Again tRump lies this time about the profit / good about our illegal attack on Venezuela

Three hospitals are under investigation for providing gender-affirming care to trans youth

Jan 07, 2026 Orion Rummler

Minnesotans rally at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul in support of transgender youth on March 6, 2022.ย (Michael Siluk/UCG/Getty Images)

This story was originally reported by Orion Rummler of The 19th. Meet Orion and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.

Three childrenโ€™s hospitals are under federal investigation for providing gender-affirming care to transgender youth, as the Trump administration continues to use all the levers it can to block such care. 

Health and Human Services (HHS) General Counsel Mike Stuart has referred three childrenโ€™s hospitals to the agencyโ€™s inspector generalโ€™s office: Seattle Childrenโ€™s Hospital, Childrenโ€™s Hospital Colorado, and Childrenโ€™s Minnesota. Gender-affirming care for trans youth is legal in all three states. But HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. last month announced that medical practitioners who provide gender-affirming care to minors are out of compliance with federal health care standards. Now, the agency is enforcing that declaration. 

In response, Childrenโ€™s Hospital Colorado has reportedly paused gender-affirming care for trans youth. Childrenโ€™s Minnesota did not respond to a request for comment, and its website states that โ€œat this time, our gender health services remain unchanged.โ€ Seattle Childrenโ€™s hospital also did not respond. 

Another hospital, Denver Health, has also paused gender-affirming care for trans youth since Kennedyโ€™s declaration, although the hospital does not appear to be under investigation.

In earlier efforts by Trump administration officials to investigate and halt  gender-affirming care, both Childrenโ€™s Hospital Colorado and Seattle Childrenโ€™s Hospital successfully fought back against Justice Department subpoenas seeking trans patientsโ€™ medical information. 

The administration previously pressured hospitals to halt gender-affirming care by threatening to revoke federal funding, which worked in many cases, but these HHS investigationsmark a new escalation. They stem from Kennedy saying that, under his authority as health secretary, he can unilaterally decide that gender-affirming care โ€” which  he calls โ€œsex-rejecting proceduresโ€ โ€” is not a safe and effective treatment for trans youth.

The response from states has been swift. Just before Christmas, 19 states โ€” including Washington state, Colorado, and Minnesota โ€” and Washington, D.C., sued Kennedy and the federal health agency over the announcement. The statesโ€™ lawsuit says the declaration harms their ability to administer state Medicaid plans in accordance with local laws protecting gender-affirming care.

โ€œTo me, the declaration is the extremely clear way they are trying to just shut down this care all across the country,โ€ said Katie Keith, director of the center for health policy and the law at the Oโ€™Neill Institute at Georgetown Law. โ€œThey are trying to ban it nationwide for minors.โ€ 

On X, Stuart said that all three hospitals were referred to the agencyโ€™s inspector generalโ€™s office for failing to meet “recognized standards of health care,โ€ citing Kennedyโ€™s declaration. 

The HHS has also proposed two new rules to restrict gender-affirming care for trans youth โ€” both of which must still go through an approval process before they can be enforced. One rule would blockhospitals from receiving Medicare and Medicaid funds if they provide gender-affirming care to trans youth. That care includes hormone replacement therapy for adolescents and puberty blockers for young kids who are experiencing dysphoria โ€” intense discomfort or anxiety felt when someoneโ€™s physical gender is out of sync with their identity. It also includes surgery, which is very rarely performed on minors. 

Another proposed rule would bar Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care for youth under 18 and the Childrenโ€™s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) from covering such care for youth under 19. This would disproportionately impact low-income trans youth.Technically, states could still use their own funds for coverage โ€” but experts say that would be extremely burdensome and ultimately cause gaps in care. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics, an organization of 67,000 primary care pediatricians and other specialists, strongly condemned these proposals, saying that they misrepresent current medical consensus and create uncertainty for patients. 

โ€œThese rules are a baseless intrusion into the patient-physician relationship,โ€ the group said in a statement. โ€œPatients, their families, and their physicians โ€” not politicians or government officials โ€” should be the ones to make decisions together about what care is best for them.โ€The American Civil Liberties Union has said it will challenge these two restrictions in court if they are finalized.

Man Detained by ICE Found Dead, Hanging With Hands and Feet Tiedโ€”Attorney

The man was found with his hands and feet tied behind his back.ย  That is what hog tied means.ย  Please explain to me how he could then put a noose around his neck and hang himself?ย  And it has happened more than once according to this?ย  Some people are killing the detainees and ICE is covering up for it.ย  Hugs


https://www.newsweek.com/ice-detainee-death-family-questions-hands-feet-tied-11066992

Nov 18, 2025 at 04:04 PM EST

updated

Nov 20, 2025 at 07:16 AM EST

Byย 

Politics Reporter

A Chinese immigrant was foundย dead in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention, with his hands and feet tied behind him, an attorney has alleged.

Chaofeng Ge died four days after enteringย ICEย custody inย Pennsylvaniaย on August 5, with an agency report stating he was found by agents with โ€œa cloth ligature around his neckโ€.

After an autopsy report, his family is calling for more answers from theย Department of Homeland Security.

โ€œI am devasted by the loss of my brother and by the knowledge that he was suffering so greatly in that detention center,โ€ Yanfeng Ge, the brother of Chaofeng, said in a statement shared withย Newsweek. โ€œHe did not deserve to be treated that way. I want justice for my brother, answers as to how this could have happened, and accountability for those responsible for his death.โ€

Why It Matters

As detention numbers have spiked within ICE facilities under the Trump administration,ย deaths have also begun to rise. At least 15 immigrantsย died within ICE facilities, or while under their care, under this administration, compared to 12 for the entire fiscal year 2024. Advocacy groups and attorneysย have repeatedly warned that ICE detention conditions are poor, but DHS has said otherwise.

