General Discussion, Thursday, October 16, 2025

Day TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY of Presidential recovery.

Crystal Mill, near Marble CO

 

 

 

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Brouhaha at the Department of War!

You have probably heard by now about all of the mainstream media outlets who have refused to sign the Media Access Guidelines requested by the Department of War in order to maintain their credentials.

I have wondered what I am missing. Is there something that truly does impinge upon the Freedom of the Press guaranteed in the First Amendment to our Constitution?

Post after post appears on X condemning the Secretary of the DOW, Pete Hegseth. This afternoon I ran across this post by the Federalist’s CEO Sean Davis, and its Editor-In-Chief, Mollie Hemingway. It lays out very clearly what is at issue. Apparently there IS another side to the story. Here is the text:

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Posted in Defense Department, Fake News, Media | 2 Comments

SCOTUS may strike down race-based redistricting as unconstitutional

Epoch Times

The Supreme Court seems poised to strike down race-based redistricting as unconstitutional, or at least rein in the practice, court experts told The Epoch Times.

The outcome of the high-profile racial gerrymandering case of Louisiana v. Callais could have an impact on the balance of power in the federal legislative branch. Gerrymandering is the manipulation of electoral district boundaries to favor a particular party or constituency.

Currently, Republicans maintain a razor-thin majority over Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives. The congressional seat at the heart of the litigation is currently held by Rep. Cleo Fields (D-La.).

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Posted in Congress, Constitution, Supreme Court, Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Flaky Folded Biscuits

Another biscuit recipe, this time from J. Kenji Lopez-Alt (author of the Food Lab). He posted it on the NYT site, but that’s probably behind a paywall for you, so here’s the recipe:

These biscuits rely on frozen grated butter to create an extra light and crispy texture. The dough can be gently kneaded together, rolled and cut into biscuits using a biscuit cutter or knife before baking, but this method of folding and rolling produces more flaky layers. The final step of rolling the dough like a jellyroll, flattening it, and cutting it into triangles results in triangular biscuits that gently fan apart in layers that are perfect for catching extra butter and jam, or for pulling apart with your fingertips. If the dough or butter feels like it is getting warm or greasy at any point, transfer the dough to a rimmed baking sheet and place in the freezer for five minutes before proceeding.

Ingredients
Yield:8 biscuits

½ cup/120 milliliters cold whole milk
⅓ cup/85 grams whole milk Greek-style yogurt (preferably 5% milk fat)
2 level cups/285 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
1 tablespoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup/225 grams unsalted butter, frozen (2 sticks; you will not use all of it)

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It’s Doggityday!

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The Internet: Mixed Bag

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General Discussion, Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Day TWO HUNDRED SIXTY-NINE of Presidential recovery.

 

 

 

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WATCH LIVE: Trump posthumously awards Charlie Kirk the Medal of Freedom

 

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The Algorithm That Rigged the Census: How One Bureaucrat Stole the House and Billions in Funding

Very interesting. I had heard about the overcounts in blue states and undercounts in red states. This explains how it was done. It’s technical, but boils down to the fact that one bureaucrat made changes to the way the counts were done in such a way that they couldn’t be detected or challenged. And the counts weren’t really counts.

The man responsible for this,  John M. Abowd, joined the Census Bureau in 2016, and served until 2022. In my opinion, he is one of the bureaucrats who torpedoed the first Trump administration, and did tremendous damage. Although he is no longer with the Census Bureau, he still has fingers in the government pie. According to Wikipedia:

Abowd helped to found and continues to provide scientific leadership for the U.S. Census Bureau’s Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics Program, which integrates censuses, demographic surveys, economic surveys, and administrative data to produce research and public-use data.

 

Amuse on X Substack

NOTE: All bolded text was done by me.

The 2020 census was marketed as an “actual enumeration,” a neutral count of people for apportionment and funding. It was not. The same official who helped block a basic citizenship question in 2018, John M. Abowd, then the Census Bureau’s Chief Scientist, pushed through a new, opaque methodology in 2020 called differential privacy. The new system deliberately injected mathematical noise into every block count in America, turning the census from a headcount into a model with knobs. The knob that mattered most was a single parameter, epsilon, a secrecy shroud known only to a small inner circle. Abowd argued that a single added question about citizenship posed an intolerable risk to data quality because there was, he said, not enough time to test it. Then he rushed an untested algorithm that altered every count in every neighborhood. The irony is so sharp it cuts: the man who warned that one question might distort the census approved a method that guaranteed distortion.

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Posted in Big Government, Democrat corruption | 7 Comments

Government Cleanup In Process

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