THURSDAY: Massachusetts miasma un-muddled again!

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 2025

New York Times echoes Daily Howler: The Massachusetts "gerrymander" muddle has been unpacked again!

This muddle has been vexing the various savants employed by the Fox News Channel. For now, we'll take you back to the August 12 edition of The Will Cain Show (4 p.m., Monday through Friday).

Cain was sure that the Massachusetts congressional map just had to have been gerrymandered. His evidence, such as his evidence was, went exactly like this:

CAIN (8/12/25): It just kind of flies in the face of reality when I look at the state of Massachusetts, where Donald Trump gets 35% of the votes and there are zero Republican representatives from the state.

Words say one thing, and actions do something else in a place like Massachusetts. So, you can’t–so you can’t bring up random words and actions to me when I see the evidence in these states.

We'll link you to the full discussion below. Simply put, Cain was saying that Democrats do engage in gerrymandering, just like Texas is now doing. Just look at Massachusetts, where Candidate Trump got 35% of the vote—but all nine members of the state's delegation to the House of Representatives are Democrats! 

Please don't say that isn't a gerrymander! Any such statement flies in the face of reality!

Full disclosure: Sometimes, Democrats do gerrymander their congressional districts. The state of Illinois is a current prime example.

Also this: 

Will Cain is perfectly bright, in the basic IQ sense. Because of that observable fact, we sometimes find it hard to believe that he's being fully sincere in some of the mandated talking points he agrees to agree with.

This isn't necessarily one of those cases! As we've noted several times in recent weeks, the logic of redistricting and gerrymandering is routinely misconstrued. We're going to guess that Brother Cain didn't know why his presentation about the Bay State didn't make a whole lot of sense.

Today, this vexing piece of logic has been clarified for all time. In the New York Times, Nate Cohn has slain the dragon in an analysis piece which starts exactly like this:

Trump Says Massachusetts’ All-Blue Map Is Unfair. Is He Right?

It’s easy to understand why President Trump and Republicans point to the Massachusetts congressional map in their push to justify redistricting in Texas and other red states.

Last year, Mr. Trump won 36 percent of the state’s vote, but neither he nor Republican House candidates managed to win even one of nine congressional districts. The state’s map plan has been ranked as “more skewed” than 95 percent of plans nationwide by PlanScore, a nonprofit group that is advised by legal scholars, political scientists and mapping experts.

It certainly sounds unfair, but is it a gerrymander? That’s not so simple.

While it might seem reasonable to expect that Republicans would win three or four seats with more than a third of the presidential vote, it’s really not obvious that Republicans should win a single district in Massachusetts, let alone three. 

As always, we'd say that Coen is being too kind when he excuses the endless MAGA muddle about this basic point. Someone should have explained the logic of this matter to President Trump long ago—not that it would have made any difference.

That said, the incomprehension is general over the discourse with respect to this general topic. As he continues, Cohen explains what we've explained several times in the past few weeks. using similar numbers:

COEN (continuing directly): The problem is geography—or more specifically, the geographic distribution of a party’s voters across the state. For better or worse, congressional districts represent the voters of the different geographic areas of a state; they don’t directly represent a state’s voters. There is no guarantee that the state’s population as a whole will be well represented by the winners of each of a state’s geographic areas. This is at the heart of why it can be hard to detect—let alone prohibit—partisan gerrymandering.

Imagine, for instance, a state that votes 60-40 for one party, with every neighborhood voting 60-40. If so, it is impossible to draw a district for the minority party: While there are plenty of minority party voters, there’s no area that can be drawn to represent that party’s voters.

That's what we've been saying! If the population of a 60-40 state is evenly distributed across the state, it may be impossible to create a district which doesn't tilt strongly in favor of the statewide majority party.

Massachusetts is one such state. As Coen explains, there is no significant region of the state which doesn't tilt Democratic.

The heavily Democratic state of Maryland is different. Here in Maryland, we have one part of the state—the so-called "Eastern Shore" on the eastern side of the Chesapeake Bay—which tilts fairly strongly Republican.

Massachusetts has no such outlier region. For that reason, Maryland has one (1) Republican congressman. Massachusetts has none.

Coen goes into substantial detail about this elementary piece of logic. Not being the more typical Fox News Channel tribune, it seems to us that Cain should already have figured this out on his own.

To see him trying to puzzle this out, you can simply click this link for videotape of the August 12 show, as supplied by Mediaite. On that occasion, he was debating Texas state Rep. James Talarico, a Democrat, about this general matter.

For the record, Rep. Talarico didn't we explain the logic of this matter himself! He just kept noting that a Republican governor in Massachusetts had approved the existing congressional map.

