WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2025
Two-thirds know little or nothing: Did we read the New York Times wrong? As we noted this very morning, here's what the news report said (and still says):
Pressed on Justice Dept. Politicization, Bondi Goes on Attack
[...]
Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the top Democrat on the committee, opened the questioning by asking if the White House had consulted Ms. Bondi on the deployment of federal troops to Chicago. She ignored the question and instead raised her voice to accuse Mr. Durbin, a 28-year veteran of the Senate who has delivered billions of dollars in criminal justice funding to his state, of disloyalty to his constituents.
“I wish you loved Chicago as much as you hate President Trump,” she said.
Right there in paragraphs 4 and 5, that's what the news report says.
In fact, we'd seen that exchange between Durbin and Bondi on three or four cable news programs. We'd seen Bondi offer that accusatory non-answer non-reply to Senator Durbin's question.
That said:
From reading the article in the Times, we got the idea that Senator Durbin had actually "opened the questioning" in the manner described. But looking at the C-Span videotape, we now see that Senator Grassley had questioned Bondi at some length before Durbin took his turn.
According to the C-Span videotape, that accusatory non-reply by AG Bondi actually happened at roughly the 40-minute mark of yesterday's proceedings.
As we noted yesterday afternoon in a brief aside, different people will have different reactions to Bondi's refusal to answer various questions, and to the unmistakable body language with which she broadcast her disdain for a string of Democratic Party senators.
To us, her behavior looks unmistakably insolent. To others, she may have come across as a heroine of the tribal wars. However you score it, civilizational breakdown is indicated by the relentless behavior you can observe on the C-Span videotape.
Reading Rev's transcript isn't enough. You have to look at the body language to see how stark the dismissal was.
Somehow, we managed to get a misimpression from reading the New York Times. That said, Bondi did return to the jibe she aimed at Senator Durbin a few hours later, as we noted this morning.
She played the same insult card in a scolding non-response to a question from Senator Padilla. As we noted this morning, she rebuked him for the length of time he had spoken, then returned to that same old jibe:
First, Senator Padilla, you've gone on for over five minutes, and I wish that you loved your home state as much as you hate President Trump. We'd be in really good shape then.
Yes, that's what she said. We've referred to this as a silent secession. Whatever you think of that silent secession, we do think that phrasing is apt.
We've begun to hope that the president's conduct is becoming so weird and so extreme that public opinion will start turning against him in a decisive way. That said, none of us knows how far this administration might be willing to go if some such situation actually starts taking shape.
We'll offer one more observation about the way our national discourse now works or fails to work. Also in today's New York Times, a news report seeks to explain a major policy matter. Here's how that news report starts:
What’s Behind the Dispute Over Extending Health Care Subsidies
At the heart of the government shutdown fight is a dispute over extending expiring subsidies that help people buy health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.
Democrats are demanding that Republicans renew the tax breaks that help pay for the coverage, which are set to expire at the end of the year, as part of any funding extension to reopen the government.
Republicans, so far, have said such an extension does not belong on a spending measure, and some have argued that Congress should let the subsidies expire.
Here is a look at the debate.
The Times report continues from there, laying out some basic information. With an eye to the death of the American discourse, we were struck by the way this news report ends.
The news report ends like this:
Before the shutdown, few Americans knew much about this issue. It barely came up during the 2024 presidential race, and the tweaks to a subsidy formula are a bit wonky and technical to understand.
But when surveys ask voters what they think about the policy, they tend to overwhelmingly support an extension of the subsidies.
A recent survey from KFF showed that more than three-quarters of adults, including 59 percent of Republicans, thought Congress should extend the subsidies. But it also showed that nearly two-thirds of people had heard “little” or “nothing at all” about the issue.
That's the way the news report ends. Nearly two-thirds of us the people know little or nothing at all about this important topic.
To some extent, it's always been like this. To some extent, we'll guess that, thanks to all the civilizational warfare, matters are now somewhat worse.
Thank God for President Trump, Attorney General Pam Bondi, and the entire Trump administration!
ReplyDeleteHoman is a deep state bag man.
DeleteThank you Mr. president for proving without a shadow of a doubt, that the Right will fear a bowl of Trix sitting in the Sun, if you ask them to.
Delete4;09,
DeleteMeh.
I prefer political parties, that don't run global pedophile rings.
