News

Monday 2026-05-04

01:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 羊 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小3

sheep

ヨウ

ひつじ

羊水   (ようすい)   —   amniotic fluid
羊蹄   (ぎしぎし)   —   Japanese dock (Rumex japonicus)
羊羹   (ようかん)   —   yokan
子羊   (こひつじ)   —   lamb
羊肉   (ようにく)   —   mutton
羊飼い   (ひつじかい)   —   shepherd
羊毛   (ようもう)   —   wool
山羊   (やぎ)   —   goat
牧羊犬   (ぼくようけん)   —   sheepdog
羊の群れ   (ひつじのむれ)   —   flock of sheep

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 姫 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

中学

princess

ひめ ひめ-

美姫   (びき)   —   beautiful maiden
歌姫   (うたひめ)   —   songstress
お姫様   (おひいさま)   —   princess
姫君   (ひめぎみ)   —   daughter of a person of high rank (esp. eldest daughter)
白雪姫   (しらゆきひめ)   —   Snow White
姫さま   (ひめさま)   —   princess
眠り姫   (ねむりひめ)   —   Sleeping Beauty (fairy tale)
乙姫   (おとひめ)   —   younger princess
姫様   (ひめさま)   —   princess
織姫   (おりひめ)   —   woman textile worker

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

05:00 AM

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for April 26 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
Euganean Hills are a group of hills of volcanic origin that rise to heights of 300 to 600 m in Veneto, Italy.

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for May 1 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
View of the coastal artillery site Castillitos, Cartagena, Spain. It was built together with the coastal artillery Cenizas in order to protect the entrance to the Bay of Cartagena in the Mediterranean Sea. The construction took place between 1933 and 1936 following a project from 1926 during the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera. It's a Spanish National Heritage Monument since 1985.

Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt [Techdirt]

This week, n00bdragon takes both top spots in the insightful side. In first place, it’s a comment about Trump’s latest attempt to get Jimmy Kimmel fired:

What gets me the most confused is that Kimmel gave his monologue multiple days before the WHCD. No one objected at the time. No one, not even the administration, is implying that his monologue inspired the gunman (who probably already has his hotel reservation booked). There is absolutely no nexus, real or even alleged, between Jimmy Kimmel’s joke and the attempted assassination. The demand to fire Kimmel is a complete non sequitur. What next? “The sky is blue today, so fire Jimmy Kimmel”?

In second place, it’s a comment about the details included in the DOJ’s crazy legal brief about the White House ballroom:

Uh, forget about telling the (fake?) National Trust for Historic Preservation about the details of a top secret military installation. Did… the White House just tell us about details of a top secret military installation? Pretty sure there are lots of spy networks all over the world that would LOVE to find out if all the air vents are connected and if hacking the security in the ballroom will get you into the underground bunker. I guess the Very Stable Genius (and lawyer, apparently) answered that for him. Best president ever!

For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from Thad about Tennessee’s Charlie Kirk Act:

I’ve said it before, but they tried to use his death like the Reichstag fire or 9/11 but the plain truth is most people didn’t know who he was.

And people like Kirk have spent the past25 years training Americans to just shrug and move on when there’s a shooting. He was literally in the middle of trivializing shootings when he was shot. Well, he got what he wanted; nobody fucking cares.

Next, it’s MrWilson with a reply to the first place winning comment:

We saw this post-9/11. The attacks (or terrorism in general) were used as an argument in favor of whatever cause a politician wanted to push. It didn’t require even the thinnest thread of a connection in their minds.

“I’m a proud American patriot and the terrorists are coming for our precious dairy industry, so the farmers in my district deserve a special tax break!”

It’s just abject and obvious opportunism.

Over on the funny side, our first place winner is an anonymous comment on our post comparing Palantir employees to the characters in a famous Mitchell & Webb sketch:

They’re already in the process of switching to a rat’s anus.

In second place, it’s Pixelation with a comment about Paramount trying to blame Netflix for all the negative merger press:

Follow the orange clown

They should go one step further and blame the real culprit. Biden! All that is wrong with America, Biden did it!

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with an anonymous comment about James Comey’s seashell post:

Amazing! I have the same combination on my luggage!

Finally, it’s That One Guy with another comment about Jimmy Kimmel:

MAGAts: Make humor legal again!

Liberal Comedian: [Exists]

MAGAts: Not that kind!

That’s all for this week, folks!

Sunday 2026-05-03

09:00 PM

Just like me, but… [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

The actor, artist, mathematician, pianist, speaker, leader, tech nerd: Just like me, but talented.

I’m not so sure.

It might be more accurate to say “just like me, but dedicated.”

The first approach lets us off the hook.

The second approach opens the door to possibility.

      

07:00 PM

FlavaWorks Sues Operator and 325 Users of Private Torrent Tracker Gay-Torrents [TorrentFreak]

gay torrentsFlavaWorks is an Illinois-based adult entertainment company specializing in content featuring Black and Latino men.

The company has pursued copyright infringers aggressively for years, including a $1.5 million damages award against a defendant who shared its films on BitTorrent and a high-profile clash with an unnamed television executive that was eventually settled.

This week, the company continues its legal pressure with a complaint filed last week at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The lawsuit targets the owner and administrators of private BitTorrent tracker Gay-Torrents.org, the company that allegedly receives the site’s revenue, and 325 individual members identified only by their site usernames.

Site Owner, Admins, and a Bulgarian Company

Gay-Torrents.org is a private, invite-only BitTorrent tracker that has operated since June 2009. According to the complaint, more than 146,000 members registered at the site since its launch, of which 20,671 members are currently active.

The complaint largely targets unnamed defendants, including the site’s alleged operator, who goes by the handle “TheMan”. According to Flava, “TheMan” was one of the first registered members, using the site’s official email address as the main contact.

TheMan

theman

In addition to the operator, seven administrators are also named as John Doe defendants, identified only by their site usernames: sgmusuk, jasepl, Marius, ams_guy, lucasneo, simlacroix, and matthewmancs. According to the complaint, matthewmancs alone has generated more than 470 terabytes of upload and download traffic, the largest sharing volume of any user.

Flava does not only list unnamed defendants; it also identifies BYZONA LTD, a Bulgarian company, as being involved. This company and its operator are allegedly linked to 247host.eu and cloud2max.club. These are shell entities, which Flava believes are used to route VIP-membership payments through Skrill and PayPal, while concealing the site’s true beneficiaries.

The complaint alleges that the two shells together have generated more than €7 million in revenue since 2009. This is not an exact calculation, but based on Flava’s analysis of the site’s VIP pricing, donation records, and the registered member data.

“Straight-Up Extortion”

This is not the first time that Flava has targeted users of the private torrent tracker. In fact, the complaint quotes the site’s owner characterizing FlavaWorks’ enforcement as a scam. Last December, TheMan posted on the Gay-Torrents.org forum in response to a member who had received a cease and desist letter from the studio.

Posting under his “Owner” account, TheMan wrote: “This is straight-up extortion, and people shouldn’t fall for it.”

TheMan also told users the studio had been “uploading their own shitty content themselves just so they can blackmail users afterwards,” and claimed: “We deleted all of their stuff a long time ago.”

TheMan’s forum post (from the lawsuit’s evidence package)

theman extort

Flava’s complaint points out that the private tracker did not remove all contested content, as 47 of the 56 infringing links it reported in February 2024 remained active on the site twenty months later. Some of the infringing content remained accessible when the lawsuit was filed, the company adds.

A French Uploader and 325 Registered Users

The lawsuit doesn’t only focus on the alleged owner and administrators; it also lists a prolific uploader who is identified as the Frenchman Ludovic D. This defendant allegedly purchased two paid subscriptions to FlavaWorks-affiliated sites in 2004 and 2013, which were both traceable to the same email address and other personal details.

Since Flava uses a forensic-watermarking system to link videos to registered users, it could track the man’s account to more than thirty videos that were uploaded to the torrent tracker.

“Defendant [D.] cancelled his subscription approximately thirty days after purchase, on the same day as his final download session—a pattern consistent with bulk acquisition for redistribution rather than ordinary consumption,” the complaint reads.

In addition to the named Frenchman, the complaint also lists 325 “John Doe” defendants who are only known by their usernames. These users all allegedly shared Flava’s copyrighted works, are based in the U.S., were active in the Gay-Torrents forums, and purchased VIP memberships.

