Pages

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Hey, ATCs -- control this!

Thursday, November 27, 2025

"The worst of the worst?" I don't think so.

Trump's Golf Tab

 

Trump Is Racking Up a Colossal Tab Just Playing Golf

A new report reveals the extraordinary sum President Trump has spent playing golf.

Donald Trump swings a golf club and wears a white USA cap.
Jane Barlow/PA Images/Getty Images

Donald Trump has already spent $70 million of taxpayer money on golfing in less than a year as president. If this pace keeps up, he will spend $300 million playing golf by the time his second term ends. 

HuffPost reports that the president on Wednesday made his sixteenth trip this year to his Mar-a-Lago estate and went golfing. Each trip carries a $3.4 million bill in travel and security costs. If Trump decides to go to Mar-a-Lago twice more before the end of the year, he will have spent a total of $75 million on golf, which, repeated each of the following three years, would result in $300 million spent on the trips.

That’s nearly double the $151.5 million in tax dollars Trump spent golfing in his first term as president. Trump spent a third of 2017, his first year as president, hanging out at his private clubs. This time, Trump has also made nine trips to his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, spending $1.1 million on each trip. He also went to Aberdeen, Scotland, in July to promote a new golf course at his resort there, spending close to $10 million on the trip.  

The security costs Trump incurs on his Florida trips can get pretty high, with machine gun–mounted patrol boats manning the nearby Intracoastal Waterway and the Coast Guard patrolling in the vicinity in the Atlantic Ocean. Using Air Force One costs $273,063 per hour to fly to Palm Beach International Airport, meaning that one four-hour round trip to Mar-a-Lago costs the taxpayer $1.1 million. 

In 2016, before Trump was elected, he mocked President Obama’s work ethic, claiming that he was “worse than Carter” for how often he golfed. In the end, Obama only spent $85 million of taxpayer dollars in his eight years as president on golf. 

Meanwhile, Trump has not only eclipsed that in his nearly five years as president, he’s shaped his presidency around golf. He has promoted his golf business on the White House social platform and even decided to deploy the National Guard in Washington, D.C., because he hated seeing homeless people on his way to play golf. 

Last month, Trump took dirt from his White House demolition and sent it to a golf course he’s taking over in Washington. It’s a fitting act for his presidency: taking something from the taxpayer and putting it toward playing an expensive game that he appears to cheat at. 

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Donald Trump and Andrew Johnson

Click here for Heather Cox Richardson's diary entry in "Letters from an American" for November 22, 2025.

 On Tuesday, November 18, six Democratic lawmakers, veterans of the U.S. military or intelligence services, released a video saying service members should refuse to obey unlawful orders. This should not have received any criticism, as the principle is a cornerstone of U.S. military doctrine; events such as the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, national guard troops killing student demonstrators at Kent State, and the prisoner mistreatment at Abu Ghraib during the Iraq war would not have taken place had soldiers refused their orders. The German defense at the Nuremberg trials -- "I was a good soldier; I was only following orders" -- did not stand up, and the defendants were all either hanged or sentenced to long prison terms.

Donald Trump didn't see it that way, and posted on social media that this was "SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!" Today, November 23, he is continuing to attack the six lawmakers.

Richardson notes that Trump's behavior is not unprecedented; Andrew Johnson, a Southern Democrat who became president for the remainder of Lincoln's term, from 1865 until 1868, had called for certain Republican opponents to be hanged. For this and other reasons, Johnson was impeached in the House, and escaped conviction in the Senate (and consequent removal from office) by a single vote.

 Richardson's article goes into some detail about Johnson's behavior during his term in office, when he attempted to repress black Americans in the south (he was a strong Southern Democrat) and undo Lincoln's civil rights achievements. Johnson had a tumultuous term in office, and his reactionary policies resulted in a massive defeat in the midterms in 1866, with Republicans winning a two-thirds majority in the House. The House proceeded to pass the Fourteenth Amendment, granting citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the U.S. and ensuring equal protection under the law, particularly for former slaves, and prohibiting the denial of life, liberty, or property without due process.

Johnson is widely considered the second-worst president in history, after James Buchanan (1856-1860), who allowed the South to slip into the Civil War. (Trump is generally considered the third-worst, but since he seems to be doing worse every day, he may yet pass Buchanan and Johnson in the worst-president sweepstakes.) 

 

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Trump's pro-Russian "peace plan" for Ukraine

This is a good short summary of the situation in Ukraine by Heather Cox Richardson in her November 21 diary entry, "Letters from an American."

