Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Stevie Nicks' discography

I have been in a great mood today.  Yesterday, I listened to all of Stevie Nicks' solo albums starting around 4 o'clock.  It just put in a great mood.  

So many great tracks.  I'm going to rank the albums.

8) STREET ANGEL
I didn't like this at all when it came out.  The sound just wasn't there for me.  I did like some of the songs -- "Rose Garden," for example.  But this 1994 album was not a favorite of mine.  It's improved over the years.  

7) IN YOUR DREAMS
This 2011 album is really incredible.  A favorite of mine.  It includes one of Stevie's all time great songs ("For What It's Worth") and so many other strong tracks.

6) THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MIRROR
Side two is best of this album but I do enjoy the entire album.  "Juliet" is the must listen song she wrote for this album.

5) TROUBLE IN SHANGRI-LA
This is the album that we worried we'd never get after STREET ANGEL.  Sheryl Crow worked with Stevie as a producer on this album and it really did pay off. I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed this album until I listened yesterday.  "Every Day" is great but "That Made Me Stronger" really spoke to the high level of production on this album.  There are sounds in that song that are inspired.  It's like RUMOURS in terms of its production.

4) Bella Donna
Stevie's debut solo album and it's still as amazing today as it was in 1981.  "After The Glitter Fades" was the fourth top forty hit off the album and it's only grown stronger over the years.

3) ROCK A LITTLE
This 1985 album is a classic and a joyful tour.  Every track on the album is a winner.  "The Nightmare," "I Can't Wait," "Sister Honey" (I love that song), "Imperial Hotel," "I Sing For The Things" (a beautiful ballad), "Rock A Little (Go Ahead, Lily)," "If I Were You," "No Spoken Word" . . .  An amazing album.

2) WILD HEART
This 1993 album was Stevie's finest album for years.  I loved it from first listen.  "Gate and Garden," "Enchanted," "Nightbird," "Sable On Blond" and "Beauty and the Beast" were amazing.  Then there's "Stand Back" and "If Anyone Falls" and "Nothing Ever Changes."  There's not a song in the mix that I don't love and there's not a track on this album that doesn't feel lived in and felt 100% by Stevie.

1) 24 KARAT GOLD: SONGS FROM THE VAULT
This 2014 album (Stevie's most recent solo studio album) immediately upon release became my all time favorite Stevie album.  It's classic with so many amazing songs.  "Hard Advice," for example. So many great songs like "Blue Water" and "The Dealer" and "Lady" and "She Loves Him Still."  Stevie's created a shining classic.  

That's what her discography is -- seven classics and one okay album (that would be STREET ANGEL -- it's not as bad as I felt it was when it came out but it's not a classic either).


"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS): 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026.  Chump and Hegseth appear to be fudging the facts on the Iran War,  Chump's slush fund may be dead, Hegseth and Chump's attacks on transgender service members takes a beating in the court system, and much more. 


Pete Hegseth regularly gets called out by senators on both sides of the aisle these days when he appears before them.  The reason being?  He gives them a rosy and unrealistic fantasy about the Iran War.  There are some who accuse him of doing the same with Chump. He may lie to Chump but, if he does, Chump wants to be lied to about the war and about himself -- especially about himself.  Will Neal (DAILY BEAST) reports of the war:

Iranian strikes have caused greater damage to U.S. military assets in the Middle East than the Trump administration is willing to admit.

Analysis by the BBC, published Monday, reveals that attacks by the Islamic Republic have cost millions of dollars in damage to at least 20, and possibly as many as 28, American military sites across eight countries in the region since Donald Trump launched his war on Iran at the end of February.
Trump has repeatedly claimed that U.S. forces have “destroyed,” “obliterated,” and “shattered” the regime’s military capabilities. The Pentagon has meanwhile tried to limit assessments of the impact on U.S. assets by pressuring Planet, a major satellite-imaging provider, to restrict public access to new images of the region.
[. . .]
The BBC notes that the Pentagon has, at latest count, put the cost of Operation Epic Fury, as Trump has dubbed his war with Iran, at $29 billion. Democratic lawmakers have slammed those figures as an underestimate.

Chump and company lie.  They've been a little hopeful in their progress reports. A little optimistic.  Not really accurate. Sarah K. Burris adds,  "The report also found that 'at least 42 aircraft - including F-15 and F-35 fighter jets, 24 MQ-9 Reaper drones and an A-10 attack plane - have been destroyed or damaged since February'."  It gets more and more difficult to believe the lies from Chump's mouth.  Jack Buckby (NATIONAL SECURITY JOURNAL) notes:

Last week, the Trump administration was publicly signaling that a deal with Iran was coming soon - but the prospect of a permanent peace between the two sides now appears far more remote after Iran announced that it had suspended all indirect negotiations with Washington through mediators. On Monday, Iran accused the United States of failing to restrain Israeli attacks and claimed that continued military operations in Lebanon constitute a violation of the ceasefire agreement.

The news is perhaps the most serious challenge to the ceasefire yet, which came into effect on April 8, and it suggests that a lasting deal may not be as close as the White House hopes.


Not as close as the White House hopes.  Or as it says.  Chump's just not to be believed.  Jack Hobbs (THE MIRROR) explains:

Fresh satellite imagery from Iran has contradicted President Donald Trump's assertions that Iran no longer possesses nuclear capabilities.

The latest images reveal that four out of five entrances to the missile facility in Dezful, Iran, have been reopened since last month, with just one remaining blocked. CNN reported that Iran had cleared 50 of 69 tunnel entrances that were struck by U.S. and Israeli forces across 18 underground missile installations.



