Sunday, March 31, 2024

Random News: March 31, 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 March 31, 2024, and it’s a Sunday. I had not intended on getting up before the sun today, but various biological processes forced me out of bed early, and I decided to stay up and make coffee and write this shit for you. I am nice like that. Let’s see what’s going on.


  • It’s Easter, the Christian holiday commemorating the resurrection of Jesus from the dead, described in the New Testament as having occurred on the third day of his burial following his crucifixion by the Romans at Calvary in  30 AD.
  • I’ll bet you $5 you don’t know when Easter actually occurs, other than being on a Sunday.
  • Ready?
  • Easter happens on the first Sunday after the full moon that occurs on or soonest after March 21.
  • See? I told you. Send me $5.
  • The two most commonly used names for this Christian holiday were both stolen.
  • “Easter” is named after an Old English month called Ēostre, which is the modern April, and was celebrated by pagan people to honor a goddess of the same name.
  • In Latin and Greek, the Christian celebration was, and still is, called “Pascha”. That word originated from the Jewish festival known in English as Passover, commemorating the Jewish Exodus from slavery in Egypt.
  • Was Jesus an actual person? All signs point to yes. Was he executed via crucifixion by Romans for being a rabble-rouser? Yes, there seem to be legitimate historical records of this, though many of the actual details are fuzzy.
  • Did Jesus rise from the dead after three days? Wellllll… if you’re a Christian, then yes, because that’s the basis for your entire religion, and likely a tremendous influence on your everyday life.
  • I mean, the actual official logo for your religion is the cross, so that’s the big central hub of it.
  • If you are skeptical of supernatural events in general, and believe that dead people tend to stay dead, then those are your beliefs.
  • Quick side note: the concept of resurrection was already a thing in texts from Jewish people for over 300 years before Jesus was around.
  • There were varying theories. The Sadducees held that both soul and body perished at death; the Essenes believed that the soul was immortal but the flesh was not; and the Pharisees felt that the soul was immortal and that the body would be resurrected to house it.
  • Kinda spooky, man.
  • Christianity seems to me to be filled with contradictions. A high level of interest in things like zombies and ghosts and the paranormal is often considered to be anti-Christian in this era, but all aspects of Jesus’ resurrection fall into that realm, don’t they?
  • Modern Christians claim to detest crime and many give little sympathy to those who don’t obey laws, but Jesus himself was executed as a criminal. I’m trying to figure out how a Christian could support the death penalty as such.
  • I don’t think most Christians today would give much respect to Jesus, frankly. He was all about inclusivity and acceptance. He emphasized caring for the most vulnerable members of society, such as the poor, the hungry, the sick, and the imprisoned.
  • He confronted religious hypocrisy and social injustice. He embraced people from different backgrounds, races, and genders. Jesus would have stood up for LGBTQ+ causes, and would have supported immigrants under all circumstances.
  • As I’ve stated many times before… I’m sure I would have gotten along with Jesus well. He’s unquestionably the most woke dude in history.
  • And my much larger viewpoint of religion — any religion — in general is simple. If you get fulfillment from it, if it helps guide you in positive ways that you’d find difficult to achieve on your own, if you find a sense of community in common beliefs, or if your religion makes it easier for you to act in the good of other people and the world at large, then I 100% support your choice to believe.
  • And on the flip side, I’d hope that you’d be very accepting of the idea that the world actually has about 10,000 distinct religions. A good three quarters of people worship between four… Christianity (31%), Islam (24%), Hinduism (15%), and Buddhism (7%).
  • I’d hope you’d also be respectful that many people don’t adhere to any organized religion at all, and don’t want to join your club. Your religion is what you use to guide your own behavior and actions… not mine, or anyone else’s.
  • Anyway, happy Easter.
  • Moving on.
  • One interesting thing you might not know about the destruction of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge is that hit actually goes back to something that happened eight years ago.
  • In 2016, the locks in the Panama Canal were expanded to make room for the bigger vessels increasingly favored by shipping companies. A ship the size of the Dali (and larger) was previously unable to make the route from Asia to the East Coast.
  • That’s when the Baltimore port installed four new cranes capable of handling gargantuan container ships and had its harbor dredged to the 50-foot depth needed to fit them.
  • Had the greed of the retailers who rely on cheap products from Asia been less prevalent, or the constant American desire to consume more and more things been dampened somehow, there never would have been a need for ships of that size and the inherent dangers they present.
  • Could the ships be guided more safely into these harbors with tug boats? Could all bridges and waterways be completely overhauled to better accommodate huge ships? Yes, 100% absolutely. But the cost of those actions would defeat the purpose of the giant ships in the first place.
  • So as is nearly always the case, if you ask a question that begins with “Why?”, then the answer is money.
  • Let’s move on.
  • Sorry to have to do Sunday Gunday on such a sacred day as Easter, but making yourself aware of the amount of gun violence in the USA is perhaps the first step in fixing this horrible problem that, longterm, keeps getting worse and worse.
  • Two shot dead, two more injured in a shooting in Bridgeport, CT. One woman dead, four others wounded in a shooting at a cafe on the West Side of Chicago, IL. One shot dead, another seriously injured in a shooting in The Bronx borough of New York City, NY. One shot dead, one wounded in a shooting in Montgomery, AL. One shot dead in a parking lot in Carthage, OH. One shot dead in a parking lot in Scottsboro, AL. One shot dead on a street in Duquesne, PA. One shot dead on a street in Poughkeepsie, NY. One shot dead on a street in Roswell, NM. One shot dead in a bar in North Charleston, SC. One shot dead in an apartment in Lumberton, NC. One shot dead in a domestic violence incident in the Mosby Woods area of Fairfax, VA. Seven children aged 12 to 17 wounded in a shooting in downtown Indianapolis, IN. Three shot at a party in an apartment complex in Houston, TX. Three shot in Lima, OH. Two seriously injured in shootings in Charlotte, NC. A 71-year-old shot dead in Vista, CA. An 11-year-old boy in critical condition after being shot in the head by a 13-year-old girl in St. Paul, MN. A 2-year-old shot in the Bronx borough of New York City, NY. A child accidentally shot in New Carlisle, OH. A teenager shot in Pueblo, CO. A woman shot in Omaha, NE. One shot on the East Side of Cleveland OH. One shot in Wilmington, DE. One shot in Baton Rouge, LA. One shot in Conway, AR. One shot in Memphis, TN. One shot in downtown Colorado Springs, CO.
  • There’s a lot more but I can’t do this all day.
  • And again, I’ll remind you: these are only for the past couple of days, and only the ones I saw in a quick scroll of news headlines.
  • If you don’t like it, fix it by electing political representatives who support common sense gun regulation. Thank you.
  • Moving on.
  • Yesterday, AT&T announced it is investigating a data breach involving the personal information of more than 70 million current and former customers leaked on the dark web.
  • 7.6 million current account holders and 65.4 million former account holders have been impacted. AT&T says the breach occurred about two weeks ago.
  • The information in the compromised data varies from person to person and could include social security numbers, full names, email and mailing addresses, phone numbers, and dates of birth, as well as AT&T account numbers and passcodes.
  • So that’s just fucking great.
  • Honestly, when we go extinct, I hope there’s a big book around that shows the myriad ways we fucked ourselves.
  • Moving on.
  • Las Vegas’ famed Tropicana, one of only two casino resorts on the Strip that still date back to the 1950s, closes forever on Tuesday. It is set to be demolished later this year to make way for a new Major League Baseball stadium that is expected to host the A's starting in 2028.
  • While it’s pretty old-school now (and frankly a bit grimy and rundown) compared to its newer neighbors, when the Tropicana opened on Las Vegas Boulevard in 1957, it was the most expensive resort that had ever been built in the city.
  • One more item of news.
  • You’ll see that unless something concrete happens, or something particularly egregious occurs, I’ll be spending less time discussing that Fat Smelly Prick who once called himself president.
  • Is Dumpy doing horrible things that only the worst people in history would consider doing? Yes, constantly.
  • He posted a picture of President Biden bound and shot in a car. He immediately started violated the gag order imposed on him by Judge Juan Merchan in his hush money trial, including posting pics and misinformation about the judge’s daughter.
  • But you can expect that shit all the time from a terrible human being. I don’t need to mention it constantly.
  • I’d prefer to focus on the astounding successes of the Biden administration over the past 3+ years. In every measurable aspect of public health, economy, employment, national security, and every other metric, the USA is better off under Biden.
  • Scholars are already recognizing Joe as one of the best Presidents the USA has ever had. We’ve been very fortunate to have his experienced leadership at the helm during a very rough time.
  • And now, The Weather: “In Spades” by Smelter
  • April showers bring May flowers, or so they say. The new month will kick off with a multi-day massive storm system over much of the country with the potential for tornadoes, large hail, flooding and even snow… and possible record warm temperatures.
  • Stay safe, people. We got the front edge of that storm here over the past couple of days, with typical raining and flooding.
  • From the Sports Desk… we have an Elite 8 in the NCAA Women’s tournament.
  • 1-seed South Carolina vs 3-seed Oregon State. 1-seed Iowa vs. 3-seed LSU. 1-seed Texas vs. 3-seed NC State. 1-seed USC vs. 3-seed UConn.
  • Today in history… Ferdinand Magellan and fifty of his men came ashore to present-day Limasawa to participate in the first Catholic mass in the Philippines (1521). The Long Parliament presents the Humble Petition and Advice offering Oliver Cromwell the British throne, which he eventually declines (1657). The Kingdom of Great Britain orders the port of Boston, Massachusetts closed pursuant to the Boston Port Act (1774). The Eiffel Tower is officially opened (1889). The Vienna Concert Society rioted during a performance of modernist music by Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, Alexander von Zemlinsky, and Anton von Webern, causing a premature end to the concert due to violence (1913). Daylight saving time goes into effect in the United States for the first time (1918). The Motion Picture Production Code is instituted, imposing strict guidelines on the treatment of sex, crime, religion and violence in film, in the U.S., for the next thirty-eight years (1930). The Dominion of Newfoundland joins the Canadian Confederation and becomes the 10th Province of Canada (1949). Remington Rand delivers the first UNIVAC I computer to the United States Census Bureau (1951). The Soviet Union launches Luna 10 which later becomes the first space probe to enter orbit around the Moon (1966). Selena is murdered by her fan club president Yolanda Saldívar at a Days Inn in Corpus Christi, TX (1995). Netscape releases Mozilla source code under an open source license (1998). Start of the 2018 Armenian revolution (2018).
  • March 31 is the birthday of mathematician/philosopher René Descartes (1596), composer Joseph Haydn (1732), writer Mary Abigail Dodge (1833), businessman Alfred E. Hunt (1855), boxer Jack Johnson (1878), poet Octavio Paz (1914), labor union leader/activist Cesar Chavez (1927), NHL player Gordie Howe (1928), fashion designer Liz Claiborne (1929), actress Shirley Jones (1934), songwriter/producer Herb Alpert (1935), politician Barney Frank (1940), guitarist Hugh McCracken (1942), actor Christopher Walken (1943), guitarist/songwriter Mick Ralphs (1944), actor Gabe Kaplan (1945), US vice president Al Gore (1948), actress Rhea Perlman (1948), guitarist/songwriter Angus Young (1955), NBA player Steve Smith (1969), NHL player Pavel Bure (1971), actor Ewan McGregor (1971), and comedian/musician Kate Micucci (1980).


