Monday, January 5, 2026

The Walz Are Caving in on Minnesota's Somali Community

The fact that Tim Walz, a man who could have been Vice-President of the United States, has abruptly abandoned seeking a third term as Governor of Minnesota is certainly an indication that his administration dropped the ball and did not meaningfully address alleged daycare fraud with the state's large Somali community.

Yet I suspect the breadth and depth of this fraud is not large enough to warrant the Trump Administration to freeze childcare payments to Minnesota and several other states. No doubt the Trump Administration was looking for a reason to freeze these funds, and they found it with little Nick Shirley's viral video of empty daycare centers though the claims have not been independently verified. VP Vance might think Shirley's "journalism" more worthy of a Pulitzer Prize than any of its winners. Yet let us never forget that Vance is the man who bragged about creating stories about Haitians in Ohio eating cats and dogs.

Nevertheless, this particular story has been lingering for a number of years. I suspect that it's catching fire now because the Trump Administration doesn't care much for Somalis whether they commit fraud or not with the President himself characterizing the community at large as "garbage." A story like this gives Trump and his acolytes an opportunity to pour fuel on the fire and promote hatred and contempt against Somalis. Some have gone as far as to accuse Somalis of using the fraudulently obtained money to fund terrorist groups like al-Shabaab. One of those making those accusations is Christopher Rufo who, last I checked, was peddling the "Haitians eat cats and dogs" bullshit.

When I attended Carleton University in Ottawa in the early 1990's, there was a sizable Somali community amid the civil war which had begun several years earlier. There were stories of welfare fraud and the Somali community tended to find itself singled out though it was truly no more guilty of welfare fraud than any other community. As with what is going on in Minnesota, there were undoubtedly kernels of truth, yet the community at large was being vilified. There have been large scale welfare fraud schemes by segments of the Mormon community in Utah and rightly so, but no one would entertain the idea of casting aspersions on the Mormon community at large and rightly so. Yet critical masses of society exercise no such discretion when it comes to non-white communities like Somalians.

With Walz not seeking a third term, there is speculation that longtime Minnesota Democratic Senator and former presidential aspirant Amy Klobuchar might run in his stead. The state has elected Klobuchar to the Senate five times, so it is not unreasonable to consider the possibility that Minnesota voters would elect her to statewide office as well as federal office. If Minnesotans do elect Klobuchar governor, I wonder if Klobuchar would appoint Walz to the Senate to serve out her term which would end in 2031?

Yet a story like this can linger in the ugliest way imaginable. Given the domination by Democrats in Minnesota in recent years, I could see a backlash against Klobuchar resulting in the election of an anti-Somali, anti-immigrant Republican Governor.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

One Bad Man Removes Another Bad Man from Power So He Can Install a New Bad Man in His Place

 


The best way I can sum up President Trump's order to have U.S. military forces capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is that one bad man removed another bad man from power so he can install a new bad man in his place.

Trump basically said so himself:

We are going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper, and judicious transition. It has to be judicious. We can't take a chance that somebody else takes over Venezuela that doesn't have the good of the Venezuelan people in mind.

What Trump really means is that Maduro's successor has to have the good of Trump in mind.

For her part, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi proclaimed that Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores "will soon face the full wrath of American justice on American soil in American courts." Bondi characterized the pair as "alleged international drug traffickers."

Well, former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez was a convicted international drug trafficker sentenced to 45 years in prison and yet Trump saw fit to issue him with a presidential pardon.

All of which means Trump doesn't give a shit about international drug trafficking. This is all about rewarding his loyal friends and punishing his enemies. Maduro has long been on Trump's shit list going back to his first term in office when he raised the possibility of military action against him.

Yet it must be said that Maduro is a bad man. Consider this analysis from the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect as of last month:

On 10 January 2025 Nicolás Maduro was sworn in for a third presidential term following elections on 28 July 2024, which were widely condemned as fraudulent. Independent tallies from polling centers showed an estimated 67 percent of votes for the leading opposition candidate. Throughout the electoral process and continuing to the present, the government has intensified its persecution of actual or alleged opponents, including ordinary citizens, opposition members, journalists and human rights defenders, to silence dissent and maintain power. Presidential elections were viewed by many Venezuelans as a vital opportunity for a long-term democratic transition and an end to the country’s decade-long multidimensional crisis. Following years of endemic corruption and the gradual erosion of the rule of law, in 2014 mass protests erupted in response to insecurity, hyperinflation and a lack of essential services. Security forces reacted with disproportionate force, torture and sexual violence.

