Reason.com - Free Minds and Free Markets
Reason logo Reason logo
  • Latest
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Crossword
  • Video
  • Podcasts
    • All Shows
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
    • The Soho Forum Debates
    • Just Asking Questions
    • The Best of Reason Magazine
    • Why We Can't Have Nice Things
  • Volokh
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
    • Donate Online
    • Donate Crypto
    • Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
    • Torchbearer Society
    • Planned Giving
  • Subscribe
    • Reason Plus Subscription
    • Print Subscription
    • Gift Subscriptions
    • Subscriber Support

Login Form

Create new account
Forgot password

Government Shutdown

Looming Deadline

Plus: Nuclear reactors, space firsts, Fani Willis' love life, Trump sneakers, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 2.23.2024 9:30 AM

Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests
Schumer | Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
(Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom)

Congressional shutdown? A girl can dream!

Today, the federal government will start preparing for a partial shutdown, as two government funding deadlines loom—March 1 for one set of agencies, and March 8 for the rest—that will possibly not be met.

It's possible that yet another stopgap bill will be agreed to, in much the same way Congress got itself out of this pickle back in September. Oh, and also November. Oh, and also January. In short: Congress is hobbled by dysfunction right now and keeps struggling to proactively put together spending bills in advance of deadlines.

Legislators currently disagree on foreign aid, specifically whether the U.S. ought to shell out more funding for the war effort in Ukraine, as well as border control. One flank of the Republican Party also advocates massive spending cuts—1 percent across the board!—to try to get the big-picture budgetary situation under control. These are not new tensions, but rather ones that have been somewhere between boiling and simmering for the better part of the winter. (More from Reason's Eric Boehm on this.)

"I think the odds [of a shutdown] are 50-50 at this point," Rep. Patrick McHenry (R–N.C.) told CBS News. The thing is, government shutdowns are little more than an act: Though they pack a dramatic punch, and are disruptive to many, plenty of agencies continue to provide services and they don't end up saving the federal government very much money at all.

A shutdown would, for example, pause trainings for new air traffic controllers, but keep existing ones at work. It would not halt administration of benefits for veterans, but it would temporarily pause the maintenance at Veterans Affairs cemeteries. Food stamps would continue to be sent out and food safety inspection workers would stay on the job, but most National Park Service sites would close down. Loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration would probably be delayed.

But, by and large, shutdowns are not invitations to truly reconsider the role the federal government plays in our lives. They're not opportunities to reflect on which agencies and programs we actually need—to the extent that we need any of them. They're perceived as painful and semi-embarrassing for legislators, even if they don't affect very much. They generate headlines (like this one, whoops). Eventually, Congress comes together and somebody concedes something and yet another supersized ream of taxpayer dollars gets blown right through. Rinse and repeat.

This time is a little different, though, because Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) is currently traveling through Ukraine—funding for which has been a source of major disagreement, particularly in the House—and has "said he hopes to show how congressional foot-dragging on more aid has hurt Ukraine's efforts on the battlefield and to appeal to House Republicans to take action before it's too late," per The New York Times. Sooner or later, Congress will need to figure out where it stands on Ukraine funding.


Scenes from New York: The company that runs the city's ferry service, Hornblower, filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday. "This will not affect NYC Ferry service whatsoever," said Hornblower CEO Kevin Rabbitt. "In fact, this deal injects new capital into the parent company, while eliminating debt unrelated to ferry operations, which will allow the system to continue its record growth across the five boroughs."

But the NYC ferry system, wonderful as it may be, is pretty unsustainable: Each rider pays $4 per trip but is subsidized by the city to the tune of about $10 per trip. If riders were forced to bear the true costs, maybe the ferry service would be less of a money pit, and we could remain assured that it will continue to operate.


QUICK HITS

  • All three of the Democrats hoping to be elected to the U.S. Senate by Californians hope to shut down the state's last nuclear power plant—proof that, even though Diablo Canyon power plant was recently saved, with regulators allowing it to continue operating until 2030 instead of shuttering next year, there's still a strong anti-nuclear contingent in the state. More from pro-nuclear activist/model Isabelle Boemeke:

Hey folks, it's not the 1970's anymore. It's ok to say you support nuclear energy.

Just a reminder that over 50% of voters in California were in favor of keeping Diablo Canyon open.

My prediction is that in about 5-10 years being anti-nuclear energy will be as bad of a look as… https://t.co/hJmwAcmWDh

— isabelle ???? (@isabelleboemeke) February 22, 2024

  • Federal Reserve officials are saying they're going to be cutting rates this year, just…not this part of this year. And maybe not anytime soon. OK.
  • Vice will no longer publish on Vice.com and will lay off hundreds of employees:

In a memo to staff, Vice CEO Bruce Dixon announces hundreds of layoffs and that the company will no longer publish on Vice dot com. He also says VMG is in advanced talks to sell Refinery29. pic.twitter.com/Xc9tl8uoYE

— Max Tani (@maxwelltani) February 22, 2024

  • Relatedly, meditations on link rot and how maybe the internet isn't forever:

with the vice rumors sending a new batch of journalists scrambling to archive more than a decade's worth of work, i've been thinking a lot about link rot and the insidious ephemerality of digital media

the internet is forever, except when it's not, and that's kind of terrifying

— paris martineau (@parismartineau) February 22, 2024

  • "Nex Benedict, a 16-year-old Oklahoma student who identified as nonbinary and preferred they/them pronouns, died on February 8, a day after a fight at Owasso High School. It is unclear whether the injuries that Nex suffered in the fight contributed to their death," writes Reason's Jacob Sullum. "But in a story published on Wednesday, The New York Times implicitly blames the altercation on an Oklahoma law that requires students to use restrooms that correspond with the sex 'identified on the individual's original birth certificate.' Details that the Times omitted cast doubt on that framing."
  • "A private lander on Thursday made the first U.S. touchdown on the moon in more than 50 years," reported the Associated Press, "but managed just a weak signal back until flight controllers scrambled to gain better contact." Pretty awesome to see this done by a private company vs. NASA. (Other space-tech advancements made news this week, too, courtesy of Varda.)
  • Check out the latest episode of Just Asking Questions which features none other than the lovely Michael Moynihan, one-third of The Fifth Column and formerly of Vice.
  • This past weekend, former President Donald Trump unveiled new merch: $399 high-top "Never Surrender" sneakers. Joe Biden's campaign team responded with arguably the most cringe clapback of all time: "Donald Trump showing up to hawk bootleg Off-Whites is the closest he'll get to any Air Force Ones ever again for the rest of his life."
  • The Cut has a theory about Fani Willis, the Fulton County district attorney who brought Trump and associates up on racketeering charges for election interference and who had apparently slept with one of the prosecutors she had hired to be on the case: Really, black women just can't win in America, and her competence is being questioned because of her skin color.

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: Don't Let Crime Fears Undermine Americans' Rights

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

Government ShutdownGovernment SpendingCongressFederal governmentPoliticsChuck SchumerSenateLaw & GovernmentNew York CityReason Roundup
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Hide Comments (280)

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.

  1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Congressional shutdown? A girl can dream!

    Don't even bother.

    1. Eeyore   1 year ago

      Until the jobs are eliminated with no back pay - this is just shutdown theater.

      1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

        What? Even with Trump's new boy in place as Speaker of the House?

  2. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Today, the federal government will start preparing for a partial shutdown...

    Theater kid bureaucrats, activate! PUT ON A SHOW FOR US.

  3. But SkyNet is a Private Company   1 year ago

    Fuck Chuck Schumer

    1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

      You like them ta-tas, eh?

    2. Moonrocks   1 year ago

      Fuck Chuck Tumor

      Fixed.

  4. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    One flank of the Republican Party also advocates massive spending cuts—1 percent across the board!—to try to get the big-picture budgetary situation under control.

    They'll settle for spending increases all around, though.