With his new report, Coen has explained this matter in detail, convincingly slaying a dragon. In closing, though, we offer this basic point:

It won't make a lick of difference! Our discourse runs on the rocket fuel of endlessly bungled logic. 

The bungling is part of a widespread consensus. Nothing can, and nothing will, ever change that fact!


REVOLUTION: There was a peaceful happy feeling...

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 2025

...when Vladimir stepped off his plane: Is it possible that something good will emerge from the Trump-Witkoff diplomacy?

In theory, everything's possible! That said, it's as we noted in yesterday afternoon's report:

In his new column for the New York Times, Thomas Friedman quotes lengthy statements by Witkoff—lengthy statements about Vladimir Putin—which seem to have come from the twilight zone. Then too, there's what the sitting American president said when he spoke about this matter for twenty-five minutes this past Tuesday morning.

The venue may have been a bit of a problem. The president spoke for twenty-five minutes on the D-minus morning program, Fox & Friends.

He spoke to a trio of C-minus students. Later that same day, Tom Nichols tried to describe what had happened, writing for The Atlantic:

Trump Keeps Defending Russia

This morning, the commander in chief made clear that he does not understand the largest war in Europe, what started it, or why it continues. Worse, insofar as he does understand anything about Russia’s attempted conquest of Ukraine, he seems to have internalized old pro-Moscow talking points that even the Kremlin doesn’t bother with anymore.

The setting, as it so often is when Trump piles into a car with his thoughts and then goes full Thelma & Louise off a rhetorical cliff, was Fox & Friends. The Fox hosts, although predictably fawning, did their best to keep the president from the ledge, but when Trump pushes the accelerator, everyone goes along for the ride.

The subject, ostensibly, was Trump’s supposed diplomatic triumph at [Monday's] White House meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and seven European leaders...Trump ran through the usual items: The war was Joe Biden’s fault; the “Russia, Russia, Russia hoax”; the war never would have happened if Trump had been president. Unto ages of ages, amen.

But when the hosts asked specifically about making peace, the president of America sounded a lot like the president of Russia.

That's the way Nichols started. He didn't make it sound good. 

On this campus, we had happened to see the last few minutes of the Fox & Friends interview in real time. We read the Nichols piece before we reviewed the full session.

Regarding that 25-minute session, let us say this about that:

You can watch the whole darn thing simply by clicking this. We're forced to say that, when we did, the president's adoption of the Russkie viewpoint sounded even more extreme than what Nichols had said.

Also, the president spoke, once again, of his recent encounters with his current best friend.

In fairness, we aren't Russia policy experts here—but we may know how to step outside the narrowest lanes of understanding when we listen to President Trump. Along the way in his Fox & Friends session, he spoke of his personal interaction with his darling Vladimir in Alaska on Friday last.

He thought back on that personal meeting way up north. When he did, here's what he said:

PRESIDENT TRUMP (8/19/25): [The Russians] had no communication with the White House for years as people died—years, with Biden and his people. No communication! Putin told me—years! It was years when he didn't speak to anyone from the White House. And it was a long time that he didn't speak to anybody from Europe.

No, it's a fractured relationship. And when I came in, I always had, despite the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax, which truly was a very dangerous thing for our country, but despite that I maintained a very good relationship. 

I mean, you saw that when he got off his plane, I got off my plane, there’s a warmth there that you can’t—you know, there’s a decent feeling, and it’s a good thing, not a bad thing. 

People will say, "Oh, it's such a terrible thing." It's not a terrible thing.

Borrowing from the Eagles, it was a peaceful happy feeling as the two friends stepped off their planes. Indeed, "There's a warmth there that you can't"—at that point, what did the president leave unsaid?

There's a warmth there that you can't fake or misconstrue? Is that what the president meant?

So said the American president. He said it's not a terrible thing that he and Putin share this peaceful easy feeling—this warmth. Regarding that, we must quickly add this:

The president said it's not a terrible thing. For better or worse, correctly or otherwise, many Russia experts don't believe that it's a "thing" at all!

Rightly or wrongly, many observers believe that Trump is getting played by this former KGB man. There's no way to prove some such assessment—but as he spoke with the trio of friends, Trump also described his phone call with his friend on Monday afternoon Eastern time—the call he made in the course of his meeting with President Zelensky and a phalanx of Euro officials.

At one point, President Trump rang Moscow up. Here's how the phone call went, he now told the three friends at Fox:

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I think [the European leaders] sort of knew at the end of the meeting I was going to call President Putin. And President Putin expected it and he was there.

Now by the time I called him, it was one o'clock in the morning in Russia. Russia is a big place. You know, they have eleven time zones, I believe. Nine or eleven, but I think it's eleven. 

