MAPS OF OUR MINDS: On the latest YouGov poll...

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 2026

...Dems are just two points ahead: On June 29, 1982, new language entered the world. 

Some of this language was perhaps a bit murky. Language may have "gone on holiday," As language will sometimes do.  

Briefly, a laborious review:

The new language to which we refer included subsection (b), an addition to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. At the risk of losing customers"Where I come from, we only talk so long"we present that new language again:

SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT

42 U.S.C. § 1973. Denial or abridgement of right to vote on account of race or color through voting qualifications or prerequisites; establishment of violation.

a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in section 1973b

(f)(2) of this title, as provided in subsection (b) of this section.

(b) A violation of subsection (a) of this section is established if, based on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) of this section in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population.

Part (b) was the new language. Some of that language is still a bit murky, even today, though that fact may be hard for us the people to spot.

Some of that language was a bit murky. That said, the House passed this addition to the VRA by a 389–24 margin. The Senate passed it by an 85–8 vote.  For a fuller account, click here.

There is no doubt that subsection (b) changed the face of congressional politics. In the redistricting which followed the 1990 census, this new provision led to the creation of majority Black districts in various Southern states. This added to the number of Black members of the House of Representatives.  

That said:   

Back on May 10, the New York Times' Carl Hulse answered a fairly obvious question about the creation of those new districts. That question would be this:   

Why did the GOP support the creation of those new districts? 

Given voting patterns of the day, these new districts sent Democratic members to the House, as everyone knew they would. So why did the GOP support the creation of those majority Black / majority Democrat districts? 

Why did the GOP do that? As we noted in Friday's report, here's the way Hulse explained it:

CONGRESSIONAL MEMO 
How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress 

[...]  

In the late 1980s, Republicans had been deep in the House minority for nearly 40 years. But growing dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party had begun moving white Southern conservatives into the Republican ranks, as illustrated by high-profile party switches in Washington. Then the redistricting initiated under a series of court decisions aimed at fostering more minority representation provided yet another opening that might have seemed counterintuitive at first glance.

Architects of the [new congressional] maps realized that if they could maximize Black and Hispanic representation in the new districts, they would simultaneously dilute Democratic strength in surrounding jurisdictions where coalitions of white and Black voters had elected white Democrats for decades. The shift would ultimately create dozens of openings for Republican candidates in what had formerly been known as Democrats’ “Solid South.”   

As far as we know, this is fairly standard history. In the Southern states which were fitfully switching toward Republican control at that time, creation of the majority Black districts helped Republicans pick up seats in neighboring congressional districts. 

Today, Hulse further says, the transition among white Southerners from D to R is complete. For that reason, Hulse says, the GOP is now moving to eliminate the (frequently gerrymandered) majority Black districts in various Southern states, believing that the party could now win every House seat in those Southern states.   

As far as we know, Hulse's history is fairly standard. If memory serves, the partisan tradeoffs in question were openly discussed in real time, with North Carolina's crazily shaped District 12 serving as the poster child for such discussions. 

District 12 was in the news! The leading authority on the district describes it as it existed at that time:  

North Carolina's 12th congressional district

[...]

The district was re-established after the 1990 United States census, when North Carolina gained a House seat due to an increase in population. It was drawn in 1992 as one of two minority-majority districts [in North Carolina], designed to give African-American voters (who comprised 22% of the state's population at the time) the chance to elect a representative of their choice; Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibited the dilution of voting power of minorities by distributing them among districts so that they could never elect candidates of their choice.

In its original configuration, the district had a 64 percent African-American majority in population. The district boundaries, stretching from Gastonia to Durham, were so narrow at some points that it was no wider than a highway lane. It followed Interstate 85 almost exactly. One state legislator famously remarked, after seeing the district map, "If you drove down the interstate with both car doors open, you'd kill most of the people in the district."  

The nutty shape of this new district made it a press corps favorite. Starting in November 1992, Rep. Mel Watt was elected eleven times from this district, which was heavily majority Black, and heavily Democratic.

