Debt Ceiling Bill 'Locks in the Inflated Spending Levels of Recent Years'
Plus: Artificial intelligence and jobs, how government caused a lifeguard shortage, and more...

Fiscal conservatives react to debt ceiling deal. Democratic President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R–Calif.) have reached a deal on the debt ceiling, after a monthslong standoff in which Republicans said they wouldn't raise the federal government's borrowing limit unless Democrats agreed to certain spending cuts. If the debt ceiling isn't raised, the U.S. will have to start defaulting on its debts.
But for anyone hoping the standoff would inject a little more fiscal discipline into the mix, the Biden-McCarthy deal is pretty much a dud. McCarthy has agreed to suspend the debt ceiling through January 2025. The deal will also raise military spending to Biden's desired level and only sets an enforceable cap on non-defense discretionary spending for two years. And those caps keep spending at post-COVID levels, without rolling back any of the big $1.7 trillion omnibus spending approved last year.
"I've now reviewed the bill text of the debt ceiling 'deal,' and it's actually worse than I imagined. It locks in the inflated spending levels of recent years," commented former Michigan Rep. Justin Amash on Twitter. "Under McCarthy's 'deal,' any incentive to cut spending for the rest of this term vanishes. Until January 2, 2025, the Treasury will now have unlimited authority to issue debt to finance commitments requiring payment. It's the ultimate kick-the-can-down-the-road agreement."
Come 2025, of course, conservatives may be in a worse position to negotiate with progressives over cutting spending. Or they may be in more power—which we all know by now reduces the likelihood of Republicans exercising fiscal restraint.
For now, non-military discretionary spending next year is capped at around $704 billion and non-military discretionary spending for 2025 is capped at around $711 billion.
Meanwhile, military spending cuts were never on the table to begin with. The Biden-McCarthy deal would set military spending at $886 billion for 2024, which is the amount Biden requested in his budget proposal, and $895 billion for 2025.
"The $886 billion cap for military spending represents about a 3.3% increase from 2023," notes Dave DeCamp at Antiwar.com.
There are a few bright spots in the deal, including:
- No tax on cryptocurrency miners
- Cutting some previously approved funding for the IRS
- Rescinding unspent COVID-19 funds
- Unpausing student loan payments
Capping some spending, and elements like these, are at least something. But they fall far short of the lofty goals the House GOP professed for months, and likely could have been secured via other legislative negotiations.
"It's really an overstatement to say Republicans are getting nothing," commented Semafor's Jordan Weissmann, noting that "a two-year budget freeze in a high-inflation environment is something." Yet the things Republicans got "they could have just as easily gotten in a vanilla budget fight or Farm Bill reauthorization," he suggested.
And a cap on discretionary spending doesn't really get at the root of our current spending crisis.
????After a 23% hike in two years, capping discretionary spending is surely worth doing. But notable again that Social Security and health entitlements drive the entire long-term deficit hike … and yet for 40 years lawmakers have responded instead by squeezing discretionary. pic.twitter.com/PReagMI9EQ
— Brian Riedl ???? ???????? (@Brian_Riedl) May 26, 2023
Essentially, Republican efforts "to reduce federal spending as part of the debt ceiling deal seems to have ended up on the cutting room floor," as Reason's Eric Boehm noted Sunday:
Recall that, last month, McCarthy successfully stewarded a bill—The Limit, Save, Grow Act—through the House last month that would have actually cut federal spending and raised the debt ceiling. That package would reset the federal budget baseline to where it was last year—that is, before the December passage of the $1.7 trillion omnibus bill that jacked up spending across the board—would limit future budget growth to one percent annually for the next decade, and would slow the accumulation of future debt.
In other words, it included a more sizable spending cut and a longer period of future spending restraint than the deal struck this weekend.
Of course, it was always unlikely that Republicans could get that bill through the Senate and get Biden to sign it. Even so, the gap between those goals and the newly announced debt ceiling deal is remarkable—and not in a way that looks particularly impressive for McCarthy.
A lot of conservatives are, unsurprisingly, unhappy with the deal.
"Republicans had a real chance to protect families and fight sky-high inflation and interest rates by cutting government spending," said Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts. But "most fiscally conservative and pro-growth policies" they proposed "were stripped out or diluted. … House Republicans must go back to the negotiating table and demand more concessions from the Biden administration."
It "normalizes record high spending started during the pandemic," tweeted Rep. Nancy Mace (R–S.C.). "It sets these historically high spending levels as the baseline for all future spending."
Rep. Ralph Norman (R–S.C.) called the deal "insanity," adding that "a $4T debt ceiling increase with virtually no cuts is not what we agreed to."
"Conservatives have been sold out once again!" tweeted Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.).
Fake conservatives agree to fake spending cuts. Deal will increase mandatory spending ~5%, increase military spending ~3%, and maintain current non-military discretionary spending at post-COVID levels. No real cuts to see here.
Conservatives have been sold out once again!
— Rand Paul (@RandPaul) May 28, 2023
The Biden-McCarthy deal—dubbed the Fiscal Responsibility Act—must still be approved by Congress. It's slated for a House vote on Wednesday and needs to pass both the House and Senate before June 5.
Some House Republicans—including Mace, Norman, Arizona Rep. Eli Crane, and Texas Rep. Chip Roy—are vowing to vote no, though whether they have enough votes to actually make a difference is still unclear.
What does seem pretty clear is that despite this modest opposition, the Republican Party's commitment to "fiscal responsibility" is still more performative than anything else.
The "fiscal conservatives" over at the GOP have just let Biden continue running up debt through the end of his term. https://t.co/yRGL9gSHfn
— Spike Cohen (@RealSpikeCohen) May 29, 2023
FREE MINDS
A different way of looking at artificial intelligence (A.I.) and jobs. It's common for people to argue that artificial intelligence will wipe out tons of jobs and that this necessitates government action, possibly in the form of a universal basic income. But the evidence on A.I. and jobs is far from clearly, notes Techdirt's Mike Masnick, pointing to a study showing that ChatGPT made customer service workers—especially less-skilled workers—more productive:
Basically, they looked at how customer support agents were using AI, and specifically reviewing productivity and performance and how it changed via the staggered introduction of the tools to different support agents.