Think of it—eleven time zones! That's a lot of time zones. So it was late—it was like one o'clock in the morning, but he picked it up very happily. Sure, he works very hard, like we all do. 

And we had a very good call. And I told him that, "We’re going to set up a meeting with President Zelensky, and you and he will meet. And then after that meeting, if everything works out OK, I’ll meet and we’ll wrap it up."

Despite the profusion of time zones (eleven!), Vladimir took the prearranged call. He picked UP the phone very happily, and the two men had a good call.

Speaking with the trio of friends, the president left the impression that he had then told Vladimir what would come next, and that Valdimir had happily acceded to the president's plan. 

Sadly, this is the rest of the story:

Despite the very happy call, the Russkies have now splashed cold water on the plan that President Trump described. They've said that any such meeting with President Zelensky is, at best, a long way off. There is, of course, no way to know if the president's account of the good, happy call was accurate to begin with.

There had been a peaceful happy feeling as Putin stepped off his plane. There was a warmth between these two titans—a warmth you simply can't [fake]. And it was, of course, at Monday's meeting where President Trump took poor Macron aside.

He took him aside and made him listen to this remarkable suggestion:

PRESIDENT TRUMP (8/18/25): I think he wants to make a deal. I think he wants to make a deal for me. 

Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds.

[Addressing the entire room]

Sit down. Sit down, everybody. I think we’ll let the press come in for a minute.

"As crazy as it sounds," the president said, he has the impression that Vladimir Putin wants to make a deal for peace. More specifically, he thinks Putin wants to make a peace deal for him—for President Donald J. Trump!

We can't help thinking that we're hearing a type of delusion floating around inside these strange remarks. We know that we thought we heard the voice of Gretta Conroy when Trump made that last strange comment—when he said he thinks that President Putin wants to make a deal for him.

We thought we heard her speaking about the gentle boy who, she said, had "died for me"—the gentle boy who had died for her when he was just seventeen.

("I can see him so plainly," she said. "Such eyes as he had: big, dark eyes! And such an expression in them.")

At any rate, Putin wants to make a peace deal—and he wants to do it for President Trump! The president was willing to say that it sounds crazy—but we'll guess he really believed what he said when he said those words to Macron.

We've yet to show you what the president said last Friday in the very brief press event at the end of the Anchorage summit. We've yet to revisit what Mary Trump said about her famous uncle's profusion of "psychopathologies" in her best-selling book, Too Much and Never Enough. 

We've yet to revisit what she said about the way her famous uncle came to be the way he is. Even as late as 2020, she was still able to pity the child, even as she voiced her great fears about the adult.

We have only one day left this week. (Saturday has already been slotted to belong to Joy Reid.)

That said, were we right in what we thought we heard when President Trump spoke to Macron? Were we hearing some sort of delusion being given voice by the world's most powerful man? 

Also this:

In these deeply challenging times, will the withered voices of Blue America ever agree to consider such points? A withered discourse helped bring us here. Will we ever improve our game?

Tomorrow: As spoken way up north

WEDNESDAY: Please listen "inside" what the president said!

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2025

Also, Friedman quotes Steve Witkoff: In this morning's report, we compared something President Trump recently said to a famous statement by Gretta Conroy in Joyce's acclaimed novella, The Dead.

Trump was speaking to President Macron; the Joyce character was speaking to her husband, Gabriel. Here on this sprawling campus, when we heard the audiotape of the more recent statement, we immediately thought of the other.

The statements in questions are these:

From the pages of this week's news:

PRESIDENT TRUMP (8/18/25): I think he wants to make a deal. I think he wants to make a deal for me. 

Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds.

[Addressing the entire room]

Sit down. Sit down, everybody. I think we’ll let the press come in for a minute.

From Joyce's novella, 1914:

“I suppose you were in love with this Michael Furey, Gretta, he said.

“I was great with him at that time,” she said.

Her voice was veiled and sad. Gabriel, feeling now how vain it would be to try to lead her whither he had purposed, caressed one of her hands and said, also sadly:

“And what did he die of so young, Gretta? Consumption, was it?”

“I think he died for me,” she answered.

Here on this campus, when we heard the more recent statement, it sounded a bit like the other. In suggesting that you consider the pair of statements, we're suggesting that you start to listen with your feelings—quite possibly, with the insights the poets alone can provide.

As Gretta Conroy's revelation continues, we learn that her assessment—“I think he died for me,” she said—was based on a firm foundation. President Trump's statement to Macron sounds quite different to us.

What can we learn from the sound of that statement? We 'll pick up there tomorrow, eventually returning to Mary Trump's best-selling book, Too Much and Neve Enough. For today, we'll suggest that you consider Thomas Friedman's new column for the New York Times.

