2025-04-01 05:05:18
2025-04-01 05:05:15
2025-04-01 05:05:15
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#ConnieWillis on #trump #Elon, #Tesla and the whole #uspol mess. #liberated from FB
Social Security, the Smithsonian, and Saturday Night Live's Cold Open
March 30, 2025
By Connie Willis
There were over 300 Tesla Takedown rallies all over the world yesterday:
-- People have been posting pictures from San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Cincinnati, Ohio, Watertown, Massachusetts, Chicago, Illinois, Seattle, Washington, Miami, Florida, San Jose, California, and Austin and Southlake, Texas. And from London, Australia, New Zealand, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Ireland.
--They had hoped for protests at all 277 Tesla dealerships in the country, and they came close to achieving that goal. (For some it’s not practical. The Tesla dealership in Greeley is tucked away on a back road which nobody ever travels, and any protest couldn’t be seen from the highway, but there were protests in Denver, Colorado Springs, Littleton, Broomfield, Boulder, Westminster, and the Eagle County Airport.)
--Mokurai: "All the protest organizations around the country are getting the idea of protesting EVERYWHERE, notably on every college and university campus, not just in the biggest cities. Indivisible, 50501, Tesla Takedowns, you name it."
Some people have asked, what’s the point of protesting? It doesn’t accomplish anything. But I disagree. I think protesting--including town halls and rallies and rallies--accomplish a lot:
--They make news. People complain that the mainstream media doesn’t cover them, but they do if the rallies and protests are big enough, and besides, there are lots of other forms of media, from Facebook to Bluesky and Twitter and TikTok. People are sharing their protest pictures like crazy and posting videos of the town halls.
--They send a message to our representatives in Congress. This goes especially for town halls, which the GOP is scared to death of. The national party sent out a memo telling them to stop having them because they just produced bad video clips and soundbites the Dems could use. (Which proves they’re getting news coverage.)
--They send a message to Wall Street and the stock market, who actually both pay attention to what’s going on. Tesla sales are tanking and Target sales are way down.
--They send a message to the rest of the world, who are definitely watching us and wondering whether we’re all going along with this or are just as upset as they are about what’s happening.
--They put you in touch with other groups and activities. At the rallies and protests, there are places for people to sign up for Indivisible and ActBlue and their local Democratic Party so you can get even more involved.
--They raise your own morale. People who’ve participated in the protests and rallies talk about being energized and happy to meet other people and realize they’re not alone, that lots of other people are as upset as they are.
--They play an important part in fighting the Trump regime. Resistance movements require two things--tinder and a spark. You’re providing the tinder.
In SignalGate News:
--Saturday Night Live’s cold open was about--you guessed it--the Signal chat. It was dead-on. My favorite moment was when they listed Pete Hegseth’s emojis. He texted a fist, a flag, and a flame. They read it as "Fist, Flag, Tesla." But you MUST see the whole thing:
--Ben Dreyfuss: "It’s very serious, obviously, but I do think it’s very funny imagining how they all felt when they saw the ‘Jeffrey Goldberg has left the chat’ notification."
--There’s been another security leak. Two Trump administration spreadsheets with highly sensitive information on programs funded by the State Department and USAID were sent to Congress and leaked online, endangering workers working under repressive regimes. The groups had pressed the Trump administration to keep sensitive information in the spreadsheets private and were assured that it would.
--An International non-profit executive said, "In all our years of securing grants, we have never seen the safety of government partners treated with such reckless abandon. People will lose their liberty, and possibly even more, because of this."
--Trump announced he’s not firing anybody over the Signal chat. He said: "I have no idea what Signal is. I don’t care what Signal is. All I can tell you is it’s just a witch hunt, and it’s the only thing the press wants to talk about because you have nothing else to talk about. Because it’s been the greatest 100-day Presidency in the history of our country."
--Mike Waltz told Trump he never met Jeffrey Goldberg. Now a photo has surfaced showing them standing right next to each other at a public function.