Something to keep in mind while you're reading this: In 2016, after Trump had been selected as the Republican presidential candidate, the Republican party drafted a platform, as both Republicans and Democrats had done since time immemorial -- a statement of what the party stood for. (This was the last time the Republicans drafted a platform: After that, rather than draft another platform for 2020 and 2024, they simply declared their platform to be whatever Donald Trump said it was. They did that because it was impossible to state what principles the Republicans stood for, because that could change overnight on a whim if Trump decided something different.)

The Republicans presented their platform to Trump to his approval. To their surprise, Trump accepted the whole thing without asking for any changes -- except for one. Russia had invaded Crimea in 2014, and the Republican party had been staunchly anti-Russian; the platform went into detail promising concrete support for Ukraine including the delivery of specific high-tech weaponry. Trump wanted the platform softened to back off from its pro-Ukraine position, promising only a vague statement of general support for Ukraine. Trump's representatives told Republicans that Trump didn't want to fight World War III over Ukraine, and wanted a general attitude of greater cooperation with Russia.

"Ukraine? That's all he wants? Sure, why not?"

In fact,  Trump's campaign manager, Paul Manafort, had for years been a special advisor to Viktor Yanukovych, a corrupt Russian stooge who was president of Ukraine. A revolution took place in Ukraine, and Yanukovych fled to Russia after the election of Volodomyr Zelenskyy in 2019.

In 2016, Manafort was trying to arrange a cozy little relationship between Trump, Yanukovych, and Putin, with a corrupt Russia-friendly government in Ukraine.  

Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky addressed the Ukrainian people today. The current moment, he said, is “one of the most difficult” for the country. “Ukraine may soon face an extremely difficult choice. Either the loss of dignity or the risk of losing a key partner. Either 28 complicated points or the hardest winter yet—and the risks that follow,” Zelensky said. 
Zelensky’s use of the word “dignity” recalled Ukraine’s 2014 “Revolution of Dignity” that ousted Russian-aligned president Viktor Yanukovych and turned the country toward Europe. 
Zelensky was responding to a 28-point “peace” plan President Donald J. Trump is pressuring him to sign before Thanksgiving, November 27. The plan appears to have been leaked to Barak Ravid of Axios by Kirill Dmitriev, a top ally of Russia’s president Vladimir Putin, and reports say it was worked out by Dmitriev and Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff. Ukrainian representatives and representatives from Europe were not included. Laura Kelly of The Hill reported on Wednesday that Congress was blindsided by the proposal, which Mark Toth and Jonathan Sweet of The Hill suggest Russia may be pushing now to take advantage of a corruption scandal roiling Ukraine’s government. 
Luke Harding of The Guardian noted that the plan appears to have been translated from Russian, as many of the phrases in the text read naturally in that language but are awkward and clunky in English. 
The plan is a Russian wish list. It begins by confirming Ukraine’s sovereignty, a promise Russia gave Ukraine in 1994 in exchange for Ukraine giving up its nuclear weapons but then broke when it invaded Ukraine in 2014. 
The plan gives Crimea and most of the territory in Ukraine’s four eastern oblasts of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Luhansk to Russia, and it limits the size of the Ukrainian military. 
It erases any and all accountability for the Russian attacks on Ukrainian civilians, including well-documented rape, torture, and murder. It says: “All parties involved in this conflict will receive full amnesty for their actions during the war and agree not to make any claims or consider any complaints in the future.” 
It calls for $100 billion in frozen Russian assets to be invested in rebuilding and developing Ukraine. Since the regions that need reconstruction are the ones Russia would be taking, this means that Russian assets would go back to Russia. The deal says that Europe, which was not consulted, will unfreeze Russian assets and itself add another $100 billion to the reconstruction fund. The plan says the U.S. “will receive 50 percent of the profits from this venture,” which appears to mean that Europe will foot the bill for the reconstruction of Ukraine—Russia, if the plan goes through—and the U.S. and Russia will split the proceeds. 
The plan asserts that “Russia will be reintegrated into the global economy,” with sanctions lifted and an invitation to rejoin the Group of Seven (G7), an informal group of countries with advanced economies—Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States, along with the European Union—that meets every year to discuss global issues. Russia was excluded from the group after it invaded Ukraine in 2014, and Putin has wanted back in.  
According to the plan, Russia and “[t]he US will enter into a long-term economic cooperation agreement for mutual development in the areas of energy, natural resources, infrastructure, artificial intelligence, data centres, rare earth metal extraction projects in the Arctic, and other mutually beneficial corporate opportunities.”  
The plan requires Ukraine to amend its constitution to reject membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). It says “[a] dialogue will be held between Russia and NATO, mediated by the US, to resolve all security issues and create conditions for de-escalation to ensure global security and increase opportunities for cooperation and future economic development.” 
Not only does this agreement sell out Ukraine and Europe for the benefit of Russia—which attacked Ukraine—it explicitly separates the U.S. from NATO, a long-time goal of Russia’s president Vladimir Putin.  
NATO grew out of the 1941 Atlantic Charter. Months before the U.S. entered World War II, U.S. president Franklin Delano Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston Churchill and their advisors laid out principles for an international system that could prevent future world wars. They agreed that countries should not invade each other and therefore the world should work toward disarmament, and that international cooperation and trade thanks to freedom of the seas would help to knit the world together with rising prosperity and human rights.  
The war killed about 36.5 million Europeans, 19 million of them civilians, and left many of those who had survived homeless or living in refugee camps. In its wake, communism backed by the Soviet Union began to push east into Europe. In 1949, France, the U.K., Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg formed a military and economic alliance, the Western Union, to work together, but nations understood that resisting Soviet aggression, preventing the revival of European militarism, and guaranteeing international cooperation would require a transatlantic security agreement.  
In 1949 the countries of the Western Union joined with the U.S., Canada, Portugal, Italy, Norway, Denmark, and Iceland to make up the twelve original signatories to the North Atlantic Treaty. In it, the countries reaffirmed “their desire to live in peace with all peoples and all governments” and their determination “to safeguard the freedom, common heritage and civilisation of their peoples, founded on the principles of democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law.”  
They vowed that any attack on one of the signatories would be considered an attack on all, thus deterring war by promising strong retaliation. This system of collective defense has stabilized the world for 75 years. Thirty-two countries are now members, sharing intelligence, training, tactics, equipment, and agreements for use of airspace and bases. In 2024, NATO countries reaffirmed their commitment and said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had “gravely undermined global security.”  
They did so in the face of Russian aggression.  
Putin invaded Crimea in 2014 after Ukrainians ousted Yanukovych, earning economic sanctions and expulsion from what was then the G8. But Crimea wasn’t enough: he wanted Ukraine’s eastern oblasts, the country’s industrial heartland. Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, who was running for the U.S. presidency against Donald Trump in 2016, would never stand for that land grab. But Trump was a different story.  
According to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s 2019 report on Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, in summer 2016, Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort discussed with his business partner, Russian operative Konstantin Kilimnik, “a ‘backdoor’ means for Russia to control eastern Ukraine.” According to the Republican-dominated Senate Intelligence Committee, the plan was for Trump to say he wanted peace in Ukraine and for him to appoint Manafort to be a “special representative” to manage the process. With the cooperation of Russian and Russian-backed Ukrainian officials, Manafort would help create “an autonomous republic” in Ukraine’s industrialized eastern region and would work to have Russian-backed Yanukovych, for whom Manafort had worked previously, “elected to head that republic.”  
According to the Senate Intelligence Committee, the men continued to work on what they called the “Mariupol Plan” at least until 2018. Putin has been determined to control that land ever since. And now it appears Russia is pushing Trump to deliver it. 
This plan, complete with its suggestion that the U.S. is no longer truly a part of NATO but can broker between NATO and Russia, would replace the post–World War II rules-based international order with a new version of an older order. In the world before NATO and the other international institutions that were created after World War II, powerful countries dominated smaller countries, which had to do as their powerful neighbors demanded in order to survive.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Caitlin!

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Election Day, 2025: Democrats blow them out of the water.

November 4, 2025, was a great election day for Democrats; Republicans were soundly defeated all over the map. While the mainstream media concentrated on the big, high-profile elections, there were many, many other Democratic victories.

 Here's an excerpt from Heather Cox Richardson's blog, Letters from an American, for November 4:

Tonight the results came in. American voters have spoken.

Democrat Abigail Spanberger won the governorship of Virginia by 15 points, becoming Virginia’s first female governor. Every single county in Virginia moved toward the Democrats, who appear to have picked up at least 12 seats in the Virginia House of Delegates. Democrat Mikie Sherrill won the governorship of New Jersey by more than ten points (the vote counts are still coming in as I write this).

