[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by NewsHound Ellen

While Donald Trump and Pete “WhiskeyLeaks” Hegseth threaten Democrats for urging members of the military to follow the law, it sure looks like Secretary Signalgate has been caught breaking it. This time it’s not just shocking sloppiness and negligence from Hegseth but cold-blooded, criminal murder.

A new Washington Post exposé reports that on September 2, after the first Trump/Hegseth military strike on a fishing boat in the Caribbean, two survivors were seen “clinging to a smoldering wreck.”

The Special Operations commander overseeing the Sept. 2 attack — the opening salvo in the Trump administration’s war on suspected drug traffickers in the Western Hemisphere — ordered a second strike to comply with Hegseth’s instructions [to kill everybody], two people familiar with the matter said. The two men were blown apart in the water.

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Ed Scarce

If you'd asked me a few months ago about the prospect of a Democrat winning in TN-07, a place where Trump won by 22 last year, I'd have said you were crazy and that it just wasn't possible. But here we are, with Aftyn Behn behind by just 2 points in a poll from respected pollster Emerson College.

Source: The Nation

In the suburban and rural counties around Nashville, Tennessee, drivers passing under the bridges above area highways are witnessing a new phenomenon: “bridge brigades” holding aloft American flags, cheering, and pointing to brightly lit signs urging “Vote Aftyn.”

What’s striking is that “Aftyn” is a Democrat—State Representative Aftyn Behn—who is running what looks to be a competitive race for an open congressional seat in a historically Republican and, more recently, pro-Trump district.

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by NewsHound Ellen

Honduras Ex-President Juan Orlando Hernandez is not some fisherman suspected of hauling drugs in the Caribbean. If he were, he might have been killed by murderous Pete Hegseth already.

No, Hernandez is a convicted cocaine trafficker. He was convicted in a United States court of “facilitating the import of some 400 tons of cocaine into the United States,” according to AFP.

As The New York Times described it, Trump, his family and Trump-buddy Roger Stone have tried to turn Hernandez into some kind of Biden-witch-hunt victim. “But although the former Honduran president was extradited and convicted when Joseph R. Biden Jr. was in office, the investigation of his ties with drug traffickers took place primarily during Mr. Trump’s first term," The Times noted.

So why the heck does Trump, the guy ready to go to war against Venezuela, purportedly over the import of drugs into the U.S., plan to pardon Hernandez?

Well, for one thing, it seems to be part of Trump’s efforts to meddle in Honduras’ election on Sunday. The left-wing party currently in power “have been painted by the opposition in this year’s election as being pro-Venezuela,” and Trump has called them “the Communists,” The Times said. Trump has already endorsed the guy from Hernandez’s far-right party, Nasry “Tito” Asfura.

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by John Amato

Fox and Friends co-host Emily Compagno tried to relieve some of the stress most American families are under amid Trump's downtrodden economy by claiming that Santa Claus senses a high level of optimism he hasn't seen in a long time.

I'm not sure Fox News viewers will love being told "how they are feeling" by an imaginary Christmas character. Especially when the economy and rising prices are the number one issue affecting their lives at this moment.

During the first segment of Trump's favorite morning program, Fox and Friends produced claims that costs are way down for this Thanksgiving.

Not to be undone. Compagno, a talking head from Outnumbered, joined the show to catch up with Santa.

COMPAGNO: So the fact that you can offset it with the rules, but I appreciate your point, Kilmeade, about what you hear and what you feel, because no amount of statistics that are told to you matter unless you actually feel it at the table and you have your optimism.

I spoke with a very important correspondent at our Christmas tree lighting, Santa, and he told me that this year he feels that people have a high sense of optimism he hasn't seen for a long time.

BRIAN: Right, so we'll see, because the president just basically is like, give me the ball.

WTF? Emily is using Santa to talk down to Fox News viewers! How dare she?

That's sacrilege.

She's made the naughty list.