Courts have previously been wary of joining this many Doe defendants in a single lawsuit. Flava recognizes this and specifically notes that this isn’t part of a mass settlement scheme, while promising to dismiss all defendants who don’t fall under the court’s jurisdiction.

“This is not a mass-joinder action seeking to extract settlements from non-resident Doe defendants in a distant forum,” the complaint reads.

‘$7 Million’ Asset Freeze and More

Flava also requests an asset freezing order targeting the assets in the Skrill account associated with BYZONA and the PayPal account associated with cloud2max.club. Those can be as high as €7,000,000, the complaint notes. That is an estimation based on Flava’s calculations, assuming that no funds were spent or taken out in 17 years.

Asset Freeze

gay assets

In addition, the complaint also asks the court to direct Cloudflare to preserve all records relating to the gay-torrents.org domain, including DNS configuration records and customer communications, without taking the site offline.

In total, the complaint lists seven counts, including copyright claims for direct, contributory, and vicarious infringement, and a separate inducement count against the alleged operator and administrators.

To support these secondary liability claims, Flava cites the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Cox Communications v. Sony, arguing that the Bulgarian shell entities are “tailored to infringement” and without any “substantial noninfringing use.”

The remaining three are state-law claims for unjust enrichment, civil conspiracy, and fraudulent concealment. The latter is built around the alleged payment-routing scheme through 247host.eu and cloud2max.club.

As compensation, Flava requests statutory damages of up to $150,000 per work for willful infringement. The exact number of works is not listed, but with hundreds of titles in Flava’s catalog, the potential damages run into the many millions of dollars.

Finally, it is worth noting that this is not Flava’s only case against a private torrent tracker. Last March, the adult company filed a copyright lawsuit against an alleged Canadian leaker of its videos, as well as 47 users of the private torrent tracker GayTorrent.ru. This lawsuit remains pending at the Illinois federal court.

A copy of the complaint, filed this week by FlavaWorks Entertainment, Inc. at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, is available here (pdf).

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

12:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 頭 [Kanji of the Day]

✍16

小2

head, counter for large animals

トウ ズ ト

あたま かしら -がしら かぶり

先頭   (せんとう)   —   head (of a line, group, etc.)
冒頭   (ぼうとう)   —   beginning
街頭演説   (がいとうえんぜつ)   —   roadside speech
店頭   (てんとう)   —   shopfront
頭痛   (ずつう)   —   headache
街頭   (がいとう)   —   street
念頭   (ねんとう)   —   mind
頭から   (あたまから)   —   from the beginning
筆頭   (ひっとう)   —   brush tip
台頭   (たいとう)   —   rise (e.g., of a movement)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 詐 [Kanji of the Day]

✍12

中学

lie, falsehood, deceive, pretend

いつわ.る

詐欺   (さぎ)   —   fraud
振り込め詐欺   (ふりこめさぎ)   —   remittance fraud
詐取   (さしゅ)   —   defrauding
詐欺罪   (さぎざい)   —   fraud
詐欺師   (さぎし)   —   swindler
フィッシング詐欺   (フィッシングさぎ)   —   phishing
オレオレ詐欺   (オレオレさぎ)   —   phone scam involving calls from pretended relatives in distress
詐称   (さしょう)   —   misrepresentation
おれおれ詐欺   (おれおれさぎ)   —   phone scam involving calls from pretended relatives in distress
学歴詐称   (がくれきさしょう)   —   false statement (misrepresentation) of one's academic career

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

08:00 AM

Pluralistic: The prehistory of the Democratic Nuremberg Caucus (02 May 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->-> Top Sources: None -->

Today's links



A post-war 'denazification' bonfire featuring several Nazi flags. It has been hand-tinted. There is a smouldering MAGA hat amidst the coals.

The prehistory of the Democratic Nuremberg Caucus (permalink)

Comrade Trump continues his unbroken streak of destroying the American empire's grip on the world, hastening the renewables transition, de-dollarizing global trade, and killing the world's suicidal habit of entrusting its digital life to America's defective, enshittified tech exports:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/20/praxis/#acceleration

But Comrade Trump's ambitious praxis knows no bounds. Now, he's helping to remake the Democratic Party as a muscular opposition with a serious commitment to workers' interests over billionaires. It's not merely that Trump has empowered the primary campaigns of leftist Democrats facing down corporate, AIPAC-backed sellouts:

https://prospect.org/2026/04/30/palestine-super-pac-new-jersey-12-district-adam-hamawy/

He's also stiffening normie sellout Democrats' spines, forcing them to confront the stark choice between socialism and barbarism! And Dem leaders don't come more normie sellout than Cory "Big Pharma" Booker, a disgrace to Corys everywhere:

https://web.archive.org/web/20170112224531/https://theintercept.com/2017/01/12/cory-booker-joins-senate-republicans-to-kill-measure-to-import-cheaper-medicine-from-canada/

Nevertheless, that very same (lesser) Cory has introduced legislation to unwind every illegal, corrupt merger that the Trump administration has waved through:

https://www.booker.senate.gov/news/press/booker-introduces-legislation-to-review-and-unwind-anticompetitive-corporate-mergers-approved-under-second-trump-administration

Under the Correcting Lapsed Enforcement in Antitrust Norms for Mergers (CLEAN Mergers) Act, any company that was acquired in a deal worth $10b or more will have to break up with its merger partner if it turns out that these mergers were "politically influenced." "Politically influenced" sums up every major merger under the Trump II regime:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/02/13/khanservatives/#kid-rock-eats-shit

You could be forgiven for assuming that this is just about reining in Wall Street greed, but that it isn't an especially political maneuver. That's not true: antitrust is the most consequentially political regulation (with the possible exception of regulations on elections). Every fascist power defeated in WWII relied on the backing of their national monopolists to take, hold and wield power. That's why the Marshall Plan technocrats who rewrote the laws of Europe, South Korea and Japan made sure to copy over US antitrust law onto those statute-books (that's also why the tech antitrust cases brought in Europe could be re-run in South Korea and Japan – their laws are all substantively similar, because they were harmonized with US antitrust in the 1950s):

https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/22/autocrats-of-trade/#dingo-babysitter

Fascism and monopolies go hand in hand, and smashing monopolies is key to the program of fighting fascism. After defeating fascism in the mid-20th century, the Allies oversaw a program of "denazification," starting with the Nuremberg trials:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_trials

Inspired by those trials, I've proposed that Congressional Dems could form a "Nuremberg Caucus" that would publicly promise sweeping plans to denazify America after Trump and his allies have been swept from power:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/02/10/miller-in-the-dock/#denazification

The centerpiece of the Nuremberg Caucus playbook is a set of ready-to-file, public indictments against Trump officials who have violated the law, the Constitution, and the rights of the people of the USA. Dems should create and maintain a docket with exhibits and witness lists that gets updated every time one of these crooks runs their big, stupid mouths on Fox News or OANN or Twitter. The Nuremberg Caucus could even set dates for the trials of officials, with judicial calendars for each federal courtroom, starting on January 21, 2029.

The idea here is to both demoralize Trump's collaborators and to stiffen the spines of the Democratic base who will have to be convinced that turning out for the coming elections, and defending them, will mean something, delivering the change and hope they've been promised since the Obama campaign, but which has never materialized.

While trials and punishment for Trump's fascist goons are at the center of the Nuremberg Caucus plan, that's not all of it. The plan also calls for publicly announcing the intention to unwind every corrupt merger that was consummated under Trump. This serves two purposes: first, it promises the electorate that the monopolists who steal from them will face consequences for their crimes; but second, it also puts investors on notice that any gains from corrupt mergers will turn into massive losses once the next administration orders these companies to unscramble the inedible omelets they're cooking up, no matter what the cost.

That's exactly what Booker's CLEAN Mergers Act – cosponsored by Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Chris Murphy (D-CT), and Mazie Hirono (D-HI) – does. I don't think that Booker is listening to me, but I do think that Dems who are willing to introduce this kind of legislation can be cajoled, coerced and sweet-talked into more ambitious Nuremberg Caucus actions.

For example, there could not be a better time to announce plans to unrig the Supreme Court, which has just gutted the Voting Rights Act:

https://prospect.org/2026/05/01/turning-civil-rights-inside-out-supreme-court-voting-rights/

The Supreme Court's legitimacy has been burned to the ground, and Trump's chud justices are pissing on the ashes. Packing the court is a very good idea:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/09/20/judicial-equilibria/#pack-the-court

It's also a very popular idea:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/18/the-people-no/#tell-ya-what-i-want-what-i-really-really-want

Which is why I included it in the Nuremberg Caucus plan. But packing the court is just table stakes. In his latest video, Jamelle Bouie lays out a detailed plan for denazifying the Supreme Court:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRzS61buXkQ

As Bouie points out, "as long as John Roberts has his majority, nothing the left of center in this country wants to do is safe or stable…We can have democracy and self-government in this country or we can have the Supreme Court as it exists, but we cannot have both."