Chaofeng Ge, 32, died while in ICE detention in Pennsylvania in August 2025.ย |ย Ge family handout

What To Know

Ge, 32, arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border near Tecate, California, on November 22, 2023, and was arrested by the Border Patrol for unlawful entry. Officers released him into the U.S. with a Notice to Appear for a hearing at a later date.

The records from ICE went quiet for over a year before agents encountered Ge in Lower Paxton Township, Pennsylvania, in January 2025. He was accused of accessing a device issued to another who did not authorize its use, conspiracy โ€“ accessing a device issued to another who did not authorize use, theft by deceptionโ€”false impression, conspiracyโ€”theft by deception, criminal use of a communication facility, and unlawful use of a computerโ€”access to disrupt function.

Ge, who lived in Queens, New York, was convicted of the first two of these charges by the Court of Common Pleas in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, on July 31, and he was sentenced to six to 12 months with credit for time served, so he was released from local custody and ICE agents detained him.

ICE is required to issue reports on all deaths within its custody, including Geโ€™s. The report states he was assessed with the help of a Mandarin interpreter on August 1, when he denied any past medical or mental health issues.

Four days later, on August 5 at around 5:20 a.m., officers at the Moshannon Valley Processing Center (MVPC) in Philipsburg say they found him in a shower stall with the cloth around his neck. Despite getting him onto the ground and attempting lifesaving measures, including CPR, Ge was pronounced dead roughly 40 minutes later.

For Geโ€™s family, this does not answer all their questions, and they have filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security in the Southern District of New York.

An autopsy report seen byย Newsweekย showed Ge was found tied with a bedsheet, with linens around his wrists and ankles in what the report described as a “hog-tied” position. The medical examiner noted that there had been other reported incidents of people who had hung themselves having done something similar, and that there were no obvious defense wounds.

These details were also laid out in the criminal complaint filed by the familyโ€™s attorney, David Rankin, a partner at Beldock Levine & Hoffman LLPย in New York City. The complaint alleges that ICE denied Ge the mental health care he needed and ignored requests for more details on the conditions at the MVPC.

Newsweekย asked DHS whether Ge had been tied up and whether it was cooperating with the lawsuit filed in New York. Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin did not answer these questions, but repeated similar messaging on detention deaths: that ICE takes each one seriously and thoroughly investigates them all.

What People Are Saying

David B. Rankin, the familyโ€™s attorney, in a statement toย Newsweek: โ€œIt is truly mystifying how any detention facility can let someone leave their room, create three nooses and then hang themselves without anyone knowing. Whatโ€™s worse is the lack of mental health care which could have prevented this tragedy. Mr. Geโ€™s death represents a totally failure on the part of the GeoGroup and the DHS.โ€

DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, in a statement toย Newsweek:ย โ€œChaofeng Ge passed away at the Moshannon Valley Processing Center. All in-custody deaths are tragic, taken seriously, and are thoroughly investigated by law enforcement. ICE takes its commitment to promoting safe, secure, humane environments for those in our custody very seriously.โ€

Whatโ€™s Next

The lawsuit is asking for a judge to force DHS and ICE to release the details on Geโ€™s case.

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by dialing 988, text “988” to the Crisis Text Line at 741741 or go to 988lifeline.org.

Political cartoons / memes / and news I want to share. 1-7-2026

Image from Assigned Male

Image from Assigned Male

Image from Assigned Male

 

 

 

#The Green Mile from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

#political correctness from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

#evolution from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

 

 

Mike Smith for 1/5/2026

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John Deering for 1/6/2026

 

 

Joey Weatherford for 1/5/2026

 

 

 

 

image

image

 

 

 

 

 

 

#republican assholes from Rejecting Republicans

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image from The Iron Snowflake

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chris Britt for 1/5/2026

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image from RECORD GUY

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An elderly man speaks to a young boy.

โ€œIn my day, we had to use the C.I.A. to secretly finance military coups if we wanted to steal a countryโ€™s resources.โ€

 

imageMaduro was not in the US he was in a country that our law enforcement people had no authority to enforce laws.ย  This was the kidnapping of a foreign leader which is a war crime.ย  Hugs

 

 

 

 

 

Bart van Leeuwen PoliticalCartoons.com

 

 

 

 

 

Ingrid Rice British Columbia, Canada

 

Minnesota day care hoax is fueled by MAGA psychosexual weirdness

OK let’s discuss the hidden thing here.ย  A 20 plus year old claims he has never had sex.ย  I remember being a 16 yr old newly inducted into the SDA church.ย  Any touching of your male members was a huge sin they constantly harped on.ย  I did try, but seriously, a teen boy with my history but any normal teen boy is going to do the deed to get off.ย  And for many of them it leaves them with after crippling guilt of not pleasing their god who watched them do it.ย  God is a perv.ย  ย I can’t tell you the number of boys in that church school I hugged with and they cuddled with me … but we never had sex.ย  Two wanted to but if I got thrown out of the school I had to return to the brutal home I was using the school to escape from.ย  But the idea of just ignoring one’s hormone driven sex drive is not healthy and the religious leaders pushing that all did it when they were teens.ย  But the grift has to be kept up.ย  Hugs

https://www.salon.com/2026/01/05/minnesota-day-care-hoax-is-fueled-by-maga-psychosexual-weirdness/