Rep. Watt repeatedly won by very large margins in a district which had been designed to pull Democratic voters out of its several neighboring districts. The district starred in several court cases as the judiciary struggled to find the proper way to interpret and apply subsection (b) of the Voting Rights Act.

At any rate, the transition of the white South from solidly D to solidly R has helped create the modern world in which the GOP holds a slender majority in the House. The last-minute elimination of majority Black districts in certain Southern states may help the GOP retain that control this November.

Can Democrats regain the House this fall? Yes, they certainly can! That said, the analysts groaned yesterday at the numbers presented in this report by Mediaite:

SHOCK POLL: GOP Closing the Gap With Democrats in Latest Midterm Poll   

A new survey from The Economist and YouGov indicates that Republicans are closing the gap with Democrats ahead of this November’s midterm elections.

History would suggest that the latter boasts a considerable advantage over the former as...incumbent parties tend to struggle in the midterms. Previous incarnations of the Economist/YouGov poll backed up that theory. 

One survey from February found that Democrats boasted a seven-point lead over Republicans on the “generic ballot” question, “If the elections for U.S. Congress were being held today, who would you vote for in the district where you live?” Another from May suggested that Democrats’ lead had slipped to five points.

But in this latest poll of 1,549 American adults (1,402 of which were registered voters conducted between June 13 and 15, Republicans trailed Democrats by just three points (39%-36%) among the former, larger group and two points (46%-44%) among the latter, smaller one.   

Let's restate that final paragraph in English:  

On this Economist/YouGov poll, Democrats are holding only a two-point lead among registered voters on this version of the "generic ballot" question: 

If the elections for U.S. Congress were being held today, who would you vote for in the district where you live?

The Democratic Party's lead on that question is down to just two points! Given the madness of Republican governance, how is that even possible?

Yes, it's only one poll. There's no reason to assume that this particular survey's results are perfectly accurate.   

It's also true that there's no way to know what will happen between now and November. But especially given the way the mid-census redistricting wars seem to be shaking out, there is currently zero guarantee that the Democrats will regain the House this fall.

The Republican president continues to engage in highly erratic conduct. The Republican Congress has continued to support his erratic conduct pretty much right down the line.

Admittedly, the price of eggs is downbut the price of gas has been way up! Given those facts, why isn't the Democratic Party seeming to stage a "blue wave" runaway on these generic ballot questions?  

What's holding the Democrats back? Tomorrow, we'll return to the insult aimed at Michelle Obama to offer one possible type of answer. 

We'll return to the way that same insult is frequently churned by the folk who perform the corporate messaging for the rancid Fox News Channel. Most strikingly, we'll look at the way this insult was interpreted on yesterday's Deadline: White House. 

Eventually, we'll find our way back to the murky language which emerged in 1982and yes, these questions are related. In the immediate present, though, they lead us onward to this question:

In what ways might we, the Blues, perhaps be defeating ourselves?

Tomorrow: As heard on Deadline: White House


TUESDAY: Sitting president abandoned by allies!

TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2026

But also, a furious fellow explains: It's stunning to see the extent to which President Trump has been abandoned by Murdoch World. 

We refer to the way his deal-which-isn't-a-deal has been trashed by the Wall Street Journal, by the New York Post, and by a wide range of Fox News Channel commentators. 

What makes it "a deal-which-isn't-a-deal?" There's nothing deep about the answer, but the editorial board at the New York Post explained in a pithy way:   

The still-mysterious Iran deal leaves a LOT of work undoneat best   

Aside from the vast damage the war did to Iran’s military assets and the deaths of so many of the ruling cabal, this Memorandum of Understanding seems to leave things right back where they were before the bombs started dropping.

That is: Tehran hasn’t actually agreed to give up its nuclear program or its support of terror groups like Hezbollah and Hamas—but only to talk about it all some more.

In our view, nicely rendered! With respect to the "deal" which isn't really any such thing, Iran hasn't agreed to do the things the president wants it to do. Iran has only agreed to talk about it some more! 

