Thursday Morning Links

by | Mar 19, 2026 | Daily Links | 324 comments

It’s tourney time for real. Prepare for noon to midnight games and some upsets. And across the pond, Liverpool got their shit together finally and are now in the UCL quarterfinals. Newcastle got demolished by Barcelona, and Spuds also got thumped. And that’s about it for sports.

What an odd situation. In Canada, they’d have probably just MAIDed her. Not sure if that’s a word or not, but I’m using it.

This is kind of surprising. I mean the deploying of troops, not the attacks. Question: has Europe ever been more than two generations one way or the other from trying to exterminate the Jews?

The plot thickens. This will be interesting.

He seems stable. I can’t believe the union let him get fired though. That would have never happened if he was in NYC.

Good. We need more like her.

The Hittler Zielinski election is not what I expected this year. Good for the French for not getting hung up on names, I suppose.

This is pretty retarded. So the location should come as no surprise.

Move one more item from the conspiracy theory column to reality. ::sigh::

Well maybe they shouldn’t have allowed all that fraud. Stupid ass NPR.

NIMBYism for the win! If I had to guess, I’d bet this project was going to fill the pockets of some government officials and/or their connected friends. But either way, it’s kind of funny.

Here you go. Something light and fun. And here’s one of my favorites. It just starts off fast and never stops. Enjoy them both.

And enjoy this lovely Thursday, dear friends.

About The Author

sloopyinca

sloopyinca

324 Comments

  1. Ted S.

    The plot thickens. This will be interesting

    Will they paw through his wife’s underwear drawer?

    • SDF-7

      Only if they’re looking for the bare necessities.

      (Alternate take: Then they’d be the Unmentionables instead of the Untouchables)

    • Drake

      The wife who was killed by ISIS?

      • SDF-7

        Maybe Anubis sent her back?

      • Not Adahn

        His wife was killed by the Joos! ISIS was just their patsy!

      • Not Adahn

        (this is literally being asserted by the groypers I’m unfortunate enough to encounter).

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        Nah, the Joos were supporting the Al Nusra guy and I don’t think they get along.

      • Swiss Servator

        The new one, the one who works for Max Blumenthal

  2. SDF-7

    What an odd situation.

    Love that it takes 5 months and formal legal processes to kick someone out of your property. Mark of a “civilized” society that we’re so adverse to harm that we allow those who ignore the laws to tromp all over those who follow them. Progress!

    Canada might have MAiD’d her… but might also have recognized her claim to the stolen land of her room or some madness.

    Morning all.

    • R.J.

      She acknowledges that the hospital resides on land that was stolen from the alligators…

    • Trials and Trippelations

      Similar situation at a hospital I worked at. Patient refused to leave. He would need some sort of nursing care outpatient, so he would refuse to talk to social workers and most doctors. When the hospital did manage to find potential skilled nursing facilities patient’s wife would call them say he is a violent threatening ass (he is) and that she would sic his lawyer on them (facility didn’t know the lawyers track record was shit) if they accepted the patient.
      I was the patient’s nurse several times because I was a travel nurse and he had burned so many bridges over the prior year with the staff that they were never assigned to him.
      This is a top 20 hospital system, so I can only assume it wasnt legal ineptitude but rather the higher ups just didn’t care and didn’t want to face any PR slights.
      I think the higher ups were satisfied with the situation once they got him to spot yelling and throwing things at staff. To try to make life less comfortable they banned him from receiving outside food. I really don’t see any way that he left that hospital except in a body bag

      • Trials and Trippelations

        So the patient got to be a bump on a log. Watch Tv all day. Sleep when he wanted and initially get all the fast food he wanted. As stated he was forced to only get hospital food eventually but at least he didn’t have to cook.
        His wife lived off his disability checks an it was rumored was having an affair. The only task she had to do was bring him fast food initially and call any SNF placements to scare them from taking him

  3. SDF-7

    Question: has Europe ever been more than two generations one way or the other from trying to exterminate the Jews?

    I’m sure the tribes there around 500 BC were perfectly fine leaving the Jews alone. It seems since then, Israel just Gauls them.

    • guy in the back row

      Maybe it’s due to AI pogramming?

      • Sensei

        What have they ever done for us?

      • Ted S.

        Blame it on the stars that shine at night.

  4. Sensei

    “direct oral suction”

    Phrasing? It’s rare that the whole ritual gets attention in the press.

      • Aloysious

        OMWC?

        The story didn’t mention Greta Thunberg at all. Or fun butt stuff.

  5. Sensei

    “So the location should come as no surprise.”

    One thing I absolutely do not like living close to NYC is the light pollution. The only things in the night sky I can generally see is the moon and the planets.

    • rhywun

      I couldn’t care less but I am a bit baffled here. The Manhattan Borough President is not a legislative position – it is a figurehead.

      I’m guessing you’ll just have to live with the light. 😞

      • SDF-7

        I read it as the turkey proposed the legislation (while in the legislature) and has since left and become Borough President. Could be wrong… but that was the only thing that made even a little sense out of that article.

      • rhywun

        Perhaps.

        I would like to think that even the braindead luminaries in my current state would not impose that insanely expensive and completely unnecessary bullshit but all bets are off these days.

    • Threedoor

      If my neighborhood ever tries to enforce the covenants I’m going to do one of two things, make a motion to dismiss the entire structure as there has never been enforcement or a body setup for over 20 years, or introduce a dark sky rule and shit every asshole with their tens of thousands of lumens in blue LEDs on all night down.

  6. SDF-7

    He seems stable.

    I get anger. I get psychological damage. I don’t really get posting crap like this on the internet unless you’re looking to suicide by cop. Of course, I don’t get all of the TikTok videos where people seem to enjoy making it clear what pathetic losers they are either…. just because you can post stuff online doesn’t mean you should, younger generations…. Funny how we had a better sense of that before the Eternal September.

  7. Sensei

    “Thomas Keller, the chef-owner of French Laundry, attended a Yountville Town Council meeting on March 3, 2026, to discuss the proposed Yountville Commons affordable housing project in Yountville, Calif. ”

    In his chef’s whites – naturally.

    • SDF-7

      At least he bared his head in respect…. didn’t want them to see him toque’d off.

    • rhywun

      I’m guessing in addition to graft, the project is intended to spite residents who thought they had escaped living near the poors.

      IIRC wasn’t it Obama who plotted to put Section 8 housing in every town in America?