The racism underlying MAGA’s latest obsession is intertwined with misogyny

Senior Writer
MAGA influencer Nick Shirley speaks during a roundtable discussion on antifa at the White House on Oct. 8, 2025. ( Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
MAGA influencer Nick Shirley speaks during a roundtable discussion on antifa at the White House on Oct. 8, 2025. ( Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Nick Shirley really wants the world to know that heโ€™s never had sex. The YouTuber who moved from โ€œprankโ€ videos to the more lucrative world of creatingย MAGAย disinformation apparently believes that sexual inexperience is an armor against accusations that heโ€™s a liar. โ€œIโ€™m a virgin. I donโ€™t have sex with random girls. Youโ€™re not gonna catch me on those sexual allegation charges,โ€ heย rambledย on โ€œPBD Podcast,โ€ insisting that he is โ€œreligiousโ€ and doesnโ€™t โ€œhave any vices.โ€
ย 

A deeper dig shows even more how ridiculous this situation is. Shirley hasย a history of dishonesty, which includes paying immigrant laborers toย hold pro-Biden signs, clearly hoping voters would think they were self-motivated. In another video, heย claimedย Portland had โ€œfallenโ€ and โ€œantifaโ€ had taken โ€œcontrol of the city,โ€ an unvarnished lie.

CNNย verifiedย that children were being dropped off at a day care center Shirley had targeted. The Minnesota Star Tribuneย visited the day caresย in question and found, when they were allowed access, children playing and napping peacefully. CBS Newsย reviewed security footageย showing kids being dropped off at one targeted center. Others were indeed empty; they had gone out of business before Shirley filmed outside the buildings.

Shirley stands accused of lying for racist reasons, so his โ€œbut Iโ€™m a virginโ€ defense is irrational โ€” at least on the surface. But it makes more sense, in a psychosexual way, in light of the rightโ€™s long-standing fear and loathing of day cares.

Shirley stands accused of lying for racist reasons, so his โ€œbut Iโ€™m a virginโ€ defense is irrational โ€” at least on the surface. But it makes more sense, in a psychosexual way, in light of the rightโ€™s long-standing fear and loathing of day cares. After all, the scandal Shirley is exploiting isnโ€™t really about day cares. Itโ€™s aboutย a larger case in Minnesotaย of Feeding Our Future, a fraudulent food pantry that was run by Aimee Bock, a white woman who was convicted in March of cheating taxpayers out of nearly $250 million of pandemic funds. While Bock was the mastermind, other defendants in the case are Somali American. On Dec. 30, a federal judgeย cleared the wayย for the government to seize $5.2 million in assets from Bock.

If Shirley was only interested in building his hoax on that existing and very real case, he could have targeted anti-hunger charities for his fake sting. Instead, he went after day cares, which are only tangentially related insofar as they are โ€” along with churches, mosques, schools and community centers โ€” sites that were supposed to get assistance from the fraudsters but never received it.

These businesses were picked almost certainly because Shirley and his colleagues have tapped into the long-standing tendency of paranoid reactionaries to make day cares the subject ofย conspiracy theories. Along with birth control and abortion โ€” whose providers are also smeared constantly with right-wing lies โ€” day care is loathed on the right for allowing women to work instead of being financially dependent on a husband. In the 1980s, day care workers wereย accused of being Satanists. Now, during the MAGA era, the scapegoat for menโ€™s fears of female independence has shifted from imaginary devil-worshippers to real immigrants. White women are implicitly accused of using immigrant labor as a cheat to avoid their god-given duty to quit work to stay home and raise babies. Vice Presidentย JD Vanceย has beenย especially loudย with his belief that day care isย pushing women awayย from their supposedly inherent desire to be housewives.


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics?ย Sign up for her free newsletter, Standing Room Only, now alsoย on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.


Vance almost certainly doesnโ€™t believe his own narrative. For one thing, itโ€™s illogical to believe women would think, โ€œGosh, I want nothing more than to stay at home, but if thereโ€™s a day care down the street, I guess I have to use it.โ€ His own wife has beenย outspokenย about how much she loved working at her law firm that offered on-site childcare โ€” and how much she misses it. But Vance has apparently decided that the bulk of support for his 2028 presidential bid will be rooted in the world ofย extremely online, sexually dysfunctionalย misogynists that love shady influencers like Shirley. The vice presidentโ€™s messaging strategy has long been focused on this loose conglomerate known as the โ€œmanosphereโ€: bitter divorced men, โ€œincelsโ€ (involuntarily celibates) and devotees of the โ€œred pill,โ€ an ideology that holds that dating and marriage arenโ€™t about love but about men tricking or forcing women into submission.

The manosphere isnโ€™t just deeply misogynist; itโ€™s also incredibly racist. For liberals taking a cursory glance into that world, it can be very confusing how MAGA men can somehow blame immigrants for their own dating woes. But in the cesspool of incoherent resentment that Vance is clearly absorbing, the alleged evils of feminism and immigration are seen as part of a larger โ€œwokeโ€ conspiracy against the white man. Before he died, Turning Point USA founderย Charlie Kirkย oftenย postedย about how โ€œwho we actually canโ€™t stand are angry, liberal, white women.โ€ He wouldย portrayย white women as idiots for not perceiving immigrants as a threat. โ€œIf woke is a mind virus,โ€ heย posted, โ€œthen white college indoctrinated women are the most susceptible hosts.โ€ Influencersย like LibsofTikTokย hold up white women who resist mass deportations as selfish ninnies who just want to keep their babysitters.

