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Reason Roundup

DOJ Antitrust Suit Seeks To End Google Ad Dominance. The Market Is Already Taking Care of That.

Plus: Journalism versus qualified immunity, Mississippi bill would end civil asset forfeiture, and more...

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 1.25.2023 9:40 AM

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Google logo and stick figure people | Jakub Porzycki/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Jakub Porzycki/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed another civil antitrust suit against Google. This one accuses the company of maintaining an illegal monopoly on various aspects of digital advertising tech. And like so much federal antitrust action against tech companies, it comes at a time when the market is already challenging Google's dominance.

DOJ's previous antitrust complaint, filed in 2020, was concerned with Google's search and search advertising businesses, largely objecting to deals made by Google's parent company, Alphabet, to have its apps and search engine preset as the default on some browsers and devices. That suit—filed in conjunction with 11 states—is still ongoing.

The new suit, filed in conjunction with eight states—California, Colorado, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia—seems to offer up more of the same spin: Google is big, Google is very successful, and therefore Google must be doing something bad to maintain this status.

It seeks to make Google get rid of its Google Ad Manager suite, which includes a publisher ad server, Doubleclick for Publishers, and the ad exchange, AdX.

Funny timing: The federal government doesn't have a great track record when it comes to antitrust claims against tech companies, largely because it is reactionary and unimaginative. It looks at the current landscape, sees which companies are dominant, and assumes that without government intervention, things will always be thus. But tech is a dynamic field, with new—and hard to predict—products and services constantly disrupting the old behemoths. By the time a company becomes big enough that government regulators want to topple it, it's likely that it's already being threatened by market forces.

This was the case when the government went after Microsoft in the 1990s. The government was upset about the dominance of Microsoft's operating system (Windows) and browser (Internet Explorer). But by the time the suit started winding its way through the courts, Microsoft was facing increasing competition from Apple computers and, not long after, from smartphones. "Smartphones supplemented and replaced desktop and laptop computers; social media and messaging apps gained on email; and Apple's iPhone, Google's Android operating system, and platforms such as Facebook and Twitter began to dethrone Microsoft," I noted in this 2021 feature on the bipartisan antitrust crusade against tech companies.

In recent years, authorities have been obsessed with toppling Facebook, saying that it holds an unfair monopoly on social media services and its dominance prevents any new players from becoming successful. The government has been launching this legal crusade against Facebook as the company started shedding U.S. users and TikTok rose as a massive competitor to Facebook and Instagram, which are both owned by Meta.

The new DOJ suit against Google comes at a time when the company's ad share is shrinking and it faces increasing ad services competition from a host of major players. Earlier this month, a Wall Street Journal headline put it succinctly: "Google and Meta's Advertising Dominance Fades as TikTok, Streamers Emerge."

Their timing is seriously uncanny…. pic.twitter.com/7sJ0LNI4Eo

— Scott Lincicome (@scottlincicome) January 24, 2023

"Google owner Alphabet's digital ad sales missed analysts' estimates for three quarters in a row and, for the first time since 2015, their combined market share with Meta dipped below 50% last year," noted Jessica Melugin, director of the Center for Technology and Innovation at the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI). "Projections are for continued loss of market share in 2023 thanks to booming new ad types that appear on streaming TV platforms and e-commerce sites like Amazon.com, Target and Walmart. This is a competitive sector that's moving quicker than politically-motivated antitrust regulators."

The suit also comes as Google is feeling its search business threatened by the rise of ChatGPT and artificial intelligence tech. "For more than 20 years, the Google search engine has served as the world's primary gateway to the internet. But with a new kind of chat bot technology poised to reinvent or even replace traditional search engines, Google could face the first serious threat to its main search business," notes The New York Times. "One Google executive described the efforts as make or break for Google's future."

What DOJ is saying: In a press release, DOJ accuses Google of monopolizing "key digital advertising technologies, collectively referred to as the 'ad tech stack,' that website publishers depend on to sell ads and that advertisers rely on to buy ads and reach potential customers."

"Today's complaint alleges that Google has used anticompetitive, exclusionary, and unlawful conduct to eliminate or severely diminish any threat to its dominance over digital advertising technologies," said Attorney General Merrick Garland.

DOJ accuses Google of acquiring competitors, requiring publishers who want "effective real-time access" to Google's ad exchange to use Google's publisher ad server, and "limiting real-time bidding on publisher inventory to its ad exchange."

Google's response: "Today's lawsuit from the Department of Justice attempts to pick winners and losers in the highly competitive advertising technology sector," writes Dan Taylor, Google's vice president of global ads, in a blog post.

It largely duplicates an unfounded lawsuit by the Texas Attorney General, much of which was recently dismissed by a federal court. DOJ is doubling down on a flawed argument that would slow innovation, raise advertising fees and make it harder for thousands of small businesses and publishers to grow. We've already responded in detail to many similar claims made in the complaint led by the Texas Attorney General.

The lawsuit tries to rewrite history at the expense of publishers, advertisers and internet users.

DOJ is demanding that we unwind two acquisitions that were reviewed by U.S. regulators 12 years ago (AdMeld) and 15 years ago (DoubleClick). In seeking to reverse these two acquisitions, DOJ is attempting to rewrite history at the expense of publishers, advertisers and internet users. Both of these acquisitions enabled us to invest heavily in developing new and innovative advertising technologies. These deals were reviewed by regulators, including by DOJ, and allowed to proceed. Since then, competition in this sector has only increased.

Taylor notes that Google now faces competition from a number of major businesses, including Microsoft, which last year acquired an ad platform, Xandr, that has its own full ad tech stack and went on to beat out Google for a lucrative advertising deal with Netflix.

In addition, "Amazon's advertising business is now growing faster than Google and Meta's advertising businesses," Taylor points out. Apple and TikTok, too, have growing advertising businesses, while Comcast, Disney, Walmart, and Target also "continue to invest in building their own online advertising technology services," and a number of niche products and companies serve specialty markets.

Taylor also argues that DOJ misrepresents Google's business model and products.

No one is forced to use our advertising technologies—they choose to use them because they're effective. In fact, publishers and advertisers typically work with multiple technologies simultaneously to reach customers and make more money.

"Antitrust cases shouldn't penalize companies that offer popular, efficient services, particularly in difficult economic times," Taylor concludes. "And they shouldn't force companies to reverse 15-year-old investments that they have nurtured and worked hard to make successful, especially when those investments were already reviewed by regulators and allowed to proceed."

Google offers more detailed pushback against DOJ's claims here.

What others are saying: "Google's frequent assertions that the ad market is competitive strain credulity. Just three companies will capture a majority of US digital ad spending this year, according to eMarketer estimates shared by Bloomberg, with Google taking a plurality of the total," writes Casey Newton in Platformer.

But that sort of depends on your definition of competitive. As Newton points out, Google has an estimated 26.5 percent share, which hardly screams illegal monopoly.

And this share "is down more than 10 percent from its peak in 2015," due to the growth of Meta and Amazon's ad businesses, notes Newton.

As @eric_seufert reports, the Google-FB ads "duopoly" is over. "Google and Meta will account for 48.4% of all U.S. digital ad revenue this year, which is down from a peak of 54.7% in 2017."https://t.co/yPBql2y1Nn 11/

— Adam Kovacevich (@adamkovac) January 24, 2023

CEI Senior Economist Ryan Young questions the government's definition of the relevant market here. "In an antitrust case, it is not enough to say that a company has a monopoly. One must also answer, a monopoly over what? That's where this case stumbles," said Young in an emailed statement.

"Online ad sales are clearly competitive, with falling prices, rising volumes, and new competitors like TikTok eating away at Google and Meta's leading market shares," Young continued. "That's why Justice Department lawyers have created brand new market definitions that are much narrower, such as 'publisher ad servers,' 'ad exchanges for indirect open web display advertising,' and 'advertiser ad networks.' … The Justice Department's wordplay is evidence of a weak case, not a monopoly."

"This lawsuit is just another example of this administration looking for a large company to needlessly bully for no reason other than to assert its own dominance." - @PatHedger18

TPA's response to the DOJ's lawsuit against Google ⬇️https://t.co/scLALodSwW

— Taxpayers Protection Alliance (@Protectaxpayers) January 24, 2023


FREE MINDS

Journalism case hits federal court. Reason's Billy Binion has more details:

Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is most known for its work taking up controversial religious freedom cases. They famously defended Jack Phillips, a baker who was the subject of a high-profile suit after he declined to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. More recently, the organization argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in favor of Lorie Smith, a website designer who preemptively challenged a Colorado law so that she would not have to design wedding sites for gay couples in violation of her religious beliefs.

They are not known for defending foul-mouthed, left-leaning journalists whose bread and butter consists sometimes of criticizing the police. They're doing so anyway.

That journalist is Priscilla Villarreal, whose presence in Laredo, Texas, is associated with her profanity-laced commentary on law enforcement and who police jailed for the crime of asking the government questions, getting answers, and publishing those responses. That would appear to be a fairly cut-and-dry infringement on her First Amendment rights. Yet, it's a question that has stumped the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in a case that could have far-reaching implications for anyone engaged in journalism, regardless of their political bent.

A district court granted the cops who jailed Villarreal qualified immunity. A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit rejected that ruling, with one judge writing that "if [this] is not an obvious violation of the Constitution, it's hard to imagine what would be." Today, a majority of the 16 judges on the 5th Circuit will rehear the case en banc. More here.


FREE MARKETS

A Mississippi* lawmaker is moving to end civil asset forfeiture, the process by which police can seize—and sell—any property, possessions, or cash that that they allege is connected to a crime, even if the person who stands accused of the crime has not been convicted or even charged. Rep. Dana Criswell, a Republican, has introduced a bill that would end the current asset forfeiture regime and require the state to obtain a criminal conviction before seizing assets in most cases. The bill has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee.

Mississippi House Bill 622 (HB622) states "there may be no civil forfeiture." Rather, property can only be forfeited if "the offense is of a state criminal law that authorizes the forfeiture of property; Guilt of the offense is established by proof of a criminal conviction, except as otherwise provided under subsection (4);" and "the state establishes that the property is subject to forfeiture under Section 10 of this act by clear and convincing evidence." The exceptions outlined include situations where the defendant died, was deported by the federal government, was granted immunity or a reduced punishment in exchange for assisting law enforcement, fled the jurisdiction, or abandoned the property.

"Passage of the bill would effectively opt Mississippi out of a federal program that allows state and local police to get around more strict state asset forfeiture laws," notes Mike Maharrey at the Tenth Amendment Center. "This is particularly important in light of a policy directive issued in July 2017 by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions for the Department of Justice (DOJ) that remains in effect today." (That directive called for more aggressive federal asset forfeiture.)