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[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Caribbean Matters is a weekly series from Daily Kos. Hope you’ll join us here every Saturday. If you are unfamiliar with the region, check out Caribbean Matters: Getting to know the countries of the Caribbean.


By now most readers here, and folks who pay attention to New York City politics, are aware that Rep. Nydia Velázquez has announced that she will be retiring. 

Maya King, writing for The New York Times reported on the trailblazer:

Representative Nydia M. Velázquez, a Democratic trailblazer who was the first Puerto Rican woman elected to Congress, said on Thursday that she would not seek re-election in 2026 at the completion of her 16th term.

Ms. Velázquez, 72, cited the calls for generational change in her party, acknowledging that she had considered retiring for the last few years. But after Zohran Mamdani’s success in the November mayoral election, she felt confident that a new cohort would continue her efforts.

“I love this work and I love my district, but I believe now is the right moment to step aside and allow a new generation of leaders to step forward,” she said in an emotional phone interview from her office in Washington. “After devoting so much energy and so much time to help elect young leaders, I feel at ease,” she added, pointing to Mr. Mamdani’s election.

NY1 also covered the mixed feelings on her retirement from a political career that began in 1992:

Velázquez defeated a nine-term incumbent in a newly drawn majority-Hispanic district to become the first Puerto Rican woman elected to Congress.

“She never took on weak people. She took on the powerful. That’s what she’s done her whole life — opening up doors,” NY1 political commentator Gerson Borrero said. [...]

Velázquez was the first Latina to chair the Small Business Committee. She used that position to elevate women-owned businesses through a contracting program she started.

“She knows that if you fund right: a nail salon, a hair salon, a cleaning business, a small restaurant, a mom and pop store — that these people had the right ideas, they didn’t have the money,” Borrero said.

Known as “La Luchadora” or The Fighter, Velázquez not only championed her causes but pushed for more Latina representation at the highest levels.

The 16-term congresswoman helped appoint Justice Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court as the first Latina.

Now, after more than 30 years in office, the congresswoman said she is proud of her work, but it’s time to step aside.

“This was not an easy decision, but I believe that the time is right for me to move on and for a new generation of leaders to step forward,” she said in a statement Thursday, in part. [...]

“She was one of the first to prove that you don’t need to be invited. You don’t need to have someone make a space for you. You can kick down the door and bring your community to Congress,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said.

Almost immediately after the announcement of her decision not to run again, speculation began on who would be competing for her seat, which covers parts of Queens and North Brooklyn, including Long Island City, Astoria, Ridgewood, Bushwick, Williamsburg, and East New York. Tsehai Alfred and Peter Sterne at City & State NY wrote about those eying the seat, which is one of the most left-leaning in the country:

As Rep. Nydia Velázquez, the Puerto Rican progressive pioneer nicknamed “La Luchadora” for her willingness to fight for her community, exits her historic 16-term seat, her Thursday retirement announcement leaves a competitive primary in its wake.

Velázquez’s congressional district, which covers parts of northern Brooklyn and western Queens, is a leftist hotbed, having overwhelmingly voted for Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani in the primary. This upcoming congressional primary will likely see a wave of progressives – including members of the Democratic Socialists of America – seeking to capitalize off of Mamdani’s momentum. The central question, according to Democratic strategist Trip Yang, will be if Velázquez’s successor is “socialist or a non-socialist progressive.”

The story mentions the names of lots of possible contenders: Brooklyn borough president Antonio Reynoso, District 59 state Sen. Kristen Gonzalez, District 18 state Sen. Julia Salazar, District 37 Assemblymember Claire Valdez, District 34 City Councilmember Jennifer Gutiérrez, District 37 City Councilmember Sandy Nurse, District 33 City Councilmember Lincoln Restler, District 22 City Councilmember Tiffany Cabán, and District 26 City Councilmember Julie Won.

Emily Ngo, Nicholas Wu and Jeff Coltin at Politico also reported on her retirement.

I’ve covered her in several stories: here, and here, and here.