The report found productivity went up across the board — and also that both employees and customers were much happier, which seems like a good thing. But, the impact on lower skilled workers was much bigger, basically leveling them up to work nearly as well as higher skilled workers. …
Of course, this is just one study of one company, using the technology as it is today. But lots of things could still change. That study may not prove to be generally applicable. The tech could change. There are lots of other things that could go wrong. And this isn't to suggest that UBI might not still be a useful tool for helping make sure that everyone has a clear foundation on which to feel safe and able to live freely.
But, at the very least, it might call into question the "doom and gloom" predictions that this will somehow further hollow out the middle class and massively increase unemployment. The early evidence, at least, seems to suggest it might do the exact opposite.
FREE MARKETS
Local pool closed? Blame the government. Pools around the country are offering reduced hours due to a lifeguard shortage. "There are simply not enough people, namely teens, who want to do this work, we're told," Reason's Billy Binion points out. But there's another explanation, one driven by government regulations:
In June 2020, former President Donald Trump issued an executive order suspending foreign work visas. That included the J-1 visa, also known as the exchange visitor visa, which, as it turns out, is a major vehicle for filling vacant lifeguard spots at pools across the country. Before COVID, the American Lifeguard Association (ALA) used to train about 300,000 new recruits a year, 50,000 of which came from J-1 visa recipients.
The ban expired in April 2021. But the effects, including the massive backlog in applications it created, reverberated. Bernard Fisher II, the director of health and safety at the ALA, told ABC News last June that "the lack of the J-1 visa candidates coming in as strongly as they they were" has prevented the association from reaching "pre pandemic enrollment times." He continued: "So with that said, we have a very serious problem in enrollment now." In 2022, the U.S. State Department issued 284,486 J-1 visas in total, which is over 50,000 shy of levels before the pandemic. And in the years before the pandemic, the U.S. began subjecting applicants to more rigorous vetting and bureaucracy, slowing down an already-inefficient process, as red tape often does.
More here.
QUICK HITS
• Texas lawmakers approved a ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities.
• The "library of America" project aims "to show that the places of American fiction can't be divided into blue or red states."
• The book Freedom's Dominion argues that Southern history was animated by "racialized radical anti-statism." The case is lacking, writes history professor David T. Beito.
• Scott Shackford explores what Gadsden flags and pride flags have in common.
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But for anyone hoping the standoff would inject a little more fiscal discipline into the mix, the Biden-McCarthy deal is pretty much a dud.
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If the debt ceiling isn't raised, the U.S. will have to start defaulting on its debts.
I'm getting pretty tired of seeing this lie repeated endlessly as though it were true.
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Yeah, it's a big fat lie that the Democrats and the media (but I repeat myself) have put out, and everyone seems to just be accepting it uncritically.
Had the deadline passed, there would never have been a default. They would have done the exact same thing that they've done in the past, which is to furlough 'unessential' employees and contractors, and temporary halt some of the least expensive and most popular programs, like National Parks. A so-called 'partial shutdown'. And then they would have continued to make interest payments, because that's approximately 10% of revenues.
And then voted to pay those temporarily laid off employees when the debt limit was raised.
If the debt ceiling isn't raised, the U.S. will have to start defaulting on its debts.
Way to undersell it. What about the rivers running red with blood, the skies darkened by rains of frogs, the dead walking again, and the return of Battle of the Network Stars? All of these plagues and terrors will be ours if we fail to raise the debt ceiling by iggelty-trillion dollars.
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The agreement pretty much confirms what we already know and that is that the debt ceiling is a poor tool to cut government debt. Reducing the debt can not be done by gimmicks it takes hard work, regular order, and compromise, things lacking in our Congress.
The debt hasn't been reduced since 1957. Literally none of the bland prescriptive generalizations you offer up here have any relevance.
At least they used to negotiate over the budget. Favors were handed out for votes - a new VFW hall in some representatives home town, etc.
Now they don't even pass budgets. They do "continuing resolutions". I wonder if there is a single Senator who has a clue as to what we spend our money on. I doubt there is even one of the 535 that reads the entire omnibus bill.
Nobody could possibly read one of those ten thousand page omnibus monsters.
Which should mean that nobody could possibly vote for one.
But... principles seem to be in short supply.
It's a lovely thought, but yeah.
I'd love to see someone be accused of filibustering by simply reading the entire bill out loud.
You know what would "cut government debt"?
OBEYING THE US CONSTITUTION!
The debt ceiling is a fine tool for
cuttingcapping government spending. The problem is that the government keeps raising it. If congress is to be the supreme law makers of the land then no mere law can constrain them. If they are the makers and ultimate puppet masters of the Federal Reserve, then no monetary policy is off-limits to them. If they are able to amend the very constitution itself then even that document is, ultimately, powerless before them if they are so motivated to circumvent it. If there is a constraint on congressional spending it is only found in some fundamentally different form of government which we do not have.Balanced budget Amendment!!
Wouldn't matter. Congress would have to be the one to make such an amendment and even if implemented it could simply pass an Unbalanced Budget Amendment.
It got us some work requirements for welfare. That alone makes it worthwhile.
Or they may be in more power—which we all know by now reduces the likelihood of Republicans exercising fiscal restraint.
Don't you try to trick us into voting 3rd party.
Amash?/Somebody! 2024
Trump/Amash
DeSantis/Amash?
McDreamy..er..Polis/Amash 2024. There's your Reason approved ticket.
The triangulation is to put Tulsi on the ticket.
I wonder how long it would take for the propaganda machine to turn her into Palin?
27 seconds, tops.
I can see Tahiti from my window
Humorously; the majority of reason writers "reluctantly" voted for Biden.
But the evidence on A.I. and jobs is far from clearly...
Did Skynet write this sentence???
"Don't worry about AI taking your jobs and clearly, they just make lowest-skilled workers even *more* interchangeable." Does seem like something an AI would say.
You anti-Intelligence conspiracy theorists are in the database…
The AI hands of journalism.
> basically leveling them up to work nearly as well as higher skilled workers.
This tells me the opposite of what the author intended.
This doesn’t raise the wages of the low skilled worker. This lowers the value of the higher skilled worker. Because now any turnip can do that job.