But packing the court – while a good place to start – isn't enough. Per Bouie, the problem isn't just the court's corruption – it's how powerful the court is. Article 3, Section 2 of the Constitution permits Congress to "jurisdiction strip" the Supremes: Congress can pass a law taking voting rights and racial discrimination away from the Supreme Court's jurisdiction. Congress can impose ethics reforms on the court, banning justices from taking bribes (I can't believe I have to type these words).

Congress can turn the Supreme Court's current building into a museum and move the Supreme Court back into its original home in Congress's basement. Congress can take away the Supremes' ability to select their clerks or which cases they hear. All the Constitution says is that there must be a Supreme Court, and it must adjudicate "disputes between states, disputes involving ambassadors, impeachments, that kind of thing." Everything else is up to Congress to grant or withhold from SCOTUS.

This is very good Nuremberg Caucus stuff. It would be an amazing campaign promise for anyone primarying a shitty normie Dem in the midterms: "Vote for me, and I will be part of the legislative movement to make the Supreme Court weaker and thus more accountable."

Now, as much as I like this, I'm really holding out for a Dem to go with my big ICE-melting idea: promising million-dollar bounties for ICE officers who rat out their buddies for violating the law:

ICE agents are signing up with the promise of $50k hiring bonuses and $60k in student debt cancellation. That's peanuts. The Nuremberg Caucus could announce a Crimestoppers-style program with $1m bounties for any ICE officer who a) is themselves innocent of any human rights violations, and; b) provides evidence leading to the conviction of another ICE officer for committing human rights violations. That would certainly improve morale for (some) ICE officers.

As I wrote in February:

Critics of this plan will say that this will force Trump officials to try to steal the next election in order to avoid consequences for their actions. This is certainly true: confidence in a "peaceful transfer of power" is the bedrock of any kind of fair election.

But this bunch have already repeatedly signaled that they intend to steal the midterms and the next general election:

https://www.nj.com/politics/2026/02/top-senate-republican-rejects-trumps-shocking-election-plan-i-think-thats-a-constitutional-issue.html

ICE agents are straight up telling people that ICE is on the streets to arrest people in Democratic-leaning states ("The more people that you lose in Minnesota, you then lose a voting right to stay blue"):

https://unicornriot.ninja/2026/federal-agent-in-coon-rapids-the-more-people-that-you-lose-in-minnesota-you-then-lose-a-voting-right-to-stay-blue/

The only path to fair elections – and saving America – lies through mobilizing and energizing hundreds of millions of Americans. They are ready. They are begging for leadership. They want an electoral choice, something better than a return to the pre-Trump status quo. If you want giant crowds at every polling place, rising up against ICE and DHS voter-suppression, then you have to promise people that their vote will mean something.


Hey look at this (permalink)



A shelf of leatherbound history books with a gilt-stamped series title, 'The World's Famous Events.'

Object permanence (permalink)

#25yrsago Implementing TCP over pigeon https://blug.linux.no/rfc1149/

#20yrsago Barenaked Ladies frontman on copyright reform https://web.archive.org/web/20060505032617/http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/issuesideas/story.html?id=3367a219-f395-4161-a9b9-95256c613824

#20yrsago Stephen Colbert kills at White House press corps dinner https://web.archive.org/web/20060501114431/http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002425363

#20yrsago Cinema owners try to lure us back to the movies https://web.archive.org/web/20060620140301/https://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/peninsula/14457900.htm?source=rss&channel=mercurynews_peninsula

#20yrsago Smithsonian’s sellout to Showtime slammed by Congress https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/28/AR2006042802213_2.html

#20yrago Wallaby milk: proof against antibiotic resistant bacteria https://web.archive.org/web/20060429102138/http://news.scotsman.com/scitech.cfm?id=593632006

#20yrsago Documentary on radical free school https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgpuSo-GSfw

#15yrsago Facebook celebrates royal wedding by nuking 50 protest groups https://anticutsspace.wordpress.com/2011/04/29/political-facebook-groups-deleted-on-royal-wedding-day/

#15yrsago Jay Rosen: What I Think I Know About Journalism https://pressthink.org/2011/04/what-i-think-i-know-about-journalism/

#15yrsago Companies should release the source code for discontinued products https://makezine.com/article/maker-news/if-youre-going-to-kill-it-open-source-it/

#15yrsago Scratch-built “freedom press” https://makezine.com/article/craft/freedom_press/

#15yrsago HOWTO quilt a 3D Mad Tea Party set https://www.instructables.com/Quilted-Mad-Tea-Party-Set/

#15yrsago Online activism works: Canada delayed US-style copyright bill in fear of activist campaign https://web.archive.org/web/20110501103056/https://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/5763/125/

#15yrsago Ad agency to radicals: “We own radical media(TM)” https://web.archive.org/web/20110503045909/http://radicalmediaconference.wordpress.com/2011/04/27/we-make-radical-media-you-make-adverts/

#15yrsago Troubletwisters: Garth Nix and Sean Williams’ action-packed new kids’ fantasy https://memex.craphound.com/2011/04/30/troubletwisters-garth-nix-and-sean-williams-action-packed-new-kids-fantasy/

#15yrsago RIP, Joanna Russ https://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/012974.html#547586

#5yrsago Experian doxes the world (again) https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/30/dox-the-world/#experian

#5yrsago Disney's writer wage-theft is far worse than reported https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/29/writers-must-be-paid/#pay-the-writer

#5yrsago Korea set to break the Samsung dynasty https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/29/writers-must-be-paid/#dynasties

#5yrsago What the hell is "carried interest" https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/29/writers-must-be-paid/#carried-interest

#1yrago Mike Lee and Jim Jordan want to kill the law that bans companies from cheating you https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/29/cheaters-and-liars/#caveat-emptor-brainworms

#1yrago Republicans want to force students to pay off scam college loans https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/30/trump-u/#i-think-you-know-what-the-trustees-can-do-with-their-suggestions


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

A photo of me onstage, giving a speech, pounding the podium.



A screenshot of me at my desk, doing a livecast.

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/)

  • "Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026

  • "The Post-American Internet," a geopolitical sequel of sorts to Enshittification, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2027

  • "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027

  • "The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Third draft completed. Submitted to editor.

  • "The Reverse Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book for Farrar, Straus and Giroux about being an effective AI critic. LEGAL REVIEW AND COPYEDIT COMPLETE.

  • "The Post-American Internet," a short book about internet policy in the age of Trumpism. PLANNING.

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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https://doctorow.medium.com/

Tumblr (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising):

https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/tagged/pluralistic

"When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla

READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer.

ISSN: 3066-764X

Just for Skeets and Giggles (5.2.26) [The Status Kuo]

I need a bit of help. I’ve been averaging just one or two new paid upgrades a day lately (thank you!), but that’s not quite enough to offset those who decide not to renew for various reasons. Sadly not sustainable should the trend continue! If just three readers a day bought me coffee each month, I would sleep a lot easier! Be my virtual coffee date? Thanks for considering!

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The week started off with, well, a bang. And frankly, folks had questions.

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Note: Xcancel links mirror Twitter without sending traffic. Some GIFs may load; just swipe them down. Issues? Click the gear on the Xcancel page’s upper right, select “proxy video streaming through the server,” then “save preferences” at the bottom. For sanity, don’t read the comments; they’re all bots and trolls. Won’t load? Paste the link into your browser and remove “cancel” after the X in the URL.

Many were initially skeptical, even as the right pounced to make this all about violent leftists.

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People predicted how Trump would milk the moment.

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It turns out, he made it all about his damn ballroom and how security was needed more than ever.

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The FBI was on it!

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Man, the internet is fast.

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The conspiracy theories continued to fly, but not without a sense of humor.

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My favorite was this one.

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It didn’t help matters that Karoline Leavitt had said THIS earlier in the evening.

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The would-be attacker reportedly left a message indicating his reasons for the attack. But he oddly made a point of leaving Kash Patel off his list of targets.

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One viral moment from the evening was this unflappable guest, who just kept eating his salad through the mayhem.