    1. damikesc   1 year ago

      Is it not amazing that a government that costs TRILLIONS to run does not even have 1% of waste to cut? Never thought that much cash could be handled THAT efficiently, but learn new things.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        An interesting phenomenon is that annual revenues tend to outpaced the spending from 5-7 years prior. Holding spending level for 5 -7 years would give revenue a chance to catch up.

        1. DesigNate   1 year ago

          Do you want us all to die? Twice?

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            Again?

            1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              I've lost track, how many times have we died again?

    2. Oafish   1 year ago

      They’ll settle for additional borrowing, that is.

  5. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    If riders were forced to bear the true costs, maybe the ferry service would be less of a money pit, and we could remain assured that it will continue to operate.

    Only the undocumented would afford it!

    1. Fats of Fury   1 year ago

      Will Hornblower CEO Kevin Rabbitt be put on trial for misrepresenting the value of his ferries?

      1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        I would support that if the sentence included making him change his name to Horatio.

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          This joke probably would have worked better if the company was named Rabbit and the CEOs last name was Hornblower. Should have gone with something about loving the rainy nights on reflection. I apologize.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

            Some of us got it and chuckled.

            1. The Margrave of Azilia   1 year ago

              I think they want the public to associate their company with Horatio Hornblower.

              "Steady as she goes, Mr. Bush! Batten down the mizzen-mast, splice the main brace, fire a broadside at that French vessel. England expects every man to do his duty, and anyone who doesn't...I'll give him one-third of British naval tradition, you guess which third."

  6. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    They paved office space and put up a charging lot...

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/absolutely-crazy-vacant-la-office-tower-be-torn-down-just-30-new-ev-charging-stations

    The trend emerging for older towers is a complete tear-down. However, building a new office tower is no longer a viable option, considering the US market has years of elevated supply overhanging the market.

    So, the trend at play is to tear down older towers, but what comes next?

    Well, X user Triple Net Investor, citing a recent note from real estate firm CoStar, pointed out that a 68,000-square-foot office tower at 8121 Van Nuys Blvd. in Los Angeles is slated for demolition.

    What comes next might be surprising. And it's not a tower, but actually, the very real possibility of a charging station for electric vehicles.

    "Add electric vehicle charging to the list of new uses envisioned to replace underused offices across the United States," CoStar said.

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Even if electric car technology isn't there yet, Telsa's supercharging network is actually a huge gamechanger that hasn't been really noticed.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

        I couldn't resist the lyric parody though. 🙂

        1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago (edited)

          No, no, it was good.

          I was just thinking on how gamechanging Starlink, Falcon 9, Starship, Neuralink and the Tesla supercharger network are the other day, and your post triggered my meditations again.

      2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        Supercharging stations are the only realistic way to accelerate adoption and until we start seeing Buccees-style charging plazas and neighborhood supercharging stations, I am going to say that it isn't really happening. Home charging has insurmountable issues. The biggest being that electrical grids cannot handle millions of individuals charging on demand. Once it hits a certain threshold, home charging will either require powerwall-type battery storage or charging stations that are centrally controlled to spread out the load over time and by location.

        As adoption increases, electric cars will need to be supercharged during the day when solar and wind power are available.

        1. BYODB   1 year ago


          As adoption increases, electric cars will need to be supercharged during the day when solar and wind power are available.

          I can't tell if this is sarcasm or not.

          1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

            LOL! If only it were. The power grids in the Midwest already struggle during the evening in the summer. They have made amazing advances in power storage, but it is resource intensive and at some point will hit the wall of diminishing returns. Direct charging on demand at home will not an option after a certain point.

            Is anyone fooled that the eventual rationing of electricity for proles is a not an intentional feature of a New Green economy? The wealthy will still be able to afford the personal storage needed to charge on demand.

        2. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

          We should be decelerating adoption. Even stopping it. EV’s will help wreck our economy, all to satisfy insane demands of climate cultists.

          They’re also bad for the environment.

    2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      Better turn off the nuclear plant so there isn't the power to charge cars there.

  7. Longtobefree   1 year ago

    "They're not opportunities to reflect on which agencies and programs we actually need"

    Instead, we should reflect on which agencies are actually allowed by the US constitution.
    (all others being reserved to the states)

    1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      So, not the DEA or ATF, then. Or probably the EPA. And lots of others.

  8. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago (edited)

    Hey folks, it’s not the 1970’s anymore. It’s ok to say you support nuclear energy.

    But the green monster needs fed.

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      #TeamMothra over here.

    2. Dillinger   1 year ago

      no chance lol have you seen the Red Sox roster?

    3. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

      The green monster is not credible. It’s incredible, and hulking.

  9. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    Unions want freedom to bribe officials.

    https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_c759779a-d197-11ee-8c7d-9fdde40bac64.html

    National labor unions have taken up the cause of a former Indiana mayor convicted twice of taking a $13,000 bribe after steering city contracts to a local company.

    At issue is whether a section of the federal bribery statute criminalizes gratuities – payments in recognition of actions a state or local official has already taken or committed to take, without any quid pro quo agreement to take such actions.

    The U.S. Supreme Court has taken up the case of former Portage, Indiana, mayor James Snyder this session and its decision could have significant implications for public officials across the country along with prosecutors, unions, criminal defense attorneys and taxpayers.

    Prosecutors contended that when it came time for the city to buy garbage trucks, Snyder rigged the bidding process to make sure the contracts went to Great Lakes Peterbilt, a trucking company owned by brothers Robert and Steve Buha. Great Lakes Peterbilt got two contracts with a total value of $1.125 million. Three weeks after the second contract, Great Lakes Peterbilt sent a $13,000 check to a defunct company that Snyder owned. Snyder then moved most of the money to his personal account. When the FBI asked about the $13,000, Snyder said it was for consulting services he provided to Great Lakes Peterbilt. Snyder was eventually convicted of bribery twice in two trials.

    Unions such as the Laborers' International Union of North America and International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 AFL-CIO have filed friend-of-the-court briefs in support of Snyder.

    The Laborers' International Union of North America said in its brief that the statute is so broad that it threatens to "chill legitimate political activity" such as campaign contributions and other interactions with elected officials.

    The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers also has filed a brief in the case.

    A veritable rogues gallery.

    1. Sevo   1 year ago

      Surprised the SEIU hasn't stuck its nose in there.

  10. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Federal Reserve officials are saying they're going to be cutting rates this year, just…not this part of this year.

    October surprise!

    1. Yuno Hoo   1 year ago

      Why this mealy-mouthed bs has to be revered as some kind of guiding gospel eludes me. How about shutting up until the rates are actually changed, or -- probably better -- getting out of the knob-turning 'business'?

      1. shadydave   1 year ago

        You would think when the story we were fed about how well the Federal Reserve would work failed to materialize, some discussion might occur as to its overall utility. Other than Ron Paul, no dice.

  11. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Vice will no longer publish on Vice.com and will lay off hundreds of employees...

    "Woking hard or hardly woking?"

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      They can put those ideals to work writing code... Oops, that's AIs job now.

    2. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

      Learn to weld.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Is that like coding?

    3. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      I hear the military is short of their recruitment targets.

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

        The pen journalist keyboard is mightier than the sword drone keyboard.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Ha

    4. damikesc   1 year ago

      Funny how Tim Pool seems to be the only one who worked for them that is doing much of anything these days.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Think I’m going to try his coffee.

    5. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

      I hope they all starve to death. Although I’m sure they won’t. I just feel sorry for their new coworkers when they finally get hired to do real jobs elsewhere. As I’m sure they’re all entitled. Insufferable pieces of shit.

      Just like our pals here, like Sarc, Pedo Jeffy, Pluggo, etc..

  12. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Relatedly, meditations on link rot and how maybe the internet isn't forever...

    I'm going to hurry up and write a lot of bullshit and as evidence for whatever I'm selling I'll link back to vice.com. Future generations will just have to take my word for it.

    1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      I went *Whew!* when Xtube went belly-up. The Internet not being forever can be a good thing!
      🙂
      😉

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

      Wait, what about archive.is????

  13. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    ...The New York Times implicitly blames the altercation on an Oklahoma law that requires students to use restrooms that correspond with the sex 'identified on the individual's original birth certificate.'

