Monday, March 30, 2026

Biggest No Kings Rallies Yet - But TIMES Reporter Remains Clueless About The Purpose

 

     NY Times Jeremy W.  Peters: "Who does Left have to lead?"  
Ans. NO ONE, Sherlock! 'No Kings' ain't defined by political identity!

NYC protester knows what No Kings was about: Agency for citizens
                Scene from Denver No Kings rally - American flag prominent

"The No Kings rallies yesterday succeeded in motivating a powerful voting base to take back this country from a man who has only served his own interests, not the nation's.  True, rallies alone will not get Trump to change course but energizing voters - especially new ones - is what Trump is most fearful of. Hence, his pushing the anti-voter SAVE Act.
- Ali Velshi. on MSNOW: 'Velshi, Sunday morning


It was heartening once again to see Americans turn out across the nation in their literal millions Saturday to protest the sitting traitor and felon who fancies himself a king.   Raucous and joyous millions - empowered by their unified energy -  pushed back on Capt. Bonespurs's' latest Hitlerite impressions.  Now including threatening NATO countries and dispatching U.S. ground troops to Iran.

Amazingly, one NY Times commenter seemed to have grasped what Times' reporter Jeremy Peters was unable to in a Saturday column, writing:

 "Protesting is a physical demonstration of your opposition, essential in this social media dominated society. Trump can’t deny a massive crowd, other than calling them “dangerous leftist lunatics”, which he probably will. It’s cathartic to be with fellow citizens fighting for our democracy."

Such a mature and insightful take might have been assumed from Times' reporter Peters, but I didn't see it, though it should be obvious that Democracy is not self-executing.   Citizens to be citizens - and not merely 'consumers' - have to become involved when a renegade, rogue government is trashing norms, laws and the Constitution. We have to vote, we have to show allegiance, and we have to protest.  As Ali Velshi put it in his opening remarks on Saturday, people have to stand up for their nation's laws and principles especially if a nest of criminals has taken over the machinery of governance.

 Further, there is agency and energy to being on the right side of history and being motivated to protect democracy or what was democracy before Trump commenced his path to autocracy with his cast of lackeys, bootlickers and sycophants.

Typical among this sorry lot is Trump administration spokesperson Abigail Jackson, who barked Saturday (parroting the WSJ line):

"The only people who care about these Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them," 

Too dense to grasp that no reporters get ‘paid’ to cover these protests any more than other events, such as Dotard babbling about a black pen left on his desk four days ago. Which showed the orange fruitcake is really in need of serious medical, neurological intervention. And he is the one that has access to the nuclear codes!  Any American not worried about Trump's defecating on the Constitution - or engaged in protes-  ought to examine his own priorities and political biases.

As usual the tired and predictable "Hate America" fulminations were barked from the MAGA dummies – many of whom now appear to support Trump’s illegal war on Iran. But it isn’t about hating America as much as hating what the first felon ever elected has done to America - defiling it from pillar to post. And now putting the entire world at risk of going up in flames by  launching a war based a whim and an ego trip-  believing he’d have as easy a time as toppling Maduro in Venezuela.

As for Jeremy Peters, he writes in his opening:

"Millions of Americans are expected to turn out on Saturday for mass demonstrations against President Trump, the latest organized display of anger led by the coalition of progressive groups known as No Kings."

This is his first error, one of treating the protests superficially as a "display of anger" analogous to a recent Wall Street Journal carping that it is a "psychological therapy outlet for Trump derangement".  In fact, it is neither. It is rather millions of citizens summoning agency to make their voices heard, and let the tyrant king know his actions are opposed.  Irrespective of whether following proto-Nazi Stephen Miller's orders to attack hard working immigrants using masked paramilitary goons, or Trump's yen to blow up boats of innocent fishermen off the coast of South America, or  Hitler Jr. launching an illegal war with no consultation with congress.  

Peters then goes on showing he knows less and less about what he's writing:

"Those two (earlier) protests gave the administration’s most ardent opponents an outlet for their discontent at a time when Democrats were deflated from their losses in 2024 and reassessing their missteps. But as the third “No Kings” demonstration gets started, it’s an open question whether posting another big  number will be enough to influence the course of the nation’s politics. Can the protests harness that energy and turn it into victories in the November midterm elections? How can they avoid a primal scream that fades into a whimper?"

The Times dummy in the above expulsion of nonsense doesn't even seem to be aware the previ0us No Kings national protests already made a difference. As Velshi pointed out, since the last one the Dems have captured 30 - as in THIRTY - state and local elections, routing the Repukes. The latest being Emily Gregory who flipped a Florida House seat that had been controlled by Republicans and in Trump's own Mar-A-Lago district. See e.g.

