[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

The data and election results are pretty clear: The GOP is in a rough place. But it’s not just the data—it’s the vibes. Here are 10 reasons why Republicans should probably start emotionally preparing for a rough 2026, because they’re in for a world of hurt. 

1. They are losing elections

We don’t need to look at polls to see that Republicans are already struggling at the ballot box. GOP candidates were utterly routed in this November’s off-year elections, without a single speck of good news to point to. And it wasn’t just the win-loss record. The margins were brutal.

This combination photo shows candidates for governor of New Jersey Republican Jack Ciattarelli, left, and Democrat Mikie Sherrill during the final debate in governors race, Oct. 8, 2025, in New Brunswick, N.J. (AP Photos/Heather Khalifa)
New Jersey Republican Jack Ciattarelli lost to Democrat Mikie Sherrill in the New Jersey governor’s race.

Republicans had a legitimately strong gubernatorial candidate in New Jersey—someone who narrowly lost the previous cycle and was supposedly running neck-and-neck with his Democratic opponent in the polls—and Jack Ciattarelli ended up losing to Mikie Sherrill by 14 points

In an early December Tennessee special election, Democrats outperformed President Donald Trump’s numbers in the district by 13 points. In Miami, Republicans lost the mayor’s race for the first time in 30 years, by nearly 20 points. Four years ago, they won that same seat 79–12.

Democrats don’t need anything close to those margins to win back the House and Senate in 2026. Results half as good would still produce a GOP wipeout. As one Georgia Republican put it after his party got trounced in special elections, “Our donors aren’t motivated and our voters aren’t either.”

2. Trump is not all there

We all know Trump isn’t well. His incoherence keeps getting worse. He can’t walk in a straight line. He struggles with stairs. He shows up at events and press conferences with unexplained bruising on his hands. He’s had multiple MRI scans in a single year. He falls asleep on camera. He misses events without explanation, oscillating between somnambulance and mania.

Former President Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court before his trial in New York, Friday, April 26, 2024.  (Michael M. Santiago/Pool Photo via AP)
Former President Donald Trump appears asleep at Manhattan criminal court before his trial in New York on April 26, 2024. 

CNN’s medical expert has described Trump’s current state as “jarring.” He is obese, and deeply defensive about all of it, insisting he’s a paragon of physical and mental health.

The practical result is that Trump is incapable of campaigning effectively for his party. Worse, when he does try, he actively makes things worse. 

He recently went on a short tour to claim he was the “affordability president,” only to spend his time rehashing grievances and mocking concerns about high prices as a “hoax.” He’s an albatross around the GOP’s neck, either unable or unwilling to do what’s necessary to shift the political conversation onto more favorable ground.

3. Trump is on the ballot

As 2025’s elections have shown, Trump motivates voters to vote against his party. The individual names on the ballot barely matter. For many voters, the only way to register disapproval of Trump is to vote against Republicans, and they’re doing exactly that. With Trump’s approval ratings now lower than they were during the worst moments of his first term, even during his catastrophic response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Republicans are staring down relentless headwinds.

4. Trump isn’t on the ballot

At the same time, Trump’s most devoted MAGA cultists simply don’t show up to vote when he isn’t personally on the ballot. We saw this in 2018 and again in 2022. Trump can turn out some of the most disengaged voters in the country, but he’s never turned them into reliable Republican voters. Instead, he’s tied them entirely to himself.

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump told supporters, “In four years, you don’t have to vote again. We’ll have it fixed so good, you’re not gonna have to vote.” Many people interpreted that as a promise to end elections. But it sounded more like pure narcissism—an admission that without Trump himself on the ballot, his supporters wouldn’t bother showing up at all. And he’s perfectly fine with that. 

5. Economic sentiment is in the gutter

The Democratic Party’s 2024 presidential campaign largely boiled down to one argument: The economy is doing great. And by the numbers, it was—low unemployment, easing post-COVID inflation, and wage growth outpacing inflation. But that’s not how most people felt, especially those who are lower on the economic ladder.

Cartoon by Clay Bennett

Trump and Republicans capitalized on that disconnect, winning poorer voters for the first time while Democrats carried voters making over $100,000. But instead of locking in those gains by actually delivering for working-class Americans, Trump and the GOP immediately pivoted back to tax cuts for billionaires, while pushing tariffs and mass deportations that are inherently inflationary.

Now prices are rising again, unemployment and underemployment are creeping up, and Trump is insisting everything is fine. He’s repeating former President Joe Biden’s biggest political mistake—telling people they’re wrong about their own lived experience.

That doesn’t just alienate voters: It enrages them. Nobody likes being gaslit, and that anger helped fuel Democratic victories in 2025. As Democrats make affordability central to their 2026 messaging, Trump is actively making their job easier by denying voters’ reality.

6. The polls are suspect

Even in the polls—where Republicans usually find comfort—the numbers include warning signs. On the generic congressional ballot, GOP support remains stuck in the low- to mid-40s, but only lagging Democrats by a few points. Under normal circumstances, that might look competitive.

But this year, polling has consistently overstated Republican performance. In election after election, Democrats have outperformed their polling averages, often by wide margins. That gap matters. It suggests Republican support is soft, conditional, or simply not translating into actual votes.

In other words, the problem isn’t just that Republicans are polling poorly—it’s that even their best-case numbers aren’t materializing on Election Day. When voters do cast ballots, they’re increasingly ignoring individual candidates and using elections as a blunt instrument to register disapproval of the GOP as a whole. And that’s a dangerous place for any party to occupy heading into a midterm year.

7. A historic level of retirements

A record number of members of Congress are heading for the exits. As of now, 29 Republicans and 24 Democrats have announced retirements. But while Democrats are defending open seats in a relatively friendly environment, Republicans are doing the opposite.

And it may get worse. Puck News reports that as many as 20 additional Republicans are expected to announce retirements in coming weeks, as defending a shrinking majority—and endlessly defending Trump—starts to look like a losing proposition.

8. Trump has lost young voters

Trump did alarmingly well with young voters in 2024, winning 43% of them. Many of those voters had no real memory of his first term, having been politically formed by social media posts and right-wing podcast culture rather than lived experience.

That’s changing fast. A recent Pew poll shows that among voters aged 18 to 34 who backed Trump in 2024, his approval rating was at 94% in February. But when that same group was surveyed again in early August, his approval had collapsed to 69%. Once young voters actually see Trump governing, the shine wears off quickly.

9. Trump has lost Latinos

Supporters hold a sign before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump arrives to speak during a campaign event at the Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, Thursday, Sept.12, 2024, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Supporters hold a sign before Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives to speak during a campaign event at the Linda Ronstadt Music Hall on Sept.12, 2024, in Tucson, Arizona.

Once touted as proof that Trump was making durable gains with Latino voters, Miami’s mayoral election results instead revealed how shallow and transactional that support really was. As Trump’s rhetoric hardened, his deportation policies intensified, and the economic fallout of his agenda became clearer, Latino voters recoiled.

The GOP’s attempt to reduce the most GOP-friendly Latino voters (Cubans, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans) to culture-war fodder and anti-socialism warnings collapsed once those voters saw Trump’s policies directly threatening their families, livelihoods, and communities. And if that shift is happening among those core GOP constituencies, what do you think it’ll look like among more traditionally Democratic Latino voters who pulled the lever for Trump out of economic desperation?

What looked like a political realignment has turned into a backlash—and Miami is likely the template for what’s coming nationally.

10. MAGA is turning on itself

Finally, the movement is starting to eat its own. The opening shots of a MAGA civil war have already been fired, and Trump is powerless to stop it. They can’t even wait until after the midterms to tear each other apart.

At the same time, Republicans are stuck managing open extremists like Nick Fuentes and outright Nazis who continue to inflame internal divisions and repel swing voters. The coalition that once looked frighteningly unified is now fracturing in public—and 2026 is approaching fast.

[syndicated profile] atrios_feed
Don't put anything to the contrary in the newspaper

The US military said in its initial assessment that “multiple” Isis members had been killed in the strikes on extremist “camps”.

However, residents of Jabo professed surprise at the strikes, saying the bombs had landed in empty fields, causing no casualties, and that Jabo had been relatively shielded from violence. The last attack by militants had occurred two years ago, they said. Video footage on Nigerian television showed pieces of burnt metal in what looked like farmland. 

One man told Arise News, a local television station: “Glory be to God, there was no loss of life.”
[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

When Donald Trump gloats online about the galling rebranded “Trump Kennedy Center,” he might face some challenges directing people to its website. 

That’s because it’s already taken. 

Toby Morton, a former South Park and MadTV writer, told Daily Kos on Friday that he saw the “writing on the wall” back in August and decided to scoop up both TrumpKennedyCenter.com and TrumpKennedyCenter.org.

“Once you’ve spent enough time watching branding, ego, and history collide, the joke basically writes itself,” Morton said.


Related | Kennedy Center already defiled with Trump's name


The comedy writer has a knack for using his creativity to predict—and buy— domains that might be of use to politicians down the road. 

Morton has used his resources, most of which come from supporters’ donations, to purchase website domains to point out the absurdities of right-wing groups and personalities like Vice President JD Vance, Moms for Liberty, and Rep. Nancy Mace

And with the Trump Kennedy Center, the comedian struck satirical gold last week when Donald Trump announced its illegal name change. However, Morton wasn’t exactly enthusiastic when he realized that his prediction came true.

Tarps are installed in front of the sign on the Kennedy Center on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
Tarps are installed in front of the sign on the Kennedy Center on, Dec. 19.