President Donald Trump’s approval rating has fallen to a record low with Big Data Poll, a survey that has historically given him some of his strongest numbers, as voters express growing dissatisfaction with the economy, the cost of living and the administration’s handling of foreign policy.
In its most recent survey, conducted between May 24 and 27 among 3,121 registered voters, 39.4 percent of respondents said they approved of the job Trump was doing as president—including 19.9 percent who said they strongly approved. Big Data Poll called this a “new low for the president during his second term and the first time he has dipped into the critical 30s.”
While polls have been known to underestimate Trump’s popularity, with the president outperforming preelection expectations in three presidential campaigns, Big Data Poll has previously showed some of Trump’s highest approval ratings—so the record low approval raises questions about whether dissatisfaction with the administration is beginning to extend beyond traditional critics.


Yes, the dissatisfaction with the administration has extended beyond traditional critics. 



Turning to Chump's slush fund, Marita Vlachou (HUFFINGTON POST) reports:

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Monday said his party "will launch a coordinated effort to kill" President Donald Trump's "Anti-Weaponization Fund," adding that Democrats will force Republicans to vote on the fund.

"Trump’s nearly $2 billion MAGA slush fund is his most brazen act of self-dealing yet and one of the most corrupt schemes ever launched by a president. Senate Democrats will not let it stand," Schumer wrote in a Dear Colleague letter. "This week, Senate Democrats will launch a coordinated effort to kill the slush fund before one cent goes out the door. And no matter what Republicans do, we will force them to vote."

Travis Gettys (RAW STORY) explains, "Democrats are unlikely to have the votes to kill the fund outright, but the campaign is widely seen as a political maneuver designed to put Republicans on the record ahead of the 2026 midterms, when control of both chambers could hinge on a small number of competitive seats."  Nikole Killion (CBS NEWS) points out, "Last week, a federal judge temporarily blocked the Justice Department from moving forward with work on the new fund." And Alexander Willis (RAW STORY) provides this context, "Trump’s nearly $1.8 billion fund has proven wildly unpopular even among GOP lawmakers, triggering a revolt of sorts within the Republican Party. The fund is even less popular with voters, with recent internal GOP polling sparking alarm among party insiders."



President Trump is backing off his plan to establish a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claimed they were victims of unfair prosecution by the government, two people familiar with the matter said on Monday.

The people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the president’s thinking, said he had been leaning for days toward scrapping the fund, which critics have characterized as a scheme to reward Mr. Trump’s political allies with public benefits.

The administration signaled a retreat on Monday, when the Justice Department said in a statement that it would abide by a federal judge’s temporary order not to proceed with any steps to activate the fund until at least June 12, when a hearing on the fund is scheduled. The department said the administration disagreed with the decision but did not make clear whether it intended to fight the issue further in court.

It was unclear whether getting rid of the fund would affect another part of the legal settlement in the case, which provides Mr. Trump, his family and his businesses with significant immunity from audits.


"Dead for now," Lawrence O'Donnell pronounced the slush fund last night on MS NOW. 









Chump's legal problems never fade away.  There always there.  He can't escape the judiciary.  Farrah Tomazin (DAILY BEAST) reports:

The Trump administration has been dealt another legal blow, with a federal court ruling that the president illegally banned transgender troops from military service.

A divided panel of appeals court judges ruled on Monday that Donald Trump’s executive order to exclude transgender troops from military service likely violated their constitutional rights, and was driven by a “non-legitimate state interest” to harm transgender people.
“The government’s stated reason for issuing the Hegseth Policy as based solely upon gender dysphoria was pretextual, and that instead, the Hegseth Policy was premised, at least in part, on a non-legitimate state interest to harm the politically unpopular group of transgender persons,” Wilkins wrote in an opinion, adding that Trump “declared transgender people as categorically unfit for military service explicitly because of their gender identity.”
The move is the latest humiliating setback Trump has faced in the courts within days.

Remember, the Supreme Court did not rule on the issue.  The Crooked Court just permitted Chump to do it and to allow it to work its way through the courts instead.  Well the appeals court has ruled. 


A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., said Monday that the Trump administration’s transgender military policy appears motivated by "the bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group," delivering some of the strongest appellate criticism yet of a cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s campaign against transgender rights.

Writing for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Judge Robert Wilkins concluded that key portions of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's policy likely violate the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection because they appear rooted in hostility toward transgender people rather than legitimate military concerns.

"The sharp contrast to the Mattis Policy ... appears to be driven by the bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group: persons who identify as transgender," wrote Wilkins, an appointee of former President Barack Obama.

"As such, at this preliminary stage, I conclude that the Hegseth Policy is both arbitrary and based upon animus."

The remarks came in a fractured ruling that partially upheld and partially narrowed an injunction against the policy. The court preserved protections for the named transgender plaintiffs currently serving in the military while allowing enforcement of portions of the policy affecting prospective recruits.

But the most striking aspect of the 107-page opinion was Wilkins' repeated focus on what he described as evidence that the administration's policy targets transgender identity itself.



Today's ruling is the latest courtroom defeat for Hegseth. Since taking office, federal judges have blocked his Pentagon press restrictions, enjoined his censure of Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ), and blocked his blacklisting of Anthropic — with courts repeatedly finding his actions driven by retaliation rather than legitimate policy.

The case, Talbott v. United States, now heads back to the district court. A class action motion that would extend protections to all affected servicemembers is scheduled for hearing on June 30.




In related news, Hegseth continues embracing discrimination and hate as he refuses to allow promotions to take place.  Travis Gettys (RAW STORY) reports:

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth blocked the promotions of at least seven Navy officers hand-picked by a board of senior admirals, removing all women and most minority candidates from the list of nominees for promotions.

