From the Star Ledger:
27 N.J. towns lose another round in fight over affordable housing — and they’re not giving up
An appeals court judge on Friday rejected a request from 27 towns to pause New Jersey’s new affordable housing requirements — the latest in a string of defeats for the group.
Judge Cindy K. Chung of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit denied the towns’ bid in a one‑sentence order, marking the third time in two weeks their attempt at emergency relief has been turned down.
The 27 towns — organized as Local Leaders for Responsible Planning — had already been denied twice last week by U.S. District Judge Zahid N. Quraishi. After those rulings, they appealed to the Third Circuit, only to be rejected again.
Their next step is an appeal the U.S. Supreme Court, where they plan to seek intervention in their challenge to the Affordable Housing Reform Law.
“While we are disappointed that the Third Circuit denied our motion without even offering an explanation today, we are excited to announce that we will be bringing this case to Justice Samuel Alito, who is our emergency justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, with a filing anticipated to be completed on Monday,” Montvale Mayor Mike Ghassalisaid in a social media post.
Montvale is the lead plaintiff in the case, which includes mostly affluent suburban communities in North and Central Jersey, including Holmdel, Millburn and Franklin Lakes — places that have long resisted high‑density development and previously fought affordable housing mandates in court.
The state defendants include the New Jersey attorney general, the administrative director of the courts and members of the Affordable Housing Dispute Resolution Program.
The towns have argued that the stay — a court order that temporarily stops a law or ruling from taking effect while a case is still being decided — is necessary. They contend that a victory on appeal would be hollow because construction would already have begun and could not be reversed.
The more than two dozen municipalities initially filed a lawsuit in state court challenging the Affordable Housing Reform Law enacted by Gov. Phil Murphy in 2024.
Trump is a pedo
Montvale is the lead plaintiff in the case, which includes mostly affluent suburban communities in North and Central Jersey, including Holmdel, Millburn and Franklin Lakes…
If we can’t get them out, we’ll breed them out.
These towns need to conduct “lengthy” environmental reviews to assess the impact of affordable housing. After all, we don’t want to disrupt the migration pattern of s0cial harmony butterflies.
They can call it the ‘Great Big Beautiful Hug’ assessment.
lol.
Melania is opening to the best numbers in a decade for a documentary with a better-than-expected $8 million or more.
If that sunny forecast holds, the film will come in No. 3 behind fellow newcomers Send Help and Iron Lung after icing out Jason Statham’s new action pic, Shelter.
LMFAO!!
RE: Shitcoin
But Pret said no more write-downs
Pumps – who hit the sell button?
Bitcoin $78,449
I went all in on your advice in October. I have now lost -38% of my investment.
This isn’t a crypto winter it’s a crypto calamity. Nearly $1.5 billion worth of assets left U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs over the last week, that means hundreds of thousands of small investors hit the sell button!!
Melaina movie not going to make a profit I gather.. There simply isn’t blue haired old women around.
“The audience was overwhelmingly female (72 percent) and over the age of 55, according to Amazon.”
Nazi propaganda is more entertaining
JJ Lives:
A Florida Airbnb host has been accused of walking around a resort outside of Disney World naked and engaging in a sexual act with a vacuum cleaner.
Kevin Dale Westerhold allegedly exposed himself in front of properties and was seen naked in hallways at the Windsor Hills Resort in Kissimmee, Florida, according to Ring footage reviewed by Osceola County Police.
Seems Mandami does not want NYC to get federal money anymore, and Hochul is not far behind.
Again here we are talking about protecting criminals. He is choosing to protect foreign criminals from deportation over billions needed to finish the Hudson river tunnels, schools, and all kind of social services in NYC. These are criminals being held on Rikers island of all places, they would rather release them to the streets than turn them over to DHS.
https://nypost.com/2026/01/31/us-news/mamdani-to-sign-bill-barring-ice-from-operating-out-of-rikers-or-any-nyc-correctional-facility/
Chi – Windsor Hills Resort in Kissimmee, Florida.