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Erika Kirk left the event… in tears, of course. Commentary ensued.

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Wonder how she’ll monetize the moment.

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Trump gave an interview the very next day on 60 Minutes, and Jon Stewart had some thoughts on that incredible moment. Here’s the whole piece on The Daily Show:

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After footage from the security cameras showed a, let’s just say, rather lax security perimeter that the assailant was able to run right through after being spotted by a dog and a guard, there were questions about competence and mission.

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The third alleged attempt on the President’s life was not the only news this week, of course. There was also a royal visit, which evoked inevitable comparisons.

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And the astronauts from the Artemis II mission had to endure another uncomfortable journey.

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Trump is putting pressure again on ABC to fire Jimmy Kimmel, but Kimmel isn’t backing down.

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He also came for former FBI Director James Comey again, this time over a photo of seashells on the beach that Comey posted to Instagram. Let the trolling begin!

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This is both hilarious and an earworm!

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Hear, hear!

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Can you be indicted for this? Asking for a friend.

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Let’s not let Trump’s shell game distract us from this.

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Or from this.

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In a terrible blow to voting rights, the Supreme Court handed down its Callais decision, gutting Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Josh Johnson had a few thoughts on that.

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We weren’t quite done with Erika Kirk stories, either. She actually went on her podcast looking like this, then proceeded to make this sound:

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And she wonders why the internet mocks her. Even the MAGA folks!

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Maybe we should just have sympathy for the poor woman.

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Speaking of MAGA ladies, this influencer thought she’d found someone like-minded. Nope!

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Last week we were treated to 90 excruciating seconds of Russell Brand trying to locate a Bible verse during an interview. Then came the meta commentary.

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Neil Stone was on a roll. Or maybe a rolling Stone?

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Others had a culinary take.

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Okay, back to Neil.

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Nudge nudge! Please support your friendly neighborhood Substack writer with an upgrade to a paid account!

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I’ve seen cats do this all the time. Dogs? Not so much!

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This was an admittedly incredible moment for this NFL recruit, but my eyes were on the dog! Good boy!

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We may have to rename the cone of shame to the cone of pride. Rooster, you are rocking the look!

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Do not attempt at home.

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To be fair, this is also often my reaction to a bad horn section.

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I was rooting for him at the way. And wow, look what he did at the end!

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This doggo is Instafamous for a reason. Wow.

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This clip stole the internet’s heart this week.

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Those eyes! How could anyone keep playing?

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If cats could talk, I think we know what she’d be saying.

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Reminder of why I don’t want to raise large farm animals.

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I didn’t know there was a World Penguin Day, nor did I know penguins make this sound when delighted.

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Here’s another animal story involving a stuffed version of mom. Not for a monkey, but for an owl!

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They finna get it on.

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The chances of being slapped by a turtle in the open sea are very small but non-zero.

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When the sushi is a bit too live crew.

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My own brain wouldn’t have leapt to this, but that’s why the internet exists.

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Speaking of cow posts, this series is one for the ages.

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OMG she saw it.

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Wait, Google saw it.

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There was more to cover, of course, so as not to be utterly ashamed.

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Google Earth has caught some sus things before.

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This is like those AI nude generators.

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In the human world, if you’re wondering where your package went, take a look.

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🎶 So why don’t you slide… 🎶

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What’s up, brah?

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A picture of poise and balance.

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My new favorite celebrity chef is this little chap:

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I want some Yorkshire pudding now!

We end, as usual, with a ridiculous dad joke. This is a shout-out to my brother Kaiser and his return to the rock scene in China!

Have a great weekend!

Jay

07:00 AM

Game Jam Winner Spotlight: Diary Of A Provincial Lady [Techdirt]

We’ve arrived at the end of our series of spotlight posts looking at the winners of our eighth annual public domain game jam, Gaming Like It’s 1930! We’ve already covered the Best Adaptation, Best Deep Cut, Best Visuals, Best Remix, and Best Digital Game winners, and now we’re wrapping things up with a look at the Best Analog Game: Diary of a Provincial Lady by donnabooby.

E. M. Delafield’s novel Diary of a Provincial Lady was a smash hit when it was published in 1930, and it’s remained in print ever since. Its success came from its combination of comedy with authentic slice-of-life insight into a particular lifestyle, and its stylistic influence can be seen even in modern classics like Bridget Jones’s Diary. This game of the same name might not quite achieve the same status, but there’s no reason it couldn’t: it’s an excellent little party game that blends the mechanics of games like Apples to Apples with the appropriation-and-remix techniques of blackout poetry and similar art forms.

Like many such games, it all starts with a randomly selected prompt — in this case, a random combination of an illustration from the novel with a short question or fill-in-the-blank sentence.

Players compete to impress the rotating judge (or Provincial Lady) for the round by deploying a card from their hand to match the prompt. But rather than just making a selection, first they make alterations. Players are asked to modify a diary entry from the novel by crossing out, changing, and inserting words, adding emphasis with underlines and circles, and otherwise editing the text on their card to craft the best prompt response.

Like any such party game, how it plays out depends entirely on the creativity and taste of the players. The creative freedom of the editing aspect opens it up to so many expressive possibilities beyond the acts of contrast and juxtaposition that dominate other similar games. The charming illustrations and tone-setting text of the diary entries give shape to this freedom, rooting everything in the sometimes-dated, sometimes-timeless atmosphere of the novel. Put it all together and you’ve got a genuinely fun and replayable exercise that is this year’s Best Analog Game.

Congratulations to donnabooby for the win! You can get everything you need to play Diary of a Provincial Lady from its page on Itch. That’s the end of our winner spotlights this time around, but don’t forget to check out the many great entries that didn’t quite make the cut. Thanks again to everyone who participated in the jam, and stay tuned for next year when we’ll be back for Gaming Like It’s 1931!

Saturday 2026-05-02

08:00 PM

Nostalgia can be fatal [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

For hundreds of years, nostalgia was seen as a serious disease, with doctors across Europe scrambling for a cure. Hundreds of thousands of people died from it.

In the original understanding of the term, it was a sort of homesickness. Soldiers from Switzerland were the first to get the official diagnosis–separated from their friends, family and homes, these young men would suffer from melancholy and would waste away, sometimes fatally.

As it spread, one theory was that it afflicted people from places that were at high altitude. As more humans traveled, often under duress (for example, enslaved people kidnapped from their homes and brought by ship to the new world), the suffering increased.

It’s not hard to see how a sudden, involuntary dislocation could be debilitating. Particularly if home was a place that was insulated from sudden change and fast-moving culture.

Today, future shock is bringing a new, if milder form of the affliction. As technology, jobs and culture shift faster than ever before, it’s understandable that many are yearning for a return to an imagined past. When the future arrives uninvited, it can feel like being pulled from a comfortable village in the middle of the night.

Knowing our peers are encountering challenges with the transitions at work or at home can give us the insight to build the scaffolding they need to find their footing. And perhaps we can offer ourselves a bit of grace as well.

      

02:00 PM

Trump’s Surgeon General Search: Casey Means Out, Casey Means In Groucho Glasses & Mustache In! [Techdirt]

A quick reminder: America has not had a confirmed Surgeon General at the federal level since January of 2025. Yes, that’s over a year ago. How we got here is a microcosm of the Trump administration generally: chaos, misfires, and the wrong people at the very top. Janette Nesheiwat was Trump’s first nominee. MAGA gremlin Laura Loomer complained about her very loudly, leading Trump to obediently pull back the nomination.

In her place, he then nominated Casey Means in May of 2025. Means has been described as RFK Jr.’s “favorite wellness influencer”, which is a more subtle way of saying that she’s not a licensed doctor. That fact generated a lot of pushback in Congress, not only from Democrats, but Republicans too. Then, during her confirmation hearing in March of this year, Means dodged questions about vaccines as much as she possibly could, leading Senators like Bill Cassidy and others to question what her actual belief structure on vaccines is, and how much it aligns with RFK Jr.’s. Ultimately, few people thought her nomination was in a good place when it comes to confirmation.

Trump finally woke up to that fact, angrily of course, and has now pulled the Means nomination as well. In her place, he has now nominated radiologist Nicole Saphier, who also moonlights as a health commentator for Fox News. In many ways, Saphier is merely Casey Means wearing sunglasses and a false mustache.

In some ways she’s different. For instance, she’s an actual practicing doctor. On the other hand, she’s caked in the same wellness industry nonsense as Casey Means.

