Sunday, January 29, 2017

Susan Rice

I trust Susan Rice's opinion on this topic.










Thursday, January 26, 2017

Samantha Bee on Women's March

Perhaps Samantha Bee should be on nightly.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

George Orwell

From 1984:

"The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command. "
"And if all others accepted the lie which the Party imposed—if all records told the same tale—then the lie passed into history and became truth."

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

2016 Voter Turnout

Voter Turnout in 2016 was 55.4%

Donald Trump won the Presidency with 46.0% of the vote (vs 48.1% for Hillary Clinton).

Thus, Donald Trump won with 26.3% support of the voting public.

Of that 26.3%, many were former Obama voters who simply did not like Hillary Clinton.  Many were simply voting for a change agent.  Many were moderates with no strong ideological leanings.

That means 73.7% of the public did not vote for Donald Trump and many of those who did were not doing so for ideological reasons.

Yet, Donald Trump has selected the most right wing cabinet in U.S. history and has been espousing many policies that come right out of the far right wing playbook.  There has been no outreach whatsoever to the middle or to the left.

And people are surprised that there are already protests on the streets?


Monday, January 23, 2017

Pick Up Lines

Being perpetually single, I have used my share of pick up lines over the years, mostly unsuccessfully, so I usually go with a simple "Hi".  Needless to say that doesn't always work.  Playboy has some good ones though, I may need to try some of these:
  1. 'I almost wore that tonight,’ referring to her blouse or dress. It’s simple, it’s funny and it’s not too aggressive.“
  2. "Coffee?”
  3. “‘You look so familiar.’ Then I list the places I may know her from while including details about myself. For example, 'Did you go to the University of Michigan? I was pre-med, but I think we did a play together.’”
  4. “One time I was at a restaurant and I really liked my waitress. I asked if I could have anything on the menu. When she said yes, I asked her to stand on the menu. I ended up getting her number and we went on a date.”
  5. “I met my girlfriend on OkCupid. My first message was, 'Can you please return the records you borrowed?’”
  6. “You’re way out of my league, but I had say to hello before I left.”
  7. “I know a freak when I see one.”
  8. “Hi. I’m looking for a date to my sister’s wedding.”
  9. (at a bar) “Can I buy you a house?”
  10. “My name is Alex, and I don’t belong here.”
  11. “'That Stanley Kubrick is really a genius, isn’t he?’ (Don’t laugh. It worked!)”
  12. “’Damn, girl, you look like a strong, independent woman with agency and self respect. How YOU doin’?’ This is my own and it’s actually worked really well.”
  13. “I kept crossing paths with her. The second time we were introduced I just said 'Hey.’ But the third time I said, 'Are you following me?’ To which she responded, 'I don’t think so.’ Then I said, 'Oh, I guess I must be following you then.’ Recounting this, it just now occurs to me how stalkerish that line sounds!”
  14. “When I share glances with someone, I simply go up to them and say something like 'Hello. I’m Josh. I’ve enjoyed sharing glances with you. You seem very nice. Can I get your number and give you a call sometime?’ It never fails because it’s a gentleman’s approach.”

Sunday, January 22, 2017

2020 Democrat Presidential Candidates?

Here's my early list to take on Donald Trump in 2020.  I feel like Dems will want a fresh face, so I suspect that we won't see another Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders run, and I also think Joe Biden's window has closed.  So with that being said, here is the TPSG Top 10 Potential Democratic Presidential candidate names to watch:
  • Elizabeth Warren - The populists populist, she would play well in the rust belt states. 
  • Sherrod Brown - A rust belt state populist with a strong following. 
  • Cory Booker - Popular, charismatic, a populist, strong minority appeal. 
  • Amy Klobuchar - A well respected, pragmatic liberal with bipartisan appeal. 
  • Kirsten Gillibrand - Women and the LGBT community love her.  
  • John Hickenlooper - Middle American Governor who legalized marijuana. 
  • Andrew Cuomo - Governor of a large liberal state that is doing quite well. 
  • Kate Brown - Her state has become a liberal petri dish and is performing well doing so. 
  • Al Franken - Name appeal, sharp as a whip, not afraid to take people on.  
  • Tim Kaine - He won a lot of fans in the 2016 campaign.  
I really like most of the names on this list, I would easily vote for any of them over Donald Trump in 2020.  Of the names above, I suspect that Warren, Brown, Booker and Klobuchar would have the edge, but if Kate Brown keeps Oregon humming along like she has, I think she could become a solid sleeper bet.  Mark Cuban is another name to watch, although nobody is quite sure if he's even a Democrat.  