I have stayed nearby there a few times we have rented homes on the golf courses nearby.
That entire area is all rental homes in gated communities. It’s not cheap to invest or stay there either.
https://tinyurl.com/2eypbzes
Bovino Is Said to Have Mocked Prosecutor’s Jewish Faith on Call With Lawyers.
Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol field leader, made disparaging remarks in reference to the U.S. attorney in Minnesota, an Orthodox Jew, people with knowledge of the phone call said.
By Ernesto Londoño and Hamed Aleaziz
Jan. 31, 2026
A day before six career federal prosecutors resigned in protest over the Justice Department’s handling of the killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis, lawyers in the office had a conversation with Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol field leader, that left them deeply unsettled.
According to several people with knowledge of the telephone conversation, which took place on Jan. 12, Mr. Bovino made derisive remarks about the faith of the U.S. attorney in Minnesota, Daniel N. Rosen. Mr. Rosen is an Orthodox Jew and observes Shabbat, a period of rest between Friday and Saturday nights that often includes refraining from using electronic devices.
Juice,
Trading it right now. Currently out of the market and seeing how low they give me. Game of patience right now. Amazing week. Best ever for me.
Tell us when your breadwinner has a dinner party for work colleagues. You going to clear out the guitars from the garage and bring folding chairs?
Oh, that scent this weekend? Eau de Cardiologist.
Women totally respect frightened slackers whos main function in life is adoring them like some lost puppy. LOL. Loser.
I feel so much better now that Trump has been cleared in the Epstein files.
Juice: It’s shameful, these are criminals and should be deported? It’s good publicity for Mamdani though, and he doesn’t have to focus on that 12 billion budget deficit.
Too bad the ICE patrols are short of intelligence, then maybe they could help with a real problem like this, instead they are too busy grabbing guys who dry off cars at a car wash.
“Ghost students” present new threat to community colleges
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwAFGay9HaU
Fast: There are several high dentisty developments . I know one is a luxury rental, and a friend of ours lived there for a year after selling their house and then moving permanently to the shore. Said it was nice at first , because it was empty . Once it filled up, you could hear and smell everything. The other developments are condos I believe.
The most famous words in liberal vernacular: “Yeah, but.”
Wealthy Liberal NJ towns hate Trump, but don’t want affordable housing in their towns.
Once it filled up, you could hear and smell everything.
I’d need to find a way to buy or rent a free standing building. At my age, I’ll go to a bog outside of Vineland. I don’t want to smell someone’s fish dinner three days later.
Wealthy Liberal NJ towns hate Trump, but don’t want affordable housing in their towns.
Remember what I always say, it’s about symbolism. Appearances matter. When it comes to reality, then it’s someone else’s problem.
The audience was overwhelmingly female (72 percent) and over the age of 55, according to Amazon.”
Should have called it “Karens”.
I like affordable housing
the women there are more fun.
Sounds like the NYC you are so worried about. One would think by the way you describe it that maybe its good that Mamdani takes it over.
3b says:
February 1, 2026 at 10:30 am
Fast: There are several high dentisty developments . I know one is a luxury rental, and a friend of ours lived there for a year after selling their house and then moving permanently to the shore. Said it was nice at first , because it was empty . Once it filled up, you could hear and smell everything. The other developments are condos I believe.
haha. they are all trying to figure out how she landed that big round orange cash vending machine, as they look at their husbands and ask how come i didn’t get the powerful man in the world with so much money to buy me everything i want.
hughesrep says:
February 1, 2026 at 10:42 am
The audience was overwhelmingly female (72 percent) and over the age of 55, according to Amazon.”
Should have called it “Karens”.
Dark: Well yeah, if Mamdani destroying NYC should be a major worry, certainly more than those “Karen’s “you are always going on about.
As for the second part of your comment, no idea what you are saying.
I don’t care what mamdani does in nyc. they voted him in, that’s what they got.