“I sighed, stared into the middle distance, and thought, ‘Of course it did,’” he said.

What’s to come for the domains remains to be seen, as the sites still sit empty today. But from the purchase alone, Morton has already gotten plenty of reactions. 

While he has received numerous anonymous offers to purchase other domains he owns, he hasn’t received any buyout requests for the two Kennedy Center gems—yet.

But Morton has never been on this comedic mission for the cash. Instead of money, Morton’s end goal is to use the power of laughter to highlight ludicrous actions coming from all political persuasions.

“I don't care what side you're on, I'm gonna make fun of you,” Morton told Daily Kos in an April interview.

However, longtime Trump ally and president of the Trump Kennedy Center, Ric Grenell, disagrees with Morton’s jokes.

“Support for the Arts should be bipartisan so it’s shameful that the radical left keeps boycotting the Arts to make a political point,” he told Daily Kos on Friday.


Related | Comedy writer dishes on how humor can help us survive Trump


The formerly named National Cultural Center was renamed by an act of Congress in 1963 as a “living memorial” for John F. Kennedy following his assassination. Trump’s obsession with the institution has been met with unease, disgust, and poor ticket sales.

Trump purged the previous board of trustees in February, installing himself as chair and other loyalists who ultimately signed off on the center’s rebrand.

Artists bailed and major productions, such as the hit musical Hamilton, canceled performances

When the center’s name change became official, and Trump’s tacky name was added to the building’s exterior, another longtime performer at the arts center also called it quits. 

A cartoon by Clay Jones.

Chuck Redd, a musician who hosted the center’s annual Christmas Eve show for nearly two decades, walked away on December 19.

But the White House, driven by Trump’s narcissism, has already come up with replacement programming sure to excite fans of the arts.

Last week, sources told The Hollywood Reporter that Melania Trump’s upcoming self-titled documentary would hold its premiere at the center.

Unfortunately for the Trumps, it doesn’t seem like they’ll be able to market the movie on a splashy new Trump Kennedy Center website, thanks to Morton. 

For now, Morton gets a chuckle out of the curious emails he receives as the owner of the domains for the repulsively rebranded Kennedy Center. 

“Those [emails] are my love language,” he said.

Wine 11.0-rc4 Brings 22 Bug Fixes

Dec. 26th, 2025 04:21 pm
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

Wine 11.0-rc4 is out today as the latest weekly release candidate in working toward the stable Wine 11.0 release in January...
[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

A man jumped in front of an Orange Line train pulling into the Oak Grove side of State Street around 7:34 a.m., Transit Police report.

The train driver was able to halt the train about halfway down the platform; the man wound up under the first car but was conscious and able to talk when the first Transit Police officer got to him.

Boston firefighters were able to get him up to the platform around 7:48 a.m., and handed him over to Boston EMS for transport to a local hospital, with injuries not considered life threatening.

Transit Police Supt. Richard Sullivan praised the train driver for doing "an outstanding job" in stopping the train "as quickly and as safely as possible."

"It is our sincere hope [the victim] gets the support and care he obviously needs," he added.

The T brought in shuttle buses to replace service between Jackson Square and Back Bay - with riders told to switch to the Green Line for service downtown.

Regular Orange Line service resumed around 8:30 a.m.

Topics: 
Neighborhoods: 
[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

In Donald Trump’s mass deportation effort, ICE and border patrol won big as immigrant families spent the holidays living in fear or separated from loved ones.

The president’s bloated Big Beautiful Bill earmarked $170 billion over the next four years for immigration enforcement, which includes the construction of disgraceful new detention facilities.

However, projects have been underway long before federal funds were guaranteed after Republicans in Congress passed their grotesque spending bill.

In July, Florida's “Alligator Alcatraz” opened its doors. The following month, Homeland Security chief Krisit Noem was slammed after teasing the “Speedway Slammer” in Indiana.

FILE - President Donald Trump, Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, and others, tour "Alligator Alcatraz," a new migrant detention facility at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility, Tuesday, July 1, 2025, in Ochopee, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Kristi Noem, and others tour "Alligator Alcatraz" on July 1.

Reports of human rights abuses have also surged along with Trump’s brutality aimed at immigrants.

Immigrants are subjected to horrendous conditions at ICE facilities across the U.S. One getting significant attention for its treatment of ICE detainees—and protesters outside—is Chicago’s Broadview detention facility.

However, no amount of outrage from Americans has been able to slow Trump’s heavily funded deportation machine.

According to a glowing year-end report from Homeland Security, more than 2.5 million immigrants have either left the country voluntarily or have been deported by the government’s hastily hired ICE agents.


Related  | Next Democratic president needs to crush ICE


And the president has tripled his bribe to get people to willingly leave the U.S., upping the offer to $3,000.

As of early December, DHS claims 1.9 million immigrants have opted to self-deport.

The government shows no signs of slowing down its cruelty, either.

The Washington Post reported last week that the Trump administration has employed contractors to overhaul the deportation processing system, planning to build massive warehouses near detention centers that would house up to 5,000 immigrants instead of shipping them hundreds of miles away from their homes.


Related| The dark history of Trump's retro 'patriotic' imagery


It’s unclear whether the private detention companies bidding on the drafted plans will be the same ones that have questionable ties to border czar Tom Homan.

The Trump administration has also brought shuttered prisons back to life and used military bases to ramp up its drive to recklessly boot millions of people from the country—leading to at least 30 deaths of people in ICE custody.

Cartoon by Mike Luckovich

This included a disturbing four immigrant deaths in four days between Dec. 12-15 at ICE facilities.

Meanwhile, the ghouls at DHS continue to hype up their inhumanity with heinous memes and promotional videos.  

“We didn’t have this meme-ification of various serious operations, these things that are life or death. … It’s not a joking matter,” David Lapan, a DHS press secretary during Trump’s first term, told the Washington Post.

As the year comes to an end, it’s terrifying to think what kind of inhumane actions DHS and ICE will take with their influx of federal funds.

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Comedian and late-night host Jimmy Kimmel gave a stark warning to the world about the rise of fascism and tyranny in the United States in a Christmas message broadcast to the United Kingdom.

Kimmel was asked by broadcaster Channel 4 to provide an “alternative” address to accompany the official message aired by King Charles each year.

“From a fascism perspective, this has been a really great year. Tyranny is booming over here,” Kimmel said. He noted that Trump “would like to shut me up because I don’t adore him in the way he likes to be adored.”

“Here in the United States right now, we are both figuratively and literally tearing down the structures of our democracy -- from the free press to science to medicine to judicial independence to the actual White House itself,” he added. “I want you to know we’re not all like him, we’re not all like that.”

Kimmel ended his speech by asking viewers not to give up on America, noting, “we’re going through a bit of a wobble right now, but we’ll come around.”

Cartoon by Jack Ohman

Kimmel was chosen for the broadcast because in September the Trump administration, via the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), directly targeted him for removal from the air after the comedian commented on the killing of Charlie Kirk. 

Kimmel has been a longtime critic of Trump and has used his show, “Jimmy Kimmel Live” to mock Trump for years.

After the program was taken offline, with the assistance of conservative ABC affiliate owners Sinclair and Nexstar, public outcry against the decision led to Kimmel’s triumphant return.

Unlike his predecessors in both parties, Trump has been unable to maintain calmness and maturity when mocked by comedians—a standard part of being a major public figure like the president. 

Just before the Christmas holiday, Trump fumed that he was being made fun of by one of Kimmel’s competitors, “Late Night” host Stephen Colbert—and called for the broadcast licenses of networks airing comedians who don’t like him to be pulled.

Trump highlighted his vindictiveness in a Christmas evening post where he warned that Democrats and other detractors should “enjoy what may be your last Merry Christmas.”

Over the last year, allies of Trump have exerted their control over major media outlets to bend coverage in Trump’s favor. For instance, Trump inaugural donor and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos has overseen an exodus of voices critical of the right in the paper’s editorial pages and has been praised by Trump for pushing the paper in a pro-MAGA direction. Simultaneously, Trump allies like billionaire Larry Ellison have taken over Paramount, which owns CBS, and paid off millions to Trump for a frivolous lawsuit.


Related | Trump threatens TV networks in unhinged Merry Christmas rant


There has been considerable blowback as well, most recently at CBS News, where conservative editor-in-chief Bari Weiss spiked a “60 Minutes” report exposing the Trump administration’s affiliation with abusive policies at El Salvador’s CECOT prison. Instead of squashing an unfavorable story, CBS has come under withering criticism for days on end.

Kimmel was the perfect spokesperson to continue arguing for First Amendment speech under Trump—targeted for regime censorship, he received public support and was restored, and now continues to mock Trump with the contempt the American president has earned.

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Jennifer Ouellette

Black holes have long captured the imagination of both scientists and the general public. These exotic objects—once thought to be merely hypothetical—have also conceptually inspired countless artists all over the world. A generous sampling of such work is featured in Conjuring the Void: The Art of Black Holes.

Author Lynn Gamwell spent ten years as director of the New York Academy of Science's Gallery of Art and Science. She has an extensive background writing about the intersection of math, art, and science. So she was a natural choice to speak at the annual conference of Harvard's interdisciplinary Black Hole Initiative a few years ago. Gamwell focused her talk on the art of black holes, and thus the seeds for what would become Conjuring the Void were sown.

"I was just astounded at how much art there is [about black holes], and I was specifically interested in Asian art," Gamwell told Ars. "There's just something about the concept of a black hole that resonates with the Eastern tradition. So many of the themes—the science of black holes, void, nothingness, being inescapable—relate to the philosophy of Buddhism and Taoism and so on."