Which is exactly what people are worried about.
...it might call into question the "doom and gloom" predictions that this will somehow further hollow out the middle class and massively increase unemployment.
If nothing else we know that glove-making jobs are probably safe from A.I.
What about sex work?
Once the robots match flesh, sex work will be gone gone gone.
The "library of America" project aims "to show that the places of American fiction can't be divided into blue or red states."
This person read 1,001 books written by Americans set in America. The person writing this article decided it was worth sharing the dots representing where each of these books she randomly selected were set, and we're supposed to pretend this is valuable for some reason.
What if 750 of those books she'd read had been different books? The map would have been different. What if she'd only read 500 books? Who the fuck knows, it's all ridiculous and arbitrary.
Great link.
Would Megacity One get one dot in the larger DC metroplex or a dot for every city between Montreal and Miami... were it written by an American?
Before COVID, the American Lifeguard Association (ALA) used to train about 300,000 new recruits a year, 50,000 of which came from J-1 visa recipients.
REASON WANTS TO BLOW FOREIGN COVID RIGHT INTO OUR DROWNING CHILDREN'S LUNGS.
This one got me to chuckle.
Finally.
Texas lawmakers approved a ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities.
Cite?
Did they ban bears in trunks?
I’m told that’s the real danger.
But what if you have a Porsche and have the bear in the frunk? Is that OK?
I mean, it'd have to be an awfully tiny bear...
It would be unbearable.
The anti-DEI trunk bear jokes are all fun and games until hairy lesbians start getting hauled out of the back of Subarus.
Gay bars for large hairy men hardest hit.
Asking for Jeffy, do they come in trunks?
More likely to be in Speedos.
Most likely in your butt.
Seems kinda hard on the elephant.
*enthusiastic golf clap
*bow*
Texas lawmakers approved a ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities.
If only they would outlaw other areas of academic bloat, they might keep their kids' tuition bills in check.
We could dream. Who knows, if this goes well maybe they will.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion course removal will drop tuition enormously.
Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity staffing cuts would reduce tuitions immensely. Fuckin' hell but universities are top heavy dinosaurs these days.
"Texas lawmakers approved a ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities."
I'm guessing the left will try to get the accreditation organizations to declare DEI mandatory or the federal government to make it a requirement of student loans.
Neither students nor business will boycott in any meaningful manner.
Scott Shackford explores what Gadsden flags and pride flags have in common.
They all pair well with thin blue line flags.
The only way will will have unification is by differentiation.
Probably most notable from those comments is our friend Chemjeff Standard-Order Collectivist suggesting that if a science class can have basic information in a chart such as the periodic table, why cant an activist cult group have their flag representing their morals and belief system.
Excellent analysis going on in that thread.
I mean, it's pretty standard fare for activist groups to make a flag for themselves. It's just telling that there needs to be a different flag for every subdivision of every sociologically recognized sexuality type and dozens of variants of each of them each representing a leftist cause du jour.
They take the 'let your freak flag fly' thing literally.
It’s perfectly normal for men to dress up as women and then fuck men and tell young children all about it.
/Jeff
"When its age appropriate, of course!" (Florida law was for 5-9 year olds, for reference)
You must hate free speech. Jeff should definitely be the arbiter of free speech. I'm guessing he would have a hard time finding babysitting gigs, though.
Yes. They read snow white to kids -jeff.
Snow White does 7 Dwarves.
Snow White watches the 7 Dwarves run a train on eachother.
Isn't there just the rainbow flag?
Try to keep up for a change.
Let me guess, he's saying this with the knowlege that any left-wing group should be able to do whatever they want, while any right-wing group will be heavily curated with face-fanning jerimiads about that dark night of facism descending on us.
He has very quickly developed a soft spot for allowing all topics of discussion, and challenging preexisting biases and knowledge.
Of course, this was markedly absent when we were in the eye of the govt propaganda hurricane that was COVID hysteria, and he also knows that the schools and govt wont allow any of the icky right wingers to 'challenge preexisting biases' so its totes safe for him to come down on the side of 'everything is up for discussion!'
It was about a year ago where he was raging against Florida school boards setting standards he disagrees with as he pretends teachers and school boards should be allowed to teach transgendrism to kindergartens. He has no consistency of thought.
And every time someone asks Jeff if that means teaching intelligent design is okay, he loses it.
The funny thing is, Jeffy sounds like a YEC right now.
Even Young Earth Creationists have a solider scientific footing than a lot of Jeff's Transgender and Critical Race Theory garbage.
Please cite a comment where chemjeff expressed his support for collectivism.
Lolz.
His entire body of work.
You going to ask me for a cite that Bernie Sanders or AOC are socialists next?
I'm declaring a new rule for the Reason commentariat. Answers like "his entire body of work", "everything he has posted", and the like are not valid citations.
Instituting a new rule for Mike.
When you declare citations of past comments are creepy you can’t demand citations of past comments.
Also jeff hates demands for citations.
chemjeff radical individualist 11 months ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Fuck you and your demand for citations.
.
That is another Jesse tactic that you deserve to get good and hard.
Look at mike thinking he’s in charge.
He unironically compared transgenderism and alchemy which was hilarious as for it being a reason to not be taught.
Pretty much any leftist ideology is based on gnostic alchemy where you're supposed to be awakened to the Supreme Being you really are once you gain the appropriate level of knowledge. It's quite incredible how such a supposedly unreligious political framework bears so much of a resemblance to Scientology.
Pride flag comes into focus.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10956787/Laurence-Fox-banned-Twitter-posting-swastika-symbol-Pride-flags.html
Caroline Russell, who is also a member of the Police and Crime Committee in the Greater London Authority, wrote on Twitter: ‘I hope the Met Police will look into Laurence Fox using pride flags to create nazi imagery and posting the images on a public platform.
‘This is a hate crime,’ Ms Russell wrote.
“Mr Fox thanked Ms Russell for making his point clear.”
Oh fuck, the own goals get even worse!
The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust added: 'We are appalled to see Laurence Fox's vile tweet this morning with abhorrent use of the swastika.
'Gay men experienced untold suffering under the Nazis, including murder, castration, and medical experimentation.'