The Mississippi bill would also "address the 'policing for profit' motive inherent in civil asset forfeiture by requiring the state treasurer to deposit forfeiture proceeds into the general fund after payment of specific allowable expenses," notes Maharrey. "Under the current law, police can keep up to 100 percent of forfeiture proceeds."


QUICK HITS

Republicans say they want to balance the budget — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes). https://t.co/j1bTTl6lfh

— Catherine Rampell (@crampell) January 24, 2023

• Synthetic cannabis sales are booming.

• A new study challenges popular wisdom about intermittent fasting and weight loss.

• Two mass shootings in California have Biden and others reaching for the same old solutions—like raising the age at which it's legal to buy guns. But in this case, the perpetrator of the Monterey Park shooting was 72 years old. The Half Moon Bay shooter was 67 years old. And California already has some of the most strict gun laws in the nation. "The shootings underscored again the grim reality that strict firearms laws cannot stop every shooting in a country where there are an estimated 400 million firearms," notes The Washington Post.

• Florida's Supreme Court will hear a challenge to the state's 15-week abortion ban.

• "A Connecticut state representative has proposed a bill that would allow undocumented immigrants to vote in municipal and state elections," reports WTNH.

• Amazon is getting in on the prescription drug business.


*CORRECTION: This post previously misstated the state considering civil asset forfeiture reform.

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NEXT: Biden Wants Schools That Please Politicians, Not Parents

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Reason RoundupAntitrustGoogleDepartment of JusticeTechnologyInternetAdvertisingMonopoly
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    1. RebeccaHunter   2 years ago (edited)

      Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is most known for its work taking up controversial religious freedom cases. They famously defended Jack Phillips, a baker who was the subject of a high-profile suit after he declined to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. More recently, the organization argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in favor of Lorie Smith, a website designer who preemptively challenged a Colorado law so that she would not have to design wedding sites for gay couples in violation of her religious beliefs.

      They are not known for defending foul-mouthed, left-leaning journalists whose bread and butter consists sometimes of criticizing the police. They're doing so anyway.

      That journalist is Priscilla Villarreal, whose presence in Laredo, Texas, is associated with her profanity-laced commentary on law enforcement and who police jailed for the crime of asking the government questions, getting answers, and publishing those responses. That would appear to be a fairly cut-and-dry infringement on her First Amendment rights. Yet, it's a question that has stumped the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in a case that could have far-reaching implications for anyone engaged in journalism, regardless of their political bent.

      A district court granted the cops who jailed Villarreal qualified immunity. A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit rejected that ruling, with one judge writing that "if [this] is not an obvious violation of the Constitution, it's hard to imagine what would be." Today, a majority of the 16 judges on the 5th Circuit will rehear the case en banc. More here
      Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is most known for its work taking up controversial religious freedom cases. They famously defended Jack Phillips, a baker who was the subject of a high-profile suit after he declined to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. More recently, the organization argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in favor of Lorie Smith, a website designer who preemptively challenged a Colorado law so that she would not have to design wedding sites for gay couples in violation of her religious beliefs.

      They are not known for defending foul-mouthed, left-leaning journalists whose bread and butter consists sometimes of criticizing the police. They're doing so anyway.

      That journalist is Priscilla Villarreal, whose presence in Laredo, Texas, is associated with her profanity-laced commentary on law enforcement and who police jailed for the crime of asking the government questions, getting answers, and publishing those responses. That would appear to be a fairly cut-and-dry infringement on her First Amendment rights. Yet, it's a question that has stumped the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in a case that could have far-reaching implications for anyone engaged in journalism, regardless of their political bent.

      A district court granted the cops who jailed Villarreal qualified immunity. A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit rejected that ruling, with one judge writing that "if [this] is not an obvious violation of the Constitution, it's hard to imagine what would be." Today, a majority of the 16 judges on the 5th Circuit will rehear the case en banc. More here

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  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed another civil antitrust suit against Google.

    The discovery is simply doing a Google search. Ha!

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago

      That will just turn up Russian misinformation.

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    2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      "The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed another civil antitrust suit against Google... In recent years, authorities have been obsessed with toppling Facebook"

      I guess we're still pretending that Google, Facebook and the DOJ aren't all just different tentacles of the Democratic Party.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago

        No, this is just the stick they use to keep them in their clutches.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

          Stick? Clutches? Millennials would drop dead if they had to drive a straight-drive! 😉

          1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago

            I must have died 25 years ago when I learned on my Jeep Wrangler. I am such an old millennial now that, it came with a tape deck and I had tapes to play. 😉

            1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

              All exceptions duly noted and honored. Maybe you can teach Robbie how to change a tire without mussing his coiff.
              🙂

    3. Minadin   2 years ago

      My favorite part about the Fed's Google lawsuit is how just a few weeks ago, Nancy Pelosi unloaded ~$3 million of her Google stock.

      Anyone else (not in Congress) would be facing some pretty serious insider trading charges. Martha Stewart went to prison for a LOT less.

      https://trendingpoliticsnews.com/blatant-insider-trading-pelosi-stock-trade-goes-viral-internet-accuses-her-of-white-collar-crime/

      1. markm23   2 years ago

        If insider trading wasn't allowed for Congresspersons, how would they become multimillionaires on a salary of $174,000 a year?

  3. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Republicans say they want to balance the budget — but...

    ...they're congressional Republicans.

    1. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

      Meanwhile, Democrats do not care about balancing the budget at all and act accordingly as if the national debt can be made infinite.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        The only time in the last 60-plus years that we had a relatively balanced budget, taxes were slightly higher than today, spending programs were being slightly cut back, and the economy was defined by an unsustainable speculative investment bubble during a period when the Boomers were a majority of the workforce and at the peak of their earning power.

        No matter where tax rates have been since 1957, the last year we actually paid down the national debt, we've simply never taken in the revenue required to match our spending commitments, save for that one rare exception at the very tail end of the 90s.

        The problem has always been that we want more than what we're personally willing to pay for, but we're fine with someone else covering the bill while we continue to demand MOAR FREE SHIT. No politician in this country is going to be elected who's actually serious about rectifying this--either the people won't elect him of their own accord, the Cathedral will demonize him to ensure that he isn't even considered a serious candidate, or both.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          This is actually going to get worse before it gets better, too, because the Boomers will put an incredible strain on the SS and Medicare systems. Once they're mostly gone, that demand will ease off, but right now that's about 35-40% of all federal spending. We can cut defense, but Congress, the Executive branch, and the pundit class can't stop playing world policeman, and despite all the defense spending, the military has been so hollowed-out, manning and equipment-wise, that cuts there would effectively cripple military readiness--because that's where the cuts would inevitably be applied, not in the Pentagon or in acquisitions where it really needs to happen, while the dingdongs in the Joint Chiefs keep chanting "do more with less!" You first, motherfuckers--lead by example.

          1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

            The bond markets will eventually force America to be more disciplined. That will be very, very painful. Imagine Treasury going to auction to sell 100B of bonds, with no takers. Then watch what happens.

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

              I've been hearing that since the 2008 recession, and at this point I think it's going to take a lot more beyond where things are at right now to make it happen.

    2. Minadin   2 years ago

      It's an odd critique coming from the Left-skewed WaPo, which obviously did not care about balancing the budget under Democrats.

      It sort of reminds me - remember how last week the Treasury Department had to do some accounting gymnastics to avoid default? Because Democrats said they would rather shut down the government than negotiate with Republicans?

      I don't recall seeing a tidal wave of Chicken Little 'Sky is Falling!' news articles and segments about the catastrophic dangers of default like we have had every single time in recent memory that Republican budget negotiating tactics have even hinted at that possibility.

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      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        It sort of reminds me – remember how last week the Treasury Department had to do some accounting gymnastics to avoid default?

        It wasn't to avoid default, it was to avoid going over the debt ceiling. This is another mendacity that's even been unconsciously filtered into the comments here, because the fucking media are a bunch of lying-ass snakes and so it's become the conventional wisdom.

        Hitting the debt ceiling doesn't cause a default--failing to make a payment on the national debt interest is what causes that. What hitting the debt ceiling means is that the government simply cannot spend more than it acquires in revenue. That revenue is targeted towards non-discretionary spending first, and then anything that might be left is sent to the discretionary spending, based on what's deemed essential. That's why things like national park visitor centers and other facilities close, because it costs money to staff and run the buildings, staff gets furloughed or sees their weekly hours cut, military training stops, etc.

  4. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Synthetic cannabis sales are booming.

    Monsanto, at it again.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

      Can't wait for the "Toxic chemical Roundup found in your weed" articles.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago

        No need to wait, they've been written for many years now. Duck Duck Go, "illegal grow chemicals". It's been used for why CA needs to crack down on illegal grows (maybe for good reason, but I suspect its more about taxes).

      2. Chumby   2 years ago

        Michael J. Fox claims that is what gave him Parkinson’s: herbicide laced marijuana. He can’t shake the effects.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

          Ooooh! That's not nice. It's not like he can drive the souped-up Snowmobile "Back In Time" and change that.

    2. Anomalous   2 years ago

      Does it give you a fake high?

      1. Hank Ferrous   2 years ago

        Fake couch lock is the worst.

    3. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      So why does everybody demonize Monsanto and not Archer Daniels Midland?

  5. Rich   2 years ago

    Michigan House Bill 622 (HB622) states "there may be no civil forfeiture." ... "Passage of the bill would effectively opt Mississippi out of a federal program that allows state and local police to get around more strict state asset forfeiture laws"

    Those Michigan legislators are pretty powerful if their stuff affects Mississippi.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

      Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

      Something tells me it's an editorial issue, and the editor involved didn't edit.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago

        Yeah, I think she copy and pasted into the wrong section; it should be the last paragraph. And forgot a transitioning sentence like: In other related news, Mississippi also has legislation being proposed...

        Though it did force me to click the link so Mission Accomplished, ENB.

        1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   2 years ago

          Are you sure it wasn't a test to see if anyone actually reads the article?

          1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 years ago (edited)

            Well, I hope I passed; ensuring another year of links. Your welcome.

          2. Unable2Reason   2 years ago

            The treat that popped out of the USB port was a dead giveaway.

    2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   2 years ago

      Wondered who would notice.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        *CORRECTION: This post previously misstated the state considering civil asset forfeiture reform.

        I think we here may have made a difference (for once).

  6. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    A new study challenges popular wisdom about intermittent fasting and weight loss.