--I told you yesterday that Pete Hegseth kept bringing his wife to work. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the reason is to keep others from asking him about his alleged sexual misconduct.
--Trump’s people have all gone into hiding. Not a single one of them was on the Sunday shows. (They know just how deadly this is for them.)
TrumpsTaxes: "My hope is that when career prosecutors at Defense, NSA, CIA, State, and other agencies absorb the sheer hypocrisy of their bosses getting away with sharing classified information, with zero punishment, they will anonymously leak every sordid story, rumor, and detail about their bosses to the press."
--First Dog on the Moon cartoon: "What fun things did we learn from the super secret chat? 1. These might be some of the most powerful people in the world, but they are a long way from being the smartest. 2. There are no longer any consequences for anything ever. 3. European freeloading is PATHETIC. 4. Emojis are good again? 5. Be right back, just playing Candy Crush."
In deportation news:
--A University of Minnesota student was detained. Nothing else is known, not even the student’s name, which ICE agents refuse to reveal.
--ICE agents went to an elementary school in Washington, D.C. to grab a contract employee, but they left without making an arrest after school officials required ID and a warrant. (Translation: What they’re doing is totally illegal and they know it.)
--Bill Kristol: "MAGA Congresswoman in America: ‘You violated the law, you don’t get due process.’ Queen of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland: ‘Sentence first, verdict afterward.’"
--Judge Patricia Millett: "Nazis got better treatment under the Alien Enemies Act than has happened here."
--Immigration lawyer: "The administration is looking for numbers. Without actually reviewing if it was legal, if it was right, if it was morally correct to do what they’ve done. They don’t care about that."
--Adam Serwer: "Trump and his advisers simply hope the public is foolish or shortsighted enough to believe that if they are not criminals or deviants or terrorists or foreigners or traitors, then they have no reason to worry. Eventually no one will have any rights that the state need respect, because the public will have sacrificed them in the name of punishing people it was told did not deserve them."
Trump’s now going after the Smithsonian and the National Zoo:
--He signed an executive order yesterday saying that he was taking them over to root out "improper, divisive, or anti-American ideology."
--He particularly targeted the National Museum of African American History and Culture, the Women’s History Museum, and the American Art Museum. He said the National Museum of African American History and Culture "espouses a corrosive ideology."
--The Smithsonian was created by an Act of Congress. It has funding from private endowments, but it gets 2/3 of its budget from the federal government.
--The employees now face the same terrible dilemma other agencies have faced, whether to stay and try to protect as much as you can or quit. "If they stay in their jobs, they’re in effect working for an authoritarian takeover of what they do." But if they go, they’ll be risking leaving it in the hands of people who’ve had no compunction about deleting websites. Will they also try to destroy paintings, pottery, historical artifacts and documents?
--The Zoo thing apparently involves the Chinese pandas--and evolution.
--The executive order also demands that all Confederate statues and monuments be put back up and a statue of an anti-slavery Supreme Court justice.
--Lauren Wolfe: "This is unabashed fascism."
--Jeff Stein: "Trump goes full-on Soviet with intent to scrub the Smithsonian, museums, etc., of ‘improper ideology.’"
--David Blight of the Organization of American Historians: "It’s a declaration of war. It’s arrogant and appalling for them to claim they have the power and the right to say what history actually is and how it should be exhibited, written, and taught. "
In Social Security news:
--Trump has told Musk and DOGE he wants the Social Security cuts speeded up.
--People all over the country are reporting long waits, waves of calls, and website crashes. In many cases Social Security administrators are telling people who call that the wait time is over 2 hours long and then hanging up on them.
--Social Security says they’ve delayed plans to cut phone services by 2 weeks and ditched a proposal that would have forced the disabled and elderly to visit a physical office to deal with problems with their benefits or apply for benefits.