"Someone should probably tell them about the Trans movement."
‘Gay men experienced untold suffering under the Nazis, including murder, castration, and medical experimentation.’
"But enough about Mermaids."
They never heard of Ernst Roehm? Head of the SA, of which many were also gay.
I guess the gay old Nazi streetfighter was just a martyr to the cause.
I've also heard of the Night of the Long Knives, when Roehm and the rest of the SA leadership were murdered by Hitler's orders. The Nazis were quite nuts about homosexuality and other so-called sexual "perversions": their leaders' perversions were quite fine (although not to be talked about), but non-party members were sent to concentration camps if perversion was suspected.
I'm just happy that when I was out walking the dog yesterday I saw a Thin Blue Line flag being flown below an American flag.
It is starting to piss me off how many Thin Blue Line flags, Rainbow flags, etc. I see flown with no American flag in sight, let alone being in its rightful place higher on the flag pole.
Cite?
“It’s just a piece of cloth “.
"Meanwhile, military spending cuts were never on the table to begin with."
LOL
#NeoconsForBiden
Now that the military is 2SLGBTQ+WTFBBQ that would be a hate crime.
Now that the military is 2SLGBTQ+WTFBBQ...
...we need a citizen militia. Nobody is coming. We are on our own.
More on the debt limit agreement.
https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_d86da2d6-fe48-11ed-9155-676ee87d0327.html
Lawmakers on both sides have expressed frustration with the concessions made to reach that deal with several suggesting they will not vote to support the debt limit increase. If a deal is not passed by June 5, U.S. Treasury officials say the nation risks defaulting on its debt obligations, hurting the national credit rating, and sending shockwaves through the U.S. economy and the global markets.
The “Fiscal Responsibility Act” extends the debt limit until January 1 of 2025, notably through the next election. Democrats have touted that the agreement does not significantly cut nondefense spending. McCarthy says the plan would freeze for fiscal year 2024 and then increase by 1% in 2025 and touted that the bill takes back $20 billion that was previously appropriated to the IRS as well as another $30 billion of unspent COVID relief funds.
The agreement would also expand work requirements for food stamps for some American adults. McCarthy touted the wins for Republicans, arguing that in the last several debt limit increases, there were no spending cuts of this kind.
However, several Republicans in the House have suggested they will vote no on the deal as currently constructed. They point to an increase in the national debt as the major issue, rallying in opposition to that rising number.
“The D.C. Swamp has proposed the largest debt ceiling increase in our nation’s history, adding $4 trillion to the existing $31 trillion national debt,” Rep. Matt Rosendale, R-Mont, said in a statement after the deal was reached. "The Fiscal Irresponsibility Act fails to cut spending and continues to fund the Democrats’ and Biden Administration’s radical agenda. It is frankly an insult to the American people to support a piece of legislation that continues to put our country’s financial future at risk. Montanans did not send me to Washington to support business as usual, which is why I will be voting AGAINST the Fiscal Irresponsibility Act."
Democrats have blasted Republicans, calling for a debt limit increase without the proposed cuts.
“The Republicans holding the entire world economy hostage unless they get what they want has been an outrageous display of extremist politics,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., wrote on Twitter.
Republicans, though, have pointed to soaring debt and inflation in recent years. The national debt is projected to hit $32 trillion this year, and inflation remains stubbornly high.
Other Republicans shared frustration with the debt increase as well.
“With Republicans like these, who needs Democrats?” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, wrote on Twitter.
Shut the fuck up, Bernie "Three Houses" Sanders.
There's literally nothing "independent" about the greatest jobber in US political history since Adlai Stevenson.
Bernie Sanders: "Nobody needs more than 1 hou-" Aide cuts him off and whispers in his ear:
Bernie's Aide: "Sir, you own three houses. Each one very large and expensive."
BS: "Nobody needs more than 3 houses! It's millionaires and billionaires-" Aide cuts him off again:
BA: "Uhh, sir, you have a net worth in excess of a million dollars."
BS: "It's the billionaires not paying their 'fair share!' that's the problem!"
On a more serious note, the sooner that old communist shitstain shuffles off to the great hippie commune in the sky (which he'll probably still get kicked out of for being too lazy) the better.
His initials are fitting.
Well, there’s a big part of the problem with Sanders. He’s not the kind of guy who will let an aide cut him off before he says something he shouldn’t.
That and being a hypocritical communist. To you lefties, the first part is a problem. The second, not so much.
Safe Harbor.
https://nypost.com/2023/05/29/new-messages-show-bidens-offering-safe-harbor-to-hunter-as-he-flails-over-scandalous-reports/
In 2018, Hunter Biden’s world was collapsing.
The New York Times had run a story on one of his shady deals with the Chinese and his father, then vice president, was pulled into the vortex.
It appears that Hunter was in a free fall and his uncle Jim Biden reached out in newly discovered messages to offer him a “safe harbor.”
There were deals all over the world with foreign figures worth millions and some of these figures had close ties to foreign intelligence or regimes.
As revealed recently by the House Oversight Committee, the Bidens constructed a labyrinth of corporations and accounts to transfer millions from these deals to various Biden family members, including grandchildren.
Nevertheless, Joe Biden repeatedly claimed as a presidential candidate and as president that he had no knowledge of any foreign dealings of his son.
Hunter increasingly looks like the designated defendant of the Bidens — the sin-eater who may have to take one for the team in the form of a couple of tax charges.
Likewise, Attorney General Merrick Garland has seen to that by steadfastly refusing to appoint a special counsel despite references to the president getting a proposed cut of these deals and instructions to use code names for him like the “Big Guy” to conceal his role.
Most recently, an IRS whistleblower came forward to accuse the Justice Department of interfering with the tax investigation of Hunter by “slow walking” the investigation and making a series of decisions that worked to his advantage.
Pluggo assures us the whole thing is about a bar tab.
Well, turd lies.
"Likewise, Attorney General Merrick Garland has seen to that by steadfastly refusing to appoint a special counsel despite references to the president getting a proposed cut of these deals and instructions to use code names for him like the “Big Guy” to conceal his role."
And this corrupt insider was almost a Supreme Court justice. Horrifying to think about.