      • Rat on a train

        Only in the towns that vote the wrong way.

      • Tonio

        They wanted that in every neighborhood. They claimed that putting poor ppl in middle class neighborhoods would magically transform those poor ppl into high-functioning, productive citizens. Just like they claimed that dumping a bunch of tribal third-worlders into America would magically transform them into civilized ppl. In reality, it was always about punishing the successful.

      • Homple

        “They claimed that putting poor ppl in middle class neighborhoods would magically transform those poor ppl into high-functioning, productive citizens.”

        Forced bussing was so successful at making kids smart, so it was reasonable to think this. I guess.

      • ZWAK, doktor of BRAIN SCIENCE!

        Yountville voted the correct way.

    • Rat on a train

      respect his authority

    • slumbrew

      Eh, I wager he came right from the kitchen and was headed straight back there. The dude puts in the hours.

    • Threedoor

      If he worked for Fauchi he would have shown up in his lab coat.

  8. SDF-7

    We need more like her.

    For Texas that’s merciful, isn’t it? I would have thought “start at 6 feet, clerk gets a loaded .45… see if you can dodge the rounds” was a more standard Texas punishment….

    • Translucent Chum

      I like that he’s described as a shoplifter…🙄

    • DrOtto

      I beat a ticket in east Texas because a court certified copy of an accident report wasn’t made available to me in a timely manner. The state trooper that cited me was pissed. As I was leaving, the clerk “joked” they were going to give me a 5 minute head start.

  9. R C Dean

    What an odd situation.

    I had to threaten to do that a few times, and once we actually did file trespass paperwork on a patient who wouldn’t leave after being discharged.

    • Sensei

      Is the hospital feeding the (ex-)patient? I get how regular squatters operate, but this one is a new twist!

      • R C Dean

        Oddly, my proposal that we cut off the TV and food service to the room was rejected.

      • Sensei

        Funny about that! That’s what I would asked too.

      • Rat on a train

        Lock the TV to a kids channel with no way to turn off.

      • rhywun

        Or CNN.

      • Necron 99

        I would cut off TV, food service, and remove all furnishings; bed, call button, blinds, everything. Let’s see how long someone wants to stay in an empty room. If anything goes in, housekeeping removes it first time she goes to the crapper.

    • (((Jarflax

      The beds have wheels right? Wheel them down to the morgue or the ER waiting area.

      • rhywun

        Wheel them to Psychiatry. Something is off is you want to live in a hospital.

  10. SDF-7

    This is pretty retarded.

    Oh no…. the enviro-wackos aren’t trying to regress humanity to the Stone Age… not at all… never happen…

    (Ok, that said — I’m not overly fond of light pollution either. From a purely utilitarian perspective, light that isn’t illuminating things at ground level (i.e. what goes up and makes us lit from space level and all) is really wasted energy, after all. Better lighting / more efficient / more directional is cool… but as with most things, that should be market decisions where it makes sense, and nothing above local government level if it must be a public lands thing).

    • Tonio

      Even lights directed downwards reflect back up. Light is tricky like that.

      • SDF-7

        My brain is just flashing to the Fleet of Worlds and waste heat now…. some energy leakage is mandated by physics and all.

    • Threedoor

      The big thing I’m against in lighting is LEDs.

      They are not good for your health, especially at night.

    • Threedoor

      Some people don’t care.
      Property rights end at the property line, if what you do crosses the property line only then do your neighbors have a legitimate cause. My county has no noise ordinance and I’d like to keep it that way, so I shut off the radio at 6pm when I’m working outside and generally keep it down.
      I turn off all my outside lights unless I need them to do a specific task at night.

      New neighbors just leave the damn things on. They are outside here pushing rock around with their tractor but the lights are on all night
      And have ended stargazing in my neighborhood completely. https://ibb.co/FqzB9yYW

  11. SDF-7

    Move one more item from the conspiracy theory column to reality. ::sigh::

    Certainly one more “ritual” that reads a lot like “some messed up priest wanted to do this back in the day, so wrote it in” (rather like the “God’s portion is shared with the priests and is a good BBQ” that most of the MidEast seemed to be in on back in the day… I think the Greeks at least gave the gods the offal and the “thigh bones wrapped in fat” which might have deprived them of some good stews, but not the briskets… OMWC will doubtless point me to a Jews Day Tuesday archive that sets me straight on some things I’m misremembering on how this works now…)

  12. Tonio

    The hospital has repeatedly made efforts to coordinate her departure with family members and offered transportation to obtain necessary identification, the lawsuit said.

    Yeah, there’s other things going on here.

  13. SDF-7

    Stupid ass NPR.

    “Let’s not argue and moan about who defrauded who….. The important thing is that we’re entitled to your money, in a very real and legal sense!” (Our government has long since burned down, fell over and sank into The Swamp….)

  14. R C Dean

    The Napa Valley town has spent years planning to convert an old elementary school into affordable housing for workers

    First, can I get an eyeroll for “spent years planning”?

    Second, why do I doubt you have to show proof of employment to live there?

    • rhywun

      “workers”

      Yeah, that’s an old lefty trick. Housing for “workers” really means housing for the homeless or mentally ill and maybe some actual working people.

      See also: “The Working Families Party” – a commie front group here in NY

      • Homple

        They called it “worker housing”, copied from Europe, but people here with jobs called it “the projects” and did anything they could to live anywhere else.

  15. slumbrew

    and Spuds also got thumped

    ¿Que?

    They won, albeit not by enough to advance.

  16. rhywun

    Stupid ass NPR.

    They are so laughably predictable. Must be a day ending in -y.

  17. Sensei

    Pardoned for Fraud, a CEO Mounts His Comeback: ‘We Can Trust You Now’

    I’m waiting them to attach his new aircraft to some carrier aircraft, release it, and glide for a landing. After that put a splashy video like it flew under its own power. One of the many things I’m unhappy Trump did was this guy’s pardon.

    https://www.wsj.com/business/trevor-milton-pardon-nikola-trump-3163e19c?st=fzVsHP&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

    Reference:
    https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-54161343

    • Rat on a train

      I wish pardons were more like nominations requiring confirmation than a plenary power.

      • juris imprudent

        The King must be able to dispense some favors after all!

    • (((Jarflax

      That kind of cowardice and evasion of responsibility by a legislator should be treated as a criminal act. Unfortunately that would require that legislators have the courage to live up to their oath of office.