Dem Emily Gregory on flipping Florida House seat that includes Trump's Mar-a-Lago | New Hampshire Public Radio

Peters, evidently stoked on some brew or stew of shrooms, then babbles:

"The phrase “No Kings” is a nod to the anti-authoritarian, democratic principles the country was founded on — which the protesters say Mr. Trump has ignored."

No, genius, has ignored - not "which the protesters SAY he's ignored".  Wake up and face reality. Maybe Peters never saw the January TIMES article: Trump Takes America’s ‘Imperial Presidency’ to a New Level:

Which noted:

"Mr. Trump takes it upon himself to reinterpret a constitutional amendment and to eviscerate agencies and departments created by Congress. He dictates to private institutions how to run their affairs. He sends troops into American streets and wages an unauthorized war against nonmilitary boats in the Caribbean. He openly uses law enforcement for what his own chief of staff calls “score settling” against his enemies, he dispenses pardons to favored allies and he equates criticism to sedition punishable by death."

Not to mention launching an illegal war and setting up a ruse ('SAVE Act')  to interfere with federal elections which are the responsibility of the states.

Lastly, one encounters this clueless twaddle, which I'd have expected my junior high nephew to have more likely put 0ut: 

"Nor has a high-profile leader or public face emerged, in the way that Tom Hayden did during the 1960s antiwar protests. Luminaries of today’s left like Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez act as champions of progressive causes rather than only as foils to Mr. Trump."

Failing totally to grasp the protests themselves are not from the 'Left'- but energized by Americans across the political spectrum.  This was emphasized by former Tea Party activist Joe Walsh who appeared on Velshi Saturday.  Walsh, at the Arlington, VA No Kings, made it clear the people assembled "are not Ds or Rs" but concerned citizens fighting to preserve their democracy

Obviously, then, given the wide spectrum for the No Kings rallies it would be stupid to have or support one leader from one particular part of the spectrum. Indeed, protests erupted in more than a dozen other countries, from Europe to Latin America to Australia, Ezra Levin, a co-executive director of Indivisible, a group spearheading the events, said in an interview. In countries with constitutional monarchies, people call the protests "No Tyrants," he said.

In Rome, thousands marched with defiant chants aimed at Premier Giorgia Meloni, whose conservative government saw its referendum for streamlining Italy's judiciary fail badly this week amid criticism that it was a threat to the courts' independence. Protesters also waved banners protesting Israeli and US attacks on Iran, calling for "A world free from wars."

In London, people protesting the war held banners with slogans such as "Stop the far right" and "Stand up to Racism."

Maybe by the time of the next No Kings protests, or the coming huge Dem win in the midterms, Jeremy Peters will have absorbed these points.

See Also:

by Nancy Braus | March 28, 2026 - 5:27am | permalink

`

Millions of Americans are currently hard at work doing whatever we can to resist the fascism that has quickly taken hold in the United States. For as long as I can remember, many Americans were discontented with many aspects of the government—both people like me, who have always worked for environmental, social, and economic justice, and the people who would devolve into Donald Trump’s supporters—the same racist, nativist misogynists who have always populated this settler colonial state.

For those of us who value kindness, learning, fairness, diversity, working for a future for the environment, and all the other values hated by the MAGA cult, this is a time that feels like a daily nightmare. Every value we hold is being smashed into the ground by this cult that often feels almost supernatural in its pure evil.

» article continues...

And:

by Robert Reich | March 29, 2026 - 5:13am | permalink

— from Robert Reich's Substack

`

Friends,

Yesterday, millions of us once again affirmed the foundation of the common good.

Across America, people showed their solidarity — in opposition to Trump’s ill-considered war in Iran, with immigrants being targeted by ICE and Border Patrol agents, with current and former public officials whom Trump is prosecuting, with the students and universities whose freedom to learn and speak continues to be threatened by Trump, in favor of the earth and stopping climate change, and with every American who’s determined to reject dictatorship.

But how do we turn yesterday’s solidarity into political power?

Three suggestions. All depend on our working with activists we already know, added to those we met yesterday, and the activism of our local Indivisible chapter and other groups we participate in.

» article continues...