Shirley has engaged in this rhetoric himself. โ€œWhite liberal women tend to support the people that steal and rob from them,โ€ heย claimedย in one post. Another wasย more ominous: โ€œLiberal white womens [sic] logic and empathy will get them killed eventually.โ€

In this toxic stew of sexual resentment, misogyny and racism, it makes more sense that Shirley thinks his virginity is relevant. Anti-immigrant sentiment is woven into a larger MAGA narrative about expelling allegedly decadent and foreign influences. White male dominance, people like Shirley believe, can be restored by adhering to strict sexual and social mores prescribed byย right-wing Christianity. Abstaining from sex until marriage is part of a larger program meant to produce male-dominated marriages,ย  where wives are too busy with large broods of white children to hold jobs. Attacking Black immigrants at a day care center has powerful symbolic resonance; itโ€™s seen as an important front in a war both to make America whiter and to restore white women to a submissive role in the home.

The irony is that Shirleyโ€™s diatribe about his sexual status only underscores how much the attack on the day cares is not, contrary to his claims, driven by a nonpartisan, disinterested desire to end fraud. That much was always obvious. Shirley loves Donald Trump, who is himself a convicted fraudster who continues to use his office to enrich himself in blatantly corrupt ways. Shirley hasย followedย the presidentโ€™s lead โ€” he, too, has aย long historyย ofย posting racist vitriolย about immigrants.

But bringing his sexuality and views on gender relations into the discussion โ€” when no one else has done so โ€” suggests that those issues arenโ€™t far from mind, either. The fixation on โ€œpurityโ€ is a common fascist obsession, manifesting in backwards fantasies of racial and sexual purity. None of this has any relation to the real world where people of all races and genders are just trying to do their jobs, raise their children and live their lives.

watch-woman-arrested-mid-interview-after-protesting-against-trumps-venezuela-strike/#:~:text=WATCH%3A%20Woman%20Arrested%20Mid%2DInterview%20After%20Protesting%20Against%20Trump%E2%80%99s%20Venezuela%20Strike

In some places in the US cops are maga not enforcers of public peace and honoring the constitution.ย  ย We have the right in the constitution to address the government with protests of their actions.ย  How far have we moved to a fascist nation where the rule of law is simply might be delivered by thugs makes right.ย  ย Agree with us or else … A horrible place we are in.ย  Hugs


 

WATCH: Woman Arrested Mid-Interview After Protesting Against Trumpโ€™s Venezuela Strike

WATCH: Woman Arrested Mid-Interview After Protesting Against Trump’s Venezuela Strike

https://youtu.be/dNxc8YKHlpw

A Michigan protest organizer was arrested on camera while giving a TV interview criticizing Presidentย Donald Trumpโ€™sย actions in Venezuela on Saturday.

Jessica Plichta, a 22-year-old preschool teacher and Grand Rapids Opponents of War organizer, was speaking to local ABC affiliate WZZM about a weekend protest condemning theย captureย of Venezuelan Presidentย Nicolรกs Maduroย when police officers moved in behind her and placed her in handcuffs. The patrol car had been visible in the background moments earlier, its presence unremarked upon until the interview abruptly ended.

โ€œItโ€™s not just a foreign issue, itโ€™s our tax dollars that are being used to commit these war crimes,โ€ Plichta said on camera. โ€œIt is also the duty of us, the people, to stand against the Trump regime, the Trump administration, that are committing crimes both here in the U.S. and against people in Venezuela.โ€

As she was escorted to the police vehicle, she could be heard saying, โ€œI am not resisting arrest.โ€

The clip quickly went viral, with WZZM later reporting that police said Plichta was arrested for โ€œobstructing a roadway and failure to obey a lawful command from a police officer.โ€

Prior to her detention, Plichta told WZZM she had recently returned from Venezuela, where she attended the Peopleโ€™s Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty of Our America summit.

A police department spokesperson issued the following statement toย AlterNetย following the arrest:

A group was marching in the roadway. Over 25 announcements were made from the PA system of a marked police cruiser for the group to leave the roadway and relocate their activities to the sidewalk. Blocking traffic in this manner is a direct violation of city and state law,โ€ the spokesperson stated. โ€œThe group refused lawful orders to move this free speech event to the sidewalk and instead began blocking intersections until the march ended. Patrol officers consulted with their sergeant and the watch commander who informed the officers that if the individuals could be located, they were subject to arrest. The adult woman who was arrested was positively identified by officers, and the lawful arrest was made.

After her release from jail, Plichta spoke withย Zeteoย about the incident.

โ€œI donโ€™t think itโ€™s a coincidence that as soon as I finished an interview speaking on Venezuela, I was arrested โ€“ the only person arrested out of 200 people,โ€ she told the outlet.

Watch above via WZZM.