--Musk and DOGE’s plan at Social Security has been leaked. It is to completely redo the Social Security Administration’s code in a matter of months. Experts say the payments are currently made using 40-year-old COBOL code, which has had 40 years of additions and corrections, and that safely converting COBOL and rewriting code takes years, including months of analysis, years of coding, and rigorous testing for functionality and performance. The attempt to do this in mere months is likely to break the entire thing.
--Social Security employees say they will be doing their beta testing on vulnerable seniors.
--Musk is now claiming that "As a result of the work of DOGE, legitimate recipients of Social Security will receive more money, not less money."
--Paul Krugman, talking about the elimination of Social Security: "On this as on other issues, above all rule of law and the survival of democracy, the ‘alarmists’ whose warnings were dismissed by the supposedly savvy have been completely vindicated."
In cowardly, sniveling capitulation news:
--The White House Correspondents Association (the group that hosts the Correspondents Dinner, you know, the one where Obama OBLITERATED Trump and so did Stephen Colbert) has fired the comedian they hired for this year, Amber Ruffin, because Trump officials complained about her.
--A federal prosecutor in Los Angeles was fired at the behest of the White House, after lawyers for a fast-food executive he was prosecuting pushed Trump officials to drop all charges against him.
--Johns Hopkins told their faculty not to intervene in ICE detainments on campus.
In non-cowardly, Standing Up to the Bastards news:
--At the opening performance of the season for the Buffalo Philharmonic, a woman from M and T Bank (who sponsors the concerts) came out before the performance started and spoke about the orchestra’s support for IDEA--Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access. She got a two-minute standing ovation.
In other news:
--As of this point, ALL USAID employees have been fired. The last ones got an e-mail Friday night.
--Trump has now sicced the FCC against Disney for "promoting diversity."
--Musk just sold Twitter to Twitter AI in a $33 billion stock deal. He owns both companies. (No idea what he’s up to.)
--Florida passed a child labor law so that little kids can take the place of the immigrants who’ve been deported in the fields and the orange orchards. (What does that remind me of? Oh, wait, I know. Oliver Twist, anyone?)
In good news:
--A new treatment involving amyloid removal delays the progress of Alzheimer’s Disease.
--The Yankees hit 9 home runs in their first game!
--I had a crown put on after a root canal last week and was expecting the usual awful procedure, where they put that goop in your mouth that makes you gag so they can make an impression, then you get a temporary crown that you have to be really careful of for two weeks before you get the crown. Not any more! They took a picture of the tooth with a 3-D laser, 3-d printed out the new crown, and had it on within an hour. So, see, 3-D printers ARE good for something besides making ghost guns!
In historical news: Today is Charles Lightoller’s birthday. He’s one of my heroes. He was the lieutenant on the Titanic who saved more lives than anybody else, insisting on loading the boats to capacity before they were launched. He stayed on board trying to get one of the collapsible boats untied until a wave swept him and the collapsible into the water. (At the American hearing, an idiot Senator asked him snidely, "When did you live the boat, Lieutenant Lightoller?" and he replied, "I didn’t leave the boat, the boat left me.") The collapsible was upside down, and he clambered aboard, then helped dozens of others to climb up and stood there, keeping the boat balanced, till the Carpathia got there. He was the last person to board the Carpathia, insisting on waiting till everyone else had been picked up. Then, nearly 30 years later and retired, he took a boat over to Dunkirk and brought back 127 stranded soldiers. I have always said that if I’m in a maritime disaster, my survival plan is to keep as close to Lightoller as possible.
It’s also Vincent Van Gogh’s birthday. I love Van Gogh, partly because he was so humble. He took an art class on color because, he explained, "I have never been very good at color." Oh, my God! In honor of his birthday, you need to go look at "Starry Night" and Almond Blossoms" and ":Irises" and "Sunflowers." And you definitely need to watch the Dr. Who episode where the Doctor takes Van Gogh to the Musee de Beaux Arts in Paris to see his legacy. It will bring you to tears:
Best line of the day, from MattZ: "Are we allowed to listen to Cassandra yet?"