MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Comments
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 1:52am
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 1:57am
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 2:01am
and from Kimberly Strassel who is Potomac Watch columnist for Wall Street Journal edit page
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 2:09am
Yglesias retweeted this reply to Strasser's point:
but it does also explain why people become enamored of "drain the swamp" anti-Federal government Republicanism and consistently give very low approval ratings to Congress -
why even send funds to Washington if this is the way they are going to be distributed? That certainly is the classic p.o.v. of most WSJ type readers
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 9:36am
Right - I'm sure if you look finely thru GM or Google's annual budgets you'll find some ridiculous items in isolation. People should chill - we just spent 4 years with a cocksucker "draining the swamp" for a billion into his untracked private Delaware LLCs with half the goddamn country approving, while we supported/splained away bonesawing a journalist, so if some woke trannies get a few G's, deal with it.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 7:13pm
Ron Johnson:
This is how he wins re-election from a state like Wisconsin. Wisconsites don't favor sending money to the federal government if it is wasted on pork barrel projects nor on things like the Pentagon, and are long known to dislike 'tax and spend liberalism' -
Senator Bill Proxmire, a Democrat, holds the record for being the longest-serving Senator from Wisconsin (1957-1989). Among other things, he was famous for,
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 10:44am
Much hay is made here:
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 10:48am
I see lots of angry citizens; a sampling
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 6:53pm
Well, John "Claghorn Leghorn" Kennedy & Rand Ayn Paul called it pork, so i must be outraged.
A chicken shit in every pot. Wake me when it's over.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 7:18pm
It's not about if you like it or not, it's about understanding why so many vote for anyone who advocates less money and power in the federal government. Seems to me nothing angers so many politically active people than this. They consider it unfair, dishonest, and against the whole democratic project among many other reasons. Where the best local lobbyist wins! Not what is best for the whole country, as the federal government ideally is supposed to be.
At least this time they've put in a rule that an earmark can't benefit relatives of the congressperson - they didn't have that the last time. Says nothing about political donors, though?
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 11:25pm
p.s. again Proxmire built a lifelong career on this, and he was enormously popular nationwide and I know for a fact that this is what some Wisconite swing types like about Johnson, overriding his nutsy downsides. Feingold had a reputation for being watchful about Federal spending too, (especially special interests, i.e. McCain-Feingold act). I think you underestimate how much the "tax and spend liberal" derogatory brand is attached to the Democratic party and how much it hurts them - the whole Woke thing just adds another layer. My own father, for example, was a lifelong "for the little guy against the professional politcians" member of the Democratic party and worked in personnel for the city. He could get outraged, truly outraged, if tax money went to like the Milwaukee symphony, he felt "if rich people want a symphony, they should get the money for it elsewhere". It gags people like him to see people scrimping and scraping to get by while tax money is going to an LBGTQ museum, it just riles like nothing else, doesn't matter if its a comparable pittance, to them it's the principle of the thing.
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 12:08am
I realize, but in $1.7trill they'll find their $800 toilet seat somewhere no matter how safe. And all the politicians who got COVID r lief money but it mostly hurts them none. So, i just don't really care, sorry. Hoping they don't cut Ukraine's money, hoping there's largely good stuff, and yeah, hope the Dems largely win the food fight even if they but in stupid stuff. I agree with you on a lot of cleaning up NYC, having an adult like Bloomberg, etc. But the politics in the Capitol is too whack to expect too much sanity
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 1:00am
NYTimes: Lawmakers Steer Home More Than $15 Billion in Pet Projects
The $1.7 trillion spending bill moving through Congress contains more than 7,200 earmarks for projects in lawmakers’ home states and districts.
By Stephanie Lai, Dec. 21, 2022, 7:52 p.m. ET
by artappraiser on Wed, 12/21/2022 - 11:08pm
Snowden
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 1:00am
Yet Ed & Julian still hurt the country, all the self-righteous nous aside. And he helped enable the Putin regime that's invaded Ukraine, even tho he's tried to stay silent since the invasion/mass destruction began. But sure, he can scold us about our budget. Enjoy your new life, Ed - dead to me.
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 1:26am
good general reminder:
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 1:26am
Exactly - Dems get pummelled while GOP gets to go on budget breaking freak shows. Took Obama how long of careful budget mgmt to recoup the Bush crash, and then Trump comes along and blows it up again, woops, start the process over...
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 1:29am
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 4:14am
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 4:21am
The Screeching Eels have spoken. Waiting for the Rodents Of Unusual Size (ROUS).
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 12/22/2022 - 11:16am