Saphier got her medical degree from Ross University School of Medicine in Barbados, according to her LinkedIn profile. She then completed a radiology residency through Creighton University School of Medicine. She joined Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in 2016 and has been a Fox News contributor since 2018. She is also the founder of Drop Rx, a herbal supplement business that develops “clean, thoughtfully crafted tinctures that support focus, calm, balance, and overall wellness.”

Her Instagram account is peppered with dubious wellness claims such as “rosemary and sage decrease Alzheimer’s risk.” In another, she gathered friends for a “turmeric and cinnamon infused anti-inflammatory tea (yes, @drop__rx) … Topped off with a glass of champagne.”

As for the topic of vaccines, her commentary rings as though she has a similar belief structure to Means, but knows how to hide it better.

On this front, she appears to walk a fine line—being skeptical of vaccines and critical of vaccination recommendations, while avoiding overt opposition to them. In 2022, she falsely claimed on social media that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was set to mandate COVID-19 vaccines for schoolchildren—something the CDC does not have the power to do; school vaccination requirements are set by the states. Despite being wrong, her claim sparked outrage among right-wing media.

In August, she posted a video criticizing the American Academy of Pediatrics for continuing to recommend COVID-19 vaccines for children—after Kennedy had unilaterally dropped the recommendation in line with his anti-vaccine views.

Oh, and she was more than a little careless when it came to COVID.

In Dec 2021, Nicole Saphier — a Fox contributor now tapped as Trump's surgeon general nominee — argued that "it is time to move forward and allow this mild infection to circulate so we can continue to build that hybrid immunity."250,000 Americans died of covid in 2022.

Philip Bump (@pbump.com) 2026-04-30T16:53:40.448Z

This administration keeps making the same mistakes over and over again. The dual facts that we’ve been without a confirmed AG for over a year into this administration and that we can’t get a vanilla nominee that can pass through to confirmation without generating headlines is both crazy and a complete failure of this administration.

Trump has been on a tirade blaming Cassidy for all of this. But Cassidy isn’t the problem here. Trump and Kennedy keep stepping on rake after rake by nominating the wrong people for important jobs. I doubt that anyone that was skeptical of Means won’t have the same concerns about Saphier, so we may be back at this all over again months from now.

12:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 幹 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

小5

tree trunk, main part, talent, capability

カン

みき

幹事長   (かんじちょう)   —   chief secretary (usu. of a party)
幹部   (かんぶ)   —   management
新幹線   (しんかんせん)   —   Shinkansen
幹事   (かんじ)   —   executive secretary
幹事会   (かんじかい)   —   board of governors
基幹   (きかん)   —   mainstay
根幹   (こんかん)   —   foundation
主幹   (しゅかん)   —   chief editor
幹線道路   (かんせんどうろ)   —   main road
幹部会   (かんぶかい)   —   board of directors

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 痩 [Kanji of the Day]

✍12

中学

get thin

ソウ チュウ シュウ シュ

や.せる

痩せた   (やせた)   —   thin
痩せる   (やせる)   —   to become thin
痩せ型   (やせがた)   —   slender build
痩身   (そうしん)   —   slim figure
痩せ形   (やせがた)   —   slender build
痩せっぽち   (やせっぽち)   —   skinny person
着痩せ   (きやせ)   —   looking slender in clothing
痩せ薬   (やせぐすり)   —   drug used for weight reduction
痩せ我慢   (やせがまん)   —   enduring something out of pride
痩せこける   (やせこける)   —   to get too skinny

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

花博鶴見緑地で学ぶ 地図とWikipediaの編集体験 [OpenStreetMap Japan - 自由な地図をみんなの手で/The Free Wiki World Map]

開催日: 
日曜日, May 10, 2026 - 10:00 to 17:00

花博記念公園鶴見緑地を題材に、地域の情報をオープンデータとして記録・発信する方法を体験するイベントです。

午前中は現地での調査と撮影を行い、午後は会場に移動して、OpenStreetMapやWikipediaの編集に取り組みます。
地域の情報を「見つける」「記録する」「公開する」までの流れを、一日のプログラムとして体験していただきます。

OpenStreetMapやWikipediaの編集経験がない方でも参加しやすい内容を予定しています。

10:00 AM

Fear And Opportunity: Immigration Scams Surged As Trump’s Sweeps Lured Desperate People To Eager Defrauders [Techdirt]

This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.

As an asylum-seeker living in the U.S., Jasmir Urbina worried as she watched violence break out amid the military-style immigration sweeps across the country. Then she read about legal residents being arrested at immigration court and wondered when federal agents would set their sights on her city.

Urbina had fled Nicaragua in 2022 and legally resided with her husband, a fellow asylum-seeker, in New Orleans while reporting to immigration agents for check-ins as she awaited her day in court. Finally, the date was approaching, in late November 2025. Days later, the Trump administration would flood the region with federal officers in “Operation Swamp Sweep.”

Urbina, 35, began searching for a Spanish speaker who could help her, and said she stumbled on a Facebook post advertising the services of Catholic Charities, a prominent aid organization whose services include assisting immigrants. After a few clicks, she connected via WhatsApp with “Susan Millan,” who claimed to have a law degree. The woman’s photo looked professional, showing a small library in the blurry background, according to a screenshot Urbina shared with ProPublica. The asylum-seeker said she discussed her predicament with the woman she thought was an attorney.

Millan told Urbina the ordeal could be settled over a virtual hearing with U.S. immigration authorities. Millan sprinkled in details about her own life — a sick husband, two kids, a supportive church — so Urbina felt comfortable. In an interview, Urbina said she completed paperwork to be sent to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, for a fee. Millan’s organization asked her for documentation, including five character references; for another fee, it would submit these up the line. Through the payment app Zelle, Urbina and her husband paid nearly $10,000, according to her financial records, money they had set aside to buy their first home.

On Nov. 21, Urbina made the case that a “credible fear” was keeping her from going home. In the virtual hearing, which lasted five minutes, she said she spoke to a man dressed in a green uniform, stitched with what looked like government insignia, seated in front of an American flag. A day later, via WhatsApp, Millan told her she “won residency.” Her documents would be in the mail.

In an instant, Urbina’s fears had been assuaged. She asked if she should still attend her court date, Nov. 24. “No, don’t worry,” she remembers the woman replying. “There’s no need.”

But when Urbina asked to speak with someone in a message to Millan’s phone number the next day, according to screenshots she shared with ProPublica, the WhatsApp chat fell silent. After two days, she suspected she’d been duped and wrote in anger: “God is with us and He fights for His children; today you messed with the wrong person and you will get your payment from the Most High, you cowards.”

There was no attorney named Susan Millan associated with Catholic Charities, and the deceit was just one example of hundreds that the group has become aware of when desperate immigrants eventually reach the real organization.

“There’s a reason why we have a good reputation,” said Chris Ross, vice president of migration and refugee resettlement services at Catholic Charities. “And so for someone to be trading on that goodwill with nefarious intent is very frustrating.”

Urbina had fallen prey to “notario fraud,” in which scammers provide legal advice, often by saying they’re public notaries or other legal professionals. In many Latin American countries, a public notary is the equivalent of a lawyer, and notario fraudsters rely on this mistranslation to fake credentials.

Urbina shared documents that detail how she was lured into the scam, and ProPublica corroborated her story with her husband and Catholic Charities. After Urbina told local and federal authorities she had been tricked out of her day in court, Immigration and Customs Enforcement switched her scheduled December virtual check-in to an in-person meeting. When she showed up, agents arrested her. In January, she said, officers shackled her hands and feet and loaded her on a plane to Nicaragua.

She’d been scammed, then deported.

A spokesperson with the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, did not respond to questions about Urbina’s case but said, “Anyone caught impersonating a federal immigration agent will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.” New Orleans police did not answer ProPublica’s questions about a complaint she filed.

Scams like those that destroyed Urbina’s dreams are on the rise, federal data analyzed by ProPublica shows, as profiteers seize on the fear and confusion wrought by President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Complaints of immigration scams have doubled since Trump was elected, ProPublica found in analyzing more than 6,200 complaints filed with the Federal Trade Commission by victims and advocates over the last five years.

From the start of 2021 through the election in fall of 2024, the FTC — the nation’s top consumer protection agency — fielded about 960 immigration complaints per year, such as reports of fake attorneys offering services or people impersonating federal officers. In 2025, the commission received nearly 2,000 complaints.

