…is champagne made from grapes that will disappear from ‘climate change’, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Don Surber, with a post on Trump having possibly killed NATO, too.
Read: If All You See… »
…is champagne made from grapes that will disappear from ‘climate change’, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Don Surber, with a post on Trump having possibly killed NATO, too.
Read: If All You See… »
First, I mentioned Mark Cuban offering to hire some fired federal workers. Then I did Hochul and NY State getting sued for their climate scam “polluters pay” law. And now, I swear this was not planned
Hochul seeks to recruit laid off federal workers with ad in Washington’s Union Station
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s (D) office is running a digital ad in Washington, D.C.’s Union Station to recruit laid-off federal employees to work for New York State amid the Trump administration’s efforts to slim down the federal government.
The ad, which started running Monday at digital director displays in Union Station, features an image of the Statue of Liberty with the caption: “DOGE said you’re fired? We say you’re hired! New York wants you!”
“Elon Musk and his clueless cadre of career killers know nothing about how government works, who it serves, and the tireless federal employees who keep it running,” Hochul said in a statement. “Here in New York we don’t vilify public servants, we value them and their efforts. So when DOGE says ‘You’re fired,’ New York is ready to say ‘You’re hired’ – and we’re making sure talented, experienced federal workers know about the many opportunities available in our state workforce.”
The ad is the latest effort from Hochul to reach out to federal employees impacted by job cuts spurred by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Hochul appealed to government employees in a recruiting video last week.
“Whatever your skills, we value public service,” Hochul said in the video. “Come join our New York State family.”
What if they’re deadbeats? Incompetent? Overly-entitled? Slackers? Will Hochul and her people put in the time to interview and determine if these fired federal employees will actually be beneficial to NY state? Will they be workers who work hard or ones who login to their computers from home in the morning and then spending most of the day doing nothing? Or, will the be over-zealous and send people to go kill a pet squirrel and raccoon (long live Peanut!)?
Last week, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R), whose state boasts a large federal and military workforce, backed DOGE’s efforts but touted his “Virginia has jobs initiative” as a potential safety net for laid-off workers.
I bet Youngkin will do a deep dive on every applicant.
Read: Serendipidy: NY Governor Hochul Tells Fired Federal Workers To Come Work For NY State »
Kathy Hochul finally signed the NY climate scam law requiring “polluters to pay” while Hochul and others continue to use the “pollution” at the end of December 2024. Twenty two states have already sued in early February. And now
A coalition of business and trade groups is suing the Hochul administration over a law that will force oil, natural gas and coal companies to pay $75 million for spewing carbon emissions.
Gov. Kathy Hochul’s administration claimed the law was necessary to combat the companies contributing to climate change for decades — but critics said the extra costs will be passed along to consumers through prices at the pump and heating bills.
“This law is not only illegal and misguided, but it will likely increase the cost of energy, placing an unnecessary burden on New Yorkers and consumers nationwide — especially during a time of already high prices,” Marty Durbin, president of the US Chamber of Commerce’s Global Energy Institute and plaintiff in the case, told The Post.
The lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court claims Hochul and the state legislature exceeded their authority by approving the New York Climate Change Superfund Act last year, and asked that it be tossed out as unconstitutional.
The plaintiffs also include the New York State Business Council, the American Petroleum Institute and the National Mining Association. (snip)
Federal law prohibits New York from imposing liability on fossil fuel energy producers for harms allegedly caused in the Empire State by greenhouse gases emitted outside the state, the lawsuit said.
Well, it will be interesting to see where this goes. Quite a few other lawsuits along similar lines have been killed off by the judicial system, including New Jersey’s shakedown suit, over the same thing: states do not have the authority to do this.
Read: Bummer: New York, Gov. Hochul Sued Over Their Climate Scam By Businesses »
At least these folks have usable skills…on paper
Mark Cuban offers to fund government tech unit that was cut in the middle of the night
Billionaire investor Mark Cuban waded into the latest government tech shake-up on Saturday, posting an unexpected offer of support for newly laid-off federal workers on the social network Bluesky.