Since then, the Venezuelan government, including the security and intelligence apparatus, has perpetrated systematic arbitrary detention, torture and ill-treatment, sexual and gender-based violence and short-term enforced disappearances targeting actual and perceived opponents. Various security forces have also allegedly perpetrated tens of thousands of extrajudicial killings in the name of combating crime, predominantly targeting men between 18 and 30 years-old living in low-income neighborhoods. Over the past decade, an estimated 8 million Venezuelans have left the country in what is considered the largest migration crisis in recent Latin American history.

But what does Trump care about arbitrary detention, torture and il-treatment much less sexual and gender-based violence? Forget about extrajudicial killings. Where it concerns Venezuela, Trump has proven more than willing to engage in extrajudicial killings of his own. I fear that Trump could very well succeed in turning Maduro and his wife into sympathetic figures. 

For now, I have two questions.

First, how will the Venezuelan people react? Will they be initially pleased with Maduro's removal only to grow discontent when life is no better in the next few months than it was under Maduro's regime leading to civil unrest? In which case, how long will it be before Trump order American troops to shoot Venezuelan civilians? Trump doesn't give a flying fuck about the Venezuelan people. He simply wants to install a leader who will do his bidding. If Venezuelan voters do not give the result he wants, then he will simply cry fraud and not allow the will of the people to stand.

Second, how will MAGA react? Will they rally around him? Perhaps in the short term. But how long will it be before the conversation returns to the Epstein files or to Jews in America? And what of Trump's pledge of "no new wars"? However awful Maduro might be, ousting him from power is an act of war. 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

In The Year 2025 (Or Life Isn't Always Great, But It Isn't Bad)

As I begin to write this dispatch, there are just under 90 minutes remaining in the year 2025.

I cannot help but think of the Zager and Evans song "In the Year 2525 (Exordium and Terminus":

In the year 2525, if man is still aliveIf woman can survive, they may findIn the year 3535Ain't gonna need to tell the truth, tell no lieEverything you think, do and sayIs in the pill you took today

With the advent of AI, 2525 arrived 500 years early. We have now reached the point where we cannot discern what is true from what is false. Worse still, far too many among us don't care to know. Too many among us are ready to swallow anything and it need not be a pill though if often takes the form of a poison. How else can one explain the second Trump Administration and the mainstreaming of anti-Semitism? 

Yet it is true that MAGA is fighting amongst itself and their greed and incompetence may do themselves in, they can still hurt and kill a lot of people in the process be it hundreds of thousands of unnecessary deaths due to AIDS, malaria, pneumonia and tuberculosis all over the world or hard working, law abiding taxpayers awaiting their green card dying in ICE custody.

And then there's the malignancy of anti-Semitism on both sides of the political spectrum with the sitting Republican Vice-President openly minimizing its very existence while New Yorkers elect a so-called progressive who calls for "globalizing the intifada". In this country, "globalizing the intifada" has resulted in Molotov cocktails being thrown at Jews who had the temerity to hold a vigil for the hostages held by Hamas, arson at the San Francisco Hillel and high school students who openly sing the praises of Hitler while forming a human swastika. Meanwhile, prominent public figures ranging from NY Mayor-elect Mamdani, AOC to Elon Musk and FBI Director Kash Patel seek to vilify Jewish civic institutions. Of course, I'm only scratching the surface. Indeed, the malignancy of anti-Semitism is only beginning to spread. The worst is yet to come, and I shudder to think what the worst could be.

My recent experience serving on a federal jury did little to improve my mood.

Now I don't wish to leave anyone with the impression that I had a terrible year. My job continues to go well and among the highlights of my year were my first business trip to New York and my first business conference in Wheeling, West Virginia. I can only hope there is more of this to come in 2026.

There were plenty of good times whether it was going for a swim, walking along on Mass Ave from Cambridge to Boston, a couple of trips to Walden Pond, my first visit to Newport, Rhode Island or viewing a half century plus old David Ackles concert at the Paley Center for Media in NYC last month. I was saddened by Robert Redford passing away on my birthday but am glad I got a chance to see 10 of his best films at the Brattle Theatre. I also got to see Jerry O'Connell, Corey Feldman and Wil Wheaton sing the praises of Rob Reiner at a 40th anniversary screening of Stand by Me just over a week before he and his wife Michele were cruelly taken away from this world. A subsequent tribute screening of When Harry Met Sally came at just the right time.

Earlier this evening, I had some Chinese food at Changsho on Mass Ave in Cambridge. My fortune read, "Your heart will be full of love in September." If good things come to those wait, then what's another nine months?

After the meal, I took a short walk around the neighborhood. During this short walk, I went into a convenience store, purchased a $10 scratch ticket and won $50. It was the first time I had bought a scratch ticket since winning $100 during my last trip to Concord. This time around, I had no trouble getting my winningsIt was a good way to end the year. 

