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Federal Reserve

Holiday Stress Test

Plus: AI energy boom, Biden vs. Nippon Steel, and more...

Peter Suderman | 12.26.2024 9:30 AM

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Seal of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve | Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom
(Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom)

Banks are Fed up: In 2010, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, a major law regulating large financial institutions. The goal of the law was to prevent another financial crisis. Among the law's many provisions was a requirement that the Federal Reserve perform "stress tests" to determine how big banks would perform in another, hypothetical crisis. 

But like so many elements of Dodd-Frank, the exact details weren't spelled out. Instead, Congress left others to figure out the particulars. Since then, the Fed has performed capital adequacy analyses as part of the test, and has used those analyses to require banks to maintain certain levels of capital. 

Get your morning news roundup from Liz Wolfe and Reason.

Get your morning news roundup from Liz Wolfe and Reason.

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To make those determinations, the Fed uses various models and scenarios to determine a bank's performance in a crisis. How do those models work? What sort of scenarios? Well, like an unopened Christmas present, that's something of a secret. In July, CNBC reports, a consortium of financial institutions "accused the Fed of being in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act, because it didn't seek public comment on its stress scenarios and kept supervisory models secret." Unwrap those stress test models! 

So, on Christmas Eve, a group of banks and business groups sued the Fed, arguing that the process needs to be more transparent. The banks are trying to eliminate the stress tests, the suit claims. Instead, they just want the rules and requirements to be clear and logical. The existing system, they argue, "produces vacillating and unexplained requirements and restrictions on bank capital." 

The Fed was already moving in this direction. Just one day before the lawsuit was filed, the Fed announced that it would implement changes to the stress test program, allowing banks to provide comment and feedback on the models it uses, perhaps along with other transparency measures. 

But the Fed's shift may not have been entirely voluntary. The Fed cited an "evolving legal landscape" for the move, which is another way of saying that the Supreme Court has made it somewhat more difficult for bureaucracies to engage in shady business. As Reuters coyly noted, the decision "followed recent court rulings that have significantly changed the framework of administrative law in recent years." 

What's the opposite of low-energy? On Christmas day, the front page of The New York Times website linked to a report worrying that incoming President Donald Trump might scrap clean energy "investments"—read, federal spending—put in place by the Biden administration, specifically by pulling back on subsidies included in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

But whether Trump will be good or bad for clean energy is a separate question from whether he'll continue to push the Biden administration's subsidies-first approach to green tech. 

On the contrary, it's possible that in the next few years, we'll see a clean energy boom driven by market demand rather than by central planning. As a fascinating article in The Wall Street Journal says, "President-elect Donald Trump's enthusiasm for artificial intelligence and cryptocurrencies could have an inadvertent effect: buoying clean-energy businesses he bashed for years." 

AI tools like ChatGPT and cryptocurrencies like bitcoin need a gargantuan amount of energy. This means that pretty much any source that can deliver at a competitive cost will be valuable. This is somewhat counterintuitive for those who understand everything through a political lens. As the Journal article notes, "the likelihood that Trump could inadvertently trigger a surge of investment into clean energy runs counter to fears the sector is in for a reckoning." And Trump, while not always an entirely reliable narrator, has pushed for more energy production in order to compete with China on AI and other energy-intensive tech. Meanwhile, AI visionaries are investing in nuclear, and electricians are flocking to AI boomtowns. Power to the people?


Scenes from Washington, D.C.: It's dead here this week. The city feels like a ghost town. But I do have a new puppy, and he's very, very cute.

Big staffing announcement at the newsletter.

I have a new assistant, a new researcher, a new barback.

He's an 8 week old bullmastiff, and his name is Huckleberry. pic.twitter.com/2OgDvmvGVp

— Suderman (@petersuderman) December 18, 2024


QUICK HITS

  • Thirty-eight people died in a passenger jet crash in Kazakhstan. Russian air defense systems may have been responsible.
  • Welcome to Musktown, Texas.  
  • The Democratic brand is in such big trouble that at least one New York Times pundit says it's in the toilet. The party has no strong leadership, no message, no clear sense of what to do. Truly, Dems in disarray! 
  • Nippon Steel's bid to buy U.S. steel will end up with President Joe Biden (remember him?). He's vowed to block it. 
  • Does the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) really need to track Santa? In any case, here's a history of the annual Christmas stunt. 
  • As someone who made a habit of throwing giant CRT televisions off high-floor fire escapes during college (don't ask), I enjoyed this story about the quest to preserve the world's largest CRT television.
  • It will always be funny that states have official birds.