    A new study challenges popular wisdom about ______________.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      War on obesity must be ended. Unleash the studies. Only big pharma can solve the problem, which shouldn't be solved, but continue to praise fat people.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        I get the feeling the proggies would rather have Big Pharma fix it rather than take *gasp* personal responsibility and do what works best: modify one's diet and become more active; i.e. stop eating all the potato chips and actually turn off the TV/phone and take a walk - for starters.

        1. McGuffin   2 years ago

          The entire progressive agenda is a combination of a weak, mentally ill constituency who want to be soothed by big daddy govt that: "nothing is your fault, everything is THAT guys fault (the rich, the capitalists, the whites, etc), but dont worry, govt can and should be the one to fix all of your problems"...and a govt that is happy to keep selling them this opium so long as they continue becoming more powerful and said people continue to become more fat/lazy/powerless and dependent on them.

          1. CharlotteAdams   2 years ago (edited)

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            follow instructions on this website… http://Www.workstar24.com

          2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

            I heard a very succinct observation about this on a pop culture YouTube channel--the guy said, basically, "The generation who internalized the phrase, 'correlation doesn't equal causation,' took that to mean that they weren't ever the cause of anything bad that happened."

            1. McGuffin   2 years ago

              The two biggest cultural/political battles being fought, IMO, boil down to

              1. Do you want more freedom (to be left alone) or more free shit from the govt (and the govt to have more control over everyone)

              2. Given any situation, are you personally responsible for arriving in it & resolving it, or is someone else to blame, in which case someone else should also fix it for you

    2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      A scientific study means exactly that, a study. But journalismists always talk like they're conclusive, and quote them as if they're the new holy writ.

    3. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Ackshuyally, "intermittent fasting" is a redundancy. All fasting is intermittent because it takes place between two points in time. And fasting ends in one of two ways: eating or death. 🙂

      As the Joseph Stalin meme says: "Dark humor is like food. Some get it, some don't." 🙂

  7. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

    Republicans say they want to balance the budget — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes).

    They just needed Herschel in the Senate to show them how.

    1. Overt   2 years ago

      A few years back SPB posted kiddy porn to this site, and his initial handle was banned. The link below details all the evidence surrounding that ban. A decent person would honor that ban and stay away from Reason. Instead SPB keeps showing up, acting as if all people should just be ok with a kiddy-porn-posting asshole hanging around. Since I cannot get him to stay away, the only thing I can do is post this boilerplate, and link to the evidence of his wrongdoing.

      https://reason.com/2022/08/06/biden-comforts-the-comfortable/?comments=true#comment-9635836

      Don't respond to SPB, just shun him.

      1. damikesc   2 years ago

        Odd how the only candidate who really offended the pedo was a black guy, ain't it? He is impressively not dropping racial slurs.

        Yet.

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago (edited)

          I was offended as a Georgian.

          Just like I was with that idiot Cynthia McKinney in Congress.

          Oh. I get it They are both dumb as a box of nails but I am a racist for saying it.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            You focus on only one, the black conservative. You ignore the likes of Fetterman. Are you not aware of this?

            1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

              No, actually being a black conservative is irrelevant. For example Alan Keyes was downright erudite and an accomplished speaker.

              Herschel is a mealy-mouthed sawmill swamp carp.

              1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago (edited)

                “For example Alan Keyes was downright erudite and an accomplished speaker.”

                “He was a well spoken negro”

                You’re just baiting us now, aren’t you Pluggo.

                https://www.aaihs.org/inarticulate-while-black/

                1. Chumby   2 years ago

                  Brings to memory when senator Harry Reid (D) referred to Barack Obama as being able to speak in the negro dialect when necessary. David Brooks got a bit too excited about the crease in Obama’s pants.

    2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      Some GOP lawmakers have said that everything is on the table for possible cuts, but others have quickly pulled whole sections of the federal budget back from the chopping block. For example, both House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) have said they are open to reductions in defense spending, but House Appropriations Chairwoman Kay Granger (R-TX) and Rep. Michael Waltz (R-FL) have said no to that idea.
      .................
      Instead of military cuts, Waltz said lawmakers need to look at “entitlements programs,” which would include Social Security and Medicare. But Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) and former president Donald Trump, among others, have ruled that option out. “Under no circumstances should Republicans vote to cut a single penny from Medicare or Social Security,” Trump warned last week.

      Great work, ENB. I had not seen that op-ed. Republicans once again wander in the fiscal wilderness.

      And you're a sexy bitch. Reason should promote you. Take Nick's job.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        How did you miss an Op Ed in your favorite source of liberal opinion, WaPo?

        1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          The article is by a Democrat mad about Republicans making spending cuts and not raising taxes.

          So of course "libertarians" like ENB and Buttplug are mad about that.

          I also suspect both of them just really liked the headline and didn't think too much of the articles content from a libertarian perspective.

          1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

            You keep waiting for the GOP to cut spending. I've been waiting for 40 years.

            (the Obama/Boehner 2011 cut was the only exception).

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Have you figured out how budgets are passed yet?

            2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

              "You keep waiting for the GOP to cut spending. I’ve been waiting for 40 years."

              The article that ENB posted and you're celebrating is bitching about them doing exactly that.

              You really don't read the articles you push, do you.

              1. Chumby   2 years ago

                The only thing he cares about that he pushes is…let’s not go there.

    3. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      One thing that does seem to be acceptable to Republican lawmakers is cutting funds for what some conservatives call “wokeism,” but as Rampell notes, there isn’t really a line item for that in the federal budget.
      ....................
      So, faced with a roughly $20 trillion shortfall in the budget over the next 10 years, and standing firm with their principled refusal to raise taxes, Republicans would have to make ruthless cuts in non-defense discretionary spending. “Closing that gap would require eliminating nearly all other domestic spending,” Rampell writes. “That means axing border protection, air-traffic control, farm subsidies, infrastructure and many other categories that both voters and elected officials hold dear.”

      Goddamn, Republicans are useless.

      Democrats suck too. But the Trump Cult sucks GOP cock.

      1. Sevo   2 years ago

        turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
        If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
        turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

      2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        "So, faced with a roughly $20 trillion shortfall in the budget over the next 10 years, and standing firm with their principled refusal to raise taxes, Republicans would have to make ruthless cuts in non-defense discretionary spending."

        The WaPo, Buttplug and ENB are upset that the Republicans are refusing to raise taxes and are making spending cuts instead.

        As expected of you all.

  8. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    A Connecticut state representative has proposed a bill that would allow undocumented immigrants to vote in municipal and state elections...

    They're afraid Republicans will learn about ballot harvesting and nullify that advantage.

    1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

      The proposal was brought forward by Democratic State Rep. Juan Candelaria who represents the 95th District.
      According to migrationpolicy.org, there are currently over 240,000 non-citizen immigrants living in Connecticut

      And those 240,000 reside in the 95th district. Coincidence?

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        "They're already voting, we just need to make it de jure now."

    2. Zeb   2 years ago

      This might be a good place for the "you get as many votes as dollars you pay in taxes" approach.

  9. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Amazon is getting in on the prescription drug business.

    Next up, Prime Day Jabz.

    1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago (edited)

      Same day boosters to follow!

  10. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    "Passage of the bill would effectively opt Mississippi out of a federal program that allows state and local police to get around more strict state asset forfeiture laws," notes Mike Maharrey at the Tenth Amendment Center.

    How the hell does this affect Mississippi (MS) when the bill is in Michigan (MI)? ENB, do some real editing first.

    1. A Thinking Mind   2 years ago

      And how does all this affect Montana?

    2. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

      It is a federal bill introduced by a congressman from MI.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Shouldn't the feds first end the practice of splitting monies shared between them for allowing feds to "help."

      2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        It's not, it's a Michigan bill, Michigan House Bill 622.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          *CORRECTION: This post previously misstated the state considering civil asset forfeiture reform.

          It actually is a Mississippi bill.

    3. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

      Someone's head is in Mississippi.

      1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

        Mississippi now identifies as Mistersissippi.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Not as Frogissippi or Zhesissippi?

  11. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    ..with one judge writing that "if [this] is not an obvious violation of the Constitution, it's hard to imagine what would be."

    The court's lack of imagination destroys our thin, blue line!

  12. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Rep. Dana Criswell, a Republican, has introduced a bill that would end the current asset forfeiture regime...

    Someone's about to find themselves in personal trouble with law enforcement.

  13. JesseAz   2 years ago

    After the conclusion of the Arizona election trial. Maricopa finally audits election machine system logs and finds 250k ballots were rejected on election day. During trial election officials claimed no voters were disenfranchised, but this evidence was not given prior to trial. Bonus: some images of signature matching of signatures not even closely matching but accepted, estimated number of votes accepted without marching is 40k.

    https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/matt-margolis/2023/01/24/theres-another-huge-bombshell-in-kari-lakes-election-lawsuit-n1664474

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago (edited)

      Cite?

      https://news.google.com/topics/CAAqIQgKIhtDQkFTRGdvSUwyMHZNRzB5TjI0U0FtVnVLQUFQAQ?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen

      1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

        Poor buttplug

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

          Google search = zero hits. That would be a big story if true.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

            Is this really the gaslighting you’re going with?

            Appeal to curated Google searches is worse than appeal to Wiki.

          2. Chumby   2 years ago

            Brave found multiple stories on this. Maybe it is a big story but regarding censorship.

          3. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

            How come google didn't find the page Jesse posted from pjmedia?

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Well when you demand only curated friendly sources like shrike is demanding, it is easy to not find the things one is looking for.

              The evidence of Google search bias has been studied for a decade, but it helps shrikes team so he relies on it knowingly.

            2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago (edited)

              Because Google has a nasty habit of burying anything that goes against the progressive narrative. If you go down the list of news and “news” here, then you can see various sources. Most notably, they elevate the Daily Kos to a “news” source while failing to include PJ Media.

          4. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

            "Google search = zero hits."

            Funny because DuckDuckGo, Brave and Bing all found plenty.

            What does this tell you, Pluggo?

            1. Chumby   2 years ago

              Squirrel says this ok as long as nobody was actually incarcerated.

          5. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

            Google search = zero hits. That would be a big story if true.

            Uhh... no it would not. That's the point.

      2. JesseAz   2 years ago

        I mean the link is in the post.

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago (edited)

          No wingnut fake news “sources”.

          Finding 250,000 uncounted ballots is huge. If true it will be in Wall St Journal or some legit source.