Trump says the U.S. government may reimburse oil companies for rebuilding Venezuela’s infrastructure

No healthcare subsidies, no money to feed poor people or kids who need government help to have lunch.ย  As a kid often the only meal I got was lunch at school.ย  ย No one monitored if I paid or not I was given food to eat like every other kid.ย  ย In Jr / Senior high school, say from 13 to 18 again my only meal was lunch or snacks at school.ย  But yes the tRump admin was cutting every safety net program and even halting child care so it hurts Walz, and stopping FEMA funds to states run by democrats among other cuts to already congress approved funding.ย  ย All illegally I will add but the republicans in congress are too scared of tRump to object to his being a tyrant.ย  ย But we have plenty of money for companies and businesses to extract oil.ย  ย 

On The Majority Report I am listening to an oil person saying that the price of oil has fallen below $50 a barrel because of a glut on the market, and that Venezuelan oil is “sour oil” meaning it is hard to refine.ย  He says that to make a profit on that prices have to be over $80 dollars a barrel.ย  ย Which means this demented daydream of Rubio’s and Miller’s is not about oil so much as territorial control over other countries and Rubio has long wanted Cuba to fall to the US so his parent’s lands and money can be claimed from the rightful owners of it now.ย  ย Rubio’s family fled Cuba as refugees and lost all their holdings in Cuba, he has made a career of wanting it all back and toppling Castro.ย  But … well Rubio and the neocons claim that if we can make Venzualia fall into line then all the other Latin American countries will fall in line also and Cuba’s government will be destroyed.ย  Just like if we take out Saddam Hussein then the entire Middle East will embrace democracy.ย  ย Same story different location.ย  ย And it is all lies.ย  Just an excuse to use the US military might and have a reason to deny any public relief or safety nets at home.ย  ย Hugs


https://www.nbcnews.com/business/energy/trump-venezuela-oil-companies-reimburse-rcna252434

Big oil firms will either “get reimbursed by us or through revenue,” Trump told NBC News in an exclusive interview.

President Donald Trump said he believes the U.S. oil industry could get expanded operations in Venezuela “up and running” in fewer than 18 months.

“I think we can do it in less time than that, but itโ€™ll be a lot of money,” Trump toldย NBC News in an interviewย Monday.

“A tremendous amount of money will have to be spent, and the oil companies will spend it, and then theyโ€™ll get reimbursed by us or through revenue,” he said.

Whether the U.S. government ultimately agrees to reimburse the oil industry’s costs in Venezuela, or alternatively, decides that future revenue is sufficient repayment, will likely be a key factor for the oil companies as they consider their options.

Trump declined to say how much money he believes it would cost companies to repair and upgrade Venezuela’sย aging oil infrastructure.

“Itโ€™ll be a very substantial amount of money will be spent” by the oil companies, Trump said. “But theyโ€™ll do very well.”

“And the country will do well,” he added.

Despite Trump’s optimism, oil companies have appeared skeptical of quickly entering, expanding or investing in Venezuela. A history of state asset seizures, the ongoing U.S. sanctions and theย latest political instabilityย all feed into this caution.

Trump said he believed thatย tapping Venezuela’s oil reservesย is “going to reduce oil prices.”

Gas prices are already at multiyear lows. The average retail gas price on Monday was $2.81,ย according to AAA. That’s the lowest since March 2021.

“Having a Venezuela thatโ€™s an oil producer is good for the United States because it keeps the price of oil down,” Trump also added.

While lower oil prices could make gas cheaper at the pump, it would likely also mean lower revenues for the same big oil companies that Trump is counting on to bankroll the rebuilding of Venezuelaโ€™s oil industry to the tune of billions of dollars in foreign investment.

Asked if the administration had briefed any oil companies ahead of Saturday’s military operation to capture deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolรกs Maduro, Trump said, “No. But weโ€™ve been talking to the concept of, ‘what if we did it?'”

“The oil companies were absolutely aware that we were thinking about doing something,” Trump said. “But we didnโ€™t tell them we were going to do it.”

Trump told NBC News it was “too soon” to say whether he had personally spoken to top executives at Americaโ€™s three largest oil producers, Exxon Mobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips.

“I speak to everybody,” he said.

ConocoPhillips declined to comment Monday on Trump’s plans for Venezuelaโ€™s oil reserves. Chevron told NBC News it does not comment “on commercial matters or speculate on future investments.” Exxon did not immediately respond to questions.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright plans to meet with executives from Exxon and ConocoPhillips this week about Venezuelaโ€™s oil industry, Bloomberg Newsย reported Monday,ย citing people familiar with the matter.

Wright will be a point person for the Trump administration’s broader campaign to rebuild Venezuela’s oil infrastructure, a White House official said Monday.

The Trump administration has repeatedly claimed that the U.S. oil industry is eager to return to Venezuela, nearly two decades after the country last nationalized billions of dollars’ worth of oil company assets.

“They want to go in so badly,” Trump told reporters Sunday evening.

Despite Venezuela’s massive reserves of crude oil, large U.S. oil firms have a good reason to pause before committing to expand operations in Venezuela.

In the 1970s, the Venezuelan government nationalized energy assets there, including those owned by Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips. In the years since, the companies have tried unsuccessfully to recover billions of dollars.

In 2006 and 2007, the Venezuelan government nationalized even more assets. Then-President Hugo Chรกvez allowed foreign oil firms to remain, but on less favorable terms, leading to the full departure of Exxon and Conoco.

Chevron, however accepted the terms and remains to this day, thanks in large part to a limited waiver exempting it from U.S. sanctions on Venezuelan oil.

Exxon Mobil CEO Darren Woods recently expressed caution about re-entering Venezuela.

“Weโ€™ve been expropriated from Venezuela two different times,” he toldย Bloomberg News in November,ย replying to a question about whether Exxon would be interested in Venezuela’s oil or gas. “Weโ€™d have to see what the economics look like.”