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.

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NEXT: How FOIA Gave Rise to Government Transparency Laws Around the World

Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

Federal ReserveDodd-FrankArtificial IntelligenceGreen EconomyClean Energy
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    Thirty-eight people died in a passenger jet crash in Kazakhstan. Russian air defense systems may have been responsible.

    In Russia, voice passives you.

    1. A Thinking Mind   6 months ago

      That’s actually not passive voice, just waffling language. Passive voice would be “the plane was shot down by Russian air defenses,” because it places the actor at the end of the sentence, after the object of the action.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

        Even more passive: "A plane was shot down."

        1. Jerry B.   6 months ago

          Mistakes were made.

          1. Don't look at me!   6 months ago

            Some people did some things.

  2. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    Welcome to Musktown, Texas.

    My debut country album title.

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      I thought it was a cologne

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

        Or an out-of-control circus act.

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

      And then comes the Fist Parties.

      1. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   6 months ago

        I went to a fisting party once. My hands were so wrinkled by the end...

      2. docduracoat   6 months ago

        Come on, Suderman.
        Not one of those power hungry data centers are going to run off solar or wind energy.
        Anyone who want to have a reliable source of energy in order to turn a profit will never choose an intermittent power source.

        They are going to be nuclear or natural gas.

    3. MK Ultra   6 months ago

      "Muskrat Family BBQ" was a one-off name change by "Special Ed and the Short Bus" because they were playing for teachers and the real name was problematic. I must have been involved in this event somehow, because I remember the name change issue, but can't recall the specifics.

      https://www.suffolknewsherald.com/2005/06/15/band-changes-name-for-city/

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

        The best band name
        "oedipus and the mother fuckers"

    4. Eeyore   6 months ago

      Sounds like a place with a large population of skunks or badgers.

      1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

        Formerly Boca Chica "village". Before SpaceX moved in it was four people in two homes, with an additional 12 seasonal residents.
        Some progs on X the other day were railing against how Musk stole an entire city.

  3. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    The Democratic brand is in such big trouble that at least one New York Times pundit says it's in the toilet.

    That pendulum will never swing the Dem's way again!

    1. Mike Parsons   6 months ago

      I believe in 08 when Obama won, he had built his coalition of both working class (dem hang-ons of old) and elites, and the "demographics is destiny" schtick meant, I believe in carville's words, 'the democrats will never lose again'

      I would also imagine there is some sort of relationship between assuming you will be in power forever and governing in a overtly corrupt self serving shitty way that turns off voters. But who knows, im not a political genius like carville.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

        Shave your head?

      2. Michael Ejercito   6 months ago

        Yes.

        Even if you govern ethically and justly and competently, that does not mean your successors on your side will.

        Of course, we did not get the "govern ethically and justly and competently" with Obama.

        https://ethicsalarms.com/2023/05/17/assorted-ethics-observations-on-the-durham-report-part-ii-the-substance/

    2. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      Is that the same nyt that got 3 pulitzers in the last 12 years for publishing stories that were compleatly made up?

      1. Mike Parsons   6 months ago

        is there any other kind of Pulitzer prize these days?

      2. SIV   6 months ago

        The Pulitzer is an award for fiction.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

          Correction: the Pulitzer is an award for propaganda.

    3. Gaear Grimsrud   6 months ago

      Next up: Musk Greenland.

  4. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    Truly, Dems in disarray!

    They should embrace the 90's era Democrat who's about to be sworn into office.

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

      Should, maybe but never will. Wes Moore is their future, guy.

      1. MK Ultra   6 months ago

        Very likely. "Make America Maryland" wouldn't be much better than "Make America California."

        1. Ajsloss   6 months ago

          Isn’t “Make America Mary Land” what they’re saying in California? At least in San Francisco.