Just consider how many democrat appointees are corrupt but not caught? I'm guessing most.
Any individual who can stand to sit as a judge and enforce the laws of this nation for years upon its citizens already has suspect morality in my eyes. That pretty much goes for every federal employee as well, now that I think about it…
At least Garland knows what a woman is. We got worse.
Depends on your view of Jackson. We did get better than Garland with Goursch.
Pulitzer Center suggested Math curriculum asks some choice questions:
https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/05/new-reparations-math-is-coming-to-a-public-school-near-you/?utm_source=recirc-desktop&utm_medium=homepage&utm_campaign=river&utm_content=featured-content-trending&utm_term=first
"the Pulitzer Center, a curriculum partner of the New York Times’ 1619 Project, rolled out “Understanding the Racial Wealth Gap,” a suite of lesson plans in 2022 for teachers nationwide to sprinkle into their classroom curricula. Advertised to teachers as enough to filling “2–3 weeks” of programming, the lesson plans focused on two “essential questions”: “How does white rage fuel the racial wealth gap?” and “What are ways that the United States could begin to repair the harm of enslavement, Jim Crow, and other forms of wealth theft from Black Americans?”
Flanked by other “guiding questions” — including “What patterns do we notice about violence and terrorism by White Americans against the Black middle class?” “How is American Capitalism more brutal than other forms?” and “What are reparations and are they actually possible in the U.S.?” — the 2022 suite of lessons seemed to have taken the NEA’s marching orders to full speed.
But it turns out they were just getting started, and last week, the Pulitzer Center’s “1619 Project Education Materials Collection” debuted a follow-up suite of lessons under the banner “Reparations Math and Reparations History,” a “3–4 week” (“15 class period”) tour through pro-reparations programming, all culminating in a mandatory final project in which students will “share their research into the lasting impacts of slavery on the wealth gap for African Americans, and their cases for reparations to descendents of enslaved Africans and African Americans,” including “what math function the U.S. should use to determine and provide monetary preparations [sic].”
I would like to understand how Left Leaning but nevertheless practicing Libertarians expect us to counter this messaging.
These are clearly not good messages. The idea that White Rage is a thing is not libertarian. The idea that American Capitalism is especially brutal is not libertarian. The idea that the US should tax whites to pay blacks for reparations is not libertarian.
Other than eliminating public education all together, what method of keeping this unlibertarian stuff out of schools is acceptable?
I'd suggest going to school board meetings but that's an FBI Watchlisting Offense these days.
I’m fine with legislatures just flat banning it in public schools as a condition of employment. I think it’s both constitutional – employees paid to deliver a specified government message – and also good policy.
Normally wise managers delegate a good amount of discretion to professionals rather than micromanaging, whether it’s teachers, librarians, counselors, etc. That’s why you have them. But if it’s not working out then sometimes you have to intervene, or even hire different ones.
Vote against all school levies.
If we go by Jeff and Mike they want you to ignore it.
If a state bans the curriculum, school boards should be in charge. If school boards ban it, state or teachers should be in charge of it. If teachers are against it school boards should force it. They will always change their proposal to whoever supports this type of work in the classrooms.
It should not be a part of public education. School choice for parents would resolve a lot of it, but not every student has an engaged parent to explore choice.
CUNY law school speaker just ranted about white supremacy and she chose CUNY for standing up against it. She is clearly an activist who will utilize the law to push her activism. Exactly the opposite of a blind judicial system.
If we go by Jeff and Mike they want you to ignore it.
As well as pretty much everyone on the center-right. These people are just not capable of putting up any kind of resistance to a faction with nuclear levels of will to power. People like The Dispatch crowd always think "ideas" and glib comments on the internet will be sufficient to push back that kind of aggression, and they've been proven wrong every single time.
CUNY law school speaker just ranted about white supremacy and she chose CUNY for standing up against it. She is clearly an activist who will utilize the law to push her activism.
Seriously, this shit is how you get a Pinochet or Suharto--the rad-left becomes so aggressive in their determinism that eliminating them become the only option in order to keep some semblance of the existing society even relatively intact.
"Seriously, this shit is how you get a Pinochet or Suharto–the rad-left becomes so aggressive in their determinism that eliminating them become the only option in order to keep some semblance of the existing society even relatively intact."
Not to put words in his mouth but this seems to be what Nardz is saying also. I hate that it might come to that, but it's starting to be inevitable.
I can't disagree.
Yep the gadsen flag which is a symbol for American individualism, ingineuity, and self reliance, VS the pride flag which is a symbol for a cult based solely on who you have sex with.
Yep only Shackford would think they are the same
The Pride flag is as much a religious symbol as the cross, and should receive the same strictures.
I don’t think there is anything wrong with saying that the Gadsden Flag and Pride Flags symbolize a political movement. As does the American Flag, for that matter.
The question is, who decides which political movements get endorsed by the state and indoctrinated into the minds of each child they imprison daily?
What's notable about the "pride" flag is how it keeps having additional pieces of flair added to it since the Floyd riots, apparently in a manic attempt to increase the intersectional alliance and bolster their side's numbers against Evil Disgusting White Supremacy.
"in a manic attempt to increase the intersectional alliance and bolster their side’s numbers against Evil Disgusting White Supremacy."
And with each additional piece of flair, it becomes more clear that the purpose is basically just "Not regular white people". They could shave off a lot of time making them by just writing that
"This pride flag has 37 pieces of flair, and a terrific smile."
"You know, the Nazis had pieces of flair that they made the Jews wear."
Th ed problem is the pride flag doesn't represent a movement but multiple. The original meaning of tolerance has been erased and replaced with the authoritarian demand of forced celebration of whatever the LGBT a activists demand today up to and including denial of reality.