Read full article

Comments

[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

As part of the various end-of-year benchmarking comparisons on Phoronix and with Linux 6.19 switching older AMD GCN 1.0/1.1 graphics cards to the AMDGPU driver by default, I planned for a very large AMD Radeon graphics card comparison on the latest open-source Linux driver for ending out 2025. In the end though I was thwarted by newer AMD RDNA3 / RDNA4 graphics cards regressing hard on Linux 6.19 that led to ending this testing prematurely due to a show-stopping bug. In any case in this article offers a fresh look at older GCN and RDNA graphics cards on Linux 6.19 + Mesa 26.0-devel.
[syndicated profile] atrios_feed
One day soon we will realize a computer that gets math problems wrong much of the time is not an especially useful computer.
As A.I. Companies Borrow Billions, Debt Investors Grow Wary

...

Investors in the A.I.-fueled stock market have largely shrugged off warnings about a tech bubble, an optimism that has pushed up share prices to repeated new highs this year.

But the debt market is telling a different story, some investors say. New artificial intelligence companies looking to raise funds to supercharge their nascent businesses are being made to pay lofty interest rates on the money they borrow, indicative of investors’ skepticism when new, unproven A.I. businesses take on large debts.
I've heard a few "AI company" pitches recently and they are all like "a chatbot helps you with something" and I am surprised people are lending at any rate for this stuff.

Random Inca Remains

Dec. 26th, 2025 05:32 pm
purplecat: Averbury Stone Circle.  A large stone close by and smaller markers leading away. (General:Inca Ruins)
[personal profile] purplecat

Broad stone terraces.
Sacsayhuamán, Peru
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

Coreboot 25.12 is out today as the latest quarterly feature update to this open-source BIOS/firmware solution...

Just in case you had any question

Dec. 26th, 2025 03:45 pm
[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

Sign: This location is closed forever

The CVS on Dudley Street in Uphams Corner wishes to make it clear it's never coming back, as Ginnette Powell shows us.

Neighborhoods: 
[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

The MBTA reports delays of up to ten minutes on the Green Line due to "a disabled maintenance train near Kenmore."

Topics: 
[syndicated profile] nashvillebanner_feed

Posted by Banner Staff

MAZE APPEAL: After the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled against them, Russell and Kaye Maze are seeking to appeal to the Tennessee Supreme Court. In a November opinion, the Tennessee Court of Appeals sided with a May 2024 post-conviction court in ruling against the Mazes, who sought relief from convictions associated with their infant son Alex’s death in 2000. Russell is currently serving life in prison after doctors originally said Alex was a victim of “shaken baby syndrome.” In Sept. 2024, former medical examiner Dr. Bruce Levy, who originally testified that he agreed that Alex had been shaken to death, changed his mind in an affidavit. “If called to testify now,” Levy said, “I would assert [Alex] Maze’s brain, at the time of his death, showed no indication, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, of prior trauma or abuse. Instead, the residual brain lesions viewed at autopsy more likely than not resulted from a natural disease process.” On Monday, Russell filed an application to appeal to the Tennessee Supreme Court, citing in part Levy’s affidavit. Kaye, who is seeking to vacate her original conviction for reckless aggravated assault, filed her application last week. — Mikeie Honda Reiland

OWNERSHIP AUDIBLE: As a minority owner of the Nashville Predators, Nick Saban has no plans to be a silent partner. “I’m no expert in hockey,” Saban said earlier this week. “So, don’t look at me like I’m going to make some huge impact coaching around here because that’s not going to happen. But I do have a pretty good idea of what it takes to have successful organizations. … (The Predators) want to be successful.” Saban, through the firm Dream Sports Ventures, LLC, bought into the local NHL franchise on Dec. 16, and the majority owner is happy to hear what the seven-time national champion college football coach has to say. “You have somebody who understands building a championship culture, who understands — I think better than almost anybody in sports — the process that’s needed to get to where you compete as a champion, and somebody who just loves sports.” Saban said he had been on a team since he was 9 years old until he retired from coaching after the 2023 college football season. The decision to join the Predators’ ownership group, he said, eases concerns about not being involved in team sports. — David Boclair

OPEN AND SHUT: Dalt’s American Grill sent shockwaves through West Nashville on Monday with the announcement that it had shut down permanently. A day later, Strategic Hospitality, which owns and operates several high-profile local restaurants, announced that it had purchased the Dalt’s “brand and concept” and planned to reopen a revamped version of the establishment that has been a fixture on White Bridge Rd. since 1980. “We will establish a place for new memories, solidifying Dalt’s as the ‘Cheers’ of west Nashville,” Max Goldberg, of Strategic Hospitality, said in a release. “We are looking forward to creating a welcoming neighborhood restaurant for the next generation of families.” — David Boclair

The post Dec. 26: Rusell Maze, Kaye Maze Appeal; Nashville Predators Minority Owner Nick Saban appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Money Can't Buy You

Dec. 26th, 2025 03:42 pm
[syndicated profile] atrios_feed
I know there is a selection issue here - we only hear from the rich guys who never shut the fuck up - but it is still a mystery why all these rich guys can't stop posting. There is nothing wrong with a bit of posting - I do it occasionally myself - but that they are so invested in it, and get so enraged by it that they have to warp society over their twitter beefs, is hard to comprehend.

Go sip wine in Italy. Climb a mountain. Learn violin. Become an arts patron. Whatever.
[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

As millions of Americans were celebrating Christmas, Donald Trump was launching new military strikes, excitedly announcing that he bombed alleged ISIS terrorists in Nigeria to avenge a non-existent Christian genocide.

“Under my leadership, our Country will not allow Radical Islamic Terrorism to prosper," Trump wrote in an unhinged Truth Social post. “May God Bless our Military, and MERRY CHRISTMAS to all, including the dead Terrorists, of which there will be many more if their slaughter of Christians continues.”

Of course, while there is undoubtedly terroristic violence in Nigeria, there is no evidence that it is a Christian genocide, as Trump claimed.


Related | Shady foreign leaders are pouncing on Trump's thirst for peace prize


“Portraying Nigeria’s security challenges as a targeted campaign against a single religious group is a gross misrepresentation of reality," the Nigerian government wrote in a post on X back in September. "Terrorists attack all who reject their murderous ideology—Muslims, Christians, and those of no faith alike."

What's more, even if there was a Christian genocide to avenge, Trump would need to go to Congress to get authorization for the strikes—which he did not do.

"There’s no authority for strikes on terrorists in Nigeria or anywhere on earth. The 2001 [Authorization for Use of Military Force] is only for the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks," former Rep. Justin Amash, a Republican who left the party in protest of Trump, wrote in a post on X. "The War Powers Resolution doesn’t grant any authority beyond the Constitution. Offensive military actions need congressional approval. The Framers of the Constitution divided war powers to protect the American people from war-eager executives. Whether the United States should engage in conflicts across the globe is a decision for the people’s representatives in Congress, not the president."

But Trump has ignored the Constitution to launch multiple military strikes without Congress’ input, one of the many ways he’s shredded the founding documents of this country to simply do what he wants.

Just last week, Trump launched airstrikes against alleged ISIS targets in Syria. And let’s not forget his attack on Iran earlier in the year.

And, of course, Trump has been carrying out illegal military actions in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific without congressional approval, some of which likely constitute war crimes


Related | Trump uses ‘drug boat’ bombings to justify illegal deportations


Trump claimed, without providing any evidence, that the boats the military is blowing up are trafficking drugs. Yet even if they are, that does not give him carte blanche to launch strikes without Congress' go-ahead.

Ultimately, Trump's bloodlust is completely counter to his campaign promise that he would not launch new wars if elected president.

Cartoon by Clay Bennett

It's also a joke given that he has deemed himself the “peace president” as he campaigns endlessly for a Nobel Peace Prize.

But GOP lawmakers, who have neutered themselves of their constitutionally granted powers to let their Dear Leader do whatever he wants, don’t care.

In fact, many of them were cheering Trump’s latest military strikes.

“Thank you @POTUS for standing up against Christian persecution. The PEACE President!!” Rep. Ralph Norman, the South Carolina Republican who is groveling for Trump’s endorsement in his bid for governor of the Palmetto State, wrote in a post onX.

Rep. Mike Collins, a Georgia Republican running for Senate in the Peach State, even posted an image of a military plane with a Santa hat along with the text “Merry Christmas, Nigerian terrorists.”

Merry Christmas, indeed.

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday that he will meet with U.S. President Donald Trump in Florida over the weekend.

Zelenskyy told journalists that the two leaders will discuss security guarantees for Ukraine during Sunday's talks, and that the 20-point plan under discussion “is about 90% ready.”

An “economic agreement” also will be discussed, Zelenskyy said, but that he was unable to confirm “whether anything will be finalized by the end.”

The Ukrainian side will also raise "territorial issues", he said.

Zelenskyy said that Ukraine “would like the Europeans to be involved," but doubted whether it would be possible at short notice.

“We must, without doubt, find some format in the near future in which not only Ukraine and the U.S. are present, but Europe is represented as well,” he said.


Related | Trump might sell major weapons to Ukraine—but has questions first


The announced meeting is the latest development in an extensive U.S.-led diplomatic push to end the nearly four-year Russia-Ukraine war, but efforts have run into sharply conflicting demands by Moscow and Kyiv.