Political cartoons / memes / and news I want to share. 1-6-2026

Image from Assigned Male

Image from Assigned Male

Image from Assigned Male

 

 

 

#Samwise Gamgee from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#ManChildTrump from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#DOGE from Progressive Power

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#public libraries from Library Journal

 

image

The progressive comic about Trump's idiot voters

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

#cat from Catasters

 

 

 

Image from Making Donald Drumpf Again

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Al Goodwyn for 1/5/2026

 

 

 

 

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A curtained off section of a larger room is NOT a SCIF. The incompetence of this administration knows no bounds.

And the fact that X is pulled up on the screen behind them is justโ€ฆembarrassing.

Who thought this was a good photo to release?

Looks like Pete Hegseth is either checking the online cocktail menu or lurking for exes on Facebook. Both can be true.

 

#politics from Cartoon Politics

 

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A Great Info & Opinion Piece About The Rich, The Poor, Capitalism, & Socialism

A good explainer written with a sense of humor. Nice things are not always bad things. -A.

We Regret To Infomrm You Zohran Mamdani’s Wife Wore Nice Boots.

Ready, Boots? Start walking!

Robyn Pennacchia Jan 05, 2026

Since returning to office, Donald Trumpโ€™s personal wealth has nearly doubled, from $3.9 billion in 2024 to $7.3 billion this past September, which includes $2 billion from his cryptocurrency ventures that no one had been buying into prior to his reelection. Donald Trump Jr. is now worth six times what he was in 2024, also due in part to the family crypto scam.

But did you hear? Zohran Mamdaniโ€™s wife, Rama Duwaji, wore some cute boots to his inauguration like a common Imelda Marcos! Quelle horreur!

The New York Post breathlessly reported:

Their โ€œaffordabilityโ€ agenda got off on the wrong foot.

New York Cityโ€™s first lady Rama Duwaji appeared to wear $630 โ€œartisanโ€ leather boots from a high-end designer to her Democratic socialist husband Zohran Mamdaniโ€™s mayoral swearing-in ceremony โ€” a luxury look that flew in the face of the politicianโ€™s โ€œeverymanโ€ image, eagle-eyed critics said Thursday.

Duwaji, a 28-year-old artist, gave more socialite than socialist on New Yearโ€™s Day as she apparently rocked one of the fashion house Miistaโ€™s pricey boot designs โ€” one which is said to be crafted from โ€œvegetable tan cow leatherโ€ and feature an โ€œultra-cushioned memory foam insole.โ€

Not โ€œvegetable tan cow leatherโ€! NOT A MEMORY FOAM INSOLE!

Not that it matters, really, but $630 for boots is not โ€œluxury.โ€ I mean that technically. Obviously $630 is a good amount of money, but itโ€™s not luxury. Itโ€™s whatโ€™s called โ€œbridgeโ€ โ€” meaning that itโ€™s high quality and expensive, but not at the same level as actual luxury brands, which cost at least twice that. Itโ€™s not Chanel or Versace or Alexander McQueen or Louis.

Now, it turns out that the boots (and the entire outfit) were actually rented/loaned for the occasion, as her stylist Gabriella Karefa-Johnson explained in a blog post about the event:

Rama wore a vintage Balenciaga coat from Albright Fashion Library and archival earrings from New York Vintage, both rented during a single marathon day spent diving into the racks and cupboards of the cityโ€™s best small, circular fashion businesses. [โ€ฆ]

Cโ€™mon formal shorts!! Those are from The Frankie Shop, and the boots are *ON LOAN* from Miista.

Iโ€™m just going to have to get comfortable with the fact that people on the internet do not understand what being lent a SAMPLE that has been borrowed before and will be borrowed again means but, you know what, thatโ€™s okay.

This is a big part of what stylists do. Most of the time, when you see a celebrity wearing something fancy on the red carpet or at an event like this, itโ€™s not something from their own closet, itโ€™s on loan from a designer (because cheap advertising) or something like the Albright Fashion Library. This is also how a lot of wardrobing for television and movies works.

But even if they werenโ€™t on loan, the idea that โ€œitโ€™s hypocrisy for a Democratic socialist or even a regular liberal to wear nice boots!โ€ is absurd. It only seems like โ€œhypocrisyโ€ to people who think socialism means everyone should be poor and miserable and standing in bread lines all day wearing cardboard boxes on their feet instead of shoes.

The reality is โ€ฆ thatโ€™s capitalism. Like, for most people, that is capitalism, except you donโ€™t even get any free bread out of it. Indeed, most of the people in the comments on the Postโ€™s tweet for the article were talking about how they, the proud capitalists that capitalism is definitely working out really well for, only spend $40 on boots at Walmart or Amazon. Actually, buying shoes that will only last a season (and will fuck up your feet) because thatโ€™s all you can afford, instead of boots that cost a lot up front but last forever, is a perfect example of why it costs more to be poor than it does to be rich. (This is not to say that you canโ€™t get decent boots for a not-crazy price โ€” I do very well at Nordstrom Rack and Marshalls, thank you very much โ€” but you get my point.)

What we want is for people to not have to spend $2,000 a month on health insurance or on rent so that they can have nice things, so that they can buy a nice pair of boots or a warm winter coat. So that they can go out to dinner sometimes without worrying about breaking the bank. That is the whole damn point! Thatโ€™s the โ€œhearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses tooโ€ of it all.

Right now, 60 percent of Americans cannot afford $1,000 for an emergency expense. Thatโ€™s not socialism that did that, thatโ€™s capitalism as practiced in the United States of America. Our economy literally has poverty built into the system. We literally cannot function without people to work the kind of jobs that currently do not pay enough for survival. Austerity is a way of life for a very large percentage of us, which also means that those whose income is dependent on other people having expendable income are also screwed.

New NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdaniโ€™s affordability plans donโ€™t just benefit the poor, they benefit everyone. If people arenโ€™t taking certain jobs because transportation costs too much to make it worth their while or they canโ€™t afford to live in the city, everyoneโ€™s quality of life goes down. A city where only rich people can afford to live is a city where rich people have absolutely nothing to do, which kind of defeats the whole point of being rich in the first place.

The commenters complaining about all the people they could supposedly feed with the $630 those boots cost are also missing the point. Besides clearly not being how socialism is supposed to work, caring for the poor by way of charity and philanthropy is lovely, but itโ€™s not the most effective and efficient way of doing so. Taxes are. Social programs are. GoFundMe raises about $650 million a year for medical causes, with some people getting far more than they could ever need and others getting nothing. That is a stupid way of doing things. You want to spend less on healthcare? Make the entire United States one giant insurance group with a shit ton of leverage and bulk buying power, make medical school free and invest tax money into creating more internship programs. That is how you take care of people, not by not buying a pair of shoes.

Capitalists want philanthropy to replace taxation. Right-wing libertarians frequently argue that if you just didnโ€™t tax the rich, they would happily give huge chunks of their fortunes away to the poor, which is patently ridiculous (and, again, not effective or efficient even if things did shake out that way).

Champagne socialists are good, actually. Why on earth would it be better to be a miserly rich person than a rich person who actually believes they should be taxed at a fair rate because they want to see everyone living well? The idea that the Left wants a world in which everyone lives like theyโ€™ve taken a vow of poverty and no one gets to be โ€œsuccessfulโ€ is a fantasy created by rich assholes who donโ€™t want to share and donโ€™t care if they live in a society where everyone has at least their basic needs met.

We actually love success, which is why we want more of it for more people, rather than just one percent of one percent of people. We love people, which is why we want a safety net that keeps them from falling so far they canโ€™t get back up again. We love ingenuity, which is why we want people to be able to go into business for themselves without having to worry about what will happen to their kids if they canโ€™t afford good health insurance on their own right away. We want their kids to feel like itโ€™s not hopeless to try their best in school because they donโ€™t think theyโ€™ll be able to afford to go to college without being in debt the rest of their lives. We donโ€™t think itโ€™s enough that people can โ€œdreamโ€ of being billionaires but factually never be able to afford their own home.

And yes, we even want some people to be able to afford to actually buy $630 shoes, so that other people can get paid a fair wage for designing, making and selling those $630 shoes.

Hope that clears things up!

News We Can Use In The Week Ahead

The Week Ahead

January 4, 2026 Joyce Vance

What is Donald Trump running away from so hard? Is it the fifth anniversary of his January 6 insurrection, which we will mark on Tuesday? It should be.

It could be Jack Smithโ€™s newly released testimony, which is damning and damagingโ€”and we havenโ€™t even gotten the release date of Volume II of his special counsel report, due sometime in February unless Trump manages to hang it up in court. On balance, Congressman Jim Jordanโ€™s โ€œWeaponizationโ€ work is backfiring.

It could also be the Epstein Files. DOJ missed its reporting date to Congress over the weekend, and the full release of the files is still nowhere in sight.

Donald Trump has a lot to try to hide from. It could be all of the above, and itโ€™s all closing in on him this week. In the past, he has always been able to delay or distract just long enough for the public to forget. But this week, the past seems to be catching up with the lame duck president.

That may be at least a partial explanation for Trumpโ€™s strike on Venezuelaโ€”distract, distract, distract. Itโ€™s a better explanation than Trump as a committed warrior against narcoterrorism. That one doesnโ€™t work particularly well for Donald Trump, who pardoned Honduran ex-president Juan Orlando Hernรกndez, a man who former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said in our Substack Live on Sunday morning, โ€œpersonally trafficked tons of cocaine into the United States and actually said at one point he wanted to shove cocaine up the noses of the gringos.โ€ When Trump pardoned Hernรกndez, he said, โ€œIf somebody sells drugs in that country, that doesnโ€™t mean you arrest the president and put him in jail for the rest of his life.โ€ As Jake pointed out, and I agree, โ€œthe drugs excuse holds no water.โ€

This week, weโ€™ll be watching Congressโ€”and watching Trump watch Congress, which has been showing a few signs of life lately. I donโ€™t want to oversell that, but this is definitely a week that warrants paying attention, particularly with the privileged War Powers Resolution I mentioned in last nightโ€™s post coming to the Senate floor this week. The ball is in Congressโ€™ court.

Article I, Section 8, Clause 11 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, as well as to โ€œmake rules concerning captures on land and water.โ€ Presidents before and including Trump, as experts at the Brennan Center explain, have tried to claim some of that authority for themselves, using โ€œoutdated and overstretched war authorizations like the 2001 and 2002 authorizations for use of military force.โ€ Multiple presidents have also โ€œasserted an inherent authority to undertake airstrikes, raids, and other military interventions without prior congressional authorization. When Congress has authorized conflict, such as the War in Afghanistan and Iraq War, presidents have overread Congressโ€™s approval and expanded U.S. military involvement into countries that Congress never contemplated. Compounding the problem, presidents often fail to give Congress the information it needs to oversee these conflicts.โ€ This is not a Trump problemโ€”presidents since at least George H.W. Bush have claimed a share of Congressโ€™ power. But Trump, who is uniquely interested in amassing presidential power, has the potential to move on from Venezuela and keep going, if Congress doesnโ€™t step in and assert itself.