    Is that a problem for the nonbinary?

    1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

      Anyway, I'm beginning to think the NYT has a certain view it's going to stick to no matter what.

      1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

        That NYT reporter should probably do a story on Vice.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          The NYT should go the way of Vice. Chapter 7 would be good.

      2. Minadin   1 year ago

        NYT is lying on multiple fronts in that story. I know, shocking - they normally hold themselves to such high standards.

        https://nypost.com/2024/02/22/us-news/nonbinary-student-nex-benedicts-death-was-not-caused-by-injuries-from-school-fight-police/

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

          Whoa I assume democracy has now died.

        2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          "I know, shocking"

          Truly unbelievable.

        3. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

          Somebody provided paywall free access to the NYT article about the Eagles and Hotel California lyrics yesterday and it piqued my interest. The article was unnecessarily lengthy, rambling, and incoherent. Everything I expect of the NYT.

          It boiled down to: Don Henley loaned some songwriting notes years ago to an author who didn't return them. Some fancy guys who got their hands on the notes were trying to establish providence so they could sell them for big bucks and were informed that Henley wanted them back. Instead of returning the notes, they exchanged emails with the author who told them to just say that the documents were obtained from Glenn Fry, because Fry is dead and can't dispute it. Those guys are now on trial for fraud because they committed fraud.

          The article includes a lot of name-dropping like a Boomer trying to impress kids at a music festival with his knowledge of rock history. Sad.

          1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

            One of the more twisted things to come out of that was Henley's alleged dalliance with a 14-year-old at the party where she OD'd on coke. He had claimed for years that he just took the fall on that one to protect the road crew, but apparently he testified during the trial that he was feeling like crap and ended up calling an escort service for a hooker, and then this kid showed up.

            1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              Just out of curiosity, was she driving a flatbed Ford in Flagstaff Arizona?

              1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

                Easy drive from Winslow, even if she did slow down to take a look at him.

                1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                  Fuck I got the damn lyrics wrong to one of my all time favorite songs.

        4. Oafish   1 year ago

          Don’t worry the fact checkers will trumpet the truth! (ツ)

    2. BYODB   1 year ago

      It seems like a valid question. Since they claim neither sex, one presumes their choice of bathroom is totally irrelevant.

      1. Eeyore   1 year ago

        Maybe one of them had a long line?

        1. BYODB   1 year ago

          As an aside, I've used the women's restroom before plenty of times and no one said a damn word about it. It's always been if the men's room is occupied, because before the current day it was generally understood that if you had to go it was better to use the wrong restroom than take a shit in the middle of the store and it had no bearing on what sex you actually thought you were.

    3. Eeyore   1 year ago

      Literally dying, because every building doesn't have 1000 different bathrooms - one for each gender.

      1. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

        And a ready supply of small children that they can expose themselves to.

  14. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

    Wait until they publish Nex Benedict's assailants were black girls.

    Trans > POC girls?

    1. Minadin   1 year ago

      She was the assailant.

      1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

        Flinging water earns a beating?

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          It's a good way to start a fight. She chose to initiate a confrontation when outnumbered, likely in a constructed area, with few egresses. The beating was largely the result of her not thinking through her actions.

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

            Yeah. However excessive the consequences, they were entirely predictable.

          2. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

            I get what you're saying, but my personal retaliatory code would be to soak her, not beat her, especially with superior numbers. Maybe even an old school swirly.

            1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

              You have a sensible, proportional response. But this is a society where "What are you looking at?" is met with indiscriminate gunfire, notwithstanding the fact that the shooter is surround by thousands of people including children. It's a part of the culture.

            2. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

              You're an adult guy, not thinking like a tween/early teen girl. Even tween/early teen guys do things like swirlies. We, as guys, might just fight water with more water, and she'd have walked out looking like a drowned rat.

              I remember seeing a fight between girls in high school. It wasn't exactly pretty. Where two guys might start using fists and wrestling, these two gals were using anything they could get their hands on to beat the living shit out of each other.

            3. Dillinger   1 year ago

              girls don't do proportional. or playground.

            4. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

              Regardless of the proportionality, it does harm the narrative of “They assaulted her for being trans.” No, they reacted disproportionately to an ACTION that she took.

              It doesn’t give them a pass because beating her up was wrong, but it means the spin on the story is incorrect.

              1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                And one of the cardinal rules of initiating a confrontation is to have an exit strategy. When you don't, bad shit can and will often happen. It's a bathroom, likely one exit, maybe two. If things go bad escape and retreat become extremely difficult if not impossible. But then again, I'm like a lot of veterans, even though I didn't see combat, I subconsciously identify my exits when I enter a room, prefer to sit with my back to a wall, preferably out of the line of sight from the entrance to the room etc.

                1. R Mac   1 year ago

                  I’m not a veteran at all and I do all those things in public.

                  1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                    Not trying to imply it's only a vet thing. It's kinda an inside joke with some aspects of the veterans community, kinda vets would rather stand then take the open seat that's not backed to the wall. Oh and the cute for just about any ailment is drink water, 800 mg Motrin and clean socks.

                    1. R Mac   1 year ago

                      All good. Not really sure when/how it became a thing with me, at some point when I was a young man just started doing it, and then it became a habit. My wife knows I want to sit there so she always leaves that seat open.

                      Annoying thing is my MIL will automatically take the “power seat” when we’re out with her. I suspect it’s because she was pretty high up in commercial banking which was a male dominated field for most of her career. When that happens I play a game with myself where I memorize everyone in the restaurant I’ve got my back to,

                    2. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

                      Totally "stable"...

        2. Longtobefree   1 year ago

          Well, flinging 'a beverage' starts a whole lot of bar fights.

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            When I was at a party in college some dude threw a cup of beer in my face as he was leaving. I chased him for a block and beat the shit out of him. I was pretty consistently good at deescalating potential fights, but being assaulted in the face, even if in a minor way that causes no real harm, is a good way to get a violent reaction from people.

    2. Moonrocks   1 year ago

      They'll have to duke it out for their place on the totem pole, just like the Jew/Muslim spat. The wonders of intersectionalism at work.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        Jews tend to lose in any intersectionality challenge. E.g., The Dyke Parade kicked out jewish dykes for daring to display a star of David flag.

        ------------

        The D.C. Dyke March, a social justice-focused parade on June 7 for, in its words, “queer liberation,” announced that it would not welcome any “nationalist symbols.” That included Israeli flags and American flags, the only two mentioned specifically in their ban. More controversially, rainbow flags with Jewish stars in the center were banned because, according to organizers, they look too much like Israeli flags and are thus a symbol of “violent nationalism.”

        Palestinian flags were allowed.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          Palestinian flags were allowed.

          Would a banner stating "Chickens for Colonel Sanders" be appropriate in the parade? Asking for a friend.

          1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago (edited)

            OT : For the longest time, I believed Colonel Sanders was a WWI veteran. I learned only within the past year that he was granted an honorary title known as a Kentucky Colonel.

            1. Dillinger   1 year ago

              my pops sat next to him on a plane in the 70s some time & he signed a little stock pic of himself for me ... guess he carried them around

          2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

            A little digression but domesticated livestock actually have several advantages over their wild relatives. Guaranteed feed, shelter, health care, protection from predators, less competition for mates. Yes, in the end they are slaughtered, humanely by law, but everything dies.

    3. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Nobody will publish the race of the assailants if they're black.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        That's how you will know they are black. Like the KC parade shooters.

        Given the proximity of LEOs and full video of everything, I told my wife that I will be assuming it was not a "mass shooting" but almost certainly someone who dissed someone and someone started banging away indiscriminately, and also predicted the demographics involved. All based on the fact that the information was not forthcoming. Ann Coulter used the same logic to arrive at the same conclusions.

    4. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Wait until they publish Nex Benedict’s assailants were black girls.

      Is that likely? That town is something like 75% white.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Isn’t it a safe assumption when the assailants aren’t identified at this point?