America voted in trump, you get what you get.
and when there is a reaction to either one of these two, well, that is on them as well.
these two are polar opposites. voted in by americans.
mamdani is the antidote to trump, trump is the antidote to mamdani
each side thinks they are right. but alas, what is happening is that while the discord is going on here, China is moving forward faster than ever.
the house of cards that the banking cartel in the usa has created is going to crash. you can only bleed the bones so much till ya got no blood left to take.
the handlers have the average american in their grasp and are tightening the noose around them. their only hope is to save the constitution, which sadly, is taking on water by outside forces who have comprimised the american goverment with bribes.
it’s only a matter of time now. the way it’s accellerating, they know the cat is out of the bag, the gig is up, so it’s full speed ahead. the next few years will change america forever.
may you live in interesting times.
a nice tune. the battle is brewing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XEnTxlBuGo
‘murican history
In 1931, miners and mine owners in southeastern Kentucky were locked in a bitter and violent struggle called the Harlan County War. In an attempt to intimidate the family of union leader Sam Reece, Sheriff J. H. Blair and his men, hired by the mining company, illegally entered their home in search of Reece. Reece had been warned and escaped but his wife, Florence, and their children were terrorized. That night, after the men had gone, Florence wrote the lyrics to “Which Side Are You On?” on a calendar that hung in their kitchen. She took the melody from a traditional Baptist hymn, “Lay the Lily Low”, or the traditional ballad “Jack Munro”.[1]
From Gizmodo,
“Son of Executive Overseeing U.S. Government’s Crypto Stash Accused of Stealing $40 Million
Over the weekend, ZachXBT, who is an advisor to crypto investment firm Paradigm and has been called “one of the best digital detectives” by The New York Times, claimed that the perpetrator of a suspected $40 million theft from the U.S. government’s crypto holdings is the son of an executive at a firm tasked with the management of those funds. Now, the U.S. Marshals Service says it’s investigating the situation.
Command Services & Support (CMDSS) was awarded a government contract for the management and disposal of a specific class of crypto assets in October 2024. Dean Daghita is the chief executive of CMDSS, and according to ZachXBT, his son, John Daghita (also known as Lick), is connected to a theft of crypto funds in government custody that were associated with the 2016 hack of crypto exchange Bitfinex. According to a report in The Block, most—but not all—of these funds allegedly stolen from the government were returned within 24 hours.
The connection between John Daghita and the stolen funds is said by crypto insiders to have been made after the accused was seen bragging about large-value crypto wallets in a Telegram group chat. During a dispute with another member of the group chat, where each user was attempting to prove they controlled more crypto than the other, John allegedly revealed access to a wallet connected to the previous theft of funds from government custody.
After ZachXBT made multiple reports regarding these connections on X, roughly $1,900 worth of ether associated with the stolen government funds was sent to the blockchain investigator’s publicly known Ethereum address. ZachXBT has stated that any stolen funds received will be forwarded to U.S. government seizure addresses.
This is not the first controversy that the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), which oversees seized crypto associated with federal cases, has faced challenges when it comes to its handling of digital assets. Previously, separate reports in CoinDesk and The Rage indicated the agency (and the government as a whole) is unable to provide a proper and transparent accounting of its crypto holdings.
CMDSS’s LinkedIn and X accounts have been deactivated, and the company did not respond to a request for comment from Gizmodo made via the CMDSS website. The USMS told Gizmodo, “At this time, we will not be making any statement as the matter is under investigation.” CMDSS did not respond to a request for comment.
On X, President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets Executive Director Patrick Witt indicated he is looking into the matter.
In the past, the U.S. government has seized crypto assets associated with criminal cases and then sold them off for a profit. For example, legendary tech investor Tim Draper once purchased nearly 30,000 bitcoin that were seized from a darknet market Silk Road. This bitcoin stash was worth around $18 million at the time and is now worth roughly $2.5 billion.
Following an executive order from President Trump last year, these sorts of sales have stopped. Now, seized bitcoin is added to a strategy bitcoin reserve, and other crypto assets are added to a separate stockpile. The Trump administration is also looking at ways to expand the strategic bitcoin reserve with additional purchases to add on top of coins seized by law enforcement. Multiple states have also established their own, separate bitcoin reserves.