          This is why your average conservative is so goddamn misinformed. Some wingnut posts a lie and idiots like you spread it all over Flyover Dumbfuck Land.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            I see you're too stupid to read. These are ballots rejected by the machine, not missing ballots. Ie voters told to try again or go to a different polling place. It is literally in the article. Are you too stupid to read? The audit was done by Maricopa election officials post trial. This shows the machines had many more problems than admitted to, the total number of rejections. In many instances where voters were told to vote somewhere else they were not properly checked out, not allowing them to vote at a different location.

            All you've proven is your bias is so strong and ignorance so high you can not even be bothered to read something you strongly wish to counter.

            Man you are dumb.

            1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago (edited)

              So they were not uncounted then.

              You got nothing.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                We got this.

                A few years ago, you got your original “Sarah Palin’s Buttplug” account banned for posting kiddy porn to this site. The link below details all the evidence surrounding that ban. A decent person would honor that ban and stay away from Reason. Instead SPB keeps showing up, acting as if all people should just be ok with a kiddy-porn-posting asshole hanging around.

                https://reason.com/2022/08/06/biden-comforts-the-comfortable/?comments=true#comment-9635836

              2. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

                Yes. They were not counted. They were rejected.

                What words are you struggling with here?

                Many gave up after 2 or 3 times. Many tried to vote elsewhere and were not allowed. The trial had affidavits from such voters but Maricopa claim was not one voter was affected. Evidence shows otherwise.

                Did it ever occur to you to read something before calling it false?

                1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

                  "What words are you struggling with here?"

                  He's paid fifty-cents to struggle against all of them.

                2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

                  We knew that in November.

                  And 51% were Hobbs votes.

                  You got nothing.

                  1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                    The logs were first reported dec 29th. Hobbs was not 51% of the rejected vote you lying retarded fuck.

                    Amazing watching you lie in defense of democrats.

                    1. Chumby   2 years ago

                      He’a only here to shitpost and waste your time.

          2. Sevo   2 years ago

            turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a TDS-addled shit pile, a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
            If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
            turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

          3. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

            Fake news, like this, Buttplug?

            This you, admitting being banned for posting kiddie porn?

            https://reason.com/2019/02/26/bernie-sanders-cnn-townhall-foreign-poli/?comments=true#comment-7690893

            moneyshot 4 years ago
            Reason has my email address.
            For all I know some conservative asswipe in IT made an editorial decision on his own.
            fuck him — and you too.

            1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

              "For all I know" - you got nothing again.

              I admitted I didn't know why I could not sign in. Found out the password I was using was incorrect.

              1. Sevo   2 years ago

                Gee, turd is posting; turd must be lying.

              2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                Horseshit. Here's Sandra (OBL) referencing your ban.

                https://web.archive.org/web/20181225135006/https://reason.com/blog/2018/12/24/brickbat-the-last-place-you-look#comment_7608665

                Sevo|12.24.18 @ 10:08AM|#
                Hey, is turd banned?
                If the ban-hammer starts falling on the lairs, Tony and the Hihn-crowd's in trouble.

                OpenBordersLiberal-tarian|12.24.18 @ 10:24AM|#
                If you look in this topic there are several Sarah Palin's Buttplug posts that have disappeared.

                I love Reason, but if they really have banned Mr. Buttplug I think that's a major mistake. I will try to partially cover his beat by posting links describing how terrible the #DrumpfRecession is, but it won't be the same because my economics knowledge lags far behind his.

      3. damikesc   2 years ago

        Just because your recent girl/boyfriend is too young to know what a link looks like does not mean you also are that young, pedo.

    2. JasonAZ   2 years ago

      Let's hope this evidence continues to come to light. Need to get AZ elections reformed to work properly. AZ GOP also needs to get a handle on getting their voters to actually vote.

  14. Sandra (formerly OBL)   2 years ago

    "And California already has some of the most strict gun laws in the nation."

    Progressivism 101 teaches us that all problems in the bluest of blue states are always the fault of some Republican somewhere else. There must be a nearby red state with insufficient gun control.

    "But in this case, the perpetrator of the Monterey Park shooting was 72 years old. The Half Moon Bay shooter was 67 years old."

    Those are the most surprising details to me. How does someone spend 72 years on this planet before deciding to commit mass murder?

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

      As you get older, life in prison becomes less a deterrent.

      1. Sandra (formerly OBL)   2 years ago

        That makes sense in a way.

        I was thinking "recently diagnosed with terminal cancer."

        1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago (edited)

          I was thinking it may be tied to the CCP or Asian organized crime. The shooters either owed or were forced to shoot up the targets through coercion.

          Either that, or they were jacked up on Tiger balm and Rhino horn.

        2. Hank Ferrous   2 years ago

          He might have just had enough of being treated like shit by his wife. Old dude looks like a nebbish. No excuse for his flipping his wig, but if it had gone on for decades, maybe that night, not getting the invite was the tipping point. Or, maybe he was a dickhead, and a bit nuts to start out.

    2. Chumby   2 years ago

      Maybe that was on their bucket list.

      1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

        Hopefully both shooters kicked the bucket

        1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

          The one shot himself which brings me to my PSA: if you plan on murder suicide, it important to practice. Start with the suicide.

    3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      The progs are calling 9mm handguns "military-style assault weapons" now, because the shooters didn't use those scary AR-15s.

      The other tell is how they're deflecting by saying, "People call me a gun-grabber," right before arguing why they need to take your guns.

    4. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Ancient Chinese Secret.

    5. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      Stop Asian Hate took on a whole new meaning this week.

  15. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Illegal immigration has a cost. Cities like NYC are complaining over immigrants at 40k in number. Border towns like Yuma Arizona see those numbers in a month and are in the brink of collapse.

    https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/arizona-border-town-battles-strains-mass-migration

  16. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

    Republicans say they want to balance the budget — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes)

    Or they could eliminate baseline budgeting, but democrats think that is a cut.

    1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

      Baseline budgeting isn't partisan. They both say decreases in increases are cuts.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Cite? Even Paul Ryan tried to end baseline budgeting during the budget show downs under Obama.

        1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

          That was just GOP theater - sarc

          1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

            JesseAz is on mute. He has nothing to say that is of interest to me. Heck, I wouldn't piss on his head if his hair was on fire.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

              No, you wish to remain in blind ignorant bliss. So you mute those who disallow you to do so. You can’t counter an argument, so you hide from it. Youre a drunk coward.

              If you pissed on me you'd wake up later asking what happened. Odd you have golden shower fantasies for those you seemingly despise.

            2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

              "He has nothing to say that is of interest to me."

              Probably because you're both retarded and pathologically dishonest.

            3. Chumby   2 years ago

              With all the alcohol in your system, you pissing on something ignited may result in flamethrower type action jetting forth from your dick.

            4. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

              But you peeked anyway.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                It's like an addiction. I don't think he can help it anymore.

                1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

                  JesseAz leaving a grey turd on all of my posts?

                  1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                    Responding directly to your posts buddy. Do you still not realize others can read the comments you mute?

                  2. sarcasmic   2 years ago

                    Oh, look. He did it again. Like an addict.

  17. JesseAz   2 years ago

    A look into the mass infiltration by IC members into Silicon Valley, often taking jobs that lead to censorship.

    https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/former-agents-cia-fbi-dhs-nsa-defecting-big-tech-and-big-censorship

  18. JesseAz   2 years ago

    LGBTQ teachers continue to encourage and hide student transitions from parents in schools.

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/nonbinary-teacher-boasts-changing-students-genders-parents-knowing-they-need-protection

    1. Overt   2 years ago

      This should be a scandal of epic proportions, but instead we actually have lefties like Chemjeff in these comments defending it.

      Imagine if a teacher was secretly diagnosing children with ADHD and giving them supplements without notifying parents. Or if the child was suicidal and the teacher took it upon themselves to treat the child themselves, without notifying the parents.

      These teachers are clearly being disingenuous to have things both ways. They are adamant that "Gender Dysphoria" is a serious medical condition, warranting immediate and drastic action. They justify this by insisting that untreated gender dysphoria leads to suicide and other unhealthy outcomes.

      But these teachers treat this serious medical condition unlike any other condition. The staff do not recommend the student to a professional for expert diagnosis. They do not notify the legal guardian that the child is suspected of having a medical condition. They do not conference with the parents to identify a joint treatment plan.

      Instead, these teachers- and the hacks running cover for them- insist that there is a compelling interest to hide this medical concern from the parents on the off chance that the parents might abuse them. This is such an obvious dodge, that one wonders how these people can actually make the argument without dying of shame and embarrassment.

      In case it isn't clear, states have mechanisms for relieving parents of their right to medical consent and control of their children in cases of abuse. Those mechanisms never, ever include Teachers and other school staff determining on their own, without documentation, that the child is at risk, diagnosing them without documentation or expert consultation, and treating them without documentation or expert supervision. For fucks sake, teachers can't even give kids ibuprofen without consent of parents and the supervision of a trained nurse. Anyone who argues that a school teacher or administrator can diagnose and treat a serious medical disorder without the consent of the children based on an extra-legal finding of potential abuse is a gaslighting shill and should be laughed out of polite company.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        The suicidal instance just happened a week ago. It involved the teacher hiding the suicidal behavior from parents while trying to transition them. The 6 year old then attempted suicide.

      2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        Well said.

      3. Nardz   2 years ago

        "This should be a scandal of epic proportions"

        Add it to the list

        1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

          It's not as bad as you say.

      4. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Or if the child was suicidal and the teacher took it upon themselves to treat the child themselves, without notifying the parents.

        In Canada, 'treating the child' who was suicidal would mean "kill them". Seriously.

      5. McGuffin   2 years ago

        Teachers frankly need to be told to shut the fuck up and teach math, nothing more. Unless they want to accept legal liability for what happens to the kid.

        You aren't a psychologist/psychiatrist, counselor, and most importantly you aren't the kids fucking parent. You meddling in a confused kid's head can have serious repercussions.

        These teachers need to face consequences. When something tragic happens to the kid, they need to be dragged into court for trying to play therapist when they are barely qualified to teach shapes. Sue their asses for harming the kid while practicing outside of their scope, sue them for child abuse.

        They are eventually going to harm the wrong parents' child, and a the response is going to be ugly. Cant say we didn't keep warning them

        1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

          I think Reason did an article about this recently... unwittingly so, pointing out a survey that wanted schools to teach basics and skip the college prep.

          What I don't believe Reason discussed or delved into, is that this attitude is almost certainly tied in with the dramatic rise in parents fighting back against school systems in general teaching critical race theory, wokeism, transgender ideology etc.

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      it's not happening

      but if it is, it's good!

  19. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Catherine Rampell
    @crampell
    ·
    Follow
    Republicans say they want to balance the budget — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes).