She was recently spotlighted by Daily Kos contributor bilboteach in his weekly series on the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. On her background growing up in Puerto Rico, he cited a 1992 New York Times article detailing her background by Maria Newman:

In a small wooden house on the banks of the Rio Limon, flanked by verdant fields of sugar cane swaying in the warm breeze, Nydia M. Velazquez learned about politics.

The talk at the dinner table for the family of 10, Ms. Velazquez recalled, was always about the status of their island commonwealth and who controlled it, or about the rights of workers and how to organize. Her father, Don Benito Velazquez, a poor sugar-cane cutter with a third-grade education but a penchant for learning, was so passionate about the issues that he used to jump on the back of flatbed trucks to deliver speeches. Eventually, he founded a political party in their hometown.

"I always wanted to be like my father," said Ms. Velasquez

Thank you, Rep. Velázquez for all you have done for both your constituents and for the people of Puerto Rico, who have no voting representation in Congress due to their colonial status. 

Please join me in the comments section below for more on “La Luchadora” and for the weekly Caribbean News Roundup.

A Pane In The Glass

Nov. 29th, 2025 02:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Pane In The Glass

Friend: "I want to get rid of it, but it would cost too much to replace."
Me: "What do you mean it's going to cost a lot?"
Friend: "I shopped around for a door, and it's gonna cost at least $1000. I really hate it, but I can live with it."
My Wife: "No, it won't."

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[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Mariel Ruvinsky

The beautiful thing about the cat distribution system is that it can truly catch you anywhere and at any time. You can be doing the most ordinary thing when your soulcat finds you, and just like that, in a meowment, your life changes forever. You can go on a quick pizza run and come back with a kitten. You can go get a quick coffee at Starbucks and come back with a cat. You can go grab some essentials at Walmart and come back with the most essential thing of all that you didn't even know you needed.

And, like this person, you can hop over for a quick dinner and return with an extra hungry mouth to feed in the form of an adorable kitten who chose you. It really can happen anywhere. And the second most beautiful thing about the cat distribution system is that truly chosen ones do not fight being chosen. They just go along, accepting their fate as cat owners and never looking back ever again. 

Mike's Blog Round Up

Nov. 29th, 2025 01:32 pm
[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Batocchio

The Mahablog: A nation in freefall?

Public Notice: Why MAGA is coming apart at the seams.

Meditations in an Emergency: Notes on journalism in the time of Trump.

Equal Justice Initiative: Charles Gaines’s new sculpture, Hanging Tree.

Los Angeles Review of Books: The inconvenient scholarship of Kevin Roberts, the man behind Project 2025.

This installment by Batocchio. E-mail tips to mbru AT crooksandliars DOT com.

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Cliff Schecter

David Shuster from Blue Amp Media's Substack:

The President is increasingly a decaying, crotchety man wrestling not with grievances or enemies, but the betrayal of time and impulse control. The NYT reported what all of us with an optic nerve see, a once bombastic showman has shrunk his public schedule and limits appearances to a mid-day window.

But instead of addressing concerns like an adult, he rages like a tyrannical toddler. Trump denounced the reporting as unfair, sneered at journalists, and bellowed about his “perfect” tests, as if we're all gullible children. Trump’s stain is no longer just corruption and incompetence. He's a leader lashing out with the reflexive hostility of a man in a dementia ward, cornered by his own limitations.

Just the past week, Trump’s language became even more venomous and feral. His vocabulary's narrowed. His speeches have devolved into loops of resentment, sputtering hyperbole, and insults borrowed from the dullest middle school hooligan...

Watch the video, read the rest in the piece, and don't forget to Subscribe to Blue Amp Media! (For Blue Friday and this weekend, 50% off all paid subscriptions!)

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Not Paid Enough For This Sit

Nov. 29th, 2025 02:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Not Paid Enough For This Sit

Customer: "The lines are too long!"
Me: "That's what happens on Black Friday."
Customer: "You should make them shorter!"
Me: "Well, every register is open."