Arkham Intelligence currently values U.S. government bitcoin holdings at just under $30 billion.
After all these years, thefts of bitcoin and other crypto assets are still a rather common issue. Last year, an Office Space-esque exploit at a longstanding decentralized finance (DeFi) application sent a chill through the entire industry, as it put into question whether these platforms, where transactions are irreversible and “code is law,” can ever be fully trusted. Additionally, 2025 was a record year for physical crypto thefts, as more criminals are taking their activities offline and going with $5 wrench attacks, potentially based on personal information they’ve obtained from a crypto hardware wallet manufacturer or French tax authority.
2025 was also a record year for illicit crypto activity more generally, with a report from blockchain analytics firm estimating these transfers at $154 billion. However, much of this activity was denominated in stablecoins, which are centrally issued and more easily frozen and controlled. For example, stablecoin issuer Tether recently froze $182 million of its USDT token amid reports of heavy use of the dollar-pegged digital currency by the Maduro regime in Venezuela.
Of course, in many ways, solving the price volatility and lack of transaction reversals in Bitcoin through centralized stablecoins nullifies a significant aspect of its originally intended purpose.”
From The Atlantic,
AMMON BUNDY IS ALL ALONE
The anti-government militia leader can’t make sense of his allies’ support for ICE violence.
FEBRUARY 01, 2026
Not so long ago, Ammon Bundy was the most famous right-wing militia leader in America. His two armed standoffs with federal agents had made him the face of the Patriot Movement: a loose assemblage of anti-government extremists, Second Amendment maximalists, and more than a few white nationalists. Even some mainstream elements of the Republican Party embraced him as a modern folk hero.
But Bundy’s criticism of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown now threatens to make him a pariah within his own community.
In November, Bundy self-published a long essay titled “The Stranger,” in which he labeled the Trump administration’s treatment of undocumented immigrants a “moral failure.” “To call such people criminals for lacking official permission” to be in the country, he wrote, “is to forget the moral law of God, the historical truth of our own founding, and the Constitutional ideals that continue to define justice.” On a recent livestream following the killing of Renee Good in Minnesota, Bundy told his audience that ICE’s conduct “clearly looks like tyranny.” If the government threatened his family, he said, he would fight back by whatever means necessary.
I spoke with Bundy a few hours after federal immigration agents shot and killed Alex Pretti. “It’s sickening to me,” he told me over the phone, “just to see the parallels of history repeating itself.” (In his November essay, he had compared the administration’s treatment of immigrants to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.) He added, “When it comes to the more humanitarian side of it, I think the left has it much more correct than the nationalist right.”
Bundy, to be clear, has not gone woke. He believes that Democrats, whom he calls “communist-anarchists,” are “spurred by wickedness.” (So, he says, are Republicans, whom he calls “nationalists.”) He believes that government has no business providing virtually any social services. He believes that homosexuality is a sin. And don’t ask him about vaccination requirements.
But perhaps Bundy’s central belief is the inviolability of individual liberty, and in this he has remained fairly consistent over the years. During the first Trump presidency, Bundy took heat from some of his followers for opposing the administration’s anti-immigration agenda, and when I first spoke with him a few years ago, he reiterated those views. If he has become something of an outcast, that testifies less to a transformation in his thinking than to a broader realignment on the far right. Bundy, in his relative ideological fixity, offers a stable reference point against which to measure that shift.
In 2014, Bundy and his father, Cliven, marshaled about 1,000 militiamen and other supporters to repel government agents trying to impound their cattle in Bunkerville, Nevada. (Twenty years earlier, in an effort to protect the endangered Mojave desert tortoise, the Bureau of Land Management had ordered Cliven Bundy to remove his cattle from federal lands; he ignored the directive.) The standoff turned the Bundys into the first family of the Patriot Movement and darlings of conservative media. They might not have been quite at the Republican Party’s ideological core, but they weren’t very far away from it. They were avatars of a conservative belief in the importance of individual liberty and the righteousness of resistance—even armed resistance, if necessary—to government tyranny. In a Fox News poll asking thousands of viewers whether they were “Team Cliven Bundy or Team Federal Government,” 97 percent answered “team Cliven.” Several Republican U.S. Senators publicly defended the family. Sean Hannity repeatedly had Cliven on his show.