We're not crazy about the headline. But here's how the column begins:

Ukraine Diplomacy Reveals How Un-American Trump Is

I am really trying to be fair in analyzing the Trump-Putin-Zelensky-Europe drama that has been playing out the past few weeks. I am trying to balance President Trump’s commendable desire to end the murderous war in Ukraine with the utterly personalized, seat-of-the-pants, often farcical way he is going about it—including the energy that everyone involved has to expend feeding his ego and avoiding his wrath, before they even get to the hellish compromises needed to make peace.

For now, the whole thing leaves me deeply uncomfortable.

I have covered a lot of diplomatic negotiations since becoming a journalist in 1978, but I have never seen one when where one of the leaders—in this case Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky—felt the need to thank our president about 15 times in the roughly four and a half minutes he addressed him with the press in the room. Not to mention the flattery that our other European allies felt they needed to heap on him as well.

When our allies have to devote this much energy just to keep the peace with our president, before they even begin to figure out how to make peace with Vladimir Putin; when they have to constantly look over their shoulder to make sure that Trump is not shooting them in the back with a social media post, before Putin shoots them in the front with a missile; and when our president doesn’t understand that when Putin says to Ukraine, in effect “Marry me or I’ll kill you,” that Zelensky needs more than just an American marriage counselor, it all leads me to ask: How is this ever going to work?

For our money, Friedman is being overly "fair" when he accepts the characterization according to which President Trump is exhibiting a "commendable desire to end the murderous war in Ukraine." 

We know of no reason to believe it's as simple as that—or even that it's anything like that at all.

Beyond that, Friedman describes the hoops our "allies" must jump through as they try to work with the sitting president. Friedman says this raises a troubling question:

How is this ever going to work?

In our view, it also raises the pair of questions we've now been asking for years:

Is something wrong with President Trump? Also, why isn't anyone willing to ask?

The press corps has agreed that those last two questions must never be asked. It seems to us that, if we listen to what the president said to Macron, we may be hearing a part of the answer to the first of those two questions.

In his column, Friedman proceeds to quote Steve Witkoff at substantial length. More specifically, he quotes statements in which Witkoff offers his assessment of Vladimir Putin, with whom he has been negotiating on President Trump's behalf.

Witkoff's lengthy statements sound almost completely delusional. At one point, Friedman says this:

FRIEDMAN: It gets worse. Trump is so deluded as to Putin’s nature that during his summit with European leaders on Monday he was overheard on an open microphone telling President Emmanuel Macron of France about Putin: “I think he wants to make a deal for me. Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds.”

Interesting! That said, delusion can be a colloquial term, or it can also go clinical.

In fairness to Witkoff, he may simply be saying what he feels he has to say, given the outlook of the man who has made him our leading ambassador.

When we listened to Trump this week, we also thought we heard the voice of Gretta Conroy. In the next few days, we'll tell you what we thought we heard. 

Mary Trump's book still seems highly instructive to us. Is there any chance—any chance at all—that we Blues can improve our game?

Hitting the links: The Dead became a feature film in 1987, starring Anjelica Huston. Don't cheat yourself out of the chance to see her perform the scene in which, weeping, Gretta Conroy explains her statement:
I think he died for me.

 To watch that scene, click here.

To read that scene as Joyce wrote it, you can simply click this link, then scroll to the end of the story.

 

REVOLUTION: "I think he died for me," she said!

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2025

On Monday, Trump said something quite similar: On Monday, the president spoke to Emmanuel Macron, president of a vexatious nation called France.

His words were captured by an active mike. He'd just spoken to Putin on the phone. Strangely enough, the president now said this:

PRESIDENT TRUMP (8/18/25): I think he wants to make a deal. I think he wants to make a deal for me. 

Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds.

[Addressing the entire room]

Sit down. Sit down, everybody. I think we’ll let the press come in for a minute.

He seemed to be saying that Vladimir Putin wanted to fashion a peace deal. More remarkably, he seemed to be saying that Putin wanted to fashion a peace deal for him, apparently as some sort of favor for the sitting American president

The president said that sounded crazy. We're strongly inclined to agree.

We also agree with the various analysts who have said it was a very strange moment when Trump said that to Macron.  Also this:

When we heard the tap of what Trump said, we thought of the great novella by Joyce. Inevitably, we thought of the climactic scene of the acclaimed story, The Dead.

 The leading authority guides us:

The Dead (Joyce short story)

"The Dead" is the final short story in the 1914 collection Dubliners by James Joyce. It is by far the longest story in the collection and, at 15,952 words, is almost long enough to be described as a novella. The story deals with themes of love and loss, as well as raising questions about the nature of the Irish identity.