  5. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    Nippon Steel's bid to buy U.S. steel will end up with President Joe Biden...

    He should veto it just based on that racist name alone.

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

      And play the short game? Think of all fund raising and activism that could be directed at the Japanese Steel Company like the Washington Football Team.

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

        The redskins? Or the seahwks?

      2. Its_Not_Inevitable   6 months ago

        I always thought the Redskins should just change their logo to a potato.

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

          That or just got with the Hogs. Could have gotten those sweet ESG dollars by having the first official trans mascot, the Hogettes.

  6. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    Does the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) really need to track Santa?

    His mistletoe is no match for their TOW missiles.

    (Credit to Futurama.)

    1. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

      A picture is worth 25 words.

      https://oddstuffmagazine.com/funny-pictures-december-25-2024.html/missile-toad-2

  7. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    ...I enjoyed this story about the quest to preserve the world's largest CRT television.

    People preserved them because they're too heavy to budge.

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      CRTs are polarizatinists!
      Every cathode needs an anode
      ALM! ALM! ALM!

      1. TrickyVic (old school)   6 months ago

        Geek.

        1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

          GLM! GLM! GLM!

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

      Finally the Reason admits CRT exist, but of course they want to preserve that racist theory.

    3. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   6 months ago

      Can confirm. Had a 42" CRT TV. Took two very large dudes to move.

  8. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

    Oh for an editor!

    The banks are [not?] trying to eliminate the stress tests, the suit claims.

  9. Longtobefree   6 months ago

    The fed just took the global warming (remember that one?) models and changed the titles to 'stress test'.

  10. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

    The problem with green energy is its unreliability and unpredictability, not its lack of demand. And guess what? Data centers need more reliable energy than homes. I can run my little Honda 2200 generator and get by for several days when the power fails; not so a data center or very many big businesses like factories or steel mills or mines.

    No, crypto and AI are not going to lead to more demand for green energy.

    And no, changing the label to "clean energy" doesn't hide its unreliability and price.

    ETA: "This means that pretty much any source that can deliver at a competitive cost will be valuable." is a laugh. It had damned will better be reliable, and green energy is not price-competitive.

    1. A Thinking Mind   6 months ago

      Eliminate all subsidies and wind energy is laughably overpriced. Solar is getting better, but requires massive batteries for storage that require a ton of front end energy investment that they take quite a while to pay off.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

        Or just outlaw electric lights and heat and tech use at night. Or on cloudy days. Or winter.

        I have a solar panel system on my roof, with a primary goal of powering my central AC in the summer. I claim about 80% success for that. But I also learned how feeble it is with any degree of cloud cover, from big puffy clouds (on those days the output bounces from 100% to 20%) to solid overcast (at best 25% all day). If I really wanted to run my house 24/7/365 I would have to at least quadruple my solar array, and add enough battery storage for 10 days. And that is with gas for heating and cooking. Even then, some winter months would be uncertain.

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   6 months ago

      It's pronounced NUKE-U-LAR.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

        Ha ha!

      2. creech   6 months ago

        All the kids need to get with nuclear power. Unfortunately, there are still too many voters who remember the fear-mongering from the Three Mile Island failure.

        1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   6 months ago

          Using The Hulk as a pro nuclear spokesman could help with youth support.

      3. Its_Not_Inevitable   6 months ago

        Jimmy Carter & George W. Bush Pronounce "Nuclear" Incorrectly

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHdl_0q-F60

  11. Fist of Etiquette   6 months ago

    it's possible that in the next few years, we'll see a clean energy boom driven by market demand rather than by central planning.

    If only there was such a thing as clean energy.

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      Lng, oil
      Both clean

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

        "Clean" energy these days means solar and wind, because the climate catastrophe crowd have to embrace distorted language to match their distorted science.

        1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

          If 1 million people tell me 2+2=5 it doesn't matter because 4 is the correct answer

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

            Wait til you visit Room 101.

            1. Stupid Government Tricks   6 months ago

              101 binary is 5 decimal.

              And 31 OCTal is 25 DECimal.

            2. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

              We've all been in Room 101 since 2013.