    This is just false. Two different members have published means to reduce deficit, easiest is retur ing to 2019 spending levels.

    1. Overt   2 years ago

      This is the disingenuous game that they play. The republican party, like any collective, is not a hive mind. There are various people who hold differing and sometimes conflicting viewpoints.

      So the trick that ENB and this Rampbell always do is portray these conflicting viewpoints as evidence of lying or hypocrisy. Person A says "We need to balance the budget." But persons B and C say they won't allow cuts to X & Y. These are all the opinions of individual people, and when a full package is agreed to, some opinions may carry the day while others are discarded.

    2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   2 years ago

      Can't really do that - inflation and more debt has raised the cost of paying all that interest.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Baseline budgeting is a 3% growth yearly. This goes to automatic budget increases as the baseline for all new budgets. Just removing this would basically eliminate the deficit in about 8 years. Returning to the 2019 budget would also be a reduction in spending as it would remove the growth from the budget bills passed since then.

  20. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Evil authoritarian Hawley has introduced legislation to end congressional stock trading of members and their direct families. Oddly unmentioned here. Maybe due to it being the PELOSI bill?

    1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

      That was oddly un-mentioned = PELOSI bill

      Surprised by that?

      1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

        Hopefully the new speaker hammers that one home.

        1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

          wont mattter.
          Need Senate + Prez

    2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      Insider trading is already illegal. No need for a new bill.

      If a Congress critter receives real insider information from a corporate officer and trades on it they are subject to criminal charges.

      Congress itself cannot be an inside source to single corporations news

      1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

        Congress exempted itself from the insider trading rule and penalty. Why do you think it is a bill? Do some research.

        1. Sevo   2 years ago

          Imagine that! turd caught lying AGAIN!

          1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

            Everytime.

      2. sarcasmic   2 years ago

        OJW is right. Insider trading laws do not apply to Congress. How else do you think they all become millionaires?

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago


          The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112–105 (text) (PDF), S. 2038, 126 Stat. 291, enacted April 4, 2012) is an Act of Congress designed to combat insider trading. It was signed into law by President Barack Obama on April 4, 2012. The law prohibits the use of non-public information for private profit, including insider trading by members of Congress and other government employees. It confirms changes to the Commodity Exchange Act, specifies reporting intervals for financial transactions.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STOCK_Act#:~:text=It%20was%20signed%20into%20law,Congress%20and%20other%20government%20employees.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            A law that makes it a requirement to report, not disallows trading.

            Try reading your own links.

            1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

              He never does and never will.

              1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

                Imagine defending congress like a simp. unreal.

          2. sarcasmic   2 years ago

            And if you bother to read your own link, you'll see that it is not enforced. So it doesn't matter.

            1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

              Insider trading by a member of Congress is a crime. To bring a case here, however, federal authorities must overcome two obstacles: the Speech and Debate Clause, and proving “materiality” in novel circumstances. Indeed, the announcement that the authorities have closed their investigations into three senators may show these obstacles already have proven too steep.
              ............
              Can members of Congress commit insider trading?
              ...............
              Federal law prohibits securities trades while possessing material, non-public information in violation of a duty to a third party. In the STOCK Act of 2012, Congress clarified that insider trading laws bind members of Congress (as well as the President and members of the executive branch). Federal authorities, however, never have prosecuted a member of Congress under the STOCK Act, although they have prosecuted members (including former Representative Chris Collins) for insider trading on information acquired outside Congressional duties. If the authorities make Senator Burr (or any as-yet-undisclosed colleague) the first STOCK Act prosecution of a member of Congress, they will face challenges.

              https://www.forbes.com/sites/insider/2020/05/26/how-senators-may-have-avoided-insider-trading-charges/?sh=15fbe16827ba

              SCOTUS rulings included.

              1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                That is using non public materials from companies under investigation, not from congressional bills.

                Do you even read your own fucking links?

                1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                  No, he doesn't seem to. I think he gets fed them from whomever his overlords are.

                2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

                  Parse it any way you want the fact is that insider trading is and has been a crime by a member of Congress.

                  1. Sevo   2 years ago

                    Looks like a post/lie from turd right there!

                  2. JesseAz   2 years ago

                    Do you even understand arguments you Wade into? The clearest recent example is Paul Pelosi purchasing semi conductor stock a week before congressional funding was introduced and passed. That is insider trading, just based on regulatory information, not NPI from companies themselves.

                    You've gone full retard today.

          3. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

            Also glaringly excludes family members. Again, why put forward a bill for something that doesn't exist? Unless it does and Congress has been enriching itself.

        2. Overt   2 years ago (edited)

          This loophole was closed many moons ago- congress is indeed subject to insider trading rules.

          But first of all, insider trading is notoriously difficult to prove, and requires enormous discretion for law enforcement to chase after.

          Second, information in congress could be considered "Public Knowledge" and therefore it doesn't violate insider trading rules. But congress critters DO, by the nature of their job, have better understanding of these bills, their impacts, and the likelihood that they will actually become law. So the information could be considered public, but Congress critters will always be better suited to evaluate that information more accurately.

          Finally, Congress can profit off of stocks in ways that do not necessarily cross the line of insider trading, but still represent a breach of trust. For example, if Pelosi buys Boeing stock and then at a later day pushes for budget increases to a bill that helps Boeing, this could be considered a conflict of interest, but is not technically insider trading.

          1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

            The Pelosi's bought Tesla stock right before the announcement that the Biden fleet would be converted to electric vehicles, then sold it when the stock took off after the announcement. Through Paul's advisor of course.
            It's a loophole that hasn't been closed and is easily circumvented.

            1. Overt   2 years ago

              Yes exactly my point when I said "insider trading is notoriously difficult to prove, and requires enormous discretion for law enforcement to chase after."

              1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

                I agree and provided a real life case for the Pelosi's doing exactly what you hypothesized.

      3. JesseAz   2 years ago

        It is not illegal in congress. Knowledge of bills in draft is not considered to be insider training based on current laws.

        You really are fucking ignorant. Or is this an example of defend the left at all costs?

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

          Yes it is, dumbass.

          "Insider" requires non-public info on a CORPORATION though. Congressional discussion does not meet the definition of "insider".

          If Senator X bought Moderna stock because he/she knew Congress would fund vaccine purchases that is not insider trading.

          If the same bought Moderna stock because the Moderna CEO told him/her privately that they had discovered a vaccine BEFORE it was public info then that would be insider trading.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            Non public information on corporation refers to material handed to congress under investigative duties, not from congressional bills.

            For fucks sake man. Stop digging.

          2. Sevo   2 years ago

            Look there! More lies from turd!

          3. sarcasmic   2 years ago

            Why do you bother having conversations with him? All he does is lie. What's the point?

            1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

              Yes, we all know Buttplug lies.

            2. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Where did I lie?

              You literally went from disagreeing with him to defending people disagreeing with him using facts as liars.

  21. Chumby   2 years ago

    Brave search engine has an ad blocker that works. Just sayin.

    1. Ajsloss   2 years ago

      Brave trans activist has hormone blockers that work.

      1. Chumby   2 years ago

        Whore moans

  22. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/amuse/status/1618222206261297152?t=6HXuSDv6wBR18yxq9A36Vg&s=19

    It’s the eggs!!!

    [Link]

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Chickens chew a lot of tobacco.

      1. Chumby   2 years ago

        They also smoke Marlboro Rhode Island Reds

        1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

          And Newports? (Also, RI)

  23. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Why is Britain rejoining the EU so important to some?

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/01/25/the-elites-are-desperate-for-us-to-rejoin-the-eu/

    There was obviously the shock of Brexit. The establishment was shocked. The polls had assumed that Remain was going to win. Also the establishment is very London-centric. An awful lot of civil servants don’t get out of London and they don’t listen to people from outside. They certainly don’t understand what’s going on in some of our poorer areas, or those areas in the Red Wall seats that voted very strongly to leave.

    Seems not too unlike our own bureaucrats in Washington, never getting outside the Beltway.

  24. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

    In other news, UKR has just sacked a plethora of high level officials who were taking our money for hookers, vacations and cars....and not munitions. Thus confirming for all time why UKR should never be invited to join NATO. They are corrupt AF. Only Russia is more corrupt.

    There are less than 60 days to spring. If UKR has any hope to drive out Russia, or bleed Russia so they leave, they'll need munitions....lots of them.

    Also, if UKR is serious, it is time to cut off Crimea from Russia...that bridge has to go into the Black Sea. Crimea will have to be cut off and starved out.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

      The bridge makes no difference as Russia has a land route around the Azov.

      If we kicked out all the corrupt members of NATO whose officals get rich off MIC spending, there wouldn't be anyone left. Actually, that is good idea.

    2. Nardz   2 years ago (edited)

      Your lust for genocide is revealing

      1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

        Genocide, my ass. It is military tactics, and no more than that.

        1. Nardz   2 years ago

          You're cheerleading for Ukraine victory, as you have been for 11 months, which means Ukraine conquering the Donbass and Crimea. The people of those regions are overwhelmingly opposed to being ruled by Kiev, so Ukraine would have to depopulate those areas in order to control them. You root on ethnic cleansing and support it by repeating NAFO (the cringiest astroturf ever) style demonization of Russia.
          Ukraine has sacrificed 120,000+ people to the cause of globalist totalitarianism, and are patrolling cities to literally kidnap people to put on the front lines, yet you treat Kiev as morally superior.

          1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

            I'm sorry, what is NAFO?

            Nardz, I have been pretty clear that UKR is not America's fight; it is Europe's fight. Nor do I want UKR in NATO.

            Now 11 months into the war, UKR tactics can and must change. And they should. New objectives can evolve. I don't think many thought last Feb that we would be in a position one year later to degrade Russia into not a credible conventional military threat to NATO. It is now clear in a conventional fight, NATO will absolutely devastate Russia.

            I have no love for either UKR or Russia, I am not exactly weeping at the Russian commie ass that is getting kicked (and buried). They've been a thorn in the side of the US for a century now.

            I do think that bridge needs to be destroyed asap.

          2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

            So Ukraine has aspirations for a Totalitarian Empire and an Ex-KGB man with Alexandr Dugin and Patriarch Kirill as his political and religious muses does not?

            Well, whatever Putin, Dugin, and Kirill are selling, not even Russian Orthodox Christians are buying it:

            Duped by Stalin and Putin
            https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/op-eds/duped-by-stalin-and-putin

  25. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Was sarc in St Louis? On the latest Dave Smith podcast, Part of the Problem, at the 29 min mark, a guy starts shouting how the cops were right to kill Ashley Babbitt and all the J6 protestors. Amazing back and forth.