Bondi snarks and Somerby approves. More senators should love their country he says. As if the Dems in the senate don’t. What a clown Somerby is. Bondi is just dishonest and as uncivil as other Republicans, playing to Trump.
ReplyDeleteIs Somerby a Right-winger, because he repeats Right-wing grievances on his blog every day?
DeleteTo quote TDH, "Anything is possible."
Does Somerby not know that the Chairman goes first? Ancient Chuck Grassley is the committee chair. Sheesh.
ReplyDeleteHere is a Ken Burns style letter from the front lines about the horrors of war in Portland:
ReplyDeletehttps://digbysblog.net/2025/10/07/kristi-noem-visits-war-ravaged-portland/
There is no mayhem justifying sending the national guard to any blue state, not Portland, not Chicago, not LA, not DC.
Trump has been bragging that there have been no crimes, no murders in DC since he sent in his guard members to collect trash in the parks. Actually, the murder rate has returned to normal (no one is applauding that) so Trump is lying as usual. Guard members are not trained as police officers. You need police work to stop crime in cities, not military guys carrying rifles.
Somerby complains that 2/3 of Americans don't know anything about the reasons for the shutdown. But he never explains why they should have to become wonks themselves after electing a representative to do that work for them in Congress.
ReplyDeleteThis shutdown represents the failure of the Republicans to get their job done. Republicans control the presidency and both houses of Congress. They have the power to get things done. Unfortunately, Trump refuses to negotiate and Mike Johnson is stymied because the Democrats refuse to vote for a budget that includes a doubling of ACA insurance premiums, something that will be unaffordable for both poor and middle class families, causing too many people to become uninsured. Trump has told Republicans not to budget, to shut the govt down instead. So that is what they are doing. Democrats are standing up for the people by refusing to accept those insurance premium increases.
So, who is doing the work of the people? Most people are against this government shutdown (which hurts all of us everywhere) and they are blaming the Republicans for it. That doesn't sound like a lot of ignorant yahoos, as Somerby suggests today. It sounds like the public is aware and knows what is going on. The Republicans have fucked up their job because they listen to Trump's demands.
There were no government shutdowns during Biden's four years in office. That is because Biden worked with both parties in Congress to pass budgets as needed. That is because Biden, unlike Trump, was a competent, reasonable, intelligent president who was willing to listen to both parties to meet the needs of the people. Trump has never been that kind of guy. Not even close.
Sounds like a peace deal is essentially consummated.
ReplyDeleteSecretary of State Marco Rubio, standing in the back corner of the White House’s Blue Room, caught his eye.
He had news for Trump, he said, but it would have to wait until after the media left. Then Rubio passed the president a note.
News photographers covering the event zoomed in on the handwriting on White House stationery that read, “You need to approve a Truth Social post soon so you can announce deal first.”
Will Trump-haters give the President credit? Or, will they find reasons to keep on hating him?
Calling the deal "consummated" conjures up an unfortunate image.
DeleteThere are so many good reasons to go on hating Trump. And don't forget, this is your fantasy that a deal has occurred, not an announcement of any deal much less a cessation to fighting, release of hostages, or health care, food and a return to peace for Gazans. It doesn't seem to me that there is anyone worth congratulating left standing. Threats are not a deal.
Israel and Hamas have agreed to begin the first phase. That's all.
DeleteExcuse list
Delete1. It didn't happen.
2. It happened but it was insufficient.
Nothing important has happened yet.
DeleteOnce again, an off-topic comment from DinC.
DeleteDavid, tell us more about what you think Trump has done for which he deserves "credit."
DeleteTrump should get credit for proving Republican voters are bigots, who couldn't care less about grocery prices. Before Trump, it was only something most people thought.
DeleteQiB,
DeleteDavid is too busy preparing himself to deny the existence of the Holocaust, to answer your question.
QiB - Are you referring to just the Middle East or credit for anything? In the Middle East, he ended the killing and got the hostages released. That's two great accomplishments. His plan may lead to long term peace in the middle east. Time will tell.
DeleteOther accomplishments I've posted about ad nauseum: Closing the southern border. Ending or reducing reverse discrimination. Merit-based decisions throughout the government including the military. Helping to secure the end of half a dozen wars. Cutting $200 billion of government waste. Amping up military recruitment.