      • juris imprudent

        It would also require voters not to be the predictable assholes they actually are.

      • SarumanTheWoefullyIgnorant

        It would also require the political parties to stop nominating morally bankrupt sorry-ass wet noodles for public office. They’re moral cowards and grandstanders because it’s their role to oppose anything that reduces the amount of grift going on.

    • Ownbestenemy

      We moght have to debate ideas, defend policy and you know, be a representative! How dare you!

    • R C Dean

      Congress was designed to be the “first among equals” of the three branches. Actually, the three branches were never intended to be “co-equal” at all. The systemic institutional failure of Congress to fulfill its role is one of the fundamental problems afflicting this country.

      And short of dissolving the government entirely, there is no fix for it. Sure, theoretically you could vote out the entire current population of Congress and replace them with people who are willing to shoulder responsibility, but that ain’t gonna happen.

    • Drake

      Pure insanity. I hope somebody can talk sense into Trump before they march off into the Tutenburg Forest.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        It’s gonna happen. Trump’s a deluded tard who’s under immense pressure. It’s a good bet he’s going to do the stupidest thing short of using nukes.

    • R C Dean

      From what I can tell, Iran hasn’t really closed Hormuz, and is letting certain ships through, including a few carrying oil to China in violation of sanctions.

      My question: the purpose of seizing Kharg is to cut off Iran’s oil exports. Can’t we do that by closing Hormuz ourselves?

      • Drake

        Driving global oil prices even higher?

      • Ownbestenemy

        That would require strategic implementation beyond superior air power.

        While we have the vast edge in navel power too, getting other nations to protect their vital imports also seems to be the hangup in securing the strait.

      • R C Dean

        Like seizing Kharg wouldn’t impact oil prices?

      • UnCivilServant

        There’s another scenario that just came to mind – to stop potential sabotage by regime agents who conclude the war is lost and want to deliver a “fuck you” to whoever gets the country afterwards. Their ranged capacity is ever diminishing, but someone on the ground could still ‘scuttle’ the facilities.

      • R C Dean

        I’m not talking about securing Hormuz. I’m talking about cutting off Iran’s oil exports. Of the two options for doing so, seizing Kharg seems far and away the hardest and riskiest.

        The current situation, where Iran can keep exporting oil to fund the regime and nobody else can get oil through the strait, seems the worst of all possible worlds.

      • Drake

        India is desperate for fuel. They are escorting their oil tankers (paid for in yuan) to India. Are we going to try to interdict the Indian Navy?

    • Grumbletarian

      I would think building a canal through the UAE and Oman south of the strait would just end Iran’s permanent threat vis-a-vis closing the strait.

      I say that knowing nothing about how likely it would be, but it’s something I would have looked into about, oh, 47 years ago.

      • R C Dean

        There are mountains there that would make it prohibitive.

        Now, a pipeline could probably be made to work, but you would need terminals at each end that would be targets just as phat as, well, Kharg.

      • Grumbletarian

        Well, crap. Thanks for the info.

      • juris imprudent

        Shorter than the Panama Canal and no more mountainous. It could be done, all within the UAE.

      • DEG

        Now, a pipeline could probably be made to work, but you would need terminals at each end that would be targets just as phat as, well, Kharg.

        Since 2012. The Saudis also have a pipeline to bypass the Straits. The Saudi’s pipeline goes to the Red Sea.

        On the UAE Pipeline, Iran has targeted the infrastructure around the east end of the pipeline.

      • SarumanTheWoefullyIgnorant

        Plus building a canal there wouldn’t involve a wet tropical climate, dealing with a Chagres River, Malaria, Yellow Fever, and collapsing mountainsides. Just drought and horrible heat.

        But I agree with RC that a pipeline sounds much more practical (and defensible).

      • Drake

        Good solutions that would take years to build (assuming Iran and the Houtis don’t blast the construction). Not going to alleviate the incoming pain on energy.

  18. juris imprudent

    I bet you’d forgotten that these dumbshits were still around.

    Service Employees International Union Local 26, which represents more than 8,000 of the state’s janitors, window cleaners and other property service workers, has ​“lost over 20 members to these abductions by federal agents, often without warning, often without due process,” said Greg Nammacher, union president, at a January 19 press conference.

    Hmm, perhaps sanctioning a union that knowingly admits illegal laborers should be on the table?

    • rhywun

      I could never forget that outfit – one of the worst of the lot. Always causing trouble everywhere.

      • juris imprudent

        Actually, I was more making fun of In These Times but I see the quote causing the confusion.

      • rhywun

        Oh. I don’t know what In These Times is.

        Just recall the SEIU being a particularly vile example of its kind – up there with teachers’ unions.

    • UnCivilServant

      No, no, no. Cubes removed from the past to sell in the current will have a net zero impact on the amount of mass involved. there will just be a period with less mass hanging around. The problems will be that the lower mass will cause the Earth to slip out of its orbit to a more distant one and spiral us into an ice age.

      • Grumbletarian

        But if the loss of mass is not evenly distributed then the earth will wobble in its rotation, causing the planet to flip into its side like Uranus. Then the seasons are all screwed up, agriculture collapses, and the human race is destroyed before the time travelers return to the present with their stolen Rubik’s Cubes.

        And thus Paul Erlich was right all along!

  19. PieInTheSky

    In the least important controversy these days, the local press is still discussing the problem that Romania’s eurovision song entry called Choke Me glorifies dangerous practice of erotic asphyxiation. This made me ask the real question: has any glib listen to it and what is the official glibertarian opinion etc.

    Alexandra Căpitănescu – Choke Me | Romania 🇷🇴 | Official Music Video | #Eurovision2026

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yn0YmI0dPb8

    • UnCivilServant

      I have never heard of it, and would rather not listen to anything being submitted to Eurovision. Such is the negative reputation of the contest.

    • R C Dean

      Wrong side of the hot/crazy line for me.

    • Not Adahn

      It it as entertaining as that song/video Poland (I think) put out that had hotties churning butter suggestively?

      • Not Adahn

        I like the “Diva Dance” bits.

    • DEG

      I remember when I was an undergrad and some guys being weirded out by their girlfriends wanting to be choked during sex.

      • PieInTheSky

        and you swooped in a chocked em yourself?

      • UnCivilServant

        No, that would be weird for DEG to choke the dudes while the dudes are otherwise occupied with the girls.

    • Not Adahn

      She’s not convincing me that Romania isn’t full of vampyres.