Okay then. I should take a shower and then make some deviled eggs. Enjoy your day.

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Random News: March 30, 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 March 30, 2024, and it’s a Saturday. I’m actually up and showered and dressed for a change. It’s pouring-ass rain here in the LA area and the robe wasn’t cutting it. Let’s see what’s happening.


  • Tomorrow is an important day. Sunday, March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility
  • What, did you think I was going to say Easter? I am always happy to acknowledge various cultures and their religious or historical holidays and events.
  • But I don’t think I have to remind those of you who celebrate that big Christian holiday that it exists, while probably 95% of you don’t know about Trans Day.
  • I’m here to inform.
  • Transgender Day of Visibility is observed around the world to bring attention to a population that’s often ignored, disparaged, or victimized.
  • Scheduled events were include panels and speakers in Cincinnati and Atlanta, marches in Melbourne, Florida, and Philadelphia, and a roller derby game on Long Island.
  • Perhaps the highest profile U.S. event is a rally scheduled for tomorrow on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
  • Major buildings and landmarks across the U.S. will be lit up in pink, white and light blue to mark the day.
  • I remember when I was younger, transgender people were often the object of public ridicule. Today, they’ve become more visible in public life in the U.S. and elsewhere, which I consider a good sign.
  • And, of course, this comes at a time when at least 11 states have adopted policies barring people from using the bathrooms aligning with their gender in schools or other public buildings.
  • 25 states have bans on transgender women and/or girls competing in sports for women or girls. More than 20 have adopted bans on gender-affirming health care for minors.
  • Anyway, shoutout to my trans friends. I see you and respect your decision to be true to your selves!
  • Moving on.
  • No, you know what? Let’s not move on yet. We have some good news on this topic.
  • Yesterday, an appeals court in Texas upheld a lower court’s injunction blocking the state from investigating parents who allow their kids to receive gender-affirming care.
  • Yes, to be clear: Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott ordered state agencies in 2022 to open probes into the parents of transgender minors after Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton issued an opinion claiming gender-affirming medical care, including puberty blockers and hormone therapy, classify as child abuse.
  • Thankfully, a district court judge immediately imposed a statewide temporary injunction on the investigations, saying they endangered the children and their families.
  • The injunction was upheld yesterday. It had been fought by LGTBQ groups, medical professionals, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and others.
  • When you fight these fuckers and you’re in the right, you won’t always win, but more often than not you will.
  • And we’re gonna fight them over every fucking inch of freedom they want to take and injustice they want to enact. Bring it on, bitches.
  • Okay, now we can move on.
  • When the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed early Tuesday, you might have assumed one factor was that it was poorly maintained.
  • The reality is that it was better off than thousands of other bridges in the USA. 
  • Over 42,000 U.S. bridges are in poor condition, yet they carry about 167 million vehicles each day. One out of every 13 bridges in the country rate a “poor” condition.
  • Most Presidents say they’re going to address infrastructure, but then rarely seem to follow through. A massive infrastructure law signed by President Joe Biden in 2021 directed $40 billion to bridges over five years — the largest dedicated bridge investment since construction of the interstate highway system, which began nearly 70 years ago.
  • Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said that law already is funding over 7,800 bridge projects, but even this will hardly be a dent in the real need for repairing or replacing all the bridges that need it.
  • The states with the worst bridges in the most need of addressing? Iowa has the most bridges tanked “poor” by far, followed by Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Missouri. 
  • Let’s move on.
  • Some folks — I mean, a lot of them — aren’t exactly excited about another term for president Biden. And look, I always found Joe to be too much of a centrist for my personal political tastes, especially previous to his presidency.
  • But if you can get past your own prejudices and look objectively at what the guy has done since being sworn in on January 20, 2021, it’s actually pretty amazing.
  • Biden established the Office of Gun Violence Prevention. In 2023, schools were awarded $286 million in federal dollars to support student wellness and school mental health professionals.
  • Biden lived up to his word in regard to prioritizing climate change and job creation via the expansion of a clean energy economy. Renewable power is the No. 2 source of electricity in the U.S., and climbing.
  • Biden is expanding overtime pay guarantees for millions of workers. His Department of Labor is proposing a rule at the end of August that would push up the cutoff to people making up to $55,000/year.
  • Biden’s team greenlit the country’s first over-the-counter birth control pill, which will be available at places like CVS and Walgreen’s, and will help make birth control access more equitable by reaching people who can’t afford or easily visit a health care provider for a prescription.
  • Biden is taking huge strides in eliminating junk fees — the hidden charges that often come as a surprise to customers of airlines, cable companies, concert ticket-sellers, and hotels — and overdraft charges.
  • I mean, he did all that while the country and the world were still at the start of a massive pandemic. I’ll remind you that as distant as it seemed, almost none of us had even received one dose of COVOD vaccine when Joe took office.
  • The world was fucking awful, and this guy still picked up the ball and ran for touchdowns.
  • I don’t want to hear she about him being old. He’s got a lot of energy. And frankly, not to be an insensitive prick about it, but if he were to become disabled or die, vice president Harris seems very capable and competent to me to take over the job.
  • In other news…
  • Starting Monday, California fast-food workers will start making a minimum wage of $20 an hour. For many, this means a life-altering 25% raise.
  • My state’s new minimum uniquely focuses on fast food, affecting some of the country's biggest chains, including McDonald's, Starbucks, Subway, and Pizza Hut.
  • Those folks — cooks, cashiers and other fast-food workers — have some of the lowest-paid jobs in the country.
  • California is one of the country's most expensive states; about half a million people are estimated to work in fast food here, mostly women, immigrants, and people of color. Many live below the poverty line.
  • I’m happy about this.
  • Note that the new wage law applies to fast-food chains with at least 60 locations nationwide, with exemptions for some bakeries and smaller fast-food outposts inside grocery stores, airports, and other venues.
  • And now, The Weather: “every day is a game” by Night Tapes
  • Let’s do a chart. It’s exactly 52 years ago, at the end of March 1972, and this is the top of the Billboard Hot 100 singles. I’m rather small, going on three years old. I think we live in Detroit.
  • 1. Heart Of Gold (Neil Young). 2. A Horse With No Name (America). 3. The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Robert John). 4. Without You (Nilsson). 5. Everything I Own (Bread). 6. Mother And Child Reunion (Paul Simon). 7. Precious And Few (Climax). 8. The Way Of Love (Cher). 9. Puppy Love  (Donny Osmond). 10. Down By The Lazy River (The Osmonds). 11. Jungle Fever (The Chakachas). 12. Hurting Each Other (Carpenters). 13. Bang A Gong (Get It On) (T. Rex). 14. I Gotcha (Joe Tex). 15. Joy (Apollo featuring Tom Parker). 16. Sweet Seasons (Carole King). 17. In The Rain (The Dramatics). 18. Rock And Roll Lullaby (B.J. Thomas). 19. Don't Say You Don't Remember (Beverly Bremers). 20. American Pie (Parts I & II) (Don McLean)
  • From the Sports Desk… we’re down to the Elite 8 in the Men’s NCAA tournament.
  • 1-seed UConn vs. 3-seed Illinois. 4-seed Duke vs. 11-seed NC State. 4-seed Alabama vs. 6-seed Clemson. 1-seed Purdue vs. 2-seed Tennessee.
  • We’ll know the Women’s Elite 8 teams tomorrow.
  • Today in history… The Florida Territory is created in the United States (1822). Ether anesthesia is used for the first time, in an operation by the American surgeon Dr. Crawford Long (1842). Sir William Crookes announces his discovery of the element thallium (1861). Danish prince Wilhelm Georg is chosen as King George of Greece (1863). Alaska is purchased from Russia for $7.2 million by United States Secretary of State William H. Seward (1867). Texas is readmitted to the United States Congress following Reconstruction (1870). The Heinkel He 100 fighter sets a world airspeed record of 463 mph (1939). A riot breaks out in Austurvöllur square in Reykjavík when Iceland joins NATO (1949). U.S. President Ronald Reagan is shot in the chest outside a Washington, D.C., hotel by John Hinckley, Jr.; three others are wounded in the same incident (1981). SpaceX conducts the world's first reflight of an orbital class rocket (2017). Donald Trump becomes the first former United States president to be indicted by a grand jury (2023).
  • March 30 is the birthday of painter/sculptor Francisco Goya (1746), author Anna Sewell (1820), poet Paul Verlaine (1844), painter Vincent van Gogh (1853), writer/philosopher/monk Chunseong (1891), animator Marc Davis (1913), singer-songwriter/harmonica player Sonny Boy Williamson (1914), actor Richard Dysart (1929), singer-songwriter Rolf Harris (1930), actor Warren Beatty (1937), NBA player Jerry Lucas (1940), singer-songwriter/guitarist Eric Clapton (1945), model Naomi Sims (1949), actor Robbie Coltrane (1950), actor Paul Reiser (1956), rapper MC Hammer (1962), singer-songwriter Tracy Chapman (1964), singer-songwriter Celine Dion (1968), singer-songwriter/pianist Norah Jones (1979), and NFL player Richard Sherman (1988).