His message, which quickly gained traction, urged the displaced engineers and designers to turn the upheaval to their advantage.
“If you worked for 18F and got fired, Group together to start a consulting company,” wrote Cuban. “It’s just a matter of time before DOGE needs you to fix the mess they inevitably created. They will have to hire your company as a contractor to fix it. But on your terms. I’m happy to invest and/or help.”
Cuban’s offer came after the government’s General Services Administration (GSA) abruptly gutted its 18F technology unit, which helps other government agencies build, buy, and share tech products. Per Politico, the layoffs affected roughly 70 individuals who learned the news around 1 a.m. Eastern time on Saturday. Among other things, the unit had reportedly built Login.gov, a secure and private way for the public to access services at government agencies, including Social Security and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Hey, how’d that project work out?
Login.gov facing technical difficulties and cost uncertainty, watchdog says
The General Services Administration’s Login.gov, a single sign-on platform that recently made remote identity proofing generally available, needs to address technical challenges concerning the biometric validation pilot program, according to a new government watchdog report.
The Government Accountability Office said that nine of the participating 21 Chief Financial Officers Act agencies reported issues with Login.gov, including lack of fraud controls and visibility into authentications as well as high failure rates. Additionally, eight agencies shared challenges regarding Login.gov’s pricing, including the inability to get a multi-year pricing plan or insight into the service’s annual renewal process, as well as the potential for prices to rise between years.
So, that’s government speak for “it’s not working correctly, it cost a lot of money, no one seems to know what it will cost going forward (why would it cost that much beyond the initial implementation?), and it could lead to lots of fraud. There might be a reason the group was terminated. So, have at them, Mark! Maybe you can hire a bunch of the administration weenies and others who were let go. For all Mark’s caterwauling, you can bet his companies do not have lots of dead wood and unproductive employees, as well as people wanting to do their own thing rather than do what the company is supposed to do. Oh, and waste lots of money.
In the wake of these new layoffs, Cuban’s proposal presents an intriguing possibility: could the very workers pushed out of government help reshape the future of civic tech on their own terms? As DOGE moves to dismantle agencies, even Musk has acknowledged fallout tied to the speed with which his team is moving. On Wednesday, Musk shared that, “For example, with USAID, one of the things we accidentally canceled — very briefly — was Ebola prevention.” (Public health experts have since said the government’s support has not been fully restored.)
It was good to do this for a time, but, now, it is time to work the scalpel instead of the chainsaw. Everything done out of USAID of worth should have shifted to the State Department or another relevant agency. Now it is time to look for the unnecessary, the unproductive, those being wasteful, the incompetent, and those working their own personal agenda.
And they can go find a job in the private sector, with those icky requirements for performance.
Read: Huh: Mark Cuban Offers To Hire Certain Fired Federal Workers »
…is a rapidly rising ocean meeting land turning to desert, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Common Cents Blog, with a post on the trust in media.
It’s women with hats week!
Read: If All You See… »
Happy Sunday! Another wonderful day in Returned America! The Sun is shining, the birds are singing, and my new Overdrive pedal is freaking awesome! Maybe I’ll write about it at the end of this post or another one. This pinup, something a bit more modern, is by Joe Chiodo, with a wee bit of help.
What is happening in Ye Olde Blogosphere? The Fine 15
As always, the full set of pinups can be seen in the Patriotic Pinup category, or over at my Gallery page (nope, that’s gone, the newest Apache killed access, and the program hasn’t been upgraded since 2014, so, most are hosted internally). While we are on pinups, since it is that time of year, have you gotten your Pinups for Vets calendar yet? And don’t forget to check out what I declare to be our War on Women Rule 5 and linky luv posts and things that interest me. I’ve also mostly alphabetized them, makes it easier scrolling the feedreader
Don’t forget to check out all the other great material all the linked blogs have!
Anyone else have a link or hotty-fest going on? Let me know so I can add you to the list. And do you have a favorite blog you can recommend be added to the feedreader?
Two great sites for getting news links are Liberty Daily and Whatafinger.