    1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      Poor Sarc.

  26. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    #DiedSuddenly

    https://www.thefp.com/p/the-epidemic-of-diedsuddenly

    Perhaps the most high profile of these was the near-death, on national television, of 24- year-old Buffalo Bills football player Damar Hamlin. Hamlin went into cardiac arrest after a routine hit during a game earlier this month. He was ultimately saved by prompt medical care. But during the drive from the field to the hospital, Hamlin became a potent political symbol.

  27. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    Rep. Dana Criswell, a Republican, has introduced a bill that would end the current asset forfeiture regime and require the state to obtain a criminal conviction before seizing assets in most cases.

    Someone just lost all political support from law enforcement.

  28. Jerry B.   2 years ago

    "Rep. Dana Criswell, a Republican, has introduced a bill that would end the current asset forfeiture regime and require the state to obtain a criminal conviction before seizing assets in most cases. The bill has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee."

    Where it will die. Gotta keep that money flowing, so the bureaucracy can grow.

  29. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/JackPosobiec/status/1618260754867843073?t=3skyBGjXm9uJQO_Fb9Cn3g&s=19

    BREAKING: German Foreign Minister speaking about NATO says: "We are fighting a war against Russia"

    [Video]

    1. Nardz   2 years ago

      And by the way, Ukraine isn't getting Crimea and the Donbass back without completely depopulating those regions (why Russia stepped in), so what are you Ukraine fans really rooting for?

      1. Dillinger   2 years ago

        trickle-down corruptionomics.

      2. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

        ...so what are you Ukraine fans really rooting for?

        Answer: To degrade Soviet Russian military capacity to wage conventional war against any NATO country.

        I think the premise: Ukraine isn’t getting Crimea and the Donbass back without completely depopulating those regions... is faulty. Depopulation? Like everyone gone? NFW, Nardz.

        1. Nardz   2 years ago

          They were 75+% opposed to remaining part of Ukraine 9 years ago, and since then Kiev has done nothing but bomb and murder them. Ukrainian reporters keep going to these cities trying to get anti Russian propaganda, and everyone they run into says "what the hell? You're the ones bombing us! Fire is coming from the Ukrainians' direction, not the Russians'."
          Yes, Kiev will have to ethnically cleanse the Donbass and Crimea if it retakes them, which has more or less been their desire from the beginning.
          But hey, keep following Goebbels' script and advocating Nazi tank supply in Ukraine if that's what floats your boat.
          I'm not going to support your manipulation of Americans to satisfy your old world anti Russian agenda though.

          1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

            I don't buy this part, Nardz = They were 75+% opposed to remaining part of Ukraine 9 years ago, and since then Kiev has done nothing but bomb and murder them. That sounds a lot like....RUS propaganda. Is it?

            And your assertion that UKR will need to 'completely depopulate' just doesn't hold water. Sorry, I don't hear Zelensky making noises about 'complete depopulation', or his military people either.

    2. A Thinking Mind   2 years ago

      Need some justification for the Abrams tanks we're sending in.

      1. Ajsloss   2 years ago

        Stacey will stick out like a sore thumb in Ukraine... oh, you're speaking of a different Abrams tank.

  30. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Aptly named act.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/hawley-introduces-pelosi-act-stop-congressional-insider-trading

    The Preventing Elected Leaders from Owning Securities and Investments (PELOSI) Act would require lawmakers and their immediate family members to use qualified blind trusts - a method of investing in which an independent manager buys and sells assets without the knowledge or consent of the owner in order to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interest.

    1. Nardz   2 years ago

      Well done on the acronym there

      1. JasonAZ   2 years ago

        Yeah, we usually cringe at the acronym game, but this one is fantastic!

    2. Illocust   2 years ago

      I'm sure they'll find a way around it, but it's not a bad idea.

    3. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      Paul Pelosi hardest hit.

      1. Sevo   2 years ago

        turd is a liar. And stupid, besides.

      2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        Hahaha... Sure Pluggo. All those miracle trades he made just days before massive purchases were announced were just happy coincidences.

        1. Ajsloss   2 years ago

          I believe he was referring to the underwear hammering incident.

          1. McGuffin   2 years ago

            who was getting hammered in their underwear?

        2. Chumby   2 years ago

          Pluggo the clown performs in front of a captive audience of children.

      3. Mike Laursen   2 years ago (edited)

        I was wondering what’s up lately with the Paul Pelosi story. Just did a search and, apparently, yesterday’s breaking news is Nancy had an exorcist come by their house. WTF.

        1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          Pray the gay away.

  31. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye from the committee.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/mccarthy-formally-rejects-schiff-swalwell-house-intel-committee

    House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday officially rejected Reps. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) for seats on the House Intelligence Committee after House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) nominated them on Saturday

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      The best part is democrats saying this is revenge. When they did it they kicked Republicans off all committees. Here they are only kicking them off one committee, one that grants security clearances.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        And there are pretty damn good reasons for doing so. Swalwell was kind of fucking a Chinese spy. Schiff has lied to the public repeatedly as chairman of that exact committee. Neither has any business on it.

        1. McGuffin   2 years ago

          this was 1/10th of the punishment Schiff deserves for him knowingly lying and misleading the public, on multiple occasions.

          1. JasonAZ   2 years ago

            He should get impeached for his actions related to censoring a journalist on Twitter. I hope the journalist sues him personally.

    2. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

      How exactly do the Democrats justify putting Swalwell on any sensitive committee assignments? The guy got infiltrated by the Chinese, if I remember correctly. Do the Dems think, at all?

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

        She was hot. Nothing wrong with banging hot.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Hot or not, she was still a spy.

        2. Sevo   2 years ago

          turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
          If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
          turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

        3. Moonrocks   2 years ago

          Is that what you say on the playground?

      2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        He didn't just get infiltrated... he was sleeping with that action.

      3. rev-arthur-l-kuckland   2 years ago

        When your boss (in their case the ccp) tells you to do something you do it

      4. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        For the same reason Feinstein never suffered any consequences for having a Chinese spy driving her around everywhere, or Debbie Wasserman Schulz was never punished for keeping Pakistani spies on staff to harvest information from government computers, or why no one suffers any consequences for hiring Chinese spies to work at Los Alamos.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          What do Feinstein and Schulz have in common? I'll give a hint, it's brought to you by the letter "D" on the back of a jackass.

      5. JasonAZ   2 years ago

        Come on guys, that Chinese spy incident was before he was a member of the Congress. That makes it totally okay.

  32. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Speaker rebukes idiot reporter.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mccarthy-gets-heated-reporter-dont-get-determine-whether-answer-question

    During a press gaggle, McCarthy defended his decision to remove Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., from the intelligence panel, telling reporters that Swalwell had been compromised by a Chinese spy and should not receive intelligence briefings, while Schiff, according to McCarthy, had abused his authority by repeatedly lying to the American people.

    The video is pretty good.

    1. JasonAZ   2 years ago

      And yet, sadly, the media will still give this story an angle that makes the Dems look good and the GOP is meany-heads.

  33. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago (edited)

    Must be that climate change thingy again.

    https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20230125_06/

    The coldest air mass of the season continues to bring snow, mainly to areas along the Sea of Japan coast from western to eastern Japan. The mercury has dropped below zero Celsius [32F-ed] across the country.

    Weather officials are advising people to refrain from non-essential outings and watch out for icy road conditions. They also warn that water pipes could freeze.

    Apparently even Hiroshima got 2.3 inches so far.

    1. A Thinking Mind   2 years ago

      If it's unusually warm, it's global warming. If it's unusually cool, it's global warming. If it's a mild hurricane season, it's global warming. If it's an extreme hurricane season, it's global warming. If it's a drought, it's global warming. If it's potentially flooding, it's global warming.

      This is different than Evangelicals who just chant "God did it. God did it. God did it. God did it."

  34. Sevo   2 years ago

    "...which hardly screams illegal monopoly..."
    Pretty sure there is no such thing.

  35. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    NTSB releases preliminary report on worker sucked into engine at Montgomery Regional Airport.

    https://www.alabamanews.net/2023/01/23/ntsb-releases-preliminary-report-on-worker-killed-at-mgm/

    The National Transportation Safety Board has released its preliminary report on the accident that killed a worker at the Montgomery Regional Airport on New Year’s Eve.

  36. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Buttplug's sugar daddy's Presidency.

    https://nypost.com/2023/01/24/with-joe-biden-george-soros-finally-had-a-president-he-could-control/

    Soros was represented well by Biden’s picks, with individuals working for organizations founded by or funded by Soros making up at least 17 of them. This included individuals picked to work on the transition teams of the State Department, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, United States Mission to the United Nations, Department of Defense, Department of Labor, Department of the Interior, Department of the Treasury, Federal Reserve, Banking and Securities Regulators, National Security Council, Office of the US Trade Representative and Department of Veterans Affairs.

    A number of individuals within the Soros sphere of influence then entered Biden’s Cabinet:

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

      Open Society has about a 90% Venn overlap with classical liberalism.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        Bullshit, Buttplug.

      2. Sevo   2 years ago

        turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a TDS-addled shit pile, a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
        If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
        turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

      3. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Lol.

        God. Youre on fire today with the retarded takes.

      4. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago (edited)

        Now this is interesting.

        https://capitalresearch.org/article/origins-of-antifa/

        Despite the name, the movement embraces fascistic tactics.

        Antifa has gained new prominence in the post-Obama era. They trace their roots back to Nazi Germany. Although they opposed the Sturmabteilung (SA), or Nazi storm troopers, like the SA they also used violence to intimidate political opponents and break up their meetings and rallies. It could be argued that the ideological distance between Antifa and the now-defunct National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, abbreviated as NSDAP) or Nazi Party, is so slight it can be measured in millimeters.

        Nonetheless, the left-wing billionaire George Soros has ties to Antifa through a group called the Alliance for Global Justice (AfGJ). Soros’s philanthropy, known at the time as the Open Society Institute, gave $100,000 to AfGJ ($50,000 in 2004 and $50,000 in 2006).

        Acting as a fiscal sponsor, AfGJ gave $50,000 to Refuse Fascism, an unincorporated Antifa group. Fiscal sponsors are recognized tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofits that take in donations on behalf of unincorporated or small groups so that donors can deduct the donations from their taxes, charging the group receiving the donation a processing fee.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          And taking it a bit different.

          https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/06/george_soros_on_his_open_society.html

          That “Siren's song” was sung by none other than President George Bush in 2003/4. That also means that Soros's open society is best advanced by the Democratic Party and not by the Republican Party. In fact, Soros believed -- at the time -- that the open society isn't advanced at all by the Republicans; at least not under George W. Bush... and now not under Donald Trump either.