Saturday, January 21, 2017

How Republics End

Great column by Paul Krugman on Thursday.
". . . I couldn’t help noticing the contemporary resonances of some Roman history — specifically, the tale of how the Roman Republic fell.
Here’s what I learned: Republican institutions don’t protect against tyranny when powerful people start defying political norms. And tyranny, when it comes, can flourish even while maintaining a republican facade.
On the first point: Roman politics involved fierce competition among ambitious men. But ... “However important it was for an individual to win fame and add to his and his family’s reputation, this should always be subordinated to the good of the Republic … no disappointed Roman politician sought the aid of a foreign power.”
America used to be like that, with prominent senators declaring that we must stop “partisan politics at the water’s edge.” But now we have a president-elect who openly asked Russia to help smear his opponent..., the good of the republic be damned.
And what happens to the republic as a result? Famously..., the transformation of Rome from republic to empire never happened. Officially, imperial Rome was still ruled by a Senate that just happened to defer to the emperor ... on everything that mattered. We may not go down exactly the same route..., but the process of destroying democratic substance while preserving forms is already underway. ...
Why is this happening? ... And let’s be clear: This is a Republican story, not a case of “both sides do it.” ..., what directly drives the attack on democracy, I’d argue, is simple careerism on the part of people who are apparatchiks within a system insulated from outside pressures by gerrymandered districts, unshakable partisan loyalty, and lots and lots of plutocratic financial support.
For such people, toeing the party line and defending the party’s rule are all that matters. ...
One thing all of this makes clear is that the sickness of American politics didn’t begin with Donald Trump, any more than the sickness of the Roman Republic began with Caesar. The erosion of democratic foundations has been underway for decades, and there’s no guarantee that we will ever be able to recover.
But if there is any hope of redemption, it will have to begin with a clear recognition of how bad things are. American democracy is very much on the edge."

Full column here.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Betsy DeVos

It must be nice to have friends in high places.  

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Robert Reich on King Trump

Don't be conned by the Trump claims of opening up White House press conferences to more reporters.  This would not be a good development.   As Robert Reich explains:

"Tyrants don’t allow open questioning, and they hate the free press. They want total control.
That’s why, according to three senior officials on the transition team, the incoming Trump administration is considering evicting the White House press corps from the press room inside the White House and moving them – and news conferences – to a conference center or to the Old Executive Office Building.
This may sound like a small logistic matter. It’s not. The White House “press room” contains work stations and broadcast booths, and the briefing area for presidential news conferences. Reporters have had workspace at the White House since Teddy Roosevelt was president, in 1901. 
But we’re in a new era, the reign of King Trump.
Sean Spicer, Trump’s press secretary, acknowledges “there has been some discussion about how” to move the press out of the White House. Spicer says it’s because the new administration would like a larger room to allow more members of the press to attend press conferences.
Rubbish. It’s because a larger room would allow the administration to fill seats with “alt-right” fringe journalists, rightwing social media, Trump supporters and paid staffers. They’d be there to ask the questions Trump wants to answer, and to jeer at reporters who ask critical questions and applaud Trump’s answers.
The move would allow Trump to play the crowd.
That’s exactly what happened at Trump’s so-called “news conference” on January 11 – the first he’s held in six months.
It wasn’t really a press conference at all, and shouldn’t have been characterized as one. It was a fake news conference that took place in a large auditorium. 
In the audience were paid staffers who jeered and snickered when reporters asked critical questions, and cheered every time Trump delivered one of his campaign zingers. It could easily have been one of his rallies.  
In this carnival atmosphere it was easy for Trump to refuse to answer questions from reporters who have run stories he doesn’t like, and from news outlets that have criticized him.
He slammed CNN for dispensing “fake news,” called Buzzfeed “a pile of garbage,” and sarcastically called the BBC “another beauty.” The audience loved it. 
Just as he did in his rallies, Trump continued calling the press “dishonest” – part of his ongoing effort to discredit the press and to reduce public confidence in it. 
And he repeatedly lied. But the media in attendance weren’t allowed to follow up or to question him on his lies.
For example, Trump wrongly stated that “the Democratic National Committee was totally open to be hacked. They did a very poor job. … And they tried to hack the Republican National Committee, and they were unable to break through.” 
Baloney.FBI Director James B. Comey said there was evidence that Republican National Committee computers were also targeted. The critical difference, according to Comey, was that none of the information obtained from the RNC was leaked. Also, according to Comey, the Russians “got far deeper and wider into the [DNC] than the RNC,” adding that “similar techniques were used in both cases.”
Trump further asserted at his fake news conference that “I have no deals that could happen in Russia, because we’ve stayed away. And I have no loans with Russia.”
Wrong again. Trump repeatedly sought deals in Russia. In a 2008 speech, Donald Trump Jr. said “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assets,” and “we see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.”
Trump’s statements at his fake news conference were, and are, big lies. They influence public understanding and opinion about two critically important issues: Did the Russians help Trump win the election, and, if so, why might they have done so?
At the very least, they should have been followed up with questions from the White House press corps. That would have happened at a real news conference in the White House press room, holding 45 correspondents from major media outlets who are assigned full-time to report on the president.  
Which is the danger of evicting the press from the White House and putting press conferences into a large auditorium: Trump won’t be called on his lies, and the White House press corps will lose the leverage they have by being together in one rather small room.  
And that’s precisely why Trump wants to evict the press from the White House. 
A senior official admitted the move was a reaction to hostile press coverage. The view at the highest reaches of the incoming administration is that the press is the enemy. "They are the opposition party,” said the senior official. “I want ‘em out of the building. We are taking back the press room.”
The incoming Trump administration is intent on neutering the White House press corps. If it happens it will be another step toward neutering our  democracy." 
Full article here and here