    • Not Adahn

      its a blend of gothic rock, electronica, and a small tinge of southern flavor.

      I imagine that a Eurovisioner’s idea of southern rock and mine are different.

      • PieInTheSky

        southern – Europe, America, Africa ? who knows

      • Threedoor

        Just like “country” music.
        What country?

    • rhywun

      I was expecting Romanian, not English. If you’re celebrating Europa or whatever.

      • PieInTheSky

        I think a majority of Eurovision songs are in English.

  20. Not Adahn

    I never even touched a gun in my entire life. Would I want to possess a firearm? No. I’m not a coward.”

    I’m trying to figure out how to properly describe the very particular flavor of contempt I have for this guy.

      • Not Adahn

        Only sissies use hammers! Or nails! Real men push boards together until they fuse!

      • Furthest Blue pistoffnick (370HSSV)

        Its the big truck=smol penis argument but applied to gunz.

      • UnCivilServant

        🙄

        Let me guess, they’re also scared by thunderstorms, Golden Retrievers, and sporks.

      • SarumanTheWoefullyIgnorant

        And clapping. Any kind of clapping or unusual noise. Hence the push towards Jazz Hands.

        Oh wait, sudden unexpected motion can be triggering . . .

    • Tonio

      Which link is that from?

      • Not Adahn

        The NYP “Spanish teacher threatens school superintendant.”

      • EvilSheldon

        Ah. So less coward, more asshole.

    • EvilSheldon

      I wonder if there are any other useful tools this guy holds in such regard.

      • Ted S.

        Ketanji Brown Jackson?

      • Tonio

        [golf clap]

      • EvilSheldon

        [joins in the golf clap]

    • Tonio

      This is an example of what I call viewpoint delegitimization. There is no legitimate argument for anything opposed to leftist orthodoxy. It also dovetails with gaslighting and projection, and is Orwellian.

      You are not allowed to have legitimate concern for your own safety based on the increasing random violence in our society. No, your desire to have a gun is based on irrational fear.

      You are not allowed to have legitimate concern about biological males in womens’ restrooms and changing rooms. Your opposition to that is based on ignorance and irrational fear.

      Etc.

      • rhywun

        Yeah, all the trendy so-called “phobias” are like this now.

      • juris imprudent

        Moralism. I have good morals and if you oppose me it is because you have bad ones.

  21. Sensei

    A perfect piece of earnings release BINGO from General Mills.

    “We expected this reinvestment approach—along with the impact of divestitures and timing headwinds—would pressure our sales and earnings through our first three quarters,” Chief Executive Jeff Harmening said in prepared remarks Wednesday.

    https://www.wsj.com/business/earnings/general-mills-posts-lower-profit-sales-amid-turnaround-0dca77e0?st=NbCY1Z&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

    Commentary from them and Cheesecake Factory this AM suggest that MAHA is having an impact. When Team Blue regains control these same companies will whipsaw in the exact opposite direction for the next fad. You wouldn’t to stick to your core competencies.

    • juris imprudent

      Lately I’m not sure corporations have core competencies any more than government does.

      • Threedoor

        They are all on the coattails of bad government policy propping them up.

    • Threedoor

      New food pyramid directly impacts school meals, prison, and hospitals.

      Good.

  22. PieInTheSky

    Ukrainians sometimes add traditional motifs. Romanians paint their balconies in random colours (which you can do individually as planning laws currently mostly allow this).

    https://x.com/doktor_val/status/2034604864081141805

    I am generally against strict planning laws but the way Romanians painted their apartment buildings is a steelman argument for strict planning laws.

    • Rat on a train

      Although I’m in an HOA, siding, trim, doors, and all are various colors. When I received a notice that my garage and foundation needed repainting I changed the colors of both.

      • UnCivilServant

        “What are you doing looking at my house?”

        (-.-)

      • juris imprudent

        Hopefully she had to sell her property to pay the damages.

      • EvilSheldon

        This was very obvious AI.

        Although honestly, not a bad representation of HOA Karens.

      • Threedoor

        You have to paint the concrete foundation?!

        That just adds unnecessary maintenance.

    • rhywun

      “It takes money to kill bad guys.”

      He has the same oratory skills as his boss. 🙄

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      Damnit, there go the tariff refund checks but stupid unnecessary wars ain’t cheap.

  23. Not Adahn

    Please tell me (((you people))) have a Do Not Suck list where you can banish herpetic mohels.

  24. PieInTheSky

    Today, Green Party leader Zack Polanski outlined his economic philosophy at an event organised by the New Economics Foundation (NEF). I will not pretend that I was listening with a completely open mind: I mostly made up my mind about Zackonomics on the day when Polanski said that his three favourite economists were Gary Stevenson, Richard Murphy and Grace Blakeley.

    My issue with that is not that all three of those are completely wrong about economics (although they are). It’s that they are all wrong in very different, and mutually incompatible ways. You can be a fan of each of them in isolation (although you really shouldn’t), but you cannot, in a meaningful way, be a fan of all three of them at the same time.

    Stevenson believes that wealth inequality is the source of all of the world’s problems: he thinks the billionaires are hoarding all the wealth, not leaving anything for the rest of us. His solution, therefore, is to tax their wealth in a punitive way.

    Richard Murphy, on the other hand, is a proponent of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). He believes that governments can print as much money as they like, and that they do not need tax revenue to finance spending. This would make a wealth tax superfluous, or even actively harmful, because it entrenches the idea that taxes fund spending.

    Grace Blakeley, meanwhile, is an orthodox, Bolshevik-style Marxist-Leninist. She believes that capitalism is like The Matrix, with the capitalist class in the role of the machines. In that worldview, discussions about different monetary or fiscal regimes are, of course, completely moot, because these are all just changes within the Matrix.

    How can anyone be attracted to all three of those philosophies at the same time? That’s very simple: all three are vaguely fashionable, and at the end of the day, that is all Zackonomics really is: a “greatest hits” album of fashionable platitudes.

    https://thecritic.co.uk/zackonomics-is-incoherent-and-outdated/

    fuck it might as well

      • Rat on a train

        Just playing to the base.

      • PieInTheSky

        people expected more from this green leader because unlike others who had bullshit jobs before politics, he had the important work of increasing women’s breasts via hypnosis, charging 200 pounds a session for his services.

      • Ted S.

        One shouldn’t, but see Tonio’s comments on viewpoint normalization.