Regarding the foot pedal, it can be tough to find ones, because there are only so many at the guitar stores, and, really, if you go to Guitar Center they are all expensive. Can’t go to Sam Ash stores anymore. So, Internet stores. I’m not that good at guitar anymore, but, I try. I love playing. I wanted a pedal to give me some distortion. The Fender amp, a G-Dec Junior (if you can get one they are one of the best values), has a lot of choices for this, but, I wanted more control. I tried a distortion pedal, but, it goes quickly from 80’s hair metal to just mush, where you can barely tell the notes on chords. Single notes, fine. Chords? Nope.
So, an overdrive. Something that can give you nice, easy OD like a Jeff Beck to more like Hendrix and Page up to Black Sabbath and Judas Priest (Tony Iommi actually never used a pedal. Like most he overdrove the amplifier). All you can do these days is listen to videos. And there are tons. Joyo has 19 OD pedals. Caline has like 9. Other brands have multiple. You have British style. American style. Blues. Standard OD. Too many. The Mellow sounded great, and, after 20 minutes of playing it is the one. It is not really mellow. It is smooth. I can get all the distortion I want for all the stuff I play. I can even get much harder metal, like Megadeath, Slayer, Opeth, and more. The voice nob gives great control. And you can really hear the notes when playing chords, even with heavy OD.
BTW, the others from Caline were very interesting, especially the Orange Burst, which is a little harsher. Pure Sky goes even harsher, but, can give a nice OD. The Green Mamba sounds more like the hardcore Yamaha green.
Have a great Sunday.
Read: Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup »
Do you have sympathy? I don’t. When these groups decided that they were going live at the taxpayer teet for their funding, and make lots and lots of cash for producing little, I have no sympathy
Groups frozen out of $20B in EPA cash fear bankruptcy
Eight nonprofits caught in a legal crossfire over $20 billion in Biden-era climate grants are racing toward a funding cliff.
The groups have been shut out of their accounts at Citibank since Feb. 18 because of a still-unexplained freeze imposed amid criticism from President Donald Trump’s administration.
On Tuesday, the standoff enters a new phase — groups will no longer have grant money to make investments or basic needs such as payroll and rent.
It’s the latest fallout from the Trump administration’s effort to claw back tens of billions of dollars from former President Joe Biden’s massive climate and clean energy agenda, including money that agencies had already legally contracted and even placed in bank accounts for recipients to spend. A senior federal prosecutor resigned last week after saying Justice Department officials had pressured her to launch a criminal investigation into the $20 billion in Environmental Protection Agency climate grants, despite a lack of evidence of wrongdoing.
The $20 billion comes from a program, called the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, that was intended to ramp up clean-energy technology finance in low-income communities.
OK, so, here’s the question: what have they succeeded at with the money so far? Anything?
One awardee told E&E News that it won’t be able to make payroll and would begin defaulting on contracts with project partners by March 7. It is trying to raise funds to cover the shortfall.
OK, so, try and get a loan. Reach out to like minded climate Believing companies, charities, and individuals.
The leader of one grant recipient, a coalition of nonprofits called Power Forward Communities, told POLITICO this week that it still intends to deploy its initial $539 million disbursement from the grant, saying he’s “confident” Citibank will honor its funding agreements. Citibank did not respond to requests for comment.
Uh huh. The money comes from the Climate Scam Act Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed by President Brandon in August of 2022. Power Forward Communities was created in October 2023. What expertise do they have? It’s made up of
Enterprise Community Partners: An affordable housing group
Rewiring America: A nonprofit that aims to electrify homes and reduce fossil fuel use
Habitat for Humanity International: A well-known nonprofit
Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC): A nonprofit that specializes in financing projects in areas that struggle to attract private-sector investment
United Way Worldwide: A well-known nonprofit
So, what is the purpose of the over-arching group? Where is the money going? BTW, this is the group that moonbat lefty Stacey Abrams and $2 billion was linked to. Seems more like a shell company, like so many others, where money comes in, they take a cut, it gets spread around to the other companies, who take their cut, then contract out, and they take their cut. And there are a shitton of partners to spread the money around too. So far, everything is about “will be making investments”, nothing about “have made” or “have done”.