        1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          Social media is claiming they are black and it's why their race has not been published.

          1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

            Skin color is the most important thing.

            1. R Mac   1 year ago

              No, but it’s important to point out hypocrisy.

            2. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

              Yes it is, to democrats.

        2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          Sure, but this is also minors in this case as well--their names would be left out of the reporting because of that, anyway.

          In this situation, we don't have the video, like that white kid in Vegas who got beaten to death by a group of black kids.

          1. Minadin   1 year ago

            Also, as far as the NY Post story details, the other girls in the fight haven't been charged with anything, so it might not be proper to release their names for that reason as well.

            I did read that the girl who died had been suspended from school for her role in the altercation - I don't recall reading whether anyone else was or not.

    5. BYODB   1 year ago

      If the other girls race was not mentioned, there is your answer.

      1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

        Prejudice just works.

    6. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago (edited)

      They’re blaming Libs of TikTok. And I wouldn’t be surprised if they also decided it was Trump’s fault.

  15. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    "the most cringe clapback of all time: "Donald Trump showing up to hawk bootleg Off-Whites is the closest he'll get to any Air Force Ones ever again for the rest of his life."

    Woah! Buttplug's a Whitehouse speech writer. Mind blown.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

      Makes sense. Don't they have a number of folks on staff who buy photos of cheese pizzas online?

      1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

        Even the term "Clapback" is cringeworthy to me. That should have died, almost, but not quite, as fast as "On Fleek."

  16. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    A private lander on Thursday made the first U.S. touchdown on the moon in more than 50 years...

    ...one giant leap for capitalismkind?

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      upon video review, the touchdown stands as called.

    2. Eeyore   1 year ago

      Except for the huge government contract.

      1. Oafish   1 year ago

        It’s called crony capitalism. Now, does it eventually become like the airline industry? That’s the belief.

  17. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    "Donald Trump showing up to hawk bootleg Off-Whites is the closest he'll get to any Air Force Ones ever again for the rest of his life."

    The average voter is going to have no idea what any of that means.

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Why can't he just give away a copy of his book at the $400 donation-tier level like everyone else?

      1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        He'd likely be prosecuted and the usual suspects will say the difference is that Biden voluntarily did something while Trump fought back. Ergo Trump deserves it because he doesn't roll over and play dead.

        1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          Orange man is indeed very very very bad.

  18. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Really, black women just can't win in America, and her competence is being questioned because of her skin color.

    At this point it seems like the markings have almost entirely rubbed off that card.

    1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Really? I mean, if I found out my defense lawyers had evidence that the DA was sleeping with the special prosecutor she appointed, while he is getting paid exorbitant rates and another of the special prosecutors donated the max amount to the same DAs election fund before being appointed, and my lawyers didn't bring this up, I'd be reporting them to my respective state bar association for dereliction of duty. But yeah right, it's her skin color and not her actions that raised questions (that any first year law student should be able to identify). Fuck, someone who has seen one episode of Perry Mason and dropped out of high school could see why the defense raised these questions and it's nothing to do with race. BTW, her race doesn't protect her from the same ethical and professional standards every other lawyer is expected to live by (especially tax payer funded prosecutors). These idiots defending her by screaming racism need to get bent.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        Fani Willis, laticia James, Tiffany Henyard mayor of Dolton IL, Latoya Cantrell. I really thought Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton had perfected the race grift but they were amateurs compared to the ladies.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          Black female Democrats have proven incredibly proficient at using taxpayer money and NGO donations as a personal piggy bank. It seems to be their best skill set, along with incentivizing black men to pursue other races for relationships.

          1. BYODB   1 year ago

            I think black men bailing on black women as soon as they get pregnant means that black women are probably well aware of how great those dudes are.

            White women and Latina women fetishize them and probably don't know how unreliable they are in general yet.

            This is what I've heard from every black woman I've worked with, and rest assured I've worked with a whole lot of professional black women in the healthcare industry.

            It's...really quite interesting to hear what they have to say on the subject. I think out of dozens, if not hundreds, the most common complaint I've heard is they simply don't get those child support payments because the dude has at least one kid with several different women.

            Perhaps it's not a mystery why so many abortions are black children.

            1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

              Thomas Sowell has it right. It isn't a Black thing. It is the same grifter mentality of the immigrants who came across in the early 1800s. The Irish and Welsh and Italians who came fleeing famine and persecution unlike the previous waves who came seeking opportunity.

              If you look at all men with a similar history of oppressed ancestry, poverty, and poor opportunities, you will find a correlation of absentee fathers and criminal behavior. The commonality being that they justify their poor behavior based on the circumstances of their birth. It is glaringly obvious to anyone that lives in a border state. Young Hispanic men in San Antonio are not any different than young black men in Detroit or young white men in Philadelphia. The only difference is the percentage of each population in similar circumstances.

              It isn't a race thing. It is a victim thing. Which is ironically the reason that race relations are getting worse when they were getting better. Culture has seized on victimhood and is elevating it to ever-greater heights.

              1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

                And there is no bigger Alpha Victim than Donald Trump.

            2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

              White women and Latina women fetishize them and probably don’t know how unreliable they are in general yet.

              One of the more awkward moments that I've experienced in my life was during a visit to the Broncos' spring training camp when I was in high school. We were waiting outside the locker room after practice to get autographs, and standing outside with us was this young blond woman with a mixed-race child. We ended up chatting briefly, and it turns out that the kid is wide receiver Vance Johnson's (and it was obvious, the boy looked like his Mini-Me; dude had some strong genes), and she's basically trying to catch him to ask about child support and why he hasn't seen his son.

              That was a real eye-opener and broke my naivete in regards to these pro athletes not always having their shit together and just being general assholes, as opposed to their media image.

    2. Super Scary   1 year ago

      "Really, black women just can’t win in America"

      What about sort-of black women? Are they winning?

      1. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        Rachel Dolezal recently lost her teaching job, so no.

        1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

          Yeah, but she has that lucrative Only Fans gig to fall back on!

          Takes all kinds, I guess.

      2. Dillinger   1 year ago

        Karmela results pending.

    3. Oafish   1 year ago

      Often the product of DE&I. Most know the truth and whisper behind their backs. So sad for the truly competent that I work with who are often lumped in with them. I’ve heard some of their complaints on the matter.

  19. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    This past weekend, former President Donald Trump unveiled new merch: $399 high-top "Never Surrender" sneakers. Joe Biden's campaign team responded with arguably the most cringe clapback of all time: "Donald Trump showing up to hawk bootleg Off-Whites is the closest he'll get to any Air Force Ones ever again for the rest of his life."

    That was after the Biden campaign tried to claim that the crowd was chanting "Let's go Biden" when they were actually saying "Fuck Joe Biden".

    https://twitter.com/BrianMcWilliams/status/1759610545815388561

    Progressives are not only delusional but deaf as well. The crowd is clearly chanting “fuck Joe Biden.” Not even debatable.

    in response to this from "Biden's Wins":

    BREAKING: Donald Trump arrived at Sneaker Con and was met with not only boos but also let’s go Biden chants. This is amazing.

    Amazing? More like delusional.

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      There was even a "Let's go Bran..." that was cutoff.

    2. mamabug   1 year ago

      Even on the most charitable listen, that first word doesn't come anywhere close to a 'leh-ts' sound.

  20. Moonrocks   1 year ago

    Just a reminder that over 50% of voters in California were in favor of

    Since when has that mattered?

    1. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

      It might matter if they stop voting for the criminally insane.

    2. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      California is well known for legislating via "Propositions".

      Just not well known wherever you live, apparently.

  21. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    I just typed in a Google query on my phone and the top two choices are pro censorship!

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Type in "Why gulags..." The results are similar.

      I clicked on "Why were gulags created?" and the 1st answer is "to turn the Soviet Union into a modern industrial power and to collectivize agriculture."

      No bullshit.

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

        I quit using google.com years ago. Every once in a while, I try again when duckduckgo seems to flub the results, but google just gets worse and worse. Last time I tried (HVAC near me because the furnace is reluctant to turn on) all I got was sponsored ads from far away. Not a single unsponsored search result!