And:

A Lesson For All Voters To Master: How Wannabe Kings Grab And Hold Onto Power

And:

Wannabe King Trump Gets Feted at Windsor While Angry Protests Rage In London

And:

by Christopher D. Cook | June 20, 2025 - 5:21am | permalink

The June 14 “No Kings Day” outpouring was truly historic. An estimated 5 million people (some estimates from organizers run closer to 10 million) flooded the streets in more than 2,100 cities and towns across the nation, peacefully expressing their outrage at President Donald Trump’s unrelenting assaults on immigrants, democracy, the Constitution, science, diversity, government services, and more.

To paraphrase the target of this uprising, we’ve rarely seen anything like this. “No Kings Day” protests, taking place in all 50 states, including massive crowds in Red states, may well be America’s biggest single day of protest against a U.S. president and his policies. (By some accounts, “No Kings Day” ranks third among all U.S. protests for a single-day turnout.)

Throughout the next day, the internet was wallpapered with photographs of huge red-state crowds, everywhere: Sugarland, Texas. Blount County, Tennessee. Omaha, Nebraska. Hot Springs, Arkansas. Jackson, Mississippi. Indianapolis, Indiana. Birmingham, Alabama. Everywhere.

» article continues...

    And:


    Opinion

    Philip Bump

    Stating the obvious: Mass protests are not going to help Trump


    Excerpt:

    It’s understandable that media coverage of Saturday’s events would focus on an obvious political contrast: While President Donald Trump summoned Americans to Washington to celebrate the Army’s (and his own) birthday, protesters against Trump’s authoritarian approach to his position took to the streets around the country and around the world.

    This comparison does a disservice to the difference in scale between the two. Though estimating crowd size is tricky and subject to bias, it seems clear that the anti-Trump “No Kings” protests drew millions of attendees in the U.S. while the Army/Trump parade enticed thousands. It was a demonstration of opposition that will be impossible for the president to spin. But, then, he might not have to.

    And:

    by Rob Okun | June 15, 2025 - 5:03am | permalink

    A would-be king wants a coronation today—Saturday, June 14—a date already laden with meaning: Flag Day, the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, and, yes, Donald J. Trump’s 79th birthday. But this year, Americans are refusing to let the day be coopted. Across all 50 states, from big cities to small towns, more than 1,800 events are planned to mark what organizers are calling the “No Kings Day of Defiance.”

    Driven by grassroots outrage and organized by IndivisiblePublic CitizenSocial Security WorksThird ActCommit to Democracy, and others, these decentralized protests share one audacious goal: to reclaim the flag from authoritarianism and reject the corrosive spectacle of a would-be despot. The theme? “Take back the flag on Flag Day.”

    Trump’s military pageant—planned for the heart of Washington—is a grotesque parody of patriotism. The New York Times reported that theproposed display features 28 M1 Abrams tanks, 28 Stryker armored vehicles, a vintage WWII-era B-25 bomber, 6,700 troops, 50 helicopters, and more than 100 military vehicles, horses, even a dog. The projected cost will likely end up at nearly $50 million, footed by we the people. All in the service of one man’s fragile ego.

    » article continues...

    And:

    by Fred Wertheimer | June 15, 2025 - 5:10am | permalink

    This week President Donald Trump sent the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles to control what he preposterously called a “violent occupation.”

    Sending U.S. troops to act against citizens exercising their right to free speech is a chilling betrayal of American democracy. The rebellion Trump claims to be fighting is simply nonexistent.

    In fact, reporters and on-site observers have documented that the protests in Los Angeles—and those spreading now to other cities—are, for the most part, nonviolent. The violence that has occurred was likely intensified by the arrival of the military.

    Late Thursday, a federal court ruled that Trump’s deployment of the National Guard in California was illegal and unconstitutional and ordered Trump to relinquish control of the California National Guard back to Governor Gavin Newsom. That ruling has been temporarily blocked by an Appeals Court and the deployment will be allowed to continue at least into next week.

    » article continues...

    And:

    'NO KINGS' Protests = Diminishing Returns? WSJ's Kim Strassel Needs To Watch Those News Clips Again

     

    Friday, March 27, 2026

    All Experts Redux: Open vs. Globular Star Clusters

     Question:  Can you please explain to me, using examples (images if possible), the difference between open and globular clusters?-  Amateur astronomer, Houston, TX


    Answer:  The answer is fairly straightforward for your question and to facilitate I provide two photos below, the first of the Pleiades open cluster, the second of  the M13 (in Hercules) globular cluster:




    As you will note, the open clusters like the Pleiades (left) are generally of random shape and loosely clustered, hence outer stars often escape the gravitational pull of the cluster's center of mass and drift off separately.  The Pleiades cluster, for reference, contains about 100 stars within a diameter of roughly 10 light years.   This statistic is also fairly typical of other open clusters, which can contain from fewer than a hundred stars to a thousand within a space a few tens of light years in size.  Thus, the star densities are a few stars per cubic light year.