          Soros is often very specific as to how his open societies tie in with global government. Indeed, he believes that the prime purpose of a global government is to bring about open societies.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

            Even more entertaining regarding Soros.

            https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/01/cleaning-voter-rolls-soros-founded-funded-eric-now-used-31-states/

            For decades the Democrats and leftists have fought ferociously to prevent the cleanup of State voter registration rolls. Recognizing a potential niche, left wing activists created ERIC to clean voter rolls their way, using their rules. So in 2012 the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) was formed as a membership organization primarily for blue States. ERIC is essentially a left wing voter registration drive disguised as voter roll clean up. But it’s been gaining traction in Red States too. Originally funded by the Soros Open Society, it is now responsible for cleaning the voter rolls in 31 States, plus D.C. A top election official from each member State is appointed a seat on the ERIC Board or as an Officer, all unpaid positions.

          2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

            Part II:

            https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/01/eric-investigation-part-2-largest-u-s-counties-removed-zero-two-ineligible-voters-voter-rolls-4-years/

            States are required by federal law (1993 NVRA) to report to Congress how many ineligible voters they removed from their voter rolls. These are the registrations of voters who fail to respond to an address confirmation request, and fail to vote in two consecutive elections. The outstanding team at Judicial Watch recently investigated this data and found some astonishing revelations. Over the recent 4 year reporting period, large counties in powerful states like NY and CA reported they removed ZERO, ONE, or only TWO ineligible voters from their voter rolls over those 4 years.

          3. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

            Part III:

            https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/01/eric-investigation-part-3-soros-open-society-founding-nations-largest-voter-roll-clean-operation/

            In 2020 Judicial Watch found 29 states had huge registration excesses. In 8 states, if you combined all counties, their average registration for the entire State exceeded 100%. Seven of the 8 are long time members of ERIC (Alaska, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Rhode Island, and Vermont). In fact, Wyman’s own Washington had 14 of 39 counties exceeding 100%. Colorado, a huge proponent and also 8 year member of ERIC, had 40 of 64 counties exceeding 100%. They were sued by Judicial Watch for this election fraud.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Great take down. Shrike will ignore.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                For Arizona, this is rather notable:

                In May of 2013, by executive order, Obama created the Presidential Commission on Election Administration. It included his personal attorney (Bob Baeur), Director of Elections for Michigan (Thomas), and the Clark County Registrar (Lomax) known for the ACORN registration scam. It also included Mitt Romney’s campaign attorney (Ginsberg), and Tammy Patrick from Maricopa County Elections Compliance. She now works at the Soros partnered Democracy Fund.

                I'll repeat that: Tammy Patrick from Maricopa County Elections Compliance.

                Any idea who she is, Jesse, or what role she's played?

                1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

                  Not sure if she is still there. I’ll take a look. Maricopa has been an election issue for a decade or two. The McCain machine ran a lot of the election shit. Wouldn’t be shocked if he is linked to soros.

                  Perhaps more troubling is the fact that McCain’s Institute has accepted contributions of as much as $100,000 from billionaire liberal activist-funder George Soros and from Teneo, a for-profit consulting firm whose corruption CRC covered during the 2016 election. Teneo has long helped enrich the Clintons through lucrative speaking events and business deals.

                  Yeap.

                  https://capitalresearch.org/article/george-soros-john-mccain-and-immigration/

            2. Minadin   2 years ago

              Strange how in the nominally 'red' states with voter roll excesses, like Kansas and Missouri, the only counties with excess registrations skew solidly Democrat.

              Also, no data on Illinois; which they are being sued for not providing.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                The letter to Illinois:
                https://www.judicialwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/CSEO-Ill.-11-16-21.pdf

                Granted, some of the counties are small in population, but this is notable:
                Fifteen other Illinois counties reported zero or comparably low removals pursuant to Section 8(d)(1)(B) over the last two years: Chicago City (zero removals reported in two years)

                Given Chicago's size, there should be some serious removals over two years. Methinks they're still using the dead to vote Democrat.

                1. Minadin   2 years ago

                  Given the population bleed of the city of Chicago and the State of Illinois in general, not to mention the murder rate in said metropolitan area, zero removals is pretty ballsy.

                  1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

                    They're Chicago Democrats. Ballsy seems to be their nature, whether they're accepting bribes, shaking down Burger Kings, or committing election fraud.

      5. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        Open Society rhetoric has about a 90% Venn overlap with classical liberalism.
        Open Society funding and advocacy has about a 90% Venn overlap with classical fascism.

        1. rev-arthur-l-kuckland   2 years ago

          Are you calling a socialist nazi (soros) a lier?

  37. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Woke and progressive racism.

    https://nypost.com/2023/01/24/gianno-caldwell-on-being-a-back-conservative-demonized-by-liberals/

    All the while we spoke, I regularly looked around the room because, as a public figure, I know people can record me or try to confront — or even attack — me in public spaces. So I am always aware of my surroundings. But I never saw this one coming, this woman with the disgusted glare.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      Cult members have the most hatred for those who have escaped

  38. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    "It's not my fault!"

    https://nypost.com/2023/01/24/bidens-excuses-for-classified-docs-make-scandal-worse/

    Then, of course, there is Biden’s possession of classified documents from his decades in the Senate, which turned up in Biden’s Wilmington home during last Friday’s search by the FBI. It’s not enough to say that the president had no business holding on to those documents for at least 14 years (Biden left the Senate to become vice president in 2009). The point is that he shouldn’t have been holding on to them for 14 seconds.

    1. Dillinger   2 years ago

      "no no no listen it's all okay. Pence is covering for me." ~~ Brandon

    2. Hank Ferrous   2 years ago

      I'm waiting for the inevitable series of thinkpieces from reasonmag, and deep opinions from the very online internet-trained classified materials handling & storage specialists of the commentariat. How much weight will go to the 'it's an over-classification problem' not a problem w/ taking classified documents that biden did not have the authorization to take, then storing them improperly, then exposing them to people who had no clearance? I believe the left-libertarians have a demeaning name for libertarians who don't accept the rules, or the way in which rules can be changed. Or the 'biden cooperated, reported as soon as documents were found' lie? The dates for reporting show this to be untrue, and the fact the NARAIG only found out by chance indicates that NARA and the biden administration were trying to keep the matter quiet.

  39. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/Sargon_of_Akkad/status/1618161573046145028?t=D53DeN-mqBhouOsgXIwlXw&s=19

    Black women main characters herald a bad movie, TV show, or video game, @davidscottjaffe. They have become totemic examples of woke (usually white) leftists who use them for two purposes: "representation" and as a meat shield behind which they can hide from criticism. Debate me!

    1. McGuffin   2 years ago

      There is pretty much no debate to be had here.

      They are chosen not for their strong acting (from the actress), or the plot needing that demographic (from the writers), but for tokenism. Its almost 100% of the time woke-brain-virus white women (but sometimes men) doing anything they can to push CRT style politics. Not only that, but they usually completely skip any kind of great writing or plot, and just go straight to the hack politics.

      And it turns out, no one has any interest in lectures, boring/bad writing, and watching yet another Mary-Sue character explain why she had to 'work twice as hard to get half as far' and is the bestest best better than any man ever.

      Yet another example of women (specifically woke women) taking over an industry and completely destroying it

      1. Hank Ferrous   2 years ago

        The AWFLs are definitely a root cause of the issue, but progressive males (I am deliberately not calling them men, and not due to respect for trans rights) are as great a problem. Not having checked what sargon is saying in detail, I will say, that if sex and skin color combined w/ the Mary Sue factor are the only aspects of the character, then I agree. If those traits are ancillary, there is development, skills are learned, fought for, then the development team hasn't lost sight of what reality is vs what some believe it should be. I suspect I'm preaching to the choir here. What's strange is, nothing has really changed. Media collusion was exposed during gamergate, the media, the usual suspects, the same in-group that embraced the russia hoax, the okay sign = white power hoax, all of the ncov overreaction 'new normal' insanity -they are still pushing the same lies about gamergate. They are still pushing the same lies about russia, the okay sign, they will never stop, because they do not believe they are capable of being wrong.

        1. Nardz   2 years ago

          "If those traits are ancillary, there is development, skills are learned, fought for, then the development team hasn’t lost sight of what reality is vs what some believe it should be."

          Sure.
          I'm just unable to think of any recent examples where this holds true.
          Got any?

      2. Nardz   2 years ago

        Its almost 100% of the time woke-brain-virus white women (but sometimes men) doing anything they can to push CRT style politics."

        It's gotten real bad in commercials too.
        Too many AWFL women have risen up the ranks, because they're inherently obedient thus disproportionately successful in college now, and are filling media with mediocrity and their fetishes.
        You'd think black people represent the majority of disposable income in the market based on advertising objectives. But the real marks are the cosmo AWFLs who desire to bask in the glow of virtue they've ascribed to (abstract) black people.

    2. McGuffin   2 years ago

      "and as a meat shield behind which they can hide from criticism"

      Ironically, they took south park's 'operation: get behind the darkies' to heart, and its the only thing in their playbook now

      1. Nardz   2 years ago

        Lol, too true

      2. Dillinger   2 years ago

        lol word

  40. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    Republicans say they want to balance the budget LK/i>

    Imagine thinking "balance the budget" is the conservative position

    — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes).

    Imagine thinking that "raising taxes" can result in a balanced budget.

  41. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    — but meanwhile they have ruled out every mathematical path for doing so (cuts to defense, cuts to entitlements, wiping out nondefense discretionary spending, or raising taxes).

    Everyone is going to eventually (and possibly soon) find out that all spending is actually discretionary

  42. raspberrydinners   2 years ago

    It's like reason tries their hardest to be the dumbest motherfucker in the room.

    "It's not the overall market share that the DOJ is worried about, though: It's the market share of the individual tools used by publishers and ad companies. On the "sell side" (the side of websites that have ad space to sell—like this one), the DOJ says Google's "DoubleClick for Publishers" ad server has an over 90 percent market share. On the "buy side" (the side of advertisers that are looking for a spot for their ads), the Google Ads network for smaller businesses has an 80 percent market share, while "Display & Video 360" for big ad agencies has a 40 percent market share. The Google Ad exchange, which matches sellers and buyers, has a 50 percent market share."

    Breaking them up would be great.

    Since when does a libertarian argue AGAINST competition and ensuring the free market works?

    JFC this is pathetic.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      libertarians argue against centralized government control of markets, which is what anti-trust law is all about.