I’ve quoted this before, but I’m re-posting it here because it’s a perfect summation of what the modern left really believes, and why the right’s pushback against it is always framed as “fascism”:
“Liberating tolerance, then, would mean intolerance against movements fromthe Right and toleration of movements from the Left. As to the scope of this tolerance and intolerance: … it would extend to the stage of action as well as of discussion and propaganda, of deed as well as of word…The whole post-fascist period is one of clear and present danger. Consequently, true pacification requires the withdrawal of tolerance before the deed, at the stage of communication in word, print, and picture.”–Herbert Marcuse, “Repressive Tolerance”
if you want to understand why today’s left and their sponsors in both government and corporations are so hell-bent on shutting you up if you don’t go along with them, that’s the cornerstone of their philosophy in a nutshell. It’s absolutely useless to outline their double-standards, because that’s the whole fucking point. Note that the so-called “moderates” on the NeverTrump Right, are happy to enable this as long as they think they’ll be lined up last against the wall, while the bog-standard liberals counsel the fabian rather than accelerationist approach because they know the right will be far more likely to push back hard against leftist overreach.
THREAD: There are members of the GOP claiming Democrats got nothing from the “deal.” Oh really?
1) An uncapped debt ceiling with an expiration date - worth approximately $4 trillion
2) Basically no cuts - a freeze at bloated 2023 spending level
3) ZERO claw back of the $1.2 Trillion “inflation reduction act” crony giveaways to elite leftists for grid-destroying unreliable energy
4) 98% of the IRS expansion left fully in place
5) No work requirements for Medicaid? - and only age adjustments for TANF/SNAP
6) No REINS act statutory requirement for congress to approve huge regulations - just an “administrative” PayGo that the administration will get to enforce
7) No border security - and a deal allowing them to avoid policy riders in the fall
And as far as the student loan thing goes, the Democrats get out of a crazy election promise and get to tell the people that they tricked that it was the Republicans fault.
As usual the GOPe helped bend America over and oiled the Democrats shaft for them to facilitate insertion.
Its all political theater they were never going to stop get a real deal. I often wonder why i even vote anymore.
To vote in a libertarian to end this madness? Or at least kick it into overdrive as the CIA assassinates them.
Trump's a perfect example of what happens when an outsider takes the throne. Unless the libertarian is a Bill Weld type he won't last long.
Screaming into the face of oblivion is mildly cathartic at times.
Until oblivion starts screaming back.
Oh, that's been happening forever.
Killing the desert and releasing stored carbon for the sake of solar power.
https://mishtalk.com/economics/bidens-solar-push-is-destroying-the-desert-and-releasing-stored-carbon
Please consider A Costly Omission in Planning for Climate Change by Robin Kobaly, a twenty-year career as a botanist with the BLM, with a Master’s Degree in biology.
"Most people are not aware of the vast amount of carbon that is captured and stored underground in desert soils."
"If few people realize the intrinsic value of the desert’s carbon contributions, it becomes more difficult to protest when thousands and thousands of acres of desert habitat are scraped bare for solar fields. It appears that the California Deserts may be sacrificed to meet California’s climate goals without even considering the full consequences of doing so. Where will our carbon footprints lead us . . . down a path that leads to a slashed-apart, industrialized desert where throngs of people once flocked for solitude and for vast uninterrupted vistas of an ancient landscape? Let’s not lose this treasure when there is a smarter path forward, including solar panels on rooftops, parking lots, fallowed agricultural lands, and even exposed aqueducts."
The Guardian comments Solar Farms Took Over the California Desert: ‘An Oasis Has Become a Dead Sea’
"He says one project bulldozed 600 acres of designated critical habitat for the endangered desert tortoise, while populations of Mojave fringe-toed lizards and bighorn sheep have also been afflicted. “We’re trying to solve one environmental problem by creating so many others.”"
Experts suggest the mad rush to convert desert to subsidized solar panels may be releasing mass amounts of stored carbon while simultaneously destroying archeological sites in the process.
But it's for the green religion!
His suggestion to put up solar panels in fallow fields is hilarious. He didn’t seem to realize that they are left fallow to give the soil a chance to recover and thus need sunlight.
I'm thinking he's more concerned about the Mojave fringe-toed lizards.
A reminder that in order to provide the solar energy to meet America's current energy needs, it would require prime, tortoise habitat spanning an area larger than the state of Arizona.
And those panels would only be good for 5 - 7 years, so whoever is putting them up best be fuckin' quick about it.
Can you imagine the size of the landfill needed for the scrapped ones after just a couple of cycles?
I can't wait to hear the Greens whining about that one. And they thought the waste from nuclear power plants was a problem.
And that doesn't even get into the pollution created in the manufacturing process.
Or the extra large recycle bins needed to put them out on the curb on pickup day?
I think we're talking 20 foot rollaways at that point.
"What does seem pretty clear is that despite this modest opposition, the Republican Party's commitment to "fiscal responsibility" is still more performative than anything else."
The Republicans hold a bare majority in the House, do not hold the Senate and White House, and the Democrats are screaming bloody murder at what they did have to concede to the GOP in this fight. The bill the House GOP passed was a starting negotiating position. It was not what the final compromise was going to be. Does ENB understand how politics works in a representative democracy? If you are going to dismiss everything that is not exactly what you want as merely "performative", what incentive does the GOP have for sticking their necks out at all on fiscal issues?
The bill the House GOP passed was a starting negotiating position.
Technically I don't think the bill has passed the house yet, and it's not entirely clear to me if they'll have the votes to even pass this pathetic piece of shit. We're so fucked it's not even funny. There's zero chance of any real spending cuts happening. Ever.
He means the earlier bill that passed the house, re-imposed spending limits and raised the debt ceiling. Democrats in the senate did not take up the bill at all.
Ah, my bad, I stand corrected.
Although I do stand by my previous prediction that "[t]here’s zero chance of any real spending cuts happening."
ENB 8s the brand of both sides libertarianism that would rather have no steps than any. But even I'm disgusted at the deal at the end. Let the shut down happen.
"what incentive does the GOP have for sticking their necks out at all on fiscal issues?"
Not sure what you mean. Isn't that what they stand for? One of their principles? Isn't it part of what makes them different from the Dems? A reason given that libertarian types should vote for them?
This isn't gonna turn out like you wanted, example N:
"Supreme Court upholding California pork producer law could affect abortion pill suit"
[...]
"A pig's fate in California may shape the destiny of abortion access nationwide as a federal judge determines how a Supreme Court ruling on pork affects West Virginia's anti-abortion legislation.