The editors call this a "deal" in their headline. We'd stick to the bureaucratic term, "memorandum of understanding," and we'd make a point of leaving the description at that. 

That said, the editors aren't the only residents of Murdoch World who are walking away from the president's triumphant claim of a wonderful deal. The Wall Street Journal editorial board follows suit in an editorial which carries this dual headline

Trump Stages an Iran Retreat
The regime gets financial relief to reopen Hormuz and hold more nuclear talks.  

"[T]here’s no denying that Mr. Trump is retreating from his main goals as political pressure has built at home and finishing the job requires greater military risk," the unhappy Journal board says. 

Meanwhile, Mediaite spills with reports about Fox News personnel taking a walk away from the new arrangement. We'll start with a link to Mediaite's report about the New York Post editorial, then link you to some reports about blowback from inside the Fox News Channel:

‘When Does the World Get to See It?’ The New York Post Calls Out Trump Over ‘Mystery Deal’ 
(for full report, click here)
Retired General [Jack Keane] Shreds Trump’s Iran Concessions on Fox News...
(for full report, click here)
Fox’s Ben Domenech Shreds Trump’s Iran Deal—Appears to Brand JD Vance ‘Hillbilly Obama’...
(for full report, click here)
....Fox’s Andy McCarthy Goes Scorched Earth on ‘Neville Trump’ Over ‘Laughable’ Iran Deal 
(for full report, click here)
...Fox’s Dana Perino Calls Out Trump White House for Keeping Iran Deal Details Under Wraps
(for full report, click here)

That is correct! Yesterday, the president was even challenged at substantial length on The Five. Dana Perino did so right at the start of the show, in a lengthy demurral.   

It was surprising to see Perino depart from the expected messaging norm in that extended way. Meanwhile, here's one thing which didn't happen in the second segment of yesterday show:

None of the program's four pro-MAGA co-hosts managed to say that UFC fighter Josh Hokit shouldn't have insulted Michelle Obama at last Saturday night's White House event.  

None of them managed to say that! As we noted this morning, liberal co-host Jessica Tarlov directly questioned Greg Gutfeld:   

“Why can’t you just say that the guy should never have said that Michelle Obama is a man?" 

It wouldn't be hard to agree that Hokit shouldn't have said that. But Gutfeld went on an extended, histrionic rant in which he explained his increasingly peculiar "cable news" agitprop messaging style.   

We think you ought to watch his agitated rant. 

Below, headline included, you see the start of Sarah Rumpf's report for Mediaite, where video is included. We then include Rumpf's quotation of a key part of what Gutfeld said: 

Fox’s Greg Gutfeld Defends UFC Fighter Who Called Michelle Obama a Man: ‘We Enjoy It When You’re Upset’

Fox News host Greg Gutfeld defended comments by UFC fighter Josh Hokit in which he called former First Lady Michelle Obama a man by downplaying it as the fighter just being a “troll,” and adding that the right enjoyed it when the left was “upset.”  

[...]

"Hell, I seem to remember, not too long ago, how often I heard that Melania Trump was an escort—and from a lot of people who are now “oh, oh, oh!” huffing and huffing. People who say that a Black kid who stabs a White kid, that was just him defending himself. People faking Charlie Kirk getting stabbed in the neck, thinking it’s funny. People hoping for another Luigi Mangioni to take out Elon Musk or perhaps Trump or maybe both!

"See, we don’t have to listen. In fact, we enjoy it when you’re upset.

"That guy is a troll. He showed up at the weigh-in pretending he was drunk and was throwing up applesauce as a fake pretense because he was pretending he was scared. That’s called a troll. We get it. Not our fault if you don’t. He knows it’s going to upset you. He’s a troll! You give a mic to a troll?"

We don't have to listen to you libs any more! Gutfeld has been saying this, over and over, in the past few months. 

It's all a game of owning you libs! We enjoy it when we say things that make you libs get upset!