        The media happily normalizes Green Party evils, as well as cranks like Richard Murphy.

  25. PieInTheSky

    Islamic terrorist attacks are just blowback from America’s GWOT, which was just blowback from 9/11, which was just blowback from America supporting Israel, which was just blowback from the Ottomans fighting against America and Britain in WW1, which was just blowback from Britain seizing Egypt and supporting Greek freedom from the Ottomans, which was just blowback from the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople and hundreds of years of oppression, which was just blowback from the Crusades, which were just blowback from the Seljuk conquest of Anatolia, which was just blowback from the Byzantine Empire’s expansion into Syria …

    https://x.com/romanhelmetguy/status/2033582174599786861

    • UnCivilServant

      So, what you’re saying is, instead of exiling Mo, the pagan arabs should have just executed him and saved the world fourteen hundred years of hassle?

      • juris imprudent

        Ask the Romans how that worked out with that other guy in the the mid-east.

      • (((Jarflax

        Exceptionally well? Foundation of the greatest civilization to date? I’m not sure an ideology of conquest and domination survives it’s founder’s immediate execution the same way.

      • juris imprudent

        I specifically said to ask the Romans – there is a credible argument about the role the conversion to Christianity played in the demise of Rome.

      • PieInTheSky

        I do not find the argument all that credible tbh. The crisis of the third century happened before. I do not think Rome was on the brink of a comeback.

      • UnCivilServant

        I don’t see it JI – how about you make the argument. Rome was falling beforehand, and after conversion half of it survived another thousand years.

      • juris imprudent

        Personally, I don’t think the Roman government was ever stable. The Republic was always teetering and troubled, never mind how it became the Empire – in that sense it was a lousy object model for our own government.

        Nietzsche seemed to believe that the religious transformation was highly detrimental.

      • Threedoor

        Can we have one more crusade?

        A last one?
        Maybe a final one?

    • Mad Scientist

      Don’t restrict that decision to the mother either. Other passengers on the airplane should also be able to elect to abort that baby.

      • PieInTheSky

        ok good one

    • rhywun

      Because England’s slow-motion suicide isn’t proceeding quickly enough…?

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      Blood for Baal with an extended pinky and an ascot. The Phoenicians did it better.

    • Rat on a train

      At least through the 75th trimester.

  26. PieInTheSky

    Not coming from an agricultural background, some measurements don’t make intuitive sense to me. A Hectares are easy enough to come to terms with: 10,000 square meters. Easy. An acre?! I still can’t wrap my head around this…

    https://x.com/simongerman600/status/2034525420050161983

    checkmate americans stupid acres

    • Ted S.

      Just as a foot was some random guy’s foot, an acre is some random team of oxen plowing a field for a day.

      • PieInTheSky

        my dick is not 12 inches but smells like a foot was an old saying

      • SarumanTheWoefullyIgnorant

        Wait until you see a land deed whose measurements involve chains and rods.

      • Raven Nation

        Hah! Most of us growing up in Australia knew that a chain was 22 yards because that was (and still is) the official length of a cricket pitch.

        I vaguely remember learning furlongs and a few other imperial measurements. But Oz went metric when I was in grade school.

    • Grumbletarian

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selion

      It coms from feudal agriculture. a Selion was a plot of land worked by a serf, 1 furlong by 1 chain (or 4 rods). A furlong was generally how far an ox could pull a plow before it needed to rest — about 660 feet or so. The rods the plowmen used to steer the ox were about 16.5 feet long. 4 rods was 66 feet. A selion was one acre of land.

      • rhywun

        How many square giraffes is that?

      • Grumbletarian

        Are we talking metric giraffes?

      • Rat on a train

        You use spherical giraffes in metric.

      • UnCivilServant

        You can’t use a metric giraffe in this context. You end up with a value in deciliters per light year.

      • Ted S.

        Assume a spherical giraffe….

      • Fourscore

        My garden is 16.7 square rods. How much chain link fence will be required, if the long side is a 100 feet?

    • Rat on a train

      The biggest stupidity in the measurement wars are people who believe the average person needs to convert between units instead of just needing standard units.

      • (((Jarflax

        The measurement wars are 99% people with no actual intellectual accomplishments trying to bolster their ego by association with something they perceive as scientific.

      • PieInTheSky

        A PINT IS  568 mL !!!!!!

      • Common Tater

        A pint is a pound, world around.

      • PieInTheSky

        you’d be lucky to find it for 5 pounds outside a Wetherspoons

      • UnCivilServant

        These days, that’s cheap beer.

      • (((Jarflax

        A pint of tungsten isn’t

      • PieInTheSky

        I assume you mean wolfram

      • (((Jarflax

        Sorry, I meant to say children of the night metal.

    • UnCivilServant

      An acre is a useful unit of measurement. It is based on actual work and the space needed to feed one person for one year.

      A hectare is based on some random length murderous frenchment picked because they hated everything that had been built before.

      • PieInTheSky

        work and the space needed to feed one person for one year – in every country for every crop I assume?

      • UnCivilServant

        In every country that mattered when it was defined.

      • PieInTheSky

        you are saying french plowmen were lazier than english, or just ate less?

      • UnCivilServant

        A: France doesn’t matter.
        B: of course they’re lazier.
        C: they had no choice, if you don’t grow enough to cover yourself and the church and the segnior, and the king, and…

      • (((Jarflax

        The French had longer rods than the English.

      • juris imprudent

        space needed to feed one person for one year

        Well then, promising 40 acres and a mule was quite generous wasn’t it?

      • UnCivilServant

        I said it was based on that space, not that it was that space.

      • UnCivilServant

        But I was mistaken, it was based on plow time.

        The hide was the unit based on feeding people.

        Mea Culpa.

      • Not Adahn

        Also the Japanese koku, which was the amount of rice needed to feed a person for a year, which doubled as the monetary unit.

        Farmers literally grew money!

      • UnCivilServant

        Well, it makes sense.

        Taxes predate currency, so taxes had to be paid in food. Food was paid to gain the services of people who didn’t grow it. The food per person per year is a good measure for how much those services are valued. Carrying it over to minted currency was the simplest action.

        Also, the yield per acre of wheat in 1800 was only 20 bushels. I think today it hovers around 60. I found these data points trying to validate my mistaken memory.

    • PieInTheSky

      Can we all at least agree that people use different measurements but the MM DD YYYY format is retarded?