      2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   6 months ago

        Yep. Clean, natural petroleum products.

  12. Rocinante   6 months ago

    State bird of West Virginia, Robert.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

      I thought he was a (grand) dragon?

    2. Ajsloss   6 months ago

      And Larry should be just fine in Indiana.

  13. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

    Stress test for banks, have you ever debanked a person due to politics?
    1. You loose all fdic access/insurance
    2. You get a full audit as does every individual in your organization
    3. Your new liquidity requirement is 99%

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   6 months ago

      Or just execute the people responsible, and give their jobs to Americans. Keep repeating this until democrats comply. Or until there are no more democrats.

  14. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

    How about they continue the Santa tracker and cut the protection of Canada?

  15. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

    Suderman, your new assistant is already smarter than you, sullum, and bohem combined

    1. creech   6 months ago

      +1 Megan McArdle

      1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

        Are they still "married"? I thought she was just his beard.

  16. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

    "It will always be funny that states have official birds."

    Birds aren't real.

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      You must be chinese

      1. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birds_Aren't_Real

        1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

          https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy/china-launches-high-tech-bird-drones-to-watch-over-its-citizens/

          1. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

            Ahh, hadn't seen that!

  17. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

    Bank owners and managers: "Hey, you Fed Nazis, keep your hands off our money!"

    Bank owners and managers: "Hey, you Fed Nazis, give us billions of dollars!"

    Sounds about right.

    1. creech   6 months ago

      Weren't there a good number of banks that didn't want, didn't need, and didn't ask for TARP funds but were forced to take (and pay) for them? In the end, the taxpayers got back everything and then some that they fronted to the banks. And there are numerous public traded bank stocks that have never gotten back to their 2008 highs.
      Lots of investors suffered, and many bank employees have never worked in that field again. [Not all of them innocent, of course.]

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

        I think you are correct. But for every one of them, there is a Silcon Valley Bank.

      2. The Angry Hippopotamus   6 months ago

        Weren't there a good number of banks that didn't want, didn't need, and didn't ask for TARP funds but were forced to take (and pay) for them?

        At least one bank, after saying it didn’t need nor want the TARP funds, was actually threatened by Sec. Paulson (paraphrasing, because I don’t have the exact quote in front of me): “Your main regulator (referring to Fed Chair Bernancke) is sitting right here. If you don’t take the money, he’ll declare you illiquid and under capitalized, and that will be the end of you”

  18. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

    I wonder if Democrats will reject Trump clean energy like they told us they would never take the Trump vaccine.

    1. A Thinking Mind   6 months ago

      Like Adam Schiff spending months refusing to bring the cancer funding bill to a vote, and then pretending Republicans in the house cut cancer funding in their continuing resolution.

      1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   6 months ago

        And California turns around and makes this treasonous scumbag a senator.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

          Stupid is as stupid does.

  19. Sandra (formerly OBL)   6 months ago

    "The party has no strong leadership, no message, no clear sense of what to do."

    That's unfair to Dems.

    Their message is simple: You're a bigot if you don't believe this new thing that 90% of Democrats didn't believe 5 - 10 years ago.

  20. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

    'The Democratic brand is in such big trouble that at least one New York Times pundit says it's in the toilet. The party has no strong leadership, no message, no clear sense of what to do. Truly, Dems in disarray!'

    Please, Democrats, double- or triple-down on your recent progressive insanity. More genders! More "Racism!" More socialism! More catastrophism! More state ideology puritanism! More WEF elitism!

    We need to see even more clearly how delusional you are, so that more normal people can get over you.

    1. Mike Parsons   6 months ago

      They are in a bit of a pickle, and will be interesting to see how things unfold.

      On one hand, the mood in the country is one of rejection of the political elite, and establishment, the uniparty centrists. The R's already went through ripping that bandaid off with Trump coming in and shaking things up. The D's have been 100% behind the establishment aristocracy with Obama/Clinton/Pelosi et al calling the shots. That is getting thoroughly rejected.