In all, at least $94.4 million was reported stolen in complaints to the FTC over five years. That number is certainly an undercount, as not all immigrants report wrongdoing for fear of deportation, and not every report included dollar amounts.

The spike in complaints is so severe that many states and legal organizations have alerted the public about them. California’s and North Carolina’s attorneys general released statements in late 2025, as did the American Bar Association and AARP. In June 2025, the New York City Council passed legislation increasing notario fraud penalties, and a similar law passed in Florida.

“Immigration scammers contribute to a lawless environment, undermining our immigration system,” said Zach Kahler, a spokesperson for Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency Urbina falsely thought had awarded her residency. Online, the agency provides guides on how to spot immigration fraud and warns consumers that it does not use WhatsApp. The agency tells people who think they’ve been scammed to complain to the FTC.

Old Problem, New Sophistication

Scams targeting those mired in the U.S. immigration system are not new, but advocates say predators have become more sophisticated, using technologies like artificial intelligence and targeted ads. At the same time, immigrants have become increasingly anxious about speedy mass deportations, creating a bonanza for those looking to cash in.

“I believe AI is being utilized in these scams pretty effectively. People think they’re talking to a real person, or the logos and stuff look pretty professional to the untrained eye,” said Ross, of Catholic Charities.

Many victims say they were duped by scammers who had professional-looking photos, wore immigration uniforms and staged realistic virtual hearings.

A review of the image of the person named Millan who was supposedly helping Urbina suggests that it was AI-generated.

Ross added: “The biggest thing is the desperation — that’s really what’s driving this.”

In San Diego, attorneys working for the city have been impersonated by scammers. City Attorney Heather Ferbert told ProPublica her office has forwarded these cases to the FBI and warned residents to be on the lookout for advertisements that promise a government official or lawyer can help with immigration proceedings. The FBI declined to comment.

“When you add the title and you add the government weight behind it — the city attorney’s office, the district attorney’s office, for example — the targets are sort of lulled,” Ferbert said. “We’ve heard stories where they promise that they can solve their immigration problems for them. No real lawyer is ever going to promise an outcome to you.”

Other scams extend beyond impersonating lawyers. The FTC complaints include a case in which people posing as Department of Homeland Security immigration officers received more than $600,000 from a family by claiming one of the relatives’ identities had been stolen and they needed to pay to protect it. In West Virginia, a “federal agent” threatened to deport a college student who was close to graduating unless they paid nearly $4,000 in gift cards.

“They claimed that if I did not comply immediately, I would be arrested, detained or deported,” wrote the student, who was legally residing in the U.S. on a student visa. The student, whose name was not disclosed in federal data, used prepaid Dollar General gift cards and then went broke and turned to family for help.

Immigrants from India and Bangladesh were told they had failed to update a necessary form and would be arrested and deported immediately unless they shared their Social Security numbers. Other scammers claimed the government had intercepted packages full of money and drugs addressed to immigrants, who were told to make a payment or face arrest.

“Well-Oiled Machine”

Most victims find the fake attorneys advertising on Facebook or TikTok. Facebook’s parent company, Meta, has pledged to delete scam accounts and announced new tools to track them.

Charity Anastasio, practice and ethics counsel for the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said the ads are often pay-per-click and targeted at Spanish-speaking users.

“They’ve designed such a well-oiled machine,” Anastasio said.

The ads appealed to those in deportation proceedings, clinging to any means to stay in the U.S., but also those who may have wanted to get their paperwork in order ahead of Trump’s crackdown, said Adonia Simpson, an attorney with the American Bar Association.

“A lot of people are trying to preemptively get representation to see what their options are,” Simpson told ProPublica. “The enforcement has been a big driver. It’s caused a lot of people to be very fearful.”

The White House declined to comment.

In October 2024, 56-year-old José Aguilar, who had been granted temporary protected status under George W. Bush’s administration, was in just that position when he came upon a Facebook ad. The advertiser claimed to work for Jorge Rivera, a well-known Miami immigration attorney, and promised Aguilar they could get him permanent residency. It would take $15,000. ProPublica sought comment from the real Rivera, who is not accused of wrongdoing; he did not respond.

A leather factory worker in Minnesota who had fled El Salvador, Aguilar cobbled together the money in installments through loans from friends and that year’s tax refund. Over several months, he had four video calls with the fake attorney and two calls with immigration agent impersonators. He was initially skeptical but became convinced when they sent him videos of residency cards with the Citizenship and Immigration Services logo.

“Don’t try to deceive me, because I’m borrowing money, I’m a man of faith, and I’m a person who has had a heart transplant, so I can’t get angry because it hurts me,” Aguilar remembered saying.

“No, don’t worry, sir,” Aguilar said the scammer responded. “This is real. It’s super real.”

During one of their last conversations, Aguilar says the scammer appealed to their shared Christian faith, thanking God for approving the paperwork and earning him residency.

By February 2025, the scammers had stopped responding. A month later, Aguilar realized he was probably never going to get the residency cards and contacted an attorney who confirmed he had been duped. Aguilar, who has two young daughters, says his family is subsisting on food banks and relies on donations for rent.

“It’s unforgivable,” Aguilar said. “Even bringing God into it.” 

Mother and Daughter Torn Apart

For Mariela, an undocumented Honduran mother of three, financial stress began long ago. In 2021, the father of her children headed for the U.S. along with one of their daughters, seeking construction work. Two years later, when she traveled 2,000 miles in blistering heat to join them, she broke her arm in three places after falling into the Rio Grande while crossing the border. ProPublica is withholding her last name because she fears being deported.

And then, in October 2025, immigration agents detained her 20-year-old daughter. Desperate, the mother reached out to what she thought was a Catholic Charities Facebook page.

She was pulled into a scheme involving a man who posed as a priest, another posing as an immigration judge, and another posing as Oscar Carrillo, an attorney licensed in Texas who practices tax law.

The real Carrillo told ProPublica he began getting calls from frustrated immigrants last spring, all of them Spanish speakers who claimed they had been referred by Catholic Charities. When he realized his name and photo were being misused, he alerted the FBI and FTC. The State Bar of Texas has posted a public warning on its webpage about Carrillo impersonators.

“Most of these clients, because of their immigration status, are afraid to report this to the police,” Carrillo said. “I feel sorry for these clients. We’re not talking about wealthy individuals.”

In January, after her daughter was deported, Mariela realized the fraudsters had cheated her out of more than $18,000 over three months.

She said she had borrowed $3,000 from an uncle in Honduras, another $1,500 from a cousin, a few thousand from her boss, and another $2,000 from a friend from her Honduran hometown who had also emigrated to the U.S. In addition, she burned through her savings and her daughter’s.

Public Alerts, Little Recourse

Since the beginning of Trump’s second term, local law enforcement, advocacy groups, state attorneys general and law firms have published notices warning immigrants about an uptick in scams.

“Our best advice is to make direct contact, outside of social media channels, with the organization you’re seeking help from,” said Kevin Brennan, vice president for media relations at Catholic Charities. “Call the organization on the phone or visit an office in person.”

Scammers show no signs of retreat.

In April, three months after her deportation to Nicaragua, Urbina received a call from someone claiming to be a lawyer. He said that he’d been referred to her by a bishop with Catholic Charities and that he’d help her obtain immigration papers.

The stress of being scammed and separated from her husband, who remains in the U.S., had taken a toll. “I’ve been through a lot of things, one right after the other,” Urbina said. She’s living with her mother in a remote village, afraid to step outside in a country where the government has ramped up surveillance of those who previously moved to the U.S.

Desperate, she gave the “lawyer” her personal information.

After earlier saying his help would be free, he then asked for money, she said.

“Where did you get my number?” she asked.

Intrigued but skeptical, Urbina followed up with WhatsApp messages, hoping he might really be an immigration attorney.

She never heard from him again.

07:00 AM

The Supreme Court’s Voting Rights Ruling Is Results-Driven Cynicism, Not Law [Techdirt]

I will continue to make the case for a 100 Justice Supreme Court because we need to get to the point that no single Supreme Court Justice matters. As it stands, each individual Justice has way too much power, and when they go mad with it, they can undermine the very structure of democracy. And while I’m sure some people will insist this is sour grapes about cases not going the way I want, it’s not that. I can accept rulings I disagree with, where I can see and understand the Constitutional logic behind them. For example, while I agree that the post-Citizens United change in campaign finance has been disastrous and needs to be fixed, I think the actual ruling in that case is not just defensible, but correct on the law (i.e. I think the fixes to campaign finance should come from elsewhere, not from getting rid of that ruling).