      • UnCivilServant

        Can we all at least agree…

        No.

      • EvilSheldon

        If you’re not using the ISO standard format (2026-03-19) I have to question your ability to live in a civilized society.

      • Furthest Blue pistoffnick (370HSSV)

        Commas instead of periods to mark decimal places is also tarded.

      • Sensei

        Commas instead of periods to mark decimal places is also tarded.

        I can adjust to the different date formats, but I have to agree here.

      • PieInTheSky

        the commas thing is so annoying. also saving comma separate value files from excel with ;

      • rhywun

        If you’re not using the ISO standard format (2026-03-19) I have to question your ability to live in a civilized society.

        This.

      • Rat on a train

        Military Date Time Group …

      • Furthest Blue pistoffnick (370HSSV)

        Hear me out…..

        Metric time

      • juris imprudent

        Conserving Sumerian time is the most conservative value of all.

    • Not Adahn

      So, why do you need “hectare” if you’ve already got 10^4(m^2)? Why are you adding derivative units when your whole point was (supposedly) simplification? And why would you use 10^4 when everything else in your system is 10^3?

      • (((Jarflax

        Because you want an even exponent for area which is inherently 2 dimensional? Just as you want a power of 3 exponent for volume which is inherently 3 dimensional?

      • UnCivilServant

        And why would you use 10^4 when everything else in your system is 10^3?

        They wanted it to be bigger than an acre since the kilometer turned out to be shorter than a mile.

      • Not Adahn

        So what you’re saying is square kilometers would be sane? Again, what is the purpose of hectares?

        It’s almost like OG units were based around being convenient and useful whereas metric is about imposing order on the peasantry. –

      • UnCivilServant

        No, using square kilometers would be useless.

      • rhywun

        I always thought the reason for “hectare” is that it is reasonably close in size to “acre”.

      • Not Adahn

        Next thing you’re going to tell me is that the meter was chosen because it was as close to a yard as they could get by juggling coefficients and various distances.

        I seem to recall a wise man once writing “a meter is a froggy yard.”

    • Threedoor

      Measurements before metric and tractors.

  27. EvilSheldon

    I hate having blood drawn.

    That is all.

    • PieInTheSky

      well liking it is not relevant.

      • (((Jarflax

        You know, comments like this really don’t help your efforts to push back against the vampire thing.

      • EvilSheldon

        The phlebotomist at my doc’s office is pretty great. She has very good hands.

        But if she looked and dressed like a sexy vampire, the whole experience could just be that much better…

      • Common Tater

        There are goth themed restaurants, but a goth hospital?

      • The Last American Hero

        Holy market opportunity, Batman! Why has nobody thought of this?

      • Threedoor

        Welcome to Silent Hill Tater.

    • R.J.

      Now all we have to do is convince S. Korean fans that Iran is responsible for Enhyphen’s dissolution.

  28. PieInTheSky

    Danmark forberedte sig på muligt angreb fra USA: Fløj poser med blod til Grønland og gjorde klar til at sprænge landingsbaner i luften

    Nøglekilder i Danmark og Europa fortæller nu for første gang, hvad der skete i de mest kritiske dage, hvor Donald Trump truede med at tage Grønland “på den hårde måde”.

    https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/groenland/danmark-forberedte-sig-paa-muligt-angreb-fra-usa-floej-poser-med-blod-til-groenland-og-gjorde-klar

  29. EvilSheldon

    From Arkhaven, a delightful piece about Firefly, and the potential animated continuation series… Caution – some mild spoilers if you haven’t read the comics.

    My favorite quote:

    Here’s the truth of it. Firefly has already won. It did the one thing almost no show ever manages—it survived its own death.

      • EvilSheldon

        I don’t think that your misery can be fixed. Only shared.

    • PieInTheSky

      I loved firefly but am ambivalent about it coming back after all these years. I don;t really do comics so just the series and the movie though.

      • EvilSheldon

        The comics (I own them all) basically explore all the plot threads that Joss Whedon wanted to do in the TV series. The big one got wrapped up in the movie, which means that a continuation series would likely have to de-canonize it.

        I share your ambivalence, just because I have no faith that anything good can come out of Hollywood right now. But…against all odds, Hollywood does occasionally come out with a banger. I have every intention of seeing Project Hail Mary in the theater. So, I’m willing to give a Firefly continuation a fair shot.

      • juris imprudent

        The Drinker gave a rave review on Project Hail Mary and I guess if you ignore the insane basis for the movie (our sun is dying), then okay, but that’s a big ask in my book.

      • Not Adahn

        Eh, that’s the same scenario in the final episode of B5.

    • Threedoor

      I have long thought animated was the way to go with Firefly.

  30. Mad Scientist

    A møøse bit Pie’s sister once.

    • (((Jarflax

      I had a 3 month period in my younger days in which I had no access to a washing machine. Hand washing clothing is not fun.

      • PieInTheSky

        My parents knew a old woman a long time ago who was against washing machines saying that you should only wash clothes in the river as was the way in her youth.

      • UnCivilServant

        Either she was mentally ill, or too proud to admit she couldn’t afford one and wanted to masquerade it as a choice with faux moral superiority.

      • Rat on a train

        Stay near running water for safety?

      • Pope Jimbo

        The Real Marines who did boot camp at MCRD San Diego got to spend an hour every week (or so) washing their clothes by hand at some cement troughs between the barracks. The WM’s (women Marines) who went to boot camp at Parris Island got to use washing machines.

        In truth, washing your clothes by hand outside at the trough wasn’t too bad. The DI’s pretty much left you alone. Being in San Diego meant that the weather was almost always nice. Not a bad way to spend an hour.

      • Rat on a train

        Army Basic Training had weekly laundry service.

      • Threedoor

        Army basic for me had washers and dryers. We did our own and had to stay there to make sure no one stole our stuff.

    • Rat on a train

      Bring your own container like for stores?

      • PieInTheSky

        microplastic free !!!!

      • EvilSheldon

        Sadly, imitating Japanese culture isn’t going to make us more like Japan.

      • Gustave Lytton

        Yes, but I’d like to try packaging plastic within plastic with extra plastic bags for later all the same.