Zelenskyy's comments came after he said Thursday that he had a “good conversation” with U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Friday that the Kremlin had already been in contact with U.S. representatives since Russian presidential envoy Kirill Dmitriev recently met with U.S. envoys in Florida.

“It was agreed upon to continue the dialogue," he said.

Trump is engaged in a diplomatic push to end Russia's all-out war, which began on Feb. 24, 2022, but his efforts have run into sharply conflicting demands by Moscow and Kyiv.

Zelenskyy said Tuesday that he would be willing to withdraw troops from Ukraine's eastern industrial heartland as part of a plan to end the war, if Russia also pulls back and the area becomes a demilitarized zone monitored by international forces.

Though Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Thursday that there had been “slow but steady progress” in the peace talks, Russia has given no indication that it will agree to any kind of withdrawal from land it has seized.

In fact, Moscow has insisted that Ukraine relinquish the remaining territory it still holds in the Donbas — an ultimatum that Ukraine has rejected. Russia has captured most of Luhansk and about 70% of Donetsk — the two areas that make up the Donbas.

Cartoon by Pedro Molina

On the ground, one person was killed and three others were wounded when a guided aerial bomb hit a house in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region, while six people were wounded in a missile strike on the city of Uman, local officials said Friday.

Russian drone attacks on the city of Mykolaiv and its suburbs overnight into Friday left part of the city without power. Energy and port infrastructure were damaged by drones in the city of Odesa on the Black Sea.

Meanwhile, Ukraine said that it struck a major Russian oil refinery on Thursday using U.K.-supplied Storm Shadow missiles.

Ukraine’s General Staff said that its forces hit the Novoshakhtinsk refinery in Russia’s Rostov region.

“Multiple explosions were recorded. The target was hit,” it wrote on Telegram.

Rostov regional Gov. Yuri Slyusar said that a firefighter was wounded when extinguishing the fire.

Ukraine’s long-range drone strikes on Russian refineries aim to deprive Moscow of the oil export revenue it needs to pursue its full-scale invasion. Russia wants to cripple the Ukraine's power grid, seeking to deny civilians access to heat, light and running water in what Ukrainian officials say is an attempt to “weaponize winter.”

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

The Trump administration is engaged in a full-scale assault on the independence and sovereignty of European countries that dare to try to regulate big tech in a way he doesn’t like. Apparently this is what we are exporting these days. 

European countries are trying to regulate and impose fines on technology companies that aren’t following their laws. This should be a noncontroversial thing, a no-brainer, really. Sure, it’s no fun for big tech overlords to have to follow different rules in different countries, but that’s kind of how being an international presence works?

But not these days—not if President Donald Trump has his way. 

The latest leverage the administration is deploying in order to stop other countries from enforcing their own laws is to threaten to launch investigations into “unfair digital trade practices.” The United Kingdom, the European Union, and South Korea are all in the administration’s crosshairs here. 


Related | Trump vows retaliation against countries with digital rules targeting US tech


The administration isn’t threatening a full-fledged trade war quite yet, but just give it time. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is dangling lower tariff rates on steel and aluminum in front of the EU if they will only agree to regulate big tech companies the same way the United States does—which is to say, basically, not at all. 

All of this is being done at the behest of big tech, of course. Here’s some anonymous spokesperson talking to Politico about it: 

“I would just say that’s the next level of escalation. I think that’s what people are waiting for and looking for. What folks are looking for is like action over the tweets, which, we love the tweets. Everyone loves the tweets.”

Many people do not actually love the tweets, because X is basically a Nazi cesspool these days, chock-full of targeted harassment. But Trump still loves Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk, apparently, so the American government is stepping in to make sure Musk gets what he wants. 

Earlier this month, the EU fined X $140 million for not following the EU’s Digital Services Act. Despite this getting spun as some sort of censorship, with Vice President JD Vance going on X to whine that the EU was “attacking American companies over garbage,” it’s really just a relatively boring result of a years-long investigation by the EU into X’s persistent violations of its rules. 

President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk speak to reporters as they sit in a Tesla vehicle on the South Lawn of the White House Tuesday, March 11, 2025, in Washington. (Pool via AP)
President Donald Trump has gone to bat for Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk before, like that time he turned the White House into a Tesla sales showroom.

The $140 million penalty relates to three violations of the DSA, none of which are about restricting X’s precious free speech for fascists. 

First, X ran afoul of the DSA because it still says that blue checks represent verified users, but that hasn’t been the case for quite some time. Since Musk made blue checks freely available to anyone who will pay him $8 a month, scams and bots have run amok. Continuing to say these are verified users deceives consumers and violates the DSA. 

Next, X has refused to comply with EU rules on ad transparency. The EU requires companies to keep a publicly available archive of all ads a platform runs and who pays for them. Apparently X just can’t handle that and instead has an archive that doesn’t show who paid for ads, doesn’t show what the ads are about, and doesn’t even show which broad categories ads fell under. 

Finally, X got dinged because it won’t give researchers adequate access to public data. Since Musk took the helm, X has made it much harder for researchers to scrape information from the site, a thing that the American government doesn’t care about, but the EU does. But the notion that other countries get to have their own laws seems utterly foreign to this administration and the big tech folks it is coddling.

In a nice little show of “regulations for thee, but not for me,” the administration began threatening action against European companies like Spotify and Siemens unless the EU stops trying to enforce its own rules. It is no coincidence whatsoever that this little bit of mob boss mentality came one week after the EU penalized X. 

Pretending that requiring a company to follow basic transparency rules is the height of censorship is especially ridiculous given that Federal Communications Commission Director Brendan Carr, back when he was a Project 2025 guy, called for platforms to be required to explain and justify all editorial decisions. That is quite a bit more heavy-handed than the EU requirement that X keep some ad records.


Related | You just can’t keep a good Nazi down in Trump's America


The Trump administration is also making clear that any efforts to rein in disinformation on tech platforms are not only unwelcome, but basically a criminal act that warrants not letting you in the country.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio says that people who research and regulate disinformation are “radical activists” who undermine free speech, and on Wednesday officially barred five Europeans from entering the U.S. Also not welcome here? Anyone who has been a fact checker or content moderator, because that is also censorship. 

The administration desperately wants to export the Trump/Musk view of free speech, which is that they get to spew the most hateful and bigoted lies imaginable, and you have to keep your mouth shut and listen, even if that means facing an unending torrent of abuse. 

But this isn’t just about fake free speech. It’s also about keeping big tech CEOs happy. They’ve bowed and scraped and showered money on Trump to ensure that he continues to let them do whatever they want. 

Those millions of dollars in “donations” directed toward the president’s dumb ballroom and boring inauguration are all about continuing to show Trump fealty. They don’t want much in return, really—just an unfettered, regulation-free atmosphere not only here, but worldwide. What an unholy alliance. 

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Businesses and states are grappling with the fallout of the federal government’s quick elimination of the penny.

By Kevin Hardy for Stateline


As pennies vanish from the American landscape, many businesses are clamoring for federal guidance on how to handle cash transactions in a penniless world.

Should retailers round up or down? Should they round in favor of the customer? Or in favor of the business?

So far, calls for federal direction have gone unanswered. Some businesses are setting their own policies, but states are now beginning to act amid growing uncertainty.

While the question revolves around only a few cents per transaction, it does raise important consumer protection and legal questions for states to consider. Retailers must weigh threats of potential lawsuits, while policymakers worry about protecting the most vulnerable consumers who rely on cash for everyday purchases.


Related | US Mint in Philadelphia presses final pennies as the 1-cent coin gets canceled


President Donald Trump in February moved to eliminate the penny from U.S. pocketbooks, citing the high cost of minting them — about 3.7 cents per penny. But even before the coin’s final production run last month, U.S. retailers and banks were reporting widespread penny shortages.

To provide clarity, lawmakers in New York have proposed legislation mirroring Canada’s rounding standard — up or down to the nearest five cents. And officials in Georgia and Utah have issued nonbinding guidance to businesses.

“States do not have the luxury of waiting for the federal government,” said Katherine Tschopp, senior associate at government relations firm MultiState.

Complicating the issue are the growing number of jurisdictions requiring businesses to accept cash — a move aimed at protecting vulnerable consumers who may not have access to credit cards or electronic payment systems.

U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach holds one of the last pennies pressed at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach holds one of the last pennies pressed at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia on Nov. 12.

In November, New York became the ninth state to add such a rule, according to tracking from MultiState. At least eight major cities also require businesses to accept cash.

A bipartisan group of federal lawmakers have proposed legislation in the U.S. House and Senate to require all cash transactions be rounded to the nearest five cents, but neither proposal has made it to a floor vote.

The record-breaking federal government shutdown and heated debate on health insurance subsidies have sidelined the penny discussion, Tschopp said. She thinks the federal government will likely determine a national rounding policy — eventually. But in the meantime, she expects more states to weigh in.

New York Democratic Assemblymember John T. McDonald III said he agreed with Trump’s move to phase out the costly production of the penny. But businesses are asking for some kind of guidance now, he said.

“In the absence of federal action, I think it’s important that the states act to provide clarity — clarity for everybody: clarity for the consumer, as well as the merchant and the state,” McDonald told Stateline.

Approaches to rounding

McDonald’s proposed legislation mirrors Canada’s rounding policy following the 2012 elimination of its one-cent coin. His bill calls for so-called symmetrical rounding of after-tax cash purchases to the nearest five-cent mark. Purchases ending with one, two, six or seven cents would be rounded down. And purchases ending in three, four, eight or nine cents would be rounded up.