He's been saying this sort of thing for moths. Yesterday, he ranted it hard. This is being broadcast to audiences which are triple the size of nightly MS NOW audiences.   

This is the world of a type of unstated secession. Later, on the Gutfeld! show, this angry fellow returned to the joy of insulting Michelle Obama himself.

A large modern nation can't expect to function successfully this way. Luckily, if you read the New York Times or the Atlantic, you will never have to know that this insult-driven cultural secession is actually going on!

This 61-yeatr-old angry child loves to feed this gruel to his viewers. CEO Scott tells him to do it, pays him nine million per year!


REGIONS OF THE MIND: Tarlov and Gutfeld and Compagno oh my!

TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2026

But also, subsection (b) of the Voting Rights Act: In fairness, American incoherence is just part of a much larger human story. 

Here in America, one current snowstorm of incoherence got its start in 1982, when the United States Congress agreed, by overwhelming margins, to add some murky language to the 1965 Voting Rights Act. 

At that time, the Congress added subsection (b) to Section 2 of that important piece of legislation. 

Borrowing from the later Wittgenstein, had "language gone on holiday" in that addition to the Voting Rights Act? To a large extent, we're going to say that it pretty much had. You can peruse subsection (b) below

SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT

42 U.S.C. § 1973. Denial or abridgement of right to vote on account of race or color through voting qualifications or prerequisites; establishment of violation.

a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of theright of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in section 1973b

(f)(2) of this title, as provided in subsection (b) of this section.

(b) A violation of subsection (a) of this section is established if, based on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) of this section in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population.

To be clear, it was subsection (b) which was added in 1982, in part for reasons which Carl Hulse described last month in the New York Times. 

Did language "go on holiday" in that new part of the Voting Rights Act? We're going to say that it did! Even today, forty-four years later, it's virtually impossible to untangle the balls of confusion which have come into being in the wake of the vacation taken by clear, concise language within that jumble of words. 

Somewhat oddly, there's one declaration in subsection (b) which seems to be fairly straightforward. It comes at the very end of this addition to the original VRA:

[N]othing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population. 

Paraphrasing slightly, this new subsection said that members of a protected class are not guaranteed "proportional representation" in (for example) the House of Representatives. You may think that was a lousy provision but, in fairly straightforward language, that's what this new subsection said.

You may think that's a lousy provision but there it sits, in fairly straightforward language, right there in the VRA. Oddly, the recent Supreme Court cases which have generated anger and controversy seem to involve claims by plaintiffs who were demanding proportional representation under terms of the Voting Rights Act.  

The Act doesn't guarantee such representation. To appearances, plaintiffs seemed to be seeking it all the same

Proportional representation might seem to be fair. In principle, it would seem that it plainly would be fair," whatever objections might arise with respect to some such legal requirements. That said, subsection (b) seems to say that there is no right to some such outcome on the part of the "protected classes" under consideration. 

If no such outcome is guaranteed, is the active pursuit of some such outcome constitutionally permissible? It seems that's a question the Court was batting around in its recent decisions.   

At any rate, a ball of confusion was set into motion when Congress passed that new subsection. According to Hulse's account, the Republican Party supported that new subsection for a grimly political reason:   

According to Hulse's account in the New York Times, the GOP wanted to cram Black voters into majority Black districts in the hope that this would help them win congressional seats in adjacent districts. According to Hulse, this was part of the GOP's attempt to win control of the solid South, a region which was slowly moving from solidly D to solidly R at the time in question.

That last part of subsection (b) seems to be reasonably straightforward. Did language go on holiday in other parts of that new subsection? Also, has language been on holiday in the decades of legal and journalistic writing which have followed the creation of that subsection?

We're inclined to say that the answer is yesthat an era of American incoherence has been added to the much longer story of human incoherence.

It's sad but plainly it's true. As a species, we the humans simply aren't built for this kind of analysis. That said, we'll continue to try to show you what we mean when we say that "language has gone on holiday" with respect to subsection (b) of the Voting Rights Act.   