The intervention left a slate of 22 one-star admiral nominees that includes no women, despite females making up roughly 21 percent of the active-duty Navy, and only two nonwhite officers, despite racial minorities accounting for approximately 38 percent of the force, reported the New York Times.

At least two of the removed officers are women, two are Black men, and three are white men.

Four current and former defense officials, speaking anonymously to discuss sensitive personnel matters, said Hegseth's actions are highly unusual and appear to breach Pentagon rules, which permit the defense secretary to remove officers from promotion lists only when new information raises specific questions about their fitness to serve — not on ideological grounds.



Friday, Chump got told to take his damn, dirty name off The Kennedy Center.  Liz Dye (ABOVE THE LAW) covers that and notes:

On Friday, a federal judge in DC ordered Donald Trump to take John F. Kennedy’s name out of his filthy mouth. More or less.

In a meticulous, 94-page order, Judge Christopher Cooper found that the toadies Trump installed on the Kennedy Center Board might have the legal right to rubber stamp a plan to shut down the storied arts center for two years and convert into a Vegas-style emporium, but they didn’t have the smarts to do it properly. And they certainly never had the power to rename the place after Trump himself.

Along the way, the court ruled that the president lied about the proposed renovation, as did his cronies.
Naturally Trump has responded with his normal gravitas, dramatically washing his hands of the entire project and personally attacking Judge Cooper and his wife — all of which will be Exhibit A should the government make good on its threat to appeal.
In 1958, President Eisenhower signed the National Cultural Center Act to create a center for the arts in the nation’s capital. At first, fundraising was sluggish. But after President Kennedy’s assassination, Congress re-designated the project in 1964 as the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The “living memorial” to the slain president drew private donations and public funds, and in 1971 it opened with a performance of the Mass by Leonard Bernstein, the quintessentially American composer.

Trump, who prefers “Cats” to Callas, has a testy relationship with the performing arts. And vice versa! During his campaigns, popular musicians routinely sued to block him playing their songs at his MAGA rallies. But during his first term, Trump largely left the nation’s important cultural institutions alone. This time around, the culture warriors at Project 2025 and the America First Policy Institute were ready to wreak havoc on these “liberal” bastions on day one.
Echoing Nazi claims about degenerate art, Trump announced that he was firing the board of the Kennedy Center and appointing “an amazing Chairman, DONALD J. TRUMP!”
The new board included Pam Bondi, Florida lobbyist Bryan Ballard, Lee Greenwood, Laura Ingraham, and Dan Scavino, the guy who writes Trump’s tweets. Ric Grenell, a figure from the first Trump administration who was too toxic to be let back into the White House(!), was installed as executive director.

The fallout from this MAGA-fication was immediate.

Everyone from Renée Fleming to Issa Rae canceled scheduled performances.

“You just made it political and caved to the woke mob who wants you to perform for only Lefties,” Grenell sneered at banjo player Béla Fleck.

This charm offensive failed to staunch the bleeding, although Grenell put on a game face. In September of 2025, he bragged about sellout crowds and high demand for Kennedy Center Honors tickets, promising that America250, the nation’s 250th birthday celebration, would be a show like none other. (Wait for it …)

Then in December, the board voted to rename the institution the “Trump Kennedy Center.” Signage went up the very next day, suggesting that the outcome was essentially a foregone conclusion.

After which the bottom fell out. Ticket sales collapsed, immediately dropping 70 percent as compared to the prior three years, according to the Wall Street Journal. The Washington National Opera, the Center’s resident company since 1971, announced it was severing the relationship. In fact, so many artists canceled that there was functionally no 2026 season left.


I could excerpt the entire piece, it's so well written and it captures all the cheap tactics Chump pulled to try to get his way.  But he lost.  Yes, he did. 

And he's losing so much these days as the American people catch on to him.  Svante Myrick (THE HILL) reflects on his avarice, greed and corruption:

“Welcome to the Golden Age!” says a banner on the White House website. 

Maybe it’s golden for Trump and his family, who’ve made billions by cashing in on the presidency, and for their ultrarich friends whose political influence rises along with their wealth.

But it’s not so golden for Americans paying higher prices for food and gas prices due to economic uncertainty caused by Trump’s chaotic tariff policies. They’re also paying high energy prices and facing fertilizer shortages resulting from his war against Iran, amid massive cuts to social safety net programs and threats of unregulated artificial intelligence.  

At a time when millions of families cannot meet their basic needs, and millions more live with anxiety and economic insecurity, Trump is focused on self-aggrandizement. His ridiculous gold-plated Louis XIV ballroom. A massive arch we don’t need and nobody else wants.  

And, untethered to the actual lived experiences of the American people, he waves away questions about American families experiencing hardship due to his policies, saying he doesn’t give them a thought.   

Political authoritarianism and economic corruption go hand in hand. They’re bad for democracy, the economy, freedom and families. When political leaders don’t think they have to follow the laws that apply to other people, they have an incentive to abuse their power and manipulate the system to enrich themselves and their friends.  

To achieve their ends, they undermine the rule of law, disadvantage honest economic players and corrupt both public and private institutions.  



Meanwhile, in New Mexico yesterday. the state's Truth Commission set up to investigate the actions of the late Jeffrey Epstein held their first meeting.



Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:


ICYMI: In Letter, Murray, Klobuchar Raise Concerns about Food and Nutrition Service Reorganization

ICYMI: Murray, Klobuchar Raise Concerns about the USDA Research, Education, and Economics Mission Area Reorganization

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, joined Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, and 18 of their colleagues in sending a letter to Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Stephen Valden raising strong concerns about the plan to reorganize the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. 