        1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

          I stopped using DuckDuckGo about two years ago when the CEO announced they were updating to downrank search results associated with “Russian disinformation.” I only use Brave search right now, though occasionally I still do have to return to google.

          1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

            Sadly, Google is still better for technical searches, so I have to use it at work quite a bit.

  22. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'But the NYC ferry system, wonderful as it may be, is pretty unsustainable: Each rider pays $4 per trip but is subsidized by the city to the tune of about $10 per trip. If riders were forced to bear the true costs, maybe the ferry service would be less of a money pit, and we could remain assured that it will continue to operate.'

    But ferry boat rides are a human right! And to achieve ferry justice we have to require rich people to pay for those who are anti-money. And only DEI high-scorers get to steer.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      "" If riders were forced to bear the true costs, maybe the ferry service would be less of a money pit,""

      Riders would probably find a less costly way and ferry service would end.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

        That's what's happened with other modes of transportation. The train nuts don't like to hear it, but planes and cars were better and cheaper for getting people to destinations than the trains ever were.

        1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

          Exactly.

          Making things faster, cheaper, or more convenient is precisely what profit motive is all about.

          Trains are great -- where trains are great. But that sure ain't when there's 1500 miles and a couple of mountain ranges between where I am an where I want to go. I'll take 4 hours over 4 days, please.

  23. Mother's Lament   1 year ago (edited)

    RNC Security Officer Who Was First Responder To Jan 6 Pipe Bomb Says Official Story ‘Makes No Sense Whatsoever

    Capolino found the pipe bomb in question just a few moments before protestors started entering the Capitol building. The device was hooked up to a 60-minute egg timer, but it had been in its location since the previous night. Almost like it was part of a setup of some kind, right?

    “I was two feet from it. Why would someone construct a device with a one-hour kitchen timer, place it [at] 8:30 p.m. the night before, if they intended for it to detonate 16 hours later?” Capolino then asked…

    But Capolino said that whether or not it was a real bomb, the FBI’s story that it was placed at 8:30 p.m. on January 5 is true, at least for the Capitol Hill Club. He personally retrieved, reviewed, and handed over to the FBI, RNC footage showing the suspect. “We have the guy walking through the back alleyway at that time,” he said…

    Capolino said that although he provided video to the FBI immediately after the event, the FBI showed up at the home of the security officer who was manning the booth six months ago to reinterview him, and asked for his supervisor’s information, “but I never heard from them.” The FBI initially released only a couple of grainy pictures of the suspect, despite the existence of many more videos and photos. The still photos made it impossible for people to identify the suspect by the way he walked, Capolino said…

    The FBI has arrested more than 1,200 people for charges as minor as trespassing at the Capitol on January 6, using high-tech techniques like “geofencing” cell phone records. But despite video showing the suspect using a cell phone on January 5, an FBI official told Congress that it could not find the suspect in cell phone records, perhaps because a batch of cell phone data had gone missing…

    Journalist Julie Kelly reported that the Capitol Hill resident who found the bomb near the RNC, Karlin Younger, worked for an FBI contractor. The news outlet Public on Monday quoted a security analyst questioning Younger’s demeanor in the video of her discovering the bomb, saying she “never expressed any worry” and “leaned down and placed her ear near the device to listen if the timer was ticking…

    1. Super Scary   1 year ago

      Let's just get this one out the way early:

      Kenneth Capolino didn't kill himself.

      1. Ron   1 year ago

        not yet anyway

  24. Sevo   1 year ago

    "...Fani Willis, .... who had apparently slept with one of the prosecutors she had hired to be on the case..."

    You can drop the "apparently" both parties admit the fact, and it gets worse:
    "Judge Overseeing Trump’s Georgia Case Donated To Fani Willis Campaign Before Appointment"
    [...]
    "Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee, who is overseeing the case against former President Donald Trump, made a small donation of $150 to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ campaign prior to his appointment.
    [and]
    McAfee also formerly worked under Fani Willis when she led the complex trial division in the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office, according to the New York Times..."
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/judge-overseeing-trump-s-georgia-case-donated-to-fani-willis-campaign-before-appointment/ar-BB1iFw40

    BTW, McAfee's wife kicked in another $200, but they're still only a little bit pregnant, right?

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      None of that matters, because TRUMP!!!

    2. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   1 year ago

      "McAfee also formerly worked under Fani Willis"

      McAfee's not the only one who worked under Fani Willis. She got on top because she thought Nathan always fucks up.

  25. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

    If not saving shitty articles is terrifying to you... well your fucked.

  26. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

    Hey Republicans in Congress,

    If Javier Milei, a new comer without a political machine, can come in and cut ministries in Argentina, what will your excuses be this time around for more spending?

    1. Yuno Hoo   1 year ago

      "Why, to Save Democracy, of course!"

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

        Yeah, (D)emocracy.

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Shit, he did more in his first 48 hours in office than any "small government conservative" did in the last 50 years.

      1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

        This. Such a great example of everything Republicans have claimed they stand for.

        1. BYODB   1 year ago

          It's almost as if Republicans don't actually want the gravy train to end. It's quite profitable to be the controlled minority party, after all.

      2. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        To be fair, Bill Weld never really got the chance.

    3. Dillinger   1 year ago

      hold my Chamomile! ~~ Speaker J

    4. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      "what will your excuses be this time around for more spending?"

      The arms manufacturers in their stock portfolios.

  27. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

    It is unclear whether the injuries that Nex suffered in the fight contributed to their death," writes Reason's Jacob Sullum.

    HER death. Jesus. It's not that hard.

    3rd person pronouns dont belong to the person. They are used by other people when talking ABOUT that person. You can use the right pronouns and appropriate adjectives about anyone no matter what silly game he or she wants to play

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

      Worst abuse I saw was in an Analog sci-fi story about aliens. I've been reading sci-fi stories involving aliens for years and years and don't remember a single bit of confusion, yet this story couldn't get enough their/them abuse in. What was really bad was having multiple aliens, and never being clear whether the plural was really plural or just the singular substitute. I canceled my subscription over that.

      1. Moonrocks   1 year ago

        their/them

        It's Marklar you bigot!

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Not to mention that the parents used her actual name in her obituary, not the assumed one, and she will be buried using her actual name.

      The psychopaths in the Body Dysmorphia Cult don't get to override that, anymore than cutting off their tits or their dick magically makes them the opposite sex.

    3. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      English is really hard. We should just switch to Spanish. Oh wait. Even inanimate objects have a gender. Ok we'll just fuck with English until everyone gives up and plays along.

    4. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Language is fluid, but change is organic rather by diktat. You can't demand people change language because you want them to. Also, generally, when language changes it's an addictive not subtractive role, e.g. a word may get a new meaning or definition but the old meaning and definition also remains, as does usage. Some definitions may fall out of common usage but they rarely completely disappear. Dictated language change has a poor history of acceptance and thus long term usage and compliance. That's why preferred pronouns are largely ignored, resisted and ultimately doomed to failure.

    5. Fats of Fury   1 year ago

      I'm confused again. Is it her/him/them/they/it? MTF? FTM? WTF?

      Was it a dude who was beat up by three girls? Was it death by fire extinguisher?

      1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

        You are not confused.
        Men are men.
        Women are women.
        That doesn't change.
        Period.

      2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        It was a chick that thought it was neuter.

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          Will Riker could have cured her of that, while likely breaking the prime directive in the process.

    6. Oafish   1 year ago

      Or avoid the linguistic abomination altogether. “…Nex suffered in the fight contributed to Nex’s death.” See how it’s done Jacob?

  28. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

    Democrats need to get straight with nuclear power. If slowing climate change is important people need alternatives to fossils fuels. I support renewables but that is not going to fill the need. My generation grew up fearing nuclear power because of bombs and was further scared by some disasters Chernobyl and Fukushima most notable. I hope the generation following the Boomer have more open minds to nuclear power.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      Perhaps it's not about using the best technology, and instead it's about enriching elitists pushing wind and solar.