The consequences from the six-justice majority opinion held in National Pork Producers Council v. Ross, which maintained California's law banning sales of pork meat that comes from pigs that are "confined in a cruel manner," are already playing out in a legal dispute over West Virginia's ban on a common abortion-inducing drug..."
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/courts/scotus-pork-producer-ruling-impact-abortion-pill-suit
Gorsuch"s dismissal of the California pork producer's case is a infuriatingly condescending:
""They invite us to fashion two new and more aggressive constitutional restrictions on the ability of States to regulate goods sold within their borders. We decline that invitation," Gorsuch wrote.
"While the Constitution addresses many weighty issues, the type of pork chops California merchants may sell is not on that list," the justice continued."
Except the law is more about California attempting to regulate businesses outside of its jurisdiction.
He also has it exactly backwards: they were 'invited' to remove restrictions.
He was objecting to considering restrictions on State powers, not on people.
Ah, yes! "Freeing" the state.
Don't worry, this arguement will go straight out the window the second the abortion pill case reaches the Supreme Court.
Sometimes he seems to be slowly becoming another Roberts.
I can't see that. I don't see how you could strike down this law without emboldening a strong federal government.
As much as I hate the law, if states have ANY right to regulate which things will be sold in their state, then this law has to stay. The solution is to get rid of such stupid laws in your state (and to break up california, to boot).
The condescension in his opinion, not the ruling.
The constitution literally gives feds the powers to properly regulate trade agreements between the states, which is what California is doing. They can set their own standards of producers in states but should not have power over other state producers.
Sounds like a correct opinion.
Yes, California, being a huge market, influences commerce outside its borders, but it is just that: influence, soft power, not coercion. So, it is correct, according to libertarianism, for the Federal government to stay out of it.
And Mike thinks influence isn't coercion somehow.
Yes. California produces almost all pistachios in the USA. Several states merely need to get together and figure out a specific high cost restriction on them.
Hand picked. By legal citizens. With documentation of such. Per nut.
An even better idea, following California’s lead in regulating working environments, outlaw products produced in states where employees are not free to work without joining a union.
"The Biden-McCarthy deal—dubbed the Fiscal Responsibility Act—"/i>
LMAO, haven's seen something named so Ironically since the Inflation Reduction Act.
>>If the debt ceiling isn't raised, the U.S. will have to start defaulting on its debts.
half-truth at best. and shoddy jornolisting
I for one am really shocked, shocked I tell you, to learn that Kevin McCarthy is a spineless quisling. Never saw that one coming.
>>lifeguard shortage
lifeguarding was how to get paid *and* hit on bikini chicks all day long, I can see how this gender-confused generation would shy away from it
We don't have a "gender-confused generation". We have a generation with a subculture of "gender-confused" kids, with the size of that subculture being exaggerated by the right as part of the culture war.
As always, Mike gets it backwards.
Did we expect anything less from the White Knight?
More to the point, he's claiming that an ideology which is presently being aggressively promoted by federal and state governments, as well as major national and global corporations, is just an "exaggerated subculture."
If this is a "minor subculture," I guess what Mike considers to be a major one is a society where every kid has to have their genitals cut off as part of growing up.
Kathy Ireland. Kim Petras.
Kathy Ireland definitely removed all doubt as to gender identity and orientation in my neighborhood. I don't think any 15 year old boys were confused after seeing her.
Actually, the one closeted gay friend from that age probably got confused by seeing her. He didn't figure out that his obsession with penises was more than just an obsession with depictions of penises until he was 17 and graduating... he probably figured since 15 year old him was infatuated by Kathy Ireland, he couldn't be gay.
Nah... she was just that hot.
guessing she's doing 60 right too.
Umm, two peoples’ names… relevance?
Do an internet search for them. Not the standard search, an image search. That might answer your question.
Those two names perfectly sum up my entire point. Not going to think for you.
Maybe those two names sum up the crux of your comment, but your "entire" comment included an exaggeration of the extent of the gender idealogical subculture.
no, it did not. it was absolutely illustrative. not my shortcoming you can't see it.
I am pretty sure it is the left that is claiming that 20-30% of the current kids are genderqueer or transgender, not the right.
The right is either proclaiming numbers that are a fraction of 1% (historically used numbers) or that it is all about wrongly classified mental illness and there is no such thing.
Where does Reason get the stones to write up the debt ceiling deal from the point of view of fiscal conservatives and write it as a failure of Republican leadership to get real fiscal restraint?
There certainly wasn't a strong voice from the editor of reason condemning the Democrat senate for failing to pass the House bill - how many months have they had to take up that bill? Did they ever even take it up? Did Reason ever call out Biden for failing to push that bill forward in the senate? No?
So what are we doing here? How does Reason suddenly find concern for the success of conservatives within the republican party? 5 minutes ago, the concern was that Republicans didn't just pass a debt ceiling raise without any restrictions at all. So this is quite an odd take.
Sometimes Republicans pounce too much and other times they don't pounce hard enough. I leave it to the libertarians at Reason to explain the difference.
Almost every article is written with the premise of "what the republicans did wrong", and the simps here cant imagine why we call it a left wing rag.
I would be happy if it was a left wing rag.
But it is partisan democrat with a schmear of libertarian sauce these days. And democrats lean sort of stalinist these days, so I have a hard time reconciling that.
Plus.... partisan libertarians? What the heck even is that. We are the anti-partisan types. Pedantic? yes. Doctrinaire? You bet.
But partisan? We are normally partisan in the way that house cats are herd animals.
Actually, I agree that the blog post above unfairly lays too much blame on the Republicans.
What a complete moron.... I just saw that he threatened Uganda. I hope all of Africa gets the message and totally rejects his Climate crap just to retaliate.
Even legitimate governments he is now destabilizing. Wake up, Libertarian morons , this unprincipled random old fart is not your buddy.
Who are you talking to, or about, random badly aimed AI bot?
Biden threatened Uganda with sanctions if they don't repeal their anti-gay law.
This one is a real anti-gay law. Like, gay people are criminals. It is so anti-gay that Ted Cruz was ahead of the administration on publicly calling them out and forced Biden to one-up his criticism by calling for sanctions.
Ah. Ok. It was just kinda out of left field. And I don't think anyone here thinks Biden is a friend to libertarians. The four stooges don't count.