     Globular clusters like M13 in the constellation Hercules, have a definite shape (hence the name)  and can hold from 100,000 to 1 million stars - all jammed into a space only 100 LY or so in diameter..  Contrasted to the open clusters, globulars are very stable gravitational units so it would be rare for stars to escape.  The stars at the center of a globular cluster are crammed together as densely as a hundred per cubic light year.   For perspective here, if Earth orbited a star at the center of such a cluster its nearest stellar neighbor would be only a few "light months" away - as opposed to the 4.2 light years from Proxima Centauri.

    There is also a difference in respect of location for the two types of clusters.  While open star clusters are found in the spiral arms of our galaxy, the globular clusters form a sort of 'halo' around the central plane.  This is not a coincidence. The halo is in fact regarded as the "fossil remains"  (one astronomer's term) of the galaxy's birth.  Hence, globular clusters would naturally contain the most ancient stars.  The conclusion here is that our galaxy must have been incepted or born from a gas cloud that was initially 100,000 LY or more in radius.

    The globular cluster stars we refer to as "Population II" stars(red giants) which color also denotes more ancient stars. (The red giant stage being the end phase of stellar evolution for stars no the main sequence). By contrast, the open clusters like the Pleiades contain "Population I" stars which are relatively young, spectral type O and B supergiants.

    Hopefully these differences I've examined give a better idea of the distinctive features for both types of star clusters.

    Thursday, March 26, 2026

    Mensa Algrebra and Analytic Geometry (Circle) Problem

     




    The circle in this problem is defined by the equation:

     (x - 132) 2 -  (y - 132) 2 = 24, 649  

    The circle intersects the y-axis at points A and B as shown.

    The point A has a greater y-value than B.

    The line AC is a diameter.

    M and N are points on the circle such that the angles:

    < ACM =  < ACN  =  p /4   radians.

    What are the Cartesian coordinates of M and N?

    Hint: You may need to apply the inscribed angle theorem which states:

    An inscribed angle is equal to one half the central angle that intercepts the same arc.

    You may also need to do a circle reconstruction to incorporate the points M and N in relation to each other and their lines to the diameter. 



    Wednesday, March 25, 2026

    New Research Finds Climate Change Linked To Enhanced Slowing in Earth's Rotation Rate

     


    If one looks at the underlying physics it shouldn't be astounding to learn that days are getting longer as a result of climate change.  In effect, warmer temperatures have led to a slowing of Earth’s rotation at a rate we have not been seen for at least 3.6 million years. This finding is based on new research, i.e.

    Climate‐Induced Length of Day Variations Since the Late Pliocene - Kiani Shahvandi - 2026 - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth - Wiley Online Library

     Showing that rising sea levels caused by melting ice sheets are redistributing mass across the planet, reducing how fast Earth spins and gradually lengthening the day.  Amazing?  Not really. Earlier research has already found that the Earth's rotation axis has been displaced by melting glaciers and ground water overuse. Also, that new estimates of the inertial tensor have shown the rotation of the non-rigid Earth can be affected. (See added links at end of this post).

    Of course, the deviations are extremely small, but they add up over time, especially geological eons. Researchers have found that days are currently increasing by about 1.33 milliseconds per century due to climate-related factors, a pace that stands out sharply in the planet’s recent geological history. Earlier studies by the same team established that climate change affects sea levels and, as a result, Earth’s rotation—but the new work places the trend in a geological context. 

    According to lead paper author (and geodisist*) Benedikt Soja of ETH Zurich, Switzerland:

    This rapid increase in day length implies that the rate of modern climate change has been unprecedented at least since the late Pliocene, 3.6 million years ago.  The current rapid rise in day length can thus be attributed primarily to human influences."

    Adding:

    By the end of the 21st century, climate change is expected to affect day length even more strongly than the Moon. Even though the changes are only milliseconds, they can cause problems in many areas, for example in precise space navigation, which requires accurate information on Earth’s rotation.”

    Paper co-author Mostafa Kiani Shahvandi of the University of Vienna added that the effect is similar to a figure skater spinning more slowly after extending her arms.  She will be slowed dramatically in terms of reduction in angular velocity, w. so that her angular speed w (f)  <  w (i).   