      1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

        Is that any different than enriching elitists pushing fossil fuels.

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          Yes, because most people actually utilize fossil fuels because they're convenient, cheap, reliable and fairly efficient. Thus, offering fossil fuels actually meets people needs and wants, unlike misnamed renewables (they really aren't renewable because the harnessing technology, e.g. panels, fan blades etc, are not renewable), which require heavy subsidies and government intervention in the form of regulation and laws, just to even appear competitive.

          1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago (edited)

            All of this.

            Take away the coercive power of government, and wind/solar would be a niche market with a reliance on fossil fuels. They have to use government’s power to prop up these alternatives. That’s what makes it more despicable than the companies that use and rely on fossil fuels.

            1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              Additionally, I would like to point out that some of the biggest players in wind and solar also tend to be the same corporations that dominate fossil fuels, but they invest in the former for a very different reason, not to make profit, but to reduce regulatory and tax obligations and for subsidies that their real money maker, fossil fuels production, aren't eligible for.

              1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

                You are correct that power companies work both ends of the energy supply pipeline. Both fossil fuels and renewables so my suggestion that elites exist at both ends and would likely also be the case for nuclear power. It is worth noting that while the average person cannot drill and refine oil or build a nuclear power plant in their back yard, they can in many cases add solar and wind power to their property. The average person can also burn wood if they have access to a large supply of trees. Most people would still need to supplement their energy needs, but I do a few off-grid people. They tend to be rugged and well educated. Rugged as they accept the limitation of being off-grid. Well educated to understand the systems that allow them to be off-grid.

                1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

                  while the average person cannot drill and refine oil or build a nuclear power plant in their back yard, they can in many cases add solar and wind power to their property

                  Solar? Yes, with a few caveats about how you need sufficient storage capacity if you're not connected to a grid where you can also transmit.

                  Wind? Almost nobody can actually build a sufficient windfarm on their own property that can run their house. And it's a money-losing enterprise because wind power is not cost-efficient.

                  1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

                    I can only offer antidotal evidence, but one off-the-grid couple I know told me that the addition of a wind turbine to their property greatly enhanced their energy supply. The turbine plus their existing solar panel array gave them enough energy to meet their needs and minimized any need to use their auxiliary propane generator. This was a rural property. I agree that a wind turbine would not be acceptable in most urban settings.

                    As to storage, the couple used batteries for storage. They reported that in the years in the house that had three sets of batteries with each set using fewer but bigger batteries. The last set being forklift batteries that weight in at several thousand pounds a battery.

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

          At least the fossil fuel folks don’t pretend they’re saviors while they’re enriching themselves.

        3. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

          How much gov money is going to fossil fuels compared to green energy?

          The fossil fuel elitists are getting rich because we pay them for a product.

          Also the fossil fuels people are not trying to use fossil fuels as a means to remake society.

          1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

            btw, I'm a big fan of green energy. I just don't believe in shoving down it people's throats. When it is ripe for use, we will naturally transition to it.

            1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              Eventually the cost of finding and extracting fossil fuels will exceed the cost of green energy, and that's when people will naturally transition.

              1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

                Or when green energy provides an advantage over fossil fuels.

                ""Eventually the cost of finding and extracting fossil fuels will exceed the cost of green energy,""

                With green energy you still need to find and extract materials. If the task of finding and extracting increases, it will do so for green energy too.

                1. BYODB   1 year ago

                  Keep in mind that the raw materials to build solar panels are actually more difficult to get than oil, and they are most certainly finite just like fossil fuels.

                  The whole endeavor is nonsense from start to end.

                  As a bonus, just about all of those minerals come from...China. As in around 98% of them worldwide last I checked.

                  Also, last point, none of these jagoff's have any idea what removing that much kinetic energy from the surface wind patterns will do. Admittedly probably nothing, but for a group that are literally shitting their pants over a minor increase in a necessary trace gas like CO2 you'd think they would at least try and model that...yet they have not.

                  1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

                    Silicon isn't rare. You may be thinking of the materials for batteries.

                    1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

                      It's not the silicon, it's the electronics. Solar panel production is notorious for producing toxic waste.

                    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

                      Sigh.. here is the list of minerals for panels.

                      Aluminum
                      Cadmium
                      Copper
                      Gallium
                      Indium
                      Lead
                      Molybdenum
                      Nickel
                      Silicon
                      Silver
                      Selenium
                      Tellurium
                      Tin
                      Zinc

                    3. R Mac   1 year ago

                      Lol. You realize it’s not required for you to be ignorant, right sarc?

              2. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

                Btw, the winning green energy may not be solar or wind. But something we have yet to figure out.

                1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

                  Nuclear.

                2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

                  I agree.

    2. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

      If slowing climate change is important

      Well there's the rub innit?

    3. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

      They are not going to because Democrats are nihilistic misanthropes, if they are not just plain stupid.

  29. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

    While people can focus on not getting budgets, funding, and appropriations completed, people can see also see the achievements of the Republican lead House which was able to elect two different speakers, impeach a cabinet secretary in only two tries, and show that we don't want Hunter Biden to be President.

    1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Hmmm, so how many budgets have the Democrats passed? Or tries to get passed this year? Oh, and which party voted unanimously to oust the speaker of the house while only a small percentage of Republicans thus voted for ouster? Tell again why you're trying to lay all the blame on Republicans?

      1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        I think we know why.

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          I see some gray box shit poster that I have informed multiple times he's muted for being a hypocritical ass hat also found the need to reply. I would be surprised if it is anything other than attacking the Republicans and the usual Trump hatred (I mean by this time it's clinical how far his psychosis of hatred for Trump is) he normally posts, but don't care enough to unmute the jejune moron. And yes, I'm attacking him personally because he is worth nothing but my utter detest because of his rampant hypocrisy, dishonesty and frankly boring tediousness.

          1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

            I'm sure some lying shitbag will be along shortly to tell you that's exactly what I said.

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              Full retard. Glad I didn't miss anything.

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

            Sarckles is pointing out that Republicans have held congress for a whole whopping year and three months now, so it’s actually all their fault.

            Remember, though, Sarc’s totally not a Democrat (or a lying shitbag). Just ask him, he’ll tell you.

            1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              Democrats get all the blame when they're in the majority while Republicans bitch and moan about not being able to get anything done. Now that they're in the majority and it's still all the fault of the Democrats? Poor, powerless Republicans. They must be terrible if they can't get anything done in the minority or in the majority. What a bunch of pathetic losers.

              1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago (edited)

                You are a fucking idiot. Nothing is getting done because neither side is willing to compromise anymore. Considering the Republicans hold the conservative position and the Democrats hold the let’s-ditch-everything-we-did-that-got-us-to-this-point-and-destroy-our-economy position, I am comfortable with the Republicans drawing that line.

                The Dems and the socialists have gotten a lot of shit through that never should have been allowed. Meanwhile, they have done nothing to dismantle the war machine. Because they will need it later.

              2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

                "Now that they’re in the majority and it’s still all the fault of the Democrats?"

                They've been in power in congress only for a year and a half, shitbag, and they don't hold the Senate.

            2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              Figured it was something along those lines. BTW posting a response to someone who has already stated they are ignoring you and despise you is just a desperate cry for attention. Let me add narcissist to the list of traits that have led me to despising him.

              1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

                posting a response to someone who has already stated they are ignoring you and despise you is just a desperate cry for attention

                He isn't responding to you. He is responding to the universe....

                Personally, I come here to participate in conversations with the people who are here and not to score imaginary points or collect $0.50.

                1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                  And, as most people know, the universe really doesn't care about his response or mine. I prefer conversations also, but can only stomach so much disingenuousness, that's why there is a short list of muted individuals, and not all of them from the left. I applaud those who actually take the time to engage these people, despite it being a largely thankless task, and fraught with tedium as they rarely, if ever, post original arguments.