Two years later, Ammon led a six-week occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon that left one rancher dead, shot down by police officers after a backwoods car chase. From 2022 to 2023, he was embroiled in a slow-motion standoff with local and state law enforcement in Idaho stemming from his refusal to pay a $52 million judgment against him in a high-profile defamation case.
By that point, the breadth of Bundy’s support had substantially diminished. His exploits no longer garnered the attention of Fox News and its mainstream conservative viewership. And now, even some of his greatest supporters—people whom he and his family inspired to become militants in the first place—seem, in an ideological sense, to have deserted him. After Good was shot and killed, I reached out to a number of those who stood with Bundy at Bunkerville, at Malheur, or afterward. None of them would condemn ICE, and some expressed enthusiastic support.
When I asked Nick Ramlow, a Montana militant and member of Bundy’s People’s Rights Network, about Good’s killing, he referred me to a recent Supreme Court opinion and stressed that “a jury will make a determination of liability when a civil suit is brought.” In other words, Ramlow, who once told a sheriff that he “better keep his nose clean” because Ramlow had “a bigger army than he does,” didn’t want to comment one way or the other until the courts weighed in.
Eric Parker, who in 2014 made a name for himself by training a semiautomatic rifle on federal agents at Bundy Ranch and who is now the head of the Real Three Percenters of Idaho, had nothing but praise for the agent who killed Good. “I mostly think it’s important to note how impressive it was to get those first two shots off in under a second,” he told me, adding that Good’s wife should be criminally charged (for what, he did not say). Lee Rice, a longtime People’s Rights member and steadfast Bundy supporter who participated in the Oregon standoff, told me when I first met him in 2023 that he didn’t “believe in the government running roughshod over you.” When I spoke with him recently about ICE’s tactics in Minnesota, he said, “I’m supportive of what’s going on, because we need to get these clowns out of here.” Good deserved her fate, he added, because she’d sided with undocumented immigrants.
Some of those in Bundy’s orbit have responded favorably to his essay and video, and a few have changed their mind about ICE enforcement since the killing of Pretti, which the Trump administration has tried to justify by pointing out that Pretti was carrying a gun. “I feel completely different about this one,” Parker texted me after seeing the video of Pretti’s death. Unlike in the case of Good, he didn’t see any self-defense rationale for the shooting. “No detainment just fighting. Disarmed him then shot him.”
But, on the whole, Bundy’s former allies seem to remain solidly in favor of the masked, armed federal agents. Just the other day, Bundy told me, he had a contentious conversation with a militant who had joined him at Malheur. Bundy had always thought that he and his supporters stood for a coherent set of Christian-libertarian principles that had united them against federal power. “We agreed that there’s certain rights that a person has that they’re born with. Everybody has them equally, not just in the United States,” he said. “But on this topic they are willing to completely abandon that principle.”
Bundy finds this ideological betrayal totally baffling. He would start to say something—“I can’t understand how they think …” or “They just can’t, they can’t …”—only to abandon the thought mid-sentence. “It doesn’t make sense to me,” he told me finally. “It’s scary, actually.”
And so Ammon Bundy is politically adrift. He certainly sees no home for himself on the “communist-anarchist” left. Nor does he identify anymore with the “nationalist” right and its authoritarian tendencies. The party that embraced him and the people who supported him have, by and large, left him behind.
He feels, he told me, “a little bit alone.”
Jacob Stern is a contributing writer at The Atlantic.”
Trump and Republicans say no more endless wars only to send a massive fleet to attack Iran, and get us into another endless war, in the Middle East.