The story was well-received by critics and academics and described by T. S. Eliot as one of the greatest English-language short stories ever written. It was later adapted into...the 1987 film The Dead written by Tony Huston and directed by John Huston.

[...]

Joyce biographer and critic Richard Ellmann wrote: "In its lyrical, melancholy acceptance of all that life and death offer, 'The Dead' is a linchpin in Joyce's work."...On the centennial of the release of Dubliners, Dan Barry of The New York Times called "The Dead" "just about the finest short story in the English language."

This story offers a critique of a society that has been gripped by a deadening paralysis of the spirit...

Ah yes, the "deadening paralysis of the spirit"—the paralysis that had somehow managed to grip the Irish society Joyce believed he saw around him. But let's focus on the direct connection between that widely acclaimed short story and the peculiar thing the president recently said.

We turn now to the end of Joyce's story—to the end of a long and convivial night: 

The elderly sisters Kate and Julia Morkan have staged their annual party in celebration of Twelfth Night. Now, as the party is winding down, a revelation is drawing near. It will involve Gabriel Conroy, nephew to the Misses Morkan, and his wife, Gretta Conroy:

As the party winds down, the guests filter out, and Gabriel prepares to leave. He finds his wife standing, apparently lost in thought, at the top of the stairs. In another room Bartell D'Arcy sings "The Lass of Aughrim." 

The Conroys leave; and Gabriel is excited, for it has been a long time since he and Gretta have had a night in a hotel to themselves. When they arrive at the hotel, Gabriel's aspirations of passionate lovemaking are conclusively dashed by Gretta's lack of interest. 

He presses her about what is bothering her, and she admits that she is "thinking about that song, The Lass of Aughrim." She admits that it reminds her of someone, a young man named Michael Furey, who had courted her in her youth in Galway. He used to sing "The Lass of Aughrim" for her. 

Michael Furey used to sign that song for her, she says. She has thereby started to echo the president's peculiar statement. 

Her revelation continues from there. You can see Anjelica Huston performing this scene simply by clicking this. Our advice to you would be this:

Don't cheat yourself out of watching.

For our money, the actor Donal McCann, playing her husband, may not have captured the scene in quit the way she did. We'll attribute that to imperfect direction. But as you can see by clicking this, these are the lines from Joyce's original text in which the revelation about Michael Furey is being completed:

“He is dead,” she said at length. “He died when he was only seventeen. Isn’t it a terrible thing to die so young as that?”

“What was he?” asked Gabriel, still ironically.

“He was in the gasworks,” she said.

Gabriel felt humiliated by the failure of his irony and by the evocation of this figure from the dead, a boy in the gasworks. While he had been full of memories of their secret life together, full of tenderness and joy and desire, she had been comparing him in her mind with another.

[...]

“I suppose you were in love with this Michael Furey, Gretta,” he said.

“I was great with him at that time,” she said.

Her voice was veiled and sad. Gabriel, feeling now how vain it would be to try to lead her whither he had purposed, caressed one of her hands and said, also sadly:

“And what did he die of so young, Gretta? Consumption, was it?”

“I think he died for me,” she answered.

(“Poor fellow,” Gretta soon says. “He was very fond of me and he was such a gentle boy.")

I think he died for me, she said. For our money, Anjelica Huston's performance of this story cuts extremely deep.

More than a century later, the strange man who is this nation's sitting president made a somewhat similar declaration, in this case regarding the deep friendship he seems to believe he maintains with Russia's Vladimir Putin.

Gretta's story continues from there. We thought of that famous scene from The Dead when we heard the tape of what the president recently said. 

At this juncture, we'll recommend this part of the synopsis we've posted above:

The Dead offers a critique of a society that has been gripped by a deadening paralysis of the spirit...

Our own society lies in the grip of a similar paralysis. That deadening paralysis is reflected, on a minute to minute basis, by the shriveled way our own Blue American tribunes are willing or able to discuss the remarkable oddness of the sitting president, the revolutionary leader in question.

Is something wrong with President Trump? If so, that would of course be a human tragedy—but under the circumstances, it would also represent a dangerous state of affairs.

Is something wrong with President Trump? The tribunes of our deadened world have agreed to avoid that obvious question. This Monday, the question loomed up again, as the president made a very strange declaration in a whispered aside to the president of France.

He seems to think that the man he calls "Vladimir" wants to fashion a peace deal—wants to fashion a peace deal for him! Presumably, this's an example of delusional thinking of the highest possible order.

What might that mean about President Trump? Tomorrow and Friday, we'll return to that question—but we leave you today with this broader point:

Those of us in Blue America need to step beyond our own tribe's deadened spirit. We need to see ourselves for who we are—and for who we plainly aren't at this point.

