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Patton French

Patton French's Journal
Patton French's Journal
February 17, 2024

Curb Your Enthusiasm

This show is freaking hilarious. How did I not discover it sooner? Binge watching this weekend!

February 3, 2024

U.S. economy added 353,000 jobs in January, much better than expected

Job growth posted a surprisingly strong increase in January, demonstrating again that the U.S. labor market is solid and poised to support broader economic growth.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 353,000 for the month, much better than the Dow Jones estimate for 185,000, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. The unemployment rate held at 3.7%, against the estimate for 3.8%.


Why is good economic news under President Biden always “better than expected”? I suppose it’s a rhetorical question.

https://www.cnbc.com/2024/02/02/us-economy-added-353000-jobs-in-january-much-better-than-expected.html
January 31, 2024

Rage in Gaza isn't directed only at Israel. Some are angry with Hamas too


Forced to sell cigarettes on the street to get by, the 56-year-old blacksmith is angry. At his inability to provide food and shelter for his family. At the scant humanitarian aid he's received.
And, most of all, at Hamas.

Before they launched Oct. 7, they should have secured food, drink and money so that we wouldn't suffer like this," Al-Gharabli said of the militant group's assault on Israel that triggered the war.
"It seems Hamas didn't consider the consequences," added Al-Gharabli's wife, Umm Ahmad, who, like most people interviewed for this story, gave only her nickname for safety reasons. "They believe they planned for everything, but when it came to us, they didn't. The poverty, the displacement — all this Hamas didn't think about."


Didn’t consider the consequences, or didn’t care?

https://apple.news/ANTkchHQYTHW19g9_aTRouA
August 2, 2023

Meadows and Jordan are next.

It is truly time to celebrate.

May 11, 2023

Repeat

This is a repeat of that idiot joe s. did in 2016. WTF?!? CNN is doing this why?

November 10, 2022

So, despite faux new beat up efforts,

We kept the senate and may keep the house. Absolutely unprecedented, but yet their focus is on FL, GA and TX gov. I guess I’m answering my own question.

November 11, 2021

Okay, as a lawyer, I feel a need to interject

The prosecution blew it. It’s a given that this nut job went to WI looking for trouble. OMG, but let’s turn it into whether this poor teenager can protect himself? That’s not what it was about and any objective observer should see that. It was never about self defense! Why would he have to defend himself from a situation he should never have injected himself into? But the prosecutor fell into the “there are riots” trap and focused on whether the defendant felt threatened. Of course he did, subjectively, but of course he created the threat. And the prosecutor exacerbated the problem by not seeking leave to address evidence that had previously been excluded. Rookie mistake by a non-rookie. Sorry, the prosecutor seemed woefully unprepared. This is just the tip of my analysis. Sorry for being contrarian.

November 3, 2021

Big lesson..

.. sorry for the pessimism, but disinformation clearly can take hold. The solution? Shit , I don’t know. I just know I don’t get it.

October 9, 2021

Roll Tide!

That is all….

October 6, 2021

Why the Senate doesn't work anymore

Interesting read:

//snip//

To many observers, those limited opportunities underscore the need for Democrats to improve their competitive positive in at least a few more states. It's telling that the Senate seats they flipped in 2020 came not in states they had bombarded with late television advertising, but in Arizona and Georgia -- states where they had invested for years in grassroots organizing that also lifted Biden to victory. North Carolina is a plausible next target for Democrats to add a Senate seat in 2022 with that strategy, but after that the options, particularly Florida and Texas in the Sun Belt or Ohio and Iowa in the Rust Belt, look more daunting.

The other implication of these dynamics for Democrats is the increasing pressure in the party to end the filibuster so that they can govern during the periods when they squeeze out a narrow Senate majority.

"There's no real room to build coalitions that give really any chance of overcoming a routine requirement of 60 votes to get anything done," notes Mann. Even Breaux, a centrist who built his Senate career on finding deals with Republicans, thinks Democrats need to end the filibuster for what he calls "constitutional issues" such as voting and abortion rights. The filibuster, he says, can encourage cooperation "when you have an aggressive middle on both sides, and you don't have that now." As a result, he believes "in getting rid of [the filibuster] for constitutional issues, like voting rights. We've done it for the Supreme Court and federal judges, so I guess you could do a limited carve-out for constitutional issues. That at least would help get some things done."

One final ingredient makes the operation of the modern Senate even more combustible. Because Republicans now so thoroughly dominate the less-populated, heavily rural, predominantly White states across the Plains and Mountain West, the GOP can exercise enormous power in the Senate even while representing many fewer people than Democrats do. If you assign half of each state's population to each senator, Democrats now represent 56% of the country and Republicans 44% -- even though each side holds 50 Senate seats.

As population continues to concentrate in the largest states, this partisan imbalance will likely widen. Without a change in the filibuster, that would allow states representing an ever-shrinking share of the national population to block legislative action supported by senators representing a clear majority of the country.

"The dynamic is that a smaller and smaller segment of the American electorate will control more and more seats in the Senate," says Mann. "So that there will be, in my view, a distortion that is so great it puts into question the entire legitimacy of the Senate as a governing body."

//snip//

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/10/05/politics/senate-broken-biden-agenda/index.html

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