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(no subject)

Nov. 29th, 2025 01:45 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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I’m a graphic designer. I have a day job that pays nicely, but I also do personal projects that I like to share online sometimes. One day I get request from someone who wants to talk through DMs (instant messaging on social media for those out of the loop). Me: Hi, is there something I […]

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ESL: English As A Shortcut Language

Nov. 29th, 2025 01:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read ESL: English As A Shortcut Language

I'm an ESL teacher, teaching at a school in China. We're doing an activity where my students had to give directions based on a map and situations I had chosen.
Me: "Okay, and the final question. This one is complex. Give someone directions to get from here to here, but explain that the main road is closed.

Read ESL: English As A Shortcut Language

[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by msmash

OpenAI's data centre partners are on course to amass almost $100 billion in borrowing tied to the lossmaking start-up, as the ChatGPT maker benefits from a debt-fuelled spending spree without taking on financial risks itself. Financial Times: SoftBank, Oracle and CoreWeave have borrowed at least $30 billion to invest in the start-up or help build its data centres, according to FT analysis. Investment group Blue Owl Capital and computing infrastructure companies such as Crusoe also rely on deals with OpenAI to service about $28 billion in loans. A group of banks is in talks to lend another $38 billion for Oracle and data centre builder Vantage to fund further sites for OpenAI, according to people familiar with the matter. The deal is expected to be finalised in the coming weeks. OpenAI executives have said they plan to raise substantial debt to help pay for these contracts, but so far the financial burden has fallen to its counterparties and their lenders. "That's been kind of the strategy," said a senior OpenAI executive. "How does [OpenAI] leverage other people's balance sheets?"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

(no subject)

Nov. 29th, 2025 12:45 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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(I’m at home, and I get a phone call. I usually don’t answer, but I’m waiting on a doctor referral, and it’s a local number. The person immediately starts speaking.) Person: Hi, is this [my old name]? Me: Sort of? Person: Well, we have a [child] herein [town], Florida, who listed you as next of […]

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(no subject)

Nov. 29th, 2025 12:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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Several years ago I took a recruiter position at a small staffing agency. I had done this work before in the past so I’m know stranger to it. One day my boss informs me that our client needs several people for a light industrial job. What I was told about it is that it is […]

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[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by msmash

The investigation into the June 12 Air India crash that killed 260 people has been marked by tension, suspicion and poor communication between American and Indian officials, including an episode where NTSB chairwoman Jennifer Homendy instructed her black-box specialists not to board a late-night Indian military flight to a remote facility, WSJ reports. When two American recorder experts landed in New Delhi in late June, they received urgent messages from colleagues telling them not to go with the Indians; Homendy had grown concerned about sending U.S. personnel and equipment to an aerospace lab in the remote town of Korwa amid State Department security warnings about terrorism in the region. She made calls to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and the CEOs of Boeing and GE Aerospace, and the State Department sent embassy officials to intercept the NTSB specialists at the airport. Homendy eventually delivered an ultimatum: if Indian authorities didn't choose between their Delhi facility and the NTSB's Washington lab within 48 hours, she would withdraw American support from the probe. Indian officials relented. The downloaded data showed someone in the cockpit moved switches that cut off the engines' fuel supply, and India's preliminary report stated one pilot asked the other why he moved the switches while that pilot denied doing so. American government and industry officials now privately believe the captain likely moved the switches deliberately.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

(no subject)

Nov. 29th, 2025 11:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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Since my laptop’s hard drive died, I’ve been using the computers in my local library’s teen section, which is right next to the kids’ section. Before I was able to safely put my earphones in to listen to my playlist, a little girl got everyone’s attention. Little Girl: “Watch me!” Then she pulled her top […]

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(no subject)

Nov. 29th, 2025 10:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

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My dear wife has an extremely low threshold for fools and scammers. Thankfully I am neither. For years before we met and right up until now, she has had the same land line phone number. So when the phone rings and someone asks to speak to her, using her maiden surname, she knows it is […]

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