      Problem is, Trump was the R's answer. The Dems answer is really not palatable to the average joe. The left-populists are people like AOC, Jamaal Bowman, Ilhan Omar. They are almost literally the embodiment of insufferable, entitled retarded Columbia gaza protestors. Trump is a wild boy, says some funny stuff, and while he is out of touch with the common man in terms of his finances and life, he knows it and wears it. Joe Schmoe aint pulling the lever for fucking AOC while she lectures on white privilege and tries to sell the average american on shit like the green new deal, universal single payer healthcare, or whatever other form of communism is popular next.

      Trump's policies, while maybe not being universally popular, are a message of "America is great, lets get it back on track, and restore some order and sanity". The left populists are actively arguing for TRANSing the kids and that America is a white supremacist shithole that needs to be torn down to be remade in their globohomo image.

      They have a lot of soul searching to do, that's for sure. They need a big personality and some sanity to rally behind, and it would seem that person is not on the political stage at this point

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

        If new GOP populists are close to blue collar working people, mostly self-supporting (in spirit if not reality) and MYOB, then new Democratic populists are still looking (hoping) for more social democracy or democratic socialism and define themselves by activist causes. These groups are fundamentally incompatible.

    2. Roberta   6 months ago

      The major parties got to where they are today by always adapting to divide up the electorate between them, no matter how they have to change. See any reason that process can't continue?

  21. Earth-based Human Skeptic   6 months ago

    'Scenes from Washington, D.C.: It's dead here this week. The city feels like a ghost town. But I do have a new puppy, and he's very, very cute.'

    You know who else woke up in a dead city but had a very cute dog?

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   6 months ago

      Not the hatians?

    2. Ajsloss   6 months ago

      Will Smith?

    3. Its_Not_Inevitable   6 months ago

      Dorothy? Well, at least it was dead quiet at first.

    4. Vernon Depner   6 months ago

      Vic?

    5. shadydave   6 months ago

      Don Johnson?

  22. TrickyVic (old school)   6 months ago

    ""The Democratic brand is in such big trouble that at least one New York Times pundit says it's in the toilet. The party has no strong leadership, no message, no clear sense of what to do. Truly, Dems in disarray! ""

    What does this say about the current president?

    1. Don't look at me!   6 months ago

      Trump isn’t in the Democratic Party.

    2. MWAocdoc   6 months ago

      The Republican Party is also in the toilet. Trump is simply occupying the hollowed-out shell of the former Party, which faltered in disarray after decades of giving in to the progressive socialists. Since new parties cannot gain power through the two-party system and it is self-destructive to hold the old parties hostage internally, the only way a new party can arise is through abandonment by the old guard and hostile takeover from within. The Dems are in disarray because they long ago achieved their agenda, encoded in violation of the Constitution of the United States of America through abandonment of Constitutional responsibility by the Legislative and Judicial branches. Now - their purpose having been achieved - the only thing left for them to justify their existence is pushing an increasingly silly social narrative, substituting feelings and microaggressions for rights and responsibilities.

      1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   6 months ago

        "The Republican Party is also in the toilet..."

        You have an active fantasy life.

        1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

          Hey, if you only watch CNN and MSNBC...

          IRL, if the Republicans can manage to divest themselves of the Mitch McConnells and Joni Ernsts, this will be their renaissance.

        2. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   6 months ago

          If he cant scream racist and xenophobia doc has no clue what to say.

    3. Quicktown Brix   6 months ago

      The Democratic brand is in such big trouble

      Is it though? The 2024 presidential popular vote was 48.4 - 49.9%.

      1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

        Remove California from that equation and it was a massacre.
        And even with California, Harris didn't convert a single county in the entire country in the election. Not a single one. They either stayed where they were or flipped to Trump, and that's unprecedented. All the change was to red.
        And all the traditional Dem constituencies moved red. Trump outright took or made huge advances in the Native Americans, Arabs, Orthodox Jews, Latinos, Black men, gay men, union voters, and most surprisingly the youth vote. Even the Amish who never vote came out en masse in Ohio and Pennsylvania to vote for Trump.

        Democrats and progressives just can't seem to understand how repellent they are to the rest of humanity.

        1. Quicktown Brix   6 months ago

          Without CA it would be 47.0 - 50.9%.