                  1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                    And I am far from perfect. I digress. I post esoteric long posts. Terrible about making sure I post long posts in paragraphs. Not above being insulting towards others. Tend to be a bit egotistical. Sometimes to quick to join in the pile on. Didactic. Pedantic. Argumentative for the sake of argument. Etc.

                  2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                    Speaking of gray boxes bigots... Should know better, sent up the troll signal, like the bat signal but you're much less happy with what shows up and it doesn't help anyone.

            3. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

              The Republicans don't hold Congress though, they only have the House.

      2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        Maybe because they hold the majority in the House?

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Like shrike, you seem to be ignorant on how legislation progresses.

          1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

            A completely unexpected revelation, truly.

  30. TJJ2000   1 year ago (edited)

    Look at all that sugar on the narrative. Democrats are NEVER against MORE spending no matter which party it’s origin came from. The only battle going on is some Republicans trying to LIMIT spending and some Republicans trying to cherry-pick their LIMITS.

    Heck the only resistance from Democrats is, as it has been for years, the spending isn't enough. The spending is never enough. The national will go completely bankrupt (practically is) and Democrats will still insist the spending wasn't enough.

    1. Oafish   1 year ago

      Or the resulting inflation.

  31. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    The New York Times implicitly blames the altercation on an Oklahoma law that requires students to use restrooms that correspond with the sex 'identified on the individual's original birth certificate.' Details that the Times omitted cast doubt on that framing."

    Yeah, I'm absolutely shocked that the New York Times, one of chemtard's Most Trusted News Sources, lied by omission and that the body dysmorphia cult leaders like Alexander Caraballo (who is is man, and will never be a woman) were trying to make Dagny into their Transgender Matthew Shepherd.

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      "one of chemtard’s Most Trusted News Sources"

      Right between Mother Jones and The Nation.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

        Same motherfucker links and quotes Salon, and then has the gall to call it a reliable, unbiased news source.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          He used this link yesterday. It reads like complete unhinged TDS fantasy.

          https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/05/sean-hannity-donald-trump-late-night-calls.html

  32. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago (edited)

    Modern America–Goblina slut gets deep-dicked and knocked up by some random guy, has a kid, decides she can leave the 16-month-old child in the playpen alone, with no babysitter, for a week and a half to go visit her useless eater friends and relatives, with no father present to take care of the child:

    An Ohio mother pleaded guilty to aggravated murder after she left her 16-month-old daughter home alone in a playpen for 10 days last summer so she could go on vacation. Kristel Candelario, 32, now faces a life term and will be sentenced on March 18 in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court in Cleveland. She also pleaded guilty to child endangerment as part of a plea deal with Cuyahoga County prosecutors, who agreed to dismiss two murder counts and a felony assault charge… Prosecutors said Candelario returned to her Cleveland home located at West 97th Street on June 16, 2023, and found her daughter had not been breathing. The Cleveland Division of Police and the Cleveland Division of Fire responded to the scene and pronounced Jailyn dead shortly after they arrived. ‘The 16-month-old child was extremely dehydrated at the time of death. The 16-month-old child was discovered in a Pack-N-Play pen on a liner soiled with urine and feces with soiled blankets,’ the prosecutor’s office added. An autopsy by the Cuyahoga County medical examiner´s office determined that the toddler had died of starvation and severe dehydration.

    This follows that social media clout-chasing nutcase in Utah being convicted for massive child abuse violations, and that asshole who beat his daughter to death because she accidentally peed herself in the car. In the good old days, these people would have been swinging from ropes, not getting lifetime accommodations on the taxpayer dime.

    1. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

      Jesus Christ, stories like this make me ill. I sometimes get anxiety dreams that I forgot the feed the damn dog for a day. Treating an infant like this.

      1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

        It's just a clump of cells.

        1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          Eighth trimester abortion.

    2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      Damn, WTF. Why did that retard's parents let her breed? Surely if she was so developmentally disabled as to think a 16 month old could be left alone for 10 days, she must have required a minder herself.

  33. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    Democrats to FORCE a vote on $61BILLION Ukraine aid by pleading for help from a handful of Republicans after Navalny's death sparks US to slap 500 new sanctions on Russia
    'Coming soon: Democrats will introduce a discharge petition to bring Ukraine funding to the House floor,' Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., wrote on X
    Biden administration has slapped Russia with 500 new sanctions after the death of Vladimir Putin dissident Alexei Navalny in prison

    I've seen speculation prior to this article that Navalny was actually killed by western spook assets for the purpose of using his death to brute-force a funding bill to Ukraine, as Putin had already neutralized him by putting him in jail. Looks like that can't be entirely dismissed now.

    Also, it's probably not a coincidence that his wife was speaking at the Munich Security Conference and all these articles were coming out on him right before he was killed, with his wife being immediately designated as the new "resistance" asset. Irrespective of how he died, this is part of the color revolution playbook the glowies like to run.

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      With Ukraine being unable to win a war of attrition with Russia, this looks like a last gasp effort to get a final money grab for the officials before things ultimately collapse.

      1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

        Many thought Afghanistan could not win a war of attrition with the USSR.

        1. Dillinger   1 year ago

          Afghanistan had Jawas.

        2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          Afghanistan was never a war of attrition, in the classical sense. It was a low intensity conflict, focused on stabilization operations out of strategically located strongholds. So basically the same shit as Vietnam and our own misadventures in Afghanistan. While you can focus on body count, a true war of attrition is not solely about killing your enemy but also draining the capacity to resist, hold land and eventually win a break out once the enemy can no longer resist, more like what happened to Germany in the fall of 1918. World War One is the classic war of attrition.

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            I’ve mentioned this here before, but I highly recommend The Afghan Campaign by Steven Pressfield. It’s a historical fiction novel about Alexander’s army after conquering Persia before moving on to India. It’s well researched and does a great job showing the difference in fighting there versus traditional warfare.

            1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              May have to look it up haven't read fiction in quite awhile.

        3. Oafish   1 year ago

          Afghanistan didn’t have trading partners in China, India, N Korea, Iran, Iraq, Brazil, and others who want their mineral and technological wealth. All the sanctions really will accomplish is a hard push to the axis of evil.

    2. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Yeah so far all of the crippling sanctions on Russia haven't done shit. GDP growing at 3 percent, 9 percent going to defense and national debt a lot lower than ours. But I'm sure it will work this time because Navalny.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        Our betters practice foreign policy like Hollywood makes movies these days--keep doing the same useless shit that doesn't work, in the vain self-deluding belief that it will if you just brute-force it.

        Not a surprise, considering they're led by the same group of radical left activists these days.

    3. R Mac   1 year ago

      It was my initial assumption.

    4. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      So you think it is more likely that Western spooks killed Navalny, deep within Russia, than Putin ordered him killed, after his first attempt to have him killed in 2020 failed?

  34. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>A shutdown would, for example, pause trainings for new air traffic controllers, but keep existing ones at work.

    anything to get the professionally underqualified away from the vector monitors.

    1. BYODB   1 year ago

      What's your vector, Victor?

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        thank you.

  35. R Mac   1 year ago

    I’d like the no election fraud crowd to answer what the purpose of requiring absentee voters to indicate their party on the envelopes of absentee ballots in a far left state is?

    New Washington State envelopes for mail-in ballots. NEVER had to disclose my party declaration on the OUTSIDE of my ballot before. Don't feel really good about this....

    https://twitter.com/rachstew13/status/1760777150150668689

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      one bin for (D), another bin for (D)

    2. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

      This isn’t for use in a general election, though. It’s a primary. I cannot get real offended with this for sorting purposes. There are two separate elections actually happening in a primary; one for each party’s nominations.

      If this got sent out a general election we’d have major issues.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        We’ll see.

        1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          The US will never again have a fair election as long as unrestricted mail-in voting continues to be allowed.

    3. mamabug   1 year ago

      It's for the primary. In WA, anyone can vote in either primary, but you can only vote in one. I'm not sure if you mark dem/rep if you can vote in the other one, but I vaguely recall having to do this in the polling place when we still had them.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        South Carolina is also an open primary state, but only allowed to vote in one or the other primary. Unlike most states, SC does not have the two primaries at the same time this year due to DNC dicking with things. So the Democrat primary is over and done with.