Itโ€™s possible for two things to be true at once: itโ€™s possible that Maduro was a corrupt, dangerous leader and also, that our Constitution and the separation of powers demand preserving. Our country does not, and indeed cannot, remove every dangerous leader around the globe from office with in-country strikes. We could strengthen local populations with stability-enhancing programs like USAID (which the Trump administration, of course, has cut) to increase the ability of local populations to act on their own impulses. We can engage in vigorous law enforcement, like the prosecution of Hondurasโ€™ former president. But we can do so without permitting our president to freelance as a warlord, especially one with dubious motives. So donโ€™t buy into the false equivalency that says the smash and grab in Venezuela that resulted in Maduroโ€™s arrest was a righteous exercise of the presidentโ€™s power.

The constitutional prescription for fixing this problem of presidential overreach is Congress. New Jersey Senator Cory Booker had something to say about that over the weekend, in light of the Trump administrationโ€™s strike on Venezuela.

Cory Booker@CoryBooker

Today, many leaders will rightly condemn President Donald Trumpโ€™s unlawful and unjust actions in Venezuela, and I join them. But just as glaring, and far more damning, is Congressโ€™ ongoing abdication of its constitutional duty. For almost a year now, the legislative branch has

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โ€œToday,โ€ he wrote, โ€œmany leaders will rightly condemn President Donald Trumpโ€™s unlawful and unjust actions in Venezuela, and I join them.

But then, Senator Booker put the blame precisely where it is due. He continued, โ€œjust as glaring, and far more damning, is Congressโ€™ ongoing abdication of its constitutional duty. For almost a year now, the legislative branch has failed to check a president who repeatedly violates his oath, disregards the law, and endangers American interests at home and abroad.โ€

He called out the Republican-led Congress for choosing โ€œspineless complicity over its sworn responsibilities.โ€ He condemned its inaction in the face of Signalgate, with Trumpโ€™s โ€œSecretary of Warโ€ Pete Hegseth escaping any censure for โ€œthe reckless leaking of classified information that put American troops at risk.โ€ The senator also pointed to the โ€œstunning absence of accountabilityโ€ for the administrationโ€™s โ€œillegal use of military force destroying vessels and killing people in the Caribbean and the Pacific without congressional authorization.โ€

Booker cited a litany of Congressional failures:

No hearings.
No serious investigations.
No enforcement of checks and balances.
No accountability.

He called Congress cowardly and submissive.

We are long past due for someone to speak so plainly to the country about the Republican-led Congressโ€™ failure to do its constitutional duty. The question is, who is listening, and will it lead to action this week? As my good friend Norm Eisen like to say, I am not optimistic, but I am hopeful.

Booker writes that โ€œRepublicans in Congress own this corrosive collapse of our constitutional orderโ€ and that their submission to Trumpโ€™s will โ€œnow stands as one of the greatest dangers to our nation and to the global order America claims to defend.โ€ The fact that Maduro is โ€œa brutal dictator who has committed grave abusesโ€ does not, Booker concludes, suspend the Constitution. And so, he drives home the point of what must come next:

  • โ€œThe Constitution is unambiguous: Congress has the power and responsibility to authorize the use of military force and declare war. Congress has a duty of oversight. Congress must serve as a check, not a rubber stamp, to the President.โ€
  • โ€œWe face an authoritarian-minded president who acts with dangerous growing impunity. He has shown a willingness to defy court orders, violate the law, ignore congressional intent, and shred basic norms of decency and democracy. This pattern will continue unless the Article I branch of government, especially Republican congressional leadership, finds the courage to act.โ€
  • โ€œWhat happened today [in Venezuela] is wrong. Congressional Republicans would say so immediately if a Democratic president had done the same. Their silence is surrender. And in that surrender lie the seeds of our democratic unraveling.โ€

โ€œEnough is enough,โ€ Booker concludes. With three years left in this administration, itโ€™s time to stop the (constitutional) bleeding.

Senator Booker wrote at length at a time when many Americans have lost the will or the ability to take in an argument laid out like this. For some people, itโ€™s easier to ignore common sense and stay in the fold of the cult. But Bookerโ€™s words are well worth our time and well worth sharing with others. His argument is not subtle or nuanced, and itโ€™s accessible to anyone who has taken a fourth-grade civics class: Congress should do its job, not Donald Trumpโ€™s bidding. The future of the Republic depends upon it. They would demand it if a Democratic president had done what Donald Trump didโ€”something that has been true over and over, but is all the more poignant with the anniversary of January 6 staring us in the face. Maybe Congress will remember what that day felt like and how they reacted. Maybe enough of them can muster some courageโ€”if for no other reason than that the history books, and likely voters at the midterms, will condemn them if they donโ€™t.

Make sure you share Senator Bookerโ€™s message with your elected officials this week. They need to hear it. They need to know you heard it.

A final note: a development we wonโ€™t be following this week, because it wonโ€™t be happening, is the federal criminal trial of former FBI Director Jim Comey, which was slated to start on Monday. This trial will not take place because the case was dismissed, in a serious blow to the credibility of Pam Bondiโ€™s Justice Department. There are, in fact, some guardrails that remain in place. And this year, weโ€™re going to rebuild more of them. Get ready to vote.

Where you get your news and analysis is a choice. Iโ€™m very appreciative that youโ€™re here, with me, at Civil Discourse. Your subscriptions make it possible for me to devote the time and resources it takes to research and write the newsletter, and Iโ€™m very grateful for all of you. This is what community looks like.

Weโ€™re in this together,

Joyce