So, a consumer would get no cash back from a $1.99 purchase. But a retailer would hand over a nickel to someone spending $1.97.

McDonald sits on the National Conference of State Legislature’s State and Local Taxation Task Force that has been examining the penny issue. That task force has recommended symmetrical rounding as the fairest method for merchants and consumers.

McDonald noted that the NCSL group reached a bipartisan consensus on the issue. And he said he’s found no opposition from New York businesses or consumer groups on his bill.

“In this day and age where we seem to have a lot of fractious conversations on other issues, it’d be nice to find something that actually we can all agree on,” he said. “And to have it start with the good old little penny would be a good spot.”

On Wednesday, South Dakota Republican state Sen. Tim Reed urged state lawmakers to start communicating with agencies, retailers and the public over the issue.

FILE - A sign in a Kwik Trip store shows the store will no longer be using pennies to give change, Oct. 23, 2025, in Yorkville, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)
A sign in a Kwik Trip store in Yorkville, Wis., on Oct. 23 shows the store will no longer be using pennies to give change.

A co-chair of the NCSL task force, he said businesses need guidance and consumers may need reassurance. While he acknowledged concerns about “strategic pricing” — in which retailers set prices to push rounding to their advantage — the group’s report characterized that as a “limited risk.”

“Everybody’s thinking, ‘Oh, I’ll get overcharged, or I’ll get undercharged,’” Reed said at an NCSL virtual event about the penny. He said it would be good for people to know that “really this is all going to kind of wash out in the end.”

New York Democratic state Sen. James Sanders Jr. said the cash acceptance law he sponsored earlier this year ensures people without access to smartphones or banking are not excluded from commerce. That law also says customers paying with cash cannot be charged more than other buyers.

“Otherwise, you absolutely have a two-tiered system,” he said, noting that cash is “a lifeline” for working families, older adults, immigrants and small businesses.

Sanders said he would prefer for retailers to round down to the nearest nickel on cash transactions to protect consumers.

“For the large corporations, this could be a difference of hundreds of thousands of dollars if they are steadily rounding up,” he said. While each rounding transaction represents a loss or gain of only a few cents, Sanders said, “multiply that by tens of thousands of people, and you’ve effectively raised the price of your product without any type of sanction.”

Sanders said he plans to introduce legislation on the matter soon, but added that he remains open to McDonald’s current proposal of symmetrical rounding. More than anything, he said, businesses desire some kind of guidance.

“We’re not trying to cheat business. We’re just trying not to be cheated by business,” he said. “The people I’ve been speaking to are honest souls, and they just want to know the right thing to do in a penniless society.”

A rapid change

The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia struck the last penny on Nov. 12, but pennies were already scarce at that time.

By mid-November, more than 100 of the government’s 165 coin distribution sites across the country were without pennies, according to the Retail Industry Leaders Association, which represents major chains including CVS, Target and 7-Eleven.

In a November survey of its members, that organization found six national chains had more than 1,000 stores that had no pennies.

The association said most of its survey respondents were rounding cash transactions to the benefit of customers — always down to the nearest five cents. While it’s fair for shoppers, it’s “costing businesses millions of dollars as small amounts add up across thousands of daily cash transactions.”

While states weigh the issue, the association is pushing for a federal answer.

“We are urging the federal government to quickly address the problem, to allow for uniform adjustments by retailers that operate in a multitude of states,” Austen Jensen, the organization’s senior executive vice president of public affairs, said in a statement to Stateline.

Other groups, including the American Bankers Association, have also pushed for federal action.

“They’re obviously concerned about it and wanting a federal fix,” said Christopher Phillips, a partner at law firm Holland & Knight. “The government fairly abruptly decided they weren’t going to mint any more pennies and these shortages of pennies spread fairly quickly across the country.”

For retailers, the problem is both practical and legal, said Phillips, who represents payment system companies and financial technology firms.

In many of the jurisdictions that require merchants to accept cash, the laws explicitly forbid charging cash customers more — and have a per-transaction fine for violations, raising the possibility of big fees. And Phillips said merchants could face class-action lawsuits for rounding policies in which plaintiffs argue they are charged more than advertised or face unfair or deceptive business practices.

Cartoon by Clay Jones

Federal regulations also ban retailers from charging more for purchases made with food stamps, through the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, or SNAP. Cash rounding policies complicate that rule, as some customers would be charged less for certain cash purchases than those using SNAP cards.

“The unintended consequences of these administrative actions, and these laws and how they flow together to create real problems that were certainly never envisioned,” Phillips said.

So far, merchants have come up with their own policies.

Because of the penny shortage, the East Coast convenience store chain Sheetz asked customers to move to cashless payments or round up to support charitable causes. It even offered free beverages for those willing to cash in 100 pennies.

Kwik Trip, which operates convenience stores across the Midwest, in October announced its registers would automatically round down cash transactions to the nearest nickel in favor of customers.

But without a federal standard, the landscape is patchy, Phillips said. Rounding creates a winner and a loser in each cash transaction. Some companies have pushed to standardize their practice across the country, but others will only choose to round down if required.

“Others are like, ‘You know what? This is actual money for us,’” he said. “‘We’re not just going to give it up for the sake of convenience.’”

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Samuel Axon

Ever since 1993, I think I've unconsciously judged almost every game by how well it can capture how Wing Commander: Privateer made me feel.

Steam and PlayStation (the two platforms I use the most) have been doing a year-in-review summary akin to the wildly popular Spotify Wrapped for the past few years. Based on these, I can report that my most-played games in 2025 were, from most hours down:

  1. No Man's Sky
  2. Civilization VII
  3. Assassin's Creed Shadows
  4. The Elder Scrolls IV Oblivion Remastered
  5. The Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria
  6. The Elder Scrolls III Morrowind
  7. World of Warcraft
  8. Meridian 59
  9. Tainted Grail: Fall of Avalon
  10. Unreal Tournament

With the exceptions of Civilization VII and Unreal Tournament, every one of those games is some kind of open-world experience that's all about immersing you in a far-flung land (or galaxy).

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Posted by Kyle Orland

When we put together our top 20 games of last year, we specifically called out Civilization 7, Avowed, Doom: The Dark Ages, and Grand Theft Auto 6 as big franchise games we were already looking forward to for 2025. While one of those games has been delayed into 2026, the three others made this year's list of Ars' favorite games as expected. They join a handful of other highly anticipated sequels, ranging from big-budget blockbusters to long-gestating indies, on the "expected" side of this year's list.

But the games that really stood out for me in 2025 were the ones that seemed to come out of nowhere. Those range from hard-to-categorize roguelike puzzle games to a gonzo, punishing mountainous walking simulation, the best Geometry Wars clone in years, and a touching look at the difficulties of adolescence through the surprisingly effective lens of mini-games.

As we look toward 2026, there are plenty of other big-budget projects that the industry is busy preparing for (the delayed Grand Theft Auto VI chief among them). If next year is anything like this year, though, we can look forward to plenty more games that no one saw coming suddenly vaulting into view as new classics.

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[syndicated profile] nashvillebanner_feed

Posted by Eden Turner

When she was 11 years old, Tarelle Lane’s brother was incarcerated. It put a strain on their close friendship, as Lane, her sister, mother and grandmother had to travel to the outskirts of Michigan to visit him in jail.

Today, Lane is one of many women who have been impacted by the justice system in some way who now work at Free Hearts, an organization committed to uplifting incarcerated people and their families. Some are formerly incarcerated, while others are the family members and friends of incarcerated people. 

She and her co-workers provide counseling, court support, housing assistance and other resources for the community they serve.

“When my brother was incarcerated, I was a little girl, so back then, I didn’t realize that we were being impacted,” Lane said. “It makes me much more compassionate because when we go into [the jails] to see the women and just hearing their stories of what they’re going through and what they’ve been through. … My life story makes me more empathetic because I understand.”

On Dec. 13, families arrived at the McGruder Family Resource Center in North Nashville wearing jackets, Christmas sweaters and Santa hats. As parents and guardians signed intake forms, children picked up crayons and holiday-themed coloring sheets. Others painted wooden Christmas tree ornaments. 

Volunteers passed out food and drinks while parents and guardians chose from a variety of pajamas donated by the Nashville Metropolitan Alumnae chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

Free Hearts Executive Director Dawn Harrington welcomes guests to the 2025 holiday party. Credit: Martin B. Cherry / Nashville Banner

Dawn Harrington, Free Hearts’ executive director, painted butterflies, cartoon characters and other designs onto children’s excited faces while a Christmas playlist played lightly from nearby speakers.

For the past nine years, the Christmas party has provided the families of those impacted by the justice system a space for support and community connection. 

“The holidays are some of the most difficult times for children that are separated from their family due to incarceration and deportation,” Harrington said. “I remember when I was incarcerated, the holidays were just the hardest time.”

She continued: “This is a time that we get to love on the children in our community that are impacted by incarcerations of people that are the silent victims and everything with the mass incarceration and the criminal legal system. We’re just trying to bring some Christmas and some holiday cheer and joy during the time when they need it the most.”

Throughout the event, children ran around with big smiles on their faces. Lane told the Banner it’s like this every year — the children and their parents enjoy themselves, and those who are able to help them feel grateful in return.

“[The children] are extremely happy and grateful and the parents are as well,” she said. “For me, just seeing the joy and how that makes them feel and how we could be of help to families in need is a blessing.”

The post Free Hearts Sparks Joy for Justice-Impacted Families During Holiday Season appeared first on Nashville Banner.