        Republican early voting is happening now, with the actual day-of being Saturday, February 24.

        Haley's campaign has been running ads that say that any registered voter may vote in the primary. Which is false, since only registered voters who have NOT voted in the Democrat primary are eligible.

        It's not at all clear to me how people who have previously voted in D primary will be prevented from also voting in the R primary. We're just supposed to trust them, it seems.

      2. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

        Wisconsin has an open primary also and when voting in the primary you can only vote within the party. The ballet will ask your party affiliation and that can be used to save you ballot. Voters are expected to vote for all candidates within a party. Voters are not allowed to vote for a Democratic candidate for one office and a Libertarian for a second office. If you vote outside one party your ballot is voided by the tabulator. If however you pick a party, say Republican and vote for Nikki Halley for President, but pick a Libertarian for Senator, the tabulator will accept choices in the Republican section, so you don't lose your chance altogether.

        Parties typically hate open primaries because the opposition party can cross over. Poll workers dislike open primaries because it's confusing to voters and we get the most errors in partisan primaries, typical people voting for candidates in more than one party. It not a frequent problem but you can expect a few errors each election day.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          Illinois has an open primary as well, but you request one of three types of ballots from the poll worker: Republican, Democratic, or Non-Partisan. There's no way to vote for say a Republican choice for president and a Democratic choice for senator as they do not appear on the same ballot. The R & D ballots contain their primary candidates as well as any non-partisan elections and referendums. The Non-Partisan ballot will only contain the non-partisan elections and referendums, but no primary candidates for any party.

    4. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      Do you get it now?

  36. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Sooner or later, Congress will need to figure out where it stands on Ukraine funding.

    Congress is not a being.

  37. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Democrats hoping to be elected to the U.S. Senate by Californians hope to shut down the state's last nuclear power plant

    on my office wall is a poster from 1/13/78 Grateful Dead show in Santa Barbara - The Pacific Alliance Benefit Concert to Stop Nuclear Power

    1. Sevo   1 year ago

      They weren't called "dead heads" for nothing.

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        have no fear for atomic energy likely the line that got Marley killed.

        1. Sevo   1 year ago

          Very old Dead joke:
          "What did one dead head say to the other when they ran out of dope?"
          Shrug...
          "This music SUCKS!"

    2. Oafish   1 year ago

      Which thus accelerated climate change? And now they have a new plan? Me wonders…

  38. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Vice will no longer publish on Vice.com and will lay off hundreds of employees:

    see what happens when everyone stops giving a fuck about what you put up for discussion?

  39. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>The Cut has a theory about Fani Willis

    Six months' cash in my house says it's the wrong take.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      A lot of cash in your house means you are a drug dealer.
      - - every cop ever

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        ... plus anything we find in your car, felon ~~ Civil Forfeiture Dept.

    2. Fats of Fury   1 year ago

      The Cut's financial adviser was scammed out of 50 grand.

      https://www.foxnews.com/media/scammed-financial-advice-columnist-defenders-mocked-critics

      Laura Bassett, a Cut contributor who covers politics and abortion rights, is probably the same caliber.

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        geez I would have taken Charlotte Cowles out to dinner first at least

  40. Sevo   1 year ago

    BTW, side-by-side articles on the front page of the Chron this morning:
    1) "Tearing Down Dams on the Klamath River to Return Lands to Tribes"
    2) "State Water Officials Are Limiting Allocations to 10%-15% of Requests"

    1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago (edited)

      That’s like the front page of the Anchorage Daily News several years ago: Global Warming set to make Alaska winters warmer. Sidebar story: Anchorage experiencing coldest November in history. Really makes you wonder about editors.

  41. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

    Venezuelan illegal migrant kills girl in GA

    "Ibarra, 26, illegally crossed into El Paso, Texas, in September 2022 and was released from U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody, according to three ICE and DHS sources cited by Fox News. ICE said it had no official comment on the matter, Fox News reporter Bill Melugin posted on social media Saturday morning.

    After police arrested the Venezuelan national on Friday, Ibarra was charged with malice murder, felony murder, aggravated battery, aggravated assault, false imprisonment, kidnapping, hindering a 911 call, and concealing the death of another. Ibarra neither attended UGA as a student nor knew the victim, authorities said."

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      As usual, they're lying. He did not cross "illegally" if he applied for asylum. That is the law.

      "Information from the U.S. Attorney’s Office said Diego Ibarra “is a citizen of Venezuela and was processed for expedited removal but claimed a credible fear of return to Venezuela. He was consequently released from immigration custody pending adjudication of his claim for asylum on April 30, 2024.”"

      The only question is whether they're lying only to us, or also to themselves: Democrats lie to us; Republicans lie to themselves.

      1. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

        Pretty damn good case for completely shutting down the broken asylum process.

  42. jagjr   1 year ago

    "The thing is, government shutdowns are little more than an act: Though they pack a dramatic punch, and are disruptive to many, plenty of agencies continue to provide services and they don't end up saving the federal government very much money at all."

    this is actually more optimistic than reality. shutdowns and our constant use of CRs COST MORE. new starts are delayed, costing more due to inflation when they finally do start. existing efforts cannot be executed to spend plan, costing additional administrative effort (& dollars) as well as incremental costs to stop and start tasks. contracts need to be renegotiated based on updated costs, sucking more money. etc, etc, etc. it is far from "saving very little" - it costs the taxpayer more every time we do this.

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      It's akin to a tragedy of the commons: Yes, it costs "the taxpayer" more in the end, but individual politicians gain each time they do it.

      And arguably, if theater is what the voters/taxpayers want (more than, say, "good government"), that is exactly what they deserve.

  43. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    Pretty weak, KAR.

  44. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    Use your real screenname, KAR, not this sockpuppet one that you keep changing. De-capitalizing "Lynn" isn't fooling anyone, doofy.

  45. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    Lame, KAR, lame.

  46. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    I'm not positive, but I think KAR was DOL before he got chased off for bring a lying knob. He since decided to sock his revenge.

  47. R Mac   1 year ago

    Pod is also probably one of his old socks.

  48. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    However, if the media coverage hurts your side it’s a good thing.

    You mean like when left-wing teachers molest schoolkids?

  49. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    Show us on the doll where the Stake President touched you.

  50. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    Go be a cocksucker somewhere else, KAR. Don't you have another dead cop's family to dox again?

  51. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    Speaking from experience?

Please log in to post comments

Mute this user?

  • Mute User
  • Cancel

Ban this user?

  • Ban User
  • Cancel

Un-ban this user?

  • Un-ban User
  • Cancel

Nuke this user?

  • Nuke User
  • Cancel

Un-nuke this user?

  • Un-nuke User
  • Cancel

Flag this comment?

  • Flag Comment
  • Cancel

Un-flag this comment?

  • Un-flag Comment
  • Cancel

Latest

Obama Adviser Jason Furman on Biden, Neoliberalism, and Keynesian Economics

Nick Gillespie | From the July 2025 issue

The Federal Government Owns Too Much Land. Selling It Helps Rural Communities.

Jack Nicastro | 6.20.2025 5:37 PM

A Judge's Order Freeing Mahmoud Khalil Is Yet Another Loss for the Trump Administration's Immigration Agenda

C.J. Ciaramella | 6.20.2025 4:41 PM

War With Iran Could Create Millions of Refugees

Fiona Harrigan | 6.20.2025 4:00 PM

The 9th Circuit Rejects Trump's Audacious Claim That He Can Use the National Guard However He Likes

Jacob Sullum | 6.20.2025 2:30 PM

Recommended

  • About
  • Browse Topics
  • Events
  • Staff
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Media
  • Shop
  • Amazon
Reason Facebook@reason on XReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeApple PodcastsReason on FlipboardReason RSS

© 2024 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

r

Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

This modal will close in 10

Reason Plus

Special Offer!

  • Full digital edition access
  • No ads
  • Commenting privileges

Just $25 per year

Join Today!