Tomorrow, I begin 2026 with my New Year's Day ritual of watching 7 hours of Marx Brothers films at the Brattle Theatre with my friend Christopher Kain.

Life isn't always great, but it isn't bad.

Things aren't so great when it concerns matter beyond one's own control. But when things are within my control, the result is more likely to be good than bad. 

As I enter 2026, I will do my best to minimize my involvement in things I can't control and maximize my involvement in things where control is firmly within my grasp. You can call it my New Year's Resolution.

Whatever turmoil there might be in the next 365 days, it is within my power that the conclusion of this next chapter I write will have a happy ending.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Vance Dismisses Anti-Semitism in America

(Nathan Howard/New York Times)

In a recent interview, Vice-President JD Vance dismissed virtually any notion of anti-Semitism in America:

I think that Nick Fuentes, his influence within Donald Trump’s administration, and within a whole host of institutions on the right, is vastly overstated, and frankly, it’s overstated by people who want to avoid having a foreign-policy conversation about America’s relationship with Israel.

Ninety-nine percent of Republicans, and I think probably 97% of Democrats, do not hate Jewish people for being Jewish. What is actually happening is that there is a real backlash to a consensus view in American foreign policy. I think we ought to have that conversation and not try to shut it down. Most Americans are not antisemitic, they’re never going to be antisemitic, and I think we should focus on the real debate.

Well, it is worth noting that Vance doesn't deny Fuentes have influence over his administration. Vance just doesn't want to talk about it and would like to change the subject namely to America's relationship with Israel. Clearly, Vance thinks that relationship should change. If that's the case, then let's hear what he actually thinks, if he has thought at all. Of course, that Vance should single out Israel as the lone country where such re-evaluation is warranted then it is well worth asking why that is. 

It is also telling that Vance claims 99% of Republicans and 97% of Democrats aren't anti-Semitic. I'm not sure where he gets those figures. But let us suppose for a moment that Vance's assessment is accurate. If Vance is correct, then it is equally telling that a significant number of the 1% of Republicans who are anti-Semitic could be found at Turning Point USA's AmericaFest where not only Vance spoke but where participants openly claimed Israel was involved in the 9/11 attacks. At an earlier TPUSA powwow, Vance took a question from a student who claimed Jews were openly persecuting Christians without challenging the question's dubious premise.

If this is the sort of conversation that Vance's allies are having about America's relationship with Israel, then Vance is being willfully dishonest not only about the nature of the conversation but about the growing malignancy of anti-Semitism in America.

Marty Supreme Pain in the Ass

 

Last night, only 24 hours after viewing Song Sung Blue, I returned to the Kendall Square Cinema to take in a screening of Marty Supreme starring Timothée Chalamet.

I attended the film entirely on the basis of Chalamet's presence in it on what turned out to be his 30th birthday. At this time a year ago, I saw Chalamet in the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown and was so mesmerized by Chalamet's performance that it left me wanting more. So, I saw it again 72 hours later.

I am sorry to say that Marty Supreme did not leave me wanting more nor do I plan to see it again in 72 hours from now. In fact, I could go another 72 years without seeing it again.

Marty Supreme is loosely based on the life of the late table tennis champion Marty Reisman. However, Chalamet portrays Marty Mauser and any resemblance to Reisman is purely coincidental. Which is a shame because I think it is fascinating that Reisman won a table tennis tournament in 1997 when he was 67 and would have been worthy of a film on its own. 

Unfortunately, Josh Safdie's directorial style and the script which he co-wrote with Ronald Bronstein, takes a kitchen sink approach to storytelling. In the case of Marty Supreme, it is a bathtub. Frankly, the story reminded me a great deal of last year's Best Picture winner Anora which when I viewed it could not wait for it to end. Both movies are little more than bombardment in search of a story that it never finds. But in our current day and age this passes for being clever and insightful. The only thing supreme about Marty Supreme is that it is a supreme pain in the ass.

It is a shame because the film wastes some good performances by Chalamet, Odessa A'zion and Fran Drescher in the first time I've ever seen her without makeup. Chalamet also has some chemistry with Gwyneth Paltrow in a May-December romance. I must admit I did not recognize Penn Jillette without glasses and was delighted to see a cameo role from Ted Williams, a homeless man who found a niche as an announcer and voiceover artist. Another bit of unconventional casting was that businessman, reality TV host and formerly Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidate Kevin O'Leary. However, O'Leary looked like Harry Truman's evil twin brother. Speaking of Truman, although Marty Supreme is set in the early 1950's, much of the soundtrack is from the 1980's which makes the film even more disjointed.