3b says:
February 1, 2026 at 2:35 pm
“only to send a massive fleet to attack Iran, and get us into another endless war, in the Middle East.”
How do you know?
In any case, you realize that DJT (with help from Mossad) has ended all of SlowJoe’s Middle East wars, right? Hamas has returned every Israeli hostage. Hezbollah has been neutered — literally had their balls blown off by Mossad’s exploding pagers. Houthis are quiet enough that Red Sea shipping has resumed. And Iran, of course, has had their nuclear program set back in a major way, if not completely obliterated. Might be best to wait and see instead of prematurely announcing the next Middle East war.
3b,
Things might not go as a well as they expect this time around.
First, because no one keeps their mouth shut as they try to massage King Orange Pinocchio’s ego.
Second, they have and are experienced with the Russian anti-aircraft radar/missile intercept systems and they have it turn on unlike the Venezuelans, which btw shows it was an insider that wanted Maduro out and collect $50 Millions and provided intelligence and assistance which likely to be missing in Iran.
Finally, is the combination of cheap, simple air and sea drones and lots of suicidal militias members and their continual planning to disable ships and close the Strait of Hormus and attack military bases and oil facilities like they did to Saudi Arabia that is going to make it very interesting.
The only thing that could overcome all of the above is if there is a Skynet like Terminator AI robotic army full of those Boston Dynamics robotic dogs/horses/humanoids being deployed in attack. If they were King Orange Pinocchio would habe blabber it out already.
3b says:
February 1, 2026 at 11:36 am
“…if Mamdani destroying NYC…”
Commuted to the city last Thu and I can tell you that in 30+ years of working in NYC I’ve never seen the streets in worse shape almost a week after a snowstorm. Even giving some leeway for the bitter cold that followed the snow last Sunday, it appears there was no effort to get the streets cleared — in midtown — with every corner limited to a path the width of a snow shovel. Mamdummy’s mayoralty should be fun to watch.
Today Denmark won the men‘s European Handball Championship, 34-27 over Germany. I think they are also the current world champs.
BTW, From Krugman on Inflation.
Today’s topic is the impact of tariffs on inflation. Many news reports treat the absence of a large rise in inflation since Liberation Day as a puzzle, a big problem for economists. And of course Trump and co. are crowing that all the experts were wrong.
But if you look at the actual numbers, there isn’t much if any puzzle.
The key point is that effective tariff rates have risen much less than headline rates. Partly this is because there have been some major carve-outs, like Apple’s exemption from tariffs on India. Partly it’s because high tariffs have led firms to take advantage of exemptions that were already on the books but weren’t worth the paperwork when tariffs were lower. Here, from the Penn-Wharton budget model, are the shares of imports from Canada and Mexico claiming exemption from tariffs under the USMCA:
So how much extra inflation should we have expected from the actual, as opposed to headline, rise in average tariff rates? The chart at the top of this post shows a quick and dirty way of getting that number. It shows total customs duties as a percentage of GDP, i.e., the tax actually imposed by the Trump tariff hikes. These receipts rose from 0.3 percent of GDP pre-Trump to 1.1 percent, a rise of about 0.8 percentage points. And that can serve as a first-pass estimate of how much the tariffs should have added to inflation.
OK, that could be an underestimate, because the tariffs have discouraged imports, which means that their impact on prices should have been larger than their impact on revenue. But the revenue still serves, as I said, as a first-pass estimate of how much inflationary impact we’d expect — around 0.8 percent, or a bit more.
So what has actually happened to inflation? Let me go at that two ways.
First, the HBS Pricing Lab, run by some of the same people who created the Billion Prices Index, has been estimating the impact of tariffs on retail prices. Their estimates bounce around, but they suggest that the CPI is 0.8 percentage points higher than it would have been without the tariffs:
Second, compare 2025 inflation with forecasts made before Trump went on his tariff spree. In late 2024 forecasters surveyed by the Philadelphia Fed expected 2.2 percent core PCE inflation — the Fed’s preferred measure — in 2025. We don’t have December 2025 numbers yet, but the Employ America nowcast says 3 percent for annual inflation in 2025, 0.8 percentage points above pre-Trump expectations.