    This is something every college freshman doing general physics learns.  What remains uncertain, according to Shahvandi, was whether climate had ever lengthened the day this quickly before. To answer that question, the research team reconstructed changes in Earth’s day length going back millions of years.

    Obviously, no actual time machines are being used here, so the team relied on fossilized remains of benthic foraminifera, single-celled marine organisms that preserve chemical signals of past ocean conditions. By analyzing these fossils, the geodesy team was able to infer historical sea-level fluctuations and calculate how those shifts would have affected Earth’s rotation.

    The researchers then applied a type of machine deep learning algorithm to the findings, much like I saw solar dynamics researchers do in the SDO 2025 workshop last year, 

    Looking Back On Last Week's Solar Dynamics Workshop - One Of The Best Meetings I've Ever Attended

     designed to reflect sea-level change while accounting for the uncertainty that comes with ancient climate data. According to Shahvandi:

    From the chemical composition of the foraminifera fossils, we can infer sea-level fluctuations and then mathematically derive the corresponding changes in day length. This model captures the physics of sea-level change, while remaining robust to the large uncertainties inherent in paleoclimate data.”

    The results show that Earth’s day length has varied significantly over the past 2.6 million years, particularly during the Quaternary period, when large continental ice sheets repeatedly grew and melted. These ice-driven sea-level changes caused Earth’s rotation to speed up or slow down at different times.

    However,  compared with modern measurements, the researchers found that the present era’s increase in day length is exceptional. Only one period, around two million years ago, showed a rate of change that came close to present-day levels, and even that episode was slightly slower than what has been observed between 2000 and 2020. In the words of Shahvandi:

    Never before or after that has the planetary ‘figure skater’ raised her arms and sea levels so quickly as in 2000 to 2020.” 

    These recent findings suggest that the current trend reflects a broader pattern of unusually rapid climate change. Looking ahead, the researchers say climate change could have an even greater influence on Earth’s rotation. By the end of the 21st century, they estimate that climate-driven effects on day length may surpass the slowing impact caused by the Moon’s gravitational pull.

    ----

    * geodisist: A specialist involved in the science of Geodesy

     See Also:

    And:

    New estimates of the inertia tensor and rotation of the triaxial nonrigid Earth - Chen - 2010 - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth - Wiley Online Library

     And:

    by Anabel Scales | March 25, 2026 - 4:48am | permalink

    `

    by Anabel Scales and Chuck Collins

    The February rollback of the “endangerment finding”—which provides the legal basis for regulating climate change—was many years in the works. It’s the ultimate payback for a politically engaged fossil fuel industry and the climate criminals who use their wealth, power, and position to block efforts to help us transition to a post-oil, gas, and coal era.

    Who’s responsible for rolling back the endangerment finding? We believe it is time to name names so future generations—and future climate justice tribunals—will know who is responsible for incinerating our futures. Researchers at the Climate Accountability Research Project have tracked several of the key individuals working to undermine climate protection for the last two years.

    » article continues...

    Tuesday, March 24, 2026

    The 'Tragedy of Robert Mueller'? The Real Tragedy Is How The U.S. Right Media Keeps Coddling A Putin Asset & Traitor

     

         We're almost home, my pet, there are no more serious investigations."



    "Trump is showing us why he didn't touch the Bible when he pretended to take the Oath of Office for his current term. He's at least superstitious enough to think he's not bound by it. Intolerable!" - WaPo Comment

    The Wall Street Journal's latest Editorial potshot at truth ('The Tragedy Of Robert Mueller', p. A16 yesterday, is as bereft of fact as its earlier editorial misfires on the SAVE Act and Paul Ehrlich.  In this one the Journal's Pooh Bahs insisting:

     "The FBI Director's long service was marred by the Russia collusion probe. The tragedy of his legacy is that he agreed to lead the probe into whether Donald Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election.".

    No, it was not. It was the conservative, reactionary media (like the WSJ) that marred its own credibility by failing to accept what Mueller revealed:  That Donald Trump is basically a "KGB plant" foolishly elected by 77m nutso Americans.  This now buttressed by former MI6 agent Christopher Steele's 2024 book, 'Unredacted'.  We now know, thanks to Mr. Steele's further work, the extent to which Trump DID collude and indeed, conspired with Putin and other Russian operatives to further his aims. As Steele writes in his book's Introduction:

     "Presently the gravest threat to Western democracy and the rule of law comes from Donald Trump and the U.S. Republican Party, increasingly the willing handmaidens for Putin." 