The other groups are not named. And the Politico article makes zero reference to what any of these groups have actually done. That should be the primary focus: what have they done so far. How many were created simply to glom onto the slush fund from the IRA.
Read: Climate (scam) Groups Worried About Bankruptcy After Trump Admin Cuts Cash Flow »
…are horrible Bad Weather clouds, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Legal Insurrection, with a post on the State Dept ending funding to rebuild the Ukraine power grid.
Slight editorial: why would anyone try and rebuild the grid when an active war is going on? Seems rather wasteful.
Read: If All You See… »
Realistically, the cuts to spending and personnel that the Trump administration has imposed so far are drops in the bucket. The budget is almost $7 trillion. The “work”force is around 2.4 million. Getting rid of some has driven Democrats mad
The U.S. government is attempting to dismantle itself.
President Donald Trump has directed the executive branch to “significantly reduce the size of government.” That includes deep cuts in federal funding of scientific and medical research and freezing federal grants and loans for businesses. He has ordered the reversal or removal of regulations on medical insurance companies and other businesses and sought to fire thousands of federal employees. Those are just a few of dozens of executive orders that seek to deconstruct the government. (snip)
Our recent book, “How Government Built America,” shows why the administration’s aim to eliminate government could result in an America that the country’s people have never experienced – one in which free-market economic forces operate without any accountability to the public.
Where’s the accountability for government? How often do we actually see it? If a company is doing Bad Things what happens when they get caught? They get in big trouble. Maybe they get fined. People get fired. Maybe someone goes to jail.
What happens when government employees do bad things? Quite often, nothing. If they’re taking allocated money and giving it to an NGO which takes a big cut to pass it on to another entity which takes their cut and then on to more entities which all take their cut so that a pittance of the allocation makes it doing what it’s supposed to do? Who gets fired? Who goes to jail for defrauding the government? How much ends up back in the pocket of the government workers? How much gets used for totally unrelated activities?
How about government workers who do not actually work? Who are faking it? Who are out protesting instead of doing their jobs? Agencies which have too many redundant employees? Who think that it is their job to implement their own personal beliefs on Americans, who act as little dictators?
Government funding and regulation have yielded countless economic benefits for the public, including the launch of many efforts later capitalized on by the private sector. Government funding delivered a COVID-19 vaccine in record time, many of the technologies – GPS, touchscreens and the internet – that are key to the functioning of the cellphone in your pocket, and the highway system that enables travel throughout the country.
Might not want to mention the Bat Soup Flu “vaccine”, which, also, if memory serves, Democrats said would not happen for years or decades. How about government telling citizens that they will only be able to drive an EV soon? Passing extra, unnecessary regulations that make housing overly expensive? Jumping in to tell people what they are allowed to do with the little pond in their backyard? Arresting people for paddleboarding on the ocean with no one within hundreds of yards during COVID? Treating agencies as their own little fiefdom and going after people they accuse of Wrongthink?
Admittedly, there is wasteful spending – as much as $150 billion a year in erroneous payments. That is a lot of money, but it’s a tiny sliver – just 2.2% – of the $6.75 trillion the federal government spent in the 2024 fiscal year. And government has not always been a positive force in society, either.
Do you want to die on the 2.2% figure? $150 billion is real money to Americans. And that’s just erroneous payments. Anyhow, it’s a long, long piece, which misses that government has grown too big and too powerful. It has forgotten who it works for. It is unaccountable. If bureaucrats do bad things against citizens, what can the citizen do? Virtually nothing. And, a thing I find funny is that there are often more unnecessary employees in unnecessary positions while others (say, the FDA) are underfunded and have too few employees. Investigating sub-prime mortgages.
Whenever I think of government, I think of this: “a light touch” (around 1:35)
Democrats would prefer control like China….well, at least as it pertains to Other People. They want government to take a light touch in their own lives.
Read: Saturday Funny: Trump Trying To End Meaningful Government »