"In the Middle East, he ended the killing and got the hostages released."
DeleteReally? Not yet.
"Merit based decisions throughout the government including the military." Pete Hegseth, RFK Jr., that McMahon woman, Pam Bondi, the 50,000 dollar bagman, an assistant to the AG who within 48 hrs of her appointment files the first indictment of her career, and others would like to have a word with you about this. You take every opportunity available to embarrass yourself in this comment section.
DeleteThe killing in the middle east will not stop until the last starving Palestinian boy in a food line is cut down by an Israeli sniper. Or the last West Bank Palestinian farmer is taken out by Israeli settlers with Brooklyn accents.
DeleteThere's a question about whether Antifa is real or not.
DeleteHowever, if Antifa is real, there is no question they are are anti-republican Party.
They even put it in their name (Anti=against, fascists =Republican Party).
David in Cal - sniper takes out Charlie Kirk, national tragedy. Israel snipers take out tens of thousands of civilians, progress.
Delete"ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA (The Borowitz Report)—A federal judge dismissed all charges against former FBI Director James Comey on Wednesday after Donald J. Trump’s handpicked US attorney misspelled his name as “Homey.”
ReplyDeleteThe attorney, Lindsey Halligan, begged the judge to overlook the error, which she blamed on “frickin’ autocorrect.”
“This is the first time I’ve charged someone,” Halligan pleaded. “Indictmenting is hard.”
In yet another embarrassing spelling goof, Halligan referred to the attorneys she ordered to charge Comey as his “persecutors.”
[Humor from Andy Borowitz]
Trump: "I don't know what could be worse than Portland. You don't even have stores anymore."
ReplyDeleteWhat Trump means is that a lot of stores have closed. And, that's true.
DeleteYou mean like Rite Aid, which went out of business? Thanks, David, the Trump whisperer. Are you non embarrassed parroting Trump's ill-informed gobbledygook?
DeleteRight, David. They don't have stores in Portland.
DeleteThis is the drill:
Delete1) The Orange Jesus says something completely bonkers.
2) A MAGA rube, here typically DiC, reinterprets the plainly stated Trump remark, hoping that his version will be acceptable despite it being a fictional narrative.
3) The MAGA rube's fictional narrative, being easily debunked with a simple Google search, is laid bare as such.
4) Rinse and repeat.
The next good faith honest comment from DiC here will be his first good faith honest comment.
DeleteThe next good faith argument anywhere, made by a Right-winger, will be the first.
DeleteThere was a negative story about Katie Porter on Mediaite and all the comments were right wing, like Gutfeld insults. Is Mediaite a right wing website? Somerby has been mentioning them a lot recently.
ReplyDeleteI love Katie Porter, so smart. I felt the reporter was being unusually strident for a "puffcake" interview, but Porter lost her shit for fifteen seconds. Right or wrong, glad early on 'cause she will have some digging to do.
DeleteQ: Have you given any more thought to possibly suspending habeas corpus?
ReplyDeleteTRUMP: Suspending who?
Q: Habeas corpus
TRUMP: I don't know. I'd rather leave that to Kristi.
Quaker- that’s a trick question, like, “Are you still beating your wife?” Trump’s evasion prevented a headline implying that Trump might suspend habeus corpus.
DeleteUnfortunately, "Have you stopped raping pre-teens?' isn't a trick question for Trump. It' a question like, "What is your name?"
DeleteThe person who asked Trump that question, upended norms, which David in Cal is a huge fan of, if it is in furtherance of bigotry.
DeleteTrump thinks habeas corpus is a latin street gang.
DeleteSunset grandpa drooling on himself and falling fast asleep at a meeting once again today. We really need Presidential age limits given these last two morons, don't we David?
DeleteWendy Butts was here.
ReplyDeleteWhich, alone, makes Wendy too qualified for the Trump Cabinet.
DeleteFunny, my wife calls my butt Windy.
DeleteIn Trump's defense, every Republican would designate an organization a "terrorist organization", for being anti-fascists.
ReplyDeleteAre all kids from Republican families antifa, or just the one who killed Charlie Kirk?
ReplyDeleteBest job to do in part time and start making more than $500 per day. i received $16429 of my last month working. this job does not required any special skills or anything else its just ccd a basic job even a child can do this. join this now by follow instructions here.:)
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