Similarly, while the underlying hatred and bigotry animating the decisions in 303 Creative and Chiles v. Salazar are deeply problematic, the actual rulings make some level of Constitutional sense on First Amendment grounds.

But the Roberts Court keeps handing down rulings that have no basis in any actual Constitutional principles, and are instead very clearly ideological and results-driven approaches to deciding cases. The Dobbs decision on abortion, most famously, but also (obviously) Trump v. US in which the Supreme Court effectively ruled that Trump could violate any law he wanted while President. And now we can add to that Louisiana v. Callais, which effectively brings back Jim Crow segregation and turns the Fifteenth Amendment into a dead letter.

If you want deeper analysis on just how fucked up this ruling is, I’ll point you to voting law expert Rick Hasen’s writeup in Slate, where he calls it “the worst ruling in a century.” But even more useful is his follow-up piece on just how cowardly Alito’s reasoning is:

In Callais, Alito purported to overturn no precedent, claiming he was merely “updating” a framework that the Supreme Court constructed in the 1986 Thornburg v. Gingles case to determine when a redistricting plan violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by diluting minority representation. This follows his 2021 majority opinion in Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, where he purported to provide mere “guidelines” for determining when a state violates Section 2 in passing a law related to voting or voter registration.

In both cases, however, Justice Alito made it impossible for plaintiffs to win their cases, leaving Section 2 on the books, but essentially toothless. Since Brnovich, as I showed in a recent law review article, no plaintiffs have brought successful suits under Section 2 challenging a law alleged to suppress votes. Justice Elena Kagan’s exasperated dissent in Callais cited this research and rightly predicted the same fate for redistricting claims under Section 2: “The consequences are likely to be far-reaching and grave. Today’s decision renders Section 2 all but a dead letter.”

But I want to focus on something a bit different, which is just how hypocritical many of the recent decisions are. The supposedly “conservative” Justices contradict themselves over and over again to reach the motivated result they are seeking. We’ve already seen some of this in other rulings, such as when the court decided that nationwide injunctions by district courts were bad… but only when they were used against Trump (after blessing many against Biden).

In Callais we see more of the same. Remember, just two years ago in the Loper Bright case, this same Supreme Court pretended to stand on principle against the administrative state by arguing that the executive branch had way less power than it had previously suggested in its old Chevron case, arguing that the power of Congress to define things rather than delegate decisions is key. Well, the Fifteenth Amendment explicitly says that “Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation” in order to make sure that “the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race….”

So in one case it’s left for Congress to legislate to clarify governmental power, and in the other Justice Alito and the other conservatives on the Court have decided they can take that Constitutionally granted power away from Congress — not based on any actual Constitutional reason, but because they’ve concluded that racism is over. That’s literally the crux of Alito’s argument, in which he notes that:

By 2004, the racial gap in voter registration and turnout had largely disappeared, with minorities registering and voting at levels that sometimes surpassed the majority. Black voters now participate in elections at similar rates as the rest of the electorate, even turning out at higher rates than white voters in two of the five most recent Presidential elections nationwide and in Louisiana.

Of course, this is both highly misleading and beside the point of what the Constitution actually says in the Fifteenth Amendment, which gives that power to Congress to decide. It’s misleading because he cherry-picked “two of the five most recent” elections to obscure the fact that it wasn’t true in the last three — elections that occurred only after the Court had already hollowed out the rest of the Voting Rights Act.

As we discussed last year in the Texas redistricting case, the Supreme Court has made it clear in previous rulings that it’s totally legal to gerrymander for partisan reasons, just so-long as it’s not explicitly for racial reasons. The problem in Texas was that its legislature had initially rejected the (already flimsy and obviously pretextual) partisan reasons for redistricting until the Trump DOJ threatened them over the racial makeup of districts, leading to the last minute decision to redistrict, solely in response to the warning about the racial makeup of districts from the Trump admin. The lower court (in a ruling issued by a Trump appointed judge) found that to be a violation of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.

But, bizarrely, this Supreme Court also tossed out that ruling on the shadow docket (naturally) in December, claiming it had to do this because it was too close to the election in Texas to toss out the redistricted maps… even though the election was many months away and the “redistricted” maps had only been created a few months earlier. Literally none of it made sense. That ruling was just a stay to allow the redistricted maps for the 2026 midterm elections, but the case technically continued over whether or not there could be an injunction against the maps.

In an absolutely bizarre ruling on Monday (right before this Callais ruling) the Supreme Court effectively further rejected the challenge to Texas’ redistricting by simply citing its original shadow docket ruling, even though (1) the issue before the court now is different and (2) that original shadow docket ruling was based on no significant briefing or oral arguments. Court watcher (and shadow docket coiner/criticizer) Steve Vladeck notes that this is a dangerous power grab by the court:

I can’t remember a prior case with this kind of (true) summary reversal—where the Court just reversed a three-judge district court on the merits without any detailed explanation.

The original (already questionable) order was procedural, and apparently deemed necessary due to the “emergency” nature of an election that wasn’t happening for months and for which there was plenty of time to adjust. But to then claim to rule on the merits of the case by simply pointing back to that other emergency ruling, without more detailed briefing and without explanation, is bizarre.

But remember: the stated basis for the December ruling was the supposedly imminent 2026 midterm primaries. And then look at what happened in Louisiana after the Callais decision, where Governor Jeff Landry literally declared a “state of emergency” to suspend the already ongoing primary election in order to initiate redistricting, based on the Callais ruling.

So if you’re playing along at home, in Texas they redrew the Congressional maps in August of 2025 for blatantly racial reasons (as called out by a Trump-appointed judge in November, who provided a ton of evidence). In December of 2025, the Supreme Court said that those racially-biased new districts had to stay because it was too close to the 2026 midterms (which were still months away) to try to redistrict (despite the ability to easily go back to the pre-August districts which were the existing districts). But now, in late April, based on this new Supreme Court ruling, Louisiana can magically stop elections in which voting has already occurred in order to redistrict to create more racist gerrymandering.

And all this because Alito and Roberts are happy to literally ignore the Fifteenth Amendment when they don’t like the results.

That is what results-driven judicial decision-making looks like. And it’s why the court is viewed as increasingly illegitimate across the board.

I can live with the Court issuing principled rulings I disagree with. But here there are no principles on display beyond “we’re racist and we want to deprive non-white people of their vote.” The Supreme Court makes it clear that it is illegitimate with such a move, and not worthy of any respect at all.

And that won’t change until we get real reform, such as by shifting the Court so that no single Justice (or small clique of Justices) has so much power.

Losing a Fight They Picked… Again [The Status Kuo]

Photo by J. Scott Applewhite / AP

The party now in charge has a habit of losing the very fights it picks. The Iran war, of course, comes to mind, as do key legislative battles here at home. This week, it lost another—over Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding.

Let’s set the stage once more because it underscores how remarkable it is that they keep whiffing.

Democrats control nothing in Washington. They hold no Senate majority, no House majority and certainly no White House. The Supreme Court is stacked with GOP appointees. Democrats cannot pass a bill on their own, confirm a nominee or force a vote on anything. By the conventional logic of American politics, they have no leverage beyond throwing sand in the gears and making the case against continued GOP governance.

Yet Thursday, House Republicans lost again. After 76 days of a DHS shutdown, they caved, passing a bill to partially reopen the Department on the exact terms Democrats had been offering for weeks: funding for DHS except for new money for ICE and the Border Patrol, while putting off the question of reforms until later.

Let me repeat: The party that controls every lever of federal power lost a fight it picked, against an opponent with little power to stop it. Today let’s hold a mini-seminar on politics. Call it Government 101, a course the GOP just failed, by the way. Not a great look, with just over six months until the midterms.

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Minneapolis mettle

The fight began in Minneapolis. We all know what happened there. In January, DHS deployed 2,000 agents under Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history. On January 7, ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renée Good, a 37-year-old American mother of three. Two weeks later, two CBP agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old VA nurse who was filming agents during a protest. Both were U.S. citizens, both posed no threat, and both incidents were captured on film from multiple angles for all the world to see.

The killings galvanized Democratic opposition to ICE funding in a way nothing had before. Senate Democrats announced they would no longer support the DHS bill without reforms to immigration enforcement, including visible agent identification, warrants for private property searches, and use-of-force accountability standards. These were objectively modest demands, but Republicans still refused all of them. To keep half the government from shutting down again, the White House agreed to separate the DHS funding bill from the broader spending package to allow more time for negotiation. The broader measure passed, leaving the parties fighting over just DHS funding.