I may actually work on some music stuff today. It seems like a good day for it. Enjoy your day.

Friday, March 29, 2024

Random News: March 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 March 29, 2024, and if you can believe it, it’s a Friday once again! I’m glad this work week is drawing to a close and I can go into weekend mode. One of the benefits of being a person who works hard is that you get to appreciate the times you’re… not. Let’s see what’s going on in the world.


  • Yesterday was the hearing in Fulton County, GA, where Don the Con and his lawyers were trying to get his state election subversion case dismissed on First Amendment grounds.
  • The judge did not rule from the bench, nor did he say when he would rule. The Georgia case is one of four criminal cases Trump is facing while his 2024 presidential campaign is underway.
  • Dump’s attorney argued that the former president's statements about the 2020 presidential election in Georgia are "core political speech” and he therefore cannot be prosecuted. 
  • The Fulton County prosecutors countered that it was premature to consider First Amendment arguments and that such arguments should be put before a jury during trial.
  • But more importantly, he pointed out that Dump’s lies furthered a criminal conspiracy. The prosecutor also referenced a federal judge’s ruling against Trump's First Amendment argument in the parallel election subversion case in DC.
  • There’s no trial date yet in this case. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis still hopes to go to trial before the November election.
  • We’ll see. Moving on.
  • Former cryptocurrency billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced yesterday to 25 years inprison for his role in perpetrating one of the largest financial crimes in U.S. history.
  • He fucked around, and he found out.
  • Bankman-Fried, 32, was convicted in November of seven counts of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering, along with other charges of conspiracy to commit commodities and securities fraud. 
  • The 25 years was a very generous sentence for SBF. He had faced up to 110 years under federal sentencing guidelines.
  • His company FTX was once the second-largest crypto exchange in the world, and his wealth was once estimated at more than $30 billion.
  • And now? Not.
  • Moving on.
  • President Joe Biden hosted a record-breaking election fundraiser in New York City last night, alongside his predecessors Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.
  • The star-studded evening at Radio City Music Hall raised over $26 million, setting a record for the most successful single political fundraising event in history.
  • Comedian Mindy Kaling hosted the event, which also featured appearances by entertainers like Lizzo, Queen Latifah, Cynthia Erivo, and others. The audience chanted "four more years” when Biden took the stage.
  • Probably the best line of the night, unsurprisingly, went to Stephen Colbert, who said in regard to Biden, Obama, and Clinton, “Three presidents... and none of them are here [in New York] to go to court.”
  • Biden’s fundraising has dwarfed that of Dump, who is selling $60 Bibles to fund his campaign. He may also have a lemonade stand… not sure.
  • In other news…
  • A quick science note for all the conspiracy theorists out there in regard to the Key Bridge disaster.
  • Perhaps you’ve heard of a thing called Newton’s Second Law of Motion. It says that the acceleration of an object as produced by a net force is directly proportional to the magnitude of the net force, in the same direction as the net force, and inversely proportional to the mass of the object.
  • Short version… force equals mass times acceleration.
  • Something small going very fast (like a bullet shot from a gun) can produce a lot of force. But something with a lot of mass (like a freight train, or perhaps a huge container ship) doesn’t need to be going very fast to also produce a lot of force.
  • How big was the Dali cargo ship that hit the bridge? If you stood it on its end, at 985 feet long, it would be about the same height as the Eiffel Tower.
  • That boat weighed 95,000 tons when empty… and it was far from empty when it hit the bridge at about 9mph, carry 4,700 containers.
  • That’s why the force enacted on that bridge support was incredibly strong, and it also at an angle that’s a structural weak point.
  • As these container ships keep getting more and more gargantuan, this is something that you’ll see more often than you did before.
  • Moving on.
  • In what may be some of the most horrifying footage yet from the extremist forced-birth movement, Hood County, TX Republican officials attended a presentation by Abolish Abortion Texas (AATX), a group that advocates for the death penalty for abortion and IVF, including for pregnant minors.
  • Hood County Constable Scott London, Hood County GOP Chair Steve Biggers and Hood County GOP Chair candidate Greg Harrell were present at a meeting featuring AATX hosted by the group True Texas Project, which has been labeled as an extremist group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, and has ties to white nationalist Nick Fuentes.
  • AATX also advocates for the outlawing of contraception and abortion even in cases of rape and incest. Scott London and Steve Harrell, along with multiple other Texas Republicans, have signed an AATX pledge to outlaw abortion in all cases. 
  • I am telling you now… every single Republican you vote for in November brings us one step closer to this nightmare, where they murder your wives, daughters, and other female friends and loved ones.
  • Do not allow this to happen. Vote, and encourage everyone you know to do the same.
  • Moving on.
  • A court ordered the eviction of MyPillow from a suburban Minneapolis warehouse. Company founder and prominent election denier (and insane asshole) Mike Lindell confirmed Wednesday that MyPillow owes around $217,000 to Delaware-based First Industrial LP for rent for the facility in Shakopee.
  • Lindell faced a setback last month when a federal judge affirmed a $5 million arbitration award in favor of a software engineer who proved that Lindell was full of shit in his claims that China interfered in the 2020 U.S. presidential election.
  • Lindell also acknowledged in January that Fox News stopped running MyPillow commercials after he stopped paying his bills.
  • Fuck that guy.
  • In Complete Asshole News, meet Michigan State House Rep. Matt Maddock.
  • On Wednesday night, Maddock made a social post with photos of three buses near a plane at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. Maddock wrote that the buses “just loaded up with illegal invaders.”
  • Who were these dangerous illegal invaders? It was Gonzaga and three other college men’s basketball teams arriving for March Madness.
  • When this was pointed out to Maddock, you’d think he’d apologize, right?
  • No, he doubled down. Maddock, a Republican representing parts of metro Detroit, was endorsed by Trump while running for reelection in 2022. His wife, Meshawn Maddock, is one of 15 Republicans facing eight criminal charges on accusations of acting as fake electors for then-President Trump in 2020.
  • Jesus fucking Christ. DO NOT VOTE FOR THESE PEOPLE.
  • Let’s move on.
  • Planning on sending your kid to Harvard?
  • Wow, really? Okay, then… they might have a better chance to make it in than they did before the Supreme Court struck down affirmative action last June, a ruling that prohibited the College from considering race during the admissions process.
  • The School In Boston received a total of 54,008 applications for the next cycle. And in total, Harvard offered admission to 1,937 of them to join the Class of 2028.
  • That’s an increase all the way up to 3.59 percent of applicants! It’s like anyone can get in there these days. My apologies to the 52,071 kids who got rejected this year.
  • Relevant side note: average cost to attend Harvard including tuition, books, and living expenses is $83,538 per year, assuming you don’t qualify for financial aid and aren’t on a full-ride scholarship somehow.
  • Side note two: I didn’t apply to Harvard. I had high SAT scores but an incredibly unimpressive 2.8 GPA in high school. I did apply to (and get rejected from) other somewhat prestigious schools including UCLA and Cal Berkeley, though, so I’ve got that going for me.
  • And now, The Weather: “Tongue-Tied” by Oscilla
  • Rest in peace to actor Louis Gossett Jr., the first Black man to win a supporting actor Oscar and an Emmy winner for his role in the seminal TV miniseries “Roots.” He was 87.
  • Like many of you, I was a huge admirer of his work in films like “An Officer and a Gentleman,” “Enemy Mine,” and many others.
  • Something I never knew until today: in August 1969, Gossett had been partying with members of the Mamas and the Papas when they were invited to Sharon Tate’s house. He headed home first to shower and change clothes. As he was getting ready to leave, he caught a news flash on TV about Tate’s murder. She and others were killed by Charles Manson’s associates that night.
  • Holy fuck.
  • Let’s do a chart. This time, it’s late March 1983, I’m a freshman in high school, and this is the official listing of heavy-rotation (3-4 plays/day) videos on MTV.
  • Cuts Like A Knife (Bryan Adams), Der Kommisar (After The Fire), Anxiety (Pat Benatar), A Little Too Late (Pat Benatar), Photograph (Def Leppard), Come On Eileen (Dexy’s Midnight Runners), Rio (Duran Duran), Der Kommisar (Falco), Twilight Zone (Golden Earring), Separate Ways (Journey), Jeopardy (Greg Kihn Band), Be Good Johnny (Men At Work), Back On The Chain Gang (Pretenders), A World Of Fantasy (Triumph).
  • I stopped doing quotes in my Random News bullets because most of them are inane, but I do like this one from a god pf physics, Niels Bohr.
  • “Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded as real.”
  • Bohr was saying this in regard to quantum mechanics, the study of the subatomic level of existence. To give you the quick and easy version, at the tiniest of scales, everything in the universe is made of incredibly small particles/waves with, relatively speaking, tremendous distances between them.
  • So everything you think of as real — yourself, the shirt you wear, your cat, the chair you’re in, the wall next to you, the sun in the sky — is actually comprised of space interspersed with the occasional particle/wave that generates the space.