    Adding:

    "It is sometimes easy to forget that Putin helped Trump to become President before, in 2016, as the report by special counsel Robert Mueller made clear."

    Indeed, and there were literally troves of substantiated material which the WSJ nabobs casually ignore in Mueller's (2019) Report:. 

    www.justice.gov/storage/report.pdf


     Including his indictments of 12 Russian (GRU) agents.


    [Read the indictment here.]

    So it beggars the rational mind how the Journal, which prides itself on otherwise sober reporting, can spout bollocks about Mueller's Report offering "dubious conclusions" and even suggesting (at the end of the editorial) Mueller may not have been fit enough to render credible conclusions. I.e. "How much was a declining Mueller in control of his investigation? In 2019, when he testified before the House his decline was apparent."

    Well, how about Trump's rapid decline?  Shouldn't that merit his removal under the 25th amendment? This is a deranged mutt who just launched a war on a whim because he believed he could conquer Iran as easily as Venezuela!  Thereby, minus any rhyme or reason, sending gas prices into the stratosphere, even as he yelped he was "glad" Mueller died! See also:

    Trump’s HEALTH CRASHES in WAR as 25th AMENDMENT DEMANDED!!

    Maybe the Journal's editors would do better to ask Trump's 1st term AG William Barr why he found it necessary to incarcerate a former Air Force officer (Reality Winner) under the 1917 Espionage Act for using the internet to leak documents pertaining to Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections

    If there was no "there, there" and the Russia story was just a hoax, why lock her up? Why not just dismiss her as a flake suffering from TDS? Wasn't she just leaking her own fantasies over the internet? 

    But this has been symptomatic of how the right-leaning media has continued to coddle and make excuses for the pestilence holding the highest office in the land.  A degraded fungal maggot who has seemingly compromised all who might hold him to account. Especially after his last display of removing sanctions for Russian oil, after he knew that Putin and Co. were dispatching intel on U.S. military targets to Iran. This was reported in The Washington Post:

    Russia is giving Iran intelligence to target U.S. forces, officials say - The Washington Post

    Noting:

    "Russia is providing Iran with targeting information to attack American forces in the Middle East, the first indication that another major U.S. adversary is participating — even indirectly — in the war, according to three officials familiar with the intelligence.

    Then there was the main section WSJ article ('Europe Confronts Rupture', p. A8,Jan. 20, p. A8)  noting:

    "Even more important to Putin than all of Ukraine is the longstanding Russian objective to divide the trans-Atlantic alliance. So recent Trump and U.S. actions that break the cohesion and trust within NATO are a gift to Putin"  According to Doug Lute, a former U.S. Ambassador to NATO."

    Incredibly, also in January, the WSJ editors acknowledged for once the degree to  which Trump is a real Russian apparatchik, noting:

    "For more than 75 years, the fondest dream of Russian strategy has been to divide Western Europe from the U.S. and break the NATO alliance. That is now a possibility as President Trump presses his campaign to capture Greenland no matter what the locals or its Denmark owner thinks."

    Never mind Trump backed off, after a firestorm erupted. He attempted it! The only rational and logical explanation that explains Trump's actions across the board is that he's a Russian pawn or agent, doing Putin's bidding. Likely because the Russian has a 'pee tape' on him, as first exposed in the Steele Dossier.  See e.g.

    James Carville: There Is A Pee Tape 

    Steele Dossier a fake? Think again! As reported in the comprehensive 'Moscow Project":  Dossier - The Moscow Project

    "Donald Trump’s allies in Congress and in the media have long attempted to use the Steele Dossier to discredit the Russia investigation. It has also been the subject of lawsuits filed by parties named in the document.

    But Christopher Steele is now fighting back full tilt against that agitprop. He makes clear the purpose for writing his recent book in his Author’s Note:

    I believe it is in the public interest for me to revisit matters raised in the dossier and republish in the form I have decided to do in this work, so that readers are able to understand fully my account of the events described, my criticisms of the investigative efforts which followed and my ongoing concerns that the matters raised in the dossier (including the issue of Russian Kompromat) have not been serious resolved and so remain  a threat.

    This is important as in the page that follows where he pointedly writes that the “Trump-Russia Dossier was published in Buzzfeed without my knowledge or approval."  Buzzfeed's  blatant and reckless act had the effect of unmasking many of Steele's sources who were then “punished by the Russian regime and its facilitators.” It also had the effect of exposing him to “legal threats” from people and companies named in the reports” (p. 192)

    But throughout his book, Steele stands by what he wrote in the dossier given he relied on numerous independent sources, as well as high quality investigative reporting, unlike the drivel typically coming out of the Wall Street Journal at the time. By contrast, The Financial Times in its Feb. 16, 2018 issue, validated Christopher Steele's bona fides as a trusted MI6 agent, noting he was "the UK intelligence expert on Russia".  In addition, citing James Nixey, the head of Chatham House's Russia and Eurasia program, confirming that key sections of the dossier read exactly as reports from the secret services". .