    • Sensei

      Four years on, however, there is evidence that New Jersey’s bag prohibition not only failed to curb plastic usage, it backfired. According to a new study released on January 9 by the Freedonia Group, 53 million pounds worth of plastic shopping bags were used in New Jersey prior to implementation of the state’s bag ban, a figure that has risen to 151 million pounds since the prohibition was instituted.

      https://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickgleason/2024/01/22/new-jersey-bag-ban-followed-by-increased-use-of-plastic/

      They had the best of intentions however!

      • (((Jarflax

        If the goal is grift the failure is opportunity to expand. Witness the Pacific trash crisis that is a direct result of recycling programs shipping trash to China which immediately recycled the valuable parts and dumped the plastic in various rivers.

    • rhywun

      I love the restaurant owners complaining about how it will ruin them. As if they are any concern whatsoever when there is eco-virtue to signal.

      • Common Tater

        I’ve managed bars and restaurants. Let the legislators try if they think it’s so easy.

    • SarumanTheWoefullyIgnorant

      That’s getting too cheep!

  31. The Late P Brooks

    Dilemma

    Norway has also made clear that it is already operating close to maximum output. This presents a dilemma for the EU because increasing supply would require new exploration and investment.

    Oslo suggests the EU is shooting itself in the foot with plans to put an end to oil and gas development in the European Arctic as part of a push to mitigate climate change. It points out that Russia has huge plans to expand liquefied natural gas production in the Russian Arctic.

    Norway is lobbying Brussels hard to change its policies. This is just one of a host of ways environmental decisions are being sucked into the vortex that is Europe’s energy debate.

    The hunt for short-term answers will dominate Thursday’s EU summit. There is deep concern among a number of leaders that spiralling energy and possible inflationary rises, (coupled with possible refugee influxes to Europe on the back of the growing Middle East crisis) will alienate voters and play into the hands of populist nationalist politicians on the right and left of the European political spectrum.

    Rationing and price controls will fix it. And making right wing populism illegal.

    • rhywun

      It is heartwarming to see that reality is finally biting ecotards in the ass. The “green new deal” is dead – not everyone is accepting that reality yet but it’s coming fast. I wasn’t sure I would live to see it happen.

    • (((Jarflax

      Don’t skip goon day?

    • EvilSheldon

      My goodness, how have I not seen this before?

  32. Common Tater

    “Lunatic Megyn Kelly is FINALLY ruined! Her appalling X-rated smear of my friend proves it… but now I know her truly disturbing plan: JOSH HAMMER

    So she cozied up to the utterly deranged Owens and the Nazi-sympathizing Carlson. She’s gone out of her way to pick fights with a number of public-facing Jews in media, such as Bari Weiss, Ben Shapiro, Dave Rubin and even yours truly.

    Now, she’s at war with perhaps the most venerable of all Jewish conservatives, a man who is a noted personal favorite of President Trump’s: Mark Levin.”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-15657527/megyn-kelly-mark-levin-josh-hammer.html

    https://archive.is/3Xc8E

    Will you assholes knock it off?

    • (((Jarflax

      Political commentary, like politics itself, attracts petty narcissists independent from ideological bent. I think this is a big part of why fixing things seems impossible despite a lot of fixes themselves appearing very simple to implement. The people who would have to implement the fixes are not the type of people who fix things.

      • Common Tater

        So only mechanics and tradesmen should be allowed to hold office?

      • (((Jarflax

        Hmm, I could probably be persuaded to support that rule. At minimum a ban on lawyers or academics holding any policy making or legislative office seems like a good idea.

      • EvilSheldon

        It could hardly be worse than the crop of malevolent idiots we have now…

    • Gender Traitor

      Do they have anything cute in a 7 Wide with a not-too-high heel?

      • (((Jarflax

        Not to be arch but shouldn’t you have said heel?

      • Pope Jimbo

        Bite your tongue!

      • juris imprudent

        The road to hell must be walked in high heels?

  33. Common Tater

    “Controversial manosphere influencer HStikkytokky made a series of crude claims about Piers Morgan’s wife while appearing on his YouTube show.

    The social media personality, whose real name is Harrison Sullivan, recently appeared on Louis Theroux’s Inside The Manosphere documentary, which explored the rise of ultra-masculine communities online.

    Piers confronted him about a series of comments he made on the Netflix show, including his vow to disown his son if he came out as gay…

    The exchange then became personal, with Harrison making a series of disgusting claims about his wife, Celia Walden….

    The team at Piers Morgan Uncensored have not released the interview, but the footage emerged online in a livestream Harrison shared on Kick.”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tv/article-15660293/piers-morgan-netflix-manosphere-harrison-sullivan-hstikkytokky.html

    Don’t talk to anyone named HStikkytokky.

    • rhywun

      I would think that was obvious but holy shit chasing clicks must be addictive I guess.

  34. Common Tater

    “President Donald Trump’s former top counterterrorism official who resigned over the war in Iran said his suspicion piqued when the FBI blocked his investigation into Charlie Kirk’s assassination.

    Joe Kent, the former Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, went onto Tucker Carlson’s podcast to explain how he lost confidence in Trump, who he believes was duped into the war by Israel….

    Kent suggested that there were foreign entities and potentially other domestic powers that were somehow involved in Kirk’s death, but did not provide any evidence or explicitly blame Israel.

    Kent did say that Kirk ‘was under a lot of pressure from a lot of pro-Israel donors.’

    A law enforcement source familiar with the FBI’s investigation into the assassination told the Daily Mail that Kent would often walk into meetings and make unsupported, outlandish claims that it was foreign actors who killed Kirk.”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15660969/Trump-counterterrorism-FBI-Israel-Charlie-Kirk-killing.html

    OFFS!

    • Rat on a train

      The NCTC moved from IC to LE?

    • EvilSheldon

      Assuming that this isn’t an administration propaganda op – Kirk certainly wouldn’t be the first SF hitter to have the cheese slide off his cracker…

    • rhywun

      So he went batshit and joined whatever cult of lunatics that are surrounding Tucker these days. Yeah, I can see that as a final straw for Donald.

    • Not Adahn

      What happened to the tranny banger who was arrested for the killing? Why hasn’t that trial started? I can’t imagine it would take all that much investigation.

      • UnCivilServant

        They’re in pretrial hearing trying to keep it out of the media, disrupt the prosecution team, etc.

      • Common Tater

        The trial has started.

        Also, bf was a furry, not trans.

      • Not Adahn

        Huh. My media diet has not contained this. I should probably expand it until it does.

      • UnCivilServant

        I don’t think the toxicity exposure would be healthy if you did that.