  • It is nothing you would remotely call real on its own, and yet everything in the universe is made of it. If this is confusing to you, I have another Bohr quote ready for ya…
  • “Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum mechanics cannot possibly have understood it.”
  • Yep.
  • From the Sports Desk… with under 10 games remaining in the regular season, the NHL is approaching playoff time. If those playoffs were starting now, here’s who’d be in…
  • Eastern Conference: (1), New York Rangers, (2) Boston Bruins, (3) Florida Panthers, (4) Carolina Hurricanes, (5) Toronto Maple Leafs, (6) Philadelphia Flyers, (7) Tampa Bay Lightning, (8) Washington Capitals.
  • Western Conference: (1) Dallas Stars, (2) Vancouver Canucks, (3) Colorado Avalanche, (4) Winnipeg Jets, (5) Edmonton Oilers, (6) Los Angeles Kings, (7) Nashville Predators, (8) Vegas Golden Knights.
  • Some of those standings are very close, so this list will be quite different before the playoffs start in a few weeks.
  • Today in history… Construction is authorized of the Great National Pike, better known as the Cumberland Road, becoming the first United States federal highway (1806). United States forces in the Mexican-American War led by General Winfield Scott take Veracruz after a siege (1847). The United Kingdom annexes the Punjab (1849). Queen Victoria gives Royal Assent to the British North America Act which establishes Canada on July 1 (1867). Royal Albert Hall is opened by Queen Victoria (1871). Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage (1951). The Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution is ratified, allowing residents of Washington, D.C., to vote in presidential elections (1961). Lieutenant William Calley is convicted of premeditated murder in the My Lai Massacre and sentenced to life in prison (1971). NASA's Mariner 10 becomes the first space probe to fly by Mercury (1974). The Baltimore Colts load its possessions onto fifteen Mayflower moving trucks in the early morning hours and transfer its operations to Indianapolis (1984). The Dow Jones Industrial Average closes above the 10,000 mark for the first time, during the height of the dot-com bubble (1999). Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia join NATO as full members (2004). The first same-sex marriages in England and Wales are performed (2014). Prime Minister Theresa May invokes Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union, formally beginning the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union (2017).
  • March 29 is the birthday of biologist/physician Santorio Santorio (1561), US president John Tyler (1790), engineer/inventor Elihu Thomson (1853), MLB player/manager Cy Young (1867), US first lady Lou Henry Hoover (1874), actress/singer Pearl Bailey (1918), businessman Sam Walton (1918), saxophonist Michael Brecker (1949), NFL player Earl Campbell (1955), actress Marina Sirtis (1955), MLB player/manager Billy Beane (1962), politician Catherine Cortez Masto (1964), actress Lucy Lawless (1968), politician Ted Lieu (1969), and tennis player Jennifer Capriati (1976).


Welp, that’s plenty of news. I’m looking forward to wrapping up the work week on a high note and then doing some as-yet-undetermined fun things this weekend. Enjoy your day.

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Random News: March 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 March 28, 2024, and it’s a Thursday for some reason. I slept well but had a night full of vivid dreams, which was making me think that I hadn’t slept well until I realized that I’d gotten damn near eight hours of solid slumber interrupted only by my bizarre little mind movies. Anyway, I’m awake and have coffee now, so let’s check the news.


  • Texas’ shitty on-again, off-again SB4 immigration law is off… again.
  • The 2-1 ruling late Tuesday from a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will prevent enforcement of the law that allows the state to arrest and deport people who are merely suspected of being in the country illegally.
  • Do me a favor and take a walk around your area. Can you tell by looking at people which ones are “legal” are which ones are not?
  • How can you tell? Is it the color of their skin? the shape of their facial features? Their hair texture? Their language and/or accent? Their clothing? The car they drive?
  • If you can’t tell with certainty, how do you expect law enforcement to know for sure?
  • The Justice Department has argued that Texas’ law is a clear violation of federal authority and would create chaos at the border. That is correct.
  • My favorite (not really) part of the law is that it commands police to take suspected immigrants back to the US-Mexico border, regardless of what their country of origin actually is.
  • So if you’re from Sweden (or, perhaps more likely in terms of being racially arrested, Guatemala) and you want a free trip to Mexico, just go to Texas and announce that you’re not an American, and they’ll hook you up.
  • But not today. The law remains moot until a final decision on its merits, either by the 5th Circuit or the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Moving on.
  • Per a March 1-20 Gallup survey, 55% of Americans currently disapprove of Israel’s military actions in the Gaza, while just 36% approve.
  • Last November, national approval for Israel was at 50%.
  • All three major party groups in the U.S. have become less supportive of Israel’s actions in Gaza than they were in November. This includes declines of 18 percentage points in approval among both Democrats and independents and a seven-point decline among Republicans.
  • Democrats, who were already largely opposed in November, are even more so now, with 18% approving and 75% disapproving.
  • Republicans still support Israel’s military efforts at 64% approval, but that is down from 71%.
  • Note that the poll was taken before the U.N. Security Council passed a resolution on Monday calling for a cease-fire during Ramadan, if it makes a difference.
  • Let’s move on.
  • Today is a hearing in the Georgia election interference case against El Dumpo. I thought you’d enjoy the excuse they’re going to offer.
  • Dumpy’s lawyers are expected to argue that that the indictment should be dismissed because the stuff that Dump said and did to illegally try to subvert the election results is protected by the First Amendment.
  • Hahahahahaha.
  • As a reminder, Dumpy and 18 others pleaded not guilty last August to all charges in a sweeping racketeering indictment for alleged efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the state of Georgia.
  • Four defendants subsequently took plea deals in exchange for agreeing to testify against other defendants.
  • Previous First Amendment challenges by former Trump co-defendants Kenneth Chesebro and Sidney Powell were unsuccessful.
  • In his denial at the time, McAfee ruled that various case law pointed to facts and evidence needing to be established in a courtroom before a First Amendment challenge can even be considered.
  • Anyway, that’s happening right now.
  • The only other notable news about that fat orange prick is that one day after receiving a gag order from the judge in the hush money case, Dump lashed out yesterday anyway, making a false claim about his daughter and urging him to step aside from the case.
  • Attacking a person’s children is way up top in the Dump school of action. He’s a purely despicable man, and I have zero respect for anyone who would continue to support him at this stage.
  • It means that you share his values. It means that you would also think that attacking people’s children is the right thing to do., along with everything else he does.
  • If you still support him at this point, you have to own it 100%, and you will carry the Dump stench forever.
  • In other news…
  • Joe Lieberman, who served as a US Senator from Connecticut and was Al Gore’s Democratic running mate for vice president in 2000, died yesterday after a fall. He was 82.
  • Lieberman was a Senator 1989 to 2013. previous to that, he’s been a Connecticut state senator from 1971, and the state’s attorney general from 1981.
  • I was not a fan. Lieberman was a supporter of the Iraq War, favored greater use of surveillance cameras by the federal government, suppressed whistleblowing, and nearly got the job of FBI director under Dump.
  • Joe Lieberman likely received excellent health care throughout his life, something which millions of people did not receive because as a Senator, he killed the public option as a favor to insurance companies.
  • Lieberman eventually left the Democratic Party, serving his final term in the Senate as an independent in 2006. He was also a founding chairman of No Labels, a political group that is currently in a futile effort for a third-party presidential ticket in 2024. 
  • Little side note on No Labels: you know what they don’t have in their effort to elect a third-party candidate?
  • A candidate. They can’t even get their shit together enough to name someone. The latest guy to turn down the spot was Chris Christie as of yesterday.
  • Anyway, RIP Joe Lieberman.
  • Moving on.
  • In today’s asshole files, conservative attorney John Eastman is losing his California law license over his efforts to keep former President Donnie Dump in power after the 2020 election.
  • Ha!
  • Eastman, a former law school dean, faces 11 disciplinary charges in the state bar court stemming from his development of a legal strategy to have then-Vice President Mike Pence interfere with the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.
  • Yesterday, State Bar Court of California Judge Yvette Roland sent her recommendation to the California Supreme Court for a final ruling on whether Eastman should be disbarred.
  • My note: yes. Yes he should.
  • Let’s move on with some other asshole news.
  • Remember Kari Lake, the crazy election denier who lost the Arizona governor’s race in 2022? The one who applies a noticeable blur filter on all of her video interviews?
  • She’s about to be on the hook for a big bill.
  • Stephen Richer, who presided over Maricopa county’s 2022 election, filed a defamation claim against Lake in June alleging that she repeatedly and falsely accused him of causing her electoral defeat in the race for governor won by Democrat Katie Hobbs.
  • Lake falsely claimed that Richer had misprinted ballots “so that the tabulators would jam all day long.” In another instance, her campaign’s Twitter account claimed that Richer “sabotaged” Election Day.
  • It’s so bad that Lake has literally no evidence to defend herself and will not attempt to challenge the suit, and is only fighting to keep the damages low.
  • Prediction: they won’t be low, as recent defamation suits against people like Donnie Dump and Rootie Tootie Giuliani have shown. Rudy, for example, was ordered to pay $148 million last year in a similar case over false claims he made about two former election workers in Georgia.
  • Richer’s lawsuit alleges that he and his family have been the target of threats of violence, and even death, and have had their lives turned upside down because of Lake's knowing and malicious falsehoods.
  • And now, of course, Lake is running for the soon-to-be open Senate seat for the state. She’s going up against Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), a decorated former Marine. So every penny you donate to her will go to paying off her lawsuit instead of helping her election.
  • Sound familiar? MAGA… Make Assholes Go Awry.
  • Moving on.
  • A sad story about longtime Kansas City Chiefs cheerleader Krystal Anderson, who died shortly after giving birth to her daughter, Charlotte Willow, who was stillborn.
  • Anderson, 40, had been diagnosed with sepsis during her pregnancy. Despite undergoing multiple surgeries, it wasn’t enough to save her or her daughter.
  • In the last two decades, maternal deaths in the U.S. have more than doubled. Black mothers are at the highest risk of dying in childbirth. The maternal mortality rate for non-Hispanic Black women in the U.S. was 55.3 deaths per 100,000 live births — almost three times the rate among non-Hispanic White women. 
  • I have to think that at least part of the culprit for this is a decline in the accessibility and affordability of quality women’s health care. There’s no acceptable excuse for this to be happening in a wealthy country in 2024.
  • Let’s move on to some news we can enjoy.
  • Something we haven’t covered yet, but I’ve been meaning to… the upcoming total solar eclipse that will cover a large swath of North America less than three weeks from now on Monday, April 8.
  • This is a big deal. It will be the first total solar eclipse to be visible in the provinces of Canada since February 26, 1979, the first in Mexico since July 11, 1991, and the first in the U.S. since August 21, 2017.
  • You may remember that one. Donnie Dump was president and he tried to stare directly into the sun with people screaming at him to not do exactly that.
  • The April 8 eclipse will be the only total solar eclipse in the 21st century where totality will be visible in Mexico, the United States, and Canada. It will also be the last total solar eclipse visible in the contiguous United States until August 23, 2044.
  • I’m not going to tell you what a solar eclipse is. If you don’t know, you can go find out elsewhere. I’m not your guy, bro. I’m not your dude, man.
  • I will tell you this, though… the path of totality — where the sun is fully blocked out by the moon and it gets dark in midday — is relatively narrow.
  • Coming up from Mexico, that path heads northeastward from Texas (including the Dallas are), and heads through parts of places like Oklahoma, Arkansa, Missouri, Tennessee, Illinois Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
  • What if you don’t live anywhere near those places? Well, you’ll still get a partial eclipse, with less dramatic effect the further you are form the path of totality. The entire USA will get some degree of partial eclipse.
  • I don’t care what you’re doing at that moment (assuming it’s not brain surgery). Make a fucking point to go outside during the eclipse. For some of you, it will be the only one you experience in person in your lifetime.
  • Do it.
  • Oh, and do NOT ever look into the fucking sun. Again, the fact that I feel compelled to mention that is sorta sad, and yet if I don’t, someone will permanently damage their corneas and it will somehow be my fault.
  • There are ways to experience an eclipse that don’t involve ruining your sight forever. Look them up. Thank you.
  • And now, The Weather: “rose lenses” by Shane Malone
  • Let’s do a chart. It’s late March 1987, and here’s the top of the Billboard Hot 100 singles. I’m pretending to go to class at SDSU, but mostly I’m taking bonghits and watching afternoon reruns of “Magnum P.I.” and not much else.
  • Side note: the late-mid/late ‘80s was not a great time for music. As always, there are some reasonably decent tunes here at the top of the pop charts (and a couple of great ones), but it’s also dissolving into schlocky shit from many artists and bands who are past their prime.
  • 1. Lean On Me (Club Nouveau). 2. Let's Wait Awhile (Janet Jackson). 3. Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now (Starship). 4. Mandolin Rain (Bruce Hornsby & The Range). 5. Somewhere Out There (From "An American Tail") (Linda Ronstadt & James Ingram). 6. Tonight, Tonight, Tonight (Genesis). 7. Jacob's Ladder (Huey Lewis & The News). 8. Respect Yourself (Bruce Willis). 9. Come Go With Me (Expose). 10. Big Time (Peter Gabriel). 11. The Final Countdown (Europe). 12. Livin' On A Prayer (Bon Jovi). 13. You Got It All (The Jets). 14. Don't Dream It's Over (Crowded House). 15. (You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!) (Beastie Boys). 16. Let's Go! (Wang Chung). 17. I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me) (Aretha Franklin & George Michael). 18. Brand New Lover (Dead Or Alive). 19. Midnight Blue (Lou Gramm). 20. I Wanna Go Back (Eddie Money)
  • From the Sports Desk… good news if you’re a sports fan in Washington, D.C.
  • D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and Ted Leonsis, owner of the Wizards (NBA) and Capitals (NHL), signed a deal yesterday that would keep the teams in downtown D.C. until 2050, abruptly ending the owner’s planned move to Virginia.
  • Of course, there are some shenanigans. D.C. will spend $515 million over three years to help Leonsis modernize the arena, along with other provisions that address Leonsis’s concerns about the state of downtown, and more.
  • So that’s… good, I guess?
  • Today in history… Juan Bautista de Anza finds the site for the Presidio of San Francisco (1776). Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers discovers 2 Pallas, the second asteroid ever to be discovered (1802). First concert of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Otto Nicolai (1842). France and Britain declare war on Russia in the Crimean War (1854). In the Battle of Glorieta Pass, Union forces stop the Confederate invasion of the New Mexico Territory (1862). Generalissimo Francisco Franco conquers Madrid after a three-year siege (1939). The United States Department of State releases the Acheson–Lilienthal Report, outlining a plan for the international control of nuclear power (1946). The US Supreme Court hands down 5–3 decision in Stump v. Sparkman, a controversial case involving involuntary sterilization and judicial immunity (1978). A coolant leak at the Three Mile Island's Unit 2 nuclear reactor outside Harrisburg, PA leads to the core overheating and a partial meltdown (1979). President George H. W. Bush posthumously awards Jesse Owens the Congressional Gold Medal (1990). 
  • March 28 is the birthday of painter Fra Bartolomeo (1472), brewer Frederick Pabst (1836), novelist Maxim Gorky (1868), actress Beulah Dark Cloud (1887), politician Edmund Muskie (1914), scientist/engineer Paul C. Donnelly (1923), diplomat/political activist Zbigniew Brzezinski (1928), NBA player/coach Jerry Sloan (1942), actor Ken Howard (1944), Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte (1945), actress Dianne Wiest (1948), singer-songwriter Reba McEntire (1955), NBA player/coach Byron Scott (1961), actor Vince Vaughn (1970), NBA player/coach Luke Walton (1980), singer-songwriter/actress Lady Gaga (1986), and NFL player Derek Carr (1991).


That’s plenty of news and stuff. I don’t have anything unusual planned today. Just meetings and work and typical stuff one does on a Thursday. Enjoy your day.

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Random News: March 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 March 27, 2024, and it’s a Wednesday. If you recall, I’d been planning on a normal day yesterday. That turned into a window malfunctioning in the Jeep, a run back and forth to the dealer service center, and various work craziness that had me answering emails after 10pm. So today I wish for nothing at all, and perhaps I’ll get that. Let’s do some news.


  • I don’t like counting chickens before they hatch, especially in regard to the current hyper-conservative Supreme Court, but yesterday, a majority of the justices appeared skeptical of the idea of a nationwide ban or new limits on mifepristone, the primary drug used for medication abortions.
  • The case was the first abortion-related hearing since the court reversed Roe v. Wade under the direction of Donald Trump, who takes full credit for millions of women having lost their reproductive freedom and health care in 2022.
  • The SCOTUS proceedings went into detail of the process and any complications of the use of medication abortion.
  • Lower-court rulings would have rolled back recent Food and Drug Administration decisions to ease access to the mifepristone. A district court had instituted a nationwide ban as well.
  • A quick but pertinent note on Mifepristone.
  • In the list of deaths led to drug complications, Mifepristone comes in toward the bottom, at 0.5 deaths per 100,000 people who’ve use it.
  • Want a comparison? Sure.
  • Tylenol has 0.8 deaths per 100,000, over 75% higher than Mifepristone. But Viagra has 4.9 deaths out of 100,000 users, which is over 600% more dangerous than Mifepristone.
  • Why isn’t the Supreme Court looking at banning this dangerous Viagra drug? After all, it’s made for the purpose of allowing men who can’t get their dick hard to procreate, right?
  • But none of that was the focus of yesterday’s hearing. The case will more likely be determined on whether the doctors who brought the original lawsuit had the ability to bring the case in the first place.
  • Conservative and liberal justices demanded to know why access to Mifepristone needed to be limited if the small number of doctors involved could simply exercise their own religious and conscientious objections individually.
  • A good question.
  • One thing we can be thankful for is the incompetent lead attorney who is making the argument for a nationwide abortion bad. Her name is Erin Hawley, and she is the wife of conservative Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO).
  • Even when they send their best, they’re kinda the worst.
  • Anyway, a decision regarding the case is expected by July.
  • Moving on.
  • Dumpity Dump has been gagged once again.
  • Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan said in a court order yesterday that Dump’s statements about various figures involved in the criminal hush money case “were threatening, inflammatory [and] denigrating.”
  • The gag order bars Dump from making public statements about likely witnesses and jurors in the case. He must also refrain from speaking about lawyers in the case, court staff, employees in the Manhattan District Attorney’s office and their family members if those statements are made with the “intent to materially interfere” with the case.
  • The gag order does not specifically bar Dump from criticizing the judge.
  • The Smelly Man is already bound by a gag order in a separate criminal case in Washington, D.C., federal court, where he is charged with illegally trying to overturn his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden.
  • A federal appeals court upheld Dump’s challenge of that gag order, but narrowed it to allow him to speak about his prosecutor, special counsel Jack Smith.
  • Speaking of New York, got some good news if you’re a Jets fan: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced his running mate yesterday, and it’s not Aaron Rodgers. Now you can look forward to your team sucking, but not because your anti-vax QB is busy doing veep things.
  • RFK picked Nicole Shanahan, a wealthy attorney and entrepreneur in the San Francisco Bay Area who will be joining his campaign as his vice presidential selection
  • Shanahan, who like Kennedy has never run for elected office, has made huge contributions to his campaign and his super PAC. Ahhh… this makes sense now.
  • It’s impossible to say at this point whether RFK, a known anti-vaxxer and conspiracy theorist, will make a dent in the election this fall, or if the voters he pulls in will be more damaging to Dump or to Biden. He’s running as an independent.
  • Apart from him, the entire Kennedy family is vociferously supporting President Biden for re-election.
  • Moving on.
  • Marilyn Lands, an Alabama Democrat who campaigned aggressively on abortion access, won a special election in the state Legislature yesterday.
  • She flipped a state seat in a district that Trump won in 2020, and she won by (checks notes) HOLY SHIT, 25 points.
  • Lands said her win sends a clear message. “Our legislature must repeal Alabama’s no-exceptions abortion ban, fully restore access to IVF, and protect the right to contraception,” she said.
  • She’s right.
  • I am telling you now, and don’t say we didn’t give fair warning: Republican politicians will be tumbling down this fall due to their open desire to remove women’s reproductive and health care choices.
  • Roevember is coming.
  • I haven’t bothered joining the hullabaloo regarding the incredibly fast hiring and firing of former RNC head Ronna McDaniel by broadcaster NBC. I don’t give a shit about talking heads on TV.
  • I mean, I don’t even watch TV.
  • What I will make a point to mention how her departure happened, which is rather unprecedented.
  • Journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel… on the air. That embarrassed the fuck out of the network and its brass.
  • NBC isn’t done with paying for this error. McDaniel spent the day yesterday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC. Creative Artists Agency, who brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her.
  • But no legitimate news broadcaster should have ever hired a person who was complicit in the illegal attempts to overturn the 2020 election, and McDaniel is on that list. 
  • When she was head of the RNC, McDaniel pressured Michigan officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.
  • She has remained an election denier during the four years since then. NBC really fucked up by hiring her, and the person who should really pay is NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde, who made the decision to bring McDaniel onboard.
  • He’s gotta go.
  • Let’s move on.
  • Today in Thailand, lawmakers in the country’s lower house of Parliament overwhelmingly approved a marriage equality bill that would make the country the first in Southeast Asia to legalize equal rights for marriage partners of any gender.
  • The bill passed with the approval of 400 of the 415 members of the House of Representatives in attendance. Thai society largely holds conservative values, and members of the LGBTQ+ community say they face discrimination in everyday life.
  • And yet, they acted on the side of compassion and equality. Hats off to Thailand! 
  • From the insane news desk, Donnie Dump is now selling $60 bibles for a living. Hey, anything to make a buck, amirite Donnie?
  • And now, The Weather: “Toad Mode” by Sex Week
  • Let’s do a chart. It’s the Billboard 200 album chart for late March 1995. I’m in my mid-20s, working in essentially the same field as I still am these many years later.
  • 1. Greatest Hits (Bruce Springsteen). 2. The Lion King (Soundtrack). 3. Tuesday Night Music Club (Sheryl Crow). 4. Hell Freezes Over (Eagles). 5. II (Boyz II Men). 6. Cracked Rear View (Hootie & The Blowfish). 7. The Hits (Garth Brooks). 8. Dookie (Green Day). 9. Throwing Copper (Live). 10. CrazySexyCool (TLC). 11. Balance (Van Halen). 12. No Need To Argue (The Cranberries). 13. My Life (Mary J. Blige). 14. Smash (The Offspring). 15. Yes I Am (Melissa Etheridge). 16. Vitalogy (Pearl Jam). 17. Bedtime Stories (Madonna). 18. Wildflowers (Tom Petty). 19. Safe + Sound (DJ Quik). 20. MTV Unplugged In New York (Nirvana).
  • From the Sports Desk… the NFL has new kickoff rules.
  • The proposal was passed by the NFL owners by a vote of 29-3. The new rules represent the most significant on-field rule change for the NFL in years. They are designed to lower concussion rates, something that’s desperately needed in the sport.
  • Here’s the short version: the format will move the majority of the kicking and return teams downfield to minimize high-speed collisions. Kickers will continue to kick from the 35-yard line, but the other 10 players on the kickoff team will line up at the receiving team's 40-yard line.
  • Makes sense. Look, I know there are those of you who think nothing should ever change in sports and rules should remain the same as when you were 12 years old.
  • But the percentage of high school, college, and NFL players who end up battling the effects of multiple brain injuries for the rest of their lives is shocking, It’s way past time for them to address this in any way possible.
  • Today in history… Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León reaches the northern end of The Bahamas on his first voyage to Florida (1513). Charles I becomes King of England, Scotland and Ireland as well as claiming the title King of France (1625). The United States Government establishes a permanent navy and authorizes the building of six frigates (1794). In central Alabama, U.S. forces under General Andrew Jackson defeat the Creek at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1814). President of the United States of America Andrew Johnson vetoes the Civil Rights Act of 1866, but his veto is overridden by Congress and the bill passes into law on April 9 (1866). Nikita Khrushchev becomes Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union (1958). Construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System begins (1975). The Food and Drug Administration approves Viagra for use as a treatment for erectile dysfunction, the first pill to be approved for this condition in the United States (1998). North Macedonia becomes the 30th member of NATO (2020).
  • March 27 is the birthday of activist Virginia Minor (1824), physicist Wilhelm Röntgen (1845), engineer/businessman Henry Royce (1863), actress Gloria Swanson (1899), bandleader Pee Wee Russell (1906), guitarist Robert Lockwood, Jr. (1915), music producer Phil Chess (1921), singer Sarah Vaughan (1924), mathematician/computer programmer Margaret K. Butler (1924), actor Michael York (1942), keyboardist/songwriter Tony Banks (1950), NFL player Randall Cunningham (1963), film director Quentin Tarantino (1963), singer-songwriter Mariah Carey (1969), and singer-songwriter Fergie (1975).


Okay. I’m enjoying this delicious cup of Peet’s Organic Alameda Morning Blend, but now it’s time to go work out. Enjoy your day.

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Random News: March 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 March 26, 2024, and it’s a Tuesday. I am definitely looking forward to a normal day, as yesterday was… not. More on that somewhere below. For now, let’s news it up.


  • Starting with a horrifying event last night when Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed after a container ship struck a support column, sending at least seven cars into the Patapsco River.
  • There was no indication that the event was intentional. Search and rescue teams were working to save people who’d been traversing the bridge.
  • You can see in the video that the vessel loses power multiple times before slamming into the column.
  • Crazy. Hoping the best for all impacted. Let’s move on for now.
  • Yesterday was one of those sorta good, but really bigly bad days for the former president and current accused multiple felon named Donald John Trump.
  • I saw a lot of people in full freakout mode yesterday morning after an appeals court lowered El Dumpo’s bond requirement for appeal to only $175 million, and gave him another 10 days to come up with it.
  • Broke Don said he will cover the bond using cash as a collateral. So, MAGA people: your guy made bail. Congratulations, Donald. Quite the accomplishment.
  • But this changes nothing about the actual $464 million New York civil fraud judgment against him. It will go through the typical process. Obviously, Dumpy’s immediate goal of delaying the judgement and the asset seizure that was about to begin was successful.
  • This is all just temporary stuff, and all he’s done is momentarily pushed back his inevitable fate.
  • However…
  • Within the same hour yesterday morning, Judge Juan Merchan confirmed that Big Smelly’s historic criminal trial in the hush money case will begin with jury selection on April 15.
  • This is really bad news for Dumperino. 
  • The Tangerine Twat was visibly agitated as Judge Merchan shot down his lawyers’ accusation of misconduct, saying they’d presented no evidence of anything.
  • So mark your calendars for Monday April 15. The first criminal trial of a former US president in history. Be there, will be wild!
  • Moving on.
  • In a change from its former position, the USA did not veto the UN Security Council when it called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.
  • The UN also demanded the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. It is the first time the council has called for a ceasefire since the war began in October after several failed attempts.
  • Israel got mad. Bibi Netanyahu decided to cancel meetings between an Israeli delegation and US officials in Washington that were scheduled for this week.
  • And Israel’s defense minister said they would not stop the war in Gaza while hostages were still being held there.
  • But for those of you who’ve been awaiting a strong show of support for a ceasefire to allow the people of Palestine at least some peace, that’s now happened. Hopefully Israel will abide by the UN resolution.
  • Let’s move on to another very important topic.
  • One of the biggest cases of our lifetimes is in front of the Supreme Court today. They are weighing restrictions on mifepristone, the drug that is most widely used in the United States to terminate pregnancies.
  • This same conservative-dominated court overturned the constitutional right to abortion nearly two years ago when it reversed the landmark Roe v. Wade at the urging of Donnie Dump, removing reproductive freedom from millions of American women.
  • They are hearing oral arguments today. Anti-abortion groups are seeking to have the drug banned, claiming that despite its long track record it is unsafe.
  • Mifepristone was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2000 and the FDA estimates that more than 5.9 million Americans have used it to end pregnancies since then.
  • Joe Biden is doing everything in his power to appealed the lower court's restrictions on mifepristone to the Supreme Court, who are expected to issue a decision in the abortion pill case by the end of June.
  • It would be a devastating blow to women’s health and women’s choice if they restrict the lifesaving drug’s use, which is what Dumpy is hoping.
  • Moving on…
  • I don’t cover celebrity news much, if all, but this is too bizarre.
  • The Department of Homeland Security raided multiple homes belonging to Sean “Diddy” Combs yesterday morning. Puffy faces several lawsuits over accusations including physical abuse, sexual assault and sex trafficking.
  • The federal raid follows months of allegations of sexual abuse against Combs. Per lawsuits, Combs forced women to participate in sex parties with male sex workers, flying them to multiple cities in the United States as well as abroad.
  • For awhile, it looked like Diddy had tried to flee the country, with his private jet tracked to a Caribbean island, but then he was spotted yesterday afternoon at the Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport.
  • As you’ll see below, I was in the area of his Holmby Hills mansion that was raided, and saw the cops and helicopters involved.
  • Moving on for now.
  • Yesterday, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed sweeping social media restrictions into law also requiring age verification to access pornographic websites in his state.
  • Under the new law, which would commence in 2025, minors under 16 would be barred from social media platforms.
  • Florida will join several other states with new age-verification requirement laws that have led Pornhub to block user access in Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Utah, Montana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Virginia.
  • And now, The Weather: “Imago” by Julien Chang
  • A quick mention of a remarkable experience I had yesterday.
  • My ladyfriend Kat had a medical procedure yesterday. She’s fine, so let’s get that out of the way. It was a standard preventative procedure that most people do at some point in their lives.
  • Anyway, it did require her to be driven there and back, which I did… and it was my first time setting foot in Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
  • Holy fuck. I didn’t know there were, like, luxury hospitals. 
  • It was like getting concierge service at every step of the process. I suppose that’s why it’s ranked as one of the best hospitals in the world (and the very best on the West Coast of the USA).
  • While waiting, I got continuous text alerts about Kat’s status before, during, and after the procedure. Meanwhile, the place is filled with art and sculpture. The cafe was like a nice restaurant filled with really delicious food choices. The visitor waiting room was beautifully designed with plush carpeting, large, soft chairs, and a friendly staff.
  • I gotta say, if health care could be like that for everyone, we’d all live a lot longer. I was blown away. Downside: now, every other hospital I ever visit in my life is going to suck by comparison.
  • I’ll reiterate the most important point to all this: Kat is fine and should stay that way for a long time.
  • And yes, while I was there on the UCLA campus in Westwood, I saw the commotion of law enforcement as they raced to Diddy’s mansion just a short distance away. Weird.
  • From the Sports Desk… the top seeds in the NCAA Tournament are all still in play.
  • For the Women, they are Texas, USC, South Carolina, and Iowa.
  • In the Men’s tournament, they are North Carolina, Purdue, UConn, and Houston.
  • All of them are sports powerhouse schools, No surprise.
  • Today in history… William Caxton prints his translation of ‘Aesop's Fables’ (1484). Utrecht University is founded in the Netherlands (1636). A political cartoon in the Boston Gazette coins the term "gerrymander" to describe oddly shaped electoral districts designed to help incumbents win reelection (1812). The Vancouver Millionaires win the 1915 Stanley Cup Finals, the first championship played between the Pacific Coast Hockey Association and the National Hockey Association (1915). The Battle of Iwo Jima ends as the island is officially secured by American forces (1945). Ten thousand people gather for one of many Central Park be-ins in New York City (1967). East Pakistan declares its independence from Pakistan to form Bangladesh and the Bangladesh Liberation War begins (1971). Anwar al-Sadat, Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter sign the Egypt–Israel peace treaty in Washington, D.C. (1979). Thirty-nine bodies are found in the Heaven's Gate mass suicides (1997). 
  • March 26 is the birthday of socialist/visionary Edward Bellamy (1850), poet Robert Frost (1874), first president of South Korea Syngman Rhee (1875), socialist activist Kate Richards O’Hare (1876), engineer Othmar Ammann (1879), fashion designer Guccio Gucci (1881), mythologist Joseph Campbell (1904), playwright Tennessee Williams (1911), US general William Westmoreland (1914), actor Strother Martin (1919), SCOTUS justice Sandra Day O’Connor (1930), actor Leonard Nimoy (1931), actor Alan Arkin (1934), physicist Anthony James Leggett (1938), actor James Caan (1940), politician Nancy Pelosi (1940), novelist Erica Jong (1942), journalist Bob Woodward (1943), singer-songwriter Diana Ross (1944), singer-songwriter Steven Tyler (1948), actress/singer Vicki Lawrence (1949), singer-songwriter Teddy Pendergrass (1950), actor Martin Short (1950), composer Alan Silvestri (1950), politician Elaine Chao (1953), actress Jennifer Grey (1960), NBA player John Stockton (1962), actor Michael Imperioli (1966), singer-songwriter Kenny Chesney (1968), guitarist James Iha (1968), computer scientist/businessman Larry Page (1973), actress Keira Knightley (1985), and NFL player Von Miller (1989).


As I said up top, unlike yesterday, today should be pretty normal. I like normalcy. I do. Enjoy your day.

Monday, March 25, 2024

Random News: March 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 March 25, 2024, and it’s a Monday. I have a large thing to do this morning, so my bullets will be limited, but as is the case with many things in life, I’ll do the best I can with the time I have.


  • Today is “Pay Up or Shut Up” day for Don Poorleone.
  • Smelly Man spent a good chunk of the weekend railing about the fact that he has to pay his dues like any other normal criminal.
  • Why was the judgement for $464 million? Because that’s the value of how much he stole in taxpayer money, along with some penalties that may persuade him or people like him from doing it again.
  • Where did that money go? He spent it on gaudy apartments, cringe-inducing country clubs, and an old ugly jet.
  • If Dump does not pay the money — that he doesn’t have and no on was willing to lend him — his ill-gotten assets will be seized and sold to the highest bidder, just like anyone else who is caught doing this.
  • Also, “this” happens all the time. Drug dealers, embezzlers, illegal stock traders, thieves and others get caught and their assets are seized and auctioned. Much higher penalties in terms of bond amounts and asset values have been taken, many into the billions.
  • Dumpy isn’t special. He's just another grifting criminal who got caught.
  • Moving on to a whole other trial…
  • There’s a hearing today regarding Dump’s hush money case. The trial, original scheduled to start today, is now delayed until at least mid-April.
  • Why the delay? Because earlier this month, federal prosecutors this month began turning over what would become more than 100,000 pages of records.
  • Today they’re battling about Dump’s attempt to use the new records as an excuse for yet additional delays.
  • Dumpy has repeatedly sought delays in all four of his criminal cases. He wants to win the election and then drop the cases or pardon himself.
  • In this one, El Dumpo is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records related to hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels.
  • Let’s move on to something that matters.
  • Over the weekend, President Biden easily won the Louisiana Democratic presidential primary. The incumbent president will take all 47 delegates allocated to the Pelican State.
  • Good. I offer my full endorsement to Joe Biden. He’s done a great job under extremely difficult circumstances during his presidency thus far.
  • Not everyone is as enthusiastic about their candidate. Take, for example, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK).
  • Aghast at Dumpy’s candidacy and the direction of her party, Murkowski won’t rule out bolting from the GOP.
  • She’s one of just seven Republicans who voted to convict Dump in his second impeachment trial amid the aftermath of January 6, 2021, and she is just done with him.
  • She said she “absolutely” would not vote for him. The former Republican Party’s shift over to MAGA and Dump has caused Murkowski to consider her future within the GOP.
  • In other news of another politician, New Jersey first lady Tammy Murphy is suspending her campaign for Senate in New Jersey, she announced yesterday.
  • She was running for the seat currently held by Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez, who is accused of major crimes. I can predict right now, the Senate seat will instead go to current Rep Andy Kim (D-NJ), who is well liked and has done a great job.
  • And now, The Weather: “Lines” by Maxband
  • Thousands of people in the Northeast are still without power after a storm slammed New England, taking out trees and power lines.
  • Good luck, peoples.
  • For no reason: a list of every Supreme Court justice who has been on the bench at some point within my lifetime, with their year of departure indicated…
  • Earl Warren (1969), John Marshall Harlan (1971), Potter Stewart (1981), Warren Burger (1986), Lewis Powell (1987), William Brennan (1990), Thurgood Marshall (1991), Byron White (1993), Harry Blackmun (1994), William Rehnquist (2005), Sandra Day O’Connor (2006), David Souter (2009), John Paul Stevens (2010), Antonin Scalia (2016), Anthony Kennedy (2018), Ruth Bader Ginsburg (2020), Stephen Breyer (2022), Clarence Thomas (-), John Roberts (-), Samuel Alito (-), Sonia Sotomayor (-), Elena Kagan (-), Neil Gorsuch (-), Brett Kavanaugh (-), Amy Coney Barrett (-), and Ketanji Brown Jackson (-).
  • Who were the best Supreme Court justices in history? Obviously a subjective question. I’d have to go with the ones who best defended and interpreted the constitution and acted in the best interests of the people… again, in my opinion.
  • In no order: John Marshall, Earl Warren, Louis Brandeis, William Brennan, John Marshall Harlan, William Douglas, Joseph Story, and Thurgood Marshall.
  • The worst? Mostly the ones who defended the worst decisions ever made by the body or acted unscrupulously, like Roger Taney, James McReynolds, Stephen Johnson Field, Clarence Thomas, Melville Fuller, John Archibald Campbell, Lewis Powell, James Wayne, and Samuel Alito.
  • From the Sports Desk… some good games scheduled today in the NCAA Women’s Tournament. 5-seed Oklahoma vs. 4-seed Indiana, 7-seed Ole Miss vs. 2-seed Notre Dame, 5-seed Utah vs. 4-seed Gonzaga, 6-seed Tennessee vs. 3-seed NC State, 6-seed Syracuse vs. 3-seed UConn, 1-seed USC vs. 8-seed Kansas, 7-seed Creighton vs. 2-seed UCLA, and 1-seed Iowa vs. 8-seed West Virginia.
  • Today in history… Italian city Venice is founded (421). Robert the Bruce becomes King of Scots (1306). Sir Walter Raleigh is granted a patent to colonize Virginia (1584). Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is discovered by Christiaan Huygens (1655). Percy Bysshe Shelley is expelled from the University of Oxford for publishing the pamphlet ‘The Necessity of Atheism’ (1811). Coxey's Army, the first significant American protest march, departs Massillon, OH for Washington, D.C. (1894). The Scottsboro Boys are arrested in Alabama and charged with rape (1931). United States Customs seizes copies of Allen Ginsberg's poem "Howl" on obscenity grounds (1957). Civil rights activists led by Martin Luther King Jr. successfully complete their 4-day 50-mile march from Selma to the capitol in Montgomery, AL (1965). The first fully functional Space Shuttle orbiter, Columbia, is delivered to the John F. Kennedy Space Center to be prepared for its first launch (1979). The European Union's Veterinarian Committee bans the export of British beef and its by-products as a result of mad cow disease (1996).
  • March 25 is the birthday of U.S. navy founder John Barry (1745), sculptor Gutzon Borglum (1867), conductor Arturo Toscanini (1867), composer Béla Bartók (1881), director David Lean (1908), journalist Howard Cosell (1918), businesswomen Eileen Ford (1922), film critic Gene Shalit (1926), activist Gloria Steinem (1934), singer-songwriter Hoyt Axton (1938), screenwriter D. C. Fontana (1939), singer-songwriter/pianist Aretha Franklin (1942), singer-songwriter/pianist Elton John (1947), actress Sarah Jessica Parker (1965), MLB player Tom Glavine (1966), singer-songwriter/guitarist Jeff Healey (1966), WNBA player Sheryl Swoopes (1971), race car driver Danica Patrick (1982), and NBA player Kyle Lowry (1986).


Well, send me some good thoughts today. I’m chauffeuring Kat for a medical procedure which is routine and minor, but it’s also a good ways from here, so we’ll be traversing the whole greater Los Angeles area getting there and back. Hey, I used to do that shit daily, but… I do not miss it. Enjoy your day.