    In his book, Steele observes (p. 144) there were accusations of Russian collaboration leveled against Trump - though he denied them.  However, multiple witnesses testified  (ibid.) under oath that he stayed overnight at the Moscow Ritz Carlton in 2013 – where the pee tape was made. Further, three experienced Guardian UK journalists (Luke Harding, Julian Borger, Dan Sabbah) reported:

     “The existence of a leaked Kremlin document describing the meeting of the Russian National Security Council in January, 2016 at which Vladimir Putin ‘authorizes a secret spy operation to support a ‘mentally unstable Donald Trump’ in the 2016 presidential election.”

    Fusion GPS is also cited (p.125) and Steele noted its work:

    "Had unearthed numerous connections between Trump and Russia, including his links with alleged Russian organized crime figures - also that Trump had made many trips to Russia starting in the Soviet era."

    This also meshes with the Trump back story revealed in a New Republic expose on the traitor rat's history with Russia (Aug./Sept. 2017, p .29):

    "A review of the public record reveals a clear and disturbing pattern: Trump owes much of his business success, and by extension his presidency, to a flow of highly suspicious money from Russia. Over the past three decades, at least 13 people with known or alleged links to Russian mobsters or oligarchs have owned, lived in, or even run criminal activities out of Trump Tower and other Trump properties. Many used his apartments and casinos to launder untold millions in dirty money .....

    Taken together, the flow of money from Russia provided Trump with a crucial infusion of financing that helped rescue his empire from ruin, burnish his image, and launch his career in television and politics....It's entirely possible that Trump was never more than a convenient patsy for Russian oligarchs and mobsters."

     As if all this wasn't enough, Steele details (pp.268-69) how Trump - with Putin's GRU help - also planned to snatch the 2020 election from Biden with an elaborate ruse. As Steele relates it (p. 268):

    "At the more bizarre end of the reporting range, in early October, 2020, a senior Russian intelligence officer shared a plan with our (UK) collector that showed at least some elements within the power structure in Moscow were considering a radical, highly risky last minute operation to help snatch victory from Biden in the last days of the campaign. The report read:

    'During the last week, and no more than the past two weeks, in GRU headquarters in Moscow, a small and highly secret group detached from all other tasks, has been meeting to fulfill a sole mission: to instigate the kidnapping or hostage- taking of U.S. citizens in either Iraq or Syria.  The aim being to create a distracting event just before the U.S. elections either to:

    - allow Trump quickly and successfully to settle the hostage situation and use it to his political advantage (the Kremlin's preferred method)

    or:

    - to resolve the situation in a joint operation between Russian and U.S. military forces. (In the event a joint operation would be too complex to execute, only Russian forces would be used for the mission).

    The aim is to fake a situation and then to 'resolve' it with the effect that Russia appears as a friend to the U.S. and Trump's relationship with Putin has been well worth it."

    Of course, as Steele goes on to note, this shenanigan never transpired but it shows the extent to which the Russkies regarded Trump as a useful pawn. Steele then adding in regard to the (coming) 2024 election (p. 269):

    "Approaching the 2024 election, with all restraints off Putin, we must be alert to the potential for operations that could be even more aggressive, ambitious and outlandish."

    Among which I tag the spate of 'manosphere' podcasts painting Trump as some kind of superhuman for escaping the attempted assassination in Butler, PA.  Also the Polymarket betting frenzy (mostly on Trump) and the radical emergence of the crypto bros.

    So uh, yeah, Trump is a Russkie asset - maybe even a Manchurian candidate - and it doesn't take a Mensa level IQ to figure that out. Hell, all you needed was to witness Trump's deference to Putin in their Anchorage meet last August,

     Anchorage Meet Proved Trump Is Still Putin's Bitch - And It Ain't No "Zombie Lie",

    And to grasp Putin got everything he could have out of it - including mountains of respect - while Donny Dotard got polar bear piss and lickspittle. 