“We write with serious concern regarding the announced reorganization of the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS),” wrote the Senators. “Rather than strengthening the agency’s effectiveness, this reorganization poses a risk to FSIS’s core mission of protecting public health and ensuring the safety of our nation’s food supply.”    

“Losses in staff and institutional expertise as a result of this relocation could delay the identification and containment of outbreaks involving pathogens such as Salmonella, E. coli, or Listeria, allowing contaminated products to remain in commerce longer and increasing illnesses nationwide,” the Senators continued. “Reduced coordination amongst FSIS and other food safety and public health agencies like the Food and Drug Administration, and state partners could also slow traceback investigations and public communication during multistate outbreaks, when rapid response is critical to prevent additional illnesses. Instead of moving its employees across the country, FSIS should be focused on maintaining food safety. Overall, this reorganization threatens to undermine FSIS’s effectiveness and weakens an agency that American consumers rely on every day.” 

Along with Murray and Klobuchar, the letter was signed by Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Dick Durbin (D-IL), John Fetterman (D-PA), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Alex Padilla (D-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Elissa Slotkin (D-MI), Tina Smith (D-MN), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Peter Welch (D-VT), and Ron Wyden (D-OR). 

The full letter is available HERE and below.

Dear Deputy Secretary Vaden: 

We write with serious concern regarding the announced reorganization of the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). Rather than strengthening the agency’s effectiveness, this reorganization poses a risk to FSIS’s core mission of protecting public health and ensuring the safety of our nation’s food supply. 

FSIS plays a key role in safeguarding American consumers. Not only does FSIS provide critical frontline inspection of meat, poultry, egg, and some fish products, but the agency also plays an important role in informing the public through outreach and education and coordinating with the many international, federal, state, and local agencies that play a part in food safety. When outbreaks inevitably happen, FSIS provides a rapid response to contain illness before it spreads widely. 

The Deferred Resignation Program implemented last year has already resulted in a loss of more than 500 FSIS employees, straining a key agency that operates under significant pressure. Now the Administration is asking two-thirds of the FSIS staff in the Washington, D.C. area to relocate to Iowa, Georgia, or Colorado within months, which could weaken interagency coordination and rapid response efforts during foodborne illness outbreaks, creating a greater risk to consumers and our food supply. Since FSIS was not explicitly included in the July 2025 Secretarial Memorandum on USDA’s proposed reorganization, FSIS stakeholders, employees, consumer advocates, and industry partners have not been able to provide meaningful comments on changes that could have significant implications for the nation’s food safety system. 

Losses in staff and institutional expertise as a result of this relocation could delay the identification and containment of outbreaks involving pathogens such as Salmonella, E. coli, or Listeria, allowing contaminated products to remain in commerce longer and increasing illnesses nationwide. Reduced coordination amongst FSIS and other food safety and public health agencies like the Food and Drug Administration, and state partners could also slow traceback investigations and public communication during multistate outbreaks, when rapid response is critical to prevent additional illnesses. Instead of moving its employees across the country, FSIS should be focused on maintaining food safety. Overall, this reorganization threatens to undermine FSIS’s effectiveness and weakens an agency that American consumers rely on every day. 

We ask that you provide a detailed description of how you will ensure that FSIS will maintain full operational capacity during and after this transition. Specifically, we ask that you provide further details on what communication USDA has had with impacted FSIS employees, how the USDA will mitigate anticipated workforce losses, preserve critical expertise, and ensure that outbreak response, interagency coordination, and rulemaking activities are not compromised.

Thank you for your attention to this important matter, and we look forward to receiving your response within 30 days.

###







Monday, June 01, 2026

Bernie tries to play rescuer

Platner.  If you missed it, he got himself in trouble again over the weekend.  In fact, let me pull from C.I.:

Let's talk Platner.  He and his laughable wife are in the midst of a scandal.  "Shameful!" she cries.  

Yeah, it is shameful.  Not shameful that someone outed the two of you but shameful that you couldn't even make it to your third anniversary (this November) without your husband sending sex texts to multiple women.  

12!

Only six!

Who the f**k cares?  Six or 12?  Who cares.  This was multiple women. 

And it is shameful.  Stop attacking the press.  They're doing their job.  

I'm sick of this b.s.  And I'm sick of wives showing up making excuses for husbands.

Sick of it all.

He needs to explain himself.  

His anti-gay remarks and his anti-women remarks and his anti-police remarks and all the other stuff was supposedly because he was back from the war and dealing with that so he made "indefensible" and "abhorrent" comments.  Then in 2021, his trouble adjusting was over.  And in 2023, he got married.  


He got married in November of 2023.  What's his excuse this time?

I'm tired of this b.s.  We saw it with John Fetterman as reporters who did real work got attacked.  And we all know that once Fetterman was sworn in, he immediately went to a mental institution where he remained for months (plural).  When he emerged, he was nothing like what he presented on the campaign trail.

This doesn't have to be a disqualifier for Platner.  But if he and his campaign are going to offer insults to the press and to others, then made it should be a disqualifier for him.


What he did is embarrassing and shameful.  He needs to talk about that.  Not his wife.  He needs to talk about it and he needs to explain.  

Failure to do so reflects poorly on him.  

He's the one who has  put his campaign at risk again.  Again.  And it's not his wife's job to fix it for him nor it is her job to attack the media or to attack this person who left the campaign or that person who left the campaign.  She's not running for office.  I don't need to see her sobbing or spitting out nonsense.  Blaming the media for reporting on what your husband did is spitting out nonsense.  