          Everything you say is true. Dems lost in breadth, but not depth. I guess losing by 4% is a blow out by modern standards, but Trump *officially lost by more than that in 2020. With the electoral college, it's a huge shift, but I worry easily reversible.

  23. MWAocdoc   6 months ago

    "Truly, Dems in disarray!"

    This will always be the end point of a "two party system." Instead of struggling over the pros and cons of the few, relatively minor, things left to decide democratically after the things that were forbidden to government authority by the Constitution have been taken off the political table; the Two Parties struggle to the death over majority control of all the myriad sources of power encoded in violation of the Constitution over the previous decades. There is no logical debate over policies; no admission of failure and repeal of previous bad policies; no consensus building around new directions due to improvements in technology or changes in the geopolitical situation. Only abdication of responsibility, finger-pointing, blame-shifting and strategic and tactical political strikes looking towards the next election, as the Nation careens from one disaster to another. Good riddance to bad rubbish.

  24. Think It Through   6 months ago

    The Democratic brand is in such big trouble that at least one New York Times pundit says it's in the toilet. The party has no strong leadership, no message, no clear sense of what to do. Truly, Dems in disarray!

    And Republicans pounce.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   6 months ago

      "Truly, Dems in disarray"

      Republicans will work very hard to piss away any advantage they might have.

      1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

        McConnell, Ernst, Murkowski, Grassley, Collins and Graham are on it already.

        1. Vernon Depner   6 months ago

          Republicans can't afford a Disarray Gap!

  25. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   6 months ago

    "Behind Closed Doors: The Spy World Scientists Who Argued Covid Was a Lab Leak"
    [...]
    "A car and driver had been readied to whisk Jason Bannan from FBI headquarters early one morning in August 2021 to brief the White House on a novel virus that was killing hundreds of thousands of Americans and had stopped the world in its tracks.
    Bannan had been told by his superiors to be on hand in case the Federal Bureau of Investigation was asked to join a top intelligence community briefing for the president. But the White House summons never came..."
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/politics/government/behind-closed-doors-the-spy-world-scientists-who-argued-covid-was-a-lab-leak/ar-AA1wuPLT?ocid=BingNewsSerp

  26. (Good Riddance Robert L. Peters) Weigel's Cock Ring   6 months ago

    Oh please, we all know exactly what the modern democratic party core message is: America was never all that great (in fact it kind [f sucks), white men suck, white heterosexual men really suck, white working class heterosexual men are the absokute worst of the worst, war is generally bad except when we say otherwise (Ukraine should be supported down to the last Ukrainian citizen and U.S. dollar), private industry sucks (unless perhaps the employees are unionized), freedom of speech sucks (unless we can tightly control it), the right to keep and bear arms sucks, in fact pretty much the entire U.S. constitution sucks and is outdated and should be scrapped and replaced with the United Nations charter, etcetera etcetera etcetera.

    1. Mother's Lament (Salt farmer)   6 months ago

      I can't imagine why it wasn't a winner. How did they lose the unions, youth, Latino and Black male vote with such a wonderful message?

      1. (Good Riddance Robert L. Peters) Weigel's Cock Ring   6 months ago

        Seriously. I mean good grief, they and their media lackeys spend about 1,361 out of every 1,461 presidential cycle days openly beating us all over the heads with these messages over and over and over again, and then in the final 100 days they go "No, we don't REALLY mean all these things we say all the time, we've perfectly normal America patriots just like all the rest of you good voters!"

        Sorry assholes, the country doesn't buy it anymore. The majority has finally woken up and caught onto the undeniable fact that you just turn into a bunch of fucking liars in those last 100 days is all.

  27. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   6 months ago

    It will always be funny that states have official birds.

    Mostly because you're from a state with no creativity. Which, strangely enough, chose the "eat-a-bag-of-dicks bird" as their state bird. Very specific, and yet perfectly suited to you.

  28. TJJ2000   6 months ago

    Funny how these things all worked themselves out from 1787 till 1913.

  29. lwt1960   6 months ago

    If Peter is correct that AI and Crypto suck up all available fossil fuel, nuclear, etc. sources (and all those nasty greenhouse gases), I guess we can put the final nail in the coffin of the climate change hoax.

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