We need to find a richer way of understanding our current predicament. We may need to find the way that our deadened civilization can be "renewed by...the undemocratic but sovereign power of the imagination, by the undemocratic power which makes poets the unacknowledged legislators of all mankind, the power which makes all things new."

We may be able to do some such by stepping outside the intellectual and spiritual poverty of the moment—the poverty of the shriveled discourse which emerges from our current round-the-clock pseudo-news environment.

We may need to let our feelings bloom, perhaps by consulting the poets, with Joyce as one example.

"I think he died for me," she said. As her story continues, we see that the weeping Gretta wasn't caught in the grip of a delusion in her thought about the gentle boy who died when he was just 17. 

Almost surely, our sitting president is. We very badly need to discuss the actual situation our deadened society is in.

We need to get wiser and deeper and better. What is actually going on within that peculiar man—within the revolutionary leader who, we're told, was divinely appointed to his current post?

Tomorrow: Delusions and fixed ideas


TUESDAY: Matt Bai says he has found the villains!

TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 2025 

Could the villain really be him? The fury had to go somewhere today. When the sitting president awoke, the fury and rage went here:

Trump Wakes Up to Trash ‘STUPID AND UGLY WINDMILLS’ for ‘KILLING’ New Jersey

That's the headline on the Mediaite report. To read the actual Truth Social post, you can just click here.

That's where the fury went first. Last night, on the Gutfeld! show, Greg Gutfeld started with one of his typical jokes about the way Taylor Swift is really just a 6. Soon, he was offering a sally about the alleged effect on crime of the president's takeover of the D.C. police. 

In our view, the comment came from within a peculiar, unexplained soul:

GUTFELD (8/18/25): It's gotten so quiet on the streets that you can hear Rashida Tlaib's mustache growing.

[LAUGHTER, APPLAUSE]

Pathetically, LAUGHTER, APPLAUSE! At any rate, President Trump is full of fury and anger, and so is this "cable news" star.

For the record, "Tayler Swift is just a 6" is a standard theme for this aging moral pervert. So too with the physical insults—fat as a cow; not sexually attractive; too many facelifts—he aims at every (liberal, progressive, Democratic) woman who swims into his ken.

Night after night after night after night, we remain amazed by his unrecognizable conduct. We're even more amazed by the fact that his nightly behavior has been thoroughly normalized—has been completely accepted—by our tribunes here in Blue America, by the people we now call "The Best."

It's a very depressing time to glance about the society. That disordered fellow's moral squalor has been thoroughly normalized. So is President Trump's constant massacre of anything known to be an actual fact.

Unfortunately, the normalization performed by us Blues is as bad as the peculiar conduct displayed by (so many of) them Reds. We offer that as a prelude to a recent column by Matt Bai.

The column appeared in the Washington Post. Headline included, it started off like this:

Our institutions aren’t failing. We are.

There’s a lot of talk now about failing institutions. Every time President Donald Trump pushes the boundaries of his power—this month alone, he commanded Texas to create more Republican congressional seats and staged a hostile takeover of D.C.—his critics ask: Will no one stand in his way? Where are the pillars of democracy when we need them?

I’ve raised these questions myself, yet lately I’m coming around to another way of thinking. Maybe the most culpable institution in our national breakdown isn’t any branch of government or industry—but rather the American people.

We’re the ones expressly charged with holding a rogue president accountable, and we’re failing spectacularly.

We the people are "failing spectacularly," Bai has decided to tell us. From there, he proceeds to slice the lunch meat remarkably thin, eventually serving this:

I’m not talking about the large segment of voters who disdain Trump, or the celebrity-loving Trumpists who would make him Pharaoh if they could. I’m talking mainly about the centrist and conservative voters who wince at what Trump does and wish he were a better person—but for whom tax cuts and anti-woke policies seem worth the trade-off. These are the voters who got Trump elected, and these are the voters who enable him still, more than any judge or congressman.

It isn't all Trump voters, just some—and it certainly isn't Us! So says the incoherent diagnostician of modern-day moral greatness.

There's no great gain likely to come from an attempt to say who is really at fault. To Bai, we'd be inclined to offer this:

Mother-frumper, heal thyself! 

Mofo, heal thyself—it's an ancient bromide! In this instance, we're aiming it at "the knights of the keyboard" (Ted Williams) who simply aren't willing to come to terms with the president's apparent mental disorder, or with the moral and intellectual squalor of astonishing people like Gutfeld and his pals at the Fox News Channel.

The homunculus keeps telling us that Swift is really a 6! The desire of men of his type to subjugate women goes all the way back to the dawn of the West—all the way back to the opening verses of the Iliad, to cite one famous example.

(Everyone in the Achaean camp is aversion of Jeffrey Epstein.)