I'm not in the mood for it.  I think we've all had enough of the 'noble' wife.  He did it and he needs to be the one talking.  Not her.  Kristi Noem's affair and marriage are news topics.  She's a public person who is a public servant.  Platner wants to be a public servant.  So his life is open to examination.  And when he's already disowned embarrassing moments in his further past he can address what he did in the last two years.  That's what it is.  He's not even reached the three year mark.  And he's hooking -- or trying to -- with women -- plural.  Six or twelve or maybe more. 

He needs to face the cameras and stop hiding behind his wife.  He needs to grow the hell up and step up to the microphone and own what he's done.  If he's unable to do that, he's not fit to serve in the US Senate. 


Well he's still not talking.  He's still not owning it himself.  But he got a rescue attempt from Bernie Sanders.  That's right Bernie Racist Sanders who 


, and

Sanders, who has endorsed Platner in his bid to unseat GOP Sen. Susan Collins, said that working families face bigger issues than Platner’s marriage.

“We got a housing crisis. People can’t afford healthcare, they can’t afford groceries, they can’t afford to fill up their gas tanks. And I think it’s important for us to focus on the issues facing working families a little bit more than Graham Platner’s marriage,” Sanders told reporters on Capitol Hill.


Oh, shut up, Bernie.  No one knows Platner.  This does go to his character.  He's been married two years.  He's already used "I've grown up" to dismiss his homophobic statements, his sexist statements, his rape enabling statements, his racist statements.  Now we find out that little Platner also sent out sex texts.  This does matter.


It especially matters as we see him first off hide behind his wife.  Now?  Now we see him hide behind Bernie and other pigs. 


NBC NEWS notes:


Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., is also defending Platner.

“We know that Graham has lived not your typical political experience. He’s been very clear and open with his wife, and they worked through whatever they worked through,” Gallego told reporters Monday. “He’s winning the polls, he’s willing to accept that he has grown as a person, and I think we should accept that.”

Swalwell.  Remember that? 

GOOGLE AI:


Arizona Senator Ruben Gallego faced political scrutiny following severe allegations of sexual assault and misconduct against his close friend and former congressional colleague, Eric Swalwell. Gallego, who chaired Swalwell's 2020 presidential campaign, withdrew his endorsement and urged Swalwell to resign from his California gubernatorial campaign and the U.S. House of Representatives.

 He had no idea!  He'd only heard that Eric was "flirty!"  Ruben maybe this is where you sit your tired ass down and you shut your stupid mouth?


Platner is the only one who needs to be speaking right now and he's the one who's refusing to speak on camera to media.  

"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS): 

Monday, June 1, 2026.  The Iran War continues, Chump's war on the economy continues, Pam Bondi fingered Todd Blanche in her remarks before the House Oversight Committee, the courts aren't crazy about Chump's slush fund, he's been ordered to take his filthy name off The Kennedy Center, and much more.


Ben reviews the latest on the Iran War for MEIDASTOUCH NEWS.




Americans have splashed out $59 billion more on fuel since President Donald Trump started his war against Iran — and the extra costs have already eaten up the boost in this year's average tax refund, according to a report Friday.

Moody's chief economist Mark Zandi estimated that the increased spending amounted to about $450 per U.S. household, "made up mostly of gasoline, then there's a diesel cost and an implied jet fuel cost in those higher airline fees,” CNBC senior economics reporter Steve Liesman said on the cable network's Squawk Box show.

The added costs were initially offset by this year's increase in the size of many federal income tax refunds, which averaged around $380 more per household, but by mid-May, "the extra fuel cost outstrips the refunds," and "now it's higher," Liesman said, according to a transcript posted on the Mediaite website.

Zandi also predicted, "Unless the war ends soon, financially pressed consumers will have no option but to turn more cautious in their spending, threatening the already soft economy," Liesman said.

 

Two Northwest Jacksonville business owners closed their doors, saying a challenging economy, changing consumer spending habits, and financial pressures have made it difficult to continue operating.

For years, both businesses served as gathering places for the community — one through photography and content creation, the other through food and fellowship. Now, their owners are saying goodbye.

Carissa Glanton recently closed The Selfie Showroom, a photography and content creation space that operated in Jacksonville for four years.

“A lot of people came here to celebrate birthdays, take pictures, and have a unique experience,” Glanton said. “It was something different that I really wanted to bring to Jacksonville.”

But by the middle of last year, she said business began slowing down.

“That’s when things started to trickle down for us, and it was just hard to keep the operations going,” Glanton explained.

[. . .] 

Just a few minutes away at Trout River Food Truck Park, another owner is facing a similar reality.

Chef Love, owner of Chef Love Sol Cuisine, announced she is also closing after five years in business.

Business, she said, has become increasingly difficult.

“Challenging. Uncertain. Confusing. Doubtful,” Chef Love said when asked how business has been lately.

Despite strong community support, Chef Love said economic uncertainty has taken a toll on sales.

“We’ve seen a big decrease because of the economy,” she said. “People are unsure right now. Going out to eat is a luxury for many families. Even though I feel my food is affordable, it still comes out of their income.”



For years, American consumers have defied predictions and kept the economy moving forward with their spending even amid a raft of financial pressures. Yet signs of financial strain are emerging as households grapple with the highest inflation rate in nearly three years.

Consumer spending drives about 70% of U.S. economic activity, raising concerns about a slowdown if Americans pull back amid an ongoing spike in energy prices. 

"If gas prices stay elevated, middle-income families will likely face more tradeoffs. For most households, gas isn't optional — it's how they get to work, take care of their families and manage daily life," said Glenn Williams, CEO of Primerica, a provider of financial products. 

Inflation tends to hit low- and middle-income households hardest because they spend a greater share of their income on basics such as gas and food. 


