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The republican speaker is a slippery little devil.

If you thought you’d already seen people saying the stupidest things possible on the internet, prepare yourselves.

Sometimes the world just tells you your cat is here.

So many bastards, so little time.

Weird. Rome has an American Pope and America has a Russian President.

Be a wild strawberry.

Hell hath no fury like a farmer bankrupted.

One way or another, he’s a liar.

“The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.”

Rupert, come get your orange boy, you petrified old dinosaur turd.

This has so much WTF written all over it that it is hard to comprehend.

They traffic in fear. it is their only currency. if we are fearful, they are winning.

I have other things to bitch about but those will have to wait.

When you’re in more danger from the IDF than from Russian shelling, that’s really bad.

They spent the last eight months firing professionals and replacing them with ideologues.

There are no moderate republicans – only extremists and cowards.

Seems like a complicated subject, have you tried yelling at it?

You come for women, you’re gonna get your ass kicked.

Imperialist aggressors must be defeated, or the whole world loses.

Dear media: perhaps we ought to let Donald Trump speak for himself!

It’s all just conspiracy shit beamed down from the mothership.

Hot air and ill-informed banter

rich, arrogant assholes who equate luck with genius

Narcissists are always shocked to discover other people have agency.

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You are here: Home / Archives for Breathtaking Criminality and Lawlessness / Fuckery

Fuckery

Power of the Unexpected (Open Thread)

by Betty Cracker|  October 13, 20255:00 pm| 209 Comments

This post is in: Domestic Politics, Fuckery, Open Threads, Politics, Republican Stupidity

Some folks sure are worried about the upcoming No Kings protests:

Sean Duffy: "The No Kings protest, Maria, really frustrating. This is part of antifa, paid protesters. It begs the question who's funding it."

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) October 13, 2025 at 8:22 AM

This flunky too:

Bessent: "No Kings means no paychecks. No paychecks and no government."

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) October 13, 2025 at 8:55 AM

Mike Johnson and assorted other GOP congresscritters were peddling the same lie last week. They’re saying the millions of patriotic Americans who are expected to turn out for next Saturday’s No Kings rallies are paid agitators, antifa, Hamas, etc. Fuck that noise.

I was inspired and entertained by Portland protesters’ embrace of humorous costumes to render Noem/Trump’s lies about their city ridiculous.

Heros

[image or embed]

— Mack Steele (@macksteele.bsky.social) October 13, 2025 at 10:56 AM

I even thought about acquiring an alligator costume myself for next weekend to pay local tribute to the idea. But the more I think about it, it’s probably better to show up as a white Southern voter who rejects this fascist bullshit. There’s more than one way to find power in the unexpected.

Open thread!

Power of the Unexpected (Open Thread)Post + Comments (209)

Lie, Cheat, Steal. Circumvent the Law. Repeat.

by WaterGirl|  September 2, 20252:24 pm| 62 Comments

This post is in: Bad Faith Actors, Breathtaking Corruption, Breathtaking Criminality and Lawlessness, Fuckery, Open Threads, Today in Fascism, Today in Republican Corruption

Destruction is their middle name.

So… how do we get the word out about this?

Miss Bianca took the first step by sending it to me.

How widely can we BJ peeps spread this?

Can you all link to this post on social media?  Share it with any climate-related groups you know of?  What else?

The Trump Administration Is Trying to Revoke the ‘Roadless Rule.’ The Public Won’t Have Much Time to Weigh In

The rule protecting remote wilderness areas received 1.6 million public comments when it was developed. People will have just 14 business days to comment on a key part of its rescission.

By Sarah Mattalian

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is giving the public just three weeks to weigh in on a key step of its attempt to scrap the Roadless Rule, which protects almost 59 million acres of forest land from road construction and timber harvesting.

The U.S. Forest Service (USFS) published a notice Friday seeking comment on its intention to develop an environmental impact statement for the proposed rescission of the 2001 rule. The comment period will run until Sept. 19.

The public had a full month to comment when the rule was created. The USFS received more than 1.6 million comments on the rule, the most it has ever received.

Experts caution that the truncated comment period limits the opportunity for public comment, a key part of rulemaking and a hallmark of the original rule.

Sam Evans, an attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center, said the three-week comment period—only 14 business days from official publication—is an “unusual choice,” given the norm of 30-day comment periods. This also differs, he said, from when the Bush administration proposed repealing the rule in 2005. At that time, the administration offered a two-month comment period, which it extended an additional two months following a public request to do so.

Evans said that a “lengthy and intensive public process,” including over 600 hearings across the country and a flood of supportive comments, was crucial in the development of a strong rule more than two decades ago.

“Nothing like that can happen with the staff capacity and the timeline that the [USFS] is talking about here,” he said. “I think that just goes to show that the Forest Service here is not interested in developing public buy-in or reflecting the interests of the communities that it is supposedly serving.”

How to Submit a Comment

The Forest Service is taking public comments on a key part of its effort to rescind the Roadless Rule. Comments can be shared at Regulations.gov through Sept. 19.

“Regulations do not specify the length of public comments. For the notice of intent to development an environmental impact statement, the 21 days was determined to be efficient to notify the public and seek comment. The comment period for the draft environmental impact statement and the proposed rule will be longer,” the USDA press office wrote in response to Inside Climate News’ questions about the shorter comment period.

“The rationale for repealing the Roadless Rule, I find very puzzling and a bit of a ruse for perhaps some other agenda,” said Mike Dombeck, who served as the chief of the agency from 1997 to 2001 and helped develop the rule. “The Forest Service has been a conservation leader over the decades. We need to make sure we continue to strengthen that image and that capability, because we need it more now than ever.”