Meanwhile, a larger chasm in understanding opened up yesterday, first on The Five, then five hours later on Gutfeld! Believe it or not, this was one of Greg Gutfeld's handful of opening jokes on his eponymous "cable news" program:

GUTFELD (6/15/26): At Sunday night's Freedom 250, fighter Josh Hokit ended his post-fight speech by yelling, "Michelle Obama is a man!"

AUDIENCE: Applause 

GUTFELD [scolding audience]: Terrible! Ohhhhh! Don't clap! Don't clap! 

GUTFELD: Barack Obama angrily responded, "Leave him out of it!"  

AUDIENCE: Laughter   

GUTFELD [feigning bewilderment]: I must have misread that.    

He delivered the joke at 10:01. While hiding behind several beards, the little guy pretended that the former president had referred to his wife as "him." 

You can see the angry fellow perform this function simply by clicking here. It's as we've told you again and again: "Michelle is a man" and "Barack is gay" are two of this angry nut-ball's favorite themes. 

He pushes a large assortment of such themes at his large Red American audience. He's paid $9 million by the corporation to perform this messaging function.

It's as we've told you again and again. Until he's told to stop by his corporate owners, this little guy isn't going to quit. And whatever you may think about the current state of the nation, therein lies a major societal problem.

Earlier yesterday, on The Five, Jessica Tarlov had explicitly raised a perfectly sensible question. Specifically addressing Gutfeld himself, this is what she said:   

“Why can’t you just say that the guy should never have said that Michelle Obama is a man?"   

Why can't you simply say it, she asked. It was a perfectly obvious question.

Gutfeld followed with an angry, multifaceted response in which he histrionically defended his refusal to reject Hokit's insulting remark. After that, Emily Compagno offered one of her hopelessly garbed orations in which she too seemed to refuse to say that Hokit shouldn't have said it.

Discussions of the Voting Rights Act come from the higher end of American public discourse. The intellectual squalor frequently driving the Fox News Channel comes from a whole different realm.

That said, even on its higher end, our public discourse is so unskilled that there is no real chance that anyone could ever untangle the endless confusions surrounding the recent Supreme Court decisions about the Voting Rights Act. 

Meanwhile, the tribal anger of players like Gutfeld and the Compagno reflect a silent secession from the existing American project. Whatever you think of some such secession, a secession like that can't be easily brokered, especially when our major mainstream Blue American orgs refuse to report or discuss the fact of this rebellion.

Over at Mediaite, Sarah Rumpf has reported what Gutfeld said on The Five, with videotape included. Rumph has thereby provided a valuable service.

True to the rules which seem to obtain at that site, no one at Mediaite has reported what Gutfed did, five hours later, on his eponymous primetime show. Also, Rumpf failed to record the garbled non-discussion discussion from the perpetually garbled Compagno. What if they staged a civil war and the press corps refused to come?

We'll continue to discuss each of these rolling events, the sacred and the profane. For the record, we humans aren't built for this line of work, and that isn't going to change.


MONDAY: "Absolute trash," Tarlov says!

MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2026

It's on TV every night: For better or worse, the MMA on the White House lawn is over. 

To her credit, the Washington Post's Monica Hesse noticed the unusual element of Saturday's event which was saved almost for last:

The White House UFC fights showed us the America we needed to see   

The phrase “Platonic ideal” refers to the philosopher’s conception that real life and meaning exist on an abstract spiritual plain beyond our physical existence and comprehension. You think you have seen a donkey, say, but no, you have only seen a shadow of a donkey—a hypothetical representation. You cannot even begin to comprehend the real thing. All of us go through life like dogs seeing in muted colors, not knowing what we’re missing, except on Sunday night when anyone with a subscription to Paramount+ was allowed to experience the Platonic ideal of what it means to be an American in 2026, the real donkey, and it was a UFC fight on the White House lawn.

“There’s only one person more incredible than the Incredible Hok, and that’s my Lord and savior Jesus Christ,” brayed Josh Hokit in his victory speech after winning his heavyweight bout in the event labeled, insanely, Freedom 250. “And lastly, Michelle Obama is a man.”