[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

It was a very interesting year for Ubuntu Linux. Ahead of the important Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release due out this coming April, Ubuntu Linux this year was expeditiously migrating to new Rust-based system tools like sudo-rs and Rust Coreutils, new performance optimizations continued to be explored for bettering the out-of-the-box Ubuntu performance, better ARM64 support with its desktop ISO, and enhancing the Snapdragon X Elite laptop support were among the Ubuntu highlights in 2025...
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

An exciting post-Christmas patch series out on the Linux kernel mailing list this morning is proposing a new runtime standby ABI that is similar in nature to the "Modern Standby" functionality found with Microsoft Windows...
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

This year there was a lot of going on in the NVIDIA Linux world from their official driver stack seeing better Wayland support to a lot on the open-source scene from NVIDIA engineers contributing a lot directly to the Rust-based Nova open-source driver that continues taking shape, the Mesa NVK Vulkan driver becoming more performant and capable, and a lot of other happenings. Here is a look back at the most popular NVIDIA content of 2025 on Phoronix...
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

For those using Microsoft's exFAT file-system under Linux for the likes of flash drives and SD cards, a new patch series posted today aims to enhance the read performance. The new patches are shown to improve performance by about 10% while also having lower overhead...

No Christmas magic at Millennium Park

Dec. 26th, 2025 04:02 am
[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

Eagle about to make a move

Mary Ellen was down at Millennium Park today, walking by the parking lot for the canoe launch and river-side path when she noticed some eagle drama involving two birds perched on adjoining poles along the train tracks.

One was calling and flew to the other one but it gave the cold shoulder and took off.

Eagle flies away

A little hard to tell but this is the disappointed eagle pondering what just happened:

Disappointed eagle

Mary Ellen reports that even though she wasn't close, she was using a zoom lens, she left to leave Sam alone.

Neighborhoods: 

Economic fear dampens holiday cheer

Dec. 26th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Americans are pulling back—and the holidays are paying the price.

New polling shows that growing economic anxiety under President Donald Trump is reshaping how people approach gift-giving this season. A series of polls conducted in the last two months of the year suggest that households are spending less, watching prices more closely, and trimming their expectations. And the shift isn’t subtle.

CNBC’s All-America Economic Survey, conducted in early December, finds that 41% of Americans plan to spend less on holiday gifts this year. That’s up 6 percentage points from 2024 and marks the biggest pullback since inflation spiked in 2022.



Among those cutting back, nearly half (46%) cite the high cost of goods, a 10-point increase from last year. Prices remain stubbornly high, and for many families, the math no longer works the way it once did.

Only 16% say they plan to spend more. Even then, the motivation isn’t confidence. In a telling reversal, 36% of those increasing their budgets say higher prices are the reason. CNBC notes this is the first time inflation has meaningfully driven both higher and lower spending.

That contradiction speaks to the moment. Americans aren’t necessarily bracing for collapse—but they don’t feel secure either. They’re still buying gifts, just with more hesitation, more calculation, and more anxiety about what comes next.

Other surveys reinforce the picture. Data from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research shows consumers are becoming more deliberate as the season begins. 

About half of Americans say they’re spending more time hunting for deals and putting off big purchases. Nearly as many—48%—say they’re buying nonessential items less often, while just 13% report shopping more than usual. Worse, 4 in 10 say they’re leaning more heavily on savings.



What’s striking is how this compares with earlier inflation scares. More Americans say they’re tightening their belts now than they did in December 2021, when prices were just beginning to climb due to recent inflation troubles. And while supply-chain disruptions have seemingly faded as a concern, affordability has not.

The issue isn’t availability. It’s price—especially for lower- and middle-income households, which say the gap between what they want to give and what they can reasonably afford keeps widening.

That unease is evident in broader confidence measures. Gallup’s Economic Confidence Index slid sharply in November, reaching its lowest level since mid-2024. Just 21% of Americans now describe economic conditions as excellent or good, while 40% say the economy is in poor shape.



Optimism about the future is slipping as well. Only 27% tell Gallup the economy is improving. Meanwhile, 68% say it’s getting worse.

And those attitudes are reshaping holiday budgets. Americans now expect to spend an average of $778 on gifts this season, down sharply from October’s estimate of $1,007 and well below last year’s November estimate of $1,102. Gallup notes that consumers often revise expectations downward as December approaches—but this year’s decline is the largest midseason drop the firm has ever recorded, surpassing even the pullback during the 2008 financial crisis.

The retrenchment isn’t confined to one corner of the economy. Gallup finds that households earning more than $100,000 have scaled back their holiday budgets by several hundred dollars since October. Lower-income Americans are pulling back even more sharply. Middle-income households, for now, appear to be holding steady—less a sign of confidence than of limited room to cut further.

Shoppers browse for Black Friday deals at Atlantic Station outdoor mall, Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, in Atlanta, Ga. (AP Photo/Megan Varner)
Shoppers browse for deals in Atlanta in November.

What makes this moment politically fraught is not just inflation fatigue but also a broader sense of instability tied to Trump’s second term in the White House. For many voters, the concern isn’t tied to a single policy but to a broader sense of unpredictability. Economic debate has once again become volatile and personalized, with fewer clear signals about where things are headed.

The shift shows up in subtle ways. Americans aren’t scrapping the holidays—they’re downgrading them.

Think: fewer gifts, lower price points, more hesitation at checkout. Taken together, the polls suggest holiday spending has become less about celebration and more about minimizing risk.

In short, restraint—not abundance—is setting the tone this season. An October YouGov poll found that most Americans (56%) planned to set spending limits, and a notable share (14%) said they would not shop at all this year, though the poll didn’t dive into whether that was by choice or necessity.

Taken together, the data point to an economy that feels fragile at the household level. Americans may still show up for the holidays—but they’re doing so with tighter budgets and a growing sense that even familiar rituals now require caution.

Holiday spending has long been a barometer of consumer confidence. This year, it’s measuring something else: how uneasy Americans feel living under Trump’s economy.

Embarrassing

Dec. 25th, 2025 10:30 pm
[syndicated profile] atrios_feed

I can't imagine being an actual Trump fan. I don't mean a Trumpism fan.  They are cruel assholes. I get that. There are plenty of cruel people.

I mean a fan of Trump, the man.

Just laugh at these people. It is so absurd. They are so absurd.

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

The second-highest official at the DOJ, Todd Blanche rose to prominence as Trump’s personal defense attorney. His actions violated the federal conflicts of interest law and his ethics agreement, experts told ProPublica.

By Corey G. Johnson and Al Shaw for ProPublica

Before Todd Blanche could be confirmed as the second-highest official at the Justice Department, he had to satisfy the concerns of ethics officials.

Blanche, President Donald Trump’s personal attorney during his New York criminal trial last year, was a cryptocurrency investor with holdings of between $159,000 and $485,000, records show.

To prevent possible violations of the federal conflicts of interest statute, Blanche promised to dump his digital assets no later than 90 days after his Senate confirmation in March, according to his government ethics agreement. He also pledged not to participate in any matter that could have a “direct and predictable effect on my financial interests in the virtual currency” until his Bitcoin and other crypto-related products were sold.

But about a month into the job — before divesting — Blanche issued a memo that ordered an end to investigations into crypto companies, dealers and exchanges launched during President Joe Biden’s term. He also eliminated an enforcement team dedicated to looking for crypto-related fraud and money-laundering schemes. And his memo said the Justice Department would assist Trump’s crypto working group of experts and Cabinet members that went on to issue a list of recommendations aimed at making the United States the global leader in digital coins.


Related | Here is the worst First Amendment take from Trump's former lawyer


Blanche’s directives, while he still owned significant crypto investments, violated the conflicts of interest law and his ethics agreement, legal experts and former federal ethics officials told ProPublica.

“If you are invested in that industry and now making a decision that could affect whether or not the DOJ is gonna pursue prosecutions, that’s an obvious conflict of interest,” said Virginia Canter, who served as an ethics lawyer at the White House, Treasury Department and Securities and Exchange Commission during the presidencies of George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

Even when he did ultimately divest his crypto interests, Blanche’s ethics records show he did so by transferring them to his adult children and a grandchild, a move the experts said is technically legal but at odds with the spirit and intent of the law.

Blanche’s actions illustrate the ethical problems posed as the Trump administration relaxes regulation of digital money to make good on the president’s vow to make the U.S. “the crypto capital of the world.” In less than a year, Trump has nominated at least 216 political appointees who owned — either by themselves or with their spouses — cryptocurrency investments worth between $175 million and $340 million at the time of their nomination, a ProPublica review of federal financial disclosure records found. By contrast, in the first two years of his presidency, Biden appointed about two dozen people who, combined, held less than $7 million in crypto investments.

FILE - Donald Trump speaks at the Bitcoin 2024 Conference July 27, 2024, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
Donald Trump speaks at the Bitcoin 2024 Conference in July 2024 in Nashville, Tenn.

Trump’s crypto-friendly appointees include several who head agencies with regulatory authority over the industry.

Among them is Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Until this year, Lutnick was CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm with billions in crypto investments. The firm is also the primary banker for Tether, among the world’s largest issuers of stablecoins — a type of crypto pegged to the dollar or another asset to avoid wild swings in value.

After signing an ethics agreement, Lutnick transferred his stake in Cantor Fitzgerald to his children, including his two adult sons who now run the firm. The transfer was completed in October. By then, Lutnick had taken several pro-crypto steps — announcing that Trump would create a bitcoin strategic reserve, having his department take part in the president’s crypto working group and publishing economic data on nine key blockchains, a move designed to foster more trust in the digital market. (The blockchain is a digital ledger that underlies cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.)