  35. Common Tater

    “A fitness influencer has been condemned for a vile racist rant she posted online.

    Anya Chappell, 21, who has almost 70,000 TikTok followers, filmed herself walking along in a Sunderland shirt yelling racist insults at passersby.

    Chappell is seen walking through a town centre yelling into the camera: ‘I want to smash some c*** into next week. We are making friends with all these p*** n*****s.’

    A car is heard sounding its horn, which she appears to respond to, shouting back: ‘Aye f*** off, you f***er. Here, I am not being funny, no p*** is telling me what to do.'”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15658601/fitness-influencer-fury-footage-racist-abuse-viral.html

    Paki?

  36. Pope Jimbo

    The GOP has thrown Ilhan Omar into the briar patch again.

    A key congressional watchdog committee has asked the House Committee on Ethics to look into financial matters tied to Rep. Ilhan Omar and her husband.
     
    The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in early February requested financial documents from Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, after President Donald Trump insinuated wrongdoing over a sharp rise in the value of two businesses Mynett has ownership interests in.
     
    On Tuesday, a spokeswoman for the committee said Mynett has not complied with the request.

      • Rat on a train

        You lack ethics so qualify to serve in Congress.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Trump insinuated

      In 2023, Omar’s financial disclosure form (filed in 2024) showed modest outside income and assets and credit card and student loan debt worth between $45,000 and $150,000. That disclosure form also listed Mynett as having an interest in eStCru, a winery in California, worth between $200 and $1,000.
       
      Mynett also listed an asset interest in Rose Lake Capital, a consulting company that was listed as being valued at between $15,000 to $50,000.
       
      A year later, on Omar’s 2024 financial disclosure form (filed in 2025), Rose Lake Capital was listed as being worth $5 million and $25 million. And the winery was listed at being valued at between $1 million and $5 million.

      How can anyone question a modest jump in the value of those assets? Unless they are straight up racists!

      The sad thing about all this, is that it will only make her more powerful. She is dumb as a box of rocks, but she is a genius at the 5D chess moves of portraying herself as a victim.

      • Pope Jimbo

        Sloopy:

        Mrs. Holiness is perpetually perplexed about why Omar hasn’t been arrested at the very least. Her preference would be to deport her back to Somalia.

        The ideal outcome would be for the Supremes to rule against automatic citizenship for babies born in the US. Then when they prove that Omar lied during her naturalization process, they can deport her and her no good daughter.

    • Sensei

      Yes, I posted that in yesterday’s afternoon post.

      Thanks for giving it another plug. It’s perfect!

      • sloopyinca

        It’s fantastic. I only use LinkedIn to post auction stuff, mainly because I find it full of nonsense like the stuff this AI produces.

      • rhywun

        “Huge thanks for the shout-out! 🚀 Truly appreciate the support—it’s a perfect fit! 🙌 #Networking #Gratitude #ProfessionalGrowth”

        LOL!

      • rhywun

        I stopped signing in there the second I was (re)hired at my current job, but yeah there are certain types who love posting that exact crap. Over and over.

      • Threedoor

        One of my army buddies posts garbage like that all the time.

        To be fair he talks like that too.

        Has some make work job at AT&T and golfs.

  37. Common Tater

    “A Florida trans-identified male public school teacher has launched a fundraising campaign, asking for donations to relocate to Maryland amid a state legislative crackdown on LGBTQ indoctrination in the school system. Saorise Stone, 32, of Orlando, expressed irritation that he has to “self-police” himself in the classroom or risk losing his teacher’s license.

    Stone, a high school history and English teacher, said he has to ditch the state “before it’s too late” and hopes to raise $15,000 by June. He cited Florida’s parental rights bill that prohibits the forced use of pronouns in classrooms, the banning of certain books written by “queer authors,” which were axed for inappropriate sexually explicit content, and a recent court ruling that decided sex-change procedures could be excluded from Medicaid coverage.

    “My partner and I are trying to raise funds to get out of Florida this Summer. I’m a trans woman and a lesbian, but I’m also a public school teacher in Orlando,” Stone wrote on GoFundMe.”

    https://thepostmillennial.com/trans-teacher-launches-gofundme-to-escape-florida-crackdown-on-lgbtq-indoctrination-in-classrooms

    Looks like Lilly Wachowski donated $5K?

    • rhywun

      I’m a trans woman and a lesbian

      Of course you are.

      • Ted S.

        You didn’t really think he was a tater, did you?

  38. Common Tater

    “Seattle activists and media outlets rushed to frame the arrest of a “pregnant Venezuelan woman” in Seattle, who was “separated from her child” as a vulnerable migrant mother caught in the crosshairs of federal enforcement, but court documents allege she is actually a human trafficker tied to Tren de Aragua (TDA), a violent Venezuelan gang.”

    https://thepostmillennial.com/seattle-media-paints-glowing-portrait-of-pregnant-venezuelan-ice-detainee-linked-to-tren-de-aragua-sex-trafficking-ring

    Washington mom

    • rhywun

      They were out for a pleasant afternoon stroll.

  39. The Late P Brooks

    It’s a mystery

    As candidates blame taxes and climate rules for high gas prices, experts point to a more complicated, less politically convenient reality: The recent spike is largely driven by a global oil shock tied to the war with Iran, not state policy.

    Nevertheless the war increases a deeper vulnerability for California, where gas prices climbed above $5.50 a gallon Tuesday compared to nearly $3.80 nationally: As refinery capacity declines and reliance on imports grows, global disruptions can trigger higher prices in California than anywhere else.

    “The current increase is almost entirely due to global oil markets,” said Paasha Mahdavi, a UC Santa Barbara political science professor and energy policy expert. “The problem, though … is that our starting point is so much higher than nationally.”

    State analyses show California’s higher gas prices come not only from taxes and climate programs but also a large remaining “mystery surcharge,” an unexplained markup oil companies add to gasoline prices.

    It couldn’t be that the cost of doing business in California manifests itself layer by layer in every transaction.

    You know, like a sort of “value destruction tax”.

  40. Common Tater

    “While reimposed restrictions on abortion pills could energize Democratic turnout in the midterms, just as Dobbs energized voters to protect abortion in states with GOP-controlled legislatures, SBA Pro-Life America warned the GOP is facing a electoral clobbering if the Trump administration doesn’t restrict abortion pills.”

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/abortion/justice-departments-attack-red-states-widens-gop-rift-abortion-pill-rules

    doubt

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