THURSDAY: The Times reports what Banfield said!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2026

Things go downhill from there: The New York Times has finally reported what Ashleigh Banfield said. 

We refer to what Banfield said, two weeks ago, about Nancy Guthrie's disappearance.

Should the New York Times have done that? We can't say that the answer is obvious. We can tell you this:

Over the course of the past few weeks, much of the foolishness in the "cable news" pseudo-discussion has involved an obvious fact. We refer to the fact that anchors and their endless streams of useless experts weren't allowed to go anywhere near this awkward topic. 

For whatever reason, the Times has finally broken the wall of silence. It did so yesterday, in this report about "rampant speculation" concerning this unsolved crime

In Guthrie Mystery, Rampant Speculation Is Like ‘Salt on the Open Wound’

[...]

The spotlight on the case has led to tens of thousands of tips, the authorities have said. But the accompanying conjecture has complicated an already difficult investigation and has stung Ms. Guthrie’s grieving family.

The assertion that Ms. Guthrie’s son-in-law was, or could be, the “prime suspect,” as the news anchor and podcast host Ashleigh Banfield put it, risked endangering law enforcement officials’ delicate relationship with the Guthrie family, a key source of information, Sheriff Nanos said. Ms. Banfield has defended her report and maintained that the son-in-law was the focus of investigators at the time.

Such speculation has also inspired a flood of baseless tips, the sheriff added, which has distracted officers from more credible clues.

Say what? Nancy Guthrie’s son-in-law was, or could be, the “prime suspect?" 

In fact, Banfield said that early on. Yesterday, for better or worse, the Times chose to report that fact.

Having said that, is it true? Was Nancy Guthrie's son-in-law ever the "prime suspect" in this matter? Was he ever any kind of a "suspect" at all? Should he have been a "suspect," or perhaps some sort of "person of interest?" 

We can't answer those questions! We can perhaps tell you this:

Once the Times finally decided, for whatever reason, to report what Banfield said, it probably shouldn't have doctored other facts to convey the impression that her claim has been abandoned.

In fact, as you can see in this report, Banfield reaffirmed her claim, just last Thursday, in a podcast interview with Dan Abrams. Her claim may be right or her claim may be wrong--but, whether rightly or wrongly, her claim has not been abandoned

Abrams is perfectly sane. He decided to give Banfield a fairly high-end platform. She told him that her unnamed law enforcement source says his assertion stands.

Her source may be completely wrong; we have no way of knowing. There may not even be any such source! How are we supposed to know?

That said, law enforcement did conduct at least one three-hour, night-time search of the home of the person in question, and they apparently did return, a few days later, to search the woods around that house:

As we noted last week, much of the inanity of the round-the-clock cable discussions of this crime has involved the refusal of CNN and the Fox News Channel to come to terms with those superficially puzzling facts. 

In fact, an in-law's house had been extensively searched, as was the surrounding area. Last week, cable hosts kept noting those facts, then throwing to their expert guests for comment. 

The expert guests would then filibuster on some unrelated topic, after which the cable hosts would pretend that they hadn't heard the expert guest performing an obvious dodge.

Why did they search the in-law's house? Again and again, night after night, our "journalists" kept refusing to speculate or say or admit that the question existed. They speculated about everything else, but they performed an endless series of obvious dives concerning that obvious question. 

Is "true crime" reporting extremely good for cable news ratings and profits? CNN and Fox went all in on round the clock pseudo coverage, but both channels had plainly decreed that the search of the in-law's environs should be reported but could not be explained, not even provisionally.

That made for an endless series of ridiculous non-exchange exchanges. Yesterday, along came the New York Times, and when it finally reported what Banfield has said, it incorrectly made it sound like her claim has been discarded.

Journalistically, this has been a clownish cable performance pretty much all the way down. 

For starters, the round the clock cable coverage never made journalistic sense. That said, cable news is largely entertainment and agitprop under current arrangements, a fact which has become that much clearer as this journalistic charade has unfolded.

We feel sorry for all involved in this horrible unsolved crime. The "journalism" has largely been an extended charade about a tragic event.

To be clear, we don't know if Banfield's report was correct; we don't have the slightest idea. That said, cable news truly seems to love to yammer, to burn the long hours away.


KAFKA'S DESCENDANTS: "I didn't expect the killings," she said!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2026

A hint of the Kafkaesque: For one person with whom the New York Times spoke, her experience of the past year may have become Kafkaesque. 

It's as we noted in yesterday's report. The Times spoke with thirteen Democratic or Dem-leaning voters for an "America in Focus" report. Concerning the current state of the nation, one of those voters said this:

CANDY, 46: I would say it’s exactly what I imagined it was going to be like. I called out a lot of the things that are currently happening, and I keep calling out things that I feel are going to happen that haven’t happened. Maybe I didn’t think citizens were going to get killed. But my thoughts and my feelings about what was going to happen are close enough.

On balance, this womanage 46, a Nevada residentsays she hasn't been surprised by the past year's flood of events. On the other hand, she says she "maybe" didn't think that two people were going to be shot and killed in the streets of Minneapolis as part of the overall deal. 

(Earlier, in Chicago, how did Marimar Martinez manage to avoid being killed? She was shot five times by federal agents, but somehow managed to survive. It's fairly clear that those federal agents proceeded to lie about what Martinez had supposedly done before one opened fire. We'll guess that Candy, a good decent person, also may not have foreseen conduct like that.)

For Candy, a Nevada resident, did those killings start to make the state of play perhaps feel a bit Kafkaesque? We can't necessarily say that they did, Yesterday, though, we cited these statements by two other people with whom the New York Times spoke. 

KATIE, 36: I wake up in the morning and I look at my phone, and it’s another headline. I saw something on Facebook the other day that was from The Onion. And I had to double-check to make sure that that’s where it was from because, the reality that we’re living in right now, it’s hard to tell the difference between real life and satire, which is not a good place to be in.

[...]

JOHN, 43: If you asked me this 12 years ago, it was something no one really talked about. And now it’s a daily conversation...It’s like, daily, you could have three or four things that you would never even think 10, 15 years ago would happen. 

For that 36-year-old Virginia resident, "the reality that we’re living in" may no longer exactly feel like "real life." Meanwhile, John, a resident of New Jersey, says things are happening every daythings you never could have imagined not that long ago.

Does this rise to the level of Kafkaesque? Not necessarily, nothough the ghost of Rod Serling may be around and about as Blue Americans occasionally flirt with hints of The Twilight Zone.

Below, we'll offer the strangest example of shattered presumptions of which we ourselves are aware. First, though, we turn to something Wes Moore said on CBS this past Sunday night. 

Governor Moore (D-Md.) was interviewed by Norah O'Donnell. The gentleman is unmistakably sharp. At one point, he even said this:

Gov. Wes Moore argues Biden "needed to do more" on immigration but blasts Trump's crackdown

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore told CBS News immigration is an issue the country has "punted on for a very long time" amid the nation's heated debate over federal enforcement.

While he has publicly condemned the Trump administration's immigration policies as a "cruel and reckless political agenda," he told CBS News senior correspondent Norah O'Donnell that former President Joe Biden "did not have this right."

"We needed to do more. That, I don't think anyone can argue that we had the system worked out under President Bidenthat immigration was worked out," he said during a town hall that aired Sunday. 

Say what? Under President Biden, the southern border was handled so poorly that "I don't think anyone can argue that we had the system worked out?" 

Is a fellow like Governor Moore really permitted to say that? Apparently, yes, he is. Just last weekend, over in Munich, Hillary Clinton may have said a somewhat similar thingor then again, she may not have.

For us Blues, the world has gone borderline Kafka during this second Trump term. For Reds, is it possible that some such dislocation occurred during the Biden years? Did some such dislocation occur as they watched footage of unauthorized immigrants streaming across the southern borderfootage we Blues were neither asked nor allowed to see on our own cable channels?

Fellow citizens, we're just asking! Experts say that we the humans, being heavily tribal, aren't wired for such ruminations. 

For our money, we think that Moore is on the right track when he inexplicably decides to state the obvious. For ourselves, the world hasn't exactly gone Kafkaesque during this second Trump term. 

At times, the world has gone full Witnesshas made us long for the type of internal exile the Harrison Ford character undertakes during that Oscar-nominated 1985 film.

In that film, Ford's charactera Philadelphia police officerflees to Pennsylvania's Amish country in an echo of what Plato said in The Seventh Letter:

"When I saw all this, and other things as bad, I grew disgusted and withdrew from the wickedness of the times."

Ford's character flees from the wickedness of the times, partly in hopes of saving his own life. Eventually, like Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, he sees that he has to "return to the fight."

(Like Bogey, he leaves the love of his life behind in the person of Kelly McGillis. "We'll always have Amish country," he might as well have said as he heads back to Philadelphia at the end of the film.)

We ourselves have felt that longing for withdrawal as the flooding of the zone has rolled on and on and on. We agree with John, age 43it's reached the point where there are so many bizarre events each day that it has become almost impossible to even pretend to keep up.

Still, as we Blues watch the Trump agenda unfold, has the world gone full Kafkaesque? In fairness, Kafka's protagonist, Gregory Samsa, had to adjust to the fact that he had somehow turned into an insect. 

Has the epistemic dislocation been that extreme for us? For most people, the answer is presumably no.

(Then too, there are all those people in Red America. As we Blues have sometimes proposed and done weird things, had the world gone Kafkaesque for them before the return of President Trump?)

For Blues, flickers of Kafkaesque have possibly come into view as the society's normal procedures have been upended again and again. For ourselves we flashed on Kafka this Monday morning as we struggled with two fell weeks of pseudo-coverage of the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, age 84, from her Tucson home.

Two "cable news" channels had gone all in on the pseudo-coverage. Around the clock, all day and all night, the channels had presented repetitive pseudo-discussions, in which observers who had nothing to say were sent on the air to say it.

When the very occasional factlets popped up, the channels persistently bungled them. As we grew disgusted by the incompetence of the times, we found ourselves thinking of Kafka's hoof.

We suddenly flashed on Kafka's hoof? Tomorrow, right here, we'll explain.

On the whole, we're looking for ways to understand the very unusual world within which we're currently being floodedinto which we've all been thrown. Last week, Jamelle Bouie, who's very sharp, said it's racism, complete full stop.

The columnist said that's what it is. We think it goes beyond that.

Tomorrow: Fleetingly, Kafka's hoof


WEDNESDAY: It's the sheer inanity, Stupid!

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2026

The Five cavort and clown: Before we discuss The Five let's start with a simple question of analytical competence. It involves a pair of official statements by the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

On Monday, the PCSD issued the statement seen below. We agree with the Fox News Channel's Will Cain. Whatever the ultimate truth may turn out to be, this statement didn't quite seem to make sense:

PCSD: Monday, February 16
“To be clear, the Guthrie familyto include all siblings and spouseshas been cleared as possible suspects in this case. The family has been nothing but cooperative and gracious and are victims in this case. To suggest otherwise is not only wrong, it is cruel..."

We agree with what Cain instantly noted on Monday's edition of The Will Cain Show. If Sheriff Nanos doesn't know who actually did commit this crime, it's hard to see how he can declare, with certainty, that some specific person wasn't involved in some way. 

We didn't think that statement made senseand then, you be the judge! Yesterday, the PCSD apparently issued this second statement:

PCSD: Tuesday, February 17
“...At this point in the investigation, the Guthrie family (including siblings and spouses) has not been identified as suspects.”

Many news orgs have treated that as a simple restatement of Monday's announcement. To see a reporter at Forbes do that, you can just click here. (CNN did the same thing on last evening's broadcasts.)

In fact, as Cain noted early in yesterday's show, Tuesday's statement differs greatly from Monday's declarationor at least, it does so on its face.

Who knows? Maybe the PCSD thought they were simply restating Monday's declaration, but that isn't what they actually did.

Did anyone in the press corps ask? Full disclosure:

Verbal and analytical skills are sometimes remarkably sparse within our high-end news orgs.

Now for the rest of the story: As we've often noted, The Five is our flailing nation's most watched "cable news" show. Its viewership dwarfs that of any MS NOW or CNN show.

The Five is also a daily insult to the American project. We thought you ought to see the list of topics the five stumblebums pretended to discuss on yesterday's braindead show:

Segment One: Once again, for the second straight day, AOC's flub in Munich. 
Segment Two: Members of the Democrat [sic] Party say the word "so-called" too much.
Segment Three: Should transgender people be allowed to own guns?
Segment Four: Rosie O'Donnell made a trip to New York.
Segment Five: Eric Swalwell wrote an erotic poem! (When he was 19 years old!)

AOC and Rosie and Swalwell oh my! Sadly, we've made none of that up. 

We'll spare you an account of the sheer inanity put on display as the messenger children invented dim-witted, insulting speculations about O'Donnell's reasons for visiting New York. 

As for Swalwell's erotic poem, the children never quite made it clear that they were talking about a poem the fellow wrote when he was a college sophomore.

The dumbness of the discussion about the offensive term "so-called" surpassed all human understanding, with Dana Perino winning the earnest cluelessness prize. She also played the world-class fool in offering mocking speculations about O'Donnell.

At any rate, make no mistake: 

These corporate messenger children are propaganda clowns. They're dragged out on the set each night to engage in snark and insult and scorn and to do little or nothing else.

Out of all the gin joints in the world, the Ingrid Bergman character had to walk into Bogie's cafe! Similarly, out of all the serious news topics begging for clarification and analysis, the nitwits on our most watched show chose to turn tricks like those.

O'Donnell visited her children. Swalwell wrote a poem when he was 19! Also, Dems say "so-called" too much!

It's what these flyweights are paid to doand the cast gets dumber at 10! 

The New York Times won't report about this. The breakdown runs various ways.


KAFKA'S DESCENDANTS: The United States of Kafkaesque?

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2026

Discouraged Dem voters declaim: Have we the people somehow been thrown into a previously unimagined land? 

Do we find ourselves living in what might be called the United States of the Kafkaesque? Some such case could almost be made at this point in time! 

As in Monday morning's report, so too today. Let's recall who Kafka was, and what his protagonists faced:

Franz Kafka

Franz Kafka (1883 – 1924) was a German-language Jewish Czech writer and novelist born in Prague, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Widely regarded as a major figure of 20th-century literature, his works fuse elements of realism and the fantastique, and typically feature isolated protagonists facing bizarre or surreal predicaments and incomprehensible socio-bureaucratic powers. The term Kafkaesque has entered the lexicon to describe situations like those depicted in his writings. His best-known works include the novella The Metamorphosis (1915)...

Go figure! Kafka trafficked in realism, but also in the fantastique! 

At any rate, his protagonists typically faced "bizarre or surreal predicaments" and incomprehensible socio-bureaucratic situations. So it was for Gregory Samsa, who awoke one day to find himself transformed:

The Metamorphosis

The Metamorphosis, also translated as The Transformation, is a novella by Franz Kafka published in 1915. One of Kafka's best-known works, The Metamorphosis tells the story of salesman Gregor Samsa, who wakes to find himself inexplicably transformed into a huge insect and struggles to adjust to this condition...

Plot

Gregor Samsa wakes up one morning to find himself transformed into a "monstrous vermin." He initially considers the transformation to be temporary and slowly ponders the consequences of his metamorphosis. Stuck on his back and unable to get up and leave the bed, Gregor reflects on his job as a traveling salesman and cloth merchant, which he characterizes as being "plagued with ... the always changing, never enduring human exchanges that don't ever become intimate."

And so on from there. If the leading authority can be believed, the circumstances of Samsa's transformation become more and more horrible as the story moves along.

Without question, Samsa awoke to find himself "facing a bizarre and surreal predicament." So, it almost seems, have a group of Democratic voters with whom the New York Times recently spoke.

The Times didn't put a date on its report of those discussions. Based on the contents of the link to this latest America In Focus report, we think the report appeared yesterday morning. 

Headline included, here's the start of the overview to the lengthy report:

AMERICA IN FOCUS
‘Show Up for Us’: 13 Democratic Voters on Trump, ICE and Their Frustrations With the Democratic Party

Donald Trump’s second presidency has remade American life in just a year. Many Democrats and others worry about the erosion of civil rights, cuts to the social safety net and the significant, aggressive increase in deportations across the country.

Amid major debates among activists, pundits and elected officials about what direction the party should take, Times Opinion assembled 13 Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters to ask how the party is handling the moment, what changes and reprioritizations they want to see, and what kinds of Democrats are standing out.

And so on, briefly, from there. Soon, there came the transcript of what those thirteen voters had said. To our ear, it almost sounds like some of those voters now find themselves in a Kafka-adjacent land:

KATIE, 36: I wake up in the morning and I look at my phone, and it’s another headline. I saw something on Facebook the other day that was from The Onion. And I had to double-check to make sure that that’s where it was from because, the reality that we’re living in right now, it’s hard to tell the difference between real life and satire, which is not a good place to be in.

[...]

JOHN, 43: If you asked me this 12 years ago, it was something no one really talked about. And now it’s a daily conversation...It’s like, daily, you could have three or four things that you would never even think 10, 15 years ago would happen.

[...]

MICHAEL, 56: It’s worse than I expected. I thought it would be bad, but it’s going even further than I thought he would. In his first term there were some people around [President Trump] who tried to rein him in, and now he’s just unhinged and off the rails, and everybody around him is pushing him in this direction.

[...]

KAI, 36: Yeah, I didn’t think it would be this bad because I thought there’d be checks and balances, like we were always told. 

In truth, it doesn't sound nearly as bad as what happened to Gregory Samsa. But as we scrolled through the comments by those Democratic voters, we almost thought we heard hints of the previously unimaginableof the near Kafkaesque. 

For the record, the Times spoke to thirteen voters who hail from Blue America. This latest interview piece doesn't report the thoughts and impression which currently obtain among voters in Red America.

Voters in Red America have genuine complaints and concerns of their own. But as those of us in Blue America try to understand what's currently happening here in this land, our personal view would be this:

We think the current situation substantially involves matters of what was once known as "mental illness."

According to the leading authority, that term is falling out of favor. That said, the medical situations to which it referred remain a part of human capability and human experience.

That said, our Blue elites have agreed that such topics must never be discussed in a political context. Also, the syndrome once known as "mental illness" is too complex for our unimpressive Blue elites to be able to discuss constructively, even if they decided to try.

As we noted in Monday's report, we flashed on Kafka that morning. When that happened, we weren't thinking of the near-Kafkaesque state of affairs into which our country has fallen.

We were thinking of something elsesomething you might call "Kafka's hoof." For today, we'll only apologize for wandering down this current road as the zone keeps getting flooded.

We've been watching the ubiquitous pseudo-coverage of the Nancy Guthrie disappearance over the past few weeks. Yesterday, we also watched the full hour of the "cable news" gong-show known as The Five.

It's the most watched show in "cable news," followed closely by Jesse Watters Primetime and Gutfeld! 

Viewership of those programs dwarfs the viewership of CNN and MS NOW programs combined! Can a nation so saddled really expect to survive?

Yesterday afternoon, Kafka's hoof was prominent as five stumblebums on The Five stumbled inanely along. The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but we humans simply aren't the brilliant species we have long claimed to be.

Five stumblebums stumbled along, making a joke of the American discourse. But before we rush to savage the forces of Red America, let us recall this fact:

As with deeply relevant mental health issues, so too here. Our endlessly ballyhooed Blue elites have agreed that inanity of this type must never be reported, challenged, critiqued or discussed.

What happens in Red America is allowed to stay right there! This is the arrangement we've chosen!

We're much, much less than what you've heard. In this afternoon's report, we'll try to update you concerning the pseudo-coverage of the Guthrie search and also concerning The Five.

This afternoon: It's the inanity, Stupid!


TUESDAY: The Washington Post spotted Us versus Them...

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2026

...in one small Virginia town: Purcellville could still be called a small American town.

More precisely, it's a fairly small Virginia town. The leading authority on the town offers this statistic:

Purcellville, Virginia

Purcellville is a town in Loudoun County, Virginia, United States. The population was 8,929 according to the 2020 census. Purcellville is the major population center for Western Loudoun and the Loudoun Valley. Many of the older structures remaining in Purcellville reflect the Victorian architecture popular during the early twentieth century.

By our reckoning, that still counts as a fairly small town.

For the record, the town is located fifty miles west of Washington, D.C. We learned that in this report in the Washington Posta report in which the Washington Post says it has spotted an unfortunate state of affairs:

‘Us versus them’: The battle that’s tearing a small Virginia town apart

The town council meeting had reached the point on the agenda where the public could speak on any topic, and emotions, to put it mildly, were a tad raw.

“It’s not too late to resign!” a woman shouted at the lawmakers, four of whom, including the mayor, are the focus of a recall campaign.

“Stop screwing our town!” a man railed.

“We are broke and sicker of you than ever!” someone else yelled.

Oof! According to the Washington Post, Purcellville currently finds itself split into a battle of "Us versus Them." In this case, the Us versus Them isn't Red versus Bluebut we were somewhat amused by that headline in the Post.

Can you possibly think of a larger polity which is also split into Us versus Them, though this time in a way which really is Red versus Blue? Which is split into Us versus Them is a baldly dangerous way? Which is split in this dangerous way in part due to corporate profit chasing?

The larger polity to which we refer is of course the United States of America! Its population is roughly 340 million, and it's very severely split into two tribesthe Red but also the Blue.

This dangerous state of antagonism is fueled by certain "cable news" corporate entities. On this campus, we regard the Fox News Channel as the worst of the lot, but the Blue American channel called MS NOW has been a part of this syndrome too.

(It can be hard for us Blues to apprehend that last point. Sic semper tribal vision!)

The Post is prepared to report on the tribal split in Purcellville. It's perhaps a bit less inclined to do so when it comes to the deeply dangerous split which obtains in that larger polity. 

As for the New York Times, it refuses to report and discuss the conduct observed on the Fox News Channel, even when that conduct vastly departs from all traditional journalistic norms.

(For the record, those changes can be seen, and frequently are, as changes for the better. But when those changes as so extreme, they constitute obvious "news.")

We may have more of this tomorrow, but for today, we'll leave you with this:

Roughly eleven days ago, the sitting president reposted a brainless diatribe about the 2020 election. It ended with a sudden, now-famous ape shot. 

Our question:

How frequently have viewers of the Fox News Channel ever heard that fact reported? Have viewers of the Fox News Channel ever heard about that Truth Social post at all?

Also, why is that the sort of thing you will never see reported by the New York Times or by any of its columnists? What keeps an intriguing question like that from being explored and reported?

We close today with our basic journalistic query:

Why is division newsworthy in one small town, but apparently nowhere else?

Tomorrow: What Wes Moore (correctly) said?


KAFKA'S DESCENDANTS: "Strategic ambiguity," she should have said!

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2026

The "clown show" to which he referred: AOC went to Munich last week. While she was there, at least one "stumble" occurred.

At this point, full disclosure:

On balance, it wouldn't really have occurred to us that Rep. Ocasio-Cortez would be viewed as a serious contender to become the next president. But that's the way her most-hyped stumble is being played across our nation's pseudo-discourse, wherever the "clown show" is performed.

Yesterday, it was widely performed on the Fox News Channel, by a succession of corporate messenger agents. But first, a word about the gong-show Valhalla to which "cable news" has long since flown.

We'll start at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, with The Will Cain Show.

The program appears on the Fox News Channel. Wisely or otherwise, the first 58 minutes of yesterday's show was dedicated to the search for Nancy Guthrie. Nothing beside remained!

At 4:58 p.m., Cain devoted the last two minutes of his show to the mocking of AOC. He mocked her for a remark about cowboys, and then it was time for The Five!

Harlequins tumbled onto the set of our most-watched "cable news" program. The children devoted their first segment to—of course—the Guthrie search. Then the real clowning began, the daily imitation of life:

Segment One: The search in Tucson for Nancy Guthrie
Segment Two: The stupid thing Obama allegedly said
Segment Three: Schumer, HRC launch dumb attacks
Segment Four: The stupid thing AOC allegedly said

In all honesty, Obama hadn't said a stupid thing—but this, after all, was The Five

In the podcast discussion under review, the former president had referred to the "clown show" with which we're all currently saddled. Almost surely, he wasn't thinking of The Five, or even of the Fox News Channel, when he made that remark.

Yesterday, though, the wider clown show just kept rolling along. During Segment Three, the children could have tried to explain the contents of the SAVE Act—but, this being The Five, no such attempt occurred.

On the Fox News Channel, but even more so on CNN, the focus on Tucson was considerable. Wisely or otherwise, CNN devoted its time to little else as the afternoon and evening proceeded. 

CNN made the rest of the world go away as its hosts, and their expert guests, yammered about the search and about little else. But let's return to AOC—to the stumble in which she engaged.

Full disclosure:

By now, our next presidential election is less than three years away. Given the (intellectual) "wickedness of the times," that means we need to start wasting our time yammering about possible White House contenders!

On cable, we'll make the rest of the world go away in deference to the Tucson search. But as an additional part of our national foolishness, we'll also make the world go away in deference to stumbles like this, as reported on page A6 of Sunday's New York Times:

Ocasio-Cortez Offers a Working-Class Vision in Munich, With Some Stumbles

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, a progressive who made a name for herself focused on economic problems at home in America, might have seemed an odd fit for the Munich Security Conference, an annual gathering of foreign leaders and diplomats focused on international security.

But at two Friday panels, she tied worsening income inequality to the rise of authoritarianism, weaving her working-class worldview into a broader message about combating far-right populism and strengthening relationships with Western allies. Everyday people, she argued, were turning away from democracy because wealthy elites had failed to address their needs.

[...] 

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez has stepped up her visibility in recent months as a leader for Democrats as they oppose President Trump. Speculation about her future political ambitions—she has long been considered a potential presidential candidate—was rife in Munich. Her mere presence was scrutinized as a hint that perhaps she was considering a White House bid and brushing up on world affairs.

"She has long been considered a potential presidential candidate?" 

To us, that seems remarkably premature. But in Munich, as of course on The Five, "speculation about her future political ambitions was rife!"

Eventually, the New York Times got around to reporting the most prominent of her stumbles. With respect to what AOC said, the Times quoted the part of her statement which it viewed as a stumble, then paraphrased the rest:

Questioned about whether the United States should send troops to defend Taiwan if China invaded the island, she stalled for roughly 20 seconds before offering a substantive response.

“I think that, uh, this is such a, a—you know, I think that—this is a, um—this is of course, a, uh, a very longstanding, um, policy of the United States,” Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said, before saying that the country should try to avoid reaching that point with China in the first place.

It was a striking moment from a self-assured legislator who is normally nimble at answering impromptu questions from reporters on Capitol Hill, and conservative critics seized on the stumble online. Earlier in the day, she also made a reference to the “Trans-Pacific Partnership”—later correcting that on social media to “trans-Atlantic.”

A person surely could see that as the first of a pair of stumbles. She did, in fact, stammer in a lengthy way, as judged by political norms.

On The Five, the channel went one step beyond what the New York Times did. On The Five, they played the tape of that first twenty seconds, then never mentioned the fact that AOC ever managed to offer " a substantive response" at all.

In all honesty, even her "substantive response" wasn't especially sharp. But what had she perhaps been thinking as she stumbled and stalled?

Who knows? But she may have been trying to recall a pair of words—a pair of words which has long been used to describe U.S. policy with respect to China and Taiwan. Here's the start of a second report by the New York Times about this recent underwhelming event:

After First Big Overseas Trip, Ocasio-Cortez Expresses Frustrations

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had anticipated a potentially frosty reception to her anti-establishment arguments at the Munich Security Conference, a venue she called “an elite place of decision makers that, frankly, are not responsive to a class-based message.”

And the visit to Germany felt high-stakes: It was the most prominent foreign trip to date by the progressive New York congresswoman, who had mostly focused on domestic priorities until now. Her remarks last week about addressing working-class concerns around the globe, and the reception from world leaders, were both eagerly awaited and highly scrutinized.

But rather than the substance of her arguments, it was her on-camera stumbles when answering questions about specific world affairs that rocketed around conservative social media and drove plenty of the discussion about her visit, as political observers speculated whether they would make a dent in a potential presidential run in 2028.

The most notable instance was when she was asked whether the United States should send troops to aid Taiwan if China invaded the island. She stalled for roughly 20 seconds before offering a response that reflected the United States’ longtime policy of strategic ambiguity.

"Strategic ambiguity?" Let us say this about that:

On this campus, we don't know diddly about foreign affairs. But even we knew that that's the phrase which has long been used to describe this country's highly nuanced stance with respect to that famously delicate policy question.

Even we knew—and yes, that has long been viewed as a challenging policy question. If memory serves, President Trump has even had some stumbles along the way with this knotty topic—and that's surprising, because on The Five, the former "wrestler" who now performs as "Tyrus" thoughtfully told Red America this:

TYRUS (2/16/26): The one thing that Barack Obama and President Trump had in common is that they are communicators of a higher— Like, their brilliance when they're called on something? You're never going to see Obama or President Trump asked a question that they can't answer...They're always prepared.

You'll never see President Trump asked a question he can't answer? The former "wrestler" went on from there, but the analysts were groaning so loudly that we couldn't quite hear what he said.

Before we try to summarize, we're going to tell you this:

Yesterday, the sheriff of Pima County issued a formal statement. In it, he said that members of the Guthrie family have been totally cleared with respect to the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.

On this morning's Morning Joe, Mika and Willie dedicated their roughly two-minute discussion of Tucson to the praise they heaped upon the sheriff for having made that declaration. Yesterday, on the frequently maligned Fox News Channel, Will Cain articulated a different view:

He quickly noted, quite correctly, that whatever the truth may turn out to be, that declaration by the sheriff doesn't seem to make any sense. We'd have to say that Cain's view was right, and that Mika and Willie were simply reading from insider cable guild script.

Everywhere FDR looked in 1944, he said he saw "one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished." Everywhere we look today, we think we see a flailing nation profoundly ill-served by a collection of imitations of life.

The disorder is so general that it's hard to sum it all up. But what does that have to do with Kafka? Before the week is done, we'll try to spell that out.

That said, our own Blue realm is frequently involved in these "clown shows" too. As is the norm at times of tribal war, it's hard for us Blues to see that.

In closing, also this, as we noted yesterday afternoon:

AOC also said what's shown below. As the US seems to break away from the EU, this statement seems hard to deny—and in the possible clownishness of the times, no one is talking about it:

"[Our presidential administration is] looking to withdraw the United States from the entire world so that we can turn into an age of authoritarians that can carve out the world where Donald Trump can command the Western Hemisphere and Latin America as his personal sandbox, where Putin can saber-rattle around Europe and try to bully our own allies there," she said.

Is it possible that she was right about that? We say it pretty much is!

It's impossible to sum the clown shows up. We're trying as hard as we can, but the various floodings of the zone are inundating our sprawling campus.

Before the week is done: What might Kafka have seen?