher
  • Assembly member Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas
  • Assembly member Marcela Mitaynes
  • Assembly member Claire Valdez
  • Assembly member Tony Simone
  • Assembly member Steven Raga
  • Public advocate Jumaane Williams
  • Assembly member Phara Souffrant-Forrest
  • Council member Sandy Nurse
  • Council member Tiffany Caban

At least some officials, according to Lander’s office, had been released at the time of writing. The final four on the list were arrested outside the facility, reportedly by the New York City Police Department. Dozens of New Yorkers who had gathered, holding signs and chanting “ICE out of NY,” were also arrested, officials said. A follow-up demonstration was planned for 6 pm ET at Foley Square, a longtime rallying point for immigrant rights protests in the heart of Manhattan’s Civic Center neighborhood.

NEW YORK NEW YORK  SEPTEMBER 18 Comptroller Brad Lander joins 11 local elected officials inside lower Manhattans federal...

Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor ICE immediately responded to a request for comment. Reached by phone, a New York Police Department spokesperson declined to comment because “the incident is ongoing.”

Under federal law, members of Congress have explicit authority to inspect immigration detention facilities, including conducting unannounced visits. State and city lawmakers don’t have that authority and must rely on DHS or ICE to approve such requests. The Trump administration has instituted new policies, such as mandating advance notice and designating certain field offices and short-term sites off-limits, that have blocked or delayed congressional oversight visits in recent months.

Federal judges and civil rights groups have zeroed in on the conditions inside 26 Federal Plaza. This summer, a federal court issued a preliminary injunction against the government after allegations surfaced that the facility’s detainees were being crammed into severely overcrowded rooms and made to sleep on bare floors and were denied food, hygiene, and confidential access to their lawyers.

NEW YORK NEW YORK  SEPTEMBER 18 Dozens of anti Immigration and Customs Enforcement  protesters are arrested after...
NEW YORK NEW YORK  SEPTEMBER 18 Dozens of anti Immigration and Customs Enforcement  protesters are arrested after...

The problems echo a broader pattern across the US, where watchdogs and courts have flagged overcrowding, poor sanitation, and blocked access to counsel in ICE facilities from Arizona to Louisiana.

Advocates say some of the most jarring overcrowding is happening on 26 Federal Plaza’s 10th floor, where detainees have estimated that between 70 and 90 people have been crammed into rooms measuring roughly 215 square feet. That would leave each person with roughly the space of a doormat—less room than a folded bath towel—in an area no bigger than a studio apartment kitchen.

The arrests came as part of a coordinated action by progressive Democrats, timed to amplify demands for Albany to reconvene and pass the New York for All Act. The bill would bar state and local agencies, including police and sheriffs, from sharing information or resources with ICE, aiming to stop what lawmakers describe as abductions of immigrants at court hearings and check-ins. Along with New York City Council’s proposed Trust Act—which would let people sue if city agencies unlawfully cooperate with ICE—the legislation is essential, Democrats say, to defend due process and prevent local governments from becoming de facto extensions of ICE.

NEW YORK NEW YORK  SEPTEMBER 18 Dozens of anti Immigration and Customs Enforcement  protesters are arrested after...

“The criminalization, demonization, and state-sponsored violence against immigrants in this country has reached a fever pitch under this administration. All of us, and especially elected leaders, must do more to protect New Yorkers, regardless of when they arrived,” Assembly member Emily Gallagher, a Democrat who represents parts of Brooklyn, said in a statement.

Many elected officials have been arrested while protesting the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement tactics. Among others, in June, Senator Alex Padilla of California was handcuffed after challenging Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem at a Los Angeles press conference, and in May, Newark mayor Ras Baraka was arrested outside a federal detention center during an attempted oversight visit.

In a statement, Yasmine Farhang, executive director of the Immigrant Defense Project, applauded the lawmakers’ actions Thursday, accusing the US government of “egregious abuses of power,” and imploring New York governor Kathy Hochul to use her clemency powers to shield migrants dealing with overlapping punishments from the courts and immigration authorities.

“New York leaders cannot let this cruelty go unchecked,” she said. “The moment to act is NOW.”

Additional reporting by Andrew Couts.