That's what the highly religious visitor brayedand Hesse heard him bray it. We'll link you to videotape down below, but here's more of what Hesse said in her column:

The octagon ring—“The Claw”—was set up on the White House lawn. The president and first lady sat in the front row. The U.S. Marine Band, long known as “The President’s Own,” soundtracked the whole event, in what was surely its weirdest gig of the season, and bless Staff Sgt. Hannah Davis, a young Black woman, for listening to that disgusting statement about Michelle Obama and then immediately singing “Superstar” so Sean O’Malley could punch Aiemann Zahabi for five minutes.   

Hesse wasn't afraid to report what was said. After that, she wasn't afraid to offer a judgment.  

Presumably, this is all part of the "masculinism" Helen Lewis recently wrote about in the Atlantic. We'll recommend that you pity the unfortunate men who can't get past the prehistoric longings involved in this nutcase behaviorbut we'll compliment Hesse for seeing that this unfortunate conduct ought to be reported and discussed.

As we'll show you, and as was inevitable, the New York Times cleaned things up in its report of this incident. Over at the less timorous Mediaite, the initial report of the incident started like this:

UFC Fighter Unleashes Stunning Attack at Trump’s White House Event: ‘Michelle Obama Is a Man!’   

In a stunning attack, UFC heavyweight fighter Josh Hokit blurted out a shocking slur directed at former first lady Michelle Obama moments after winning a heavyweight bout at the UFC Freedom 250 held at the White House on Sunday night.

Hokit trounced Derrick Lewis via TKO to remain undefeated in his UFC career at the monumental event attended by thousands on the South Lawn.

But as he was interviewed by podcaster Joe Rogan in the octagon after the fight, he was clearly not done taking shots.

“And lastly, Michelle Obama is a man! Am I right, America?” Hokit yelled to a cheering crowd as Rogan smiled.  

Rogan to the rescue! Every former comic a king!

At that link, you can see these highly masculine men enjoying themselves in the manner described. Or you can go to this later report, which notes the negative reaction some people recorded on social media. 

It wasn't just Monica Hesse who thought this incident was worth mentioning. Ahmad Austin's follow-up for Mediaite starts like this:   

‘Absolute Trash’: UFC Fighter Sparks Intense Ire for Calling Michelle Obama a Man at Trump’s White House Fight Night   

UFC fighter Josh Hokit was slapped with a huge wave of backlash after he called former First Lady Michelle Obama a man after his match at President Donald Trump’s White House fight night.

On Sunday, UFC Freedom 250 was held on the White House lawn. In the weeks leading up to the event, UFC President Dana White insisted the event was apolitical and merely a celebration of America’s 250th anniversary.  

[...]

Hokit took on Derrick White in a heavyweight bout Sunday, winning by knockout in the second round. During his post-fight interview with Joe Rogan, Hokit randomly blurted out, “Michelle Obama is a man!”

As the crowd around him cheered and Rogan smiled, the 28-year-old added, “Am I right America?”

The comments were met with immediate outrage on social media.

At that point, Austin posted a list of critical comments on social mediafrom Jonah Goldberg, from Tim Miller, from Joaquin Castro, from Rep. Melanie Stansbury. We were struck by the first such comment he posted:

[continuing from above]
Fox News's Jessica Tarlov called Hokit "absolute trash."

Actually, we'd say she called his comment "absolute trash." At any rate, we were struck by Tarlov's remark. Here's why we say that:  

Surely, Tarlov knows that this specific insult is standard fare, several nights a week, on her channel's Gutfeld! program. Frequently helped by his stool pigeon guests, the termagant who hosts that show calls Michelle Obama "a man" on a regular basis.  

Because the swill from this shows runs downstream, we'll guess that this particular insult has slithered its way onto The Five by now, possibly even while Tarlov is sitting there, cast in the role of the Democratic punching bag. Is it time for her to abandon her paycheck and take her asp off that show?  