    Maybe it's time The Wall Street Journal's mavens finally wake up to the fact the guy they're coddling is a craven traitor and liability to this country. Hint: Journal Editors, check out Putin's  mug as he gets in the Trump limo in Anchorage last summer:



    See Also:

    Russia sending drones to Iran, western intelligence says

    Moscow close to completing phased deliveries of lethal weapons, food and medicine to Tehran

    And:

    by Thom Hartmann | March 12, 2026 - 5:18am | permalink

    — from The Hartmann Report

    `

    Eight of our American service members are dead and over 140 wounded because Iran’s military has suddenly gotten really good at targeting our soldiers, Airmen, and Marines. News reports say they’ve been able to hit us with such precision because Russia is using their extraordinary spy satellite, spy plane, and advanced radar capabilities to help Iran’s military.

    The Washington Post, which first reported on this, quoted a Russian military expert as saying that Iran is now “making very precise hits on early-warning radars or over-the-horizon radars,” seeming to validate the concern. The article added:

    “Iran possesses only a handful of military-grade satellites, and no satellite constellation of its own, which would make imagery provided by Russia’s much more advanced space capabilities highly valuable — particularly as the Kremlin has honed its own targeting after years of war in Ukraine…”

    » article continues...

    And:

    Trump ratchets up attacks on NATO, says U.S. no longer needs alliance


    Excerpt:

    "President Donald Trump suggested the U.S. might move away from its commitment to defend NATO allies, criticizing them for not supporting the war in Iran. The United States may stop promising to defend its NATO allies should they come under attack, President Donald Trump said Friday, escalating his verbal barrage against the alliance as his frustration grows that European leaders have not significantly contributed to his war against Iran.

    From the outset of the war, European leaders have been leery about the legality and wisdom of attacking the Iranian regime, and many of them continue to say that the only long-term way to contain Tehran’s nuclear ambitions is through diplomacy. European officials also face voters who are furious with Trump for suggesting in January that he would seize Greenland — diminishing their appetite for joining in a war of choice the following month."

    Follow-up WaPo comments:

    Just like Vlad told him to do! He's just following the boss's orders!

    Vladimir Putin could not be more pleased; an American (?) president is attacking NATO.

    Breaking up NATO is Putin’s dream come true. It should be obvious Trump is a Russian agent.

    Looks like Christmas is coming early for Vladimir Putin this year.


    And:

    by Thom Hartmann | February 3, 2026 - 6:25am | permalink

    — from The Hartmann Report

    The British newspaper Daily Mail is out with a deeply researched investigative report, the result of a long collaboration between columnists Glen Owen and Dan Hodges, along with Mark Hookham (Assistant Editor Investigations), and Daisy Graham-Brown (Investigative Reporter).

    It’s shocking in its detail and its implication that Putin has basically owned Trump for years, even before he ran for president in 2016.

    They note of last week’s partial (about 50%) Epstein document release:

    The files include 1,056 documents naming Russian President Vladimir Putin and 9,629 referring to Moscow. Epstein even seems to have secured audiences with Putin after his 2008 conviction for procuring a child for prostitution.”

    » article continues...

    And:

    The ‘Putinization’ of US foreign policy has arrived in Venezuela | Venezuela | The Guardian

    And:

    by Roxanne Cooper | March 22, 2026 - 5:14am | permalink

    — from Alternet

    `

    Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who led the high-profile investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and potential coordination between the Trump campaign and Moscow, passed away Saturday, prompting an immediate and inflammatory response from President Donald Trump on his Truth Social platform.

    Mueller, 79, had served as the FBI's director from 2001 to 2013 under both Republican and Democratic administrations. He was appointed special counsel in May 2017 to investigate Russian meddling in the 2016 election and potential obstruction of justice by Trump. The investigation lasted nearly two years and resulted in the Mueller Report, which detailed extensive Russian interference efforts and numerous contacts between Trump campaign officials and Russian operatives, though it stopped short of making a prosecutorial judgment on obstruction charges.

    » article continues...

    And:

    Russia sees victory as Trump adopts Putin’s approach to ending Ukraine war - The Washington Post

    Excerpt:

    Russian officials and commentators were especially enamored by Trump’s unusually warm red-carpet greeting to Putin on Friday in which they saw an opening to pull America away from its traditional allies in Europe. ...Trump appeared to have been swayed by the Kremlin’s contention that only a comprehensive peace deal was acceptable — which Putin has so far used to delay efforts to halt the fighting. 

     Putin also succeeded, to some extent, in deflecting pressure to end the war onto Zelensky — rather than keeping it on Russia as the aggressor — with Trump telling Fox News after the summit that Zelensky should “make a deal” now because “Russia’s a very big power. And they’re not.”