Yet Biden also wants to demur to Iran for some reason.
I assume you are referring to President Biden. Where did you get the idea that any Libertarians or libertarians think Joe Biden is our buddy?
I love it when people are on our side and still manage to screw it up.
"We oppose your criminalization of being gay!"
Yay, good job....
"And we will impose crippling sanctions and run a coup if..."
Hold up now....
There are 64 countries that make it illegal to be gay.
But suddenly the US is all over Uganda.
And word has it that the CIA has been working on "regime change" for a while now.....
But sure.. Ted Cruz and Joe Biden suddenly agree, randomly, that this is where we make our stand.
Well, they don't want to piss off the Saudis too much, they already mutually hate Iran, and they want to be at war with Russia. Uganda was just low-hanging fruit.
Most of Africa is on the list. And the Middle East is worse. Asia ain't no great shakes either.
https://database.ilga.org/criminalisation-consensual-same-sex-sexual-acts
meanwhile, in nearby Nigeria, you can get the Death penalty. Same goes for Mauritania on the same continent... and Iran, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
But sure, plant our flag on this one.
Anyone want to buy a bridge??
I also just learned that Brazil legalized homosexuality in 1831,
Dang. Way to be ahead of the curve. Even Germany didn't get around to it until 1969, a couple of presidential terms after the US started legalizing it. ...... and Germany has those crazy fetish sex shows.
Whenever the zeitgeist changes in Germany it always changes big.
And word has it that the CIA has been working on “regime change” for a while now…..
They have enough oil that they might be needing some MoarDemocracy interventions soon.
But suddenly the US is all over Uganda.
And word has it that the CIA has been working on “regime change” for a while now…..
Is that why I was suddenly getting videos of that weirdo DeLovie Kwagala in my YouTube feed?
Clearly the life guard crisis is tearing our country apart. And the MSM is refusing to even acknowledge that it's happening. Thank God for Reason.
I know they are quoting numbers from the industry, but I just have a super-difficult time believing that there are 50,000 life guards on J-1 visas every year. That is just an incredibly large number.
Pre-pandemic we were handing out about 350k of those every year. 15% of people here on training visas are employed as life guards? Really?
And here I thought most summer lifeguards were college kids, off for the summer.
The folks on J-1 visas are largely college kids, grad students, etc.
So that part tracks. But 50k is just a massive percentage. I hired some students on their training visas and they were not working for $15 an hour as life guards. They were making $65k as developers 25 years ago.
Lifeguard is a cool job and it pays OK, but I would expect underclassmen to wait tables and people nearing graduation or in grad school to work in their field for a lot more money.
To have such a huge percentage of all life guards be in the country on a training visa seems really weird. And having such a huge percentage of all people on training visas be lifeguards seems equally weird. Heck, even having 15% of foreign visa holders who have water lifesaving training would be weird, let alone with full lifeguard certification.
So is it just me or is the new twitter community notes feature a fantastic system.
It is a pretty good system.
“If the debt ceiling isn’t raised, the U.S. will have to start defaulting on its debts.” This is a blatant lie that has been pointed out to “Reason” contributors several times – at least once by “Reason” contributors! There is plenty of actual revenue every year to pay the interest on the outstanding debt of the Federal government without raising the debt ceiling. The Federal government doesn’t need to borrow more money to pay the interest now, or even borrow any more money at all ever again. All they need to do is pay the interest on the current obligations first before spending any more money on anything else. Just because Congress authorized spending doesn’t mean the Executive branch is REQUIRED by the Constitution to spend every dollar authorized by Congress. If Congress fails to pass a balanced budget, the proper response by the President is to order the Departments under his authority to limit spending to an amount that is less than the amount of revenues received by the Treasury for that year. This nonsensical misinformation coming even from “Reason” writers who should know better ought to be stopped!
In the financial services industry we have rules that govern distribution of funds. These result in the creation of a "waterfall" that spits out the numbers, usually created in prototype form in a spreadsheet before being handed over to IT for coding into the distribution models.
So in this case, as money comes in, interest on the debt would get the first slice, then other required obligations like Social Security and Medicare, then things like payroll, contracts, etc. then the power bill, then optional spending like congressional travel, new art installations, etc.
In this case, it would be way more complicated because there are revenue encumbrances - Social Security and Medicare taxes go into a separate waterfall. Fuel taxes go to roads, etc.
Still, servicing the debt would come way at the top of the waterfall, and the gamesmanship they play with closing down parks would never happen. (instead, all of the department of education would get furloughed without pay, for example)
instead, all of the department of education would get furloughed without pay, for example
*Dr. Kreiger voice* "Stop! My penis can only get so erect!"
Texas lawmakers approved a ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities.
This is the way. Do that shit on your own time
The debt ceiling resolution also shows that President Biden, as old as he is, can still get things done. You can laugh and make jokes, but the guy is on a roll.
HA HA HA HA HA
You sound just like my colleague, who is a proud and boasting Socialist.
M4e sounds like a socialist? How strange, I can't imagine why.
you cant be serious
Unfortunately, I think he is serious, so let's call him Shirley.
As usual, the government ratchets up another notch.
My main complaint is the lack of engagement if you are a nobody.
On Reason, if you post, everyone sees it. On reddit, the same thing happens, at least at the start.
But on Twitter, the algorithm decides who sees your post. So even if you get in at the beginning of a discussion, maybe only a few dozen or a few hundred people see your post, even if it is in response to a post that will eventually be seen millions of times.
Meanwhile, over at lowly reddit, if you have a good point, upvotes will lift you to the top and you will be seen by everyone on the thread. Your prior good or bad acts have no impact. The post stands on its own.
I liked the meta-moderation system at Slashdot for this function. Anyone could get a highly rated comment and get traction. And nobody had a megaphone that was so loud that it would overcome the downvotes of a crappy post. So the discussion was self-policing.
Reason is small enough to survive the lack of a moderation system, despite the drag on quality that is provided by our resident trolls. But a moderation system works better, especially as you get bigger.
Having dedicated moderators (like reddit) or official censors (like everyone else until recently) is objectively bad, even if it is sometimes practically worse to live without any moderation.
It was Veronique who criticized it as not perfect enough.