The impulse is deeply bred in the bone. A first cousin to this impulse lies at the heart of a great deal of the religious zeal which helps propel the current revolution. Greg Gutfeld suffers from the misfortune of having this poison and this consummate dumbness within. 

He works his woman hatred night after night. As he does, the much finer people—the people like Bai—know they must look away.

Also this: Gutfeld's undisguised misogyny is never mentioned at Mediaite. 

The misogyny is wholly undisguised—but even then, it can't be mentioned! It's the ancient cable news "problem that has no name!"

REVOLUTION: Revolutionary madness is in the air!

TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 2025 

Who is the sitting president? On this very morning, the madcap madness of revolution was possibly in the air.

To appearances, that madness maybe possibly seemed to be lurking in several major headlines. In this morning's New York Times, one news report starts like this:

Trump Wants to End Mail-In Voting Ahead of Next Year’s Midterms

President Trump vowed on Monday to lead a movement to eliminate the use of mail-in ballots, continuing his legally dubious crusade against the nation’s voting rules, which he has long attacked and falsely blamed for his 2020 election loss.

Mr. Trump, who has opposed mail-in voting for years, wrote on social media that he would sign an executive order to “help bring HONESTY to the 2026 Midterm Elections,” though neither he nor White House officials provided any detail about what the order would entail. Later on Monday, while meeting with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, Mr. Trump said the executive order was being written “by the best lawyers in the country” to end all mail-in ballots.

As we noted yesterday afternoon, the president's vow was driven along by his usual wild misstatements. Adding to the air of madness, the news report includes this:

Last week, Mr. Trump said President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had discussed the issue of mail-in voting during their summit on Friday in Alaska. Mr. Trump said in an interview with Fox News that the Russian leader had agreed with him that the 2020 election had been rigged in favor of Joseph R. Biden Jr.

“You know, Vladimir Putin said something, one of the most interesting things,” Mr. Trump said. “He said, ‘Your election was rigged because you have mail-in voting.’ He said, ‘Mail-in voting, every election.’ He said, ‘No country has mail-in voting. It’s impossible to have mail-in voting and have honest elections.’”

Having flown to Alaska to discuss a war, the pair were now talking about mail-in voting? At any rate, the upshot was this—after Dear Vladimir allegedly trashed the procedure, the sitting president jetted home and made a vow to ban it.

In fact, many countries have mail-in voting. The madness of the president's personal culture of endless misstatements is marbled all through this crusade. With respect to that personal culture of madness and crazy misstatement, this report is sitting on the front page of this morning's print editions:

An Ohio City Faces a Future Without Haitian Workers: ‘It’s Not Going to Be Good’
Springfield faced a crisis after Donald Trump falsely claimed Haitians were eating pets. Now his policies are driving out workers like Wilford Rinvil, who left for Canada.

Springfield, Ohio now seems be facing some problems. That's the story that was driven by the crazy misstatements, by the president and by the disordered beast at his side, about the way the Haitian residents were eating the city's pets.

Mail-in voting takes place all over the world; no one was eating the pets. That said, madness tends to accompany revolution. Skipping past this additional headline—"Trump Administration Scraps Research Into Health Disparities"—we'll note that a different type of revolution gripped China way back when. 

It was called the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. Just like that, and with great fury and great ardor, madness was in the air:

Cultural Revolution

The Cultural Revolution, formally known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a sociopolitical movement in the People's Republic of China (PRC). It was launched by CCP chairman Mao Zedong in 1966 and lasted until his death in 1976. Its stated goal was to preserve Chinese socialism by purging remnants of capitalist and traditional elements from Chinese society.

In May 1966, with the help of the Cultural Revolution Group, Mao launched the Revolution and said that bourgeois elements had infiltrated the government and society with the aim of restoring capitalism. Mao called on young people to bombard the headquarters, and proclaimed that "to rebel is justified." Mass upheaval began in Beijing with Red August in 1966. Many young people, mainly students, responded by forming cadres of Red Guards throughout the country. Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung became revered within his cult of personality. In 1967, emboldened radicals began seizing power from local governments and party branches, establishing new revolutionary committees in their place while smashing public security, procuratorate and judicial systems. These committees often split into rival factions, precipitating armed clashes among the radicals. After the fall of Lin Biao in 1971, the Gang of Four became influential in 1972, and the Revolution continued until Mao's death in 1976, soon followed by the arrest of the Gang of Four.

The Cultural Revolution was characterized by violence and chaos across Chinese society. Estimates of the death toll vary widely, typically ranging from 1–2 million, including a massacre in Guangxi that included acts of cannibalism, as well as massacres in Beijing, Inner Mongolia, Guangdong, Yunnan, and Hunan. Red Guards sought to destroy the Four Olds (old ideas, old culture, old customs, and old habits), which often took the form of destroying historical artifacts and cultural and religious sites. Tens of millions were persecuted...