But Chump doesn't worry about the American people.  He infamously said, "I don't think about Americans' financial situation."  And before he said, he'd already made that clear with his actions.  He has destroyed the US economy.  

Friday, former Attorney General Pam da Bimbo Bondi appeared before the US House Oversight Committee in a closed door interview.  PBS NEWSHOUR notes.



Geoff Bennett:

So what did Bondi say?

Ali Rogin:

Not much, according to Democrats in the room. She answered many questions by saying she did not know or did not recall. She deferred many questions to Todd Blanche, saying that he handled the documents, including all the mistakes of failing to redact some of the survivors' names and images.

In her opening statement, she said she -- quote -- "delegated oversight over this process" to Blanche. She also refused to comment on her conversations with President Trump.

Geoff Bennett:

And Blanche, now the acting attorney general, who used to be President Trump's personal attorney.

Ali Rogin:

That's right, Geoff. And he's been very involved in this investigation. He met with co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell in 2025, after which she was transferred to a minimum security prison.

Bondi said she was unaware that that meeting was happening. And as acting attorney general, Blanche has said that he said the Epstein files -- quote -- "should not be a part of anything going forward at the DOJ."

Whatever his role was, Blanche is now the head of the department and Democrats said they will subpoena him to testify. For their part, survivors say that the most important thing for them is that the DOJ follow through on some of the investigative leads that are revealed and some of the names that have been released in the Epstein files.

Geoff Bennett:

And, as we have reported on this program, President Trump's own relationship with Epstein has come under scrutiny. The president has gone after media outlets, news organizations that have chosen to report on it. So what's the latest on that front?

Ali Rogin:

Yes.

So, earlier this week, President Trump refiled a defamation lawsuit that he had filed against The Wall Street Journal over a report that he had written a letter to Epstein for his birthday in 2003 which featured an illustration of a naked woman silhouette. Trump denied he wrote the letter or drew the picture. And he sued The Journal for defamation.

The judge threw out the case, saying he had not proved that the reporters deliberately reported false information. He said Trump could file a new complaint. We have seen that today. He -- there's not very much new in this new complaint, except there's an anecdote that he spoke with Rupert Murdoch, the chairman, before this article was released.

Murdoch said he would handle it. We don't know how this judge is going to respond to this, and The Wall Street Journal stands by its reporting, Geoff.



Democrats on the House Oversight Committee issued the following statement last week:

Washington, D.C. — Today, Oversight Democrats released the following statement following the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) confirmation that then-Attorney General Pam Bondi’s transcribed interview will not be videotaped for the American people.

“Pam Bondi was at the heart of a White House cover-up and Oversight Chairman James Comer is working to hide her testimony from the American people. The survivors and the American people deserve to see her respond to real questions about her mismanagement and cover-up of the Epstein files,” said Sara Guerrero, spokesperson for Oversight Democrats.

In March, the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform voted with bipartisan support on a motion by Rep. Nancy Mace to subpoena then-Attorney General Pam Bondi. On April 14, 2026, Pam Bondi refused to appear for her deposition before the Oversight Committee, despite the lawful bipartisan subpoena the Committee issued. The subpoena followed the Department of Justice’s botched release of the Epstein files and the continued White House cover-up.

###


Glenn Thrush and Michael Gold (NEW YORK TIMES via PHILADELPHIA INQURIER) note:


Pam Bondi, fired as attorney general by President Donald Trump in April, insisted Friday that she had little real authority in overseeing the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, putting responsibility squarely on her former deputy and successor, Todd Blanche.

Her remarks, delivered during a closed-door interview before the House Oversight Committee, were a bracingly candid admission of her own powerlessness that belied her nominal role as one of the most powerful figures in government. It was a noticeable shift from her past appearances on Capitol Hill, when she resorted to maximum-volume attacks on Democrats who raised questions about her performance or challenged her authority.

Bondi told committee members that Blanche was managing “the entire investigation,” Rep. Robert Garcia of California, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said after emerging from a tense session that Bondi had long sought to delay or dodge.

She added in the hearing that Blanche was responsible for determining which documents would be released, another person present for her testimony said, describing how she also repeatedly punted to FBI Director Kash Patel.


One interesting note?  NDTV adds:

Former US Attorney General Pam Bondi, during her long-awaited interview with US House lawmakers, reportedly said that Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell should die in prison and should not receive a pardon.

Maxwell was a longtime associate of Epstein, the US financier and convicted sex offender, who died by suicide in jail in 2019. She was convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking and conspiracy involving underage girls. She is currently serving a 20-year sentence and remains in a Texas prison facility.


And how did Maxwell get there?  How did she go from a low security Florida prison to a minimum security prison in Bryan, Texas?  Bondi said they needed to ask Blanche about that. 

Perry Stein and Maegan Vazquez (WASHINGTON POST) note:

Bondi said that “Acting attorney general Blanche was managing the entire investigation,” Rep. Robert Garcia (California), the top Democrat on the committee, told reporters during a mid-interview break.

[. . .] 

Garcia told reporters: “I also personally asked the former AG five times and five different questions about her conversations with President Trump, whether he directed her at any given time on the Epstein files, what he knew, what he asked her to redact or not, and she refused to answer any questions about President Trump. In fact, she said that she would not speak or respond to any questions that [have] anything to do with President Trump.” 


It must be something to dictate to Congress what you will and will not answer questions about.  Australia's ABC reports on the survivors who were outside the hearing:


Survivors of Epstein's abuse were in the building and criticised Ms Bondi's handling of the material.

They held posters that had documents from the Epstein files that feature Mr Trump's name, among others, and they made their presence known to Ms Bondi as she entered the room.