But negotiations soon collapsed. On February 14, DHS funding lapsed. The shutdown that followed was the longest partial government shutdown in American history.

The GOP fails to align

The mechanics of the standoff are worth understanding, because they reveal just how badly this was mismanaged.

In the Senate, the math was clear. Republicans hold 53 seats, but most legislation, including a bill funding DHS, requires 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. That meant Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) needed at least seven Democratic votes to reopen DHS through the normal appropriations process.

After weeks of failed bipartisan negotiations over ICE reforms, Thune accepted a compromise based on a proposal by Democrats. He agreed to fund all of DHS—including paying TSA agents who were calling out sick and causing chaos at airports—except ICE and Border Patrol. He would do it through “regular order”—meaning still needing 60 votes—then pursue ICE and CBP funding separately. That would happen through what’s called the “reconciliation” process, a party-line maneuver with specific limitations requiring only 51 votes (technically, 50 plus JD Vance).

So far, so good. The Senate passed that bill unanimously by voice vote. It would have reopened TSA, FEMA, the Secret Service, the Coast Guard and CISA. Confident of this temporary fix, the Senate left town.

But House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) was not impressed by his own party’s move. He called it “a joke” and outright refused to put it on the House floor.

This was extraordinary. A Senate majority leader’s bill passing unanimously, with his own party’s full blessing, is among the clearest possible signals that the upper chamber has done its work and is ready to send legislation to the president. Johnson sitting on it for a month marked an embarrassing rupture between the two Republican leaders, with Thune’s allies privately furious and House conservatives openly dismissive of the Senate’s judgment.

The Senate passed the bill again. And again, Johnson refused to move on it. His stated reason, offered weeks later: a “technical issue” with the bill’s language. As MS NOW reported, Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, said she was unaware of any legitimate technical problem. House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-OK) acknowledged the obstacle was political, not technical. Thune, pressed on what Johnson’s objection actually was, told reporters, “In the end, it’s the same issue. We’ve got to fund all the agencies. They’ve got a bill over there that does that.”

On April 1, Johnson publicly promised that the House would vote on the Senate bill. The vote never came.

Circular firing squad

Johnson was failing to manage a cascade of Republican preconditions, each one contingent on the last, collectively ensuring that nothing could move. At the most basic level, House Republicans didn’t trust the Senate to follow through on reconciliation after the House approved the partial DHS funding bill.

As Axios reported, hardline GOP members began insisting that reconciliation had to pass before the House would touch anything else, even as DHS workers prepared to miss more paychecks. House Budget Committee Chair Jodey Arrington (R-TX) put it plainly, declaring, “There are very few things that garner the strong support of every member of our conference—that one was roundly rejected.”

Then came the reconciliation rounds. Johnson tried to advance a reconciliation bill to fund ICE and CBP—call it Reconciliation 1.0—and conservatives demanded assurances it would happen. Then Reconciliation 1.0 stalled because a faction wanted a broader Reconciliation 2.0. Then Reconciliation 2.0 stalled because another faction wanted a broader Reconciliation 3.0 that would include the SAVE Act voter ID bill, billions for the Iran war and farm aid. Each new demand served as cover for the previous faction’s inaction.

Wednesday of this week was one of the most tumultuous days in the House in recent memory. Johnson was simultaneously trying to advance a foreign surveillance reauthorization bill, a farm bill and the DHS reconciliation measure. But his members were in open revolt on all three. Hard-liners including Reps. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), Tim Burchett (R-TN) and Harriet Hageman (R-WY) blocked a procedural rule vote for hours. If you recall from last season, a rule vote is a procedural formality that is typically a win for the majority party, but this GOP majority keeps losing them because of internal dissent.

Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) refused to support the final DHS funding bill and offered his assessment of the week. “I think this whole thing is stupid. I think it’s asinine that we’re funding the government this way.”

Rep. Troy Nehls (R-TX) was more sweeping. “We can’t really agree on much of anything,” he said. “This is our time to actually pass conservative legislation. The American people gave us the gavel. They gave us the White House. They gave us the Senate. And we have squandered an enormous amount of time away.”

CNN’s verdict was brutal. Johnson no longer has a functional majority. His GOP is struggling to fulfill the chamber’s most basic role on issues from government funding to spy powers that Trump himself has demanded, months before a critical midterm election.

The breaking point

The money Trump had been using to pay TSA agents was running out. So DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin warned in late April that emergency payroll funds, drawn from a slush fund in last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, would be exhausted in the first week of May. “My payroll through DHS is just over $1.6 billion every two weeks,” Mullin said, “so the money is going extremely fast and once that happens there is no emergency funds after that.”

TSA agents had previously gone without pay for weeks, causing four-hour security lines at major airports. ICE agents, deployed to assist TSA and untrained for security screening, did nothing but increase the temperature and tensions with already angry travelers. The weekend before the final vote, a gunman attempted to breach the White House Correspondents’ Dinner; the Secret Service agents who stopped him were working without pay.

On Tuesday, Trump’s own Office of Management and Budget sent a memo to Capitol Hill urging House Republicans to accept the Senate’s partial DHS funding bill—even without ICE money. In short, the White House delivered the ultimatum that ended the standoff.

To no one’s surprise, Johnson went along. To avoid having his own members tank the bill on a recorded vote, he quietly slipped it onto the floor under a voice vote procedure, a maneuver used when passage is assumed and no objection is expected. Reporters noted that many GOP members didn’t even know the bill was being called. Roy, one of the shutdown’s loudest opponents, confirmed the tactic with a sigh. “If there was a vote, I would’ve voted no,” he said. “But we weren’t going to win that vote, so we decided to let it pass by voice vote.”

Johnson stepped before cameras to try to sew a purse out of failed pork politics. “Despite unrelenting predictions from many of you today in the press that we would fail this week, we did exactly the opposite.” Johnson added, “Sometimes when you have a small margin as we do, people have different ideas, different priorities about very contentious pieces of legislation, but we got it done because ultimately we just used patience and frankly prayer.”

Never mind that, six weeks earlier, he had called this very same bill “a joke” and sat on it with no action. Perhaps he simply prayed away the pain.

A draw is a win against a more powerful opponent

Credit is due to congressional Democratic leadership that is often harshly critiqued. In this funding fight, Democrats fought the GOP majority to a stalemate. Unlike in battles past, they held the line for 76 days without yielding on the core policy fight, and Republicans blinked first, receiving nothing in return. The New Republic framed it well: Republicans thought Democrats would do what they always do when push comes to shove: back down. But they didn’t.

The stalemate leaves the status quo in place, which admittedly was not a good spot to begin with. ICE is already funded through 2028 under special appropriations contained in last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which nearly tripled the agency’s budget. And the reconciliation fight, where Republicans will attempt to add $70 billion more for ICE and CBP without Democratic votes, is still coming.

But the same fractures that broke the shutdown fight could follow Republicans into this one. Reconciliation requires that everything in the bill have a direct budgetary impact. Anything that doesn’t can be stripped by the Senate parliamentarian. That means the SAVE Act voter ID provisions, farm aid and Iran war funding that conservative members want to attach may not survive the process.

Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) was already managing expectations. “I think we have to set our sights a little bit lower on this reconciliation bill. It’s got to be targeted to fund ICE for 10 years, I think that’s the number one thing,” he said.

But with reconciliation also comes the “vote-a-rama.” That’s an open-ended series of amendment votes where anything can get proposed, including from Democrats. And that will create political exposure during a midterm year. During this week’s budget resolution vote, for example, Sens. Susan Collins (R-ME) and Dan Sullivan (R-AK), both facing competitive 2026 re-election races, broke with their party on amendments tied to healthcare costs and insurance denials. The final reconciliation bill will run that same gauntlet, but with higher stakes and more amendments.

As an ode to the capitulation of the GOP over the Democratic DHS funding proposal, I’ve rewritten the lyrics to the famous Schoolhouse Rock ditty. Sing along if you know the tune, and happy Friday!

I’m just a bill

Just a stand-alone bill

And I languished there on Capitol Hill

Because although in the Senate

It was un-an-i-mous

When I got to the House

Johnson showed he’s a puss

So I waited over 70 days

Till the anger started to spill

That the funding was still unfulfilled…

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