Alas, I suspect that Marty Supreme will likely rack up Oscar nominations and possibly earn Chalamet his elusive first Best Actor Academy Award. It's not that Chalamet isn't worthy of such a triumph. I just wish he would earn the honor for a different role with a more compelling performance.

Megyn Kelly Takes a Page From Elon Musk's Book & Blames Jews for Anti-Semitism


When Ben Shapiro saw fit to take Megyn Kelly to task for enabling Candace Owens' conspiracy theories alleging Israel was involved in Charlie Kirk's assassination, Kelly saw fit to retaliate against both Shapiro and CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss by blaming Jews, or at the very least Jewish conservatives, for anti-Semitism on the Right in an interview with Vanity Fair:
They are making antisemites. Tucker (Carlson) is not making antisemites. They are.

When I read Kelly's comment, it brought Elon Musk to mind.

During his ongoing campaign against the ADL, Musk made the following remark on X back in September 2023:

The ADL, because they are so aggressive in their demands to ban social media accounts for even minor infractions, are ironically the biggest generators of anti-Semitism on this platform!

At the time, I made the following observation:

In other words, the Jews are to blame for anti-Semitism by speaking out against it, and we ought to keep our mouths shut. 

By making this claim, Musk effectively absolves responsibility from those who actually harbor hatred towards Jews while giving them a blank check to defame us at every opportunity. 

In such an environment, anti-Semitism would be bound to become mainstream in the United States. And if this comes to pass then pogroms will be sure to follow.

This would be Elon Musk's hateful and ugly legacy. 

Well, Kelly is certainly carrying on Musk's legacy. By stating that Carlson bears no responsibility for spreading anti-Semitism, she absolves him for his interview of Nick Fuentes, his interview of Darryl Cooper, his interview of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and his interview of Qatari PM Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani and his intention to buy a home there. In all of these interviews, Carlson amplified their anti-Semitism without a whisper of criticism. In excusing Carlson's behavior, Kelly also gives anti-Semitism mainstream legitimacy.

Unfortunately, Kelly will be far from the last mainstream public figure in this country to blame Jews for anti-Semitism rather than the anti-Semites who pour the fuel and ignite the flames.

Song Sung Blue is a Masterpiece of American Cinema

 

On Friday night, I went to the Kendall Square Cinema to take in a screening of Song Sung Blue.

If you are familiar with the discography of Neil Diamond, you will know the song. However, Song Sung Blue is not about Neil Diamond though it is inspired by him. The focal point of Song Sung Blue are Mike and Claire Sardina, a husband-and-wife combo, who performed as Lightning and Thunder in Milwaukee, Chicago and throughout the Midwest with a repertoire of songs by Neil Diamond, Patsy Cline and ABBA. The Sardinas are portrayed by Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson in career defining performances in a masterpiece of American cinema written and directed by Craig Brewer.

The Sardinas are portrayed as a pair of struggling musicians who hit lightning in a bottle when they meet and discover a shared affection for Neil Diamond's music. The pair slowly gain a following and a legion of admirers including Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder who joins them onstage to sing "Forever in Blue Jeans". Tragically, their momentum is brought to a halt when Claire is struck by a car outside their family home losing a leg in the process which begins a descent into darkness. In time, the pair rebound and make a comeback only for it to be curtailed by Mike's death following a head injury sustained after a heart attack.

This is not a film for the faint of heart. It is not easy to watch this amount of pain. But beneath the pain is the sunshine of Neil Diamond's music and a support system of friends who sustain them in their time of trouble. Michael Imperioli, Fisher Stevens, Jim Belushi and Mustafa Shakir turn in warm performances as local Milwaukee figures Mark Shurilla, Dave Watson, Tom D'Amato and James Brown impersonator Sex Machine, respectively. Ella Anderson also turns in a formidable performance as Claire's daughter Ella who tries to keep the family together despite an unwanted pregnancy of her own.

Even if one is disinclined towards Neil Diamond's music there is a compelling story here. A pair of struggling musicians find a niche, make it work, only to have it stripped away from them, build it back up only to lose it again. I can only hope this will be enough for Academy Award voters who seem to tend towards bombardment of mile a minute action and constant cuts. I suspect the film will get some nominations although I think Hudson has the best chance of securing a statue as she fully embraces middle age.

There should also be some gold for the music. Jackman, Hudson and company's interpretation of songs like "Soolaimon", "Crunchy Granola Suite", "Holly Holy" and, of course, "Sweet Caroline" are good enough for them to go out on tour. I would certainly pay for a ticket to see the show. I'm sure Neil Diamond would if he could.

As for Song Sung Blue, I would make the case that it is among the best films to be released this century now a quarter old.