A Commerce Department spokesperson noted that Lutnick was given a limited waiver from the White House allowing him to work on general issues that could affect Cantor Fitzgerald while the transfer of his stake in the firm was pending. The waiver was dated July 8, nearly five months after he was sworn in. The spokesperson said Lutnick “fully complied with the terms of his ethics agreement” and did not have any “economic gains or losses associated” with the transfer of his stake in the firm.

Another crypto-friendly appointee is Paul Atkins, chair of the SEC, whose ethics records show he owned stakes of up to $6 million in crypto-related businesses before his confirmation in April. Since Trump took office, Atkins’ agency has dropped or settled enforcement cases with crypto companies.

Atkins signed an ethics agreement promising to sell a crypto investment fund and equity in two crypto companies. He has since filed paperwork saying he complied with the agreement and listed millions of dollars worth of investments he sold, but those do not mention any crypto-related sales. An SEC spokesman said Atkins complied with his ethics obligations but would not say when he sold his crypto-related assets.

A staffer for Blanche said he and the Justice Department would not comment.

Trump has led the way on ethical conflicts connected to crypto. During last year’s election campaign, he pledged to the crypto industry he would end Biden’s strict approach toward regulation. In turn, the industry heavily bet on Trump, spending millions to support his election and those of other Republican candidates.

On the eve of the election, Trump promised he would be America’s “crypto president” if he won a second term. He and his sons launched their own cryptocurrency business, World Liberty Financial, and after his election victory, Trump and his wife, Melania, issued a pair of meme coins, allowing anyone to use crypto to enrich the incoming president. Within days of taking office in January, Trump signed a presidential action promoting the growth of digital assets and started nominating government officials to fulfill his goal.

Cartoon by Mike Luckovich

James Thurber, a former congressional staffer who worked on federal ethics reforms and is now professor emeritus at American University, characterized the Trump administration’s disregard of traditional government ethics as unprecedented. He contrasted Trump’s sale of crypto coins to the example set by President Jimmy Carter, who announced he was putting his peanut farm into a blind trust when he took office.

Thurber noted that Obama and Biden required their appointees to comply with an ethics pledge to avoid conflicts of interest. On the day of his inauguration in January, Trump rescinded Biden’s ethics pledge requirements for appointees.

“The conflicts of interest in this administration are blatant and hugely against the public interest.” Thurber said.

Trump’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said in a statement to ProPublica that the “administration is fulfilling the President’s promise to make the United States the crypto capital of the world by driving innovation and economic opportunity for all Americans.”

“Neither the President nor his family have ever engaged, or will ever engage, in conflicts of interest,” she added.

Tonya Evans, a former professor at Penn State Dickinson Law who now consults on the digital economy, said the increase in crypto investors serving in the executive branch under Trump is a measure of the industry’s success in taking over regulatory bodies that were previously hostile to them. She compared the industry’s newfound power to how Goldman Sachs alums — such as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin during Trump’s first term or Biden’s SEC chair, Gary Gensler — held prominent government positions and were able to exert outsized influence on shaping financial policy.

“My concern is not so much that people who understand crypto are in leadership positions,” she wrote in an email to ProPublica, “but that ethics frameworks may not yet meet this critical fork in the road of development, especially if ‘divestiture’ takes the form of passing to family. We are a long way from President Carter’s peanut farm!”

Crypto Conflicts

Blanche rose to prominence in recent years as Trump’s main defender in criminal court.

A former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, Blanche, 51, was his lead attorney in the Manhattan trial that resulted in Trump being convicted of 34 felonies stemming from his hush-money payment to a pornographic actress, Stormy Daniels. Blanche also defended Trump against criminal charges accusing him of conspiring to subvert the 2020 election and retaining highly classified documents. (Those two cases were dropped after Trump was elected president.)

Since gaining Senate confirmation on March 5, Blanche has helped lead a massive remaking of the Department of Justice, shifting the emphasis from long-standing priorities, like the protection of civil rights. Thousands of employees have been terminated or resigned as the new administration ended police misconduct prosecutions, environmental abuse lawsuits and abortion access cases. Blanche has pushed for tougher border control enforcement and the use of fraud statutes to prosecute institutions with diversity-and-inclusion-related policies. As news of Trump’s ties to the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein gained momentum this year, it was Blanche who personally interviewed Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante now serving a 20-year prison sentence for helping him sexually abuse underage girls.


Related | Ghislaine Maxwell gets big upgrade after cooperating with Trump team


When Blanche issued the sweeping memo ending the department’s Biden-era crypto enforcement approach, he effectively ended a three-year effort aimed at penetrating the shadowy world of transnational criminals.

The agency’s National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team, as it was called, had won the conviction of a man who defrauded crypto investors out of $110 million; a guilty plea from a Russian man who processed more than $700 million through an online market place for drug trafficking, money laundering and other crimes; and the conviction of a cryptocurrency exchange operator that helped launder billions from hackers, ransomware attacks, identity theft schemes and narcotics distribution rings.

The team also assisted a multiagency probe of Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange. The investigation found, among other things, that Binance failed to report and prevent suspicious financial transactions for Hamas, al-Qaida and other terrorist organizations. Federal prosecutors charged the company’s founder, Changpeng Zhao, with violating U.S. anti-money-laundering laws, and to settle the case, Zhao pleaded guilty, resigned as company chief executive and served a four-month prison sentence. He also agreed to pay the U.S. $4.3 billion in penalties. (Trump pardoned Zhao in October. Months earlier, Binance had used a stablecoin developed by the Trump-owned World Liberty Financial to fund a $2 billion deal.)

In his April 7 memo titled “Ending Regulation by Prosecution,” Blanche scoffed at the Biden Justice Department’s approach toward crypto, calling it “a reckless strategy of regulation by prosecution, which was ill conceived and poorly executed.” He said the agency would now target only the terrorists and drug traffickers who illicitly used crypto, not the platforms that hosted them. He announced the disbanding of the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team.

“The digital assets industry is critical to the Nation’s economic development and innovation,” Blanche wrote. “President Trump has also made clear that ‘[w]e are going to end the regulatory weaponization against digital assets.’”

The market reacted favorably; crypto trading spiked.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks during an event with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/John McDonnell)
Todd Blanche speaks during an event in the Oval Office at the White House on Oct. 15.

At the time, Blanche hadn’t relinquished his Bitcoin worth between $100,000 and $250,000, nor his investments in the cryptocurrencies Solana and Ethereum or his stock holdings in Coinbase. Blanche should have recused himself from the decision, experts told ProPublica.

Under the federal conflicts of interest statute, government officials are forbidden from taking part in a “particular matter” that can financially benefit them or their immediate family, unless they have a special waiver from the government. The penalties range from up to one year in jail or a civil fine of up to $50,000 all the way to as much as five years in prison if someone willfully violates the law.

Blanche’s wide-ranging memo benefited the industry broadly, including his own investments, ethics experts said.

In an ethics filing he electronically signed in June, Blanche said his Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency investments — including Solana, Cardano and Ethereum —  “were gifted in their entirety to my grandchild and adult children.” Financial disclosure records don’t provide exact amounts but instead a broad range for the worth of a government official’s investment. At that point, Blanche’s records show his transfers to his family members were worth between $116,000 and $315,000. He said he sold additional crypto-related investments worth between $5,000 and $75,000. The divestment took place in late May and early June, the ethics filing said.

Legal experts noted that the federal conflict-of-interest law prohibits government officials from using their position in a way that would financially benefit a spouse or a minor child; it does not mention adult children or grandchildren.

Still, even if legal, giving assets like these to a relative doesn’t satisfy the ethical concern that a government official could act in a way that helps their family financially, they said.

“The purpose of the law is to eliminate even the appearance that an official’s decisions are influenced by their financial interests,” said Kedric Payne, a former deputy chief counsel for the Office of Congressional Ethics who is senior ethics director at the Campaign Legal Center. “That purpose is defeated when an official simply gives conflicted assets to adult children.”

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Republicans have control over all three branches of government, but that doesn’t mean that Democrats haven’t been fighting back. Whether in media appearances or committee meetings, Democrats consistently highlighted the insidiousness—and incompetence—of the Trump administration in 2025.

And it’s all on video!


Watch a Democratic senator tear 'pathetic' Marco Rubio a new one

Secretary of State Marco Rubio lied up a storm while being confronted by Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland in front of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. 

Van Hollen slammed Rubio for his role in dismantling the United States Agency for International Development—harming vulnerable populations abroad—and enabling President Donald Trump's inhumane and unconstitutional deportations


Kristi Noem tells Congress she doesn't have to follow the Constitution

According to the Trump administration, Supreme Court decisions hold no power—at least when Trump doesn’t like them.

Testifying before Congress, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem argued that the Trump administration does not have to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland resident who was wrongly deported to El Salvador—even though the Supreme Court ruled 9-0 that it does.


Watch this Democrat school Pete Hegseth on foreign policy

Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware was forced to give Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth a history and foreign policy lesson during a Senate budget subcommittee hearing. Coons got into it with the wobbly defense secretary when Hegseth dismissively downplayed the contributions of European allies in past wars, using Afghanistan—where he served.


Watch Education Secretary Linda McMahon get schooled on diversity

Democratic Rep. Jahana Hayes of Connecticut leveled Education Secretary Linda McMahon during a tense exchange at the House Education and Workforce Committee. Hayes slammed McMahon’s attempts to separate Holocaust education from African American studies within what she considers to be diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. 


