Wednesday, January 10, 2018
Tuesday, January 9, 2018
Monday, January 8, 2018
The new McLaughlin Group episode one: Tom Rogan has really porked out since McLaughlin's death
Better watch it buddy or you'll look like Jack Germond before you know it.
You can watch episode one in its entirety, here.
Rogan did a passable job, but appeared nervous and distracted. He'll need to focus and be himself if he wants to moderate the debate to be at all entertaining.
Evan McMullin was a real dud, mixing populism and white nationalism together in his incoherent analysis. Memo to McMullin: Steve Bannon is incoherent, don't imitate him. Pat Buchanan tried to set him straight, but as usual the young don't listen to the old.
The other two old warhorses, Eleanor and Clarence, looked like they were just happy to be there to go through the motions.
then |
now |
Jack Germond |
Labels:
Evan McMullin,
Pat Buchanan,
populism,
revenge,
Steve Bannon,
The McLaughlin Group
Sunday, January 7, 2018
Saturday, January 6, 2018
Friday, January 5, 2018
Thursday, January 4, 2018
Senator Grassley says Comey's leak of his own memos included classified information
From the story here:
A top Republican senator said Wednesday that it appears former FBI Director James B. Comey leaked classified information in his effort to shape the narrative surrounding President Trump’s decision to fire him. ... He said he’s personally reviewed the seven memos, but was forced to do so in a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF. “The FBI insisted that these reviews take place in a SCIF because the majority of the memos are classified,” he said. “FBI personnel refused to answer factual questions during the document reviews, including questions about the chain of custody of the documents I was reviewing, the date that they were marked classified, and who marked them as classified.”
Comey's original memo calling Hillary "grossly negligent" has been released
From the story here:
The full draft, with edits, leaves little doubt that Comey originally wrote on May 2, 2016 that there was evidence that Clinton and top aides may have violated both felony and misdemeanor statutes, though he did not believe he could prove intent before a jury.
Screw the will of the voters: Marijuana is poison and government should fight it
Sessions’ plan drew immediate strong objection from Republican Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado, one of eight states that have legalized marijuana for recreational use.
Gardner said in a tweet that the Justice Department “has trampled on the will of the voters” in Colorado and other states. He said the action would contradict what Sessions had told him before the attorney general was confirmed and that he was prepared “to take all steps necessary” to fight the step including holding up the confirmation of Justice Department nominees.
Read the whole thing here.
Scott Rasmussen thinks 15 million will drop Obamacare because now they can, and 6.5 million others already pay a fine
From the story here:
Last year, an estimated 15 million Americans would have dropped out of Obamacare if they could. Now they can. Another 6.5 million paid a fine rather than sign up for coverage. This means that more than 20 million people directly benefit from the repeal of the mandate.
The face of the declining middle class in 2016 was concealed as 15 million more lived in doubled-up households than in 2005
Zillow reported (here) in December that working age adults in 2016 were living in doubled-up households at a rate of 30% compared with 21% in 2005.
That works out to roughly 32 million in 2005 at the 21% rate vs. 50 million in 2016 at the 30% rate, using the Working Age Population data from FRED.
Had the rate remained 21% in 2016, just 35 million would be living doubled-up instead of 50 million.
That's 15 million more adults who can't afford to buy, and can't even afford to rent, thanks to the feckless performances of George W. Bush and Barack H. Obama.
h/t Jeffrey Snider, Alhambra Investments
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)