    2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      The whole point of today’s blog post is that Google IS competing. Do you have any specific arguments to make?

    3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 years ago

      You mad, bro?

  43. Dillinger   2 years ago

    >>foul-mouthed, left-leaning journalists whose bread and butter consists sometimes of criticizing the police.

    zero of those descriptors matter in the face of injustice

  44. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    The suit also comes as Google is feeling its search business threatened by the rise of ChatGPT and artificial intelligence tech. "For more than 20 years, the Google search engine has served as the world's primary gateway to the internet. But with a new kind of chat bot technology poised to reinvent or even replace traditional search engines, Google could face the first serious threat to its main search business," notes The New York Times. "One Google executive described the efforts as make or break for Google's future."

    Explain to this tech neophyte how chatGPT is impacting google's search business?

    1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

      People could start using AI for answers they would otherwise search for through Google, depriving Alphabet of the data it needs to run it's primary business model.

      1. Commenter_XY   2 years ago

        I am still not following. Whats the data?

        1. Moonrocks   2 years ago (edited)

          Search queries. More specifically, collections of search queries associated with individual users.

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

            But... ChatGPT is a language processing chat bot. So... *rubbing my temples* how is it going to be different or better than a google algorithm? Seriously... and I'm ignoring Google's now heavily manipulated algorithm. I'm just talking "old google" that was designed to [do it's best] to show you the most relevant search results?

            Is it just a 'better' algorithm? Does it use its language processing AI to better understand what you're really asking for? Because this seems like a really clever way to utilize something like ChatGPT to give you what ChatGPT wants, not what's most relevant, putting is right back where we started.

            I don't want to turn this into a bitchfest about ideological biases, but as one commenter pointed out, you ask it two questions:

            Q: Give me three paragraphs on the moral case for not transitioning children:

            It refused to do it.

            Q: Give me three paragraphs on the moral case for transitioning children.

            It gave you five.

            Regardless of what my opinion is on transitioning children, I'd like to see both cases. And the reason I might want to see both cases might vary greatly. And since I'm searching for what other people are saying about the subject, I don't care what ChatGPT thinks about the subject, I want to know what researchers think. And there is literally nothing about ChatGPT that suggest that ChatGPT bot would " depriving Alphabet of the data it needs to run it’s primary business model. "

            Just program ChatGPT to feed AlphaMetaTwitter the data it needs to run its primary business model.

            I have to tell you, this feels like yet another example of a Super Kewl Tech paradigm that will, in the end, work just like the old paradigm. I've seen them come and go a jillion times.

    2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      The word on the street is Microsoft plans to incorporate it into Bing.

    3. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      the chatGPT is just a more natural interface to the SAME INFO you get from typing into google's search bar (more or less)

      Google will just offer a similar interface to the same data and voila, they continue. They can just as easily sell ads based on the content of your conversation with an chatbot interface as they can based on your current search queries entered into a search bar.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Ed Zachary. this "ChatGPT" will disrupt Google's advertising business feels a lot like "the Segway will change how we build cities".

        Sure, there may be disruptions happening to Google's advertising business model now, but I don't see how ChatGPT plays a role in that.

        1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          To be precise, it is thought ChatGPT is a threat to Google’s *search*, which is only one source of their advertising revenue.

  45. swillfredo pareto   2 years ago

    The shootings underscored again the grim reality that strict firearms laws cannot stop every shooting in a country where there are an estimated 400 million firearms," notes The Washington Post.

    Let’s see…assuming the murderers used different pistols…two divided by four hundred million is .0000005%. Why does it not surprise me that the Washington Post’s “grim reality” is the prevalence of guns; not the indistinguishable-from-zero percent of guns used in the murders? If a few of those other four hundred million guns had been in the hands of the victims the stories would have dramatically different outcomes.

  46. Dillinger   2 years ago

    what's with Oldie Hawn and the Sundown Kid shooting up California?

  47. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    Florida's Supreme Court will hear a challenge to the state's 15-week abortion ban.

    The most important issue of all time. Without free and legal abortion up to birth, we are all slaves.

  48. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

    "I warned you…"

    https://twitter.com/GadSaad/status/1617735308040376320

    Actually, not bait, but maybe don't click on this twitter link. It's not worth it unless you're chemjeff.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

      BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

      Tony's all in on this shit too.

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      it's truly amazing that this is real. they really published this as an ad.
      what a tiime to be alive.

    3. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

      Alice Cooper hardest hit.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTx6S4kXbXc&list=RDdTx6S4kXbXc&start_radio=1&rv=dTx6S4kXbXc&t=0

  49. serebrina   2 years ago

    Newspapers, media, television and radio have long gone online. Music and books have their own successful digital niche. The film industry and the sports industry are catching up but still rely on more traditional business practices. However, there are changes ahead of us. Media and Entertainment Industry Trends in 2023 https://anyforsoft.com/blog/media-and-entertainment-industry-trends/ will tell you about the changes not only for Google, but for YouTube, TikTok and others.

  50. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

    I do recall a guy from my college newspaper who said: "I pissed blood researching this article!" But I didn't think it meant this! 😉

  51. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

    Yes, the call him Johnny on the Scott, The Shackford Shill.

  52. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    I think Tony's been filling in for Jeffy recently. Tony, of course, went beyond full retard last night.

  53. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Close to a record.

  54. JesseAz   2 years ago

    And added a lie about how many Hobbs votes were from the rejected.

    Also notice shrike ignoring completely the signature matching. Probably because it has pictures.

  55. JesseAz   2 years ago

    And add ABC to it!

  56. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

    Did he unironically declare that if you don't suck the girldick, you're a bigot?

  57. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

    Ironically, the US would have been a lot better off if they had never joined the UN and simply nurtured the NATO alliance. Obviously, that would have been politically and culturally impossible back then, but it would have put us in a better position to resist the spread of global communism abroad, as well as commie insurrectionists at home during the 1960s-70s.

    Putting ourselves under the UN's umbrella, for example, prevented us from fucking up China's shit when they got involved in Korea. Under World War II rules, sending legions of troops across the Yalu River would have simply resulted in every major Chinese city getting bombed into oblivion, and the war might have come to an actual conclusion.

  58. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

    Poor ABC.

  59. Zeb   2 years ago

    I don't think Tony is a big tranny defender.

  60. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    He came close. He's on a post-modernism binge when he tries that shit with me. I just ask him for links to peer-reviewed biology journals backing him up. For some reason, he's completely, thus far, unable to comply. I did this to him five times in a row a week or so ago before he ran off.

  61. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Oh, he is, if you press him long enough.

  62. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on children and sex ed.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880416

    Tony 1 week ago
    I don’t personally think sex as a topic hurts anyone, and I think when conservatives try to shield young people from sex education, it’s a sinister cover for their own motives to keep children innocent, the better to rape them. That’s what I feel.

    Violence, which you people are fine introducing children to in toddlerhood, is a more complicated subject to my mind.

  63. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on trans access to women's restrooms.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880319

    Tony 1 week ago
    I’m cool if you want to believe that, but I personally believe in freedom, so if a trans woman is more comfortable using a woman’s-designated bathroom, that seems, if anything, more natural than the alternative. Again I’ve seen you idiots bitch about a trans woman using a men’s bathroom too, so you’ll forgive me if I mistake your truly deep concern for women’s safety for a childish cognitive dissonance implicating clothing and hair style.

    Can you cite a single instance of a man pretending to be a trans woman raping a woman in a women’s public restroom, by any chance?

  64. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on men playing women's roles in Shakespeare's time.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880163

    Tony 1 week ago
    The fact that boys played women on stage in Shakespeare’s day should make you realize how fluid indeed the concept of gender really is. It’s probably safe to say that 20th century America was extremist in its enforcement of gender norms. Many, many cultures accepted gender fluidity, not least Elizabethan England, as you yourself have noted.

    You must realize that the gender roles you were taught as a young child are extremely strict, a product of some unholy amalgam of Puritan religion and Hollywood.

    The culture you live in is extremely specific and would be considered alien and bizarre by most cultures that have ever existed. These are all things we are taught, not things that exist in nature unchanging. Anything you were taught is arbitrary, and that’s most things you believe.

  65. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on sex-segregated restrooms.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880157

    Tony 1 week ago
    Sex-segregated bathrooms are an incredibly recent invention, so not only are you requiring other people to conform to the cultural practices you learned as a young child, you’re requiring them to conform to the nearly brand new ones.

    I’ve seen you obsessed loons freak out over a trans woman in women’s bathrooms and freak out equally much over a trans woman in men’s bathrooms.

    The only relevant question, really, since this is all political, is what do you want the government to do to trans people?

  66. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on postmodernism.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880363

    Tony 1 week ago
    Postmodernism has a lot to teach us. If there were no humans, there’d be no language, and hence no conception of the idea of sex.

    If something only exists because words were invented to describe it, is it real?

  67. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tony on the concept of biological sex.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880086

    Tony 1 week ago
    Hate to break this to you, but the very concept of sexes was made up out of thin air by people from a prescientific age. Our categories are words, not objects in the universe. They are air on stilts. They mean something only to the extent that we choose to imbue them with meaning.

    Furthermore, biology never produces absolute binaries, since biology is a messy, imperfect, ever-changing thing.

    If people don’t like the sexual binary, we as freedom extremists must permit them to explore a different worldview. All I ask is that you really examine what you’re asking for. You’re asking for other people, whom you never met and will never meet, to conform to the worldview you were taught as a young child, never questioning whether that worldview might be overly simplistic, even though it was the one you were taught, again, as a young child.

    The mind of a conservative. I don’t even use that word anymore. I just call it stupidity. The only difference between you and sophisticated people is that sophisticated people continue to learn things past the age of ten.

    What a fucking retard.

  68. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Here's where I ask Tony for links and documentation to back up his bullshit.

    https://reason.com/2023/01/16/with-classified-documents-the-real-divide-is-between-the-powerful-and-the-rest-of-us/?comments=true#comment-9880223

  69. JasonAZ   2 years ago

    Man, there is a lot of projection in that Tony statement.

  70. JasonAZ   2 years ago

    "Can you cite a single instance of a man pretending to be a trans woman raping a woman in a women’s public restroom, by any chance?"

    Is Tony this ignorant or playing ignorant? Has he completely missed the VA school district where this happened multiple times and the school board covered it up?

  71. JasonAZ   2 years ago

    This explains a lot about Tony. Postmodernists - there is NO truth!!! The irony is whoosh, right over their truth-challenged heads.

  72. Chumby   2 years ago

    Tony seems hooked on phonics

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