Pennsylvania voted to retain three state supreme court justices, preserving a 5–2 liberal majority on the court. Democrats in Georgia flipped two statewide seats for public service commissioners by double digits. Mississippi broke the Republican supermajority in the state senate.

Maine voters rejected an attempt to restrict mail-in voting; Colorado voters chose to raise taxes on households with incomes over $300,000 to pay for meals for public school students.

California voters approved Proposition 50 by a margin of about 2 to 1, making it hard for Trump to maintain the vote was illegitimate.

And in New York City, voters elected Zohran Mamdani mayor.

Tonight, legal scholar John Pfaff wrote: “Every race. It’s basically been every race. Governors. Mayors. Long-held [Republican] dog-catchers. School boards. Water boards. Flipped a dungeon master in a rural Iowa D&D club. State senators. State reps. A janitor in Duluth. State justices. Three [Republican] Uber drivers. Just everything.”

Trump posted on social media: “‘TRUMP WASN’T ON THE BALLOT, AND SHUTDOWN, WERE THE TWO REASONS THAT REPUBLICANS LOST ELECTIONS TONIGHT,’ according to Pollsters.”

But in fact, today voters resoundingly rejected Trump and Trumpism, and tomorrow, politics will be a whole different game.

 

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Trump: Let them eat cake.

 On Halloween night, Trump threw a lavish party at Mar-a-Lago with a Great Gatsby theme. The Great Gatsby, of course, set during the Roaring Twenties, was F. Scott Fitzgerald's picture of the moral decadence of the very rich -- what a theme for a party when 42 million of the lowest-income Americans are about to lose SNAP benefits that Trump's administration is withholding.

For those who haven't read the book, I asked ChatGPT to summarize it.

Summary of The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and published in 1925, is a novel set in the Roaring Twenties, a time of wealth, excess, and social upheaval in America. The story is narrated by Nick Carraway, a young man from Minnesota who moves to West Egg, Long Island, to learn the bond business. His neighbor, Jay Gatsby, is a mysterious and fabulously wealthy man known for throwing lavish parties. As Nick becomes drawn into Gatsby’s world, he learns that Gatsby’s wealth and lifestyle exist for one purpose: to win back Daisy Buchanan, Nick’s cousin, whom Gatsby loved before she married the wealthy but unfaithful Tom Buchanan.

Through Gatsby’s obsessive pursuit of Daisy, the novel explores themes of love, illusion, class, and the corrupting influence of money. Gatsby’s dream of recreating the past and achieving happiness through wealth ultimately proves impossible. When Daisy accidentally kills a woman named Myrtle Wilson in a car accident, Gatsby takes the blame. Myrtle’s husband, misled by Tom, kills Gatsby and then himself. In the end, Daisy retreats into her world of privilege, untouched by the destruction around her. Disillusioned by the moral emptiness of the wealthy, Nick returns to the Midwest.

At its core, The Great Gatsby is about the American Dream—its promise and its failure. Gatsby embodies the dreamer who believes that through determination and material success, he can transform himself and attain happiness. Yet Fitzgerald reveals the dream’s darker side: beneath the glitter of the Jazz Age lies moral decay and the impossibility of recapturing an idealized past. The novel is both a portrait of an era and a timeless meditation on ambition, love, and illusion.

Trump is no longer even trying to conceal his contempt for ordinary Americans. Paul Krugman says that too many commentators are brushing this off as being "tone deaf"; Krugman says no, Trump knows that he is rubbing people's faces  in it and taking pleasure in doing so. He posted in his article entitled "The Great Smirk":

During Trump’s first term Adam Serwer wrote a justly celebrated article for The Atlantic titled “The cruelty is the point.” He argued that cruelty, and the joy some people take from inflicting cruelty, are what bind Trump’s most loyal supporters to him:

Trump’s only true skill is the con; his only fundamental belief is that the United States is the birthright of straight, white, Christian men, and his only real, authentic pleasure is in cruelty. It is that cruelty, and the delight it brings them, that binds his most ardent supporters to him, in shared scorn for those they hate and fear: immigrants, black voters, feminists, and treasonous white men who empathize with any of those who would steal their birthright. The president’s ability to execute that cruelty through word and deed makes them euphoric. It makes them feel good, it makes them feel proud, it makes them feel happy, it makes them feel united.

 Further, Krugman says in his article: 

So, to repeat, the party at Mar a Lago wasn’t a case of tone deafness, living it up despite others’ suffering. It was in large part a party held to celebrate others’ suffering.