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Vans
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Pick’Em: Over or Under 30 GOP House Seat Losses in November?

The landslide victory of a Demofiend in a Texas State Senate seat in Texas, in a district carried by President Trump by 17 points in 2024, caps a string of telling GOP losses since Inauguration Day. “Whoa, Nellie,” as sportscaster Keith Jackson used to proclaim. The Dems hadn’t won this seat since 1994. The Lone Star MAGA comeuppance follows similar routs in New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial races, to say nothing of the international impact of Zohran Mamdani’s communist takeover of New York City, which was copy-catted in Seattle. One cause of all this trouble — in addition to Republican voters who stay home when Sir Donald isn’t on the ballot — is the flight of Latinos back into the Demofiend fold. Those loose-cannon immigration raids as portrayed on liberal newscasts are taking a heavy toll, evidently. One thing, and perhaps the only thing, going for the GOP in the fall is a huge warchest it has built up to the tune of $375 million to spend on races. President Trump is also planning many campaign swings, along with a midterm GOP convention, to try to rally the troops. The GOP’s best hope is to get ICE and mmigration off

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Strangelove
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How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Collapse of the United Nations

This is news that the liberal media probably would like to bury, and pretty much have so far, but catch this: The United Nations is broke and near collapse. The international organization has run up massive debts paying for thousands of people to operate a forum for members to pontificate. If you’ve been around as long as I have, you probably will recall a great Stanley Kubrick film that has come simply to be known as “Dr. Strangelove.” But the real title was “Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.”‘ The final scenes take place in a UN-like setting [pictured], where the U.S. president and his advisors try to figure out how to stop a B-52 bomber that has lost communications from bombing Russia. Which, of course, would start a nuclear war, ergo, “Love the Bomb.” In real life, the U.S. has graciously funded the bloviating, antisemitic body called the United Nations for decades, while member countries — which love using the podium of the General Assembly to berate Israel and/or the United States — conveniently overlook paying their annual dues. The organization is now at least $1.6 billion underfunded. Secretary-General António Guterres recently

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Grocery
My Take

Mr. President, Try Grocery Shopping Weekly to Learn What Affordability Crisis Really Means

I shop for groceries at least once a week, usually twice, so I can see how prices continue to rise despite protestations by our president to the contrary. Yes, eggs — with a one-time, sudden spike — have returned to earth price-wise, but I can’t think of a single other product that doesn’t continue to face inflationary pressures. Fortunately, I have a mortgage that is fixed rate, and I bought my house long enough ago that it is still (barely) affordable. I can’t imagine what it would be like today to find housing similar to mine for rent or sale. I couldn’t afford either lease or purchase, I guarantee you, not even in my highest-salaried days. I doubt few in the White House feel the financial pinch the rest of us do, and certainly not those in the President’s Inner Circle. The government dole extends to executive branch employees in generous ways that few out here in the hinterlands can rival. I realize that a president can’t go shopping in a grocery store for security reasons (though you once did man a McDonald’s window by yourself). Still, how about sending some people out weekly to check on prices in their

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Protests
Currently...

Minnesota Changes the Subject from Fraud to Holier Than Thou

The Demofiends have a saying to “never let a crisis go to waste,” or some such. In Minneapolis specifically and Minnesota generally, they certainly found a crisis in over-reactive ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents to change the subject from Minnesota government officials being investigated to Minnesota government officials claiming the moral high ground. As a result of ICE protests in Minneapolis and the subsequent deaths of two protestors, no one is any longer talking or writing about the $19 billion or more in fraud perpetrated in Minnesota that drained U.S. government coffers of some $19 billion in legitimate child-care and public-assistance funds, which then ended up padding the accounts of terrorists in Somalia. Now, if ICE-agent “self-defense” were more than that and could be considered murder, I wouldn’t think it beyond possible. After all, a government agent cold-heartedly murdered Ashli Babbitt on January 6, 2021, and got away with it. Of course, he was on the Demofiends’ side, so nothing came of it. I think the officer even got promoted as a result. How convenient for the fraudsters under investigation that ICE protests turned deadly, starting with the shooting of “Minnesota Mom” Rene Nicole Good and culminating with the

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SolarPanels
My Take

Green New Scam Extends to Home Solar

I live in the Stolen State, where just about everything — especially government-run or regulated enterprises — is a scam. I found this to be a painful truth when I chose to install solar panels on my roof. I chose to go solar after fires 50 miles from my home caused Southern California Edison (SCE) — a real scam artist company — to shut off my power twice for about four days at a time. They did this because, I believe, I live in Reagan Country, where people fly flags for Trump. The shutoff had nothing to do with the fires since they didn’t even shut down power 10 miles from the coastal blaze. We hear President Trump repeatedly refer to the “Green New Scam” when it comes to solar and wind energy. Even agreeing with this, I still found the sales pitch from Sunrun, a  home solar company, so strong that I bought into an installation. What a mistake. I just got a monthly bill from SCE for $197, more than I paid before going solar. Of course, SCE just got a 13.5 percent increase in rates from the state, but winter bills in the past were about $125 —

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BigMac
My Take

Disneyland and the Big Mac Shaped the USA

I recently read an article with the lengthy title, “Psychology says people who grew up in the 1960s and 70s learned 9 life lessons that are rarely taught today.” Well, I grew up in the 1960s and can’t think of a single thing I learned that can’t be learned today. The article, on some site called Global English Editing, listed things learned then but not now to include: Boredom was the birthplace of creativity Failure was allowed to sting Waiting was simply a part of life Unsupervised play was the norm Yaha, yada, blah, blah You can READ ALL NINE HERE Meanwhile, my experience from growing up back in the Dark Ages was that the Big Mac revolutionized eating in America and Disneyland revolutionized entertainment. Back then, of course, McDonald’s French Fries were cooked in delicious fat, and Disneyland was actually affordable and you could park within a five-minute-or-less walk. Anyway, my point being — I don’t have one except maybe that the Big Mac and Disneyland pretty much defined modern, postwar America. They and their offshoots still do.

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Lenin
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After 110 Years, Ghost of Lenin Stalks the Globe

In 2017, during World War I, Vladimir I. Linin returned to Russia and orchestrated the Bolshevik Revolution, resulting in the establishment of the Soviet Union and the subjugation of Russia and neighboring countries for seven decades until Ronald Reagan said, “Tear down this wall.” (Check your history books on that one if you’re too young to remember.) This is important because we see signs of Lenin’s revolution taking place here in the U.S.: The election of communist mayors in New York and Seattle, and a public uprising in Minneapolis that has all the earmarks of a Bolshevik insurrection. However, that’s not why I bring up Lenin. More importantly, Vladimir was quite the prescient person, not only in his timing of the Bolshevik Revolution, but also in his observations on world affairs. Case in point: the Wall Street Journal, in an article today titled “The First Three Weeks of the Year Will Reshape the World,” quotes Lenin as saying: “There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.” The first three weeks are already gone bye=bye, so what happened that will reshape the world, according to the WSJ? First, of course, is Trump’s push for control of

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