The disordered fellow to whom we refer loves to call Michelle Obama a man! He loves to say that Barack Obama is gay; he loves to say that [NAME WITHHELD] is constantly shoving gerbils up his ascot.  

In the end, this is who the fellow is. The garbage flows nightly on this show while creeps like Kat Timpf play along. 

Surely, Tarlov knows all this. Is it time to her to speak about what's constantly going on?

In our view, it's also time for Monica Hesse to watch a nightly primetime program like Gutfeld! and report what she sees as the little guys issue their pathetic sexual / gender insults and the little girls of the Fox News Channel pathetically play along. 

It's also time for the New York Times to report what happens on that channel's astonishing "cable news" programs. To date, appearances suggest that the timorous Times is simply unwilling to do so.

So is every opinion writer at the Times, along with every writer at the Atlantic. No one will do so at MS NOW. Their bosses tell them that they mustn't do such naughty things and to a man, to a woman, our Blue stars play along.

When a mere UFC fighter offers thoughts of this type, he may get reported and trashed. When the stars of the Fox News Channel do this on a nightly basis, our heralded Blue journalists run off and hide in the woods.

To see the Time clean this moment up, you can just click here. This is who, and this is what, we self-impressed Blues really are.   

We're glad that Hesse took offense at this. It's on "cable news" every night!

DISTRICTS OF THE HEART: No one cares about Social Security!

MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2026

Everyone cares about this: At the start of yesterday's Meet the Press, Steve Kornacki was introduced.

Kornacki is NBC's numbers man. Here's the first number he offered:    

WELKER (6/14/26): With the midterms less than five months away, our Chief Data Analyst Steve Kornacki, joins me now with the results of our latest NBC News poll. 

So we are within five months of the midterms. What are the big headlines?

KORNACKI: Yeah, Kristen. To start, just the bottom line on Trump’s standing with the voters right now. His approval rating sits at 42% in our NBC poll. Now, this is with registered voters. And that is down a tick. You can see the last time we checked in, early in the spring, he was at 44%.

WELKER: Is that a new low, Steve? 42%?

KORNACKI: That is the second term low in our poll for Donald Trump, falling to 42% right now.  

As you know, President Trump won't be on the ballot in the midterm elections. For that reason, we're often struck by our own Blue America's focus on his approval numbers.  

That said: 

As Blue Americans, we're routinely invited to marvel at how low his approval number is. At this site, we tend to have a different reaction:    

Given the persistent lunacy of the sitting president's behavior, we're amazed at how high his approval number is!    

The president won't be on the ballot this fall. Almost a thousand Republican and Democratic candidates will be.   

Will Democrats gain control of the House? Could they take control of the Senate? Kornacki moved to a second set of numbers:  

[continuing from above
KORNACKI: And the other thing that this dovetails with of course is the generic congressional battle with the Democrats now. As you said, inside of five months to the midterm, a five-point lead for the Democrats here.

Now obviously, that’s a strong number for them. What the Republicans would say on this is: If you think back to Trump’s first term, that blue wave of 2018, this number was more at, like, eight to ten points. So Republicans hoping to contain the damage at least looking at a number like that.  

On the screen, it was Democrats 49%, Republicans 44%! Just so you'll know, here's the question in the NBC News poll which produced those numbers:   

Q25: What is your preference for the outcome of this year’s congressional elections–(ROTATE) a Congress controlled by Republicans or a Congress controlled by Democrats?   

By a five-point margin, more people said they'd prefer a Congress controlled by Democrats. 

Does a number like that tend to have solid predictive value? Back in 2021, Larry Sabato's Center for Politics offered this assessment:   

MOSKOWITZ (2/11/21): Since 1968, the generic ballot has missed the real House popular vote by an average of 4%, and until 2008, it consistently overestimated Democratic support. Pollsters have mostly fixed both of these problems, and the generic ballot has been more accurate and balanced since the mid-aughts.

You'd rather be five points ahead on the generic ballot! But especially in the face of the mid-census redistricting war which President Trump kicked off, we'd say a five-point advantage in that arena may be less reassuring that it has recently been. 

(Also, there's no way to know what kind of election will be allowed to take place this year, given the "win at all costs" mentality of the strongman / royalist White House.)

That brings us back to our amazementour amazement at the fact that the sitting president's approvals remain as high as they currently are.   

Given his unrelenting strange behavior, it's striking to us that President Trump can still boast something like 42 percent approval. We often find ourselves gnashing our teeth at the possibility that our own behaviors here in Blue America may help him keep his numbers that high.   

With that, we return to what we regard as the most interesting (and most painful) issue of the day. We refer to the Supreme Court's recent decisions concerning the Voting Rights Actmore precisely, concerning the kinds of congressional districting which are, and are not, permitted according to the Constitution and under terms of that Act.  

People, consider this:

According to the most recent Naep testing, America's younger public school kids may be on the way back! Here's the start of the recent report in the New York Times:   

Younger Students’ Test Scores Bounce Back After the Pandemic

The nation’s 9-year-olds, who were in preschool when the pandemic hit, have made a significant recovery in reading since 2022, and are now caught up to where 9-year-olds were immediately before the pandemic, according to a key federal exam. They are getting closer to being caught up in math.

In theory, that's important newsbut it will, of course, produce exactly zero discussion. You'll see it mentioned nowhere else. The truth is, nobody cares.

Then too, consider the recent guest essay by Jason Furman, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers under President Obama (2013 - 2017). Headline included, his essay started like this:  

I Worked in the White House. We Never Imagined This Problem Would Get This Bad.

The first major public policy issue I worked on in the White House, almost 30 years ago, was President Bill Clinton’s call to “save Social Security first.” Though the fund wasn’t projected to run dry for another three decades, the country seemed gripped by the issue...

This week the Social Security trustees announced that the trust fund for retirees and survivors will be exhausted in just six years. That’s six years before tens of millions of Americans could see their benefits cut by 22 percent. The crisis is closer than anyone in the Clinton or Bush years ever imagined we might let it get. 

Here's the June 9 news report in the New York Times about that announcement. Here too, you're going to see little or no discussion, whether of this matter or of the giant budget deficits the sitting president keeps expanding with his silly but high-profile tax cuts, 

(No tax on tips? Why not?)  

At present, major topics come and go, with barely a single word said. These topics get swallowed up by all The Crazy from the White Housethe buildings torn down, the shrines renamed, and the UFC fights out on the lawn, with some ugly name-calling thrown in. (See this afternoon's report.)

That said, the Supreme Court's decisions involving the Voting Rights Act have produced a great deal of reaction within Blue America. That has happened for reasons which are perfectly understandable and perfectly obviousbut are those of us in Blue America possibly responding in an unhelpful way?   

Our nation's brutal racial history lies at the heart of the ongoing discussions this topic. For better or worse, so does this iconic statement by the later Wittgenstein:    

For philosophical problems arise when language goes on holiday.   

Wittgenstein was speaking there about the "problems" which constituted much of 20th century academic philosophy. He thought those "philosophical problems" were largely illusorywere the result of familiar locutions being air-lifted into contexts where no one knows what they mean, with the resulting incomprehension going undetected. 

The history which underlies the debate about the VRA is brutally, painfully real. There's nothing illusory about such matters at all.

That said, language has often gone on holiday in our attempts to discuss this topic, and it seems to us that some of Blue America's reactions are the sorts of reactions which help the current president stay at 42 percent.  

Professor Brabender, the great anthropologist, insightfully had it right. Famously, he described the impulses of us the humans in the manner shown:   

Where I come from, we only talk so long. After that, we start to hit.   

That tends to be true of us the humans. It can even sometimes be true of us the Blues.

Centuries of brutality underlie this Voting Rights issue. Those endless brutalities really occurred. That doesn't necessarily mean that we're currently getting it right.

Tomorrow: We agree, and we may not agree, with what Terri Sewell said