Several survivors said they were shoved aside by police officers.

"It boggles my mind that the Department of Justice released nude photos … the Department of Justice released pornography. That is unacceptable," survivor Sharlene Rochard told reporters outside the committee hearing room.

"I just hope that she does have a moment where she remembers her own humanity and our humanity and finds her compassion and remembers that this is a bigger story than political rhetoric," said Danielle Bensky, another survivor.

The survivors also implored lawmakers to hold Ms Bondi accountable for the handling of the Epstein case files' release, which included the personal information of potential victims.


Meanwhile, there will be a public meeting on Epstein's actions taking place this afternoon in New Mexico.  Chris Edwards reports:

As New Mexico’s bipartisan Epstein Truth Commission will hold its first public meeting this week at the Roundhouse in Santa Fe, many Otero County political leaders — have remained notably quiet on the matter.

Local state leaders voted affirmative for the resolution creating the special commission but for the most part have been silent on the demand for transparency and release of all documents in DC and for state level prosecution in New Mexico if appropriate.

The commission is examining allegations of sex trafficking, abuse of minors, and potential state and local oversights tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch. With subpoena power and a $2 million budget, the panel is seeking survivor testimony and reviewing how such activities could occur in New Mexico with little apparent intervention for years.


Chump suffers from JFK derangement and is having a fit over a recent legal ruling.  Hafiz Rashid (THE NEW REPUBLIC) notes:

U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ruled Friday that the name of the performing arts center can’t be changed without an act of Congress, and ordered the Trump administration to take down every sign with Trump’s name and get rid of all references to “Trump Kennedy Center” within 14 days. He also overturned the board’s March decision to close the theater for a yearslong renovation.


To that,  AP adds:

President Donald Trump on Saturday branded the federal judge who blocked his renovation of the Kennedy Center as “an anti Trump Hater” and predicted that the nation’s premier performing arts center he wanted to shutter for a two-year overhaul will “soon be closed, probably never to open again.”


Chump is just an anti JFK Hater.  And that blinds him to the reality that The Kennedy Center will be restored fully by the next president. This is a monument created by Congress to JFK following his assassination.  There have been eleven presidents since JFK died and JFK remains remembered and loved.  

That's why Convicted Felon Donald Chump has tried to hijack The Kennedy Center by illegally tacking his own name onto it --  because then Chump might be remembered if only due to association.  

Because there's nothing honorable about Chump.  He's corrupt.  He's unethical.  He's a racist, a sexist, a homophobe, an anti-Islamist, an all around hater.  And his pettiness comes out because he has nothing he can rise to, no better nature.  He is garbage.

And garbage who wants a slush fund.  Molly Sprayregen (LGBTQ NATION) notes:

A former Fox host and current political analyst believes a recent Donald Trump action may have finally spurred a real rebellion among Republicans.

“It’s a revolt,” wrote Howard Kurtz for Fox News. “Practically a revolution.” He said the backlash “seems to be breaking, or at least loosening, Trump’s iron grip on power.”

At issue is Trump’s proposed $1.8 billion slush fund to compensate alleged victims targeted by “political weaponization” from former-President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice.

These so-called “victims” would include rioters arrested for storming the Capitol building during the attempted January 6, 2021 insurrection. The rioters attempted to disrupt the Senate’s certification of the 2020 election results. 

Kurtz said for many Republicans, the concept of this massive taxpayer-funded compensation for people who have been convicted of crimes “was a bridge too far.”

“Some of these people had attacked and injured police officers, seized members’ offices and chanted for Mike Pence’s hanging,” Kurtz said. 


Courts are pausing the slush fund and asking questions.  Bobby Allyn (NPR) reports:


U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams in Florida on Friday ordered Trump's lawyers to respond to the motion filed by 35 former federal judges who argued that Trump is in a sense both the plaintiff and the defendant in the case, having filed it as president and also the leader of the executive branch overseeing the IRS. Thus, the judges wrote, the lawsuit "is itself a fraud on the court."

The former judges, appointed by both Democrat and Republican presidents, wrote that the lawsuit was used as a justification for the "looting" of American taxpayers. They described the case as a type of "collusion" between the president's lawyers and the federal government and asked the judge to re-open the case to determine if the settlement was reached only after the court was "deceived."

Williams, appointed by former President Barack Obama, had initially granted a dismissal of Trump's lawsuit following the settlement, but, in light of the former judges' motion, she said the court is "empowered to investigate serious misconduct."

It follows another judge in Virginia temporarily freezing the fund, which Trump officials have described as an effort to compensate Trump allies, Jan. 6 rioters and others the president says have been unjustly targeted.

That judge, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema in Virginia, ordered on Friday that Trump officials stop setting up the pool of money to "ensure that no funds are irreversibly disbursed."

Brinkema, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton, set a June 12 hearing for arguments over whether the order should be extended.





When the details of the agreement were first revealed two weeks ago, Democrats and former government officials lodged accusations of corruption and self-dealing, and even some Republicans reacted with scornful disbelief. Some G.O.P. senators were so angry they abandoned plans to approve a measure to finance the administration’s immigration crackdown.

Within days of the agreement becoming public, and before the judge raised questions about it, senior administration officials began preparing to get rid of the fund amid the intense blowback. Those discussions were reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

But while the agreement appeared to have emerged abruptly, it fused two ideas that had been kicking around in Mr. Trump’s circle for years: a desire by him and his family to avoid extensive tax audits, and a longing by his allies to obtain financial restitution for legal wrongs they claimed to have suffered during the Biden administration.

[. . .]