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Saturday, January 14, 2017

TPSG Top 10 Movies of 2016

Better late than never.  Disclaimers:  For various reasons, I saw fewer movies in 2016 than in any recent year that I can recall.  This list only contains movies that I have personally seen.  I'm not a movie critic.  You are not going to see a lot of art house or documentaries in this list.  It's also subject to updating as I see more 2016 movies.

TPSG Top 10 Movies of 2016:
  1. Deadpool - Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin 
  2. Deepwater Horizon - Mark Wahlberg, Kurt Russell
  3. Sully - Tom Hanks, Aaron Eckhart 
  4. Hacksaw Ridge - Andrew Garfield, Vince Vaughn
  5. The Nice Guys - Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe
  6. Hell or High Water - Chris Pine, Jeff Bridges 
  7. Captain America: Civil War - Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr
  8. O.J.: Made in America - Ezra Edelman
  9. Suicide Squad - Will Smith, Margot Robbie
  10. Batman vs Superman: Dawn of Justice - Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill

Worst Movie of 2016:  Ride Along 2 - Kevin Hart, Ice Cube

Haven't Yet Seen:  "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story", "La La Land", "Moonlight", "Manchester By the Sea", "Arrival", "Jackie", "Everyone Wants Some", "Lion", "Nocturnal Animals", "Hidden Figures", "Fences".

Previous Years: 2015, 20142013201220112010200920082007200620052004200320022001200019991998199719961995199419931992199119901989198819871986198519841983198219811980197919781977197619751974197319721971, 1970.

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Monday, January 2, 2017

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Cardinals 44, Rams 6

The Cardinals finished their season today with a 44-6 win over the Rams in Los Angeles.  The Cardinals close their season with a 7-8-1 record.  It was a highly disappointing season for them but at least they can go into the offseason coming off of two impressive road wins.  Of course, they hurt their draft standing by winning those 2 meaningless games.  Bring on 2017 already.

Observations:
  • Was there really any need to play David Johnson in this meaningless game? 
  • Let's hope that we haven't seen the last of Larry Fitzgerald playing in the NFL. 
  • The Cardinals will be fine with Carson Palmer as QB for at least one more season. 
  • I suspect that the Cardinals bring back DE Chandler Jones next season. 
  • Markus Golden was a beast once again today for the Cardinals. 
  • The Cardinals will be drafting 13th overall in the 2017 NFL Draft. Deshawn Watson please. 
  • Fan support in Los Angeles for the Rams is just how I remember it. 
  • Robert Nkemciche wrapped up his final game of the season in street cloths once again.
  • Total Yards:  Cardinals 344, Rams 123
  • First Downs:  Cardinals 21, Rams 9
  • Passing Yards:  Cardinals 260, Rams 71
  • Darren Fells is proving to be a quality NFL TE. 
  • Should I know who Jeremy Ross is?   
  • Harlan Miller flashed again in his extended tryout in the Cardinals secondary. 
  • It'll be interesting to see if the Cardinals can hang onto Harold Goodwin.
  • The Cardinals really do need to make changes in the way they approach special teams.  
  • Apparently it's much too early to discount Justin Bethel as a CB. 
  • The Cardinals defense did a really nice job of getting to the QB this season. 
  • The Rams should go all in on Nick Saban, he's got nothing left to prove at Alabama
  • Carson Palmer just does not lose at the LA Coliseum. 

Vikings 38, Bears 10

The Vikings closed their season today with a 38-10 win over the Bears in Minneapolis.  The Vikings finish the season with an 8-8 record.  It was a season of could have beens.  They started out 5-0, then injuries (especially along the offensive line) began to take their toll.  They've still got a lot of talent, I think they can rebound quickly.  I suspect that there will be some changes, and the fact that they won't have a number one draft pick this offseason won't help, but they are really not that far away.  The offensive line does need some serious revamping though.

Observations: