You know whom our government serves by what it measures.

A widely applicable truism about organizations — whether businesses or public schools — that systems prioritize that which they measure.  The folly of this principle came to mind while reviewing the Division of Statewide Planning’s still-new Social Equity Data Platform.  What you see, there, is a map of Rhode Island with some shaded overlays of…

The RI State House in the middle of a plantation
The web of financial interests in the Democrat bureaucracy extends to activist judges.

Jody Baldwin Stone of Rhode Island asks a question of huge importance to the Constitutional wellbeing of the United States of America: RI Jurnos: Is it true that Judge McConnells daughter, Catherine McConnell, was appointed by Biden and is currently employed by The Department of Education? Did the judges order save his daughter’s job? 👀🤔This…

An elephant defendant is shocked in a donkey court
What is the distinction between a baby in the womb and out?

Charlie Kirk has an interesting business model.  He goes where young adults congregate (presumably college campuses), sets up a booth, and has debates with whoever approaches his microphone.  Then he posts the videos for clicks and (again, presumably) collects advertising revenue. In this video, he stumps a young woman on the issue of abortion.  Kirk’s…

A woman and a baby on a seesaw over a chasm
The rhetorical positioning is the important part of the birthright-citizenship debate.

One sees people take positions of similar structure to Ken Block’s, here, on many issues, from immigration to finance to healthcare to science: One of humanity’s great advantages is that we can divide the labor of understanding.  One person figures something out, and others can build on his or her conclusions without necessarily repeating all…

Gavel with a speech bubble
UPDATED – the Hegseth Nomination: Warriors, Not Culture Warriors, in the US Military, Please

The Senate hearing on President-Elect Trump’s nomination of Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense is now underway. Inasmuch as the objections to his nomination raised so far at the hearing are irrelevant to the vital mission of the United States military, I am bumping up my post of November 17. There has been a “Well…

The Schrodinger Legality of RIDOT Paying a Losing Bidder

This is not the biggest question pertaining to Rhode Island’s handling of the failed Washington Bridge – it is secondary, for example, to WHY the state had to offer a serious incentive for what would seem to be a juicy public contract, not to mention what Ken Block is in the process of turning up…

Hold Up on Making Assumptions from 85% of the Popular Vote

There is a Presidential popular vote chart getting a lot of attention out there that seems to show a big drop in Democratic votes from 2020 to 2024. However, as pointed out by Dan McLaughlin, I think people are getting over their skis before all of the data is in.  I thought a picture showing…

Old-time detective inspects a vote drop-box
American political media has never been self-funding.

While developing plans for the future, I’ve been reading about the history of American journalism, and an observation from the post-Revolution period has been worth more than a few underlines.  Political parties always want dedicated media outlets, but media outlets dedicated to partisan politics never pay for themselves.  Jefferson had to give a no-show State Department job…

A post-Revolution journalist takes notes on an iPad in Boston
RIDOT Contract: Statewide Weigh-in-Motion Enforcement Program. RIDOT: Nah.

Following the determination in April that the Washington Bridge eastbound was becoming “considerably more sensitive” (gulp), RIDOT contracted to install a new, combined structural health monitoring and vehicle weigh-in-motion program on/between the Washington Bridge and the Iway (Providence River Bridge). In May, RIDOT entered into a five year “sole source” – i.e., no RFP –…

What should we conclude from Attorney General Neronha’s support for historical violence against police?

Democrats’ acceptance of violence from their own partisans, especially labor unions, is a major warning sign that they’ll turn away when it happens again in the future, but it’s especially disconcerting to see Attorney General Peter Neronha celebrating violence against police officers: If I seem to be exaggerating, it’s only because I’m not accepting as…

A crowd argues and riots in a large, dark hall
The DOJ’s RealPage lawsuit shows the sloppy thinking behind progressive activism.

As I understand it, RealPage offers landlords software for renting out and managing their properties.  Like other such software across industries, it uses automation and analytics to help its clients conceptualize their assets and their businesses and squeeze out inefficiencies.  Among those services is an algorithm that uses local real estate data, including from its…

A Providence neighborhood through a Statehouse window
How can we renew a sense of shared trust?

Not long ago, the ladies of The View displayed the number of associates of Donald Trump who have recently* gone to prison as evidence that “the system is working.”  We’d be in better condition as a country if more people realized that the very same visual leads to opposite conclusions for different people, creating a dangerous…

A statue of blindfolded justice over a riot in a public park
No, Gene, Do Not Redirect Professor Schiller’s Excellent Questions About the Bridge Fiasco

Gene Valicenti’s weekly Tuesday conversation on WPRO with Brown University Professor Wendy Schiller took a slightly unexpected turn yesterday when Gene honored her request to comment on the handling of the Washington Bridge closure. (Starts at Minute 06:45.) Schiller: This is a significant, major problem that if something goes wrong with the eastbound side, for…

Important lessons lie somewhere in the details of a Cranston zoning battle.

They may not be straightforward or easily articulated, though, so just read them through and absorb the awfulness. Here’s the background: Built in the 1980s and 1990s where Scituate Avenue meets Furnace Hill Brook, Alpine Estates was one of the first of what would become many modern subdivisions on what used to be western Cranston…

Shortsighted inspectors of disaster
Ripples
A reminder not to rely too heavily on a single platform.

Maybe it’s just me, but X doesn’t appear to be working on my computer or phone.  I was only looking for a moment of distraction, but the experience is a helpful reminder not to rely too heavily on a single platform for communication and information access.

Alzate is too dangerous to be a legislator.

Rhode Islanders should take legislation like this much more seriously than they do, because it exposes how little Democrat legislators respect our rights, understand the workings of those rights, and/or are willing to place our rights above their political ideology and interest groups:

State Rep. Karen Alzate isn’t waiting for federal immigration raids in Rhode Island to try to protect unauthorized immigrants living here.

In response to President Donald Trump’s call for mass deportations, Alzate has proposed legislation, H5225, that would create “protected spaces” in Rhode Island where immigration enforcement and border patrol agents couldn’t enter without a warrant signed by a judge.

The bill specifically states that “schools, places of worship, health facilities and public libraries shall not grant access to their premises, for any federal immigration authority to investigate, detain, apprehend, or arrest any individuals for potential violations of federal immigration laws,” absent a warrant.  That is, Alzate would be forbidding such organizations from cooperating with ICE even if they want to.  She is conscripting the properties of these organizations to further her political ideology.

Maybe she assumes all such groups share her extreme views and doesn’t intend to force anybody to do anything, but either way she’s made herself an example of a type of politician who should under no circumstances be trusted with elective office.

The hatred is coming from inside the house.

Something about this tweet from Bill Bartholomew is more striking than it should be:

BillBartholomew: Trump hates you.  The neo-tech oligarchs hate you.  You’ve been played using near-meaningless culture war nonsense.  As capitalism sunsets into feudalism, remember that this moment in history, if not pushed down the Memory Hole, will be a spectacular turning point.

I’m not sure whether it’s better or worse if Bartholomew actually believes what he says or is just playing a role.  The absolutely most negative interpretation that actually makes sense about the people Bartholomew dislikes is that they don’t care about you, which leads me to conclude he’s got a bad case of projection.  He’s the one who hates, and it’s so ingrained that he thinks other people must act from the same emotion.

Note, in particular the phrase “using near-meaningless culture war nonsense.”  I remember when Bartholomew was pretending to be a fair broker on his podcast and interviewed Matt Allen.  Matt flipped the interview table and asked him if there was anybody he wouldn’t have on his show.  We now know that list is long, but at the time, I think he said something about a person who is strongly anti-trans.

In other words, the “culture war” issues are definitely not meaningless nonsense to him.  He just thinks it’s illegitimate to hold opposing views, and anybody who dares to stop the progress of his radical march must be doing so out of irrational hatred.

“Education is an investment” is mostly a useless, misused statement.

One could pick apart on its own terms Nicholas Ferroni’s commentary suggesting that most states can’t be trusted to run their own education systems and “education is not an expense; it’s an investment”:

Travis_Auty: Public education is not an expense it’s an investment.

For context, Ferroni is a teacher in New Jersey who calls himself an “activist” (apparently for left-wing social causes) and moonlights as a paid speaker.  He takes it as written that the federal government is a net positive to education, which many of us would dispute.  Indeed, his case that there is already a wide gulf in the success of schools from state to state brings his assumption into question.  His faith in the value of teachers unions amplifies the need to question his assumptions.  In Massachusetts, which he calls out as an exception where the state government can be trusted with education, the success is directly attributable to reforms decades ago that reduced the unions’ power (which have been softened with predictable results).

The problem with insisting that “education is an investment” is that many institutionalized and powerful people believe it should be a unique form of investment whereby the simple fact of adding money increases profit, and wherein demanding accountability from the people who take that funding on the promise of making the investment bear fruit is an affront.

Education needs more accountability and less meddling from activists inside and outside of government.

On DOGE’s authority.

The great DOGE Authority Panic of 2025 appears to have passed, but in case you’re still interested (and to have it searchable on this site for future reference), lawyer Tom Renz’s review of the legal basis for the Department of Government Efficiency is worth a read.

Why would an “objective” newspaper downplay its own findings?

Here’s the Providence Journal headline:  “Numbers show RI undocumented immigrants a small slice of those getting benefits. What we know.

Here’s one of the shocking facts that journalist Katherine Gregg did the work to uncover:

Medicaid payments on behalf of those without Social Security numbers totaled $55.4 million last year, including the $16,106,050 paid for those officially determined to be undocumented immigrants.

The article proceeds to dismiss entirely all but the $16 million and then to contextualize that number as a drop in the state’s Medicaid budget.

Now add to the total another $12 million for various welfare benefits from the state, and we get up to $28–67 million total.  In what other type of story would the reporter treat that amount of money as insignificant and the newspaper pass on an eye-catching headline… in an era when it needs all the attention for its work that it can get??

WPRI’s been particularly notable in carrying the Democrats’ anti-Trump water recently.

The fabricated nature of this tweet’s content is just one example:

wpri12: It’s been less than a week since President Donald Trump promised to implement additional tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, but the added taxes are already impacting local business owners.

To be sure, that isn’t the most egregious example I’ve come across, but I particularly wanted to capture a statement relegated to the very end of the article, coming from one of only two local sources cited for the article, William Worthy, of Big Bear Hunting & Fishing in Glocester:

“Maybe [Trump’s tariff policy] opens the door for some local people to have local-made bait instead of bait coming from other countries,” Worthy told 12 News. “I’d rather push the locally made stuff if I can’t buy the stuff from China anymore. I think it will create other opportunities.”

There’s room for the right to make a connection with well-meaning progressives when it comes to love.

At the risk of arriving late to the news cycle of a couple weeks ago on the hierarchies of love, I wanted to offer an adjustment to Matt Walsh’s perspective, with which I mostly agree:

MattWalshBlog: JD Vance is of course correct about the hierarchy of love. You are called to love your family first. And your nation before the nations of the world. The Left prioritizes the universal love of all mankind because that kind of love requires nothing of you. It’s easy to love the world. You can do that while sitting on your couch. But to love your family requires work and sacrifice. It is a lifetime commitment. It is real. The Left prefers the kind of love that does nothing and comes with no obligations. In other words, it is not real.

The point is well taken that it’s easier to love “people” in the abstract than to love particular people (particularly when doing so leads one to advocate for things that one wants anyway).  Nonetheless, if the term, “love,” means willing the good of the other, it is certainly available to both distant and aggregated people — the broader humanity.  However, the closer a person is to environments that we can actually influence, this willing the good increasingly requires action.

Progressive policy is characterized by three qualities that bring the reality of their “love” into question:

  1. It is only marginally more specific (if at all) than the love that most well-meaning people will have for people they don’t know.
  2. It tends to impose obligations on people other than the progressives who claim to care so much.
  3. It implicitly imposes progressives’ beliefs about what is “good” on everybody else, including the constituencies they patronize.

Of course, for many progressives, we could add in the fourth characterization that the policies conspicuously benefit them in some way.

The truth is out there when it comes to progressives theft of money for ideological funding.

This observation points to a useful exercise for all citizens:

InezFeitscher: This is nothing short of simply defunding the professional left. The leftist institutional infrastructure has relied for decades on basically being paid by the taxpayer.

A useful exercise is to keep a look out when news stories at the state or even local level mention some organization.  Do a little research into their history and funding.  Rhode Island has about a million people and a long-languishing economy, yet even on relatively niche issues you’ll find multiple advocacy organizations with the funding and compensation of a healthy small business.

Much of the government grant system is simply laundering money for ideological purposes.

This is, let’s just say, a reasonable thing to wonder:

DataRepublican: After spending too much time on the award search tool, I’m starting to wonder if we’ve had a UBI system all along for one political party—just disguised as grants.

It may have long been the case that federal grants were a major financing scheme for left-wing organizations, but the Obama administration amplified it, flooding the market and giving us much of the confusion and turmoil of the last decade.

Objectively, one can say that Democrats are the party of government and progressives place government centrally in their ideology.  Therefor, the current state of affairs was probably inevitable — that accepting grant-making as a legitimate government function left up to bureaucrats to dole out would lead to a one-sided funding mechanism.

After all, even as far back as Thomas Jefferson’s time in office, the executive created no-show jobs for helpful allies (like newspaper men).  At least back then, however, the feds couldn’t afford to hand out comfortable salaries by means of such corruption.

Whenever I wonder if I’m inflating the significance of radicals in Rhode Island…

… I remind myself that Aaron Regunberg was very nearly governor.  A lot has happened since this tweet, so as a reminder, Brian Thompson was the healthcare CEO murdered in cold blood in New York:

itaisher: These sentiments are repulsive. They are not what our politics should be based on.

Think about the effect of having elected officials like Sam Bell in the General Assembly.

Here is Senator Bell’s response, back in November, to the CEO of Box.com, who offered a mild, moderate suggestion for Democrats after the election:

SamuelWBell: Great example of the kind of CEO we’re taxing when we win.  And his company is a great example of a workplace we’ll make sure gets unionized.

Bell exposes two important things, with this Tweet.  First, a significant portion of Rhode Island’s Democrat power elite are happy to ride the state into utter, Venezuelan devastation for the sake of ideological purity.  Most of us understand the idea of states as testing grounds for different ideas means that states that choose poorly will learn from those that choose well, but for fanatics like Bell, the drive is to control a state simply for the sake of imposing their ideology for the ideology’s sake.

Second, Bell’s ideology is about hurting people he doesn’t like.  He excuses it for himself by insisting the reason he doesn’t like them is they harm others, but that’s a screen.  The ego boost of power over others (probably out of envy) is the fundamental motivation.

Vance should add a point to his view on citizen construction work.

It’s from October, but this argument from Vice President Vance against the view that nobody will build houses except illegals is worth revisiting:

“This is one of the really deranged things that I think illegal immigration does to our society is it gets us in a mind-set of saying we can only build houses with illegal immigrants, when we have seven million — just men, not even women, just men — who have completely dropped out of the labor force. People say, well, Americans won’t do those jobs. Americans won’t do those jobs for below-the-table wages. They won’t do those jobs for non-living wages. But people will do those jobs, they will just do those jobs at certain wages,” Vance said.

A necessary addition — perhaps a deeper cause — is cultural.  We need to stop giving American workers the impression that it’s good enough to be made a client for government services or to work some menial minimum-wage job that was never meant to support a family.  Instead, we need to reinvigorate the sense of the value of producing things and working hard.  Of course I needed to support my family, but the greatest compensation from my years in construction was the feeling of having worked hard and created something that hadn’t been there when I started.

Beneath it all is a character issue.  Government policy has oversimplified our thinking about employment to treat it is as merely a financial exchange, and always sufficient to support a whole family.

To the contrary, employment policy should mostly stay out of the way, but to the extent it has an effect, it should foster the human drive that moves from miniscule pay for menial tasks through rewarding exertion to success through skill and wisdom.

We’re getting a clear picture of what we’ve let our country become.

Mark Steyn’s daily pre-election column is vintage Steyn today.

But in Botswana everyone voted on Wednesday, the last up-country results came in on Thursday, the ruling party conceded and the new guy was sworn in on Friday.

That’s a normal election in a normal country.

Meanwhile, back in the greatest country in the history of countries, in twenty-four hours we shall be embarking on the usual folderol offour-hour lines to vote, malfunctioning machines, burst water pipes, court injunctions to keep polls open or close them down (according to taste), pausing the count before it’s completed, and the GDP-boosting quadrennial spike in plywood sales as storekeepers in DC and elsewhere board up their windows.

And that’s if it’s a “normal” election by American standards.

Read the whole thing, wherein Steyn weaves together multiple stories drawn from our rapid-fire headlines.  The picture he paints is of the mess we’ve allowed our country to become since we elected a community organizer to the Presidency, and no matter who wins on Tuesday (or whenever), we have to take our country back.  As he states in the key point of the essay: “it’s hard to calibrate the precise point at which the soft totalitarianism turns, instantly, into hard, psychotic, murderous totalitarianism … you never know it’s time to break for the border until it’s too late.”

We’re being governed by a deliberately toxic and wasteful bureaucracy.

I’ve fallen way behind, so this tweet from Ken Block is a couple months old, but its content is (unfortunately) timeless in Rhode Island:

The picture being painted for me by over ten current and former DOT employees is a toxically managed organization where who you know is far more important than how you do your job and where technical expertise has been systematically eliminated in favor of managers with no industry experience.

Our state government is a scam taking tax dollars for favored members of the Party.  Unfortunately, journalists have been indoctrinated in the Democrats-as-heroes storyline for generations, so they are fundamentally incapable of reporting on the story in a way that communicates what’s really going on.

Federal government data simply can no longer be taken at face value.

I realized this when watching Democrats’ repeated proclamations about jobs numbers during the Obama years only to see those numbers quietly revised the following month, almost always with the revision making touted jobs disappear, rather than quiet corrections representing improvements. Now, it seems crime data has the same partisan infection.  All year, we’ve been hearing that violent crime is down under President Joe Biden, but a few weeks ago, the FBI quietly revised its numbers to show a 4.5% increase in 2022, rather than a decrease. Naturally, that makes the 2023 decrease seem even larger, but here’s the key point:

“I have checked the data on total violent crime from 2004 to 2022,” Carl Moody, a professor at the College of William & Mary who specializes in studying crime, told RealClearInvestigations. “There were no revisions from 2004 to 2015, and from 2016 to 2020, there were small changes of less than one percentage point. The huge changes in 2021 and 2022, especially without an explanation, make it difficult to trust the FBI data.”

These numbers are non-transparent estimates, and no explanation for revision is being offered.  The most rational conclusion is that bureaucrats are doing their part to “save our democracy” by keeping Democrats in power.

A belated word on Russia-funded conservative commentators.

The news cycle flows by so quickly, lately, that political actors and activists are learning it’s sometimes best to just keep your head down and let the controversy of the day join the rest of the noise tomorrow.  Nonetheless, I think there’s something worth noting in the now-passed story about Russia funding some conservative commentators.

First, my caveat is that I no longer trust America’s intelligence services or news media. Even where stories aren’t entirely fabricated, there are simply so many ways to construct a narrative. The agent or journalist can exaggerate claims or leak one-sided information that distorts the context of what’s happening. Imagine, and I’m not saying this is happening, that every commentator across the political spectrum receives some portion of his or her revenue from hostile foreign governments — that it’s simply part of the ecosystem. Releasing that information only as it relates to one group of commentators would make it seem as if they are uniquely bad.

Caveat aside, I can sympathize with some of the commentators’ defenses.  I’ve always said what I have to say, and if somebody’s wants to give me money to say it, that’s great.  That person didn’t change my view or buy my opinion.

What he or she would be doing, though, is making it possible for me to continue saying what I have to say… and to say more of it.  By selectively funding points of view, financiers can adjust the broad field of commentary.  It’s not the writer’s fault for wanting to be heard, and frankly, it’s not even the financiers’ fault for wanting to advance their visions.  We all have to have our own moral compasses and approach information intelligently and with caution.

To be sure, this is a social challenge, but it doesn’t lend itself to easy solutions.  Attempting to force transparency or, worse, ban pernicious funding or statements only amplifies the caveat expressed above.

Are you feeling the wobble in RI’s medical infrastructure?

I find it ominous that one of my children’s dentist just cancelled an appointment for tomorrow due to short staffing. RI’s medical infrastructure feels a bit like we could get the equivalent of an emergency Washington Bridge closure at any time.  Or maybe we’ve been getting them, but the people who run the state are better able to distract from and hide the effects.

We have to take the reality of meddling billionaires into account.

Last night, I read a business case about a handful of billionaires who’ve been trying to make lab-grown meat a viable consumer product, and I wondered something tangential.  Imagine if a handful of billionaires decided they needed to have a pliable big-government progressive in the White House.

They might flood her accounts with hundreds of millions of dollars laundered through untraceable donations designed to appear grass roots.

They might use the major media outlets they own to twist reality.

They might pay people to fill up arenas so that the candidate appears to be popular.

Then they might manipulate an insecure election system, including mail ballots, to simply install their preferred candidate, while pointing at the scandals they generated in media about the other candidate and the astroturf popularity of the “winner.”

This might sound conspiratorial and crazy, but these same people are trying to grow frankenburgers — not because they think it will be profitable, but because they want to “save the environment” and trick you into a diet that they believe is healthier.

The point of government seems to be as a way to make politicians feel like celebrities.

It’s a passing thought, of course, but Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee’s mild lament that a State House celebration of a basketball trophy is happening during school hours bugs me.  Somehow, it emphasizes the point that our government officials see the well-being of children — of all regular Rhode Islanders, for that matter — as secondary side-effects of insiders’ going about their big, important business, which seems often to focus on providing them power and enjoyment.

A local kid making it big is an inspiring story, but local officials use such things to inspire mainly themselves.

A bitter donkey scowls at the viewer while a comfortable elephant looks on

Politics This Week: The Bitter and the Comfortable

John DePetro and Justin Katz review the latest political news in RI.


Rhode Island Unions Again Resist True Pension Reform

Marc rightfully noted the good news on pension reform passed earlier this week, followed by a word of caution. The caution flags are now out in full force because the week wasn’t even over before the unions of Rhode Island were out attacking the pension changes passed in the State House: Unions representing state employees…

Turning Discord into Harmony

My latest column, “Juggling Spheres in the Marriage Debate,” begins with activists’ invasion of Notre Dame Cathedral and makes its way to suggestions for resolving the current impasse in the same-sex marriage battle.

Be Watchful

In my last post on the apparent passage of the 2006 RI State Budget in which Gov. Carcieri won important concessions, such as reducing pension benefits for state workers, I commented . . .now is no time to let up. This is just the first battle and there is no guarantee that it has actually…

Now Here is a Good Idea

This article, entitled California Union Blues: The Golden State’s unions fight to keep their members from controlling their own money, informs us about an issue that often gets limited public scrutiny: The leadership of California’s largest public labor unions declared a crisis last week–and it had nothing to do with outsourcing, Enron, WorldCom, the minimum…

A young family approaches a school with foreboding

Why a petition is needed to make RI state government acknowledge rights, law, and reality.

The state Department of Education’s “guidance” on transgender students exposes more than its radical beliefs.

A woman frees herself from a grasping swamp.

Politics This Week: The Truth Will Out

John DePetro and Justin Katz note ways in which the truth pokes through the statewide narrative.

A monster in a child costume.

Politics This Week: Not What Things Seem to Be

John DePetro and Justin Katz reveal the hidden realities of RI politics.

A bad magician conjures a KKK mannequin

Politics This Week: The Mainstream Illusion

John DePetro and Justin Katz pull some of the threads from the fraying mainstream narrative illusion.

Weird – Testimony at Washington Bridge Hearing Won’t be Under Oath

A joint Oversight hearing about the Washington Bridge will be held this Thursday at the State House.  [Agenda.] There will be no public testimony and only committee members will ask…

A horse-riding general leads his troops off a cliff

Politics This Week: Our Uncredible Elite

John DePetro and Justin Katz break down some of the latest political news in Rhode Island.

Ripples
A reminder not to rely too heavily on a single platform.

Maybe it’s just me, but X doesn’t appear to be working on my computer or phone.  I was only looking for a moment of distraction, but the experience is a helpful reminder not to rely too heavily on a single platform for communication and information access.

Alzate is too dangerous to be a legislator.

Rhode Islanders should take legislation like this much more seriously than they do, because it exposes how little Democrat legislators respect our rights, understand the workings of those rights, and/or are willing to place our rights above their political ideology and interest groups:

State Rep. Karen Alzate isn’t waiting for federal immigration raids in Rhode Island to try to protect unauthorized immigrants living here.

In response to President Donald Trump’s call for mass deportations, Alzate has proposed legislation, H5225, that would create “protected spaces” in Rhode Island where immigration enforcement and border patrol agents couldn’t enter without a warrant signed by a judge.

The bill specifically states that “schools, places of worship, health facilities and public libraries shall not grant access to their premises, for any federal immigration authority to investigate, detain, apprehend, or arrest any individuals for potential violations of federal immigration laws,” absent a warrant.  That is, Alzate would be forbidding such organizations from cooperating with ICE even if they want to.  She is conscripting the properties of these organizations to further her political ideology.

Maybe she assumes all such groups share her extreme views and doesn’t intend to force anybody to do anything, but either way she’s made herself an example of a type of politician who should under no circumstances be trusted with elective office.

The hatred is coming from inside the house.

Something about this tweet from Bill Bartholomew is more striking than it should be:

BillBartholomew: Trump hates you.  The neo-tech oligarchs hate you.  You’ve been played using near-meaningless culture war nonsense.  As capitalism sunsets into feudalism, remember that this moment in history, if not pushed down the Memory Hole, will be a spectacular turning point.

I’m not sure whether it’s better or worse if Bartholomew actually believes what he says or is just playing a role.  The absolutely most negative interpretation that actually makes sense about the people Bartholomew dislikes is that they don’t care about you, which leads me to conclude he’s got a bad case of projection.  He’s the one who hates, and it’s so ingrained that he thinks other people must act from the same emotion.

Note, in particular the phrase “using near-meaningless culture war nonsense.”  I remember when Bartholomew was pretending to be a fair broker on his podcast and interviewed Matt Allen.  Matt flipped the interview table and asked him if there was anybody he wouldn’t have on his show.  We now know that list is long, but at the time, I think he said something about a person who is strongly anti-trans.

In other words, the “culture war” issues are definitely not meaningless nonsense to him.  He just thinks it’s illegitimate to hold opposing views, and anybody who dares to stop the progress of his radical march must be doing so out of irrational hatred.

“Education is an investment” is mostly a useless, misused statement.

One could pick apart on its own terms Nicholas Ferroni’s commentary suggesting that most states can’t be trusted to run their own education systems and “education is not an expense; it’s an investment”:

Travis_Auty: Public education is not an expense it’s an investment.

For context, Ferroni is a teacher in New Jersey who calls himself an “activist” (apparently for left-wing social causes) and moonlights as a paid speaker.  He takes it as written that the federal government is a net positive to education, which many of us would dispute.  Indeed, his case that there is already a wide gulf in the success of schools from state to state brings his assumption into question.  His faith in the value of teachers unions amplifies the need to question his assumptions.  In Massachusetts, which he calls out as an exception where the state government can be trusted with education, the success is directly attributable to reforms decades ago that reduced the unions’ power (which have been softened with predictable results).

The problem with insisting that “education is an investment” is that many institutionalized and powerful people believe it should be a unique form of investment whereby the simple fact of adding money increases profit, and wherein demanding accountability from the people who take that funding on the promise of making the investment bear fruit is an affront.

Education needs more accountability and less meddling from activists inside and outside of government.

On DOGE’s authority.

The great DOGE Authority Panic of 2025 appears to have passed, but in case you’re still interested (and to have it searchable on this site for future reference), lawyer Tom Renz’s review of the legal basis for the Department of Government Efficiency is worth a read.