Watch whiny FBI director make a fool of himself

Appearing before the Senate Appropriations Committee, FBI Director Kash Patel was unable to provide a timeline for when his department’s budget—which was required by law to be submitted more than a week earlier—would finally be delivered to Congress.


Watch Jim Jordan get schooled on his sneaky addition to the tax cuts bill

Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado laid into GOP Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio during a House Rules Committee hearing on the GOP’s “One Big, Beautiful Bill.”


Watch: Illinois governor mocks Trump with ‘important announcement’

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker of Illinois posted a video titled, “A Special Announcement from Governor JB Pritzker,” in which he mocked some of Trump’s more comically egregious proclamations in the few weeks following his inauguration.


Watch Cory Booker's fiery 'wake-up call' for his fellow Democrats

During a heated exchange with Democratic Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, Sen. Cory Booker argued that advancing a policing bill without proper scrutiny amounted to complicity in Trump’s anti-constitutional agenda.


Democrats are furious over ‘totalitarian’ attack on California senator

When Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla of California was forcibly removed and tackled during one of Noem’s press conferences in Los Angeles, Democrats across the country immediately came to his defense.


Watch Jasmine Crockett's latest fiery clash with nemesis Nancy Mace

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on artificial intelligence got interesting when Democrats moved to subpoena Elon Musk, catching the handful of Republicans present off guard. The move forced Chair Nancy Mace to suspend proceedings while the GOP scrambled to block it.


GOP bans dissent at Trump's speech—and ejects a lawmaker

Republicans showed their intolerance for dissenting viewpoints during Trump’s primetime speech, where House Speaker Mike Johnson had Democratic Rep. Al Green of Texas removed after he dared to object to Trump.


'A bunch of sh-t': Walz spits fire against Trump's petty tyranny

Democratic Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota didn’t mince words at the Democratic National Convention’s summer meeting in Minneapolis, taking aim at the deterioration of the country under Trump. 


'Get lost': Watch this Democratic leader's blistering Trump takedown

It took House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries just one explosive minute to spotlight the stunning hypocrisy of the administration’s failure to deliver on any of Trump’s campaign promises while branding critics of his heinous deportation policies as “insurrectionists.” 


Watch this Democrat unload on Musk at first DOGE hearing

Democratic Rep. Melanie Stansbury of New Mexico is the ranking Democrat on the House’s new Delivering on Government Efficiency subcommittee. During the made-up committee’s first hearing, she excoriated Republicans for their fealty to billionaires like Musk.


Illinois governor calls out bigoted Republican's bizarre question

During an immigration hearing, GOP Rep. Brandon Gill of Texas pivoted into a bizarre attack on transgender rights. But Pritzker, who was testifying at the time, quickly castigated him for engaging in a political stunt.


For more video content, check out Daily Kos on YouTube.

[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

The Arch Linux based CachyOS has been quite popular with Linux gamers and enthusiasts for offering leading out-of-the-box performance, especially following the shutdown of Intel's Clear Linux. CachyOS has developed quite a following on the Linux desktop while looking ahead to 2026 they will be working on a server edition...

NVIDIA CUDA Tile IR Open-Sourced

Dec. 25th, 2025 03:23 pm
[syndicated profile] phoronix_feed

Posted by Michael Larabel

As a wonderful Christmas gift to open-source fans, NVIDIA dropped their proprietary license on the CUDA Tile intermediate representation and has now made the IR open-source software...

Mechnical Turks You Never Thought Of

Dec. 25th, 2025 07:30 pm
[syndicated profile] atrios_feed
My long-held belief us that Waymo has been obscuring how much human intervention they use, and this task is funny example of that.

Adkins had witnessed an Achilles’ heel of the Waymo robotaxis that ferry thousands of riders in Los Angeles, San Francisco and other cities each week. The vehicles can navigate city streets and compete with taxi drivers without anyone behind the wheel — but become stranded if a human doesn’t close the door behind them at the end of a ride.

Because riders and passersby can be unreliable, Waymo pays workers in Los Angeles $20 or more for rescuing a robotaxi by closing a door, summoning help through an app called Honk that is like an Uber for towing companies.

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

The Trump administration never misses an opportunity to tout its deep commitment to religious freedom. 

Why, just look at the Religious Liberty Commission that President Donald Trump established in May. Or the White House Faith Office that he launched in February. Or his executive order eradicating anti-Christian bias. 

So, given that the Trump team has such an excellent track record of protecting religious freedom, why is it that religious groups keep suing them?

Personal pastor to the President Paula White Cain, speaks during a Donald Trump campaign event courting devout conservatives by combining praise, prayer and patriotism, Thursday, July 23, 2020, in Alpharetta, Ga. (AP Photo/John Amis)
Televangelist Paula White runs President Donald Trump’s new White House Faith Office

Well, to start, the Religious Liberty Commission is stuffed with conservative Christians like Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who declared, “The Declaration of Independence is consistent with the Bible, and the Bible is consistent with the Declaration of Independence.”

Hmm, that sounds less like religious liberty and more like Christian nationalism. 

And the White House Faith Office? It’s run by Paula White, a televangelist who believes that anyone who opposes Trump is part of a “demonic network.” She said that she took the gig because “to say no to President Trump would be saying no to God.”

Hmm, that sounds less like religious liberty and more like a cult. 

Well, surely Trump’s efforts to eradicate anti-Christian bias are going swimmingly. In his executive order, Trump waxed rhapsodic about how his administration will protect peaceful Christian protesters after the Biden administration “engaged in an egregious pattern of targeting peaceful Christians, while ignoring violent, anti-Christian offenses.” 

To right Biden’s wrongs, Trump pardoned “nearly two dozen peaceful pro-life Christians for praying and demonstrating outside abortion facilities,” including a Catholic priest. 

Things are no doubt much better now, what with all of this religious freedom floating around, right?

Not so much. 

Instead, the administration’s wholesale commitment to violence against immigrants has resulted in a sustained attack on religious freedom—actual religious freedom, not the ginned-up culture war stuff that Trump loves. 

What could be more of an attack against religious freedom than refusing to allow Catholic nuns and priests to administer communion to detainees at a detention facility? 

This isn’t something that some rogue progressive Catholics whipped up as a way to try to get into an ICE detention center. Those nuns and priests had been visiting the facility every Friday for more than a decade, providing pastoral care, prayer services, and communion. But beginning in October, ICE started refusing to let them in.

A federal immigration enforcement agent sprays Rev. David Black, of the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago, as he and other protesters demonstrate outside theU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcementfacility in Broadview, Ill, Friday, Sept. 19, 2025. (Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)
ICE agents spray Rev. David Black during a demonstration outside of the ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois, on Sept. 19.

After about two months of absolutely fruitless negotiations over this, an ecumenical group, the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership, along with several Catholic priests, sued the administration

As the lawsuit explains, Catholics are literally compelled by scripture to minister to “the prisoner and foreigner.” 

The complaint also references Pope Benedict’s biblical quote when ministering to detainees in Rome’s Rebibbia District Prison: “I was in prison, and you came to me.” 

“Wherever there is someone hungry, a foreigner, a sick person, a prisoner, there is Christ himself, who is waiting for our visit and our help,” Benedict said.

Refusing to allow Catholic nuns and priests inside an ICE facility violates not just their religious freedom, but also that of the detainees who wish to receive communion, attend Mass, or pray with spiritual leaders. 

This lawsuit is different from the October lawsuit brought by journalists and protesters, including David Black, a Presbyterian pastor who ICE shot in the head with pepper balls. A few minutes later, they blasted him with tear gas. 

It isn’t just the brutality at this one ICE facility that has spurred lawsuits. 

In July, a large coalition of faith groups sued over the removal of “sensitive locations” guidance, which had largely barred ICE from invading places such as hospitals, schools, and churches. 

You’d think that the religious freedom administration would honor the fact that many churches and synagogues believe that providing sanctuary for immigrants is part of their religious mission, but you would be extremely wrong. 

There’s also a lawsuit that was filed by more than two dozen Christian and Jewish groups in February, saying that the threat of immigration officers entering churches is lowering attendance, which, you guessed it, infringes on their religious freedom. 

Also in February, hundreds of Quaker congregations also sued over the removal of sensitive locations, explaining that they are spiritually called to minister to immigrants. The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, a network of more than 1,400 congregations, joined the suit.

Cartoon by Mike Luckovich
A cartoon by Mike Luckovich.

“In the faces of immigrants and refugees who are fleeing political or religious persecution, or who are seeking sanctuary from tyrants, Baptists see nothing less than the face of Jesus,” the suit said.

Another plaintiff, Sikh Temple Sacramento, noted that communal in-person worship is critical to their religious practice. 

Making houses of worship vulnerable to ICE raids burdens the religious practices of these groups, particularly because the entirely legitimate fear of ICE has led to a drop in attendance. 

Somehow, the religious freedom organization didn’t really see that as a big deal and tried to handwave that away, saying that immigration authority rests with the Department of Homeland Security, which gets to do whatever it wants. 

The administration even managed to get itself sued in February by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops over cutting off refugee resettlement aid, which is quite a feat since those bishops have generally enthusiastically tilted right. 

Vice President JD Vance, who never fails to tout his tradcath views and ostensible commitment to religious freedom, said that the bishops were just in it for the money. 

The Trump team only cares about religious freedom when it’s used to force a very narrow, very conservative version of Christianity on everyone else. Actual religious freedom—the right to freely practice your faith, whether that may be—is utterly foreign to this administration.  

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