These two approaches give the same number — 0.8 percentage points — which is also the increase in customs duties as a share of GDP. Honestly, the results are almost too neat.
Lots of wiggle room at the edges, but the basic point is that there isn’t a big puzzle about the limited effect of tariffs on inflation. Some economists may have overhyped that effect, and Trumpists are happy to promote a straw man, but the reality is that the inflationary effect of tariffs has been more or less in line with what we should have expected.
Dark Phoenix says:
February 1, 2026 at 10:29 am
“Too bad the ICE patrols are short of intelligence…instead they are too busy grabbing guys who dry off cars at a car wash.”
I’m sure you’re a good guy Dark, but you’ve become nothing more than a Dem shill and the king of disinformation. Here’s the list of guys that ICE is arresting — and that the Dems are protecting: https://www.dhs.gov/wow
Do more nurse chasing and less Dem shilling.
hughesrep says:
February 1, 2026 at 10:42 am
“Should have called it “Karens”.”
Dumb and un-funny, like every single one of your posts that’s not HVAC-related (which are top notch).
Chad,
You know why the Danes won. Because they have strong hands. Is all that wacking they do to their beautiful women.
I would not be surprised that Small Con would be a Handball Champion too. He really powerfully wacks away. Is just that he needs to wear his Mr.Magoo glasses to see his weany and the those little balls.
Grim says:
February 1, 2026 at 9:05 am
“Nazi propaganda is more entertaining”
Congrats on overtaking Lib as the king of TDS. You may want to take a deep breath and reassess some things because you’ve started to give the impression of a guy that would be comfortable with Nazi’s — if they would get rid of your DJT problem. Not a good look.
In NJ news, Hillsborough went Dem for the first time in umpteen years and just a week or two after the new mayor was installed there was an anti-ICE protest in the middle of town — slowing traffic on Rt 206 to a crawl. Good to see the dingbat Dem mayor has her priorities straight — and idiot voters getting what they deserve.
SmallGov loves pedophiles!
Small: My Brother lives on the upper west side and works in mid- town, and confirms what you said about the snow removal.
As for the Middle East Trump did neuter Iran , back in June. That should be the end of it. Americans don t want another Iraq.
Diners and restaurants complain about people not eating out or ordering take out then don’t include lettuce and tomatoes on their cheese burger deluxe platters unless you pay extra.
The Melania film will be out of the theatres in a week. Every single person interested in it has now seen the POS. No film ever released will have a drop off in viewership like this one.
Did anyone here see it? Maybe I’ll see it on the plane on Saturday as I fly out to Vegas for the Superbowl.
3b,
I was charged 87 cents for a teaspoon of brown sugar for my oatmeal in Montclair. This was on top of the extra charge for blueberries which is justified.
You should ask Krugman if we are still in that “Liquidity Trap” thingy
Small, where was it on 206?
Not as good as your air flight quip, but solid.
“Abraham Lincoln went to see the movie, said it was the worst theatre experience of his entire life.”
Libturd says:
February 1, 2026 at 9:16 pm
The Melania film will be out of the theatres in a week. Every single person interested in it has now seen the POS. No film ever released will have a drop off in viewership like this one.
Did anyone here see it? Maybe I’ll see it on the plane on Saturday as I fly out to Vegas for the Superbowl
“This just in, a man has been murdered in a movie theater showing Melania. Police say there were no witnesses.”
Last. Please!
Right on the nail.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/UJal6PbfEzg
Juice,
You said Epstein files would be all Dems. Its all GOP so far,what gives?
>> “This just in, a man has been murdered in a movie theater showing Melania. Police say there were no witnesses.”
I think many would kill themselves before they seat themselves in a Melania theatre.
Fab – no amount of irony can hammer sense into a MAGA’s brain.
This sums up this admin for me
https://x.com/ricwe123/status/2017877081019887855
1 ?