Implemented at the end of the Clinton administration, the rule prohibits road construction, road reconstruction and timber harvesting on a wide swath of USFS land, effectively protecting a variety of places in states from Alaska to Vermont as remote wilderness areas.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced at a Western Governors’ Association conference in June that USFS, which falls under her agency, planned to rescind it. Like many other conservation professionals, Dombeck said that Rollins’ argument—that repealing the rule would open up forests for timber production—doesn’t have a logical basis.

“As I recall from my involvement in developing the Roadless Rule, only about 8 percent of [forest in] the roadless areas is productive timber base to begin with,” he said. “The assumption that there’s a lot of wood [with economic value in] roadless areas is just simply not true.”

Rulemaking is meant to be a slow, deliberate process, and so too is deregulation. But the Trump administration seems to have a faster outcome in mind, Evans said.

“We’ve heard rumors that the Forest Service … expects to finalize the rule next year,” said Evans, leader of the Southern Environmental Law Center’s National Forests and Parks Program. “Obviously, we don’t think that there is a solid case for repeal of the Roadless Rule. We think that the rule has had tremendous benefits.”

Grassroots organizations across the country got the word out to the public about the initial rule during its development, helping strengthen it. Some groups are now echoing earlier efforts of grassroots organizations in their attempts to fight a repeal.

“Our real interest now is making sure that folks understand what the policy measures are that ensure that public lands actually remain the way that people think of them,” said Alex Craven, a senior campaign representative at the Sierra Club focusing on forest conservation.

The announcement comes as Rollins is proposing a plan to reorganize the Forest Service, including closing nine regional offices over the next year. In the proposal, dated July 24, the agriculture secretary argued that the reorganization would improve “effectiveness and accountability.”

However, experts are cautioning that this could greatly weaken the Forest Service as a whole. The National Association of Forest Service Retirees, for example, submitted comments arguing that the proposal lacks detail and could compromise regional functions. The group urged the USFS to reassess the plan.

“It certainly seems like a disorganized approach to reducing the workforce. If it accomplished anything, it created a lot of chaos, both within the agency and among the partners that depend upon the Forest Service,” Dombeck said.

Craven said that most of the USFS regional offices have been located west of the Rocky Mountains. With the reorganization, “it’s looking like maybe it will be flipped,” he said, despite the fact that wildfire risk is higher in Western states.

Closing regional offices could mean losing staff with knowledge of wildfire mitigation and what to do when invasive bug species arrive in their respective regions, weakening the agency’s ability to respond to disasters.

“Losing the capacity and the research stations is kind of horrifying to me,” Evans said.

The reorganization could also lose the agency irreplaceable institutional knowledge and make it difficult to meet statutory requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), such as producing environmental impact statements.

“Those are really important steps, and with the reorganization, with the drain in capacity that the agency has right now, it’s very hard for you to imagine them doing a good job of that,” Evans said. “Let’s say that they push this through with a truncated NEPA analysis or a really skeletal consultation process. They’re going to be stuck with the loose ends of that forever. … Every project that they do in the future is going to be vulnerable.”

Even with the proposed NEPA changes that the Trump administration announced in July, Evans said that the USFS will still have to follow statutory requirements, which have remained the same. The “ultimate responsibility” of the USFS to consider environmental impacts, he said, still stands.

Lie, Cheat, Steal. Circumvent the Law. Repeat.Post + Comments (62)

There goes the STEM pipeline

by David Anderson|  August 29, 20257:51 am| 66 Comments

This post is in: Fuckery, Open Threads, Politics

PhDing is a weird and arduous process with substantial variance and unpredictability. I was weird in that I effectively did a post-doc before I ever even thought to apply for my PhD so I was able to get out in three years with a tenure track job lined up. Most programs in my discipline/area of interest expect that good, well prepared students who have excellent mentorship and can line everything up right to take four years to get out in the best case.  The median case is probably a five year course of study and research.  After seven years, there should be substantive discussions about progress and future milestones as something likely went off-kilter somewhere.

To do it well, PhDing is not a speed-runnable event .

The Trump Administration wants to make it a speed running event for international students which will destroy a critical talent pipeline:

Trump admin planning to change student visas from lasting for duration of academic program to fixed 4-yr term, and then much harder to renew
Could destroy US ability to attract global talent, particularly those seeking advanced degrees in STEM. The median time to complete a PhD is 5.7 yrs per NSF.

[image or embed]

— Catherine Rampell (@crampell.bsky.social) August 29, 2025 at 6:52 AM

 

I am so glad I am not applying for any PhD program director positions this fall as I like not having only gray hair.

There goes the STEM pipelinePost + Comments (66)

A Day Later and I’m Still Furious About This

by WaterGirl|  August 9, 20259:00 pm| 85 Comments

This post is in: Bad Faith Actors, Breathtaking Corruption, Fuckery, Grieving for Our Country, Open Threads, Today in Republican Corruption, Today’s Fresh Hell

Someone posted a twitter link to this yesterday, but I didn’t want to link to shitter, so I tracked this down on BlueSky.

Absolutely infuriating!

Pete Hegseth shares a clip saying women shouldn’t have the right to vote, the 19th Amendment should be “repealed,” and women should “submit” to their husbands: “All of Christ for All of Life”

[image or embed]

— People For the American Way (@peoplefor.bsky.social) August 8, 2025 at 10:17 AM

I know this is like tasting something, making a terrible face and then saying, “here, you try it”.  Um, no thanks!

But everyone should know that this shit is being said about women – out loud!  with no shame!  by the current Administration.

It’s really short, maybe less than a minute.  Knowledge is power.

A Day Later and I’m Still Furious About ThisPost + Comments (85)

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