While the origins of the tax maneuver remain somewhat obscure, the Justice Department began to assess the proposal about a week before Judge William’s May 20 deadline, according to people familiar with the matter. One of the questions raised was whether giving the Trumps protection against I.R.S. scrutiny would run afoul of a law barring the tax agency from dropping audits at the direction of the president or his aides.


Let's note LAST WEEK TONIGHT WITH JOHN OLIVER.




Let's wind down with this from Senator Sheldon Whitehouse:


DOJ’s attempt to cut a sweetheart deal for the Trump family and MAGA political allies is a crooked and corrupt abuse of taxpayer money

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Dick Durbin (D-IL), the Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, sent a letter to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche this week demanding that the MAGA Department of Justice preserve records related to a corrupt purported settlement agreement in Trump v. Internal Revenue Service, DOJ’s creation of a $1.8 billion taxpayer-funded slush fund to reward the President’s political allies, and the related tax amnesty agreement for the Trump family and their business associates.

“This sweetheart deal from the Trump IRS and the Trump DOJ attempts to give President Trump and the Trump family business a magical free pass on tax violations and set up a slush fund for cop-beaters and MAGA criminals.  It’s the very definition of corruption and merits further investigation.  Acting Attorney General Blanche – himself a former Trump defense attorney – must preserve all records related to this outrageous abuse of power and misuse of taxpayer money,” said Whitehouse.

“A MAGA ‘weaponization’ slush fund is so outrageous that Senate Republicans were forced to send lawmakers home to stay in President Trump’s good graces. Americans are struggling to afford gas, groceries, housing… you name it. And President Trump is more interested in cashing in on the presidency than focusing on the things that matter. This blatantly corrupt deal deserves further scrutiny, and the Acting Attorney General must order the preservation of all documents related to it,” said Durbin.

Earlier this month, the MAGA Department of Justice announced that President Trump had agreed to drop a $10 billion lawsuit he initiated against his own Internal Revenue Service after he was inaugurated for his second term over the leak of the President’s tax information by an IRS employee in exchange for the creation of an unprecedented $1.776 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund.”  The commission overseeing the fund would have the authority to dole out the nearly $1.8 billion in taxpayer funds to settle claims brought by anyone who claimed they were harmed by “weaponization” of the justice system, including participants convicted of beating police and other crimes related to the January 6 insurrection.

“The Fund would allow those who stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, to apply, including those who assaulted law enforcement officers during the attack on the Capitol.  This would mean nearly 175 January 6 rioters who used a dangerous or deadly weapon to assault law enforcement officers can seek compensation from the Fund, including a rioter who drove a stun gun into a law enforcement officer’s neck.  The Fund also lacks basic transparency and accountability measures, granting President Trump the authority to remove any administrator of the Fund without cause and allowing only the Attorney General to receive information about the identity of recipients per the terms of the ‘Settlement Agreement,’” wrote Whitehouse and Durbin in the letter.

One day after the settlement agreement was announced, the Department of Justice announced an addendum that would purportedly prohibit the IRS from pursuing audits against Trump, his family, and their business associates for any previous tax offenses as part of a bizarre side deal to the Department’s compensation fund agreement. 

“This addendum purports to grant President Trump and a wide swath of associates and related companies immunity from any ongoing tax audits, including one in which a potential adverse ruling could have cost President Trump more than $100 million,” added the senators in their letter.

Full text of the letter is below and a PDF is available here.

May 26, 2026

The Honorable Todd Blanche           

Acting Attorney General                                           

U.S. Department of Justice                            

950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW                     

Washington, DC 20530                                 

Dear Acting Attorney General Blanche:

We write to request that the Department of Justice preserve all records related to the proposed $1.776 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund” (the “Fund”) and the purported “Settlement Agreement” in Trump v. Internal Revenue Service, No. 1:26-cv-20609 (S.D. Fla.).

On May 18, 2026, DOJ announced the creation of the Fund “to provide a systematic process to hear and redress claims of others who suffered weaponization and lawfare.”   You testified to Congress on May 19, 2026, that the Fund would allow those who stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, to apply, including those who assaulted law enforcement officers during the attack on the Capitol.   This would mean nearly 175 January 6 rioters who used a dangerous or deadly weapon to assault law enforcement officers can seek compensation from the Fund, including a rioter who drove a stun gun into a law enforcement officer’s neck.   The Fund also lacks basic transparency and accountability measures, granting President Trump the authority to remove any administrator of the Fund without cause and allowing only the Attorney General to receive information about the identity of recipients per the terms of the “Settlement Agreement.”

Additionally, on May 19, 2026, DOJ released an addendum to the “Settlement Agreement” stating that the U.S. government would be “forever barred” from pursuing “examinations” of President Trump, his family, “related or affiliated individuals,” and related trusts and businesses, for any matter involving previously filed tax returns or “Lawfare and/or Weaponization.”   This addendum purports to grant President Trump and a wide swath of associates and related companies immunity from any ongoing tax audits, including one in which a potential adverse ruling could have cost President Trump more than $100 million.  

Please preserve any existing and future records, documents, and materials related to the Fund and “Settlement Agreement,” including any materials related to DOJ’s development of and decision to create the Fund and enter into the “Settlement Agreement.”  As you know, federal law, including the Federal Records Act, imposes an obligation to preserve federal records on all DOJ employees and makes violations subject to criminal prosecution.  This requirement includes preservation of electronic messages sent using both official and personal accounts or devices and records created using text messages, phone-based message applications, or encryption software.

We look forward to your prompt response and acknowledgment of your compliance with this request.

Press Contact

Meaghan McCabe, (202) 224-2921





The following sites updated: