Thursday, February 29, 2024

Random News: February 29, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 29, 2024, and it’s a Thursday for some reason. It’s also Leap Day, a topic we will cover in a moment. There’s also an incredible amount of important news happening, so try to stay alert here, because shit is going down that will affect the rest of your life and those of generations to come. Let’s do it.


  • But let’s start with that zany leap year.
  • How many days are in a year? 365, right?
  • Not really. It actually takes Earth 365.242190 days to orbit the sun. It would be easier if the rotation of the planet and the time it takes to complete an orbit were somehow synchronized identically, but no, it doesn’t work that way.
  • So every year, there’s almost an extra quarter of a day difference between the two measurements. Without an extra day every four years or so, the calendar starts to get fucked up. What used to happen in May then happens in April, and so on.
  • If you’re in a civilization that needs to know what time of year it is to do things like plant and harvest crops, this eventually becomes a big problem.
  • This was figured out by the Hebrew, Chinese, and Buddhist peoples thousands of years ago, and they adjusted their calendars accordingly in various ways.
  • The Julian Calendar which was introduced in 45 BC included an extra day every year. It wasn’t quite right; that led to an overcorrection by about eight days each millennium.
  • So it wasn’t until the 16th century that Pope Gregory XIII sought to address that problem, which is why we’ve used his Gregorian calendar ever since. It adds leap days in years divisible by four, unless the year is also divisible by 100.
  • Um… except a leap day is still added in years divisible by 400. Confusing much? Anyway, it works.
  • Why add the leap day in February specifically? Because it was already the shortest month. Basically, they were like, “Fuck it, just put it in February,” and no one had a better idea.
  • Alright. Happy Leap Day, I guess. Let’s do some real news.
  • Donnie Dump tried to play “Let’s Make a Deal” with a New York appellate court yesterday, trying to halt collection of the $454,000,000 civil fraud judgment while he appeals.
  • He tried to negotiate by offering them a $100,000,000 appeal bond instead of paying the full amount due.
  • No deal! Judge Anil Singh declined to address the amount of the bond, effectively requiring Trump by default to post a bond for the full judgment of $454 million.
  • And he has to pay it all within a few weeks. Dump’s defense attorneys had argued that Dumpy had no way to secure a higher amount without selling off some of his real estate.
  • This man does not have the money, people. He stated under oath not long ago that he had around $400 million in cash available. That was a lie.
  • New York attorney general, Letitia James has said that she will seek to seize some of Trump’s assets if he is unable to pay the judgment. El Dumpo has until March 25 to secure a stay before Tish James starts taking away his shit.
  • Important side note: Justice Singh did lift a ban on Dump’s ability to obtain loans from a New York bank, which could allow him to access the equity in his assets to back the full bond amount, assuming some bank is insanely stupid enough to loan him the dough.
  • Welp. We’ll all watch while that plays out.
  • We have another big Dumpy news item from yesterday, one that would mean the end of democracy and America as we know it if it doesn’t work out the right way.
  • The Supreme Court agreed to take up whether Don the Con can be criminally prosecuted over his efforts to overturn his 2020 re-election loss, setting up a historic case that tests the limits of presidential immunity.
  • The justices’ order keeps Dump’s January 6 criminal trial proceedings on hold, for now, but it also hands a win to Special Counsel Jack Smith by keeping alive a pathway for his prosecution to reach a jury before the 2024 presidential election.
  • Let’s look on the bright side for a bit.
  • Dumpy had urged the justices to hold off on taking up his immunity claims on the merits until he first exhausts his appeal options in a lower court. Why?
  • Because that process would’ve lasted weeks, if not months, which would’ve aided Dump in his efforts to delay, delay, delay, and further run out the clock so he can first have a shot at returning to the White House and end the prosecution before a jury gets the case.
  • The high court’s order establishes an expedited schedule, setting up oral arguments during the week of April 22 and likely enabling the landmark decision to be handed down by the end of June or sooner.
  • Let’s be clear: if the Court sides with Dump, that means a US President is now a king. A person who is above the law and is immune from any and all prosecution for crimes they commit.
  • It’s the exact opposite of what the USA’s founding fathers stated for the intent of this country.
  • However, if the extreme right-wing conservative-majority court ultimately sides against Dump, as many legal observers expect, it would then allow Smith’s prosecution to move forward, providing Dump’s judge with a window to still schedule the trial before November’s election.
  • It is concerning that the Supreme Court took up this case at all. Remember, SCOTUS cases are only taken up at the discretion of the justices themselves.
  • So, this may end up being one of most important Supreme Court cases of our lifetimes, and one that will affect not only Dump but also Biden and every POTUS yet to come.
  • Moving on.
  • Yesterday, a Cook County, Illinois judge ordered the state election board to remove El Dumpo from the state’s March 19 primary ballot, but put her order on hold until Friday in anticipation of a likely appeal.
  • Ha ha.
  • Judge Tracie Porter’s decision comes amid national debate over whether Dump is disqualified from the presidency because of his actions related to the January 6, 2021, failed coup attempt at the U.S. Capitol, and whether that attack amounted to an insurrection.
  • As you’re probably aware, the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to rule on this matter soon in regard to similar actions in Colorado and Maine, and Colorado’s primary election is Tuesday. 
  • We should find out soon enough.
  • In other huge news from yesterday, Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) announced he's stepping down as the upper chamber's GOP leader after 17 years at the helm. Mitch turned 82 last week.
  • In emotional remarks on the State floor yesterday, McConnell outlined his 40 years in the Senate. Note that while Mitch is stepping down as leader, he did not say he was making any plans to actually retire. 
  • I will never shed a tear for Mitch fucking McConnell. More than anyone else, including Dumpy McDumpster, Mitch was the architect of this worst-ever Supreme Court that stands to destroy our democracy.
  • Side note: as purely evil a Mitch is, you have to understand that he’s no longer conservative enough for the MAGA contingent that took over the former Republican party. That’s why he’s stepping aside.
  • Moving on.
  • Yesterday, a Republican senator blocked legislation that would protect in vitro fertilization and other assisted reproductive technologies in the wake of an Alabama Supreme Court ruling that frozen embryos are children under state law.
  • We told you that despite their denial, Republicans want to maintain complete control over women’s reproductive freedom. Don’t listen to their words; watch their votes.
  • Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) tried to pass the measure using unanimous consent. But Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MI) objected to Duckworth’s move for a vote.
  • They are who they say they are. They’ve already blocked access to abortion. They’re already making laws to discriminate against gay and trans people. They’re already taking steps to make IVF difficult to access or straight-up illegal.
  • And next they are coming for contraceptives, and then to control who you can love. Do not vote for a single one of them, ever.
  • In other news…
  • Yesterday something happened that strongly reaffirmed my opposition to capital punishment when Idaho botched the execution of convicted serial killer Thomas Eugene Creech.
  • Creech is 73 years old, and make no mistake… he seems like an awful person. He was convicted of five murders, and was sentenced to die for the killing of a fellow prisoner with a battery-filled sock in 1981.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court denied three requests from Creech for a stay of execution yesterday morning. There were no noted dissents. The execution would have marked Idaho's first in more than a decade.
  • But then, state officials tried and failed 10 times to access veins in both of his arms and legs to inject him with the lethal injection drug pentobarbital. They couldn’t get it figured out, and now Creech’s death warrant has expired.
  • His public defenders stated, "We are angered but not surprised that the State of Idaho botched the execution of Thomas Creech today. This is what happens when unknown individuals with unknown training are assigned to carry out an execution.”
  • Sigh. Moving on.
  • In our continuing coverage of the pieces of shit who tried and failed to overthrow the USA on January 6, 2021, meet Michael Joseph Foy. He was sentenced yesterday to more than three years in federal prison for assaulting law enforcement officers with a hockey stick during the brutal battle at the lower west tunnel of the U.S. Capitol.
  • Foy was found guilty of felony charges in June. Federal prosecutors sought more than eight years in federal prison for Foy, who assaulted cops after traveling to Washington with a "TRUMP 2020" flag.
  • But U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan — who is also overseeing El Dumpo’s delayed federal trial on charges he tried to overturn his 2020 election loss by conspiring to obstruct Congress and disenfranchise American voters — said that the Justice Department's request was "unreasonable" and didn't factor in Foy's prior military service and other factors in his life in the lead-up to Jan. 6.
  • Mighty nice of her, I guess.
  • Let’s do some good news.
  • Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY) has now officially been sworn in after he won a special election in New York’s 3rd Congressional District earlier this month. He replaces the disgraced and expelled George Santos.
  • So as of today, the Republicans' House majority has shrunk again. On any party-line vote going forward, Republicans will only be able to afford to lose two of their members and still see their priorities pass if all members are present and voting.
  • And that’s a big “if”, considering that representatives will be busy campaigning this year to save their own seats, or busy “looking after their family” as Lauren Boebert (R-CO) claims she’ll be doing.
  • One more note on voting.
  • We mentioned yesterday that next week on March 5 is Super Tuesday, when a whole bunch of sites hold their primary elections.
  • We should also note that between now and then, there are Republican caucuses and primaries in other states. Saturday March 2 has the Michigan caucus, and the primaries for Idaho, and Missouri. D.C. has their on March 3, and North Dakota on March 4.
  • Vote! And help others to vote. It’s so easy. Just head to vote.org to get your questions answered.
  • And now, The Weather: “Fishbrain” by Mount Kimbie
  • Rest in peace to comedian/actor Richard Lewis. He died Tuesday at age 76. Lewis had been battling Parkinson’s for the past year or so, and then had a heart attack.
  • One pretty neat story about him was his relationship with Larry David. They were born three days apart in the same hospital, met at summer camp when they were 12, and have had a lifelong friendship ever since.
  • Lewis was respected as a stand-up in the ‘70s and ‘80s and had some films and comedy specials, but became more well known to newer audiences in the past 20+ years via his regular appearances on “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”
  • Let’s do a chart. It’s this week at the end of February in 1996. I am 27, and working in pretty much the same job I have today… writing press releases, creating advertising, doing all manner of marketing spin, and being a corporate dweeb in general. This is the top of the Billboard Modern Rock tracks, which would have encapsulated the current new music I’d have been listening to at the time.
  • Note that by 1996, Modern Rock was primarily lumped into the “post-grunge” subgenre. Like any period and type of music, there were good songs and shit songs. This list is pretty good, though.
  • 1. Wonderwall (Oasis). 2. 1979 (Smashing Pumpkins). 3. Ironic (Alanis Morissette). 4. Brain Stew/Jaded (Green Day). 5. Santa Monica (Watch The World Die) (Everclear). 6. Heaven Beside You (Alice in Chains). 7. In The Meantime (Spacehog). 8. Airplane (Red Hot Chili Peppers). 9. Naked (Goo Goo Dolls). 10. Glycerine (Bush). 11. Follow You Down (Gin Blossoms). 12. Peaches (The Presidents of the United States of America). 13. Just a Girl (No Doubt). 14. The World I Know (Collective Soul). 15. Big Me (Foo Fighters). 16. Natural One (Folk Implosion). 17. Cumbersome (Seven Mary Three). 18. I Got ID (Pearl Jam). 19. Caught A Lite Sneeze (Tori Amos). 20. Only Happy When It Rains (Garbage).
  • From the Sports Desk… the biggest headline in Japan right now is about a Los Angeles Dodger. Shohei Ohtani announced on social media today that he is married.
  • Ohtani, who in December signed a record-breaking contract worth $700 million over 10 years, wrote on Instagram in Japanese: "The season is approaching, but I would like to announce to everyone that I have gotten married."
  • Well, congrats. I’m pretty sure that he’s the best baseball player I’ve ever seen in my lifetime thus far.
  • Today in history… Christopher Columbus uses his knowledge of a lunar eclipse that night to trick Jamaican natives into providing him with supplies (1504). The Jay Treaty between the United States and Great Britain comes into force, facilitating ten years of peaceful trade between the two nations (1796). St. Petersburg, FL is incorporated (1892). In South Carolina, the minimum working age for factory, mill and mine workers is raised from 12 to 14 years old (1916). For her performance as Mammy in Gone with the Wind, Hattie McDaniel becomes the first African American to win an Academy Award (1940). Gordie Howe of the Hartford Whalers makes NHL history as he scores his 800th goal (1980). North Korea agrees to suspend uranium enrichment and nuclear and long-range missile tests in return for US food aid (2012). Joe Biden wins the South Carolina primary election (2020).
  • February 29 is the birthday of religious leader Ann Lee (1736), composer Gioachino Rossini (1792), saxophonist/composer Jimmy Dorsey (1904), MLB player Pepper Martin (1904), burlesque performer Tempest Storm (1928), actor Dennis Farina (1944), serial killer Aileen Wuornos (1956), rapper Ja Rule (1976), video game composer Lena Raine (1984), NHL player Cam Ward (1984), and NBA player Tyrese Haliburton (2000).


Holy fuck, that’s a lot of big news. I’ve got plenty to do today, so my plans are pretty well established, so now I just have to do them. Easy enough. Enjoy your day.

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Random News: February 28, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 28, 2024, and it’s a Wednesday. Another busy news day, but I’ve got a big cup of coffee and have fingers with which I can type. Let’s do this.


  • Starting with coverage of yesterday’s primary election in Michigan. Both Biden and Trump handily won their respective races as we get closer to their nearly inevitable rematch this fall. However, there are some aspects that need to be reviewed.
  • In the Democratic primary, president Joe Biden got 81.1% of the votes, easily trouncing the two other candidate names who remained on the ballot. However, Biden’s victory came with a warning from progressives, young voters, and Arab American Democrats in the form of an “uncommitted” protest vote that got about 13% of the total.
  • They want Biden to change course on Israel’s war in Gaza, or risk losing a significant chunk of support in what could be a decisive general election state.
  • I’ve long supported the idea of “vote with your heart in the primaries, but vote with your head in the general election.” Ultimately, if a good number of those folks don’t vote for Biden in November, they could end up with Donnie Dump, a president who has already threatened to deport all people of Muslim background.
  • Before anyone panics about 13% of Michigan’s voters selecting “uncommitted” as their choice, I also want you know that in 2012, Barack Obama had nearly the same percentage and ended up destroying his Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, by over 400,000 votes that fall.
  • Moving over to the Republican side, El Dumpo defeated his remaining challenger Nikki Haley by 68% to her 26%. This is actually much more alarming for the MAGA world. More than 30% of the GOP base came out to vote against the unquestioned leader of their party.
  • And a good portion of those folks will not support Dumpy in the general election no matter what.
  • Weird side note: while Joe Biden was awarded all 109 of Michigan’s Democratic delegates, only 16 of Michigan’s 55 delegates to the Republican National Convention were at stake in Tuesday’s primary, with Dump getting 9 and Haley getting 4. The rest will be awarded at a state party convention Saturday.
  • And another note on polling: the most recent 538 polling average had Dump winning Michigan by 57 points. He ended up winning by about 30.
  • Shrug.
  • Anyway, we’re now less than a week out from Super Tuesday, where 16 states plus one territory will result in hundreds and hundreds of delegate votes that will lead to the eventual official party nomination for the leading candidates.
  • There is no question that these will end up being Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
  • Moving on.
  • It’s the season for major court cases, and there are a couple of them on tap today.
  • The Supreme Court is considering whether a ban on bump stocks — an accessory that allows semiautomatic rifles to fire hundreds of bullets per minute — is legal. They were banned by the Trump administration after dozens of people were killed and hundreds more injured at an outdoor music festival in Las Vegas in 2017.
  • A bump stock has a similar effect to turning a legal rifle into an illegal machine gun. There’s no way in hell they should be legal. I’m betting this disgusting Court that lacks any semblance of ethics feels otherwise.
  • Here’s a moment of comedy from Monday’s Supreme Court hearings about social media companies and the First Amendment.
  • Justice Samuel Alito, perhaps the most conservative member of this shitty Court, asked a question and I’m pretty sure he wasn’t trying to be funny. It was about whether editorial protections that newspapers have are applicable to social media platforms.
  • "Let's say YouTube were a newspaper, how much would it weigh?" he asked, and the room erupted in laughter.
  • Fucking Jesus. This guy is deciding laws for tech firms?
  • In terrible law news, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has allowed Indiana’s ban on care for transgender youth to take effect immediately.
  • The court issued a stay yesterday, overturning a June decision from a federal judge that blocked the health care ban. Indiana’s Senate Bill 480 bans health care providers from administering gender-affirming medical care to transgender minors.
  • I’m at a point now where I’d support a boycott on business with companies based in states that enact these draconian measures. Money talks.
  • Moving on.
  • Last week, Owasso, NE police said in a statement last week that “preliminary information” from the medical examiner’s office indicated that 16-year-old transgender student Nex Benedict “did not die as a result of trauma.”
  • Some people took the department’s statement to mean that any potential injuries Benedict sustained from the fight didn’t cause their death. However, Lt. Nick Boatman, a police spokesperson, said yesterday that that wasn’t what the statement was intended to mean.
  • We’ll be watching for more information as it becomes available. And if it becomes clear that Benedict’s beating resulted in or contributed to their death, we do expect murder charges to be filed accordingly.
  • As long as we’re talking about teenagers, we should mention Tyler Jay Boebert, the 18-year-old son of Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO).
  • He was arrested yesterday after a recent string of vehicle trespass and property thefts. Boebert faces multiple felony counts of criminal possession of identification documents, conspiracy to commit a felony, and more than 15 additional misdemeanor and petty offenses.
  • As of this morning, the Garfield County Sheriff’s Office listed Tyler Boebert as an inmate in the county jail with no bond amount or release date set.
  • In a high level of irony, just hours before her son’s arrest, Rep. Boebert wrote, “The Biden Crime Family will go down as the most corrupt political family in American history,” despite the fact that she, her ex-husband Jayson, and her son have all faced charges in the past six months.
  • Moving on.
  • Starbucks and a union seeking to organize the coffee chain's U.S. workforce said yesterday they have agreed to create a framework to guide organizing and collective bargaining and potentially settle scores of pending legal disputes.
  • Starbucks and Workers United said in a joint announcement that during talks last week to settle an ongoing court case, a constructive path forward emerged on the future of the nationwide labor campaign that began in 2021 and has led workers to unionize at nearly 400 of the company's 9,000 U.S. stores.
  • Commenting on this, President Biden wrote, “Months ago, I sat down with Starbucks Workers United leaders to discuss their fight for better conditions and pay. Today, I applaud workers and Starbucks for announcing a framework that respects the right to form and join unions. When workers win, we all win.”
  • Joe is right.
  • In other news…
  • Prosecutors preparing for El Dumpo’s first criminal trial next month are seeking a partial gag order to prevent him and those speaking on his behalf from disparaging witnesses, jurors, and others involved in the case, and have asked a judge to protect jurors by shielding their names and addresses from public view.
  • This is just the first of four prosecutions Dump faces as he closes in on the 2024 Republican nomination for president, in regard to Dump’s hush money payment during the 2016 election.
  • Shielding the names and addresses of jurors will help “ensure the integrity of these proceedings, minimize obstacles to jury selection, and protect juror safety.”
  • Dumpy’s defense lawyers will have a chance to respond to Bragg’s motions before Judge Merchan rules on them.
  • And now, The Weather: “Alesis” by Mk.gee
  • Some crazy weather last night in the Midwest, with severe thunderstorms in Illinois and Michigan, and at least two tornadoes touching down in Ohio. Be safe out there, friends.
  • From the Sports Desk… the current five best goalies in the NHL based on goals allowed.
  • 1. Connor Hellebuyck (WPG): 2.21. 2. Adin Hill (VGK): 2.26. 3. David Rittich (LA): 2.32. 4 (tie). Pyotr Kochetkov (CAR): 2.35. 4 (tie). Sergei Bobrovsky (FLA): 2.35.
  • Today in history… Aztec king Cuauhtémoc is executed on the order of conquistador Hernán Cortés (1525). The United Kingdom ends its protectorate over Egypt through a Unilateral Declaration of Independence (1922). James Watson and Francis Crick announce to friends that they have determined the chemical structure of DNA; the formal announcement takes place in April's Nature Magazine (1953). The final episode of M*A*S*H airs, with almost 106 million viewers (1983). The first Gulf War ends (1991). The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents raid the Branch Davidian church in Waco, TX, starting a 51-day standoff (1993). GRB 970228, a highly luminous flash of gamma rays, strikes the Earth for 80 seconds, providing early evidence that gamma-ray bursts occur well beyond the Milky Way (1997). The 2001 Nisqually earthquake, having a moment magnitude of 6.8, with epicenter in the southern Puget Sound, damages Seattle metropolitan area (2001). Pope Benedict XVI resigns as the pope of the Catholic Church, becoming the first pope to do so since Pope Gregory XII, in 1415 (2013). 
  • February 28 is the birthday of screenwriter Ben Hecht (1894), chemist/activist Linus Pauling (1901), gangster Bugsy Siegel (1906), architect Frank Gehry (1929), actor Gavin MacLeod (1931), racing driver Mario Andretti (1940), graphic designer Storm Thorgerson (1944), NFL player/actor Bubba Smith (1945), actress Bernadette Peters (1948), comedian Gilbert Gottfried (1955), actor John Turturro (1957), singer-songwriter Cindy Wilson (1957), NHL player Eric Lindros (1973), MLB player Aroldis Chapman (1988), and NBA player Luka Dončić (1999).


There’s always more news, but never more time. Gotta go. Enjoy your day.

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Random News: February 27, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 27, 2024, and it’s a Tuesday. Tons of stuff going on, so let’s jump right in.


  • President Joe Biden said yesterday that he hopes a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas that would pause hostilities and allow for remaining hostages to be released can take effect by early next week.
  • Negotiations are underway for a weekslong cease-fire between Israel and Hamas to allow for the release of hostages being held in Gaza by the militant group in return for Israel releasing hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.
  • The proposed six-week pause in fighting would also include allowing hundreds of trucks to deliver desperately needed aid into Gaza every day.
  • Let’s hope they can get this done before the start of Ramadan around March 10.
  • And for those of you voting in Michigan’s primary today, please view this as a genuine sign that Biden is truly working toward peace in the Middle East and getting to a point of better lives for the besieged Palestinian people.
  • Back in the USA…
  • Let’s talk about the Republicans and their Life at Conception Act. It was introduced in January 2023 by Rep. Alex Mooney (R-WV) and has 125 total Republican sponsors in the House, including House Speaker Mike Johnson.
  • The legislation defines the term “human being” to include “all stages of life, including the moment of fertilization, cloning, or other moment at which an individual member of the human species comes into being.”
  • After the Alabama Supreme Court decided frozen embryos used in IVF are children and those who destroy them can be held liable for wrongful death, a number of Republicans raced to distance themselves from the ruling.
  • But under the Life at Conception Act, equal protections under the 14th Amendment would be granted at the moment of “fertilization” — regardless of whether the union of sperm and egg occurs inside the body, which is what happens in a traditional pregnancy, or outside the body, which is the case with IVF.
  • Do not believe their bullshit. Republicans want to control every aspect of the sexuality and reproductive freedom of women in every possible way. Vote accordingly. 
  • Let’s move on.
  • A federal judge ruled yesterday that the FBI informant indicted earlier this month for making false statements about President Biden and his son will remain jailed.
  • After having been initially released, Alexander Smirnov was planning to flee the USA. Good thing he was caught in time. Smirnov had been receiving information from Russian intelligence.
  • As to whether the House GOP now drops their investigation or not remains to be seen.
  • Let’s do some other news.
  • Yesterday in Tennessee, a bill was passed that would largely ban displaying pride flags in public school classrooms. The 70-24 vote sends the legislation to the Senate, where a final vote could happen as early as this week.
  • At least two people against the bill were kicked out of the gallery due to talking over the proceedings as Democrats and other opponents blasted the legislation as unfairly limiting a major symbol of the LGBTQ+ community in schools.
  • Republican Rep. Gino Bulso, the bill sponsor, said parents reached out to him with complaints about “political flags” in classrooms. When pressed about whether the bill would allow the Confederate flag to be on display in classrooms, Bulso said the bill would not change the current law about when such a symbol could be shown.
  • Uh huh. Sigh. Moving on.
  • As promised, I want to follow up on yesterday’s Supreme Court activity, where they wrangled with a pair of cases that could help define the future of the Internet.
  • Legal experts say they're the most important First Amendment cases in a generation. The question is whether states like Florida and Texas can force big social media platforms to carry content the platforms find hateful or objectionable.
  • Most of the justices — including Chief Justice Roberts — seemed to side with a key argument from the social media platforms: that decades of free speech jurisprudence mean government officials cannot compel people or businesses, including social media giants, to speak.
  • I agree.
  • This is based on what happened after January 6, 2021, when big social media sites booted Don the Con from their platforms, fearing his posts could provoke more unrest.
  • Home-grown extremists like the Proud Boys and foreign groups like the Islamic State have deployed social media to attract converts and broadcast violence.
  • If the laws in Texas ad Florida stand, social media companies wouldn’t be allowed to moderate content on their own platform. 
  • Places like Facebook and Twitter would be filled with hate speech, porn, and violent threats, and there would be nothing you could do about it.
  • I’ll keep you updated on their decision.
  • Here’s another follow-up from yesterday.
  • Donnie Dump’s attorneys did file a notice of appeal of the ruling in his New York civil business fraud case… but as I suspected, the notice did not mention the bond he would need to post for an appeal.
  • That notice is meaningless until he puts up the cash. That didn’t stop a bunch of media assholes from writing “TRUMP APPEALS VERDICT” headlines yesterday morning. He’s done no such thing.
  • Here’s the thing: if we was going to put up the half-billion dollars he needs to start the appeal, he would have wanted to do it as fast as possible. Putting up the bond would stop collections of his assets (which start in under 30 days) and would stop the more than $111,000 of interest per day.
  • But he hasn’t done shit yet except formally announce that he intends to appeal.
  • Let’s move on to some outstanding world news.
  • Hungary's parliament voted yesterday to ratify Sweden's bid to join NATO, bringing an end to more than 18 months of delays that have frustrated the alliance as it seeks to expand in response to Russia's war in Ukraine.
  • The vote passed overwhelmingly with 188 votes for and six against. Unanimous support among NATO members is required to admit new countries, and Hungary is the last of the alliance's 31 members to give its backing since Turkey ratified the request last month.
  • Hell yes. Let’s go Team NATO! Welcome to the party, Sweden.
  • And now back to the USA again.
  • Yesterday, New York state lawmakers voted to reject new congressional districts proposed by a bipartisan commission. Their state Senate voted 40-17 to reject a set of congressional lines offered by the Independent Redistricting Commission while the state Assembly voted 99-47 to reject the map. 
  • The new House map was introduced after Democrats won a lawsuit to allow the IRC a second opportunity to offer a set of congressional lines after they deadlocked last time.
  • Fuck all the gerrymandering bullshit.
  • And now a headline that writes its own punchline…
  • Donnie Dump Jr. received a letter containing a white powdery substance at his Florida home yesterday afternoon. 
  • Put away that rolled up dollar bill, Junior. Anyway, early results indicated the substance was not deadly, though tests were inconclusive as to what the actual substance was.
  • And now, The Weather: “Butterfly Net” by Caroline Polachek & Weyes Blood
  • From the Sports Desk… here are the leaders in rebounds per game in the NBA.
  • 1. Domantas Sabonis (SAC): 13.2. 2. Rudy Gobert (MIN). 3 (tie). Nikola Jokic (DEN): 12.3. 3 (tie). Anthony Davis (LAL): 12.3. 5. Jalen Duren (DET): 12.1.
  • Today in history… Henry IV is crowned King of France (1594). The House of Commons of Great Britain votes against further war in America (1782). The Dominican Republic gains independence from Haiti (1844). The British Labour Party is founded (1900). A challenge to the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, allowing women the right to vote, is rebuffed by the Supreme Court of the United States in Leser v. Garnett (1922). Martin Kamen and Sam Ruben discover carbon-14 (1940). In Berlin, the Gestapo arrest 1,800 Jewish men with German wives, leading to the Rosenstrasse protest (1943). The Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution, limiting Presidents to two terms, is ratified (1951). The American Indian Movement occupies Wounded Knee in protest of the federal government (1973). 
  • February 27 is the birthday of Roman emperor Constantine the Great (272), poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807), sociologist/philosopher George Herbert Mead (1863), SCOTUS justice Hugo Black (1886), physiologist Charles Herbert Best (1899), author John Steinbeck (1902), actress Joanne Woodward (1930), actress Elizabeth Taylor (1932), activist/politician Ralph Nader (1934), actor Howard Hesseman (1940), political strategist Lee Atwater (1951), guitarist Neal Schon (1954), politician Maggie Hassan (1958), NBA player James Worthy (1961), NFL player Tony Gonzalez (1976), singer-songwriter Josh Groban (1981), NBA player Devin Harris (1983), and NFL player Chandler Jones (1990).


That’s a lot of news. I’m going to go work out and then do work and then work on other work things. Enjoy your day.

Monday, February 26, 2024

Random News: February 26, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 26, 2024, and it’s a Monday. It’s time to see what is happening in this world of ours. If you don’t know, how can you make it better?


  • Let’s start with some breaking news: Donnie Dump has appealed his $454 million New York civil fraud judgment. His lawyers filed a notice of appeal this morning asking the state’s mid-level appeals court to overturn Judge Arthur Engoron’s verdict.
  • Dump’s appeal was expected. What’s unclear is if he’s already put up the nearly half billion dollars it takes to formally move the appeal process forward.
  • And if so, where he got it. Fascinating. Guess we’ll all see eventually.
  • Moving on…
  • As expected, Ronna McDaniel said this morning that she will step down next month as chairwoman of the Republican National Committee following Donnie Dump's endorsement of a new slate of leaders to direct the party.
  • Dump has endorsed North Carolina GOP chairman Michael Whatley to be the next chairman of the RNC, his daughter-in-law Lara Trump to be co-chair, and top campaign aide Chris LaCivita to be the party’s chief operating officer.
  • What is the Dumpinator’s goal here? Simple. He wants the RNC to pay all of his legal bills, and not to use their spending power on any other candidates but himself.
  • There is currently a resolution circulating within the RNC that would bar the committee from paying the legal bills of Dumpy. That will be tossed aside quickly as soon as the new regime takes over in March.
  • Moving on.
  • Let’s talk about tomorrow’s primary elections in Michigan, an important swing state.
  • An effort to vote for “uncommitted” rather than supporting President Biden is being spearheaded by progressive groups and Arab American grassroots organizations in the state.
  • This is, of course, a form of protest toward a perceived lack of support for Palestine and refusal to force a cease-fire in the ongoing Israel/Hamas war. Michigan has the highest population density of Arab Americans in the USA.
  • I think Gov. Gretchen Whitmer says it well: “A second Trump term would be devastating, not just on fundamental rights, not just on our democracy here at home, but also when it comes to foreign policy. This was a man who promoted a Muslim ban. This is, I think, a very high-stakes moment. I am encouraging people to cast an affirmative vote for President Biden.”
  • Think about the big picture, folks. Thank you.
  • In other election news, it’s only a matter of time before Nikki Haley is forced to end her campaign as the only obstacle against Dumpy taking the GOP nomination.
  • Americans for Prosperity, the organization backed by conservative billionaire Charles Koch, will stop its spending in support of Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign, they announced yesterday.
  • Even after her unsurprising primary loss in South Carolina over the weekend, Haley said she still planned to continue her campaign. But without major donor cash, it’s difficult to see how she presses on past another week or so.
  • Dump mocked her after the loss on Saturday. I think she’s out after Super Tuesday (March 5) and will immediately endorse Dump afterwards. That’s what they do.
  • Let’s move on.
  • Vigils took place across the nation for Nex Benedict, a bullied nonbinary Oklahoma teenager who died the day after a fight in a high school bathroom.
  • The local police department has since said Benedict’s death was not a result of injuries suffered in the fight, based on the preliminary results of the autopsy.
  • Vigils for Nex were held in Oklahoma and locations across the country, including Boston, Minneapolis, New York and Southern California in the days following the student's death.
  • As mentioned yesterday, the Supreme Court is hearing arguments today in two cases that could dramatically reshape social media, weighing whether states such as Texas and Florida should have the power to control what posts platforms can remove from their services.
  • The case will affect whether sites such as Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok should be able to make their own decisions about how to moderate spam, hate speech, and election misinformation.
  • It’s a big fucking deal. I’ll keep you abreast of how it goes, of course.
  • And now, The Weather: “loner” by Night Tapes
  • In other weather news, Michigan — where today’s important primaries are being held — faces severe storms with possible hail and up to 60mph wind gusts. It’s shit like that which makes me happy to live somewhere where early voting is easy and encouraged.
  • Let’s talk about porn… and AI.
  • For the past decade or so, porn has been primarily dominated by two entities: Pornhub, a free site supported by ads, and OnlyFans, a subscription platform where individuals control their businesses and their fate.
  • But AI will soon be able to create photorealistic images and videos that put viewers in the director’s chair, letting them create whatever porn they like. 
  • The big question is how to prevent abuse. AI generators don’t have morals; they can be used to create content that depicts violence, rape, sex with children, or a celebrity — or even a crush from work who never consented to appear.
  • Currently, no federal laws protect the victims of nonconsensual deepfakes. That means that you, or your family and friends, could end up in porn images that never existed in reality and that they certainly never consented to.
  • To add some perspective… porn remains a giant industry accounting for a substantial chunk of all internet traffic. Major porn sites get more monthly visitors and page views than Amazon, Netflix, TikTok, or Zoom.
  • It’s going to be a problem, and unless lawmakers start doing something soon, it’s a genie that won’t easily be put back into the bottle.
  • Let’s do a chart. It’s this exact day 40 years ago in February 1984, and this is the top of the Billboard Hot 100 singles.
  • I am a sophomore in high school and I am constantly jamming and practicing and recording music, including working on some of my own songs. What else am I doing in February 1984? I have various girlfriends, I smoke weed, I play various sports, and I can’t drive because I am a grade ahead of my age and while most of my classmates are getting drivers licenses, I am still doing a lot of walking.
  • 1. Jump (Van Halen). 2. Karma Chameleon (Culture Club). 3. 99 Luftballons (Nena). 4. Girls Just Want To Have Fun (Cyndi Lauper). 5. Thriller (Michael Jackson). 6. Joanna (Kool & The Gang). 7. Nobody Told Me (John Lennon). 8. Let The Music Play (Shannon). 9. Wrapped Around Your Finger (The Police). 10. An Innocent Man (Billy Joel). 11. That's All (Genesis). 12. Somebody's Watching Me (Rockwell). 13. I Want A New Drug (Huey Lewis & The News). 14. Talking In Your Sleep (The Romantics). 15. Here Comes The Rain Again (Eurythmics). 16. New Moon On Monday (Duran Duran). 17. Running With The Night (Lionel Richie). 18. Think Of Laura (Christopher Cross). 19. Owner Of A Lonely Heart (Yes). 20. Yah Mo B There (James Ingram With Michael McDonald).
  • From the Sports Desk… not really a sports story, but a video popped up yesterday that shows 2015 NFL MVP Cam Newton involved in a scuffle at a youth football tournament in Atlanta.
  • Newton does not appear to throw any punches in the video and seems to be fending off three other people. It’s uncertain what prompted the altercation.
  • C’mon people. Be better.
  • Today in history… Galileo Galilei is formally banned by the Roman Catholic Church from teaching or defending the view that the earth orbits the sun (1616). Napoleon Bonaparte escapes from exile on the island of Elba (1815). Kinemacolor, the first successful color motion picture process, is first shown to the general public at the Palace Theatre in London (1909). President Woodrow Wilson signs an act of Congress establishing the Grand Canyon National Park (1919). President Calvin Coolidge signs legislation establishing the 96,000 acres (390 km2) Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming (1929). Robert Watson-Watt carries out a demonstration which leads directly to the development of radar (1935). U.N. Secretary-General U Thant signs United Nations proclamation of the vernal equinox as Earth Day (1971). The Tower Commission rebukes President Ronald Reagan for not controlling his national security staff (1987). In New York City, a truck bomb parked below the North Tower of the World Trade Center explodes, killing six and injuring over a thousand people (1993). Seventeen-year-old African-American student Trayvon Martin is shot to death by neighborhood watch coordinator George Zimmerman in an altercation in Sanford, FL (2012). 279 female students aged between 10 and 17 are kidnapped by bandits in Zamfara State, Nigeria (2021).
  • February 26 is the birthday of playwright Christopher Marlowe (1564), author Victor Hugo (1802), fashion designer Levi Strauss (1829), soldier/hunter Buffalo Bill (1846), physician/businessman John Harvey Kellogg (1852), businessman Herbert Henry Dow (1866), animator Tex Avery (1908), actor Robert Alda (1914), actor Jackie Gleason (1916), actor Tony Randall (1920), singer-songwriter/pianist Fats Domino (1928), singer-songwriter/guitarist Johnny Cash (1932), singer-songwriter Mitch Ryder (1945), singer-songwriter/keyboardist Jonathan Cain (1950), singer-songwriter Michael Bolton (1953), politician Tim Kaine (1958), bass player Tim Commerford (1968), singer-songwriter Erykah Badu (1971), NFL player Marshall Faulk (1973), and NBA player Tim Thomas (1977).


Okay then. Lots of ongoing things to keep an eye on. I hope you’re staying aware and awake. Enjoy your day.

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Random News: February 25, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 25, 2024, and it’s a Sunday. I’m a guy in a bathrobe and I have some delicious Peet’s Sumatra in my cup, so let’s explore the many things that make up the current news.


  • Everything went as expected in the South Carolina GOP primary. Donnie Dump was declared the victor about ten seconds after the polls closed.
  • One interesting way to consider it, though, is that 40% of voters in one of the most conservative states in the country chose Nikki Haley over Dump. I don’t think that bodes super well for Dumpy in the general election when he faces Biden.
  • Polls going into the SC primary had Dump up more than 30 points over Haley. They were 10 points off. 10 points is a massive difference in polling accuracy, even with the standard margin of error.
  • I should note that President Biden easily won the presidential primary here earlier in February. In fact, to make an unfair comparison that suits my views, Biden won with 96% of the vote, while Dump got less than 60%.
  • Perhaps in bigger primary news is this coming Tuesday’s election in a major swing state. Michigan’s primary on February 27 is for both Democrats and Republicans.
  • It’s a serious test of President Biden’s ability to navigate dissent within the Democratic Party over his response to Israel’s war with Hamas, due to the state’s high population of Arab Americans.
  • Dump is also looking for another primary win that would add to his sweep of the early-voting states and move him that much closer to becoming his party’s nominee.
  • The results this Tuesday will be closely watched for any clues about where Michigan is trending before the November election. With a narrow win in 2016, Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to carry the state since 1988. Biden reclaimed the state for Democrats in 2020, contributing to his defeat of Trump.
  • I think the most important thing for liberal Michiganders to remember is this: you may be upset regarding Biden’s support of Israel right now. But Dump has said many times over that he would like to literally deport American citizens who are of Muslim descent.
  • And a vote for anyone other than Joe Biden — including a vote for “uncommitted” — is a vote for Dump. It’s just true.
  • Meanwhile, the Michigan Republican Party is trying to emerge from an internal struggle between two competing pro-Dump factions. Regardless, you can bet almost 100% odds that Dump will beat Haley in that state as well.
  • Just a week later is Super Tuesday, where more than a dozen states (including mine) will hold elections with thousands of delegates at stake.
  • I do have a little breaking news about Ol’ Dumperino this morning: Federal District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected Dumpy's request for an emergency stay on the collection of the $83.3 million dollar judgment won by E. Jean Carroll against him.
  • Pay up, bitch.
  • Enough on that. Let’s move on to a disease we shouldn’t have to be talking about in 2024: measles.
  • This week, health officials in Broward County, Florida confirmed a seventh case of the virus, a child under age 5. The patient is the youngest so far to be infected in the outbreak, and the first to be identified outside of Manatee Bay Elementary School in Weston, near Fort Lauderdale.
  • How contagious is measles? It’s literally the most infectious pathogen in humans that we know of. Unvaccinated people have a 90% chance of becoming infected if exposed.
  • So you’d think that people would get this disease all the time, right? No, because measles is a required childhood vaccination in most places in the USA and has been for multiple generations.
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that as of Friday there have been at least 35 measles cases in 15 states in 2024. Florida’s outbreak is the largest in the U.S. right now.
  • Why? Because Florida health and education authorities are scared to even mention, much less require vaccination for anything. Pertinent note: the standard MMR vaccine that’s required in most states for children to enter public school offers 97% protection against infection.
  • While we’re in health news, let’s talk about an aspect of the recent attack on in vitro fertilization (IVF) that you might not have considered: cancer patients who want to have children.
  • See, people fighting cancer have for years turned to IVF as a way to preserve their reproductive options. The recent ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court — that frozen embryos are considered children under the law — may end up removing the only way of having a family after chemotherapy and radiation treatments.
  • Those treatments, as effective as they are at helping people live longer, often have the side effect of infertility and premature menopause. Freezing embryos and using IFV to gestate them is the only option they have.
  • I think it needs to be explained that in a situation where fertilized eggs are legally recognized as children, you need to understand the IVF process a little better.
  • To ensure a viable birth, multiple eggs are made available, and then those are tested to see which will most likely be viable. It’s common for five eggs to be processed in this way, with two of them being used to try and create a pregnancy, and the three others discarded with the parents’ consent.
  • This law that defines a fertilized egg as a child could be interpreted so that the medical facility, the parents, or both, could be charged with manslaughter or murder.
  • Get it now?
  • Moving on.
  • Wait, hold on. One more thing.
  • The majority of House Republicans, including Speaker Mike Johnson, have signed onto a bill that would ban all abortions nationwide and completely rip away access to IVF.
  • This aligns with their “Project 2025” plan to restrict reproductive rights in all 50 states under a second Trump term.
  • By the way, the GOP’s “Project 2025:” also rapidly privatizes Medicare if Trump wins. It would be a historic handout to the insurance industry, and the death of Medicare as we know it.
  • Okay, enough for now.
  • You’re probably reading these words on a social media network right now, most likely Facebook.
  • Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a case that will determine whether state governments or tech companies have the power to set the rules for what posts can appear on popular social networks.
  • And that will absolutely affect you if you use Facebook, X, Reddit, Threads, or any other social net you can access in the USA.
  • Here’s the topic of the case. In 2022, a Reddit user called a Star Trek character a “soy boy,” and the discussion board’s volunteer moderators kicked him out.
  • The user filed a lawsuit against Reddit under a landmark Texas law that prohibits social media companies from removing posts or accounts based on a viewpoint — an unprecedented regulation subverting how the internet has operated for decades.
  • So now, the constitutionality of that Texas law is being questioned at the highest level, along with a related Florida law which prohibits platforms from suspending the accounts of political candidates or media publications.
  • You’re probably smart enough to know what’s at stake here. 
  • Do you want the government telling private companies that they are forced to be a platform for hate speech? Look, I’m no fan of censorship, but why should Facebook or any other social platform be literally required by law to host violent and other harmful posts?
  • Ridiculous. Keep an eye on this.
  • It’s Sunday Gunday, where we take a quick look at recent incidents of gun violence in the USA over the past two days.
  • Two dead in a shooting in Wichita, KS. One dead, three wounded in a shooting at a parking lot in Kansas City, MO. One dead, three wounded in a shooting at a bar in the Marshall-Shadeland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, PA. One dead, one wounded in a shooting in South Los Angeles, CA. A woman shot and killed in the Oak Park neighborhood of Sacramento, CA. A woman shot and killed at a motel in Madisonville, TX. One shot dead by his roommate in Jefferson County, CO. A 16-year-old shot dead in his car in Antioch, CA. One shot dead during a carjacking in Selma, CA. One shot dead in Eagle Grove, IA. One shot dead in Raleigh, NC. One shot dead in Cudahy, WI. Three people shot in Willingboro, NJ. Two people shot in Winston-Salem, NC. Two people shot in New Orleans, LA. A teenager in critical condition after being shot at a hotel in the River North area of Chicago, IL. A teenager seriously injured in a shooting on a Green Line Train in Washington, DC. A teenager seriously injured in a shooting in Stoughton, MA. A teenager shot on a SEPTA train in Philadelphia, PA. One shot in a road rage incident in Blaine, MN. One shot on a bike trail in Colorado Springs, CO. One shot at an apartment complex in Huntsville, AL. One shot in the Bellevue neighborhood of Nashville, TN. One shot in New Haven, CT. One shot in Orange City, FL.
  • Super important note: these are only shootings from the past 48 hours, and I only cover a short list of the ones I see via a quick scroll through news on Sunday mornings.
  • I do not cover the many accidental shootings, suicides, or police shootings that happen each weekend. So my list is actually really small compared to the full scope of gun incidents that are mostly preventable.
  • And now, The Weather: “I Told You So” by Briston Maroney
  • From the Sports Desk… some of you are probably doing an NCAA bracket. I sometimes think about doing it, and then never do, because I don’t follow any college sports and don’t plan on starting.
  • However, here are the top seeds in each of the four men’s tournament divisions.
  • Midwest: 1. Purdue. 2. Marquette. 3. Alabama.
  • East: 1. UConn. 2. North Carolina. 3. Iowa State
  • West: 1. Arizona. 2. Kansas. 3. Creighton.
  • South: 1. Houston. 2. Tennessee. 3. Duke.
  • Today in history… George Frideric Handel's opera ‘Nero’ premiered in Hamburg (1705). Samuel Colt is granted a United States patent for his revolver firearm (1836). Hiram Rhodes Revels, a Republican from Mississippi, is sworn into the United States Senate, becoming the first African American ever to sit in Congress (1870). In his speech On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences, Nikita Khrushchev, leader of the Soviet Union, denounces Stalin (1956). President of the Philippines Ferdinand Marcos flees the nation after 20 years of rule and Corazon Aquino becomes the Philippines' first female president (1986).
  • February 25 is the birthday of painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841), tenor Enrico Caruso (1873), diplomat/politician John Foster Dulles (1888), spiritual leader Meher Baba 1894), comedian Zeppo Marx (1901), NHL player King Clancy (1903), actor Jim Backus (1913), author Anthony Burgess (1917), singer Ralph Stanley (1927), singer-songwriter/guitarist George Harrison (1943), wrestler Ric Flair (1949), NBA player/coach Kurt Rambis (1958), comedian Carrot Top (1965), actress Téa Leoni (1966), actor Sean Astin (1971), comedian Chelsea Handler (1975), actress Rashida Jones (1976), NBA player Jimmer Fredette (1989).


That’s all I’ve got. Time to do things that aren’t this. Enjoy your day.

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Random News: February 24, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 24, 2024, and it’s a Saturday. I’m your guy in a blue bathrobe, chilling on a weekend morning and finding out what interesting and/or important things have happened in the world.


  • Let’s start with the ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court that defined embryos as “children,” which has opened up a massive can of worms for the GOP.
  • Yesterday, Republicans were scrambling to distance themselves from the issue. The campaign arm of the Senate GOP urged candidates to “clearly and concisely reject efforts by the government to restrict IVF,” citing strong public support for IVF access. 
  • Alabama themselves know how badly they fucked up. A bipartisan effort is now underway in the state to draft “clarifying” legislation that would “protect” IVF treatments.
  • But they know this is for show, and merely intended to placate folks in an election year. Many of the same lawmakers who are expressing dismay about Alabama have a direct record of having voted to support a federal bill that would have restricted IVF in the same way.
  • Look at what’s happened since the Republicans forced the overturning of women’s reproductive rights with reversing Roe v. Wade.
  • The backlash against the fall of Roe was almost instantaneous and cut across party lines. Red-state Kansas voted overwhelmingly to reject an amendment that would have allowed state lawmakers to ban the procedure. Similar ballot measures in other states have seen abortion opponents consistently lose.
  • For the moment, until Alabama legally clarifies their own court’s ruling, IVF medical providers in the state have their hands tied, not knowing if they’ll be prosecuted for providing care to couples who want to have children.
  • My governor Gavin Newsom said it well. "The Republican Party has decided rapists have more of a right to become a parent than the families desperately trying to have a child through IVF."
  • None of this would have been possible without the overturning of Roe v. Wade, something Donnie Dump is proud of and takes complete credit for having accomplished. As recently as last night, Dumpy bragged about it publicly.
  • The writing is on the wall for the next steps in the Republican goals of controlling women: they will be removing access to contraception/birth control. But even that is part of a bigger picture plan for them.
  • This very week, a right-wing activist shared a post from the Heritage Foundation, a far-right think tank, that said “conservatives have to lead the way in restoring sex to its true purpose, and ending recreational sex and senseless use of birth control pills.”
  • Ending recreational sex. Yup.
  • Chris Rufo commented to the post, “‘Recreational sex’ is a large part of the reason we have so many single-mother households, which drives poverty, crime, and dysfunction. The point of sex is to create children—this is natural, normal, and good.” 
  • So — whether you’re Democrat or Republican, left- or right-wing, an extremist or a centrist — I want you to think long and hard about voting for people who want to have the state and federal government involved in your decision to have sex, and with whom, and for what purpose.
  • Keep in mind that in reality, the vast majority of Republicans — upwards of 90 percent — support access to birth control pills, and a majority of Republicans feel abortion should be legal in at least some circumstances.
  • That’s one of many reasons why the fringe elements of the GOP are leading their whole party into a death spiral.
  • This fall, you’ll have your opportunity to make your voice heard in a tangible way. If you don’t want to allow the government into your bedroom, do not vote for candidates who want to restrict your decisions in that very personal topic.
  • It’s fascinating — in a horror-film way — that the most supposedly patriotic people in the USA, those who paste “Never Forget” stickers about 9/11 on their trucks, have so much more in common with their sworn enemies than they do with the rest of their own country.
  • If I describe a group as anti-LGBT, anti-science, anti-women’s rights, anti-abortion, anti-separation of church and state, and pro forced theocracy, tell me… am I referring to MAGA or the Taliban?
  • Think it through.
  • Moving on for now.
  • Tick tock, Donnie. The clock started yesterday.
  • The civil fraud judgment against El Dumpo was finalized in New York on Friday, making official a verdict that leaves the former president on the hook for more than $454 million in fines and interest.
  • The formalized verdict gives Dump a 30-day window to appeal, which he has vowed to do. However, within that same time frame, he must deposit sufficient funds in a court-controlled account or secure a bond for the total amount.
  • Meanwhile, the interest on the debt is now nearly $111,984 each day. The amount will continue to accrue even while they appeal.
  • Welp, “Go Fash, Lose Cash” is a saying I’ve heard.
  • Speaking of Donnie… last night was special for him. He spoke at a formal event for Black conservatives in South Carolina ahead of today’s Republican primary in the state.
  • During his speech, he claimed, “A lot of people said that’s why the Black people like me, because they have been hurt so badly and discriminated against, and they actually viewed me as I’m being discriminated against. It’s been pretty amazing but possibly, maybe, there’s something there.”
  • So this white billionaire has been every bit as discriminated against as a Black person, okay. But wait.
  • "These lights are so bright in my eyes I can't see too many people out there... I can only see the Black ones. I can't see any white ones. That's how far I've come. That's a long way isn't it?" 
  • No.
  • “When I did the mug shot in Atlanta, that mug shot is No. 1. You know who embraced it more than anyone else? The Black population.”
  • Also no. By the way, Don, stating that Black people like mugshots is sorta, I dunno, racist, maybe?
  • And then, during some bullshit about having supposedly renegotiated the cost of remodeling Air Force One, Dump said this: “I have to tell you, Black president, but I got $1.7 billion less. Would you rather have the Black president or the white president who got $1.7 billion off the price?”
  • I’m not making any of this shit up. 
  • Side note: when the camera panned around to the crowd, the audience at this Black conservative event seemed to be mostly white. Odd.
  • Let’s move on.
  • A Wisconsin ethics panel is recommending that local prosecutors pursue criminal charges against one of Dump’s fundraising arms and several other Republican committees that violated state campaign finance law in an effort to topple a lawmaker who Dumpy didn’t like.
  • Dump’s Save America political action committee conspired with local Republican honchos to circumvent the state’s donation limits during their unsuccessful bid to unseat Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos in the 2022 Republican primary.
  • Get their asses.
  • Yesterday was a very, very bad day for the people who used to run the NRA, including its longtime leader Wayne LaPierre.
  • A jury in a lawsuit brought by the New York Attorney General’s Office found that the gun group mismanaged charitable funds when it failed to stop top executives from diverting millions of dollars for lavish personal trips, no-show contracts and other questionable expenditures.
  • Think about how foolish you’d feel about now if you’d donated money to the NRA. Jesus.
  • LaPierre has to pay the NRA $4.3 million in damages for mismanagement and misspending charitable funds. Former CFO Wilson Phillips has to pay back $2 million for breaching his fiduciary duties as an executive.
  • Let’s move on.
  • We were under balloon attack again yesterday.
  • It was a little balloon flying at 45,000 feet over the mountainous Western United States, but it was still intercepted by a fighter jet over Utah.
  • When NORAD fighter pilots investigated the balloon, they determined it was not maneuverable and did not present a threat to national security. Officials said the balloon intercepted Friday was not sent by a foreign adversary and posed no threat to aviation or U.S. security.
  • Good job, I guess?
  • I mentioned in passing above, though it’s hardly worth the effort to type, that South Carolina’s GOP primary is today.
  • Nikki Haley, the only GOP contender other than Dumpy, was born and raised in South Carolina. She’s never lost an election there, and that includes two governor’s races. So you’d think she has a pretty good shot there today, right?
  • No. She has no chance at all.
  • Every recent public poll in the state shows Dumpy leading Haley by wide margins. The two candidates draw support from two very different sets of voters: Dump wins huge margins with very conservative voters, evangelicals and those without a 4-year college degree. Haley does best among the college-educated, with non-evangelicals and moderates.
  • The simple answer for South Carolina’s election today is that Dump’s supporters as described above make up about 3/4 of the state’s voters. He’s going to win by double digits. I’ll be shocked at any other outcome.
  • And now, The Weather: “Cry Quicker” by R. Missing
  • Let’s do a chart.
  • It’s February 1974, and here’s the top of the Billboard 200 album chart. I’m like five years old. This chart is extreme in its eclectic directions. Folk, R&B, nostalgia, prog rock, proto metal… it’s all over the damn place.
  • 1. Planet Waves (Bob Dylan). 2. John Denver's Greatest Hits (John Denver). 3. Under The Influence Of... (Love Unlimited). 4. Court And Spark (Joni Mitchell). 5. You Don't Mess Around With Jim (Jim Croce). 6. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (Elton John). 7. Hotcakes (Carly Simon). 8. Tales From Topographic Oceans (Yes). 9. Band On The Run (Paul McCartney And Wings). 10. Behind Closed Doors (Charlie Rich). 11. Ship Ahoy (The O’Jays). 12. I Got A Name (Jim Croce). 13. The Joker (The Steve Miller Band). 14.. American Graffiti (Soundtrack). 15. The Singles 1969-1973 (Carpenters). 17. Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (Black Sabbath). 18. Tubular Bells (Mike Oldfield). 18. Brain Salad Surgery (Emerson, Lake & Palmer). 19. 1990 (The Temptations). 20. Ringo (Ringo Starr)
  • From the Sports Desk… the San Antonio Spurs’ rookie center Victor Wembanyama had quite a feat last night against the Los Angeles Lakers. He joined Jamaal Tinsley (2001) as the only NBA rookies to have a 5x5 game — at least 5 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 steals, and 5 blocks in a game. Wemby also became just the second player to have 5 blocks and 5 steals in consecutive games, joining Michael Jordan.
  • But the Spurs lost 113-108 to the Lakers despite the rookie's best efforts. Despite their rookie superstar, the Spurs are currently 11-46 and in last pace in the Western Conference.
  • Today in history… ‘Rinaldo’ by George Frideric Handel, the first Italian opera written for the London stage, is premiered (1711). In Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court of the United States establishes the principle of judicial review (1803). Andrew Johnson becomes the first President of the United States to be impeached by the United States House of Representatives (1868). The stage premiere of ‘Peer Gynt’, a play by Henrik Ibsen with incidental music by Edvard Grieg, takes place in Oslo, Norway (1876). Nancy Astor becomes the first woman to speak in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom following her election as a Member of Parliament three months earlier (1920). A false alarm led to an anti-aircraft barrage that lasted into the early hours of February 25 in The Battle of Los Angeles (1942). South Vietnamese forces led by Ngo Quang Truong recapture the citadel of Hué (1968). Fidel Castro retires as the President of Cuba and the Council of Ministers after 32 years (2008). Days after recognizing Donetsk and Luhansk as independent states, Russian president Vladimir Putin orders a full scale invasion of Ukraine (2022).

  • • February 24 is the birthday of Japan emperor Toba (1103), anthropologist/author Wilhelm Grimm (1786), activist Lydia Becker (1827), painter Winslow Homer (1836), suffragist Zara DuPont (1869), MLB player Honus Wagner (1874), admiral Chester W. Nimitz (1885), actor Abe Vigoda (1921), actor Dominic Chianese (1931), businessman Phil Knight (1938), keyboardist Nicky Hopkins (1944), singer/guitarist George Thorogood (1950), actress Debra Jo Rupp (1951), businessman Steve Jobs (1955), actor Billy Zane (1966), comedian Mitch Hedberg (1968), boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. (1977), actor O'Shea Jackson Jr. 91991), and rapper Earl Sweatshirt (1994).


That’s a lot of stuff. Anyway, I guess I’ll do things like taking a shower and getting dressed and then whatever comes next. Enjoy your day.

Friday, February 23, 2024

Random News: February 23, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 23, 2024, and if you can believe it, it’s a Friday once again! I wrapped up the second big portion of my dental extravaganza yesterday, and I’ll tell you more about that down below. First, let’s check out some news.


  • That Alabama supreme court decision that we mentioned earlier this week, the one that defined frozen embryos as “children”, is becoming a real problem for Republican politicians.
  • A poll run by conservative Kellyanne Conway's consulting group says 85% of Americans support in-vitro fertilization (IVF), including 78% of pro-life respondents and 84% of Evangelical respondents.
  • But by supporting the Alabama court decision, Republicans are causing IVF access to be shut down.
  • Three fertility clinics in Alabama have already halted part of their IVF treatment programs amid legal concerns following the ruling, causing uncertainty for patients trying to start families. If embryos are children, then any number of laws could be used to prosecute both fertility clinics and the people trying to become parents.
  • Let me tell you what’s behind all this: conservative men want to force all women to have penetrative sex in order to get pregnant. 100% of this stuff comes down to removing the sexual choices of adult women.
  • Moving on.
  • We’re back… on the moon.
  • The US-made Odysseus lunar lander made a touchdown on the moon yesterday, becoming the first commercial spacecraft to accomplish such a feat.
  • Odysseus is the first vehicle launched from the United States to land on the moon’s surface since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.
  • The uncrewed spacecraft launched last week from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. The moon, as you hopefully know, is that big rock orbiting the planet that you sometimes see in the night sky from its distance of about 240,000 miles.
  • If you get in your car to drive to the moon, it would take five months non-stop doing 60mph the whole time.
  • Also, don’t do this.
  • Moving on.
  • Today’s number of the day: 87,502, which is how many additional dollars of interest Don the Con owes every single day, along with the rest of his massive fraud penalty in New York.
  • Ha ha, loser. Also in loser news…
  • Late last night, Donnie Dump begged Judge Aileen Cannon for his classified documents charges to be dismissed in seven separate motions, asserting presidential immunity and other legally dubious defenses.
  • Some of Dumpy’s motions are publicly available, while others will remain under seal for days until the parties discuss necessary redactions.
  • Similar arguments from his lawyers have already been rejected in the D.C. election subversion case. An appeals court panel unanimously ruled earlier this month that Dump does not have immunity in that case. The Supreme Court is currently reviewing the matter, which could settle the question in both cases.
  • To put into context what El Dumpo is demanding of the courts: if this were allowed, any POTUS could declassify all of our most sensitive secrets when leaving office and sell them to Putin five minutes later with zero legal repercussions.
  • It’s insane and insulting to the American people that Dumpy would even ask, as desperate as he is.
  • That wasn’t all of Dumpy’s crying and begging for the day.
  • The judge overseeing the $355 million civil fraud case has denied Dump’s request to delay the judgment for a month.
  • In an email reply, Judge Engoron rejected the request for an additional 30 days, writing, “You have failed to explain, much less justify, any basis for a stay.”
  • Dump fails a lot.
  • In final Smelly Man news of the day, he arrived for a speech in Nashville last night over an hour and a half late, and then appeared both visibly tired and was often incoherent and had trouble pronouncing many words.
  • Shrug.
  • In other news…
  • Alexander Smirnov, the former FBI informant who lied under orders from Russia about a bribery scheme involving President Joe Biden’s family, was again taken into custody yesterday in Las Vegas, two days after a judge released him.
  • Ha ha, you piece of shit.
  • Smirnov, 43, was arrested while meeting with his lawyers at their offices in downtown Las Vegas. His claims have played a major part in the Republican effort in Congress to investigate the president and his family.
  • It’s ridiculous and frankly embarrassing for the Republicans that they have yet to drop their investigation even after the evidence came out that Smirnov is a Kremlin-backed tool.
  • Speaking of Russians, as we mentioned earlier this week, today President Joe Biden announced more than 500 new sanctions on Russia over its war in Ukraine and the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.
  • Biden said the sanctions would target those connected to Navalny’s imprisonment, as well as Russia’s financial sector, defense industrial base, procurement networks and sanctions evaders across several continents.
  • The U.S. is also imposing export restrictions on almost 100 entities that support Russia’s military efforts and taking action to reduce Russia's energy revenues.
  • Good.
  • A little reminder of the 2024 primary voting schedule. We’re about to hit the big rush of election days.
  • Tomorrow (February 23) is the South Carolina Republican primary. Next Tuesday is Michigan’s for both Democrats and Republicans. Michigan is super fucked up right now for the GOP, having split into two factions each running their own primary process.
  • Idaho, Missouri, D.C., and North Dakota also have Republican primaries over the subsequent week.
  • And then on Tuesday March 5, aka Super Tuesday, 17 different states and territories all have their primaries at once.
  • Please vote. Thank you.
  • Back to Asshole News for a moment.
  • A federal judge affirmed a $5 million arbitration award against former crackhead and MyPillow chief executive Mike Lindell in favor of a software engineer who challenged data that Lindell said proves China interfered in the 2020 U.S. presidential election and tipped the outcome to Joe Biden.
  • Lindell launched his "Prove Mike Wrong Challenge," as part of a "Cyber Symposium" he hosted in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, in August 2021. Lindell offered a $5 million reward for anyone who could prove that data he released there were not valid data "from the November 2020 election."
  • A guy proved it. Now Lindell is on the hook for that $5 million. It’s unclear if Lindell has the money to pay him.
  • And now, The Weather: “Go Away” by Sofia Bolt
  • I know everyone loves updates on my ongoing hell of dental health.
  • Yesterday morning I was scheduled for four root canals. And despite my dentist having done a bunch of the prep work, the first one was a fucking nightmare that took over two hours.
  • I hung in there for two more root canals, but that was my limit. I’d already spent four hours in the dentist chair two weeks ago, and then another 3-1/2 yesterday. I’d had enough.
  • The good news: all that’s left is one root canal and getting my permanent crowns affixed. The hardest part by far is done. I do have a couple more appointments coming up, but those will be a cakewalk compared to what I’ve already been through.
  • Oh, and in stark contrast to my last multi-hour dentistry session, as soon as the novocaine wore off, I was… perfectly fine. No pain, no anything.
  • Back on augmentin for awhile though. I mean, yay for antibiotics and not dying at a young age from infections. Boo for being on antibiotics far too often lately, even when it’s necessary.
  • Okay, way more than enough on that.
  • From the Sports Desk… Major League Baseball has a pants problem. Specifically, that the new uniforms are see-through.
  • An MLB spokesperson said in a statement that adjustments are being made to the jersey size, waist, in-seam, thigh fit and the bottom of pants, based on player requests to reps from Fanatics, Nike and MLB, who have been visiting training camps and conducting uniform fitting and feedback sessions with players.
  • I mean, we go to games to see balls and strikes, but perhaps less balls are better.
  • Today in history… Empress Wu Zetian abdicates the throne, restoring the Tang dynasty (705). Baron von Steuben arrives at Valley Forge, PA, to help to train the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War (1778). The Siege of the Alamo begins in San Antonio, TX (1836). Post-U.S. Civil War military control of Mississippi ends and it is readmitted to the Union (1870). Charles Martin Hall produced the first samples of aluminum from the electrolysis of aluminum oxide (1886). Cuba leases Guantánamo Bay to the United States "in perpetuity” (1903). U.S. President Calvin Coolidge signs a bill by Congress establishing the Federal Radio Commission — later replaced by the Federal Communications Commission — which was to regulate the use of radio frequencies in the United States (1927). German theoretical physicist Werner Heisenberg writes a letter to fellow physicist Wolfgang Pauli, in which he describes his uncertainty principle for the first time (1927). Plutonium is first produced and isolated by Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg (1941). The first mass inoculation of children against polio with the Salk vaccine begins in Pittsburgh (1954). Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old African-American citizen, is shot and murdered by three white men after visiting a house under construction while jogging at a neighborhood in Satilla Shores near Brunswick in Glynn County, GA (2020).
  • February 23 is the birthday of diarist/politician Samuel Pepys (1633), composer George Frideric Handel (1685), banker/businessman Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744), businessman César Ritz (1850), sociologist/activist W. E. B. Du Bois (1868), journalist Agnes Smedley (1892), physicist Allan McLeod Cormack (1924), actress Majel Barrett (1932), actor Peter Fonda (1940), NFL player Fred Biletnikoff (1943), singer-songwriter Johnny Winter (1944), NFL player Ed "Too Tall" Jones (1951), guitarist Brad Whitford (1952), singer-songwriter Howard Jones (1955), MLB player Bobby Bonilla (1963), businessman Michael Dell (1965), actress Niecy Nash (1970), actress Emily Blunt (1983), comedian/actor Aziz Ansari (1983), actress Dakota Fanning (1994), and NBA player D'Angelo Russell (1996).


I’m going to appreciate a normal day with no dentistry. Enjoy your day.

Thursday, February 22, 2024

Random News: February 22, 2024



DISCLAIMER: Zak's Random News is very random and doesn't cover many things, and not everything may be accurate, because I'm just some guy. Go find a real news source.



Good morning. It’s February 22, 2024, and it’s a Thursday for some reason. As I mentioned previously, I am off to a very early dental appointment that’s going to take a good while to complete, so if my news seems abbreviated, that’s why. Let’s do this.


  • Starting with a breaking story from this morning…
  • AT&T’s network went down for many of its customers across the United States, leaving customers unable to place calls, text or access the internet.
  • Although Verizon and T-Mobile customers reported some network outages, too, they appeared far less widespread. T-Mobile and Verizon said their networks were unaffected by AT&T’s service outage and customers reporting outages may have been unable to reach customers who use AT&T.
  • This feels like some kind of targeted attack, but as of now, there are no explanations as to why many of the country’s cellular network services were down. However, it was said that there’s no indication that this morning’s outage was the result of a cyberattack or other malicious activity.
  • Shrug. Let’s move on.
  • Yesterday, an Arizona prosecutor said she will not extradite the man accused of killing a woman in a New York City hotel because she doesn’t like Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
  • Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell told reporters in Arizona that she's ordered her staff not to cooperate in any efforts to send Raad Noan Almansoori, 26, back to New York where he's wanted in connection to the slaying of Denisse Oleas-Arancibia, 38.
  • Almansoori is being held without bail in Arizona, where he's been accused of stabbing two women.
  • In response, the Manhattan DA's Office cited data that shows murders being more common in Phoenix, the largest city in Maricopa County, as compared to New York City.
  • “In Manhattan, we are serious about New Yorkers’ safety,” said their rep. “New York’s murder rate is less than half that of Phoenix.”
  • Not honoring an extradition within the USA for a murderer? That doesn’t seem legal to me. Guess we’ll see.
  • Moving on.
  • President Biden and Democrats started off the year with a significant fundraising edge over El Dumpo  and the Republican National Committee, per campaign finance reports filed Tuesday with the Federal Election Commission. 
  • Biden's campaign entered February with $130 million cash on hand across its affiliated committees. Dumpy's political apparatus continued to spend more than it raised in the first month of the year, continuing a trend from 2023, which showed the operation has been bogged down by steep legal bills as Don the Con continues to bounce between the courtroom and the campaign trail. 
  • His campaign, along with the Republican National Committee and the political action committees supporting him, had just $65 million cash on hand combined to start February. 
  • Ha ha.
  • A relevant side note…
  • Dump’s original ruling with interest would indicate he will need to secure a bond worth more than $540 million. But it’s unlikely that he’ll be allowed to use his properties as collateral.
  • It’s more likely that he’d have to liquidate some assets to secure a bond. The bond company will also charge a fee that could total millions of dollars.
  • His lawyer Alina Habba said she expects to post a roughly $400 million bond within a 30-day window to file a notice of appeal, which begins after a court clerk enters Engoron’s final judgment.
  • But even his own real estate assets are not liquid, so if El Dumpo loses the appeal, the process of converting them to cash could be difficult — perhaps even more so in a case that was centered around disputes about the actual value of the properties.
  • And some breaking news here too… this morning, one of Dumpy’s attorneys asked Judge Arthur Engoron for a 30-day delay in enforcing the ruling in the civil fraud case.
  • In response, a special counsel in the New York attorney general's office, Andrew Amer, said in a letter to Engoron today that the defendants don't "provide any basis for staying enforcement of the judgement." Amer said that the defendants "requested such relief in their post-trial brief, which the Court declined to grant."
  • Fuck him. Pay up.
  • Let’s move on to another scumbag with money trouble… good old Rudy Giuliani.
  • A bankruptcy judge ruled this week that to appeal the $148 million ruling in his recent defamation case, Giuliani must acquire third-party funding that’s approved by the court.
  • U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane said that Giuliani’s financial situation is so precarious that the fees required to appeal the verdict can’t come from Giuliani’s assets.
  • Fuck both of them. Rudy and Donnie alike.
  • Let’s do some good news.
  • Yesterday, First Lady Jill Biden announced $100 million in federal funding for research and development into women’s health as part of a new White House initiative that she is heading up.
  • The $100 million will be used to invest early in “life-changing” work being done by women’s health researchers and startup companies that cannot get private support, she said.
  • “We will build a health care system that puts women and their lived experiences at its center. Where no woman or girl has to hear that ‘it’s all in your head,’ or, ‘it’s just stress.’ Where women aren’t just an after-thought, but a first-thought. Where women don’t just survive with chronic conditions, but lead long and healthy lives.”
  • Cool. That’s encouraging.
  • And now, The Weather: “All My Life” by boerd & Boko Yout
  • Here’s a tip: no matter how much you like animals, you probably shouldn’t own one with the word “monster” in its very name.
  • Colorado man Christopher Ward, 34, was taken to a hospital shortly after being bitten by one of his two pet Gila monsters on February 12. 
  • His girlfriend entered a room to see the Gila monster named Winston latched onto Ward’s hand. Ward immediately began exhibiting symptoms, vomiting several times and eventually passing out and ceasing to breathe. He died a few days later.
  • Two things to point out. First, Gila monsters are illegal t own in most places, including Lakewood, CO. But second, the bites of these venomous reptiles can cause intense pain and make their victims pass out, but normally aren’t deadly.
  • Either way, try owning a cat, or a hamster, or something else that may hurt you but is less likely to kill you. Just my advice.
  • From the Sports Desk… here’s stuff about a sport I know almost nothing about despite having spent five years in my youth playing it in organized leagues.
  • Lionel Messi helped set up both goals and Inter Miami survived extended second-half pressure from Real Salt Lake to earn a 2-0 victory in Major League Soccer's season opener on Wednesday in Fort Lauderdale, FL.
  • Yay! Or… boo! I have no idea. I know Messi is good.
  • Today in history… Robert II becomes King of Scotland, beginning the Stuart dynasty (1371). Spain sells Florida to the United States for five million U.S. dollars (1819). The United States Republican Party opens its first national convention in Pittsburgh, PA (1856). The Prohibition Party holds its first national convention in Columbus, Ohio, nominating James Black as its presidential nominee (1872). In Utica, New York, Frank Woolworth opens the first of many of five-and-dime Woolworth stores (1879). President Grover Cleveland signs a bill admitting North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Washington as U.S. states (1889). Lee Petty wins the first Daytona 500 (1959). In Lake Placid, NY, the United States hockey team defeats the Soviet Union hockey team 4–3 in a game known as the Miracle on Ice (1980). In Roslin, Midlothian, British scientists announce that an adult sheep named Dolly has been successfully cloned (1997). 
  • February 22 is the birthday of Hungary king Ladislaus the Posthumous (1440), US president George Washington (1732), philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer (1788), general/Scout Association founder Robert Baden-Powell (1857), actress Marguerite Clark (1883), poet Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892), actor Robert Young (1907), radio/TV announcer Don Pardo (1918), tallest human Robert Wadlow (1918), actor Paul Dooley (1928), politician Ted Kennedy (1932), MLB player/manager Sparky Anderson (1934), film director Jonathan Demme (1944), drummer Harvey Mason (1947), NBA legend Julius Erving (1950), Kyle MacLachlan (1959), zoologist Steve Irwin (1962), actress Jeri Ryan (1968), actress Drew Barrymore (1975), NBA player Rajon Rondo (1986), and NFL player Khalil Mack (1991).


So yes… I’m leaving in a few minutes, heading back to the dentist for another round of major work this morning. I’m planning on everything going fine. Enjoy your day.