Estimates of the death toll range from 1–2 million? Nothing like that has happened here, even as our own revolutionary cadres struggle to smash our own society's alleged versions of "the four olds."

Nothing that sweeping has happened here! But madness comes at times like these, and questions like the one shown below can even be formulated, and then asked, right in the Oval Office:

President Zelensky, are you prepared to keep sending Ukrainian troops to their deaths for another couple years, or are you going to agree to redraw the maps?

In yesterday's Oval Office event, that was the first question directed at President Zelensky. 

Some have said that the question dropped a Kremlin-adjacent framework on the terrible dilemma facing the Ukrainian president, whose country has been under attack for well over three years.

The somewhat peculiar question came from the Fox News Channel. In fairness to its creator, President Trump had offered this somewhat peculiar Truth Social post on Sunday morning at 9:17 a.m., two days after his latest meeting with Vladimir:

Truth Details

Donald J. Trump 
@realDonaldTrump

President Zelenskyy of Ukraine can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight. Remember how it started. No getting back Obama given Crimea (12 years ago, without a shot being fired!), and NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE. Some things never change!!!

It could almost be said that yesterday's question to Zelensky simply followed the company line.

In fairness, it has always been true! In theory, the leader of any invaded nation can always "end the war" simply by choosing to surrender. Given two days to think about his meeting with Vladimir, that was the somewhat peculiar thought that seemed to be back again in the revolutionary president's mind.

President Trump is the person who has triggered the revolutionary zeal which is apparent all through the land. His performance is characterized by his familiar wild misstatements and by his frequently shifting set of frameworks and rationales.

Last night, Lawrence O'Donnell stated a view about the president's mental functioning with which we're inclined to disagree. (We're glad he said what he did.) In theory, carefully selected medical specialists would have a better shot at assessing the matter at hand, but the mainstream press corps has agreed that such discussions must never occur.

The Cultural Revolution was swept along by the ardor gripping "many young people." In the current revolutionary moment, the wild misstatements of the sitting president are persistently smoothed and disappeared by the array of stooge foot soldiers who got to war on the Fox News Channel every day.

In yesterday morning's report, we showed you the way three of those soldiers fought back last Friday evening after that channel's correspondent has said that the day's Subarctic Summit seemed to have gone rather poorly.

As we noted, that pushback occurred a mere nine minutes later. Four hours later, with midnight approaching, Trace Gallagher was still trying to lay down the law.

At the end of that evening's Fox News @ Night program, he offered feedback from six Fox News Channel viewers. Feedback from viewers had been sought under terms of this chyron:

TRUMP-PUTIN SUMMIT
DO YOU THINK THE MEETING OVERALL WAS A SUCCESS?

Had the Stumblebum Summit been a success? Instant appraisals are often misguided, but battling now to keep hope alive, Gallagher ended his program by reading six alleged responses from alleged viewers. 

At 11:58 p.m. Eastern, he ended his program like this:

GALLAGHER (8/15/25): Steve says, "I believe that, all in all, it was a success. Unfortunately Trump didn't get a ceasefire. We'll get it on the next meeting."

The text of the messages appeared on the screen as Gallagher continued to read them:

Leo says: "President Trump didn't walk out like he said he would from a failed meeting. So there must have been progress."

Jim: "A success in that Putin came TO America. But it's just the first step."

Tammy: "It all depends on your definition of success. Although there was no ceasefire, evidently, Putin agreed to some things."

Joseph: "It was successful. Trump has Putin in the palm of his hand. There will be a trilateral meeting and peace."

And Scott says, "I think the fact that there will be a second meeting proves that this first one was a success."

Gallagher read six texts. The assessment was unanimous. The president had Putin in the palm of his hand. The fact that he didn't walk out of the meeting showed that there had been progress.

That said, the president would soon say that he had changed his mind about a ceasefire, thereby following Vladimir's lead.  By Sunday morning, he was back to angrily saying that Zelensky can end the war any time he wants.

The employees at Fox will continue to drive the messaging forward. Out in the country, six out of six Fox News Channel viewers will agree on the current points.

Some of the fervor comes from religious belief; some of the fervor doesn't. But what's going on with the president? 

We tend to disagree with something O'Donnell said last night, but who is this person? Who is the person who misstates elementary facts so crazily, who lurches from one basic stance to the next?

Tomorrow, we'll return to that basic question. For today, remember this:

Vladimir said mail-in voting is no darn good! Just like that, the commander in chief returned to his crazy misstatements about that topic as he launched his latest crusade.

Tomorrow: His darling Clementine